New York Age
Saturday, June 25, 1927
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
DAVIS EXPLAINS CHARGES MADE AGAINST ZION MINISTER
New York Elks Fight Wilson’s Order
Colored Federal Prohibition Agents Charged With Accepting Bribes From Harlem Bootleggers; Now On Trial
Richard Warner, Jesse Harvey, Josiah Dixon, With a White Agent, Edward McCann, Facing Federal Court, Judge Knox Presiding As this paper goes to press, the trial of Jesse Harvey, Richard E. Warner, Albert Briggs, Josiah Dixon and Edward McCann is still being heard by a jury in the Federal Court before Judge John C.
Robt. Bowler, Prominent Washington Attorney, Kills Self Because Of Losses Entailed In Realty Deals
(By Telegraph to The New York Age.)
By RIENZE B. LEMUS
Washington, D. C.—Robert J. Bowler, 38, prominent lawyer, was found unconscious in his automobile on Rock Creek Park, Monday afternoon. He had been shot through the head, the bullet entering the right and passing out of the left temple. Attempted suicide was evident.
Bowler was discovered by William Merck, chauffeur of Mortimer M. Harris, prominent Negro real estate dealer, who was driving Mrs. Harris and Mrs. Louise Hays through the park.
Patrolman Sheeled who had heard the shot, reached the scene shortly after Merck. Bowler was taken to Freedmens Hospital where he died Tuesday morning.
Though the dead lawyer's brother, Thomas Bowler, was inclined to suspect foul play, those family with the dead man's affairs, do not think over the case. It is alleged that financial difficulty worried him and that only the day stated to his sister he saw but one way.
Also stated that Mr. Bowler within the few months had been heavily insured his financial transactions.
ung attorney was well known and prom- connected. His tragic end cast a pall of the community. FROLIC WITH THE FROGS
Harvey Warppe, from and McCann former federal prohibition agent are charged with accepting rebels from Harlem bootleaders. The were arrested on warrants issued by Commissioner Garret W Cotter, based on the complaint of Assistant United States Attorney Edward Lumbarp Jr. of the Federal Attorney's staff. Briggs is an ally of the alleged collector of thieves. The trial has been on since Tuesday, June 14, and some of the defendants were accorded thoughe, concessions, the biggest bootleaders in Harlem. Some of those to go on the witness stand were Bernard Levy, Charles Levy, Henry ( Dietzel, Louis Goldfarb, all of whom processed bootleading as their occupants of G. O Poles restaurant own of West End, and Ed Manning and Benjamin Richie, all called "The Ratt," or whom declared they were guarders. Bernard Levy in his testimony admitted his occupation to be a
"number, banker, cabaret owner, furrier, and operator of speakeasies. He testified that his hoochjoints had been raised more than fifty times in 1925 and 1926, and that he had been convicted about fifteen times. Once after being arrested, he went down to the Federal Building with his brother While they were on the fifth floor Levy said he was approached by McCann, who offered to fix their case for $1,000. Levy said that Harvey, Hammer and Dixon were standing before him for six hours. McCann approached them after interview and the brother Threshad of $1,000 however, Levy said that he gave $100 another meeting with the artist Levy said that his knew Charles Smith, who was at that time an informer. It was revealed through documentary evidence that Smith was attached to the staff of Major Chester 'P. Mills' and entered into an "informer contract" in Major Gage Hester. The contract was offered in evidence and showed that Smith
(Continued on Seventh Page)
Counters Di ALBERTINI
MRS. MALONE GIVES ADDITIONAL $5,000 TO HOWARD UNIV. Total Of $10,000 Given Medical School Endowment By Poro
F. Washington, D. C—Mrs. Annie
M. Malone-founder and head of the
Phoen College, St. Louis, Mo has
contributed an additional, $5,000 to
ward the endowment of the School
of Medicine at Howard University.
She had previously given $5,000 this
additional contribution comes up to
$10,000.
In sending her latest contribution
Mrs. Malone wrote President Mor-
dean Johnson as follows
*Dear Dr. Johnson*
"Enclosed please find check on
$5,000 for the medical department of
Howard University
"With the wish that this amount
maybe of some assistance in aiding
in the upift of our grace, I gladly
make this contribution for the wite
thy cause, believing that in turn the
results will come from the earnest
endeavors of the youth in their con-
tribution to humanity, and that the
will feel it their obligation. For val-
ue received, I promise to pay
them for your wonderful
success, and the coming event
your inauguration.
"I am
cordially your
(Signed) ANNIE MALONE
Grenthal Succeeds Costuma As Leader
Assemblahman Abraham Grenfell of the 19th Assembly District New York was unanimously elected with wild acclaim executive member of that District a meeting of the County Committee, held Wednesday, 22nd February 2013, Republican Club No. 23 West 124th street New York City
Assemblahman Grenfell is serving his third consecutive term in the State Legislature. He has been a member of the Club for the past thirteen years and began his political activities as an assistant captain at the University of the Club. He is a practicum attorney with offices at 455 Fifth Avenue New York City
His election as executive member was occasioned by the resignation of David B. Costina who has been the executive member of that District for the past seven years. Mr Costina resigned to be received by the meeting of the county committee meeting region.
JOSEPHINE BAKER, COLORED AMERICAN DANCER, BECOMES BRIDE OF ITALIAN COUNT AT AMERICAN CORSOULATE, PARIS Chorus Girl With Smale & Blake; In Plantation Revue At Winter Garden, and In Harlem Theatres, But Won Fame and Fortune After Gong To Paris To Dance
Girl's Father Makes Statement In Regard To Assault Charges Which She Made Against Rev. Carrington
Samuel J. Davis of 24 Brook Street, New Rochelle, N Y. father of Miss Marie P. Davis, the young pianist and mucis teacher, who charged the Rev W O. Carington, pastor of St Catherine A. M. E Zion Church, New Rochelle, with having made a criminal assault upon her at the close of a young people's meeting in the church, the story of which was published in Last week's Age, called at The Age office in company with Dr. C. P McLendon, his family physician, and charged that the story as published had been colored so as to wrongfully favor the minister.
Paris, France · Josephine Baker, colored American, dancer, who has been the star of the Follies Bergere for the past two years, announced her marriage to Count Pepino Di Alberti of Rome, Italy, on June 1. Record of the American Council on Alcoholic Beverage place on June 3, her twenty-first birthday, at the consultaure. For nearly two years, Miss Baker has been the best actress in France. Her abritual inhumaneness success in the Follies marriage caused her services to be such demand that she now dances at the Aesacias in the afternoon, at the Follies in the evening, her own cabaret in the early morning. Recalling the many bogus noblemen that had been exposed in America, Josephine looked up the ancestry of her husband.
" Sure, he a count, Josephine said in announcing her marriage. " I looked him up in Rome. He got a family there with a fleet of boats of arms and everything." There is in Italy, a popular family of Alberti of Brescia origin. Dame Pepino · Alberti, Babe of the house was born in 1875. Count Pepino claims that his great uncle was once the famous Cardinal Celilo. His mother is stopping in Paris with the house. Josephine has not yet her marriage interrupt her work and plans to take her honeymoon upon her return to America.
Was Unknown Chorus Girl Till She Won Fame and Fortune Abroad
Two years ago Josephine Baker was a chorus girl with little or no prospects of ever winning fame and fortune to say nothing of an Italian
Girl's Father Makes Regard To Assault She Made Again
S. J. Davis of New Roof Church Officers Whi Meeting Intende
Samuel J. Davis of 20 chelle, N Y. father of 1 young pianist and mucis Rev W O. Carington, pa M. E Zion Church, New R a criminal assault upon he people's meeting in the ch was published in last week office in company with Dr. lily physician, and charged lished had been colored so the minister
He charged that the meeting of the board of trustees of the church, held on June 14 had been secretly called and that Miss Davis had not been notified of the proposed meeting although she is a member of that church, and had been a teacher and pianist for the Suffday school for a number of years. He stated also, and this was confirmed by Dr. McLendon that Dr. McLendon had left the trustee meeting in disguise after speaking
Count. She was born in St. Louis
Niger. She is a drummer in a
theatre.
Her first stage experience was with a small musical ensemble organized by Bob Russell a Negro producer. The company played the greater part of the time in the Sixth and was known as the Diana Stryker. In 1924 Josephine Baker was a cousin girl with the Chocolate Dandies, of which Stile and Blake were stars. At the Colonial Theatre she attracted attention as an end girl in musical numbers by her velocity and comedy steps.
When the Chocolate Dandies disbanded she joined the Plantation Revenue stop the Winter Garden when Ethel Walters was the feature and Stile and Blake joined Harlem and throughout the East. In 1925 Mrs. Caroline Dandey, white, formerly of Virginia, who lived up residence in south-west Virginia, organized a Negro musical company of twenty-three people for Harlem. An investment was made; the negotiation was taken to Paris. Not having the performers under contract, Mrs. Dudley was the company intact, and it disbanded.
Josephine Baker and Louis Douglas formed a vaudeville team and presented the "slave dance," which projected the female member into the limelight. Managers began to clamor for her services and she signed a contract to do a specialty as the Folies Bergere.
In 1926 she was the biggest hit in the history to the Folies Bergere and home and told of the American Negro girl who was the star of a production which all the other performers were white.
Sus Statement In
Rult Charges Which
Just Rev. Carrington,
Michelle Asserts That the
stewashed Minister In
led To Be Secret
4 Brook Street, New Ro-
Miss Marie P. Davis, the
teacher, who charged the
master of St Catherine A.
Michelle, with having made
er at the close of a young
murch, the story of which
k's Age, called at The Age
C. P McLendon, his fam-
l that the story as pub-
o as to wrongfully favor
his mind, and that the meeting was simply a cake of whitewashing. The statement in the story that Miss Alleyeen, sister of Bishop C. G. Alleyeen, was pastor at St. Catherine at time of his elevation to the bishopric, was present at the meeting and made an address at Miss Alleyeen's authority for the assertion that she did not attend the meeting and knew nothing of.
Casino 155th 8th v'g, Jun
(Continued From First Page)
GRAND LODGE SESSION CHANGED TO CLEVELAND Expresses Fear of Operation of Grattan Law In New York Which He Claims New York Ellis Promised At Session In Cleveland Would Be Repealed By Legislature
According to what appear to be well-authenticated information the Daughter Elks comprising the advisors board of the Grand Temple I B P O F of W are not invited to follow the hiding of Grand Exalted Ruler Finley Wilson by consenting to change the Grand Temple of Daughter Elks from New York to Cleveland as he proposes to do with the Grand Lodge. One of the well-posted officials, in talking with the Age said he had been assured that of the thirteen women who comprise the advisory board of the Grand Temple, eight possibly nine, have pledged themselves to vote against any change in the place of meeting subsequent Daughter Elks in Washington, D C on June 28 to consider the situation "Grand Daughter Ruler Elka Berry of Chicago has not so far as is known, knew any definite stand in the matter but it is pointed out. The Age's informant mailed a message to board well control the minority's position. In other words it is declared that with eight or nine votes assured for New York it will not be possible for any influence to bring about a change. The Law said provides that the session at the place must hold a session at the place but the Grand Lodge but that there is no provision for such a contingency as has arisen.
Philadelphia Woman Wins U. of P. Degree
Philadelphia Pa - Mrs Sadie Mossell Alexander, wife of Attorney Raymond Place Alexander, was given the degree of bachelor of laws at the recent commencement of the University of Pennsylvania. This is the first time a woman has won this distinction in Pennsylvania and Mrs Alexander was also the first colored woman to graduate from U. of P and the first in Pennsylvania to receive the degree of doctor of philosophy the degree in of philosophy in 1918, her A.M. in 1919 and her B. in 1921. She will join her husband in the practice of law
GIVES INTERVIEW TO THE AGE THROUGH RENZA B. LEMIS OF WASHINGTON, JUSTIFYING ACT
Dr. Hudson J. Oliver, Chairman of New York Committee, Makes Reply To Grand Exalted Ruler Wilson
Grand Exalted Ruler J. Finley Wilson of the Improved Banevolent and Protective Order of Ellts of the World has issued his official proclamation, under date of June 17, declaring that the coming session of the Grand Lodge, originally set for New York City, has been changed to Cleveland, Ohio, where it met in 1926, the reason given being a fear that under the Grattan Law, (New York Penal Code, Chapter 41, paragraph 2240) the colored Elks would be in danger of arrest and imprisonment if they come to New York City.
Cites Gratten Law
ties the Grattan Law as barrers of the R.P.O. to the action of May 19, 1912, in which forbidden use of the name, colors and to apply the sassand finally cites a recent deed of the New York Supreme Court to operate in this state and
Mr Wilson quotes the Grattan Law as barring the name "Elks" from any members of the B P O in on the white order quotes also the court decision of May 19, 1912 in which the colored organization was expressly forbidden use of the name "Elks" but was allowed to use the orders colors and to apply the same titles to officers as do he white Elks and finally cites a recent decision handed down by Justice Churchill of the New York Supreme Court in which Negro Moose were forbidden to operate in this state under provisions of this same Grattan Law.
Gives Interview To The Age
The Age special correspondent has had an interview with Brand Files official so north categorically convention from New York to was authorized by the Brand Board was being given solid support free only three lodges in New York City
to correspondent at Washington
with brand Excalibur Ruler
with categorical his reason for
New York to Cleveland, declare
the Grand Board of Trustees
and support from the West
New York City opposing busi
The Age special correspondent at Washington, Reiner B. Lemus, has had an interview with Grand Exalted Ruler Wilson in which the Filks official north categorically has reason for changing the Filks convention from New York to Cleveland, declaring that his action was authorized by the Grand Board of Trustees and asserting that he was being given solid support from the West South and East with only three lodges in New York City opposing him.
D: Hudson Oliver Restica
This interview has been submitted Oliver chairman at New York City of the Grand Lodge and D the statements contained in the Le interview and Dr. Oliver's reply.
has been submitted by The A-
New York City's general com-
munity and Dr. Oliver has un-
graded in the 1000 interview
Oliver's reply are being printed.
This interview has been submitted by The Age in Dr Hudson J. Oliver chairman of New York City's general committee in entertainment of the Grand Lodge and Dr Oliver has made detailed reply to the statements contained in the Lenten interview with Mr Walton. The interview and Dr Oliver's reply are being printed beyond
Rv RIENZI B LEMUS
Washington D.C. Loreauxas
at the future and welfare of the
great impressed Reservoir Prote-
tory Order of Riks of the World
are of total concern to the race
at large particularly at this time
income of the controversy spread
(To Page 2 Column 1)
ous Band
at Washington, Reno B. Lemus.
Exalted Ruler Wilson in which the
his reason for changing the Flks
leveland, declaring that his action
of Trustees and assuring that he
in the West South and East with
opposing him.
Oliver Replica
ted by The Age to Dr. Hudson J.
is general committee in entertain-
Oliver has made detailed reply
to our interview with Mr Wilson.
He being printed herewith
BY HUDSON I OLIVER MD
Edition: The New York Age
and the uphour good colo-
nies on an full space to print
an interview according to Riera B.
Lemus in the Moor Hon J. Finley
Wilson.
(To Page 2. Column 3)
missing place, this year by, peacefully
Wilson of Boston Excaled Ruler J. Fletcher Wilson, I called on Mr. Wilson at his home here Saturday and asked him for an interview in respect to the reasons for the change.
He had "aboot."
The questions and answers, verbatim, follow.
Mr. Leroux Did the last Convention of the I. B. P. O. E. W. at Cleveland vote to go to New York with the understanding that the Grattian Law would be repealed, the floors of the New York Elks and the injunction waived?
Refer To Gilchrist Stewart.
Mr. Wilson When the delegates from New York sought support from the convention they go to New York, my friends frankly called attention to the exigencies of the Grattan Law and the injunction that was still in full force and effect. These delegates, headed by the late Gilchrist Stewart, promised that in the New York the Grattan Law would be revealed and the injunction automatically lifted Dr. Hudson I. Oliver, D. Dalmus Sweele of New York, and Armand W. Scott of Washington, and others stated in the Convention that they would act the next regular session of the Legislature at Albany.
Mr Lemus. Then I take it. Mr. Grand Failed Furter that New York was selected by the Convention as the next meeting place. Navigate the next meeting place. The workers and their friends have the law repealed? Mr Wilson: I am frank to say to you that they would never have voted to go to New York, had they believed at the time of the firing that they were flying in the fries of Grattan Law and the intolerance.
Trustees Were Instructed.
Mr. Lemps Did the 1920 Convention, aside from the constitutional provision, specifically instruct the trustees to look into the situation? Mr. Lemps Yes. Through a Proposition No.10 passed in Fri. Dearborn Lake, Chicago, No.44, on March 17, 1920, which can be seen on page 133 of the Grand Lodge minutes of the 1926 session, which was adopted by the Convention, this Proposition became a law for the Grand Lodge's protection and our guidance, and gave me the authority to vote on the majority of the trustees, to change the place of meeting of our next Grand Lodge
Mr. Lemons Then it seems. Mr. Wilson, that the great fraternity, with its properly constituted authority of the Grand Lodge at its 1926 session, has full authority authorized to the consent of the Trustees to convene the Grand Lodge elsewhere?
Mr. Wilson According to my best judgment, under article 17, section 2 the Grand Exalted Ruler with the consent of the majority of the Board of Trustees may in act of emergency or extreme necessity, change the time of the annual session holding the regular annual session. Mr Lemus Foramuch as your authority to act is categorically demonstrated the country wants to know what is the emergency
Law Creates Emergency.
Mr Wilson. The emergency is the unanimous Gratian Law, and the B. P. O. F injunction against the I. B. P. O. E. W.
Mr Lemus. Is it a fact that even after your special Grand Legal Committee reported adversely on New York, that you still insisted on another convention city after yielding to the advice of friends and brother officers to seek corroborative legal advice?
Mr Wilson. Yes, and further more every Proclamation since the Cleveland Convention in August to the Flood Proclamation in June has sounded the Clarion call "On To New York.
Mr Lemus. Did you vain supreme Court justice Morschauer of New York at White Plains seeking, if such were possible, to have the injunction vacated?
Mr Wilson He advised me that the situation was in full force and
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Mr. Wilson. He said he had no power over the Judiciary of the State of New York and he doubted whether he would have the power to pardon a member of our Order if he were arrested for conspiracy with the Supreme Court in the inquest, the injunction, and he said the injunction did not look good to him. Mr. Lennas: We these visits to Governor Smith and Justice Morschaer subsequent to the report of the special legal committees? Mr. Wilson: Yes. Mr. Lennas: By virtue of what authorizes him to join this special legal committee? Mr. Wilson: On the request of the Grand Trustees, who were of the opinion that the Grattan Law was still on the statute books, and that the injunction was not dissolved, and that we might: canw the organization much embarrassed and more trouble and long drawn-out litigation on the we had twenty or twenty-five years ago.
A "Gentleman's Agreement."
Mr. Lemos. What about the assurances these "anti-administration lawyers," who claim that an injunction restraining in not a restraining injunction, give with reference to successfully holding the Convention in New York? Mr. Wilson. They have been hiding and the "gentlemanagement," but the gentlemanagement" ruled as the mist before the noonday sun on the 27th of last May, when New York Supreme Court Justice Churchill issued a permanent injunction, requested by the white Moose, restraining the colored Moose from "moosing." The injunction not only obtains by virtue of the Gratian law but was based on the injunction as a precedent against administration, which the gentleman tell not be forced if we met in New York. Mr Lemos. Do you anticipate a split in the Order?
Mr Wilson. No. Why should I?
Mr. Lemmi. One-hears so much loose talk around the streets. What is the relationship between you and your fellow executive Grand Lodge officers?
Han Kad Harmanielus Year.
Mr Wilson This has been my most harmonious year Brother, Bates and Brother Carter have been members of this Order for nearly a quarter of a century, and can not, and I will not believe that they have not held themselves and their oath and obligations as to fail to appear at the next Grand Lodge, in keeping with our Proclamation.
Mr Lennus. Mr Grand Exalted Ruler why was Cleveland selected as a correction 'city instead of city' would be good to the Lord. Mr Wilson The Grand Tenants and the majority of my Cabinet Officers felt that we should return to Cleveland and finish our work of selecting the next convention city.
Mr Lennus. It has been stated definitely that you do not want to be in New York, because you are fearful of being replaced as Grand Exalted Ruler. What about it?
Not Afraid of Defeat.
Mr Wilson You can put this down as the biggest falconhood uttered by man since the days of Ananias. The West is as solid as ananias. The East is like a stone wall; the lodges from Boston to New York have already endorsed me, more than half of the votes' in New York State are for me, and in fact Brooklyn and the Bronx will give me a solid York will oppose me; the Convention while the metropolis of New Jersey has spoken in no uncertain terms, and stated in their last meeting that they would be with me and the administration, with the Pledge of Newark battling the Indians in Newark always, and in addition Michigan Ohio and Pennsylvania outside of Philadelphia have long since notified the waiting world that they intend to meet me in New York, San Francisco, Hawaii, and New York, the good of the Order Ortiz on the morning I received an endorsement from Cuba
Mr Lemus What would be the status of the Grand Lodge officers attending the Cleveland convention on the event they went to New York
Would Discipline Rebels
Mr. Wilson. They would be hailed into our Fraternity Court and tried by brothers of our Trial Committee and if found guilty would be dealt with according to the law that governs chefs and fraternity wreckers throughout the world. Mr. Lemus. Then you are convinced that you have taken every law that governs your fraternity with the laws governing your fraternity. Mr. Wilson I am absolutely and have eliminated self-aggrandization and have placed the fraternity above personal choice and ambition. Mr. Lemus I amdodhe Mr. Grand Exeiled Ruler. I shall stop in Cleveland on some occasion from the Business League convention at St. Lemus and hope to and Americans to attend. I am interested and fighting out its differences of honest opinion in good will and traditional good fellowship. Mr. Wilson So long. Mr Lemus You will no the disappointed.
And INVESTMENTS
2303 7th AVENUE
New York
Bradhurst 1048
to give very brief questioning to Mr. Gilchrist, who was awarded by My Whitehorse life labs to say, Oliver, Stuart, Scott and others; that the late Gilchrist Stewart, who headed the delegates from New York, promised to have the Grattan Law specialist and the injunction administrator filled, and that Oliver, Scott, Scott and others started in conviction that this could be done in thirty days after the next regular session of the legislature in Albany. Now that statement is in evidence, the case has come from the lips of the Good Reasoned Ruler, for if he bears Mr. Stewart make any such statements he surely must have been in a deep trance and should be placed at the head of that class of individuals who claim they can communicate with the spirit world, for Mr Stewart died on Wednesday morning and his body was entombed in New York before the place of meeting was brought before the convention, which option did not permit, which option at which time Shaple the spirit Gilchrist Stewart was being acclaimed by the Howletts hosts.
Bradsics Wax. Chairman.
Furthermore, Robert Braddicks, and not Mr. Stewart, was the chairman of the New York delegation and neither he nor any of those interested in our cause conferred with him. We knew where he stood on the convention proposition and all his friends, and we did not need his support to win the convention and therefore did not solicit it. As to the others he mentioned, I remember he heard us make the statement: "We have meetings at the same time he heart Mr Stewart speak from above. A wonderful first answer is based on his supernatural powers, a total lack of knowledge of the organization of the Committee, and a solitary misrepresentation of facts in the case it is easy to deduce that his subsequent answers carry the same weight.
Since the Gratton Law and the injunction war thoroughly discussed his and his friends had in Cleveland it cannot be truthfully said that New York placed any reservations in their presentation of their city, to the Grand Lodge, did vote to come to New York in spite of those facts.
Another Misrepresentation
Another misrepresentation of facts is Mr. Wifson's answer to the query of "did the 1926 Convention specifically instruct the trustees to look into the situation. He knows men in the trustees and warns them to the trustees and the only power that the trustees have to consider the matter is contained in the article which he mentioned, after the Exalted Ruler requests their consent and then only: so it appears and attempts they make a middle finger to the unwarranted, unlawful and cannot be locked in by any part of our constitution. It seems that someone should peruse our laws a little closer in order they might be more familiar with the same kind of the trustees are clearly little more than the men. Yes that as what we all want to know "What is the emergency?" No more and no less than that which existed at our convention in Cleveland. And since all those facts were brought out at Cleveland there has been nothing written to warrant any claim of emergency or extreme necessity.
The Special Committee
Now, as to all these visits to New York that the Grand Exalted took and his special committee it does seem strange that these visits are always made and the New York Committee never knows about them. It seems to me that the interests of the order are the same as any other here, in New York, and we are most vitally concerned that the logical thing to do would be to see what help or assistance New York might want in order that our order might not be destroyed here instead of doing everything possible to let outsiders know that we have no right to exist and that we are always breaking the Law. The Governor is perfectly right when he said what he did but of course in view of the many other statements contained in Mr. Wilson's interview that are so far from actual facts I would have to have the Governor of New York signed statement to more clearly the statements to full. And we all realize the governor of any
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It is to be pitted that Mr. Wilson, is so afraid of him, to New York because he might be agreed. The whole history, of our order has been bolted with law rules and injunctions, and this is the first time that I have ever heard of one of the Anthem's ambitions to foster, run away in the face of danger. According to the latest interpretation in Elkdom, it is called a Holy, mandate necessary, for the preservation of our Order; in the Army it is called something The Army has before feared best to Mr. Wilson in the performance of his duties; life itself meant nothing as weighted against; the cause of Elkdom. "Plumming in the face of the law, never before caused him to kidnake to come to New York to up lodges, you have never been able to arm him cell his deputies here in New York to stop forming new lodges and collecting that money because it is against the law. He himself comes whenever he is sent for and at times when he is not sent for, and never before have I heard that he expects that $50 which he demands for coming because it is breaking the law Why all the fear now?
His Talk on Train.
I realized, too, that if it is not fearful her re-election that causes him to take such steps. I don't know whether Mr. Wilson remember our trip back from Roanoke, Va., and the conversation we had about the situation until the week hours of the morning, and in the evening, Thomas Brown, E. R. Imperial Lodge, Chas M. Hanson, secretary of Imperial Lodge and myself when he said that "My back is against the wall and if I can have assurance that 'Monarch'odge will do that' I am sure that he did in Richmond' that he would on the following day after the receipt of that information issue a proclamation 'On to New York'." I trust Mr. Wilson's memory is as good on that matter as it is on others and such statements and just what did he mean by it? I am curious to learn.
Hirguina Was Defoated.
It is interesting to know the strength of Mr. Wilson, and I congratulate him upon his following, for there is no doubt that he has deserved all the good things said about him as his record has been. I am glad to talk about Brooklyn he might have said that his choice there in the person of Lawyer Haggus was defeated for exalted ruler because of this issue, and Brooklyn Lodge owed to come to New York as deferred by the delegates in the New York Jurishment Court in New York at these Convention, and then we will see what lersey has to say.
I too agree that Mr. Carter and Mr. Bates have been in the order for a long time and too do not believe they will so far forge their own justice on the ground of justice is done and do not believe that the well thinking Elks of the country will so far forge the role that the New York lodges have played in every convention he always sending their delegates, hands and marching to the meeting in justice is also done to New York feeling that if one Elk goes to jail in New York, 100,000 Elks will also go to jail, and in the final analysis, I am certain that Elkdom will be so treasuring its way toward the metropolis so have the time of them
Invitaliza To Mr. Lemua
In conglession, I will say the whole interview borders on the theatrical, reminding me of the famous sketch put on at our conventions and other places, in which the principal actors consist of two men, one of whom is the one before supposed dignitaries in Cuba and the other a wonderful translation in Spanish. Now of Mr. Lemus wants facts let him also interview New York and see what they have to say and I hereby extend the most candid information from the Basque League Convention in Sylvestre, the son of a New Yorker, and enjoy the best convention that the I. B. P. E. of W. W. had.
READY TO INSURE
able to get insurance. Many later the taking of a policy it was stricken down and so busy to talk to an agent. I hummels chimes, whether you have to go. Would it and get ready NOW! One wants for life insurance is ready you may be the one subjected applicant could have had applied in time. Don't insurance outcast, and until of the Death Bell Do it live and well
THE INSURANCE COMPANY
PAGE, President
Newark, New Jersey
Age Akents Wanted
FOR TERRITORY
A growing alliance between certain police officers of Harlem and the bootlegging gentry is being noted through the activites of Nathan R. Steinberg, a well known bootleger who operates the saloon known as the Victoria Elks Cafe at the Northwest corner of 141st street and Seventh avenue.
Steinberg has been arrested several times and is well known in the U. S. Attorney's offices of Manhattan and Brooklyn. As a condition for this no being sent to jail for his bootlegging activities several months ago is reported to have promised the District Attorney he would not engage in this business again.
When he got out of this trouble he is reported to have become an agent for the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, but they also discovered he was a bootleger and fired him.
Age Editor Celebrates His Seventieth Birthday
June 16 marked the seventieth birthday of Fred R. Moore, editor of The New York Age, and was the occasion of many greetings from friends.
