New York Age
Saturday, September 15, 1928
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
Ask More Traffic Protection At 145th Street and 7th Avenue
VOL. 42. No. 1
Miss DOROTHY D'ANCY
Popular Young Secretary of Abysian Baptist Church, becomes bride of Clinton Brooks, Under-taker, son of the late Rev. Dr. Wm. H. Brooks, on October 6.
Miss Dorothy DeAncy To Become Bride of Clinton Brooks Oct. 6
Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. DeAney of 205 West 115th street announce the engagement of their daughter, Dorothy, to Clinton Brooks, a Brooks and well known Harlem business man. The wedding will take place October 6, at 4 p.m. The ceremony will be performed by the Rev. Dr. A. Clayton Powell, pastor of Abysinian Baptist Church, assisted by the Rev. Drs. J. W. Robinson and J. W. Brown.
Miss DeAney is a popular member of the younger set at Abysinian Baptist Church where she is employed as secretary to the pastor and church clerk. Her father is a deacon, at this church, and director of the Junior Choir.
Mr. Brooks conducts, an undertaking business at 149 West 128th street and is well known in fraternal circles. After a brief honeymoon, the young couple will reside at 117 West 129th street.
J. W. Rose Sells N.Y. Business And Returns To Calif
J. W. Rose Sells N.Y. Business And Returns To Calif
James W. Rose, for many, years one of Harlem's best known and