Letters, telegrams and tokens of appreciation poured into the office among those sending their compliments to the editor were Dr. Nathan Fox, Rev. J. W. Brown, the Red Cross Nurse of Harlem, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bearden, Mr. and Mrs.
Is Accident Chasor.
Now in addition to his bootlegging activities, he is engaged in soliciting accident cases for the law firm of Flashnick and Susstek, which has offices at 1440 Broadway. To secure leads on the accidents at all they occur, Steinberg is reported to have access to the police files of several prematches. The purpose of information coming to the Age for math Steinberg with a complete blotter report of the injured Steinberg then calls on the injured person, representing himself as a lawyer sent there by the Police Department. In this way he is able to secure signatures and restraints as the legal representative of the injured person. He is reported that certain policemen are for this police and in addition, a number of the uniformed men on their heats get paid for tips on accidents.
Has Mantv Casta
An investigation by The Agbears out of the allegations against Steinberg. The law firm of Flashnick and Sustick is now representing a large number of accident cases for Sirenix in Hardam. Two other cases, those of Miss Jane Martin of 2024 Seventh avenue, and Mrs Sadie Austin of 18 East 14th Street, Mrs Martin was injured by a bus on the Fifth Avenue Coach Company on May 21. She was in bed in her report from her. The Agency called to her her home, but would give no information concerning the case but it was learned from other sources that Steinberg was the second or third person who spoke to her following the accident. She is now being repaired in a Flashnick and Sustick in a suit for damages against the Fifth Avenue Coach Company. Mrs Austin was injured a few days ago in a street car accident but neither she nor her relatives would give information to the re-incident because. But it was learned from other sources that Flashnick and Sustick are her lawyers.
Although there are an number of lawyers practicing in New York who employs solicitors, there are few solicitors who have gotten the business down to the scientific basis. Stemberg has or who have been involved in the cooperation from the police. The matter has gone to that part of the other lawyers specializing in accident cases are getting realous and have begun to kick on the methods employed by Stemberg.
HAVE YOU AN
For a line week end drive
through Yonkers, Tarrytown
home) through Gunning to Po
at Wendelhurst Bank on road
Peekskill) then turn to lift or
LARKSBURG MO
Large Dining Room
Rooms $2.00 per night R
Dining
MAKE RESERVATION
City Office 256
Telephone Bradhurst 3611
SWIFTWATER
Mt. Pocono Penna.
Address
BESSIE JAPFA Prop
HAVE YOU AN AUTOMOBILE?
For a fine week end drive take the Albany Post Road through Yonkers, Tarstown (Passing Mme. C. Walker's Walker) and Westchester (Passing Nellie Night) at Westchester Bay on turn to Shrub Oak (5 miles East of Peekishall) then turn to 18ft on Barger Street to
LARKSBURG MOUNTAIN TOP INN
Large Dining Room. Dancig. Hiding, etc
Rooms $2.00 per night. Running water. Electric Light.
BLANKS' RIVERVIEW COTTAGES
Come to Portsmouth the gar
spend your vacation where
with nature's most beautiful
allow moonlight on the way
beaches in Maine and New
the White Mountains
Bathing Boating
All Home Cooking-Fresh V
Everything First Clash Rates
MADAME A
57 Balter Street
Come to Portsmouth the garden spot of New England. to spend your vacation where the air is refreshing and balmy, with nature most beautiful scenery of the sunrise and the silver moonlight on the water. A few minutes ride to all beaches in Maine and New Hampshire and a few hours to the White Mountains
Bathing Boating
All Home Cooking—Fresh Vegetables Meats and Sea Food
Everything First Clause Raten Reasonable Write For Térmas
MADAME A. H. BLANKS
His Seventieth Birthday
June 16 marked the seventeenth birthday of Fred R. Moore, editor of The New York Age, and was the occasion of many greetings from friends.
Letters, telegrams and tokens of appreciation poured into the office. Among those sending their compliments to the editor wee Dr. Nathan Fox, Rev. J. W. Brown, the Red Grove Nurse of the University of Beaumont, Mr. and Mrs. William H. Wortham, Miss E. Clark, besides members of the immediate family.
In a letter to Mr. Moore, William H. Wortham writes "I learned yesterday that you had arrived at your seventieth milestone. Even though you do not look it, I do not want the occasion to pass without congratulations to you."
Many of those years have been devoted to unseafish, public service, and it is just as well that we let you know that you are appreciated.
"As the years go by, I feel certain that the people whom you have agreed will come to a greater realization of the sacrifices and the courage entailed in accomplishing what you have for the betterment of the community.
Mrs Wortham and myself bowed to you our warmest congratulations upon the good work you have done on these years."
Harlem Speakeasies
The hooch joints and spas-
sages listed below are open day
of the law. Evidence of their
operation has been placed with
Federal enforcement agents, but
fractionation seems to have been
done.
MADRON AVE.—5084.
FIFTH AVE.—2169; 2180; 2190;
2195; 2201; 2228; 2250.
LENOX AVENUE
321 340 341 401 414 462
482 486 503 515 576 576
598 605 606 645 650 667
SEVENTH AVENUE
2054 2138 2154 2174 2175
2200 2211 2221 2243 2247
2254 2260 2270 2278 2284
2294 2318 2440 2454 2474
2481 2493 2505 2523 25405
EIGHTH AVENUE
2444 2114 2184 2454 2660
2469 2471 2513 2553
2577 2630 2701
126th ST.—233 W.
129th ST.—60 W.; 104 W.
131st ST.—272 W.
122nd ST.—1 W.; 43 W.; 101 W.
113 W.; 168 W.; 171 W.
133rd ST.—1-3 E.; 58 W.; 107 W.; 168 W.; 178 W.
144th W.; 168 W.
135th ST.—31 W.; 53 W.
137th ST.—152 W.
137th ST.—100 W.
188th ST.—143 W.
199th ST.—159 W.
160th ST.—102 W.
164th ST.—154 W.
144th ST.—101 W.; 200 W.; 246 W; 251 W
145th ST.—163 W
AUTOMOBILE?
We take the Albany Post Road
(Passing Mme. C. J Walker's
kescall. Den turn East (right)
Burgh uck (5 miles East of
n Barger Street to
MOUNTAIN TOP INN
n. Daneig, Hilding, etc.
running water
at $1.00
INS.—$18.00 PER WEEK
n Went 135th Street
Sumner H Lark, Press
June 26-41
A BEAUTIFUL SPOT IN
THE MOUNTAINS
With city conveniences and
country comforts. Horseback
riding, tennis, beautiful walka
and board. Excellent Table Board
Rates $18 per week single
room and board, $15 per week
each two in a room and board.
OPEN JUN 20, 1927
Golden spot of New England, to
the air in catering and balmy,
accenture of the airier and the
tier. A few minutes ride to all
Hampshire and a few hours to
Fishing Motoring
Vegetables Meats and Sea Food
is Reasonable Write For Terms
A. B. BLANKS
Portsmouth, N H
Wonderfully well built homes large plot 6 minutes
rooms, xm parlor breakfast nook stairway to attic tile
en tile baths, shower, parquet floors, spacious closet, steam
heat, beautiful electric fixtures, artistic decorations ho
attachment to steam boiler laundry in basement
Directly opposite L I R R Jamaica Main station
from Broadway-Jamaica "L" (Scent fare from New York)
FREE AUTO SERVICE
OWN YOUR OWN HOME
In the south where most of our people came from now everybody who is anybody owns something. "A little home my own someday" idea is in the minds of little children when they become grown up, are property owners. The same can be done right here in New York City may take a little more cash—not very much more—but at property No. 247 West 128th street, then come and see us. You will be surprised how easily you can own Own Home.
COLORED MEN OF WINSTON SALEM IN DRIVE FOR 'Y
Whites Preserve $100,000
Building If $25,000
Site Is Bought
Winston-Salem, N. C.—The citizens of the trity, white and colored have set a new mark of civic and religious effort. Efforts pertaining over a period of ten years to secure a Y. M. C. A. building for the colored boys and men culminated recently when white citizens promised to erect a $100,000 building for a colored branch Y if the colored raised $25,000 with which to purchase the site.
Bishop, L. W. Kyles of the A. M. E. Ziop Church was made general chairman with Dr W. H. Brute as associate general chairman. G. W. Fiber was made general secretary. C. L. Harnes, executive secretary.
On Saturday, June 18, a recapitulation of result showed that more than $27,000 had been subscribed of which about $20,000 had already been subscribed to make an intensive efforts to raise $10,000 and set to work with that end in view.
When the campaign closed Monday night, June 20 pledges to the amount of $67,000 to $67,007 in cash and in a total of 971 pledges were received. This largest pledges were $5,000 by C. H. Jones; $2,000 by Bishop L. W. Kyles, and $1,000 each by J. N. Dell, W. S. Scales and Dr. W. H. Bruce.
The actual work obeys groups of live teams with C, B and B with C, T Woodland leader F. C. Copeland assistant leader in Division A, and Rufus Hairston, leader C. A. Brown, assistant leader in Division B. Each team had a captain and lieutenant. Besides the executive committee also headed by Björn Kysler, officers were "administration," "appraisal" and "special engagements, arrangements, church cooperation and publicity.
"Y" Secretary Says Efficiency Is Needed For Holding Of Jobs
Atlantic City, N.J. - Speaking at the corner-stone laying of the new two-hundred-thousand-dollar Y M C A building here, Channing H Tobas, national secretary of the Y M C A. U. urged that the Association include in its program the kind of educational work that will help young men to acquire such efficiency in their jobs that they may be able to hold them against all forces. Said the speaker "After all due allowance has been made for race prejudice, too many, colored men are losing out in jobs that they have held for centuries. Even Atlantic City, the last stronghold of the Negro waiter, is employing fewer Negro waiters than it did ten and fifteen years ago. Waiting is now a science, and if Negro wants to hold their own in this time work must study the latest methods, cannot wheelbarrow methods, to an airplane are and expect to hold your job."
JAMA
5 Cent Fare Zone Excellent
Church
New Exclusive Home
$6,350-$350 cash
Wonderfully well built
rooms, sun parlor breakfast n
en tile baths, shower, parque
beat, beautiful electric fixtures
POLICE OFFICERS continue to be employed in calling numbers, chatting in Harlem, and Judging the Court of Special Sessions by maintaining a standard policy of sending offenders to the Welfare Island Work-house and enquiry days where conviction follows trial.
Firefighters Snelling of 22c West Island arrived with arrested in apartment 16D at 9:00 a.m. on June 7, by Patricia Edward Wilson (8839) of the 6th Division and on June 13, Judge Healy gave in 60 days.
On March 22, at 9 a.m. on Chatham
Grayway of 91 St. 145th street was picked up on those premises by
Patrolman William Schmigges (722), who arrived背后
Judge Kernbach on 60 St. 145th street for 60 days. Judge Kernbach got the答应意思 to Clinton Jackson of 60 St. Nicholas avenue, a window cleaner, who had been arrested at St. Nicholas avenue on 11th street by Patrolman Penman on June 7.
Brosius of 60° brooger, was charged with running a gambling
plane on the ground floor south of 60 West 135th street, and he had been arrested by Patrolman Prummen on May 24 and June 10 on this charge and on the charge of stealing "summer" plays. Judge Healy Broius will not either go on bread way or 135th street for the next 60 days.
Since April 7, Iain Emma Reese, 4 West 135th street, has been awaiting trial on a charge or operating "number" in the ground floor lounge of the building, having made the arrest But Judge Healy looked it up on June 11, since day she is making a 60 day visit to the Island. Henry Smith didn't have to leave the island, but the 135th (3571) of the 6th Division medal Smith up on June 7, and Judge Schoen gave him 60 days on June 12.
Buyers, Sellers, Investors
HARLEM BUSINESS BUREAU
No Charge for Listing
2305 Seward Avenue
Room 102 Bradhurst 8390
Oct 19-22am
DESIRABLE HOMES
IN
Westchester County
and Long Island
Call or Write
A. T. ANDERSON
Real Estate Synergy
322 LENOX AVENUE
Phone Harlem 4267
A. H. TAYLOR
Legal Representative
214 B. 7th Ave. Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
TO LET
IN
N. Y. Age Building
Two large, light rooms, steps
heat, electric light—Suitable for
offices or beauty parlor
Apply In Office
220 WEST 135TH STREET N. Y.
We Have A Number Of
Fine Investments
Prepositions For City and
Country Property
Including Summer Hotels &
Boarding Houses
Will be glad to mail fuller
matches on request
Beginning Monday, June 20, to continue through July the congregation of the Harlem Second Seventh Day Adventist Church, under leadership of Elder M. C. Strachan, pastor, is celebrating its third anniversary with a program in which most of the leading Protestant ministers of Harlem, their congregations and choirs, are represented.
The Harlem Church, No. 2, was organized three years ago by a group former members of Harlem. No. 1 pastored by H. Humphrey, who left the body in peace and amid the First Church had Stirs called Baltimore to new church and he is honored by Local Elder C. H. Hinson formerly pastoring Brooklyn, and the Adventist minister among adherents.
Mississippi Judge
Stirs Race Strife
By Court Utterance
Gulipfort Miss.—Judge Walter White of the Harrison County Court has stirred a dangerous condition by recent severe crises.
887 In 3 Years.
To Harlem Church, No. 2, has
three and a half years
three and a half years
total of $107,874.48
for purposes The Sunday
with a membership of 170,
this amount the sum of
church property at 106-108
W. Street, occupied as a
managogue, was acquired
at $65,000, and altera-
tions this cost to $87,
this amount, $39,265.32
on credit since, leaving
debtedness at $64,665.55
that must be shown that
that period amounted
foreign mission mon-
20.20 and local church ex-
$19,880.60
The Anniversary Program
opening anniversary program
day June 20, included
apart on the Rise of S D
New York city by Elder
Wilkinson and a paper on
of Hargen No. 2 A
A from the church clerk
A from another pastor
stended by Ras H K
man of the A M E Church
Felden First Emmanuel
Boll G. M. E Church A
A great Congregational
Citizen Rustell Memorial H
Haskins and C L Butler and
Fred B Moore, editor of the
book
Lee day night the sermon
Re W W Brown of
popular Baptist Church, with
in the Metropolitan choir
T Harves and chor from
Baptist Church Williams,
served or Wednesday night
hursday night the parent
Halton No. 1 Elder Elder
Humphries and chor con-
sidered the Rev John
A from chor of S D
M E Church, gave Friday
program
saturday morning at 11 o'clock
older I M Martin is to
add special music will be
to be Harlem No 28 choir,
group of singers will en-
joy a concert at 8:30
Sunday night at clock
alternation the Mens Lly-
w conduct the service
The Second Week
the week of June 27 to July
memorials will be preached by
P Haves of Mt Olivet
Bury church on Monday, his
hanging Rev R C Lawson
historical Church of Christ
hour on Tuesday, Rev
tullen of Salem M F
on Thursday night with
hour on Tuesday, Rev
umbell of Little M Zoon
combell of his joint on
pole and Elder Stracek
church chit will conduct
a Saturday morning
lock
saturday night at 8:30
and dinner at St.
West 130th street, and
sunday the celebration ends
Women's Iveum Day at
a stereopicture lecture
clock by Elder L A.
Prominent Westerners On a European Tour
with Mrs W H Starton
with Councilman and
W Fleming and Dr.
charles H Garrin of
wife for Paris and a
son on the SS Rocham-
June 18 The party
the fall
& T. Summer School
N. C.—Summer
of college opened
largest enrollment since
he been doing appro-
vail work
Teach-
from Connell
as well as from this
titanic and musical
their first pro-
sessed the op-
with a pro-
in harpite
Other
Dance
Ada Bel Grif
deed and art Di-
ing pianist.
Mississippi Judge Stirs Race Strife By Court Utterance
Gulliport Mias—Judge Walter White of the Harrison County Court has stirred a dangerous condition by recent severe criticisms of the Negro Race relations are imperilled and race hatred is fanned. Two Negroes were being sentenced for killing a white man who had stopped them on the road, cursing and striking them, charging that their automobiles made him. When the white man drew a gun, the colored men shot first Judge White, in sentencing them to the penitentiary, said. The Negroes of this State go looking for trouble. They carry arms, the men revolvers, the women razors. When one commits a crime the whole Negro community protects him. But the contrary, the white man commits a crime his neighbors deliver him to the law.
Following closely on the lynching of two Negroes at Lousville, Miss, by burning at the stake and the impending lynching of another at Jackson this speech has stirred the Negroes in many sections of the State deeply.
Jude White is the magistrate who attempted last year to prevent the report of proceedings to He threatened to jail for contempt any reporter who published an account of the trial of a white man of the swamps for killing two game wardens. All the newspapers defied him and Judge White did nothing
A. & I. State College At Nashville Ends Year
Nashville, Tenn.—Outlisting the mental spiritual and character building advantages afforded by a college education Rabbi Julius Mark of Vine Street Temple, delivere of A & I State College, Dr W J Hale, president on Tuesday morning, June 7 at 10 o'clock the baccalaureate sermon was preached by the Rev Albert C Holt of the First Presbyterian Church, Sunday afternoon, June 5 Commissioner P L Harned sued certificates and diplomas and conferred the B degree and ordained on twenty and in the college 25 in the normal school 5 in commercial department and 4 in agriculture
S. I. Smith Rosenwald agent awarded the following prizes: Designing contest-Laura Parley and Marie Spire 'portrait contest' Exell Dutta and Irene Daniels Sais drama contest Lavanna Dumas and Rosa Robinson Anderson Billy Hale Hike club holder Alton Gibson and Lavanna Dumas Biology medal Austin Brown Commission Harned announced that $60,000 had been appropriated by the General Assembly and $30,000 by the General Education Board. New York City for the erection of a heating plant and teachers home Invocation was given by Rev W. S. Flugang and Rev T. B Livingston announced the benediction Lennie Miller president of the college class, gave in address on second Gates Mrs Lavanna Dumas valedictorian of the senior normal class, spoke on 'Our Part in Humanity's Caravan'
"My Heart & Weary" was sung by Misa Alice White "You goe
baby by Misa Alice White" was sung by the School Quartet "Villanelle" by Misa Ozanna Vineyard
Prairie View Summer School Is Overcrowded
Prairie View Summer School Is Overcrowded
Prairie View Tex - The summer
school at Prairie View State Normal
and Industrial College is overcrowded because of the lack of
dormitory accommodations. More than
1200 teachers applied for admission. Many of the applicants
qualified for the college resident
sections and at Hempstead,
six miles away.
The school began June 6 and
will continue until August 12.
The following have been added
to the summer school faculty:
Charles R. Robert, S. C. Flover
M. Hunter, D. Land Stewart to
Bryan D. Taylor, E. Ellison
M. Mina and M. Mee.
Principal W. B. Bard and
the faculty are lending every assort
The modern tendency toward free love, as expressed in "companionate marriages" or "unmarried unions," was denounced by Bishop William T. Manning of the Protestant Episcopal Church, and by the Rev Henry Lewis, roctor of St Andrews' P. E Church, Ann Arbor, Mich., who said the church should sanctify unmarried unions. In his speech, which has been given wide publicity, Rev Lewis argued that recognition of certain types of "companionate marriages" would allow in doing away with promiscuity and divorce evils
Many Cases In Harlem
It is reported that this particular style of marriage is prevalent to a considerable degree in all sections of the country, particularly in such metropolitan centres as New York, Chicago, and other cities, with families with conditions, say there are a number of cases in Harlem.
Bishop Manning, in a statement, said he had not read the full address, but he took issue with such parts as he had seen. Said the Bishop: "I do not wish to criticize the Rev Mr. Lewis, as I have not seen his full statement, and I hope he will disavow any such views, but certainly any man who defends or approves 'unmarried unions' is out of place in the ministry of the Episcopal Church or of any other church. Some people seem to support this view, and modern about the idea of 'unmarried unions' or 'companion at marriages."
Plana Not New
These things are not new They are only modern and high sounding phrases for the age old immorality They are only modern names for their use The society environment advocating these same sex experiments as part of our plan for destroying both morality and religion I am aware that these ideas are being propagated among our young people by some university minister should advocate such views seems incredible It is becoming clearer every day that Christian morals and Christian faith stand or fall together For those who believe in Jesus Christ they can be no debates as to the Christian standards of morality and purity.
it would not allow a newspaper to come into my home which advocated 'unmanned unions' and 'six experiments' for the young lergerman who should advocate the life of a responsible would be a dishonor to the Christian Church and a menace to the community. Such teaching from a Christian minister would be even more vicious than from a tabloid newspaper or a sex magazine. What should we feel, any of us who are fathers and mothers about a minister who would com-
Says There's Law of God.
There are those as the law
states that we be only too
reads to follow such advice. But
the straight thinking and true
hearted young people of to-day
will reject and resent any such
teaching. They know there is a
law of God which must be obeyed
and that 'the wages of sin is
death' and that there is a de-
stiny evidence of the kind of
stuff that is in our young people
to day in the modesty the poise,
the fear moral judgement as well
as the courage, Charles Lind-
burgh. It is deplorable that such
teaching as that referred to can
be even thought of in connection
with one the hold the office of
a British minister.
Debutantes Install
Officers At Banquet
The Debutantes hold their installation
of officers at Images Restaurant
West 10th street on Saturday
examine June 16.
In guests of the evening were A. Philip Randolph general organizer of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Employees Lester A Walton feature writer of the New York World and Free Press and Freeman of the New York Age. A Philip Randolph stalled the officers and Mr Walton acted as taoistmaster.
The officers installed were Mrs. Edythe McAllister president Mrs. Marion Moore Davy vice president Miss Alva Daves treasurer Mr Ruth Demry-Caldwell secretary Presentations were made to Mr Randolph and Mr Moore by the club a basket of flowers also being presented to Mrs. McAllister by the members those present were Mr and Mrs H Bouchet Davy Mr and Mrs Sumpter Caldwell Mr and Mrs Edward Conyers Mr and Mrs Jenkins Misses Edythe McAllister Alva Daves Adelade Kallur Harrier Nixon on Mena Turner Odell Sawyer Ruth Rohers Edith Williams Dorthy Williams Whitworth Thomas Dumont Darling Gail Campbell Justine Wills Lolita Loom and Mel Robinson
Also John R Brooks Dr. Geraldle
Sean At the house Ludlow Werner
Olfred Alexander George Rivers
Frank Luttre and others
Paul Coleman grandson of Mr
and Mrs Frank Seall of Macau
home for the summer
fitting his second year at
Batra College, Lewiston, Maine
the real estate business of John H. Pierce, at 2228 Seymour avenue, was levied, on by Shazif Cauklin of New York County on Monday, June 26 to satisfy a judgement for $3,070.60 obtained by Burns Brothers, coal dealers. This ends one of the unknown real estate business Mr. Pierce has has been a broker in Harlem for more than ten years, and it it was generally thought he was wealthy, as he maintained a fine home on West 137th street and a country home at North Long Branch, N. J. The home at Long Branch has been turned into the Pierce Cottage and is now being run by Mrs. Pierce as a summer hotel. Going to friends, the financial embarrassment of Mr. Pierce is only temporary and he will be out of his troubles in a short while.
Syracuse Pastor To Speed Three Months In Europe and Holy Land
---
Syracuse, N. Y. — Saturday July 2, the Rev. H. M. Smith, pastor of the Bethany Baptist Church, will sail on the Homeric for a three months vacation in Europe. Northern Africa and the Holy Theocracy. The officer has granted him a three months leave of absence in appreciation for the progress the church has made under his leadership. Five years ago Rev Smith be came pastor of Bethany Baptist Church upon his graduation from Hamilton, N. Y. While at College Rev Smith made such a scholastic record he was elected a member of the Phi Beta Kappa fraternity the first colored student to receive this honor at Colgate. During the years of his ministry Bethany Church has paid off the mortgage which stood for 10 years and a modern church in community center with Sunda school rooms, gymnasium and library have been erected at a cost of $30,000. The membership and financial support of the church has been raised 200 per cent during this period.
Jacksonville Doctor
Goes To Europe For
Postgraduate Work
Jacksonville Doctor
Goes To Europe For
Postgraduate Work
Dr. I. E. Williamse a prominent physician of Jacksonville, Fla. was a passenger on the S. Mauroetania which left New York with Paris and Berlin and will do post graduate study in London and Edinburgh. He plans to be in Europe for three months. Williams did post-graduate study at Harvard University last summer.
Maryland Officers
Take Ross To Baltimore
Frederick Md.-A has a further precaution to avoid possible lynching of Henry Ross. Sheriff William S Rodderick has taken him from the Frederick County jail and placed in Baltimore city jail. Ross was arrested in a swamp alley. The monarchy River charged with the murder of Mrs Lottie M McElfresh who employed Dorsey McElfresh who employed Ross. The woman body was found in the yard of her home by her husband, who a county road foreman when it turned home for lunch and when it the appearance of having been mutilated the colored employee was suspected, and the sheriff's posse found him hiding behind a pile of driftwood
A Philip Randolph general organizer of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, addressed the Kings Mountain Conference of college students, in North Carolina, and the Northfield Mass. Conference of students from New England colleges. Mr Randolph urged that the students banish the "dirtiest" direct contact might aid in solution of economic political and social problems.
Phi Beta Sigma Chapter Formed at Morehouse
Atlanta Gra Phi Beta Sigma a national Greek letter fraternity establishing chapters in most of the prominent universities. Recent Ch. Chapter was established with official recognition at Morehouse College. The organization has many noted members among whom are Gen W. Career Institute at Taukegue. Dr Alan Locke a Rhodes scholarship man and Dr R B R Motona principal of Taukegue. The only institution in the state that has opened with it is the four french letter fraternity
Can't Do Without Age
Editor
Please find enclosed $200 for
renewal of an subscription. I
can afford to do without the paper
Three years ago, in October, 1924 Cardinal Gibbons Institute opened its doors at Ridge, Md., with Victor H. Daniel as its principal. He was accompanied, by his wife, Mrs. Constance Hazel Daniel and her aplendid assistance has contributed-materially to the growth of the work. The school as its name indicates is a Catholic school but it is not supported by the Catholic Church. Money for its operation comes entirely from philanthropic sources, and its control is vested in a board of trustees of which Senator David I Walsh of Massachusetts is chairman. Mrs. Daniel enjoyed a well-earned 10-day rest period in New York City. The guest of Dr. and Mrs. Roberts, at 10 West 130th Street, the other tallest interestingly of the work at Cardinal Gibbons Institute and its influence upon the surrounding communities.
Health Campaign
She told specially of the health campaigns and the improvements wrought in living conditions among both colored and white people of three Maryland counties as a result of their influence. She aptly described the situation when she said. "We went there to condemn schoolers but soon found that we were teaching the entire community." The health work covers part of Prince George County, and all of St Marys, in which the school is located, and Charles Counties embracing thirty-six communities. The program, arranged by Mrs Daniel originally covering the one week embraced in the National Association sponsored by Tuskegee Institute is intended to meet the peculiar needs of the neighborhood until it runs through two full months.
For 1927, the campaign opened February 1, and ended in conjunction with the national program, on April 10. It was a hard and thankless task at first, said Mrs Daniel, because the people were included to resent as unwarranted meddling and attempt to get them to pay more. The campaign improved their houses by paint, white wash and the scrubbing brush.
Winning The People
But tactful and sincere efforts succeeded in convincing the people that health depends largely upon cleanliness, and when the health department gave to put the advice and instruction given them into tangible improving of their homes, the white people were soon doing, one thing, this last health campaign under the active supervision of Mrs. Daniel, meetings were held in twelve central communities in addition to the meetings at the institute. More than one thousand training sessions were reached and introduced to work for improved living conditions.
An Ideal Location
The school is ideally located, its holdings embracing two hundred acres of fine farm land on an arm of the Potomar River near St. Mar Cities. The land sweeps back from the water in a graceful upward curve the lower that comes to the shore. The farm is situated at the apex of the ridge. From 13 ponds in 1924 the enrollment has grown to 60 and the curriculum includes a program of extension work in agriculture and home economics which extends to the people of the neighboring Mrs. Daniel is well prepared for this work. She was born in St. Paul but her family moved to New England while she was quite small and settled in Cambridge Mass. She attended the Cambridge Law School and afterwards matriculated at Atlanta University in Georgia. She taught at Tuskegee Institute after graduation and was employed for years ago to Mr. Daniel. She is the mother of the children.
He father William Hazel was the school architect at Tuskegee Institute for twelve years was at Howard University for four years and now commercially engaged Philadelphia. Her mother, Hazard Hazel, was the first colored teacher in Rhode Island State Normal and was the first colored teacher at Hampton Institute
Pittsburgh Pa—The Conventional Councils representing the bishops and general officers of the A M F and A M E Zion churches met in nontion session on Wednesday June 22 at which time a special commission on organation made a report of plans leading to uniting work of the two boads. Bishop W. Jones of Washoe Bishop added the Bishop L. Ather. Johnson of Phila delphia led the Bothe. Conventional Twenty seven bishops and six general officers were present presenting a million Methodists.
The Webbs In Europe
A card from Mr. and Mrs. John L. Webbs of Hot Springs Art tells of their arrival in London England and say "we are having a great time. Mr Webbs is supreme custodian of the Woodmen of Union.
Greeneport, N. O. — The Greeneboro News, in a recent issue, card a special dispatch sent from "Daily News Bureau and Telegram Office, 212 Tucker Building, high (by leased wire)", which of two white men from Polk city, arrested more than a year and convicted and sentenced to six months' imprisonment to sustaining illicit relations with a colored women, not embracing, as it does unique political situation, is just as it appeared in the Daily News. We the 17th and 18th Judicial District are called in the supreme court the appeal of Robert Ridingsdorff Cos Smith Polk County Demands from sentences of six months for non-breeding women, will be argued and the nobility of Mr. Ridingsdorff Demancy will have its chance at "judicial notice"
Tested In Woman's Home.
Tl Polk men were arrested just the year and four days ago by officers Robert Ridings was occurring the same room with Zona Howell, married and Cos Smi was in the other bedroom with Burdell Littlejohn a single Officer G. Laugher made arrest He testified that they "Rob Ridings and Zona Howell in one bed, both beddressed and onenet underclothes Ridings is a white man and married Zona Howell's husband was not at host In this testimony, the great pal service of Mr Ridings had nopeen brought out Mr Laughercontinued "In the other bed Cos who found in the bed Cos both who married man and Biddell Littlejohn Tl was in the home of Zona Howell and her husband. Her husband was awa, from home at the time All of the defendants
Gard Alabama Jail
From Mississippi Mob
Montgomery Ala.-Reports that anob was enroute from Jackson, Miss. to storm Kilby Prison and the out Walter Burley, a Negro on charges of killing a mother and daughter in Jackson, cause the authorities to augment the guard of officers on duty here Kilby Prison is a model institution its kind, and Burley was questioned from Jackson for keeping National Guardsm seventing a mob from capturing him as he was brought out of Jackson. The chief of police at Jackson engrahed Hamp Draper member of the State Board in charge of convict affairs, that a party of convict affairs, that a party of guardian but later Draper said learned by telephone from lack on that the men were spied sent to notify their friends when Burley is being taken back to Jackson for trial.
Dr. Sarah W. Brown Is Assisting Flood Relief
Washington D C—Dr. Sarah Brown alumni trustee of Howard University, the first and only woman to serve, left Washington Sunday night for the flood area where she is to assist in the social hygiene emergency program of the American Social Hygiene Association, which is being carried out in Valerian Parker Dr. Rosene Brown is assisting with the work Headquarters will be at New Orleans, La.
HEALTH IS HERE
By DR M ALICE ASSERSON
the New York Tuberculosis
and Health Association
Have A Yearly Health Examination
Have A Yearly Health Examination
Why not have a physical examination on your birthday?
If all people would make this a rule it is safe to say that they would be healthier than they now are and a great deal of sickness might be avoided.
Make it a point to go to a competent physician for a comprehensive examination once ever as regularly as you sign your waiver make out your income tax report or put on spring clothes it is important as any of these things.
If there are any physical defects your doctor will discover them. He will tell you what they are and what to do to overcome them it may be that a slight change in diet will be all that is needed Perhaps a little more rest or a little more exercise will improve your doctor will prescribe the proper treatment. It taken in time most physical impairments can be corrected and serious suffering avoided.
On the other hand perhaps your physician will find you are in an condition. If this is true quite neatly you will be glad to know that you will better be sure you are in good health than you are about your physical condition.
Make it part of your routine hereafter to have a physical examination once every twelve months.
Symbolising: Democracy.
Questioned further, about these men defendants, Sheriff Laughter repeated the great words which symbolize the Democracy of Polk. That little county has gone Republican often in 20 years, but if all the Democrats hereafter think only of their party and nothing of themselves as Mr. Riding's did, there will be no more Republicans sent to Ralston or the county capital of Polk.
"Rob Riding's said when I told him he had to go" up and get his clothes on and go to jail. "What do we mean?" and began to rub his eyes and sober up some. And when he finally realized that they were under arrest said "Look here Laughter, don't do this—it will ruin the Democracy party."
As a "Finally brethren, whatsoever things are true, honorable, just, lovely, and of good report," they had one of the grandest climaxes ever known in that country but the lawyers would not let it be even so. They had to ask another question. The element of immortality in Democracy had been segregated by Ridings wasn't bad, but wasn't bad, but wasn't even thinking about his parental husband. Domestic relations were no concern to him. His interests were too big for anything so small as these. But old Cos Smith had to shut out it. "I don't know about the Democratic party, but damned if it won't ruin us."
Solution: Will Pless did redeem the situation somewhat when he asked. They're (both of the men) right influential workers in the Democratic party, are they not? No, they are not. I have heard Ridings is, but don't know about Smith.
It is the Ridings, not the Smiths, who must carry Polk
Charlotte H. Brown On European Tour
In company with Miss Ola Glover, trained nurse, Mrs Charlotte Hawkins Brown, principal of Palmer Memorial Institute Sedalia, N.C. called for France Friday morning. The trip is to include France, Germany, Italy and Switzerland.
Mrs Brown's first formal visit in Paris will be a call upon President and Ms. King of the Liberian Republic West Africa, who are also visiting Paris, will make the trip to Europe in order to secure a much needed rest. She will enter the graduate school of Wellesley College. Mass in the fall where she has been accorded a scholarship.
Mr. John Bruce vice principal, will act for Mrs Brown during her absence.
A number of the present faculty of the school will return. Those are appointed are Rev John Bruce, vice principal R G Scott, director of high school M Bradlin M H A Davis of kindergarten, J W Drese, superintendent of industries Ms. Cooper, superintendent nurse and superintendent matron Miss Alice Epps, presi- ders department, J C Hyman bookkeeper and business treasurers Mrs V C Drake, ma- nant. Those leaving the work for the study are M P Rose W R Hill, Miss R W Withoute Mrs A Buanchi Miss Louse Hawken and Miss Fhel Williams secretary Mrs Brown. The faculty for the coming year will comprise about 10 mem- bers.
Poor Girl Is Given
2 Weeks Vacation By
Aesthetic Circle
The Athletic Club which was organized in 1922 as a general service club, audited the good Haskell this summer by giving a need two week vacation at one of the summer amps on the mountain. This club has also donated $25 towards the building fund at the New Moth A M F Z Church and to several worthy charities.
Officers of the club are: Erica Jane Brown president Edith Ferguson president Madeline Beach secretary Octavia Lottus financial secretary Alice Ferguson secretary Blanche P. Glowe president Lilia Henriques and Daisy Dash president
E. & W. TROUSERS
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ENGLISH HOUSE
145 North Street Caskill N.Y.
Mrs C MIMS Depotstreet
ALWAYS FN
Grand view of the Caskill
Mountains Light and Ary Rooma
good board reasonable rates
Trenton, N. J.—In an opinion written by Supreme Court Justice Parker, the Supreme Court awards a partial victory to the colored parents at Tombs River Ocean County who have been fighting the effort of the local school board to segregate the Negro children, refusing their admission to the modern, up-to date school building in Berkley Township
John F. Raison, one of the colored parents is the plantif, represented by Eugene R. Hayes of Asbury Park, and the white officials at Tom River were seeking to attack a wrist asked for by the colored school, which would compel resentment of their children in the Berkley school.
In the opinion, Justice Parker declared that "Where a child of school age is excluded from the public schools solely on the ground of color, and is not a question of the particular school to which is assigned as a matter of education, he sert his rights in the first instance through the proceeding provided by the school law, but resort may be had at once to mandatus."
Justice Parker has fixed July 1 as the date for filing of a reply by the Berkley authorities. Attorney Hayno retained by the N. A. A. C. P. to be imprisonable that the Berkley school board will be able to justify its action in excluding colored children.
LOCUST GROVE AND COFFEE
Mo. St. A. SPRINGS Proving
Rooms by day or week Reserv
vation for automobile and basket
vehicles 476f 6 Hillside and fi
phone 476f 16 Hillside and fi
venue. Atlantic Highland. N. J.
SNOWDALE FARM
In the beautiful Berkshire Hills of New York State offers many advantages for delightful vacation for east and sea view by express trains to Tampa, Tampa bathing, biking fishing and other outdoor sports are features of recreation.
Products of the farm furnish a variety in the table
Service combined with modern improvements and comfort creates a home like atmosphere at Sawdust Bay. Services and clubs served by appointment.
To reach Snowdale Farm by auto follow
outside White White Road.
HEY!!
SUPER
SPRING
LAKE
IS CALLING
THE ALLEN HOUSE 111% West 135th Street
Hospitality
Handicapped
Parked Boat
Pier (for access)
Accommodations
Guests
THE NEW YORK TIMES
THE NEW YORK TIMES
THE NEW YORK TIMES
In the heart of Harken—Highest Class Service—Lowest Cost.
13th ST. and SEVENTH AVE.
Phones Bradshaw 1131
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PMOMSATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1927.
‘eablegpetettattte te NR IE
:, MAKING A SHOW OF THEM.
S¥LVES.
patiro preseated on the Broadway stage,
Yusing the sesso just ended, was the
character of Fabius Maximus, a Roman
Benator in the play entitled “The Road
to Rome.” The presentétion of this fat-
“WSe etatesman in ancient costume and
eRouttttiag moder platitudes at appropri.
th fntervals, wag but a thitly veiled
tafiwatare of the politital heroes of the
Patent age. ‘The state of boredom eon-
-eeifoent upoa dally contact with such
‘Mietuons seff-eatisfaction was accentuat-
BG By the Escapade of his Grecian wile
iit seeking the society of Hannibal, the
invading Carthagenian general. The prev-
atence of this type of potitical mediocrity
Retiong Gur modern rulers and lawmakers
{a vevealed phen they make a show of
‘thenmelves.
One of the latest examples of this
spevies of self-revetation of moval and
Yatellectual deficiencies was furnished by
a former governor of Arkansas. George
W. Hays, who has an article in Scribner's
Magazine for Tune on “The Necessity
for Capital Punishment" Mr Hay» con-
tributes but litte new to the discussion
af this subject bevond recording his per-
- somal difficulties in dealing with appeals
“4ér pardons in cases where the death
penalty had been imposed. He commut-
26 one fonrth of the death sentences dur-
ing his terms as governor and registered
the belief theoretically, that capital pun-
ietment might well be abolished, “but
“petually to do away with it im our pres-
eit stage of development would be un-
wwise and Sangerous, . Mob vio~
Jetice would be tHe result.” The ex-
Governor's fatuity is most clearly re
vealed. when he drags in the Negro
question to justify the retention of capi-
‘tal pumsherent and to apologize half-
heartedly for lynching and mob law We
quote him on this point
One ot the South's most serious problems
is the Negro question, The legal system
is exactly the eamie for both white and black.
although the Idfter race 1s still quite promt
Give, and so general Colture and advancement
1 ther doath pha were be semuved
from our statute Books, the tendency 0
a tees tae ahacio protlem.
Fence mater of the race do not. maintain
same ideals as the whites They here
their own particular way of looking at life
The sometimes unexplainable fvendish
estmts of lomegrade typer of Negmes arouse
wacontrollable secrete on the part of the
white Ropolation which is followed by de
- eta s raing and Jygchings Due pro-
Hep of faw and orderly tarrying out the
. administration of justice are eliminat
ed, T trast thet my readers do not get the
iecamenn gaa "aaa
coder of justice. Bee
jAnd then tbig former governor with
wague in check, trnat, that his readers
"da nok get the false impression that the
South is a land of lawlessness and dis
seiyard of established codes ot juatice ”
‘Me euphemisgicalty terms Wnehings ‘ex
‘¥e-legal punishments by mobs.” and adds
thet “these crude deeds of retribution
‘outelda thé Taw take place largely in
_pétaller communities of the agricultural
pharecter.” Mr, Hays of course insiate
‘tit he is by no means condoning these
med tactica Bull deplores them greatly
wile noting with satisfaction thoi © hit
‘eration. The recent burning of the body
of &@ Nagro in the public streets of Little
Retk by a mob of lynchers showed that
thin obliteration is far from heing an
accomplished fact, it also negatives Mr
‘Hayw’ comforting conclusion that ‘hurn-
iagge by fire and oll. the crucifixinne and
‘gienilar eruel torments ard gone bn
‘Governor Haya endeavors to nose aw a
humanitarian in Nia aspirations for a sta
whan capital punishment can <afely be
Alapansed with, but hie apologetic arr
‘tae toward lynching is more suggentie
of humbug.
Another Southern goverhor «tv. has
tavenied the hollawnens of hin pretensions
as @ defender of the Bible © Inher 6,
Rinbards of South Carabna WV hein ve
thg the enforcemont of the law agarnst!
Sunday golf and ousting tea ner. whol
Delleve in evolution from the setw cis he!
SAVERS pee O MENTE TEN TEASE Wty
Slee Bade au eecuek Reber yeas Genk oy
GS hdl an He Buran ee Oa
| Inited: Statea-waa never moh: pabiially
pact is thelr mall cuigieags
in nent wl
er by public speéch and document, snag.
ogine articles or ffitial aetions and onuis
Fabius Maximus, as senator and dic-
tetor of Rofte, although lacking the In-
itlative and force to retain the affections
of an inconstant wile, was in his public
capacity of heroic mould compared to the
current erop of our American rulers. Ant
yot the issues of life and desth, affect:
‘ing millions, of people, are entrusted tr
men of the moral and mental calibre o!
these two Southern governots, whe have
made 2 holy show of themselves,
COMMITTING FRATERNAL HARI
KAI.
When an oriental seeks to shuffle off
this mortal coil because the ills of ex
istence have become too acute for endur-
‘ance, he takes @ sword and falls upon
‘the point so as to inflict such Injuries
that recovery is impossible This oper-
ation is called by the initiated trarikari,
and is regarded as an honorable way of
atoning for all errors or averting disgrace
J. Finley Wilson, Grand Exalted Ruler
of the Independent Order of Etks, seems
to have imbibed the itlea of harilari, as
he is trying to commit fraternal suicide.
This view of his conduct 1s based apen
the announcement that Mr Wilson, in
‘his official capacity as Grand Exalted
Ruler has definitely decided to change
‘the meeting place of the twenty-eghth
annual session from New York City to
Cleveland Ohio This meeting was fixed
at the last annual session to take place
in August in New York bot about a
‘month ago after all arrangements had
been made. plans were formed to mb
New York of the meeting, because the
local atmosphere was believed to be un-
favorable to the re-election of the preseat
Exalted Ruler
‘his violation «1 the pledged agreement
‘of the order t) meet in New York is
hound ta have serious consequences. for
those who are responsible for it Not
only has the order m this city gone to
considerable expense in preparing for the
session and for the entertainment of vis:
iting delegates hut lodges and individ.
uals in other sections have done the same
thing This abrupt change of meeting
place 1s bound to be resented by in
‘creasing the opposition to the re-elec
tion of the present Grand Exalted Ruler.
\t may even precipitate a split in. the
order. if persisted in as the commutiee
here is still planning to hold the conven-
‘tion a- originally decided
ft Innke asf Me Wilson had commit-
ted Hankar probably inadvertently by
his arbitrary action tm se¢ling = p-ctex!
to remove the session ta a more favor
able environment for his personal ends
The verdict will undoubtedly -ead
Committed suicide bs mistake.”
AN UNJUDICIAL JUDGE
judge presiding is a sou:
justice 1s supposedly deal ou
npartial hand ordinarily pre
degree ot wudieial ceserve 2
1. Not ao in Mississippr.
where Judge Walter White
county presides As told in
feapatch tm the New York
New Orleans, fudge White +
ge otwe Negroes te the penite
Ik assailed their race deem
| A judge presiding ie as ourtranm
where justice 1s supposedly deal our vor
an impartial hand ordinaris precers ec
some degree ot iudhcial ceserve ari sie
corum. Not ao in Mussissippt. in rie
court where Judge Walter White 0 Har
rison county presides As told in 9 ape-
cial despatch tm the New York World
From New Orleans, fudge White in sen.
fencing tw Negroes te the penitentars
bitterly assailed their race despite the
fact that there have heen three lynch.
ange 1 his Stare on ths months an on
‘other was impending ludge Where was
quoted ar fll
The Negeees Mare go looking t+
trauble Thee ay arms the mer ceva
vers she women arore Wher one com
mits a crime the whole Nagro communis
Protects him On the contrary, when s
white man commits a cnme br neighbs 1s
deliver hem to the law
Of course thie learned judge did not
stop to consider that by his untudictal
utterances he was increasing the racial
friction and meiting hia white fellow cit
izeme to further acte nf Iveching and
mob violeneg, A farmer were + the
Mnited States Supreme cous once de
fined Iynching as murder \ne 6 en on
the legal lexicon of the Mrasiaaippy jude
lary murder +s 2 crime
Ap cnteresting comment on the news
despatches from Missiaaippr anenr the
flands and Warhing wat found in ar ed
arias on the Alancheater Conn i vening
Herald Contrasting a stars of the quer
herovem nt the egroes all over rhe vast
aubmerge! arene with the Bender eouel
tyont a Magoanm mal on harm ag at
the stakes Negr accused at merle the
calito he Mees cant
Ie ars ia FS OR Sats
af prapie = qh am oF gas
PR ew aes bh Nace he
white a Oe emg. et he supes cae
the Say hy th gee almost 8 gr a
where hes as ude tha eh guesiae
A questian nn lenge
Never ser amang as che ieee rok
waieh cha Sowtherm Blacks are azcused have
aac! Ga Soa pie
hh i i
it to ouch © edacliaton 96 indicate
But the conduct: of uth hates
‘Walter White can only-cerve td quatily
multiply such sonelapong me -viavt
unprejudiced observers Soins Wie
avermufs the conclusiod “ab irrelevant
tronamting from a “damyenkee”, at
would doubtiess plirive it; ‘but on an
to the court of public opinion, it
it be sustained.
ee,
EU KLUX WHIPS WOMEN.
ipping women appears to have be-
a regular part of thk midnight rev-
lof the Ku Klux Kian {n Georgia, tht
of the grand dragon of the revived
of reconatruction times, And these
alatyied protectors of the honor of
ern womanhood do not, as in the
confine their infliction of erueiti¢s
tack women. but take as victims wo-
of thet own race end color. But let
ssociated Press tell the story of
brplity as it came from the little town
offeccos, Ga:
all town gosnp, thought to have ori-
ated. with af wold man'sin the commu.
finally reaped cighty-two blows deross
a's bare, Back, ‘The story of Mrs
ley Bowers told of an attack on her and
iheen-yesr-ol6 son has led to the arres!
four men and to a charge laid at the oor
the Ku Kiux Klan
rom» hospital bed in Gainesville, Ga.
here, Mrs, Bowers told newspapérmen
af ewelve men in thres automobiles calles
er home late last Sunday night, forced
B]to accompany them to @ lonely road an¢
th beat her four times Her son, Floyd
taken, too, she sald, and beaten whet
tabried out agemnst her asnailants
hese men are all members of the hi
Klan there is no doubt aboat 1,” Mrs
Bore declared to newapaptrmen. “They
wh the Ku Klux Rlan waiform and threat
eng to brand the letter "K’ on my back un
legi left town”
tan Bedtord, Forrest. Grand Drage
offe Ku Klux Klan in Georgia, replied tc
M4 Bower's assertion with a siatement i
whh he said: “If ant member of the Ke
Kig Klan took part in the Toccoa flog
sinkhe Kian will do its wtmogt to send fir
to & State penitentiary” Forrest said tha’
the} was a local kien in the viernity of Toc
soaput that Re thought that men “whe
confitied this dastardly outrage posed.
Kiagmen ro throw the blame on rhe orgau
wat
Thehospital surgeons stated that tht
lower fart of the woman's body was al
most fryed It was also stated tha
after © artack on Mrs Bowers hecam:
knownltwe other women disclosed de
tails ofsimilar outrages committed upor
them [The authorities attributed’ thes:
attacksto a hooded band. actuated by
“storie? “gossip” and “insinuations.
Hiatory}would warrant the behef tha
KaKluasm fosters the growth of mora
perversin, with an onclmation towar
sadistic practices Why any <pecime:
of aorfal Amencan manhood shoul
want toblly himself with such an organ
tzation 4 the Klan is heyond sonceptior
Memberpip in the Klan should be re
garded aconveving the stigma of sadist
MR.AHOOVER ON THE JOB
| When} was annuunced tha Secretary
Hoover Bd appomted aX auxthary com-
mittee tajeceive eritiersms and make nec-
essary adkatmenta in caring for the Negra
fiend refikees The Age commended his
action ash wise provision provided the
committed was allowed a free hand im
ite work |Judging from the first recom.
mmendatio| made bs this body ths ap-
rears to th the ease and ote --steisms of
unfair tregment promise to hring about
[needed imrovements in this regard.
The invptigation prosecuted iy this
lenmmittce involved travel through the
|finoded districts by das and might par-
raking + fhe same fare ac the refugees
[Thirty canbe were visited and the out
standing fai was revealed that the Na
Itronar Red i race hae heer eminently
just on its orders and pracnices ie ner
forming thd gigantic task of rescue and
houeing Where unfair treatment of the
refugees wal reported the blame was put
squarely upd the local Red (ross com
mitiees somfpsed of white teens ot the
community These individuals on the of
stances Aind acted of mig se crated the
policy of ce Red Crass tm ant them
delves The gaye aut clathing and an
ples according te their tex ate
Negroes needed rathes chan shar rhe
national organ zation had order the ¢
conditions vere noted by the active direct
ing head ot Red Crass Rehet and machin
em cet or maran hange them
Among ove hinge reding /areecwon
werk he emer ot bere milena from
More camps where thes arcied rifles
the pracssin af proper macing facidities
at campe where thes were acing or ons
adenuate and the formation of anxiharies
ampere ot recnred men aad Women in
these on where thes ae oot altendy
fametes 4 Frome sen tepnrted
the bee she amie eS *
tous * Loon woot
MR Wane tems eth at
0
had aceumet the role st 4 -tatar and 6
sued peremptory ordere aflecting Negro
THE AGE READERS’ FORUM
Pelkey rae ees Sent.
Ma i alien
Gans APE ep teen
Sho babtion firba, be eat hbe
parcidilly, = =. :
Tht cotmitittes feet that
Secretary Haover aud the
eee ROAAE officials OF the
Red Crdea"kave obtained, suf-
Gelent insight Inti: the. situa.
ion to. devise prectical plans
for thé rebabilitatia of the
refugess, with an improves
wient of the whole ayatem ins
wolviag plantation — owntra,
tenants’ mod small farmers, Te
wes algo féle that Mr, Hio-
‘Wer's attitude was sympathet
‘ic and ‘that he regarded ‘con-
ditions es both uneconomic
and unfair, It is expected
that a Way will be found te
aasure the tenapts and smal!
land owners of help and sup
port until a new crop is made
Ninety per cent. of this class
are Negroes, so the import
ance of these plane for direc:
aid to be given them ag mani
fest
Emphasis has been laid up
on the fact that thé Rad Cros:
Bootlegger Said To Be
An Accideat “Chaser”
New York, June i” bye?
Bator of The New York Age
T was advised to call your at
teatron to the following | corrupt
work that 1s being conducted, de-
grading the legal profession and
tempting others connected with
the City Departments
Nadhan R Steinberg, residing at
1500 Eant 172nd street The Broan
is employed by Attorneys Fliaab
tick & Sustick 1440" Broadway
New York Cay to encourage
clams against various maurance
and raiiroad companies He bas
fall exist io Preece) N toeat
cd at West—strett also to the
Hocatea at West—street
i The abave mennoned precincts
tarnish steinberg with a complese
Bintter report of the injured. Thr
said Stenberg then calls upon
them apd represents himselt tv be
a lawyer, sent there by thr Police
Department, and under those cor
ditions obtains the sigaatares «0
retainers and “Transcripes
‘OF course he pays for obtarmng
this information the same author
ies connected with the depart
ments, he also chases around witt
his automobile, seeing some uot
form men on their Beats, paying
those men co much for each repor
given him His plate teens
umber sth 9840 New York
‘The following amas and ad
drecwes lanea Martin 2824 Sev
enth avenue New Vork (ty
Sadie Sogn, 14 Bast 13d
sireet New Yawk City are to can
Mince Ou my areneatior agains
said Steinberg, and it vou will
vestigate this matte through th
Nand Precinets. sen wl tan
several hundred cases <1 the am
nature
The above mentioned Stender
conducts ai the presen me
dootlegging _cstablizhmen: inde
the oame Fike’ located narth
west rotee 7th avenur and 14Te
Mreet, whee was arrested a pun
[ber of ses and qu wall find h
record a che US Distnes &
jemeees sce New Dork tars
and alse in Broaklyn and v0
[cam see that he gerform: this wor)
[to cover up hs underworld acy
witien He was emploved by th
| Metronetean Life Insarance (¢
bur they sane Asseavered Ris mo
Juve and dismissed him of th
ground of being a dootlegger
Tam sure vou will give thes mat
Tier ‘neers and personal atrentio
fand will deoamatice om at en
jrermed
Thanking vow 1 an
Your over ow
\
Nom DIT Ew
(ore pert cannes
The American-Born Negro
And His Foreign Brother
Edior ot The New New Vork Ape
Yonr pape: represents 3 cervonsty
unfortunate people But rhe mit
foesune «the result at ther a
aevas Aad nein eros ate the oe
sult ab agnorance and eres cavern
meme, Rime mlaght teem strane
mening conn Beart the pene
Fyreater New Vork Dat there sow t
shold ant aeranith ya mare tus
the actua ‘note all arount
every day
ust look aout emu and see ot tne
foreign hare ralored penpie ett no!
me # pengresine op che ssholt thar
the Armenear nen cninrh cenpie
Whe ee fined thas thr oars chats
fer ur hideen art farted 9
teachers At foreign dieth and trae
tng And in mons pact hey came
from eountries st faye meant chan
DEUS A Shke escel woes oe 46
MAM. wave thay thes Han emin th
Tooke dew es pom vont eat A syst as
Well ay the wh te neon 1 Ratt ne
tive apd fareger fart Inn atvange
to em ever Shee tad te get ae vat
cae yah catperge ere
wae Ws
se wel
Ninpligencr 1 ane os the peineins
A the otios Auees saverauanens
Annther sadnlenes anavheranlausy
another and !Scheace own ae
aia eR tram SRA Rene ERA
voce any ee
pe to. di’ -bbbd jahope xe
tbe af whe, Stallisey ebtninit
tes Of whlch (De ‘Norga is
chairman. pies eee E.
Jones of the. jat
opal Chuteh’ was ststed c
vich #bairman and. the com
mittee haa béehengmented by
the additin' of fesding citi.
zens in the region affected by
the flood.
‘With this uncompromising
attitude on the part of the
active heats of the Red Croxi
against harmfal discrimina
tion, alded by the vigilance o
an ayziliary comntittes of th
character indicated by theli
report, there is every reaser
to feel that the needs of thi
refugees will be fairly ant
faithfully served. Our peopl
in all sections of the country
will do well to contribute t
the good work undertaken b;
the Red Cross and carried ou
upon such a broad basis o
equitable treatment of all thi
sufferers, without distinctior
of color or creed.
qrandivement at the unjust expense of
others, tk another of these vices.
whieh’ are all born of igndrance and
nucsed in stupidity and cowardice.
winch uy handed down trom ont gen
jerction to another as an inheritance
‘of the barbaric ages. And instead
ot arying to smgronc. yourselves there
ja 4 atreng tendency to hinder um
provements .n and by nthers?
| Orbereise why should suppased!s
learned Negroes encourage segrega
‘tuo of the race ir a democratic coun
jtry like the U.S A> Why do they
persiat wn separate public schools for
[colored Asmerican childten® Do these
things help or hinder the future gen
eration? Whats a schoo! for if
‘not to help the pupils 10 prepare
for the future competitive siseaties
or hfe and therefore te develop. all
thar us high and good in them The
“preacher seems to think that the
lchurches are only to give them ad
jeasy 10d, and many af the schoo!
teachers imowing their incompe
Itener fight for separate schools ne!
for she benef of better developing
the mands and other tain qualities ir
the pupils out cather te give there
certain easy. 10b>
Of courte. in those Souther
1 States thes soliet the ad of the
‘equally backward minded orhite peo
[ple upon the ground at prinble socia
equality which. as they sas would
terminate in the colored raer getting
married t white women and thu!
Blotung our the aistinetion of rate
Tro the extent diay ae hody wautd
Fike servant of others’ In this the
Vare as far wrong as che Afneat
views are in these of Furape Whfel
can only be vuetly explained be th
fact that the Africans have tas an
only their persona heres hut thy
ground upon whieh thes ts ce th
Eurnpeane
[There muuch wlan up
Tene arhaginatinn + she ratored ehl
abour thing sw miehs at vet easly
Spier se 8 an ioe Tile.
tenting: =< fad rearing hese
stern tarte about evavdas he oon
se requirements Thnce whe advec
calnred pene t6. de differen: 1 al
cahes people de ne show high wate!
ene eo peagrascse chaught Th
few sO at cau mul be aie «
dea wel and chen ony weed
Rov as ote there <9 utetn arto
seenes op whieh pinned Amenca
hat proves a gout compete mur
leas 9 coaster
Burt the: were nelped snaten
ot hindered bs ther people and per
mitted to vompete upon equa term
mh school thev would Nave heen be
ter hi +a compete in practical hfe
The white man -« not naturally su
Vgerion te one Negre t KE ve eve
Sse nepared er the wvhite cht
he wes amt emenuraged shee oh
Mace oe hindereet and disanie
Sted rey Node Ant 8 se thy
which makes Rien a stubhurr one
be bemins tv balk! Believing shay «
Se) wee ee eyed ie 4
should hase Me aghe ump es
J amioy the Nenefire of che tam® unde
simmilae andi oe ae others
| 7 OMAARE
De eee
| A New High Water Mark
igrosnanainy Me anes Nowe
Paes eal, Nie Oy
oagarel Ss A Rha ake
Fb a “Gamelan “Sem
Tost pce ee
nadtibent Heinen, illera
a STO ee
Se eiilion iM gopeinge. al
ante cette te, Lae
| Wik RAL hE QGAA
Soa athe ee oe
oe Ngdtecuer’ sheng ine? SE
‘
a or
Lecinteasey (wan, dai eke! Gye &
MiMcting: ogres abgphinat see
AV hae CTE TNA ’
ON ave OF OR one
ee EID, re ne son te rn ES
Ths Gary Comtmenincalth, which
wabiuabingly eimenes the sib-utlh
i gd as va co
paper? bi has & cinch 00
eity advertising. Oyer four‘ colues
cn, We ack. MO OT o resent bce
‘were filtd with: lexal notices, reiét-
ing mostly to begrings and
ordered ty the Bont ot uk
[Works ‘The same iste carried a
portrait of the major on tha ret
[page with an fecoant Of the approv
‘dof plans for a new omunietpal batt
ing, Corporation advertising i fat
to be despised and tha Commoxuwaith
undoubtedly givts full value for tye
monty, an one of its box titlhs boest
that “Commonwealth ida bring sre
rebult.” More prosperity to “Le:
diana’s Greatest.”
Under the orginal slogan “Let's
fook to Brfdie for atlp, the Flor
tdo Last Coest Dispatch, phblished
Miam urges its readers to fala
pouitry for local markets It sald:
Ont may begin here with very bt
tle equipment, carrying poultry as
sideline for a few months until pro
Goetion has reached a self sustaining
point. Thus little capital 1s required
One of the most successful poultry
men that we know started with 20
baby chicks, knowing acthing of th
Dusineas, save what he obtained from
the editor and {rom Inerature whic)
was nbtained free A vear later thi
young man was selling 600 exgy pe
week not en unusual performance
Gand habs chicks an be purchase
for from twenty to thirty dollars pe
hundred Orhe: Sands may be he
for teas
The poultrs dunineis offers 90
only an extellent source of income
Dut the work tw tascinating. health
ful and educational
The climate the sod and market
"ang ronditions are conducive to sue
Jeers Mans Negre wormen, as wel
ay men can find independence con
tentment health and prosperity vi
the Inwls biddie Orher people ar
finding 1" dails
' That sounds tthe practieal advic
j trom one who bmows what he t
‘aateioa about Bur chicken rast
requires the same industry aed appl
Veanor ae any other business
| mptanewg, ihe teeny fo
|ewimming pool as 2 oteded conven
[ee the Savannah Tribune sard
|_Sarah ears age city council a
fected to provide a swimming px
‘fer Negroes + was located an th
[sezirm, portion ot the itn gs
tion which war vers undesirable fe
‘uch a comeumity coavemence end «
[Saath alate in cehabilano
‘ns among Negroes in floods
jaca ‘want so the same cone
[ier Eedmond got wanted
Vine gesernor of Mississino: 1
fee eon cebambtason work
cause ne os @ Negro
TE rare urna. 1h fon
Jae ame ae thay Nese orga.
GOR: are interested ip rehiet wort
|e thar a large proportion af tho:
whe need ansistance are Negroe
Tea Pkewise aseles 9 porat
Fyne ada tional fact phar those at
arr marked aught and day
onded ind threatened areas has
te stinughs ar che nunr the Bi
frets > shou ands danger on
Pe Rae ake as caver the cour
teak Mae ane tmed fore
ver taguirel ahethe thes we
gene are he persone
Negra 8 se aee a e
Sie an ep ite ae
apateren Maric himeett
shop any RiRE wate: mark an en
“a arenganre
Se Se a eee
The Aiken Lynching
| From the Spartanburg Journal
Months has* paserd timer the
three Lawman. were lynched and
Seuth Carobne as and user
rutraged and ome keen, Meine
reese The oer eoardly sand
ee ie Wlnincet Oty
Kowe'si itltammeloe ane” inhete
yh es gre oe.
whethe ie ews: Bask *
damn: Ss AE casey aad
God Sends Us Men
mS 2 ARE
e 8 aie x id) san
“§
fea ok OF EE
‘8
Mere) 6 ae ot
a
Ye gee
Mad) a wee my Re,
es
rc a re eo
as ua daa uh
SNe me Kort onus *
sa it wad sot gtoerally paren
oe oe ie abou, tour
ere ahage ‘ei to this foot
jand bauebsneis acd since then ve
Jeaek gos bigrd of any effors ng
ease shother
A welling: pod hs co te
redegnitivg Qf 4° modern city and
wakes prrogly Add swoduet
ae ‘ convenience
lebrops of Savannth are tty
fin weed of auch a cotvenience
not in auch a cipseahy as the ne
which was destroyed by fire toe
located in @ stttlon éimilar to we ag
‘Réckwell streat pool would 0. ne
Jeonductive to the best moral iniereit
jo the community.
‘The aity countil, was called anor te
Wook into this matter and mabe vrop.
Jer provisioo fér all citizen a: sy.
venoth, All of which furnishes an
‘other example of how the \egro
[press gacels to serve its constiuency
fy minor ab well Ba major cause:
Concerning whe mooted question as
to whether white people read Negrs
newspatprs. we reproduce the follow
tt from une editorial colar +1
the Richmond Planes:
Ose ,teitbat seanatepacary, The
lewport News, tar, wndez the
aptioa of “White Peosie sad’ Ree
Papers,” in te isaue of May teh
mays
“Our tant John Mitchell. «of
the Richmond Planet, says the if
there are any people 10. unsophaty
cated 3s ‘are win the ane
peaple do tot know what we say in
our papare they should men he
to testify to the contrary He says
that about twenty-five years ago he
wrote an editorial which was com
atratd as 2 refigetion upoa one of the
judges of our State for 2 deciuo
tendered by him and thar ina few
days after the publication of hi
scien he was nesumantd Stet
}ime sald sudge for contempt of hu
court, Brother Mitchell det not
record what the judgment ot the
Jeourt was, Out ha does say tht BF
{has not done it again”
‘The Judge emered an order éit-
Jrmssing the proceedings aftr aa
Jattorney hed taxed os Afty aoitars
for drawing 2 paper that we could
have written ours#lves vt 4
catored editor 1s “hving sr a foots
paradite.” #0 to speak. whe> he om
agines thar he can cas wha he
J pleases in the columns oF it cur
nal and that the white folks won't
think enough of st to read
_] There have deen other Negro ain
jfors in Arkansan, Tennesses en
Jtucks Nath Carnhna ant ane
-Jsouthern states, who could fe
Tequally convinéng testimony vo tht
{same effect.
: sass
1} Or AL) Brerson wrsung tron
Lancaster SC. an the Afri
| Amercan Presbyterian, detiare ts
the greatest incubus 6a Negrete
cation today 1s incompetence of the
"Toart at the teachers He coed a
Yoog sndictment by anak’
CJ} As a result os this deficiency 0@
[the side of the NegroS teacher
eliarge per cent of thave coming x
Jor mur seheols, whnee promise 204
PYedvancement 1s condinonal ot
"Litterary test aiow a seriour tak ot
exact knowledge on cmquiced
sugned eubiectn or os altpgerye
[Mar ve many + sur yours wo
| ple eer satisfied werk aarface sere
lend supseficial raining ant
“View are entending then ores a
inne devon these ofr
Fe would ahock vere mar ot +
sfed prople of they anes Mm
fandonante at Pye Negrete
who can mor make a career oasih
‘report to say nthing ME
iteris grortny ot making *
annua report
Tem pital
efncational statis of on >
plate people apa whate eet
Glow the easy ser decenrve
tleeif-comptaccnty elt sats ay:
SJand seit Matters Lee ot
Tie ce forget ant na *
a}one ees and love ow
S| the editor at ine ce :
| feceng 10 Le bsersar ~
peture aad Ne ose ”
nnsis wtueh seein +
‘Tape he bad af ane a
S| mney ses rele .
[on des ease
tM Paw Fo
* | casas raearded the +
Whe te States
[RRReR) Seating: ONE “ORE ”
The age sae on
ae a Mame
shoe Se
a
tec eimes te
Rae tig me
Rane ase one
wa | ae a we
eee aMtene 5,
eis
woe me
rar
the downpour of rain,
on Sunday were not well
At 11 a.m. the junior
red by W. H. Town-
nell in full. They
colleagues were
delivered by the pas-
H Suma, on the subject
of God's Way.
daily schools and B. P. Y.
preparing sessions. 3:30
morning Sites preached at
the service of the Metro-
Raptist Church, Dr. W. W.
pastor subject "The Power
Word"
we listened to the asso-
lations Rev. James R.
who preached from the
The Half Has Never
queen Miller who has
an orphanage in Staun-
was the pulpit guest of
ing. At the close of the
he gave a brief address
her work in Staun-
an after offering was
in the day amounted
Rush Memorial Church
the inclement weather,
number of friends, and
were present at this 11
service last Sunday to
Olivia need to be
eighteen years of pastoring at
year
The junior chore's singing of the Slow Hour of Prayer seemed to be the way and prepare the heart to those who made their way with the cold and dreary rains to receive the message when Oliver brought to them. The subject of his sermon was Prayer. Matthew 6:6 "Prayer," said the speaker, "should be far more intimate, and detailed. Prayer is a wrought wonders, but they must be properly directed—after the praising is not necessarily long graving but more so, when it is short and sincere. The impression of prayer, carefully and thoughtfully made is like long. Prayer must always have a cohesive way we must associate with the faithful prayers and with the faithful service of the Boy Scouts, under supervision of Mr. Avendale, emailed at 3 p.m. and listened to helpful session by Dr. Oliver. The 8 o'clock service was pleasurable. Rev E A Abbott of Cheraw delivered the message
Sunday is Children's Day
spare an exercise at 2 p.m by the
school
St. Mark's M. E. Church
I W Robinson, pastor who
praised at 11 o'clock delivered
a successful sermon from 1936
Brains 18 years. Beneath of the
envelope, weather the audience
was not as large as usual
4 of clock the pastor preached
at the Epworth M F Church in
the Bronx
Sunday school was well attend
ed. After next Sunday it will
occur in the morning for the
reminder of the summer
The assistant pastor delivered
the sermon at 7:40 p.m to a large
audience
St. Paul Baptist Church
the week went
past the prawn
turned into a
Friday night
The services of the week went
a nice way. B Y P U On
Wonder day night, the prayer
which was turned into a
meeting Friday night,
attended.
The evening ovenant was
used with the pastor leading
begop. Where Do You Stand?
The afternoon on an third
begop was given over to the
M A S C O R Y which held a
meeting.
The evening the pastor having
turned from the N F B M
made a report of what
he had heard there. He then
The Open Door.
and quarterly rally of the
place new Sunday
First Emanuvel Church
clock service Pastor
and art inspiring me
many assembled His
for God sent not His
world to condemn the
that the world through
saved St John
The Purpose of the
he said. The attentions
words of our Lord
to Emmanuel and
a specific relation
and moral life of
the only has tended
to the purpose of
giving thought pro-
ple of man
that he has not
attention of be-
bith of the mean-
man and human ex-
peare that at the
will and be
present one a
that he and is
essentifying itself
in humanity. Because
they are able to
please new helpful
threats, create
life and engage
in comment
becoming
realism ap-
pusiness
with the com-
pany that has
nations, the
means by which this world burial program is carried on tends towards international friendship and unity of the human family. Histoire political and religious blasses such as is seen in the great nations and religions of the world, and in the radial and class group religious compassionness, among the leaders of these religions, is in direct opposition to the purpose of our Lord Jesus Christ the Emmanuel's business in this world.
For he came into the world, not to condemn the world but that the world through him might be saved. Through his human life experience, death, resurrection and ascension the world of humanity and natural order has been saved. That is. He had the power and understanding of adjusting the world to the eternal purpose, and bringing the life manifested in the world in harmony with the will of His Father God. And the Holy Spirit's presence here in human consciousness will help and teach believers the truth that they have had basked upon them the gift of eternal life. And that they have been transformed from the limitations of the thought of a human being into the consciousness as children of God, heirs and joint heirs with our Lord Jesus Christ the Emmanuel. They foresee we ought to make the very best use of our opportunity to glorify God in our bodies by cheerfully serving each other living true to our higher selves obey the law of the Spirit of Life in as glorifying the Emmanuel by yielding to the Holy spirit who manifests Him in so that the continuity of His purpose in saving the world flows down through posses
At the Sunday school was opened by the assistant superintendent, Mrs. Maggie Johnson. A review of the lesson was given by the paired. At the evening service, Mrs. Gregory of the Baha Movement spoke Many Fans friend attended this service Pastor Bolden also spoke Mrs. Gregory's subject was 'Praver. Dinner was served during the day. At close of the evening service Dr. Bolden preached a charm funeral service over the remains of Mrs. Lynn at Mrs. Jane under taking establishment.
Grace Congregational Ch
Rev A C Garner has been out of the city attending meetings for a part of three weeks, but returned last week and or upied in paint both to Children's Land and Father's Day. A beautiful service was given by the Church School on Children's Land and the pastor gave a short illustrated talk. The dearnesses of the hurt gave a show of goodness to Dr. and Mrs. Garner in their return to the city. Mrs. Garner from the funeral of relative in the South and Dr. Garner from the National Council at Omaha Neb. The pain and tears were deigned with a spirit of goodwill. Many folks were left at the memorial and when fine cakes and ice cream in attendance gave refreshment to the mourners. Dreamers listen to Dahl Holt Porter Ribb Roe Harrison chambers and Strick had hard of the affa
new members who are interested in leadership in peace
Church, Mrs. M. and Mrs. A. All
Chairman, Mrs. Fitz Hunter and Mrs.
Lenora, Mrs. Rita M. Beard
Mrs. Rita M. Beard Per
Lisa unda a short address was made
Philip Randolph
sermon in the Brotherhood of
Sleeping Cat Porters was postponed on account of weather
The baptism of infant John Perry took place at the morning service on Children's Day. He was born of John and Rose M. Perry
On Thursday night last the violin school of Anthony Fagella held a mosaque at Grace Church, Miss Ruby Green contralto and Miss Irene Sanders pianist assisted on the program. Those taking part were Constance James, Samwond Wes Arthur, Wes Philip Harvey Fred H. James Horne Floyd Teen was a delightful evening for children and friends
Mother Zion Church
Last Sunday was children's Day at Mothor. Our church services were conducted in the living room. Dr. Browne spoke upon Children Day the cause of Education.
The Pastor was the preacher of the main auditorium at 11 A.M. His sermon subject was The value of Samuel. At the close of the course two persons united with the church.
The funeral services of Mr. Sir Chase of class No. 8 were held at Oakleak.
There were goodly number of members present at the church on 2 October.
At 4 p.m. there was the final program of the I.C. Fraser Lyxum for the season was held. Organ curta by Leon Adger organi and chemist Lafayette. Presbyterian Church Jersey N.J. assisted by the choir of Lafayette presbyterian Church
At 8 p.m. Special Children's Day
program was held by all department
under the direction of Miss Mary
Martin and Miss Mabel Bee.
R H Henderson as master
monies. An address was made by
D Steele.
Friday praise and praise service
West end. Rath Day 10 to
am 10. 11 a.m. M
name and form of ladies
The Dail national Bible School
opens on Tuesday July 5 at 9
am.
The sick Hatter Hammelwood 220
West 131 street Lola May Bellevue
Hospital Berrica Jarnau 50 West
129 street. Mara A Green. 251 West
WHERE TO GO TO CHURCH
Bridge St. A. M. E. Church
"The Rich Young Ruler" was the sermon topic of the pastor, Dr. Edward Ernest Tyler, at the morning hour. His text was St. Mark 10:22. "And he was sad at that sarcism, and went astray gravely: for he had great possessions." Dr Tyler stressed the danger of riches and other earthly possessions, such as place, power and great intellectual power, and stated that despite these possessions all can enter the land of the blessing and providing we obey the divine laws. Despite the inclement weather there was the usual large congregation and they were aroused to a high degree of religious fervor by this solendid sermon
At the evening hour Dr Tyler filled the pulpit. He is preaching at both services despite his strenuous pastoral duties which is done all alone, for this church has no assistant pastor. This is done with an eye single to increase the attendance at the evening services, for with him in the pulpit the members and officers will have no excuse for not attending the evening service. He spoke on the subject "The Advent of the Holy Spirit." The test was Acts 24. Several persons joined the hurried one of whom was a woman who was accused by the power of the sermon that was delivered.
During the summer months Dr Tyler will deliver a series of Sunday morning sermons on "Great Character of the Old Testament."
At the evening service he will deliver a series of sermon dealing with the Acts of the apostles.
Sheam Presbyterian Church
The morning hour at Siloam the paste Rev George Shippen Stark taking his test from 1 Corinthians 2 2 gave his discourse upon Christ as the saving power of the world. The great dominating motive and spirit of every one's life should be to make known Christ the Christ that was crucified. Bible School meet in session at 1:15 p.m.
THE NEW ABSYSSIAN BAPTIST
CHURCH, 1328街, between PtB &
Leonard avenues Sun 11 am
and PtB & Leonard avenues
Sunday School 1:30 pm 7:30
pm. Bible School 8:30 pm m. General
prayer meeting m. Sunday School
LAYTON POWELL,
cor. 1194 West 1328街, Phase A,
bus 1194
MOUNT OLIVET BAPTIST CHURCH
201 Leonard Ave, Rev William P Hagen
D D Parker Rev J Raymond Heap-
don
and 7:30 pm m. Library School
p. m. B Y P U. 1:20 pm m. Loom-
ston, 2nd Sun. m. Dorcas
m. Library, Work B. 6 pm. m. Church
Aid Society, Work B. 6 pm. m. Eve.
Prayer Meeting, Pri. Evans 8 pm. O.
Public House, Layton POWELL, 1018a
METHODIST SPISLOPA:
RUSH MEMORIAL A M F I O N
CHURCH 580 W 800 G Re
M O L I S V E D D D E S t a r e r e s i d e t a r e
W 101st S A p a P h o n e A l s 100
Sun School - early morning at
Sunday and preaching at
m and p Sun School
p and p Sun School
Purse library and Historical Assoc
a 50 p Thursday evening at
Vanach F Society 800 Clio
Meeting Turre F Date meeting
FRESDYTERIAN
ST JAMES & BRYTEBIAN HURCH
(in new location St Nicholas Ave
113rd St Br. W. L. L. L. L. M.
Pasadena Sun
weeb on Girl Club and
Girl Club
Birds Light Shine
Sun
Avenue and
Sun
Sun
the公益 of the mike fund fund the hikerguard at the Silent Daily Varsity Gible School. Dr. A. Von Bauer, of the Maxwell Training School for Teachers, epubls on "The Child and His Imagination." Musical numbers were rendered by members of the Maxwell School. Next Sunday afternoon at the vesper service 4 o'clock Arthur A Schomburg will tell of his recent travels in Spain. Flowers in the church Sunday were in memory of the late Elder John Jckh given by Mrs Oliver and family. Among the ack of the church are Mrs. Mary F Wood, 29 Marion street and Mrs. Flosse M Monroe. 470 Carlton avenue.
Fleet St. Memorial
A. H. E. Zion Church
Amid the heavy rainfall on the past Sabbath morning and the deepening gloom throughout the day, the services were eagerly sought by a large number of earnest worshippers. All services were good and highly spiritual. The sermons at the morning and evening hour were delivered by the pastor Rev W C Brown. Quarterly meeting warhead at three o'clock and Holy Communion was administered. Rev H E Blount pastor of Ralph Avenue A M E Zion Church was the speaker, and his choral gave the music. This day marked the beginning of the eighth year of passionate of Rev Brown and taking all of the work of the church into congregation it is evident that this organization is still on the upward trend and efforts have been put forth already to make this the colossal year
The Pastor left the city on Tuesday morning to attend the Connec-
tional Council in Pittsburgh. Pastor to return before the next Sabbath.
Dr. Wrine a representative from the Lord's Day Alliance, will deliver a message to Sunday evening June 26.
At three o'clock Sunday afternoon, June 26, the Dunbar Celebration, under the auspices of Brooklyn Lodge. No 32 will take place at this church. A splendid program has been arranged, and
AFRICAAN METHODIST EPISCOPA
BENETAL M E CHURCH - 32-90 LB
123d St Rev Henry K. Spearman
D pausan Residence 22 W 123a St
S Church 10-45 Sabbath School 9 A
C A League 5 p m. 8 free services
1.43 HA Commutation Irsst Class
mages lights Love Peas 2
Friday nights
CONGREGATIONAL
GRACE CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
OF HARLEM, 301-310 W 199th St.
Rev A. C. GARNER, pastor. Sun. Sinn.
Rev A. C. GARNER, pastor. Sun. Sinn.
Rev A. C. GARNER, pastor. Sun. Sinn.
11 a. on Young People at 6 p.
Practicing at 6 p.
Miss Marge at 6 p.
Wed. Church Might 8:15 p.m. moth
services in Bulletin
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
DAILY SECOND SEVENTH DAY
ADVENTIST CHURCH 109 109
14th St. Hour of services Fri. 9
10:30 a.m. register in church 10
Bible study 9:30 a.m. sabbatical
12:00 p.m. Missionary 4:00 p.m. young
People Sunday 4:00 p.m. Special Ad
vice 12:00 p.m. Preaching. M C
UMAHAN, Pasco
CATHOLIC
BROOKLYN
LEG: ST MEMORIAL PIRCE
UN CHURCH 4422 BRIDGE
WILLIAM BROWN 10
CALLED IN 1900
AMONG CONFESSION
SCHOOL
1900
1900
HIHIRH the same time and
average Brooklyn borough
tight to parish New York
city on the East Side of
Brooklyn
meeting wednesdays at 8:30 a.m.
open on Sunday and commence
on 10:30 a.m. social hour including
study
evening services
Bronxian transit station
Bronxian
transit station for Troy avenue station
The church will lay the
church on the East Side of
Brooklyn and move there Seventh Street
events place and train station
ALIAM PREBRIEVIAN HIHIRH
and PARISH HOUSE at alstreet Ave.
broadway and Franklin Ave Bryan
N. REGOROR SHIPPEN STARK
Tetra 2013 Presbyterian
High School in High
Hour
adjudging
parish
opening
up to week
commence
weeks Wed
on communion
in G Stucco Park
in Greenwich Village
in Woodland Park
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
Hinneese Cong. Church
The Rev. Dr Henry Hugh Prochior filled his pulpit at both services Sunday. At the morning hour he beep on "The Power of Co-operation" and showed how cooperation was the law of life, and competition the law of death. At the evening hour his theme was "Bound in the Spirit". He held that his three great heroes were Jesus Paul and John Brown. The church is in the midst of a campaign for $10,000 as the final payment to secure title to the new building.
The pastor broadcasted over W.B.C. Sunday afternoon. The choir was assisted by Mrs Rebecca Norcom and Misa M. C Pennybacker as solosist Miss Muriel Proctor was at the piano.
Dr Proctor will speak next Sunday morning on "The Miracle of the Raising of the Daughter of Jairus. There will be a final rally of the building campaign on Sunday evening, with an address by Dr Huert Hahrison
Concord Baptist Church
Nature was not so kind on last
Sunday. In the early morning
rain fell and winds blew and mans
were drenched in rain. Sunday gu
went to bed.
Concord had the smallest number of persons abe ha had an morning service for the year. In spite of the small number press on the message was one of much interest and inspiration. Dr. Channing H. Tobias senior secretary of the International M. A was the speaker. His subject was The History of the M. A. James H. Adams int. Monday to Nashville Tennessee to attend the National B Y F. C and Sunday School Congress
A. M. E. Lay-Members
Union Elects Delegates
To General Conference
New York Annual Conference
the A M P Church held a large
and enthusiastic meeting at their
hall 17 Bridge street Brooklyn
on Monday night June 20 at which
they elected three delegates
represent the Union in the Law
college to be held at the General
Conference in Chicago 1928. They
also went on record as being un
convocably opposed to the removal
of the time limit for A M P
archers
they recommended that the law
pretention to the General Com-
partment be increased by having all
the elected and confirmed on the
owning boards of the general
housing the A.M. M.
Publishing House, the Finance De-
partment, the Church Extension
Department, the Missionary De-
partment and the layman on the
General Conference Commission.
The said layman is given their
appointment and information by
the General Conference Commission.
They are asked to attend the
General Conference and be made a member of the ensuing
General Council to see and
their successors have been appointed
and informed. They also re-
commend that the law of dispu-
sion of the church referrals, new
ward and treasured desis shall
be laxed which will make more
plausible as to whether unmerciful
wards and treasured desis are members
of the just and obedientness of the
housing.
drive
agged and more to admire
the N. For a conference and
the N. For a conference and
the N. For a conference and
the A. M. F. Duval and
New York
The following delegates were
elected. W. Mitch Brawner
Mrs. Amie Barnes and M.
Hattie Brown
The nomination also went on record
as under the administration
Bishop W. H. Heard, D. D.
follows
Mrs. Bethane In England
Aard from M. M. Mar McLand
Bethune tel. 0123456789
repeat Langlar asking
are time and making some
contacts
Granten, N.J.—A large congregation was present in Epiphany Church Row. George Marshall Plasker rector, to witness, the conferring of the order of the priesthood upon the Rev Henry Edwards. Fifty lepreman, white and colored, gathered for the occasion.
A professional cross flanked by lighted candles led, followed by the choir of small girls and ladies, then ane the Stars and Stripes, followed by the boys and the choir next came the second professional cross preceding the general energy, and behind these were the candidate for prestly orders. Rev Edward and his conductor Rev Plaskett with a single acrylic A third professional cross flanked by acrylics bearing lighted candles preceded the bishop and those who participated directly in the services, namely, the bishop's chaplain, Dr Logan of Philadelphia, the preacher Dr Denislow of the General Seminary of New York City; the gospeler Dr Walkley of Grace North Orange the epistolar, Dr Hall of Franfield Canon Lestle of Newark and Archbishop Shigley and Ehendoff.
The adult son of Trinity. Montclair united with the girls and boys chors of Famphany and the organist of Trinity Proof Stevens, presided at the canon. Dr Denston took his text from the gospel for this service. Bishop neatly proceeded with the pediment service the Litany being imposed by Canon Leslie Rev. Plan kest presented Rev Edwards to the bishop, who was assisted by the two archdeacons and Canon Leslie communion service, the edifice also covered by Mrs Mand Bower of Montclair, "O Dauga Redeemer."
Missia Edwards, formerly Miss Julia Nobles of Raleigh, N.C. commute to Raleigh in the service. Rev Henry Edwards graduated in 1920 from the Bishop Payne Divinity School Petersburg, Va. After his ordination as teacon, he took charge of the new mission St. Andrews, N. Passaic, N.J. doing special work in Epiphany and Trinity. For the past year he has been doing graduate work in the General Seminary. In his work there looking to the degree of M. He was the recipient of gifts from the congregations of Epiphany Trinity and St. Andrews.
Los Angeles, CaL
By MARIE BOUTT
JO ANGELS alf Mrs FLORE
MISS RIBBIN last week to
visit her old home in Virginia,
and returning,
herself in Philadelphia
Bush and points East
Shannon in October
MISS WILLIAM formerly of
New York on Monday to
her former home to visit friends.
With her husband she won one of
the awards in the city of
Minnesota.
EDWARD AFTERSOR popular law
student at the spending
the weekend at ataaha Island
WARNE Edwards and Miss
Johles seven students in Sociology
at LAST will attend Atlanta
University next fall.
A point was given by his mother
as a farewell token last Wednesda
day. Mr. Jones who finished
his premedical work at LAST
on the job He gave
Philadelphia and other points East
where he will visit until Fall
when he will the Medal at home
of H. and U.
Joseph, fifth of Seattle, was
indened a boy, he had
summer in the city, he
M. Staples, spent a
morning High was gues
a normal past, he
did Johnson, then
a week
his mates, lones, who he
his legal course at U.S. has
either Washington D.C. or
the Howard University law
school.
Ralph Bunche who was vatedr
torian of his class at 800 at the
University of California Southern
Ranch, entered Harvard neat
earn a scholarship.
Mr. Bunche is entertained
with a bridge umbrella Thursday
afternoon in honour of her aunt
M. Fella Robinson, lawyer
there were won by Vada
Amorville, M. Laskie, Williams,
M. Ira Williams and M. Eda
M. McReth
Mr. and Mr. Eddie Ackinson and Mr. and Mrs. M. McMahon had a h
training at New York the uni-
tition at Puraka
honor at the members of the
compan
Mr. and Mrs. Bradford ent-
tained the Bute Qm Club saturday
afternoon at the Republica Tra-
kent where won b M.
Lawrence and M. Ma-
dison White returned to
the Monday afternoon after a
week with relatives in
M.
Mr. and Mrs. William Jones was bap-
tured unda Phillip in h
Res. Katharine Ingh-
M. M. Hawkins 28th
M. M. Hawkins 28th
Mr. Hume will be here
the best of the best
in the south at formal
He deaf and
book to be
in the
workers and be
in the
and writing
Rish
Hadron popular singer
and
employer who has been
back on the job
Art of Mr. Hume
planning a whist tournament
Rish
Mr. Hume popular employer
planning taking
talks to
Auckland to
and
Windmill Road our
professional men
nighters at the open
the Shanghai
which opened at the Billings Monday
day night
of the house with his boy and
a maidman will soon short work
on the garbage and the asse oper
are all got to get.
Cassidy is one announcing the marriage of Walter Benton, popular pharmacist of Eagleson, to Miss Helen Marie Oliver, daughter of Mrs. Dillian Oliver.
Mrs. Phillip Briggs of Denver is stopping over to a brief stay, while taking an extended trip through the Southland.
Mrs. S. E. Hammond entertained a large audience of guests at lunchon午 Wednesday.
Mrs. Jessica Franklin left for Galveston last Tuesday on a visit to my nephew.
Mr. Bredd is back home after a brief visit to Oakland and San Francisco.
Mrs. Maude Friflette enters trained the Jolly 16 Club on last Wednesday. The guests were the Missa Adrian Pearl ano Gerard Moore.
Mr. and Mrs. A Muckleley are in the city for a few days having motorized driving from San Bernadino to witness the graduation of their daughter. Miss Rowana, from the music school of U S C
The Home Art Club met Friday night at the home of Mrs K Cherry on East Jefferson street. Papers were read and prizes were awarded. There were refreshments.
Madame Sewilla Lamer popular cosmetician and manufacturer leaves Wednesday for Philadelphia and points East on a combined business and pleasure trip.
Miss Anna Griffin daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J W Griffin, will spend the late summer and fall visitings in the East after which she will enter Fisk.
Mrs Mary Harpay is all at the residence of her daughter Mrs M Shater.
Woodley C. Jr. son of W. Lewis of West 35th street, celebrated his second anniversary by entertaining a large number of his little friends at a party.
Mrs. Mattie Nelson, teacher of FI centro who is now in Berkley taking a course at U C is expected to arrive in the city soon to take up her duties as secretary of the 12th St Y W C A
Mrs. E. Speaman, wife of Warrant Officer Speerman of the 10th Cavalry has returned to Nogales, Arizona to take her children home after which she will return. At a recent visit of the state President of the American region Auxiliary when over 40 units made reports of them work at Hancock Hall in the Parrotic Hall Building the report from the Auxiliary of the Benjamin I. Bowie Post made by the president Mrs. Marine White, received the annual 500 Club cup delightfully entertained by the President Mrs. Marshall Rival of East 34th street Friday afternoon. June 10 Prizes were won by Mrs. Journer White and Mrs. Himer Bartlett
The Kiddies Fashion Show under
the auspices of the Executive Board
will be held Friday July 11. All
kiddies of all ages will be seen
in Dame Fashion's latest:
The Thirty Housewife Club
held their regular literary meet-
ing at the residence of Mrs. Samuel
Morristown Normal and
"A School of
Co-Educational Fully Aided and Junior College Strong Permanentities. Administration Building Athletic Field. Manual Training and Instrumental Music. Teen and Placement Bureau. Experimental Fall Term begins September 20.
JUDSON N. HILL
Morristown
ST. AUGUSTINE
A JUNIOR
Raleigh, N. C.
An accredited High Schoolough Scholarship and Christian Modern Equipment—Enrolle
Connected with the Institute School for Nurses and the Bus and Welfare Workers.
Morristown Normal and Industrial College
Co-Educational Fully Accredited High School, Normal and Junior College Strong Faculty Modern Begged Dominators. Administration Building and New Gymnastium Large Athletic Field 'Manual Training'. Domestic Arts, Vocal, Violin and Piano. Expenses Moderate. Ideally Located. Placement Bureau. Expenses Moderate. Ideally Located. Fall Term begins September, 2019. Send catalog.
ST. AUGUSTINE'S SCHOOL
An accredited High School and Junior College. Thorough Scholarship and Christian Character are emphasized. Modern Equipment—Enrollment 500—Terms Moderate.
Connected with the Institution are the St Agnes Training School for Nurses and the Bishop Tuttle School for Church and Welfare Workers.
For catalog and Information Address
THE PRESIDENT St Augustine's School Raleigh, N.C.
TRENTON SCHOOL
FOR DESIGNING AND DRESSMAKING, Inc.
At MONTGOMERY PLACE TRENTON N.J.
A New Three-Story Brick Buildings with all amenities to Students
Course completed in Four Weeks
Branch completed in Jersey City City Main Library
and 45 West 66th Street New York, Mrs. M MARKS Socy
FOR DESIGNING AND
A NICE DIRECTORY BRICK BUILDING
course taught in Four Weeks
Branchas, 54 Orient Avenue Je
and 45 West 66th Street New
THE material contrast between
our plant is sufficiently irritant
about our satisfactory work.
But satisfactory and
imperfect measure of Dr. Washington
required for three months to themselves
consciliable and helpful work, but
and sought to do. His purpose was
real advance for his rate or for a
brief Justice United States Supreme
THE material contrast between the structure with which Becker (washington) began and the greatest great empire in common place is sufficiently striking to be enough to one turn to bring about. But as the structure and encouragement of the other imperfect D. Washington and the eminent and annual turning out of one or three hundred young men and women for their service to themselves and their family in of course a most commendable and helpful work, but that was only one part of what he did and engaged in, the material contrast between the structure which must form the basis of real advance for his rise or for his race WILLIAM HOWARD TAPT Her Justice United States Supreme Court
TUSKEGEE NORMAL AND INDUSTRIAL INSTITUTE
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
LOCATION UNEXPANDED FOR HEALTHFULNESS
WRITE FOR CATALOG OR INFORMATION
BOBERT R. MOTON, Principal
Tuskegee Institute, Alabama
News items for this collection
has signed and will be received at
the Pittsburgh office, 715 Ackley
Road, st. up to Sunday afternoon
week of the week of publication.
Pittsburgh, Pa.—Many local
girls and boys are home from college.
John Harris and Richard
Diggs from Howard University;
Orene Beery, Mary Tocas and
Mary Armstrong from West Virginia
Institute; John Fisher and
George Harris from Hampton, and
still they come!
The page number for social at Avery
Church is 49 for benefit of Living-
stone College was well attended.
Mrs. Maggie-Wilson was the
chairman.
Mrs. Frances Johnson of Ipswich
street was called to her home in
West Chasset, Pa. on account of
sports illness of her sister.
Miss Helen G. Hamilton was married to Marshall Blackburn on Wednesday, June 8. Only the immediate family was present. The Imperial Art Players are using untimely efforts to stage "Damon and Pythias," a drama June 14 is the date and the Nixon Theatre will be the scene of the drama. Miss Venus娜尔 N. Joung directress. As all other studying seasons are closing the various music teacher are closing their jersey and recitalist's jersey. Miss Charlotte Heinrich School for dancing and private instruction; Miss Madelyn Bowman, Miss Ruth Banks, and many others have had successful seasons.
The Western District Federation will hold a one-day Compaction Thursday June 30 at Morgantown Chapel, Ford City. All chair members are expected to attend. Alonez Thayer, the newly appointed Local Urban League secretary, addressed the Indigo of Schenley Heights Auxiliary on Sunday, June 12 at the residence of Mrs. Gann Dr. Ralph Snyder art United States health experts also spoke. This choice the president for the Auxiliary and their contribution to the Urban League this year was $300.
The Delta Pi Pi Mu Fraternity, not entertained by Mrs. Josephine Avent at her spacious home in Frankstown road, Friday June 3. The engagement of Miss Mary Cardwell to Walter Dawson on Chicago has been announced. Both are musically talented, Miss Cardwell having graduated from the New England Conservatory of Music and established as musician on wicked basis as Mr. son a graduate of Wentworth School of Boston. The Misses Maxine and Allie Eckstein were hostesses to the "Lae Moderna" club on Sunday June 17. Plans were made for their prince and outing on July 4.
and Industrial College
of Character"
Accredited High School. Normal
Faculty. Modern Equipped Dorm-
ing and New Gymnasium. Large
Living. Domestic Arts. Vocal, Violin
Other Training. State Certificates
Classes. Moderate. Ideally Located.
90th 1927. Send to Catalog.
L. D.: President
in. Tennessee
NE'S SCHOOL
COLLEGE
School and Junior College. Thor-
ism Character are emphasised.
Element 500—Terms Moderate.
Action are the St Agnes Training
Worship Tuttle School for Church
DRESSMAKING, Inc.
A S TRENTON N. 1
with all improvements to Students
with all improvements to Students
Diplomacy Glenn
Arroyo City Men Lilian B Miller
York Mrs M MARKS SCCY
the arrangement with which Becker
the greatest great interest in commodi-
ing be enough to one can bring
encouraging to him it is to less an
than three hundred years come and
and their familiar in of course a most
that was only one part of what he did
to radiate from a center like Thakeson
is truth which assert the bank of
WILLIAM HOWARD TAPT
THE
Founded 1867
Hitt and Nunn — Bull Pulls Off a Little Forgery but He's Desperate. You Know!
BY HITT
FOR THE LINENSURCE AND PAT GUY HITT EVER BOUNCE GET UP IF WHO'S BUTT
METES A SINGLE, MOMENTY OF A HITT-AND I WAS TO SAY THAT I WOULD NOT IT PERSONALLY.
MAR PRINTED AN SLEEPING YOU ARE TOLL-DOLLARS TO COME ON TICKER MARK-AS I LEAVE THEN I DRAW PLEASE UNDER ME A REPEATED BILL.
NOTE - DEAR BELL - QUERY MORE YOUR TOM BUCKS VERY ACCEPTABLE - WAITS - PRINT — HITT ALL NOT ANSWER THE TOM BUCKS DECLINE HITT VOLUNTARY FROM MARK-TO SOW WITH A REPEATED BILL.
PHIL EDWARDS IS METROPOLITAN HALF MILE CHAMP
Negro Star Establishes New Half Mile Record In Brilliant Race
Before a gallery at 10,000 spectators, Phil Edwards colored star of New York University, captured the Metropolitan half marathon in one of the feature races of the annual Metropolitan championships at Yankees Saturday afternoon, June 18.
Edwards, competing again, attested field which included George Lenzes national record of 600 yard champion and Ed Swinburne member of Georgetown's record holdingelas quarte unpacked a burst of speed at the final 100 yards of the race which gave him the victory with yards. Spare.
And he made in the fine time of 1 minute and 2 seconds under the record set by Harry Gissing in 1990.
The new champion is a native
South America and has been a
student at New York University
for the past two years. During
the indoor season just missed he
was the outstanding star of the N
Y Track team and a generally
considered the best middle distance
uniform in the amping at this time.
Only one other Negro William
S. Parker while a member of the
St. Christophe high about five
years ago has won the Metrop
tam half mile race.
Gus Mason formerly an athlete
of the Bay High School
Brooklyn and now a student at
St. Bonaventure college started
in the six mile handicap race but
after stalking the heels of Whe
he Riola in the first few minutes
of the race was forced to retire.
Because of the tremendous pace
the Finnish runner set.
Cockburn Tennis Matches At Plainfield This Week
Newark N.J. Here search national tennis champion will lead the team to the New York Tennis Association to play in Plainfield N.J. Saturday and Sunday June 13 and 14 to defend the captain Joshua Cockburn Trophy in which they secured a legal year With Skittch the defenders will depend upon such well known players as Fred Johnson George Smith and others. The feminine contingent will see in action Mrs. Alston Mrs. Conchick Mrs. Leonard and several more of the better players who will battle to keep the laurels in New York for another year.
Pennsylvania is sending
strong team headed by Dr.
Gordon who are among the
ers nationally added by Villanova
the Philippine wonder Ashe is
playing a team in a lacation
and man. Wm
Miss Laura Lim team in
the Kewston State would be
plete Asher be she she she
have Mrs Harriet in one more
the women play her a
ation
The Mosque is in the ring all of its best players at the fray to the avenge at the defeat. The Words B. the er and Hap Harvey But. W. am Willis Logan McWilson are at the top-mothers will be the brunt of the battle for the players with the Muses. Maell and Vaughan M. Thomas. Mr. Sadie W. women of the team. Satarda together the er vs. New York. wither at satarda matte meet the defending team. W. matte on the courts. Theilia he Tennis. Clan.
and Hillier avenue Flamfield
at noon The play beginning each day
foot of I here
provide I here
Flamfield Speak at
from the station has been aanged
The New lease Ten
The seating area is
grand and
be reached to 100 and ange
ments have perfected pre
side accommodations for
those who desire to make
weekend He is able
for 100 persons can be at.
from any member of the committee. The committee in charge of arrangements, J Mepec Burrell, Miss Olive E. Vaughan and E Harold Hopper. Plenty of parking space will be available for the motorists. Excellent roads from all points to Plainfield.
Sam Langford Says Harris Got $50 For Service at Benefit
The following letter written by Sam Langford is in reply to an editorial which appeared in the Pittsburgh Counter concerning the recent benefit listing show for Langford in New York City. Contrary to the prevailing impression that everyone connected with the show gave their services gratis, Langford charges George W. Harris as Alderman and a newspaper editor charged him $50 for services in connection with the show. Langford wrote, "I wish to state the naming of George W. Harris as treasurer and William Muldoon as treasurer was not in accordance with my wishes. Muldoon can be benefited to me in New York in 1924 which netted $8,900. I never received any of this amount. So why should I be him art a counter for the last benefit."
becoming the more realised
the artist benefited from
Mittell I was so pleased to
the netlet was for me. How
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take the matter out of my
soul I have a real probable
what Hahn didnt.
At the present time the best
bridge Ma 500 Ma achu
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nation which represent time
the more I received a New York
going boxing les, in and
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time to are for me over
da needs. As a matter of fact
look are promising to the
that he remains at all times
awarding invitation for Mr. Will
am Mudder and for Mr. George
Hall to take a nurse in Physi-
cal nursing lessons (more
absolutely free at m
massage they announced at
being the day the bengal
and $6,000 when I were
seated $5,000 at
their
another there
doubt ha
held at noth
never bored of found
written here are here
the field of Reil and a shape
and files in June This
George River from but
Sam Langford the R
Rah The he regard
and your family an
Ver. Truth Your
SAM LANDFOR
1.35th St. Branch Y' Captures Manhattan Bronx Track Meet
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aturda
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dash in 2014' seconds, finishing seven yards ahead of William Hanks in his teammate. Robinson was all anchor man for the 880-yard relay team, which included Boatie Fowler and Reilly besides himself.
Dave Peterson, another man on the half mile 125-pound class relay team won two first places and was aning man on the half mile 125 pound relay team. He won the 220-yard race for the 125-pound class and the running broad jump.
Other laurels were earned by George Taylor competing in the 90-pound class. This little school boy star broke the tape first in the 50-yard dash and the 440 yard relay race in addition to winning second place in the 100-yard dash which was won by Alvin his team mate.
Annual Golf Tournament At Shady Rest on July 4
Western New York The next Res. golf club will be the leading Nine golfers in the red State from Saturday to Sunday, July 4, at which the national tournament will be held in Sunda the golfers will play 18 holes the qualifying rounds and on Indien dence the finals will be ed off. Golfers are expected from Philadelphia Washington Baltimore Atlanta Pittsburgh and New York
THEATRICAL JOTTINGS
By Bob Slater
Hi. F. I. me, say, I am
mobile last minute and I am
excited to do the writing Ma. I am
a little bit nervous but I am
happy.
Horace. Breda. I am
fellie. I am Reverie. I am
rap dance. I am F. I am
Andubon. I am
Indra. Fay. I am
I am Reverie.
I am F. I am
I am Andubon. I am
none. I am
I am Andubon. I am
Cabaret Dance Nets $194
The delegate are Wim
Robbins and new Wim
W Wilhelm and Adam managemen
affa.
A. diCosta Appointed Harlem Representative, Coney Island Danceland
"The Telephone Girl" At the Lincoln Theatre
contributed
the players
named perform
Miss Bellam
Raste
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The sensational European dancer who is famed for the marvelous manipulation of her hands and arms is appearing as the camp in Howeve You Been? this week at the Alhambra theatre. She has studied in Paris and Russia and lived in twelve years in Europe
Eddie Green To Star In "Tam O'Shanter" At Alhambra Theatre
B. GERALDINE DISMOND
Eddie Green, who is a lamb in the A and Mar Hard J Find and Donnie Lee the Man Worl, will appear all next week at the A hambra playing the lead Tan Shante.
Mr. Green is a practicallly a baker in Baltimore and regular at the R. Maguire playing small town and park. He is a member of the A hambra.
He has a humble life and is a member of the A hambra.
Tracked By The Police At The Douglass Theatre
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
Please note our news team
tuesday afternoon each
week. A teacher teaching the
late that Tuesday is
prep.
EASTERN LEAGUE STANDING.
| | W | L | P.C.
Bacharach Giants | 21 | 11 | 656
Cuban Stars | 20 | 11 | 645
Baltimore Black Sox | 18 | 10 | 643
Lincoln Giants | 12 | 18 | 400
Herrisburg Giants | 12 | 18 | 400
Hilldale | 11 | 19 | 367
Brooklyn Royal Giants | 8 | 15 | 333
Including game, played June 18
Harlem Children In
Benefit Performance
With thousands of Harlem children eager to get away into the country comes the announcement that a special benefit performance is being staged Monday evening, June 27 at the Lafayette Theatre. This benefit of special interest, in that it is to provide to weeks vacation for the many children who have been denied this privilege. Also it is the first time that the children themselves have offered to take a hand in raising fund for their own vacation. Ms. Tracele is a specialist in the training of children in esthetic dancing offered to appeal with a selected group of her tax pupil Forum. Broadway star have volunteered their aid.
According to the Urban League only about 1,000 colored children received accommodation at camp as summer. The committee impressed at an eager interest in promoting fresh air outings in addition to factions. The honor Herald which has seen more children sea at summer. The concert will be a special outgh performance with the theater donated through the our theater the latviette management
The Roosevelt Theatre
Rina
heads up and a abber
affects her that the ubber
made it Warne Rise production
Manner ladies taking Ma
M A short time in the
Theatre
Williamston, Mass.
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Bridgeport, Conn.
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Feen a mint
The Laxative
You Chew
Like Gum
No Taste
But the Mint
Theresa Hodge and friends motorized to Atlantic City Sunday
Mrs. Amelia Smith and friend motorized to Jersey City last week
Mrs. C Johnson of Fulton court entertained guests at an evening's social Saturday June 18
M. Procton entertained friends from Philadelphia the past weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hall were recent visitors to Ashur Park
The arrival at the home of Mrs. Mary Hall of Highland avenue for benefit
the Mr. Era Baptist Church was a grand success
Mr. and Mrs. R L. Smith of Albany N.Y. were in Bridgeport recently to meet their son who is in the Bridgeport Hospital
Mr. Simmons has been again removed to the hospital
Mr. Simmons of H. Hall street
Cabaret Entertainment
Fu-De-O Club
UNDER PERSONAL MANAGEMENT
DUDE ADAMS
2110 Seventh Avenue
(ALHAMBRA THEATRE BLD
S MORNINGSIDE 0760-1064 NEW YORK
N COLN THEAT
On The Stage All This Week
PHIL HARRIS PRESENTS
THE CLUB De PARIS FOLLIES
Bully Mitchell Gertrude Saunders, Billy
Fletcher Campbell Farrel & Ethel Willian
E TEN DANCING DAINTIES OF HARL
UNDER PERSONAL MANAGEMENT OF DUDE ADAMS
PHONES MORNINGSIDE
LINCOLN
On The Stage
PHIL HARR
THE CLUB De
Featuring Bully Mitchell Ge
Dusty Pletcher Campbell
THE TEN DANCING
LINCOLN THEATRE
Featuring Bully Mitchell Gertrude Saunders. Bully Bradford
Dusty Pletcher Campbell Farrel & Ethel Williams and
THE TEN DANCING DAINTIES OF HARLFM
On The Screen Thursday To Sunday
"THE TELEPHONE GIRL"
With Madge Bellamy Holbrook Blinn
M. & S. ROAD
SEVENTH AVENUE
Saturday. Sunday. and
May McAvoy In
With Malcolm McGrew
The romance of a sugar
THE ROOSEVELT
Direction at M.
M. & S. New
142nd St
Saturday Sunday and
RIN
"TRACKED B
With a strong
AN EPIC DIAMA OF
The Douglass
Direction
ALHAM
SEVENTH AVENUE AT
WEEK
POLLOCK PRODUCTION
TAM O'
A OVE STORY
Featuring EDD
and B. B. Stamp
and E. F. Productions
FATURAL
HOW WE
LAFAY
SEVENTH AVENUE
One Week Beginning
THE SE
SHAKE,
S. & S. Roosevelt Theatre
SEVENTH AVENUE and 145th STREET
Day, Sunday, and Monday, June 2
McAvoy In MATINEE L
Malcolm McGregor and Hedda Ho
romance of a cigarette girl and a dancing
THE ROOSEVELT CONCERT ORCHEST
Direction of MABEI HORSEY
& S. New Douglass Theatre
142nd St and LENOK AVE
Day, Sunday and Monday, June 2
RIN TIN-TIN
RACKED BY THE POLY
With a strong supporting cast
EPIC DIAMA OF THE COLORADO W
The Douglass Versatile Orchest
Director of DON DAVID
HAMBRA Th
THA ENCE AT 260 STREET
WEEK OF JUNE
POLLOCK PRODUCTIONS, Inc.
A OVE STORE SET TO MUSIC
featuring EDDIE GREEN Him-
RING Stamp, Music Numbers
aged under supervision
Pollock
HOW WE YOUREN
AFAYETT
SEVENTH AVENUE
Week Beginning Monday, June
THE SENSATIONAL
MAKE, RATT
and
ROLL
M. & S. Roosevelt Theatre
Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, June 25, 26, 27 May McAvoy In MATINEE LADIES
The romance of a cigarette girl and a dancing lady
THE ROOSEVELT CONCERT ORCHESTRA
Direction of MARKLE HORSEY
M. & S. New Douglass Theatre
"TRACKED BY THE POLICE
With a strong supporting cast
AN EPIC DIAMA OF THE COLORADO W
The Douglass Versatile Orchestra
Direction by DON DAVID
ALHAMBRA Theatre
SEVENTH AVENUE AT 260 STREET WEEK OF JUNE
TAM O'SHANTEF
Featuring EDDIE GREEN Him
and Rounding Stamps Music Numbers
and Enter production Aged under supervision
Fines Rollover
FAST RELIANCE TIME MILES
This work includes Sund.
HOW ARE YOU GREEN
LAFAYETTI
One Week Beginning Monday June
THE SENSATIONAL
SHAKE, RATTL
ALSO FEATURE PHOTOPLA
T
was the weekend guest of
Hartford, Conn.
Mr. and Mrs. John Jones
trained friends from Pitt-
past weekend.
Mrs. Nancy Perry is very
Mrs. Frank Lanson has
home after spending two wives
her husband in New York
employed at the plant of the
itan Tube and-Stamping
the Stanley Works.
Thomas Hather of Hue
was a recent guest of
New York City.
When John Ellis went
to tour with a group of
men last week he was assa-
robbed; receiving a broken
place are working on the
Mrs. L George of De-
t is the guest of Mr. and W
as Gibson
Mr. and Mrs. George
Linden N. I were here
Mrs. Eker on Smith
street
George Cook John Wash-
ett Green, William Fergus
Thomas Kelly of Chicago
in Bridgeport for their vaca-
Mrs. C Scoonmaker entre
friends at dinner Sunday
freelance weather present-
part taking a long motor
Dining and Dancing
Ar-O Club
PRESENTS
PERSONAL MANAGEMENT OF
EDUDE ADAMS
Seventh Avenue
BRA THEATRE BLDG
0760-1004 NEW YORK
THEATRE
All This Week
IS PRESENTS
PARIS FOLLIES
Artrude Saunders, Bully Bradford
Farrel & Ethel Williams and
DAINTIES OF HARLFM
Rosevelt Theatre
E and 145th STREET
Monday, June 25, 26, 27
MATINEE LADIES
Regor and Hedda Hopper
concert orchestra
MARFIELD HORSEY
Douglass Theatre
LENOX AVE
Monday, June 25, 26
TIN-TIN
BY THE POLICE
supporting cast
THE COLORADO W
versatile Orchestra
DON DAVID
BRA Theatre
260 STREET
OF HENNE
CATIONS Inc. Presen
SHANTER
SET TO MUSIC
GREEN Hims
Musical Numbers S
aged under supervision
Pollack
INDIANA SND.
YETTI
Monday, June
INSTATIONAL
RATTL
and
DLL
annual commendational exerci
the Martin-Smith Music
will be held Thursday,
in the auditorium of the
hool of St Phillip's Church
invited to attend at
Admission is free
Margetson's Music Given In Recital
as a compitent trained musician of his music and the large program he has boxes appeared. Bell baritone Renee Pancino Edward and Carlton Box artists appearing less audiences than the large piece house and he has shaded the program which she sang mumble.
William Boxx and time in a small responder required as with and with compost group in a group of songs include Army Survival and Entrap Parkinson Schubber and Seneca Springfield and and in a hearing.
MUSIC STUDIO
enty Pupils Wanted
Beginner's A Specialty
Conservator's Course
FAV A JESSYE
City: Dixie Jubiles Singers
WEST 129th STREET
Basement Studios
Longueville 7987
June 25, 40
EDWIN COATES:
Piano Composition
Harmony Bar Training
W. 136th St New York City
WILSON LAMB
CAL STUDIO
300 ST. New York City
EMMANUEL CHURCH
all days of 9 W
ing. 144
PRAMPIN LAUR/
OF MUSIC
Greenville School of
Harlem
10th STREET
New York City
Audition 1987
TH AVENUE
Loaned Free For
Home Use
WEEK
ESCON
ES CONCERT BAY
And
ALCHELAND HENRY BAY
SONOMA LAKE
Atternoon.
James Presbyterian
Arthur Jones M.A.
FROM HAKRA
Afternoon, July 3 at 5:30
James Presbyterian Church
Charm Jones M A
FROM HAIR
May Afternoon, July 3 at 3 30 o'Clock
The image provided is too blurry and low-resolution to accurately recognize any text. It appears to be a grayscale image with no discernible content. Therefore, no text can be extracted from this image.
Baritons, to appear in Joint Recital with Isles' Military Band.
ent was Pro: Seth Bingham, under whom Margaret has studied composition and orchestration. Margaret son is a graduate of the music department of Columbia University having been the recipient of the Victor Rater Music Fellowship of $1,000 awarded in 1922. The Schubert Music Club is an organization in the piano and organ students.
Isles' Concert Band And Lauchland Henry In a Joint Recital
Miss Estelle Jarritt Entertains The Brownies
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Johnson-Bickett Marriage
CERT BAND
Presbyterian Church
July 3 at 3:30 o'Clock
received $10
for a period
subsequent
agent
Levy said that Smith told him the government assigned to get the defendants, but denied that he had been given $500 to testify against the agent. When Smith's partner arrested Law on December 14, 1926 and he was arraigned before the Commissioner. Levy said he complained about the bribery. He said he told his story for the first time in the District Attorney's office about two weeks after his arrest. He denied being a collector or for Warner Harvey and Dixon.
Briggs, according to Levy, was employed by himself and brother as a "numbers" collector in their stores at 501 Lenox avenue, 105 West 136th street and 114 West 135th street. In connection with his "numbers" collections, it was brought out through cross examination that Levy receipts weekly at his various stores were as follows: $600 at 501 Lenox avenue $100 at 100 West 136th street $600 at 100 West 136th street $300 at 139th street and Seventh avenue and $200 at 139th street and Seventh avenue. His total income from his speak-easy operations in the last two years was $29,000.
G. O. Folio a restaurant owner in West End was certified on the land and Harvey in his place last June and was old to pay $1,000 to be recreated. When Charles took the stand he raised aaughter when he raised his present occupation as a craftsman in a place of business at West 60th street. He said he was on Warner at 503 Lenox ave. in July 1924 during the premiere of the biography in London and later said he was treated with William Rogers his harsender. He said his case was dismissed some time afterward, after payment at 540 M. Com. in the street. He said he another brother, Mr. Folio, was arrested at a crime game in made where he 501 on a street he got him the arrests by paying aoger $20 months. Trauma was made through M. Canr.
When Bernhard was recalled to the stand on Monday he said that Brigg had been sent to the prison and that he had made nothing was said and promised.
Edward Manning the new man was sent to the prison and arrived at 70 minutes after the war he was made a quantifier. He was August that year and the Heavenly name and drought drink an often asked for the house. When Mannings and the like was visited he told him he had the men in Tabh Devan in the $ 1000 he asked the speaker he asked. The police enquiry was taken and Mannings was interviewed by the police business was carried out the day and parked in December.
The government said the person or the business was
Men
and
and
$250,000 In Two Years
Warned : Included Raid
Memory Inn War Rahara
record of the circumstances.
When Mr. Luskind, announced that the government had closed its case, he surpassed the defense counsel who had expected the case in run over for at least 4 days more. They had to ask for an extension of time in order to organize their defense. Judge Knox gave them until 2 o'clock to start their defense by saying that the case had already taken more time than necessary.
(instructions on sermon note)
It until she read the story in The Age.
Mr Davis has submitted a formal statement concerning the clause for which he reiterates these explanations, and tells of taking his daughter to the parishion to fure Rev. Carrington with the charge of his alleged misleading, and that they were unable to see him, waiting some thirty minutes in the at temp
Talked with Bishop Jones.
Then as they were leaving they met Bishop E D W Jones and stood on the church steps telling him of the occurrence, and while this conversation was in progress Rev Carrington opened the door and at the suggestion of the oathop, the group went into the library to continue the colloquy. The letter is emphasized that Miss Davis is a young woman of eleven. Character with a spotted record and that the imminent to the pastor that she is suffering from some mental trouble is covered by a camouflage used by the pastor and a cover of his trustees. The letter and statement
Fair: The New York Age
in reference to the writer
The New York Age of all week
concerning the daughter and the
Re W Carrington pastor
the St. Scharnie A W F or
the St. Scharnie A W F or
the following reply and
the will give the man
to display it in the
article
The Statement
the aster of the ma-
ture the tremp
pasture some the un-
the charge made see
the creature the midnings
are prone do forgetting
A are the them
e are hope the ame
e are on said she
evening June 14 12 the last
called the custees of the bush
together and asked them
d him Why Was he not
boothing him find the
an of the jeee
Da at the meeting
sides should he heard enable them
t know whether they wanted to
stand him a rer
ra the custees noted to keep the
al of the meet a sece But
a jusu the naid das among
them
Mr. London of Meeting
Whose name is here and whose address is here?
Mr. London of Meeting and whose address is here?
The article told us to tell that on Wednesday morning, June 8, 1927, it called at the residence of the Rev. Carrington with my daughter to last him with the charges and waited for thirty minutes for him to come downstairs to see us, which he failed to do. After he failed to appear, my daughter and I started home. On the street we met Bishop James who had gone out to get a morning paper I stopped and told him on the Church steps of the charges, and while we were talking (the Bishop and I), Rev Carrington came out and asked us in, and at the Bishop's suggestion we went to the library on the top floor to talk the matter over.
The article also failed to report that Carlington premised me that he would talk to Bishop Caldwell about sending him somewhere else if it could be arranged, but that he doubted if it would be possible at that late time. He promised he would call me by phone and report his progress upon his return on Wednesday evening the first day of the conference. He did report that nothing was done as an account of Bishop Caldwell's son being ill, the bishop did not attend the conference. I attended the conference on Thursday, to verify what he had told me and found in his corrections worsened the next day and found that the bishop can had died.
Saw The Preceding Elder
Knowing that it would be impossible to take the matter up with the head of the church, he read the matter in the attention of Pre-
siding Elder Mason and several ministers mutual Friends of both Re-Caregitor and move! But a or more Thursdays in day
day praises word of the Rev.
Carriagegitor in New York City
anyone that produce one minister
and the person who saw the
case on their may judge our
case as suddenly not the state
men that we Carriagegitor and
had a conference at the conference
and that told him the matter
would be closed to the rest
away from New York to a
scientific place.
Anothe. Foine charge
we will be stare
we will me have arried
the name of the newspaper
but the past
and we have
deplore in laugh
we eating the there
and we where usure
the minute
the gospe
op
Chur
Wash
Marma
Re
h
a
r
Open
otherne A M R Lon
Church
The Officer and Member
Sutherne or A M F
New Barbary
Fremed
We the Curious
Elizabeth. N
Re. A. W. H.
the mission to the Sunday, great service. Thata have been special features eight eight during the week. Thursday, Friday, the, the, dies will learn about, beautiful numbers will feature Mrs. Elliott Carter, soprano, of Newark, N. The Rev S. D. Turner is the pastor
Princeton, N. J.
Princeton. N J—Mrs Anderson
Mitnaul. 145 John arrest Princeton reporter for The Age, was
seriously burned on the legs Friday morning while preparing her
breakfast. She was able to be out Sunday.
Roy and Mrs J O Vick enter
trained Mrs T Sample and family
of Arthur Park. N J
Sunday, June 12, was Children's Day at the A M E Church. An inspiring message was delivered in the morning by the pastor, Rev J O. Vick. At 1 p.m., the Sunday school held its exercises and at 8 p.m. a large audience listened to a splendid program conducted by the senior choir directed by the organist, Mes M. B Robinson. Solos were Meadamte Lacella Scudder, Irane Moore, Lara Duncan Hall, Hartlet Galloway, Delaney Frank and Mrs. Fanchon Gordon. Mrs. Lillian Howard was mistress of carmomones. Addresses were made by Revs J W Herring and I O Vick. The Rev A B Askew returned from the New England Baptist Convention in time for service Sunday June 9, and brought many interesting thoughts to his congregation.
Mr. Emma Green has returned home after spending several days in Danville and Chatham. Va.
Washington D.C. and Baltimore.
Md.
Funeral services for the late
Josephine Jones an old re-
tention of Primerton and a faithful
member of the Witherspoon Pre-
bterial Church were held June
from the burial with the Rev
A. B. Beenna pastor offspring.
Undertaker Judge had charge of
the remains.
Mrs. Naom Scott is visiting her
old home town Worfolk Va. She
is visiting Hampion.
Mrs. W. W. the son of Chicago
the house guard of Mr. and Mrs.
emal arling.
Mrs. She on our friends in
Baton Rouge and our former home in
the sea. future.
Mrs. Me on going to be gone
Henning D. Miles on her
husband for the summer.
The Rev. Thomas Pope has
come after spending three
months in her former home.
And she has missed friends
in hannahope Tenn.
Paterson. N
Fan 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 13th 14th 15th 16th 17th 18th 19th 20th 21th 22th 23th 24th 25th 26th 27th 28th 29th 30th 31th 32th 33th 34th 35th 36th 37th 38th 39th 40th 41th 42th 43th 44th 45th 46th 47th 48th 49th 50th 51th 52th 53th 54th 55th 56th 57th 58th 59th 60th 61th 62th 63th 64th 65th 66th 67th 68th 69th 70th 71th 72th 73th 74th 75th 76th 77th 78th 79th 80th 81th 82th 83th 84th 85th 86th 87th 88th 89th 90th 91th 92th 93th 94th 95th 96th 97th 98th 99th 100th
Nephew, N. J., Sister, George M.
Thomas, of Willow Creek, gave a
party, at the New York Urban
League of Fridays evening, June 17.
in honor of her daughter, Sara,
a sister of the Washington State Col-
lege, Vera, who retreated
to the city recently for her暑
mer vacation Miss Thomas wore
a gown of orchid georgette and
sixty or more members of the
younger set of "New York many
former students of the grammar and
high schools of the city," were
present. At close of a Bureaual
program, an eleventh election was
served Miss Thomas will resume
her studies in the fall.
One among four, New York students graduated in physicians from New York University with Albert E. Lynch of M.D. degree who received him M.D. degree from the Medical School of New York University and College Hospital Medical-College of the 50th commencement excerpts. June & Lynch, with the other three Newarkers was part of a class of 106 students.
Newark Branch N A A C P is being represented at the 18th annual convention in Indianapolis by Mrs. Milred M Free secretary of the local branch The Dyer Circle, with the Junior Branch of the N A A C P made a success as their spring carnival which enabled the Branch to help defray the delegate's expenses to the convention.
Miss W L Long executive secretary of the Oakwood Avenue Branch W C A Orange, N J and Miss Miranda Meadough entered Mrs J G Thornton and daughter Rigness and Florence M of 1820 West 10th street. Cattle Rock, wife and daughter of Dr J G Thornton, who has a Hospital in Little Rock Mrs I N Porter, wife of I N Porter, G C C of Good Samaritans of Arkansas and Mrs W P Tillard also of Little Rock were in the party. They attended conference a. Howard University where Miss Franck Thornson was graduated. They are visiting New York City Newark the Oranges Atlantic City and Asbury Park
North Side, Pa.
North Side Pa. Arlington our man Business people of North Side more than a pleasure to introduce you in this manner as well as command Howard H Rodger one of Pittsburgh's best barbers on Pennsylvanus Avenue Mrs. Williams who is now residing Pittsburgh has begun Reaun shoppe on Pennsylvanus Avenue Mrs. Williams congratulates Mrs. Frank she daughter of Reaun Glacee of Bidwell Chu as she the graduating from corner Elementary School We are the proudest in the high school course which she began to take M and Mrs. Witten Preston and one of Teranium Pa. were house guests of Mrs. and Mrs. Robe Taill Bradford Avenue The third number of M are acob and Mrs. Emma Tay
New Haven, Conn
Laurinburg. N C
AGENTS WANTED
FOR THE WIDE
Negro Newspaper
Commissions paid
Write for part
CIRCULA
The New
230 West 135th St
FOR THE WIDEST CIRCULATED Negro Newspaper published Largest Commissions paid Interesting work. Write for particulare to CIRCULATION DEPT
280 West 135th Street. New York City
Henry is a gentleman of the town and will bring the other parties with him attend church with him. Printers of the town will print the sign like other members of the C. C. business for the浸信會 The Lurinburg's浸信會 baseball Club played in representing all on Davies Park, Haven N. C. against the Hippin Club. National teams were 85 in favor of Lurinburg. The outstanding feature of this game was the batting of McLean and T. B. for Lurinburg. The local club is managed by Townsend and Harveell.
The Livingston College
Quartet standard an interesting
gram to all appreciative audience
Franklin Chapel A M. E.
Church Thursday evening. Some
the singers are galantine Livingston
College performers are polishing
for browniewrit and barbecuewrit
Furence S.C.
Florence, S. C. Prof. J. W.
Killingworth, ally, driving here
as principal of the city granted
school, his regiment and included
to study medicine.
The following teachers have left
the city at the filibuster of the Amosit
Miss I. W. Harvey, Charleston,
S. C. Miss L. E. Danby, Waltham
london D. C.
Prol and Mrs J. W Killingsworth have left for Columbia, S. C.
M115 Dangerfield has gone to Orangeburg, S. Mite lagoon has left the city
Miss general has left the city
for Columbia, S. C.
for Columbia, S. C.
Mrs C E Godfold is still confined to her bed at her home on Marton street
Dr. and Mr. R. C. Wilson have
returred home from Ralston, N. C.
where Dr. Wilson the dentist prac-
ticing medicine.
Farmers are feeling much en-
couraged after this session, has
been visited by frequent showers
recently.
Lord Tennyson's Nice Writes of Toussaint L'Ouverture and
The most Americans the name of
Toussaint Ouverture the Negro
liberator of Haiti more than a cen-
tury ago is linked with an
operation by Wendell Phillips. Cov-
paratively few people know the
history of the Haitian Revolution
in 1803 and 1802 and of the mili-
tary part Toussaint Ouverture played
in the liberation of that island from
the wake of slavery
A recent valuable addition by her made to the history of these times the form of a novel by P Tennyson lease a grand steep of the famous English author, Alfred Lord Tennyson Mata Jesse new novel "Monraker" in a sea story recently published by Alfred A Knopf tells the adventures of an English cabin boy, taken prisoner on a ship ship and ashore on San Damignon. On the scene of the war between the French and Toussaint I Louverture. The author describes Napoleon's land and sea war, and fourth of
the French soldiers to capture
them because he had defied the
great French General She tells
how the French soldiers were
paraded and better by the Negro
soldiers under command of their
brilliant general the yellow fever
finally broke out and all but piled
our both armies and how finally
the master deliberately agreed to
meet the French commander. Le-
gain restore
never oppose but when he
conference was cap
made customer taken
exile
de
de
and tooth
and gum
and there was
among the people from behind
black hair which are the who
and could indians and ever
forges
from the park about the
Hawaii Revolution the story is
that the shattering pages and
the pages and than three
horse Moonmaker is not!
Vagra
A New Discovery!
We Guarantee
To Bleach Colored
People
FOR ONLY $10
OF MONEY REPUNDED
And cannot prove it by
Patent Attorned Bleached
Universal Cosmetics
Institute
W. King Burner M.
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Trafalgar 4227
---
EAST CIRC LATED
or published Largest
and Interesting work.
Particulars to
LATION DEPT
New York Age
street. New York City
NEW YORK
Tuchaboe, N. Y.
Washabee, N. Y—Sunday, June 25th. Womens Day at Shiloh Baptist Church. Services were under auspices of the Missionary College, and Miss Cayter of Brooklyn. N. Y. was the speaker at morning and evening services. In the afternoon Mrs. Richardson of Simpson gave an interesting lecture. N. Y. Rev. Rev. and Mrs. Parker and Ms. and Mrs. J. E Griffith of the bible were dinner guests of Mrs. Henry Brown Thursday, June 9
Mr. Mattie Howland of 49 Washington street is still cuffing to her home with a sprained ankle. Miss Roberta Brown of Bronxville spent Sunday, June 12, with Mrs Inez Liggins. Mr. and Mrs Henry Brown and Mr. and Mrs Lawrence Major attended services at Bethel Baptist Church, White Plains, N.Y. Sunday evening, June 12. Puckahoe, N.Y.-The Rev J Jarker, pastor preached at the Shiloh Baptist Church Sunday morning, June 19. Holy communion was served in the afternoon. Mrs Inez Liggins of 42 Washington street has as her guests Mrs. Mary Johnson Mrs. Fanny Brown and daughter Mrs. Odell Brown, of Newport News, Ms. Julia Howard and Miss Josephine Downing were recent guests of their former Mrs. Downing, in Newport N.Y. Mrs Rev and Mrs. J. Pace extended the New England Rapidat Convention in Providence R.I. just west.
Albany, N. Y.
Albany, North war tree, who has
dolphin, North war tree, who has
just graduated from the eighth
grade of downing wi Industrial
School has returned to the city
and is now with his parents.
Richard lefferson round street
who has just graduated from the
West Virginia High School
home and now living with his
parents.
The Isaac A M J church
held its children Day exercises
Sunday morning. Little Miss
Christine Pwell its years. It
gave a short piano recital. Other
piano and vocal selections to
Flower radle roll celli
tales were given out.
The Sixth Presbyterian Church
(White) held its Flag Day exercises
by preaching to the World War
veterans and the Boys' club.
The Lord Mary Spencer Post turned
out
Hempstead, N. Y.
Hempstead I L N Y - After several years of inactivity, the Eureka Tennis Club has been re-organized and now has a strong team of championship alibre matches. Matches have been arranged with other metropolitan clubs. The club dates back to 1914 when it was organized. Among the charter members of the original Eureka Tennis Club who are still competing are Walt Arman, Brewer, George H. Peauban and John H. Myers.
Mrs Rubin Hassan celebrated her birthday with a whist part in last Wednesday at the residence of Mr. John Mervy Hasting place. Dancing was enjoyed in the music by Jackson Orchestra. Retirement was served first prize to Mrs Hagon and the M. Fallings.
Mamaroneck, N. Y
Mamardnek N.Y. The Miss Josephine Worrell and Dunphy Dickens left Tuesday for Washington, D.C. to attend a funeral of their brother, John Worrell. The A.M. J. prettily deterred with flowers Sunday in honor of the Rev. H. W. Allen, who is turned for another year. A final conference held Rev. H. W. Allen majors in City conference object attendance
Newburgh, N. Y
Alexand a quader
New York and attended
conference
A.M.F. in huz
M. Huz
been
dustra
will
moother
stree
Mr. W. Huz
and daughter
Jyn. attended
at Rush M.
York C.
Rev.
City F.
E Z.
there
the Sunda
Mrs. Ma
Garet Bell superintendent with the
assistance Mrs. Margaret
and Mrs. Taylor plans
will be in charge of the program
George W. Mill devalat
the Zion annual conference
polls a splendid conference
Mr. George W. Mill and M.
Ava Bank must be
N. W. the stop
Montgomery.
fe Humana
the summer
the annual conference held at Rush Memorial Church, New York City. Mrs. Anna Crawford attended the conference in New York City and appen a few days with Rev. and Mrs M. L. Harvey of Memphis Lodge庐. Mrs M. A. Hainbeck of Chamber street is improving. Pride of Newburgh, No. 764. I. B. P. O. E. of W. selected the following officers for the enquiry term, W. R. Glum, exalted ruler, Charles Bell, B. L. K. L. D. Grace, E. L. K. Earnest, Martin, E. L. K.; G. W. Ford, secretary; C. Wise, treasurer, J. Holliday, chaplain; Z. Bullock's esquire, Edward Lawson, super guard; and William Bowman, tyler. A number of candidates for initiation are expected at their next meeting. Newburgh, N. Y. — Mrs. Fanny Carpenter of Smith street, has left for a month's vacation, and visit with friends in Washington, D. C. and Lincolnton, N. C.
Harold Murray of Smith street, janitor of the City Club, has had his home renovated and painted. Eugene Washington, Cecil G. Garrison, Charles Brown, Edward Branch, George Ford and Jashea Brooks motored to Middletown Thursday evening to attend the dance given, by the Middletown Temple Daughter Elks.
Miss Estelle McBride is in town for a week's rest visiting relatives and friends and Mrs Eggleston P E Eggleston steward of the club. motored to Ashokan Dam Saturday. motored to Ashokan Dam installation exercises Thursday evening.
Earnest McBride, motored to White Plains Sunday James McBride, Mrs Julia McBride Miss Estelle McBride and Mrs Catherine Nelson were in the party.
Newburgh was well represented at the dance given by the Middle School Temple. Daughter Elks Thursday night. Among those who motored up were Mr. and Mrs. John Nelson I. D. Pierce. Foster Williams. Harold Rose Walter Rose. John Holiday Harold with Charlie Parker Mr. and Mr. Edward shell Mr. and Mr. Saunders and Misses Helen Ford Pearl Moore Hattieisson Annabelle Alberta Fleming Elizabeth Carter Anna Murray Virginia Peterson Mrs Ida Murray and Mrs. Grosso Brother Misses Geneva and Belle Pickens Newburgh. - - - The Rev. Chancellor Fairfax pastor of the Washington Street A M B Zion church has been returned for an award. Mrs Charles Clark of Clark street spending a few days in Boston. Entroute home she will also visit Brooklyn, N. J. Mrs Mosley of Brooklyn N. was a recent guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Frint
The player. A Garden Lender
is given by the Girl Scouts on
our last was a fine success. Miss
Jamison coached the players.
Thanks. Decker is of New
York it was a recent guest of
his mother and sister Mrs Annette Decker and Mrs Anna Decker
Bank.
Mrs Annette ready spent Sunday
June 19 with her parents. Mrs
and Mrs Joseph Ready. Mrs
Read taking a nurse training
course. Hollum Hospital.
Poughkoepsie, N. Y.
Loughkeepsie N.Y. Through an
the name of Miss Dorothy
was omitted from the list
attending the meeting
by the L. Komanie James
Dougath Pierre Miss Ore
Miss Florence Smith
and died in New
unda.
M Miss Mullet master
W Church has been
an other conference ear
the harle
national congress in Pittsburgh. Pa. He also yielded his daughter, Mrs Viola Lumbourne of Aaron, Ohio. Charles Brown, jr., hat week yited trusses here.
Cornish Lodge, No. 24-A., F. and A. M., unmounted in New York City to have their annual session prescheduled at the Metropolitan Baptist Church. Miss Verteile Tewyman spent the weekend in New York City. Miss Mary Shepherd and Julia Washington attended the annual vernon of the Epiphany Star in New York last Sunday. Miss Alma, Allingham, popular daughter of Mr. and Miss. Yarbrough Chapman, who taught the past year at Dining Mill, after visiting her brother, Richard at Newark. N.-W., was returned home. Little Ashley West, age of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford West, who has been ill at the hospital, is recuperating at home. Miss Rika Wimper, daughter of Lee and Lotie Wheeler underwent air operation at Vassar Hospital. Mrs. Wyatt Jones, who has been very ill, is able to be about the house.
Mrs. Virginia' Ragliff has returned from Pittsburgh, Pa. where she has been visiting friends. Elmer Compeck, motored Mrs. Robert Washington, and daughter Eva and Mrs. George Holmes, to point of interest about the city. Mrs. Virginia met with Mr. and Mrs. Jefferson, who hung, graduated from the Normal School at New Palma, N.
Mrs Johanna Talbert, Miss Verne Twyman, Miss Gertrude Henley, Miss Justice Petter and Mr and Mr and Mrs Carter were motored by Mrs Ethel R Cookey to attend the supper at central Baptist Church of which Rev F H Wiggans is pastor. Mrs Wells is chairman of the committee.
Rev Herbert A Payer pastor of Ebenczer Baptist Church was in New York last week.
Mrs Elizabeth Holmes in spring field Mass was located in the city.
Mrs J. Harden, superintendent of Ebenczer Baptist Sunday School is making elaborate arrangement for examinations for the pupils.
The social given at the residence of Miss Jane Smith under the auspices of the Emergency Club on a Thursday evening was a social and financial success.
Mr and Mrs Henry Mavfield or Pershing avenue last Sunday motored Mrs Maithe Rose and her mother Mrs May also Mrs Resure May to Washington Hollow
Last Sunday Mr and Mr. Willis Twwman were in the city
Mr and Mrs Other Twwman last Sunday motored Mr and Mrs Hugh Anderson and Mr and Mrs Cous Adkins to Sharon Cemm
John Jackson was in the city on business last week
The Dincas Household of Ruth No.883 gave a socia at the residence of Mrs Olivia Baskirk last week
Rev J H McMullen pastor of Zion A M E Church returned from the West last Saturday
Dorcas Household of Ruth No.883 held their regular monthly meeting at their hall 67 thahrane street last Thursday evening
Rev Herbert A Fume pastor of Phennerer Baptist Church returned from New York last Friday
The SCM making elaborate arrangements for the opening of the Summer School new mansion.
Troop 15 Boy Scout SCM mansion at the Cemetery at the Cemetery.
creating and instituting a garden by Scoutmaster A. Smith. creating fire making beehive and fire also by flint and also in degree of the compass. Our next instruction will be given in Seraphone code signalling. At the meeting the Scouts wished the Summer Scout and Scoutmaster rewarded McGard a safe return to the will be away all summer.
Rochester. N. Y
Ambulance: Olivet Baptist, an- n. 8,
Zion Zion and the Trinity Frogby,
June 19. The services were at the
Prescbyrian Church.
The Rev. and Mrs. Jangue R. Rose returned Monday, June 17 from Washington, D. C., where they witnessed the inauguration of President Mordena W. Johnson at Howard, University. They were entertained at the home of Dr. Johnson while in Washington. While there they also witnessed the welcome to Col. Charles Lindbergh. The trip was made by motor and 'enroute home. Rev. Rose stopped in Buffalo and spoke at the Michigan Avenue Baptist Church Sunday morning and at the First Sibilfoh Baptist Church Sunday evening. Latimer and Myers, undertakers, have disbaked their pa-tuer ship each will have a separate establishment. Dr Charles T. Lunstord attended the commencement exercise at Howard University and the inauguration of President Johnson last week.
Mrs M P Simpson and her sister, Mrs N J Wagstaff, have leased a suite of rooms at 123 West Main street, where they will open a hair dressing parlor.
The daily vacation bible school of Ms Oliver Church will open on June 27. The principal will be Mrs J F Rose, with Misses Beatrice Howard and I M Rose as assistants.
Mr. and Mrs Robert H Roberts were in New York City Sunday. The Rev W M Daniels of Portsmouth, Va. and C E Rush of Philadelphia were visitors at Mr. Luther Baptist Church Sunday June 19.
Mr. and Mrs James Holmes were in Rochester last Friday and Saturday enroute to their summer home at Sagitta Springs after spending the winter at Palm Beach William Perdue on Prosper street visited his parents and friend in Patton Pa last week.
Mr. and Mrs W M Bullock of Buffalo spent the weekend in the
Mr. Kate Robinson of Brad
Lind named her husband here
and she is the daughter of
Mike Clark of Pittsburgh
working there here
New Rochelle, N. Y.
New Rosabelle N.J. Acree
Now While in the South a few
week ago harle Bullock visit
ed his grandmother M. Kelise
at harlotteville N.J.
His Harper visited the grave of
his grandmother the late Mr. Mary
Mott at Lyntonburg N.J.
The Rev. Boddie has not
concluded a two weeks' celebration in honor of his seventh anniversary as pastor of Bethesda Baptist church During the celebration $2000 a hundred dollars for each year service was subscribed by member and friend and presented the pastor.
The Rev. James E. Mason presiding elder was the preacher at St. Catherine A. M. Zion Church on Sunday June 11 having been engaged two months ago. The altar was beautiful decorated with flowers furnished by the guild of which Meadam's Sanctuary and Richards are leaders.
Rudolph Renfro and Buffalo
A Latino senior graduate of
Hampton Institute, pen-sunday
in New Rochelle. While here they
alled in several home-school
mates and friend
White Plains. N. Y
White Plains Mt. Pho
length of Maundy Park lang
in area of Maundy Park
Baptist
children to program can
dedicate the time to Baptist Church
Maundy Park a church
interested deserves much
to be an interesting Mt.
Margaret Hugh a minister
and a Mt.
Margaret Hugh a Mt.
Baptist attendant of
Mt. Mt. Mt. Mt. comish
Mt. Mt. Mt. Mt. Mt.
Yorkers, N.Y.
Yonkers, N. Y., Y—Mothers, and
Fashion the world over, are always
proud and happy to and their
children, so well in the business
world, but in Yonkers the entire
city has gone wild over the success-
of Miss Dotty Riddick.
She took an examination for the
clinical force in the county seat
at White Plains, the place for
witch, hundreds of our boys and
girls, have striven hard, but could
not overcome the inside opposition
that causes, still stronger today.
Briet Mys Riddick passed, under-
went many discouraging trials, only
to cope, out in the end with a
big job in the county seat, the
only colored girl in that entire
particular department. She is a
graduate of the Yonkers Commercial
High School, a former teacher
at the Memorial, M. E. Sunday
School and arden: admiser of out-
of-doors sports and a clever sten-
ographer.
The Knights of the Roupd Table Twelve of this city gave their annual formal reception at the spacious Masonic Temple on Friday evening. The hall was filled to its capacity. The Knights with courteous mannerisms served the guests, while the Melody Dance Orchestra poured forth the kind of jazz that made everyone happy.
Miss Helen Wilson of 12 College place graduated from Public School 17 last week, and will enter Gordon High in the fall
Mrs Georgia Strothers Sunday school superintendent of Beacon, N.Y. who extended the Methodist Conference last week in New York was the guest of Mrs Warrick and family of 4 Morgan street
The work of repairs on the Mesaiah Baptist Church is progressing rapidly. Next Sunday will be calls day at Measiah
Re S W Smith has creamed from Providence R.I. to help home where he attended the New England Baptist Convention. He is a member of the board of management.
The morning care has taken on the congregation of Mesaiah Baptist Church at the ample after the morning care will show at the church tomorrow
ton. The annual dinner given by
the Missionaries, Society was well
attended and the dinner was a
cellent served.
Mr. Carrie Gregory was the
weekend guest of Mrs. Mary
Clabourne of the Wood place
Group No. 1 of the home de-
partment of the Sunday school of
Messiah Baptist Church, held
their evening Sunday afternoon.
The speakers were Rev. W.
Smith T. Tennessey Mrs. M. E.
Howard and Mrs. Marie Crier
M. Clabourne read a poem
and Griffith sang a solo Miss
Crape Porter presided on the piano
Schenectady. N. Y.
Shenerdady N.Y. A delightful birthday party, we were given in honor of Miss Fusiae Williams at the All Star Club of Mose Wednesday evening June 14. Among our present are Ms. Millie and S. Mese Mose Mr. Shaffer Mrs. S. Hun Mose and Mr. Rudge Chappe Williams Mose Long Mr. Ashton Mose Hinton for instmaster and Mese Rogers Solman Office Brown Caramel and S. Thomas Mose Dane aired for the party and gave excellent service June 18 in the town for our husband Mose and Mose Rober Benjamin of New Haven were guests of Mose Smoke of London terrace and Mr. Castell The Pollama Club of the Mose Mose Missing meeting on June 17 in salad and ice cream were served and the members an invited mut and games.
The priest under auspice of
Missouri, custodian of the
Baptist Church on June 10 was a
wonderful source
Plainfield N J.
News memorials and advertising headquarters of The New York Age 325 Plainfield senior greetings Advertising in The New York Age teaches the most interested business people in the country Treit it and see what good results may be obtained News items for this column must be signed and will be received up in Sunday night of the week of publication
R. W. Rodgers of Detroit will make his studio home in Plainfield. He is now the guest of his cousin, Charles Quarterman, prophetor of the confectionary store at West 4th and New streets known as the Sugar Bowl.
Pleasure lovers can find enjoyment coller-skating Mondays and Thursdays at the Academy on East 4th street and Watching avenue.
The obituary of the late Charles Jackson was read by young Arthur Jones Jr. son of the pastor of Mount Olive Baptist Church.
Mr. and Mrs.' Moses Dennis have made extensive alterations on their beautiful home on West 3rd street.
The tired children dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs William Cabell of West 3rd street was quite a success. It was under suspices of the friendship Social Club of which Mrs Cabell is chairman and a good crowd attended and enjoyed the festivities. Mr. John Miller and children of West 3rd street have gone to Gastonia N.C. where she will visit her mother and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs Iaines Gonde of 636 West 4th street have recently had their home repaired and put in fine condition, making it compare favorably with the best homes in Plainfield. Two members of the Mohawk Lodge of Iowa. Spencer and Owens are opening the Clinton Blue Tea Room at 15 Silvan avenue Ashbury Park. It is a fine place for the Mohawk boys to visit when in Ashbury Park.
The Rev. D W Hoggard pastor of Calvary Baptist Church preached two wonderful sermons Sunday, June 19 at Bethany Baptist church in Newark Res. H Hurdle pastor
A mass meeting under auspice of the local branch of the N A A F was held at Calvary Baptist Church Sunday afternoon June 19 The president Dr Thompson presided and Mrs M Brown secretary was also at her post The principal speaker for the occasion Rev R C Lamb was unable to present because of his tumour but the address were made by the Rev R C W Hoggard and Dr R C H Brown and a beautiful solo companion Mrs Amnette Whiting
A high class concert at institution The holie of 123 will be held at the Pflaendert Amusement Academy Watching ascent and East 4th street Thurda evening June 2 I will begin promptly at 8 o'clock
Mr. Samuie. Pekken. will
confined to the hospital but
resting a little eating at this writing.
Her friends with her a speed-ride.
Mrs. R C ambulance will confined
to her home but much improved.
Mrs. Mary Kiner will at the
mess-ending out.
The Re M. Herman New
are meached aial at Barnet
Church Sunda evening June 12
The Re E. W. Wainright
easter of Shiloh Baptist Church
New York City preached at
ar Baptist Church Sunda
morning June 12
some of the pastor Se
Hoggard Re Wainright
are returned from England
land Baptist and preached at
St Mark 10 in New
Late He is in the congregation
the greater in the
land church preached at
the capture in the
Dalim Re Hanne R. Wainright
mena weather and the top
the morning and the amoun
SILZ The in the de
The Mahala bridge is still getting its island name. So be careful.
dent on the m
to the in
the inch
to the mill
to ident
to them
to the W
to the fire
to the sea
to the simple
to the aning and
to the g
to the end
Bathway W. D. O. Mrs. Viola
daughter of Elizabeth Burch of J. was
weekend guest of M. J. W. W. of Stickford.
The Sister Baptist Church
cause of Harriet has returned
Sunday, June 19.
Harriet Brown has returned
from Bathway Lake, N. I.
The Rev. C. H. S. Watkin
tor of the Second Baptist Ch
with a few members of his
attended the wedding of
Sarah Harriet to Harney P.
Woodbridge. N. J. on
June 19.
Mrs. P. C. Linton and her
new, Master James William
spending three weeks in tac-
ville. Fla
Elizabeth City, N. C.
Elizabeth City, N. C. - The
J R. R. McRay, pastor
an interesting sermon at the
nesterstone Baptist Church
morning. June 12
aclusion Miss Sarah Blount
a member
The Rev Joseph Tibber
his choir from Sawyer-
Baptist Church, Camden
had charge of the service
Cornerstone Baptist Shur-
day evening, June 12
Two automobiles a foe
and a Hudson coach
with a coop of chickens
treoyed when fire burned
June 10 Night
night. June 10 The Hud-
longed to Mr. Watson and
Ford to his sister Mr.
Keys The total loss was
$2,000
Miss Bessie Moore has
after spending several day
in Winston-Salem N C
Mrs M E Jenkins M
Dolees and Miss Mary Griffin
tending summer school at the
Normal School in Winston
Mrs N F Cuffin of Lunt
folk was a recent guest
ter Mrs M E Jenkins
Miss H F Simpson who has
teaching in Harnett County
School has returned home
now visiting friends and rea
Norfolk Va
Prot W S Etheridge
of Bette Academy was the
of the sister Mrs M
last week
Mr and Mrs Matthew
and children of 404 White
toured
Harrison N
to attend the funeral of
died suddenly
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South Orange, N. J—Rev Aksaw stretched to large congregations Sunday, June 12. In his morning, his topic was "Blogs of the World." In the evening, his subject was "Talking Centers" that Sunday school there was a full attendance. The young people at the B, Y, P, U, enthusiastically discussed their topic. Last Tuesday, Rev Cosby, former pastor of the First Baptist Church, passed away after a long illness. He was buried Friday. Rev Love of Montclair officiating, Rev Hughes of Orange Rev, Aksaw, Rev Hurdle of Newark, Rev Watkins and Rev Walker all spoke feelingly of the life work of Rev. Cosby
Julius Ford of Roland avenue dropped dead from heart failure while driving a horse drawn truck of George Salmon. He was buried from the Audrey Funeral parlors on Prosper Street. He leaves three sisters Mrs Betty Blackwell of Monclair Mrs Nane Wright. Now Haven Conn. and Mrs Mary Johnson of Maplewood four brothers and a host of friends to mourn their loss. Rev E. C Ricks of Pilgrim Baptist Church of Newark had charge of the funeral services. On Saturday June 4 at the A H Treel Wodge No. 611 B P O E of W. celebrated its first aniversary with election of officers. J. Scales is called elder and Leo Dax is knight. The lodge is young but membership of forty will increase with leaps and bounds. Mrs William Taka Academy street, gave a stake sale at her home. It was a big success.
The Holy Communion Church
School has closed for the summer
vacation. Ellie Hope Ford of
Alden Street caused the In-
lowing order. Bible from her
teacher is good and regular at
attendance and is sent from
the student council.
Mr Marie Lane Plantfield
spent a weekend with Mr H B
Anderson and family.
Mrs H B Anderson Master
Lemesne and Mrs Marie and
Mrs M and Mrs William and
fragtown. They also visited
friends in Somerset, stopping at
the home. M and Ms Gussie
Lah and Alfred Wether
with Orange Street.
M and the second street
from the district in Delta
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M and Ms David Turner
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Railroad Workforce In America Neater and More Intelligent Then Those In Europe
on the Rev Henry Hugh Froster of Brooklyn staged to an
of Pullman porters in New York some weeks ago, at their
memorial exercises, that the porters of the railroad servi-
nces represented the highest type of porters in the world, the state
was no idle plaudit employed merely for that particular occasion,
to be a fact, which the minister either gained from personal
or from other reliable sources. Railroad workers of all
America are superior to those in European countries, ac-
cording to the consensus of opinion of Americans who have done con-
tinue traveling abroad.
ently, a noted New York alienist, who had returned from a
trip, and was on his way to his country home up state, de-
the Pullman chair-car porter that American railroad porters
suchater in appearance and displayed more intelligence in
ork than railroad porters in Europe especially those with whom
some in contact on English roads.
English railway porters are an untidy lot. Apparently they conception of neatness. Their appearances on passenger are identical with that of our freight trainmen, whose work does bring them in contact with passenger travel. Of course the railway England are not as prosperous as they are in this country, but not sufficient reason why the porters on these deluxe trains don't be made to give more attention to their personal attire are accustomed to neatly uniformed trainmen and porters in my here, perhaps, I was unduly conscious of this untidiness in the employees," said he.
But aside from their personal appearance," continued the doc foreign porters do not exercise the same amount of forethought american porters in booking after the comfort and convenience of the passengers Seldom do they make any efforts to assist travellers in their luggage. Women, as well as men have to trudge their bag into and off the carriages no matter how many pieces they may carry. Still, these porters expect tips from the travellers traveling by rail is a much more pleasant occupation in America than
from the observations of this traveler, and these recounts are the only heard from other American travelers. American railroad posters are mostly Pulman-porters represent just what the Brooklyn post and they represented
The 25th Anniversary of America's Premier Train Celebrated
Whenever there is an unusual commotion among the first and Central Station, the one in two things to which all are attributed; Either some noted person to entrain on the 20th anniversary Limited, or it is an anniversary of the train On Wednesday at noon of last week, the latter event was the cause of the commotion. It was the 25th anniversary of America's most widely known train in the activities had a appearance of a bridal celebration, here were flowers, cameras men and all the other items of equipment that go to a unique observance of twenty-five years the three sons of the train looked like a trio of brides, so profusely section garlanded in floral decorations. Passenger in Chicago were in wonder as to whether they were guests of large commemoration or some other event of auspicious happenings. It was only when their red caps told them what it was all that they comprehended the doings. From two to until two forty-five, the time that the first one depicted his amps leading to the train were strung with the men of the road, with passenger and civilian guests and a motto of old timers. Among the other passengers George Seymour now rued who was one of the original English porters on The Century in being questioned as his presence there replied 'Why force old train was just a slight quiver in his voice as he
11. Is A Wonderful Thing
two of our guests present are commemoration guide to Porter Joan the Delaware and Hudson Company this column last week, were we the Fire Railroad and ex-president Railroad James Shortly after we Re met Porter Price in one wonderful thing Seldom are appreciated, the token speaks volume of the great Pennsylvania L.
A Courrage
There is a Pullman porter on a mean little when he starts the Thompson. The information on Thompson was the porter once occupied by a California deputy juvenile Prison The sheriff was Santa Ana, Cal. The officer rented he could have something to eat as the convict decided to make an outlaw chewing tobacco in the sheer proceeded to relieve the officer one of the men's arms toured not knowing what was going on was told to come in. But a arrested pans his head He closed the only safe thing to do. But he fortuitously again and was gunned in the steel door He push the door received another bullet the compartment and grappled with disarming him and held him until again Thompson was highl
is present at the presentation to Porter Joseph W. Price Hudson company which prefersreek, were as presidents Fred es president samuel Rea shortly after the token the Price in one of the ars Seldom are railroad emplains speaks volumes for you transviana lines should kno
two men give us present at the presentation of the 20th year commemoration gift to Porter Joseph W. Price by the president in the Delaware and Hudson Company which presentation was related this column last week, were as presidents Frederick Underwood of the Free Railroad and as president Samuel Rea of the Pennsylvania Railroad Lines. Shortly after the token had been presented to Rea met Porter Price in one of the arts and said "Porter is wonderful thing. Seldom are railroad employees on handsome appreciated, the token speaks volumes for you. The President entitles of the great Pennsylvania Lines should know."
A Courageous Porter
man porter in Los Angeles
on he starts after his main
information comes East. that
the porter on at Pullman in
california deputy sheriff with
the sheriff was returning with
the officer removed the hand
thing to cat. It was while
led to make a break for le
co in the sheriff's eyes, blind
are the officer of his weapon
's arms touched the compass
was going on within ten
in. But just at the start
He closed the door hast
ing to do. But he didn't cea
and was greeted by another
He pushed it slightly on
other bullet. The fourth
grappled with the convoy
and him until the back he
was highly come ended.
There is a Pullman porter in Los Angeles, Cal. to whom our mean little when he starts after his man. The porter is A. H. Thompson. The information comes East that on the night of April Thompson was the porter on a Pullman in which a compartment was occupied by a California deputy sheriff with a convict from San Juanin Prison. The sheriff was returning with the prisoner Santa Ana, Cal. The officer removed the handcuffs from the room he could have something to eat. It was while his hands were not as the convict deeded to make a break for liberty. He threw an oil chewing tobacco in the sheriff's eyes, blinding him temporarily. Proceeded to relieve the officer of his weapons. In the scuffle the officer one of the men's arms touched the compartment huzu. Thompson not knowing what was going on within responded to the man and told to come in. But just as he started to enter a bullet zapped part his head. He closed the door hastily which course was the only safe thing to do. But he didn't leave it. He opened it carefully again and was greeted by another shot which sped in the steel door. He pushed it slightly open a third time and the door received another bullet. The fourth time he pushed in the compartment and grappled with the convict. He succeeded in disarming him and held him until the barricade herself slipped the iron
Newark Social Worker
Denise Announced Dance
Michelle B. Wright director of
studies in the Friendly Neighbors
House Newark, N.J. states
the Age that the announcement
was made leases of the Newark
gathered House Dance was
worked and without basis
now that the name of Miss
Russell was used without
knowledge and that others
name were attached to the
name nor been connected with
gathered House
Weight has authorized the
statement.
The New York Age
releases in Wright director
of the Friendly Neigh-
borhood Newark N.
supposed to read the
papers last week's is
the Age under the caption
neighborhood House in
South Wood House
Lance on that
since the open
ok
wrote whose names
spoken are truth
He is M.
Possess the will not
engaged in work these
in the presentation of the 20th year
Joseph W. Price by the president of
any which presentation was related
presidenta Frederick Underwood
at Samuel Rea of the Pennsylvania
the token had been presented
of the arms and said "Price it
railroad employees so handsome
times for you. The President en-
tries should know
in Los Angeles, to whom our
after his man. The porter in A
Hines East that on the night of April
Pal Pullman in which a compartment
ly sheriff with a convict from Sara
returning with the prisoner moved the handcuffs from the rest.
It was while his hands were wired
a break for liberty. He threw
stiff eyes, blinding him temporary
of his weapons. In the scuffle she
chided the compartment huzz. Thom-
son within responded, the rest
just as he started to enter a built
the dog hastily which course
but he didn't leave it. He opened
seated by another shot which spee
d it slightly, open a third misc.
The fourth time he rushed
with the convict. He succeeded
the barred sheriff slipped he trons
come ended his courage.
Mrs. Wright anno account for the
apparent interest of any person
of persons in acting out this piece
public the House is open
all time and persons of similar
concerning any of its activities may
be secured
Pumpkin in Mr. and Mrs.
drink ice cream were the
guests Mr. and Mrs.
Logan a Sunday.
William Jennings, Washington
(1) Mr. Max Saunders,
John and user ladies of
him.
Pamplin, Va.
Some time ago in this column, mention was made of the splendid report of achievement, submitted to the postal employees of the New York Post Office by the trustees of the Edward. Morgan Foundation. Just a few days ago the writer had occasion to interview a Negro postal worker who had received hospital treatment under auspices of the Foundation. This clark, upon being taken ill, applied to the Foundation for admission to the hospital and was admitted promptly. He was confined to a ward with other pay patients and received absolutely the same kind and courteous treatment. In fact, there was no indication that the doctor or nurse were aware that he was any other than the regularly admitted pay patient and yet the cost of the entire hospitalization to the patient was nothing.
Of course, he had subscribed to the voluntary fund established by the Foundation through popular subscriptions from postal employees in the New York Post Office. He gave 10 cents a day but the entire amount of his subcription was infinitimal when compared with the hospitalization costs. He needed and desire to say, this clerk is all gratitude and exerts the praises of the Foundation in the highest terms for its unselfish work
This author repeats his previous suggestion regarding the unanimous support that should be given this organization by all of the employees of the New York Post Office, regardless of breed or color. Thus seems to be the first instance where high officials are inclined to assepade and head a movement in which service to rank and hire is the paramount object. However the most gratifying thing about be movement is that it embodies a realization and recognition on the part of postal officiafion that postal employees like other humans can and get actually seek. The old bogey that illness deemed the bodies of postal employees sarcastic seems to have been at last exploded.
In direct contrast to the magnimity of mind of postal officiafion more guard the administrating to the illness of these employees is the niggridly attitude displayed in the matter of
WEEKLY NOTES
WEEKLY NOTES FROM INDIA
By The Age Special Correspondent
Firing on The Strikers
The strike on the workmen in the Burma Oil Co. and the Asian Petroleum Co. in Madras has resulted in a most deplorable inciden. An alteration between a workmen and the party of Anglo-Indian and European employees of the Burma Oil Co. led to the use of firearms by the latter, resolving inquiries to 15 persons, and the lives of several peroxis are in contempt. Already there is a complaint land before the police and the officials so that the company men tried to self defence on the strikers. At the forthcoming magistrate inquiry, we understand that the worker would bowen the evidence as they are fully aware that the government would side with the masters. However, should he insisted upon the government that such masters and Anglo-Indian men should be given arms, he will give arms to the other are persuading
would appointed people believe
in cheapness in Indian life. We
new whites are also a large
Indians, what would change
Probably another massacre in the
Allianawala Bag rages, in 1900,
which led 40,000 men beheaded
upon a public meeting and
other Punjab attentives. We never
before in recent attentions he
knew roots and yet the offence
against Indians.
epsorias of Private Letters
The Back Bay Lost
Back Bay Scandal
and no business
Saturday "shorts." With the whole outside balletss world, redefining the sociopathic specialty of ballet, the employees to have success drop this daily toll at least by morn on Saturday, thus giving him time to reach the great case spines of wood and stream for a retraining week end, the great. Post-Office Department, the largest business in the United States in point of number of employees, peters nothing beyond what legal consultation elicits or begrudgingly hands out a megareview hour. "short," this gallery in all the more justifying when it is known that officials have discretionary power (without specific legislative mandate) to adopt a system that will permit a four hour day on Saturday. It seems a strange psychology, indeed by which the officials justify their own four hour day (or less) on Saturdays while throwing out the stany one hour to the underdog, and that sometimes under conditions that make even that one hour unappreciated. For example, there is a ruling applied to the day tour that a certain proportion of the men spend their hour off in bed, reporting at 10 a.m. instead of 9 a.m. This hour is considered as their "short"
The white employees and a large number of officials of the G P O ranging from superintendents down had a quat-official outing last Sunday. They fired their salaries (some eighty odd man) to the wilds of Jersey where the chief allurement was the promise of real beer. The Gods must have been displeased at the slight given their Negro fellow workers (none of the Negro employees were approached to buy a six dollar ticket to the affair) for they were accompanied by rain and more rain instead of having their contemplated baseball game and other outdoor sports. they were confined indoors to their chicken dinner the romantic art of bowling, and to their real beer. However, given good weather such an outing occasionally a helpful pastime and one that might be recommended to the Negro employees minus the ladies as something that will put quite a kick into their otherwise stand lives.
Government of India Mr Nariman a Bombay lawyer who is a membe of the Legislative Council gave evidence before the Bark Bay Commission drawing the attention of the government that there something wrong with the administration of Bark Bay scheme and said that, the higher files have been very diligent in the discharge of their duties Mr Harves took exception to and filed a complaint against the allegations of Defamator person who gave evidence before and commission are protected to law in this particular case government did not help Mr Nariman during the course of the proceeding on the case out the several big European ones who are the contractors do not account book and there they are unable to produce them in the course of the complaint that big amounts do not keep on our book And this makes the legations stronger in the case a could be concluded that the attractor must be a second or third in hiring etc. to otherwise what he should be to produce books from the government records important letters are missing Mr Harves said that he gave more information to the Minister which the whole argument of Mr Nariman stands
the business is alleged
the officials even got some
immunity from contractors.
When payable size on the ba-
se required they ordered it and
there at the house of his tax
Roman
managing W. Norman
conducte W. Norman
big offing he expre
and hiding in Somalia W. Norman
wollers are waived in the Black
heart and some tax paye
Bakoyo Prisoners Passive Resistance
The Delhi Scholars
Day of Celebration in India
The day is celebrated on the 14th of January in India. It is a day of joy and celebration, marked by various festivals and events. The day is celebrated in many cities across India, including Delhi, Mumbai, and Kolkata. It is also celebrated in some regions of the country, such as the Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.
The day is celebrated with great enthusiasm and joy. It is a time for people to come together, celebrate their culture and traditions, and enjoy the festivities. The day is also celebrated with great care and respect, as it is a day of great importance to the people of India.
The day is celebrated with great joy and enthusiasm. It is a time for people to come together, celebrate their culture and traditions, and enjoy the festivities. The day is also celebrated with great care and respect, as it is a day of great importance to the people of India.
Columbus, Ohio—Lincoln's attitude, toward slavery and his disapproval of the insurrection tactic of John Brown are revealed in a speech he made in December, 1859, at Lizaveworth, Kan., which was discovered recently by Professor Earl W. Wiley, of the department of public speaking, Ohio State University.
The speech, as reported by "The Leavenworth Tipiqa," has not been included in any of the collections of Lincoln's address.
"The Times" a Republican paper, after stating that the hall in which the speech was delivered was packed with men and women, said
"Mr. Lincoln opened by reviewing the territorial policy of our government at the start proving conclusively that it was in favor of liberty and was ever so exerted, except in some of the Southern states, where slavery existed by municipal law or was made a distinctive feature of the articles of session. But when these causes were not there freedom was proclaimed
No Interference with Slavery
The tathers did not seek to interfere with slavery where it existed, but to prevent its extension. This was the policy of the Republican party to-day. The divisions of sentiment in the Democratic party in regard to slavery, were timid and immaterial. The most advanced element could be of no higher sentiment than an indifference to the peculiar institution of the party. Demo-
torism declares slavery as unworthy in itself and then reaches sub-
time height when they said they did not are whether it was used inward down.
The andfference was all in stave power could ask. I was a virtual cognition of the right claver to unincessate extension. If a house were on fire there could be but two parties one in favor of putting on and the other in favor of setting in fire. But these popular sovereignty laws would stand aloft and argue against interfering. The house must take care of itself subject only to the legislation and the conditions of fire and wood. The speaker alluded with force and will in the great line (which we are assured by Senator Frugilev was ordained by God on the side of which stave labor alone could be employed on the other free above. Thought the Mourn we might be freed. If the line was ordained of God might in the plan and palpable but he had never be able to put his finger on it.
Belteved John Brown Crazy
he attempt identify the h
public part with the light
Brown business was a cree
creating dudge. Waa glad, he
ha the home race under and he
hood cross the people
```markdown
```
OF EAT,
TWO
FOR HARDER
WOMEN!
TWO Rounds
OF RODLES.
COME TO
PAPA.
I HATE TO
TAKE THIS
OFFA YOU,
OLE KID.
THAT'S
NOT GOOD.
BE PICK UP
SCOURSES AS
A CAN OF
LADOGHINY
GAS.
WHAT'S IT GON'T
TO BE?
TWO Rounds
OF STUDY.
OR
OF SHOW
AND ONE OF
MICRAN PETE?
MICRAN PETE
IS THE ONLY
GAME I CAN
GET ANY JACK
OUT OF.
MAD IT ALL
PETE.
CIVIL SERVICE NEWS
Prepared by M. Y. Academy of Business
This is the last call for persons from 10 years and up to file applications for the State Junior Clerk examinations which will take place July 9. for all state offices. Applications may be made at Albany, N Y.
Those who wish to take the examinations for probation officer and court atendant will be notified next week of their rating in the test.
Female attendant physical test will be held on June 22. The physical test will be held on June 22. The physical test will be held on June 22. The physical test will be held on June 22.
For this appointment, the applicant must be examined and in all 41 states referred to the New York State Service Commission as an annotated competitive examination for the position of medical examiner. Department of Labor, from which an immediate appointments are to be made at a salary of $5,000 a year. The attention of our physicians is called to the timely announcement. Applications may be made at Albany, N Y.
week. He is to take from the existing examination in instruction. Men of our country are not nearly every brave service except this. The duties are no more those of the Police for the examination for not harder. This contains like or more taking this next civil nation for another. For this appointment, the applicant must be examined and in all 41 states referred to the New York State Service Commission as an annotated competitive examination for the position of medical examiner. Department of Labor, from which an immediate appointments are to be made at a salary of $5,000 a year. The attention of our physicians is called to the timely announcement. Applications may be made at Albany, N Y.
The Federal examiner stenographer is on a tour page June 14. Many girls of our city have this examination in the United States Civil Service.
Guests At Dorsey
Park Farm, Powell, Pa.
Installs Officers
E A Abbott Made D D
```markdown
```
ESTABLISHED 1949
Mrs Ida White-Duncan
HAIR WORKER
Phone University 5120
Mrs. C. PURNELL
HAIRDRESSING.
Apex System
BV APPOINTMENT
720 West 11th Street N.Y. 1
Golden Group Chu Dengue
Bulles Leve Maje
White Rose Home
week. He is to till 60 vacancies from the existing list and another examination is in sight or this position. Men of our group have gone into nearly every branch of the Civil Service except this particular one. The duties are no more exacting than those of the Police Department and the examination for this position is not harder! This column should certain like to see men of our group taking this next Civil Service examination for them. More than 150 hames were certified for appointment in the city and state service during the past week. This number includes nearly all the departments in the state and city service.
the Federal examinations for
minor stenographer and junior
tourist place June 14 to 17, in which
many girls of our group competed.
This examination will be held by
the United States Civil Service Com-
mission for three months. The
instruments will be handed to be
held in September. The pay
$1320 per year and the needs of the
service in this particular field are
great. Applications may be had any
time at the Custom House.
N Y Academy of Business
things to complete read
in the 18th graduation exe-
cuse
held until at the
liks Auditorium B
department of Education
trated in Madison
square and his deliv
moment and add to the
lead with his work
the school may
have the national Anthem
to perform. Worship music by
a young Dream as the class
this year
Magnet has been
Alliter Harris says Razolento is green!
Alliter Harris one of the country's outstanding actresses says she moves her beautiful silky hair to the regular
EXELENTO
QU ININE POMADE
You can have has just as pretty hair by
giving it a good shine. It goes to the roots of
the hair to the skin and before you real-
ize the damage and more beautiful
things before
So companies are so that you will be able to and are them regularly that we will and are free of charge, a generalist archive from a valuable book of beauty materials prepared by specialist to the care of attractive propagation open to will and are recommended to our customers our friends.
EXFELENTO MEDICINE COMPANY
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
WANTED EVER WHERE
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SANTA
MIDY
Pain caused by
BLADDER
CATARRH
Relieved Quickly
by
Sental Midy
For personal use only
assigned to Mrs Gertrude B. Sory
assoc. as secretary, Miss Carrie B.
Jones of East Orange has been assign
to Counsellor Pope B. Billiage
as stenographer, Miles Madelillo F.
Grissom of Jersey City has been assign
to the Acme Handie Company
of Jersey City as junior stenographer.
700 subscriptions have been taken
for the graduation exercises this year,
and it is expected that more will
be taken before July 1.
It has been learned that Mrs.
Bessie Bearden will attend the gradu
ation excerises and award "The
Mrs Bessie Bearden Award" in person
to the recipient. Also Clinton
Brooks, Harlem, mostician, and
Harry T. Burleigh of St.
Georges Church.
Fifteen men of our civil service
school have passed the post office and
carrie test in the past two months.
In three consecutive examinations
last year three of our men stood
highest on the eligible list for this
position.
In the interest of our medical professional group the Academy has sent our notices to all our physicians to the effect that the State Civil Service Commission will appoint six medical examiners in the State Department of labor at a salary of $5,000 a year, resulting from an examination which will be held in New York during July.
STRAIGHTENS HAIR IN
EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER
Will Promote a Full Growth of Hair. We Also Restore the Strength, Vitality and the Beauty of the Hair
MMZ 3.0LLYGHS
FLIT
DESTROYS
Moths, Roaches
Bedbugs, Flies
Other Household Insects
Alice Florence Commodore of Rye,
Y., is spending a few days in the
Arizona, R. H. Mays, 238 West 134th
street returned from St. Luke Hospital
Sunday, where she underwent
operation. She is convalescence
rapidly.
C. C. Spaulding, president of the
M. C. Mutual Life Insurance Co.
Darham, N. C., is visiting in New
York and called at The Age office
on Tuesday.
Rev. H. H. Spearman, and Ror. S. Wigfall left Monday night for Pittsburgh. They will attend the Bishop's Council which will convene in that city. Dr. Seth H Hills of Daytona, Elsa, sat Saturday, June 18, for a vacation in Italy While in New York Dr. Hills was a caller at The Age office. Prof. Edward DeHolland, instructor of music, left Wednesday for Chattanooga, Tenn., where he will attend the wedding of his sister, which will occur this month.
BLEEK8
Dresamaking School
Pattern catalog, Designer Operating, MK
Pattern catalog, Designer Designing
and Designing
Mrs. Munne and Lena Searcy J
H Wunter and Willard Penn, left
Sunday night at Nashville, Tennessee,
where they will attend the Baptist
Sunday School Congress.
The stock listed the home,
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Shepherd A. West
132nd street Sunday June 1, and
left a bouncing baby girl. The new
arrival has been named Mary Louise
Turner Layton and C N John
stype, well known entertainers who
are home for a vacation after a long
and successful stay in England, were
callers at The Age office last week.
Rev Abner Brown, assistant pastor
of Metropolitan Baptist Church, left
last Sunday for Pittsburgh. Pa.
Rey Brown, congrate to Nashville,
Tenn. to attend the Sunday School
Congress.
The Sun and Daughters of Florida
held their annual Thanksgiving
services at Bethel Sunday. The or
gathering presented a beautiful
bunch of flowers, a bee and Mrs.
Bobbie mannan.
When in need of a position call at LEWIS' EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
Wilford Lewin, Prop.
2501 8th Ave near 135th St. near L Good Positions Now Open for Men in all departments—skilled and unskilled. Also Competete Female Help.
Open Daily From 7:30 a.m.
7:30 p. m.
Mrs. Jane Mabelle Andrews of Denver, of a member of the faculty of Summer High School, Kansas, of Kan. spending the summer, New York, the guest of her, Mrs. Jessie Andrews Zackery, the soprano at the Emma Rancho House of the 137th Street W. W. A.
Closing exercises of Junior High School 130 at Nicholas Avenue and 135th street, will be held at 9 a.m. ms. Friday, June 13. The closing exercises of Junior High School 130 at 140th street, near 13th avenue, will be held Thursday afternoon June 23. The exercises of the other Harlem public schools will be Tuesday, June 28.
Invitations are being sent out by the Rev F H Lout, secretary of missions of the A M H Church, for the marriage of their friend Miss Olive Louise amphellb on Rev William G. Drummond on Wednesday June 29. Newly missioned Department building, 122nd 120th street New York City.
Mrs Anne Day Shepard wife of
James H. Shepard president of
the North Carolina college at Durham
and the daughter Miss
Margaret Shepard and Miss A. L.
Huston burial of the college
rived in the town of Durham
C. These were routes Europe on
the summer where they will spend the
summer in London Paris and other
cities on the continent
Mrs Ma. Madison wife of
Attorney A. N. Madison sister
of burned by the fire June 14
after spending a month as a
with relatives and friends a
former home Montgomery Ma.
White on one half Mrs Madison
attended the summer en-
tices at Insker Institute the
Alma mace and at Alabama State
Normal school
Joseph W. White Alton
A veteran Pullman employee called at the Age of the Reeda and achieved the bandoneon Ball gold reach which was presented by the board of managers by the Delaware & Hudson Co. in honor at conclusion of the 40th annual inspection trip which the board and made with Mr. Price in honor the private Pullman at the time travelled. An account of the experience given in last week in James H. Hodgson column Things Seen Heard on the Age of the Reeda Pullman Ensemble
TABLE BOARD
Pprivate tab, board, brisss
acme. Breast bone cooking. We
attend to summer school students.
Prides reasonable. Reservations
forout of town people. Nice to
be 30. West 12th street
december 18. June 18-4
The Sunday evening June 19, 1993, arises at Mt. Olivey Baptist Church was given over to the Ladies Advisory of the Chisholm-Beneficial League, one of the biggest fraternal organizations in New York, which is the adjudicator of the White House. This organization rendered an entertaining program and had their annual session prescheduled by the Rev. Mr. Henderson, assistant pastor.
The program was as follows: Introducing the mistress of ceremonies, Miss Violet Coleman, by Mrs. Agnes Mason, chairman of the church committee; historical sketch of the Auxiliary, Mrs. Mattie Williams; vocal solo, Mrs. Olive P. Hopkinson; prayer, Mrs. Vivian Bowman; saxon, Mr. Henderson; solo, Miss Melta Desalius, collection, Mrs. Virginia Wetton and Mrs. Lillie Berry's presentation to Mrs. Moyles, Mrs. Desalius, presentation to grandma Dr. Ardelle Dabney's presentation to sonnet, Mrs. Beasie demby, presentation to Miss Hopkinson by Mrs. Lyndia Jones, presentation to Rev. Henderson, Mrs. Frances R. Butler, presiden) presentation to etteeses, Julius Watson, president of the Chickens' Beneficial-league
Ushers for the occasion were Mamedias Lydia Jones, Mary Reynolds, Effe Rusa Beglei Embry, Maggie Fegue, Moore and Hurd. At the annual election of officers to the Ladies Accenture to The Club's Beneficial League, held on June 1, all the old officers were re-elected. They are Mrs Frames P Ruffen, president, Mrs Miss Fame Webb, vice president, Mrs Virginia Watson, treasurer, Mrs Mattie Williams, financial secretary, Mrs Laura Brugs, recording secretary, Miss Vivian D Bowman, chaplain Mrs Effra Russ and Mrs Moore, conductress, Miss Minnie Tiantor, seer at-arms, Mrs Helen Pugh door-keep, Mrs Matte Eggan and Mrs Mary Reynolds, marmalah
Harlem Public Schools Designated As Vacation Playgrounds By Board
The Board of Education is establishing 100 new vacation playgrounds this summer and among those designated are five public schools located in Harlem. These are P < 19, 89 Benox avenue 134 and 135th streets, P < 90, 134 and 148th streets west of Seventh avenue, P < 119, 131rd and 134th streets, east of Eighth avenue, P < 136 Edgcomb and N. Nicholls avenue at 135th street and P < 139, 139th street east of Seventh avenue. All the playgrounds will be supervised by experienced leaders and a program of activities has been mapped out this should in terrest all the children
Well Known Women To Attend Frogs' Frolic
Philadelphia, Washington, Seattle
more, the Jersey connection and
towns adjacent to New York city
will be well represented at the
the Frog. Thursday evening
June 10 at Manhattan Cavern 155th
street and 8th avenue. Every indian
county to the affair being the
largest attended dance of the early
summer season.
Prominent among the boxholders,
Mary Bessie Miller Mrs. Kate
Cormon Mrs. Lucy Cole, Mrs. Adine
Venir, Mrs. Elizabeth Manley, Mrs.
Emma Layton, Mrs. Ivy Nunez, Mrs.
Sughler Mrs. Nora Johnson Mrs.
Sadie and Mrs. Estelle Lastro
Mrs. Lottie Ivie Mrs. Renie Lew
Mrs. Family Dwon Mrs. Mayne
Navage Mrs. Clement Simpson Mrs.
Maud Ferguson Mrs. Frank
Clar Mrs. Jesse Bungg Mrs.
Jordan Mrs. Maud Smith Mrs.
Flosser Reynolds Mrs. Willemha
Adams Dr. Gertrude Harrison
Gladys Walton Mrs. Harriet
Nees Mrs. Bess Williams
Amanda Kemp Mrs. Helen
Miss Nadine Capeland Mrs.
Rearden Mrs. Harriet
Maurice Lathert Mrs. Blossom Holland
Mrs. Baummer Mrs. William
Huether Jackson Mrs. Colin
Trees Mrs. Pauline Hankley Charles
Mittie Debautier Sub Sampe
Jubb and the Chicago
Buffet Luncheon Given Mrs. Mattie H. Chaves
M. Maud Jones of 666 St. S.
alive avenue entertained on Monday
afternoon June 20 in home of Mrs.
Mary H. Chase of Chicago.
Miller hometown was served by
guests of Mrs. Maud Chase.
Chicago and Middletonola Jolaamp Letters Patterson Mabel Smith Berrera Brown Zelie Kamp Emma Lorenze Lolaiking Moresa Swan Duerre Browen Frances Dunlap Lester Mitchell and Janetette Walker
The Scotia Chau.er
the regular monthly meeting of
the writing Chapter of New York and
county was at the residence of Mr.
137 Edinburgh avenue
Mr. McCaffrey gave an interesting talk at current events of the month. After the business session the museum would be elaborate collage by Meddames Films and Clark and Miss Huns.
Mr. And Mrs. William Seagrove spent the weekend at Atlantic City. Mrs. Elise Rodgers of 31 Irving place is confined to her home with a sprinkled milieu. Among the patrons of Prol Clan Holden that were presented at Gates Avenue Casino, by June 16, was Rhoda Clark, daughter of Mrs. Henry Scaly of 50 Rodgers avenue. Allen Jc Cole, 257 McDonough street, entertained a few friends Monday evening. Among them were Herbert Bank, Walter Ford, Leonard Lawrence, Samuel A Gibbs, Charles Harris and Alonzo A Moses
The First Battalion, Uniform Rank, Knights of Pythias, N A S. A. E. A. A and A. under command of Major Athlete Pope is putting forth every effort in preparing themselves for the trip to Chicago in August to the Supreme Lodge. Mrs. Virginia Watson, president of the Sisterhood of Mother A M E Zion Church, motored to Brooklyn, accompanied by Mrs M. J Brooks and ofrine Campbell to witness the parade on Thursday and were the guests of Mrs. Georgia Berry 017 Herkimer street Berry of 017 Herkimer street Miss Idanac Truly fraternal and sister worker, left the city Tuesday, evening to Cleveland, Ohio where she will be a bridesmaid at the wedding of Miss Kathleen W. of the Ashland Place Branch (017 Boree) turning Miss Truly will be the guest of the order of the eastern Star and the magistrate branches in Cleveland
On last Monday evening the regula meeting of McKenzie Lodge, No. 43, K. of P was held. A goodly number of people were present including some visitors from Ben Hur Lodge Chancellor Connamander Sir B. J. Black was encouraged at the excel lent reports in reference to the coming of new members McKenzie Lodge will celebrate its 10th anniversary on Monday evening, July 11. Mrs. Mary K. Gardiner of am bridge Mast will speak at oncord Baptist church on Friday evening 24 Mrs. Gardiner will be the guest of Miss Alice Thompson Pres of Concord Lunen Shower Club. All Federation club members are invited to be present.
BIG BOY SCOUT BENEFIT
By request the Ladies Auxiliary of Solanum Presbyterian Church will give the one act comedy "Nay at with Flowers," Mrs. M. H. Phillip director, Thursday evening June 16, 1927, B. F. Central Branch M. C. A. Auditionum 55 Hannon Blare to the benefit of Troop No. 55 Boy Nuts of America, Paul A. Strawer Southmaster Troop No. 55 headquarters are at Carlton Avenue. M. A. The boy will produce "Say with Flowers" M. M. Magger Franklin Mrs. Gertel in Unmarried Mrs. Bertha Hill, M. M. Ingle Johnson Mrs. Pearl Robins, M. M. Joseph Robinson, Mrs.ora Thomas Mrs.osa Daniel, M. F. Frennock Reese and Mrs. errudte Marten On the program will also appear M. M. H. Dodd President of Green District Assembly and M. James R. Purgeon Founder Troop No. 50 who will make an appearance. The boy will be in attendance to give them information on using the will demonstrate. Lester And Perry by Lichten
The public will normally invited
attend and will be able that the
attendance will be large, encourage
the ladies presenting the play
and those who are working hard
ge necessary co training
Very truly yours
Paul A Stewart Soutmaster
A Somithe Executive Secre-
tary
Red Cross Nurse Corps Heard Sanitation Talk
under the auspices of the North
Harmon Red Red Nurses Corps a
acute was given by Dr. Dhomun
Wood or camp sanitation and
all at sea shore and innite
ture was given at the 80th
Harmon Armory 143rd street in
evening June 17
largely attended by the Red
health aides where the ship
supply and refreshment are
theatre. This is an a series
curries by given Miss Mabel
aaron R. Miss Marian Petty
R. Miss Margaret Greth
and Miss Iceloline H Wun
field R. serve in charge of the
meeting
In the 8th June at 8 p.m a
cure and moving picture entitled.
Thumb Up was given at the
Teachmen Union League Hall 23
West 81st street. A large class of
Red Red health aides received
Mary M. H Winfield R.
and Daryle Dale Secretary
Self-Confessed Thief Given To New Jersey
Militarist, ar. M. Quintan in the Washington Height Court turned her New Jersey attorney into a lawyer. She was rendered a headstrong woman. Ma. Wade a long-time robber. Goodie a bearded man. $1 a revolver on the van where she plowed him and that since that time two efforts at suicide had been failures the gun missing five both times. Extradition paper were served both the New Jersey offices on June 11.
III. John H. Smith Receiited Grand Master
For Eighth Term
What was classed as the most peaceful and harrowingious session ever held during the seven years that John H. Smith (33) has, has served as grand master of the Most Worshipful King Solomon Grand Lodge, Inc. of Ancient Free and Accepted Masons of the State of New York, came to a successful close with a banquet at Roses restaurant on Lews avenue at 14 a.m. afternoon, two days at the King Solomon Masonic Temple, 71 West 131st street. It was the 21st annual communication. III John H. Smith was relegated grand master for the eighth time.
Prior to the annual communication the members of 25 lodges assembled at the temple on Sunday afternoon, June 12 at 1:30 p.m. and paraded to the Metropolitan Baptist church, where the annual sermon was delivered by the Rev William A Campbell, pastor of Little Mount Zion Baptist Church, who P D G. M of the Order Over 1000 men and women were in line. He spoke on the subject The Home, the Lodge and the Church The sermon was followed by a splendid program Oswald Pigrim P D M introduced the Rev H Leigh Jones grand chapel as master of ceremonies Several pleasing solos were rendered by Mrs Hazel Wright Mrs Collins and Messer Carrington and Anderson all of whom are members of the order. This was followed by the annual Mason review by Grand Master Smith
I ever seat in the space needed
face was tilted and standing down
to a premium when the grand
master asks to deliver his message
Over 1,000 persons were
present. He spoke on the
press of Union Among the Warriors Maasone Groups". He all spoke of the numerical and material strength of the order and of developing a national and international lodge in Brooklyn with visitors of the house of warriors who are housed there, sessions each day on Temple. On the second day the annual election was held.
There were few changes to the grand lodge officers. John H. Smith was elected to the eighth time as grand master. The other officers are James Bavne, senior grand warder, Seph Simms Junior grand warder, A Newell senior grand deacon Charles Skippe Junior grand deacon John A. Harteau grand causer Leah Harteau grand secretary Gunber batch Taylor, The Rev. H. Tomas and Matthews of A ban were appointed grand chaplain. All officers were installed later on.
H. Tomas R. Batzroy G M
An Amnesty Free and Accepted Mission New Jersey was a visitor and delivered an address on Sunday.
Much beneficial legislation was passed at the session.
Inaugurated by M. Smith from among them, among them, the Sovereign grand commander to Williams M.
Mr. Smith was the captain
man presents during the session
appreciation of the great work
Ministers Have Outing At Bear Mountain
The closing outing of the Inter dromational Ministers' Meeting of New York and venues was held Monday, June 22 at Bear Mountain. The score of simulators who attended acut in automobiles, taking the east bank of the Hudson River North and the west bank south. The party stopped at the Walker Home at Lexington on the Hudson and the Washington being home and the lakes. The event was spent in games and a longed in the upstarts of the Bear Mountain Inn. Rev A C O'Leane provided Dr.ullen made the engagement in the ride Rev A L De Mond. Memphis. Dennis was guest.
Braithwaite School To Hold Commencement
The annual graduation exercises of the Branwhatee Shortland & Business School will be held at Imperial Elks Auditorium W4 West 129th on Friday, evening at 10:00 beginning at 9:00 lock.
The commencement address will be delivered by A. Philip Rangliff, editor of the Message magazine. Twenty students will receive diplomas on having completed a business course. Abertha Crosses May Logo Course Rene Luriele Roberts Olivia Mangierne. Naomi Merchall, Matilda Meade, Mattea Tola Hedges, Ella Allanwalt, Diana Davis, Helente Schmidt, Diana Darcey, Higherte Brouse, Jorke Darcey, Higgerthe Brouse, Dorothy Lankey, Charles Sheed, Annette Cunningham. Shortland speed certificates will be delivered Dana Jackers, Heleg Willis and Adder Desmond.
447 LENOX AVENUE New York City
---
3.000 Hear Grand Master
The company of the Harlem Lawyer, Atticus Paid a string tribal to be one of their number Saturday evening. June 18, when a testimonial banquet honoring Atticus was held at KYPT, attendant Daniel Atticus Atticus of New York County, Mr. Dyke, has been active in the civic and political life of Harlem for the past five years, and was appointed to the District Attorney's office about six weeks ago.
The barrister was at the St. Luke's Dining Room and a fine menu was served by the management. It consisted of Consomme, oilies, broiled spring chicken, candied sweet potatoes, green peas, spiced apple jelly ice cream, chocolate wafer, cafe non and mint.
Attorney Arthur A. Madison, president of the Association, presided and introduced the following speakers D. H. Williams, secretary of the Hirten Lawyers' Association Vernal J. Williams' Justice Sidney C. Crane of the Municipal Court and James P. Ifill. All the speaker-paid tribute to the worth of Mr. Dyett as a lawyer and citizen, and expressed their belief that the guest of honor was worthy in every way of the new honor that had come to him. Mr. Dyett made a fitting response and thanked his friends for their land expressions of regard. There were several hundred people attendue the banquet.
other attending the banquet.
Other members of the Association present were William T. Andrew
Poeh B. Billups W B Bush, Rush
Rard E Larey Allan Dingle Sydra
L Christian Stanman M Dougus
Lens L. Flagg, Oscar Garrett
Lennur L. George Newton Gregg
George E. Hall Sylvan Hart W
H. Humphreys Freed Johnson
William D Jones James W John
Louis A Lavelle Flier M
Charles Lynch Joseph M
Milo M. Murray Miles W
William L Patterson Lamar P
John B B Thurme Vernon
Judith James S Watson Lewis
Watts R Huth W Whale and
Watts Ruth H Whaley and
Hortage Williams
Fern Rock Camp To Open On July Second
Two girls who are delegates from West Side Branch to Prospect Conference June 18- July 1 with Mrs. Mildred Wood the industry secretary met on 17th street branch with the other Prospect delegate on Thursday June 16.
A recent trip to Cumberland Island was reported with high glee by the girls. The trip was conducted by the Physical Education Department under direction of Mrs. Nelson but the sub girls got in touch about the latter's career interests and the frankster stands loved them nothing.
The girls are lining up for a camp Fern Rock will open on July 2 with a special rate for the week end at the Fourth
Mrs. Naomi Vincent Is Hostess To The Entre Nous Club
Mrs. Naomi Vincent Is Hostess To The Entre Nous Club
Mrs. Naumie Vinson 221 West 18th street interurban members of the Fort Nixon club at their regular meeting saturday afternoon June 18. At the annual home we specialize in decorating the mansion and the house. Lunar was served. Prints were made by the Hunt fellow Ms. Marianne amabille of Ms. Vernon the guest room and Ms. Ruth Logan Roberts second Ms. Hattie Barrent first club prize Mrs. Davis Chambers second. Other guests present Mrs. Anna Johnson Mr. Bessie Rose Mrs. Walted Bismuth Mrs. Leila Waltes and Ms. Marion Turner. The artist presents Mrs. Hattie Ribert Marion Weina (Glad) Hattie Walted Hardy (Glad) Hattie Walted Hardy the members Antoine Pogue Nam Amont and Miss Floribault Pogue
The Eyesight Specialist
RELIABLE & REASONABLE
ESTABLISHED 18 YEARS
531 LENOX AVENUE
Opponite Harlem Hospital
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Hosca B. Campbell, a student at Harvard University, has again been selected by the Union Circulation Company at 5. Colliumbus Chapel, this way, to direct their education in a subscription campaign by Negro College students this summer. Mr Campbell is now organizing a college tour in 100 all the leading educational institutions of the country, including Morgan College Howard Lincoln Virginia Union and Hampton Institute.
These students will be divided in teams and scattered in various sections of the country where under direction of Mr. Campbell they will anvay for subscription to the leading magazines and newspapers of the United States. A definite quota will be assigned each man, and if he is successful in securing the number of subscriptions allocated to him, a scholar amounting to $175 will be paid him at the end of the summer. In addition each agent is allowed $21 per week wages and an expense account of $250 weekly.
The Union Circulation Company is the first large subscription agency that has given an opportunity to Negro students to do this work during summer vacations. Mr. Campbell was given this kind several summers and he was so successful the means was induced to put the Negro agents under his summer a large share in the being turned over to the agents. A number of students formerly worked in the Pull service during the vacation period are expected to go into this work. Mr. Campbell office is the headquarters of the company. Smith, Cite and he can also be used at the evening at the street branch. M. C. A. West 15th Street
Carlton Avenue "Y" Is Scene Of Big Banquet
inner was given Thursday evening June 10, at the Carlton Ave. M A C 405, Carlton avenue, broken by the Sterling Forest Inn for those who make up summer colors at Greenwood and A. J. The dinner was attended by six invited guests. The guest of honor was I. Ols Switt, nature editor in the New York World. He addressed the guests on the subject the Mat of Life and the Cosmic Wind Alexander F. Müller presided D. J. Bruce, president and A. L. Lomither vice president of the company addressed the guests and acquainted them with facts about their company.
Those present were Miss Bennett,
Miss M. B. Bond Mrs. D. J. Bruece,
Joshua Carter Mrs. N. J. Cromber,
Mr. and Mrs. Clement D. Costa,
Mr. and Mrs. R. Elys Mrs. Harry
Foster, Mrs. W. Gardner, Dr. George Haynes, Miss Beatrice
Henderson M. and Mrs. Pugene
Henderson M. and Mrs. Johnson M. and
Mrs. Gordon Lines.
Mrs. J. Kennedy, Mrs. Martha
Mee. M. and Mrs. W. Lee Malone,
M. and Mrs. Maloney, M. and
M. and Mrs. Medley Mr. and
Mrs. McPherson, Mrs. Ptaa Moore,
Harry J. Moore, and Mrs. S.
A. Phillips, M. John B. Flowers,
Miss Gossen, St. Edward M. and
Mrs. Paul Stewa M. and Mrs.
Edward L. Luther M. and Mrs.
Walter H. H. H. and Mrs.
Jesse W. Welsh, Mrs. Anne Wel-
won, M. and Mrs. William Wel-
wins, Mrs. Hattie Williams E. H.
Wilson Mrs. Elizabeth Wright M.
Zull M. and Mrs. Andrew Van-
kener, M. and Mrs. Cleman and Mrs.
Fhrase
Cumberland Employment Agency
CANDY
ICE CREAM
SPREENS
2340 SEVENTH AVE
W 127TH ST
Ice cream supplied on short notice for all occasions
Telephone Audubon 10140-10234
Branch Store Telephone
Plainfield Academy Plantfield 4899
THE SUGAR BOWI
Charles Quarterman Prop
Confectionary and Ice Cream
Cigars Cigarettes-Stationery
Morning Evening and Sunday
Papers
421 W Fourth St Plantfield N J
Broadway Auto School
Broadway Auto School
. 21 WEST 20TH STREET
Phone Morningstown 9194
New York, U.S.
Special $10 Auto Course
UNDERTAKERS
HELP WANTED
Wanted—Salesmen or salesladies to sell high class men's neckwear direct to consumer liberal commission. N Schmidt 99 East 116 Street at Park Ave April 6 3m
Wanted—Salesmen or salesladies to sell high class men's neckwear direct to consumer liberal commission. N Schmidt, 99 East 116 Street at Park Ave April 6 3m
Attorney Myles Paige Heads Alumni Ass'n of Alabama State Norma
Attorney Mylee A. Page returned
New York, Monday June 11
after a two week vacation in
Alabama.
White, the south Attorney
Page attended the commencement
exercises of the Alabama State
Normal School at Montgomery
and delivered the commencement
address to the graduating class.
It was his first real experience in
alma mater since his graduation
in 1917 and he reports that the
school is making remarkable progress.
One of the features of the com-
ment extremists was the orga-
nization of a general alumnae
association with Mr. Paige as its
head. Up this year Alabama
State Normal had had only a state
alumnae organization, but the school
has no such leaders. Mr. Paige in
years and the graduates have
scattered so, it was decided to en-
large the Alumnae Association
to include those out of the state
of Alabama
UNDERT
Tel Harlem 5063
E. A. M. Licensed Embalmer
Miller & Shepard
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
64 WEST 127th ST New York
(Downtown Branch) 310 West 41st
Street Tel Pennsylvania 9126
J. WESLEY LANE
Undertaker & Embalmer
OPEN ALL NIGHT, FUNERAL
PARLOR AND CHAPEL FREE
Lady in Attention Amplify Service
Moderate Rates
112 W 133rd St Near Lenox Ave
Phone Ha.lem 8221
LOUISE B. HART
Prompt Service Day and Night
At Moderate Rates
4 WEST 130th STREET
New Jersey Avenue
New York City
H. A. HOW
FUNERAL
2332 SEVENTH AVE
First Class Service at Modern
Your Imps
Broom Street, 230 West—Room or
room furnished with kitchenette privileges
provided with other modern improvements
improved and lady to share room
interior with changed.
Furnished Suite
To Sullivan, 4 room furnished ap-
partment all improvement in
July and August. Written
B. N. X. Ago.
St. Nicholas avenue, 444 near 13rd
street—Furnished 'apartment
tablet. Also, 7 rooms and born
unfurnished, for rent. And
furnished room for light house keep-
ing. Ring hall Apt. 8.
Furnished—Unfurnished
St. Nicholas Ave, 444 top floor.
One unfurnished room usable
for respectable couple or
person, Mrs. Harris.
612 St. Nicholas Ave.—All private rooms, furnished and unfurnished. Top Floor. M. Thomas
TWO NICE ROOMS FURNISHED
Hotwater, Steam Heat
use of kitchen. 3 minute
East 180th Street Subway
References Exchanged.
Cal 18ckawanna 0134 or W
chester 2925
June 25-2 mo.
St. Nicholas Place 18-20 corner
151st St. 34-5 rooms, modern
improvements, reasonable rent,
colored tenants permissible
Apply
St. Nicholas Place 80
court, New Apt. House
opened for respectable
people 34 large rooms in
improvements. Each room pres-
near 153th St. and Polo House
Phone or inquire sup't Audun
2300
UNF APTS. TO LET
69th Street, 329 West—3 an
rooms, $10-$15 monthly
69th STREET 329 WEST
Three and four rooms, $10 $15 mo
99 St 16 W—Large, light apar-
ment, 4 & 5 rooms and bath
stream heat, hot water $45
Apply Supt
101st St 50 East—6 rooms bath,
electric, hot water, newly deor-
ated $40, Janitor or telephone
Lenox 3669.
315 West 121st—6 exceptional
rooms adjoining corner, ground,
middle and top floors $55-$60
151st Street, 448 W—4 an
rooms, all latest improvements
Inquire superintendent
MONTCLAIR N.
Will lease new apartment
first three of two family, house
rooms, unimproch, open fire pla-
ce, bath, hall, closet, bus and
trucks for good schools. Apply
to W. W. N. Central Val.
pur M. M. Ph. 811-811-811-811
HOUSES FOR SALE
FOR SALE OR RENT
Private house, 12 rooms, all improvements furnished and nearly filled with roomers, very low rent
Box C N V Age
HOMES - PLAINFIE N
23 Miles To New York
Plantfield better home
children get appointment
C Douglas Real Estate
erty Street Plantfield N
CAMP SITE IN STATE ISLAND
For Rent—New people in a place to camp in a da in the summer will grounds near the beach in Boulevard near Braeh over Sprague Avenue Apply Mr. Sprague at State Island N terms
ANNOUNCEMENT
I want to announce the opening
of my mottage at 1061 A
Spring Lake N
Mrs J Jacombe
June 7
TAKERS
W DAVID BROWN
Undertaker a Establish
Under the Management
AWAL SEWER AND MARCELLE BROWN CORP
Walter L Rowell Assis
HIGH DECADE LICENSE
UNDERTAKERS and
EMBALMERS
2315 SEVENH AVENUE
1343th and 1353th St
Telephone Bradford 0143
Phone Prospect 0536
Allen Dillard
Lillian C. Dillard
UNDERTAKERS
468 Franklin Ave...Brooklyn
(Corner Jefferson Ave
PHONE 4036 BRADHURST
WILLIAM C. PERK
MINERAL DIRECTOR & EMBA
LABOR FUNKAL PARK
268 West 132nd Street
Between 27th and 8th Aven
DOLPH
WELL
L DIRECTOR
And the
State Press Use of Church F
lection Invited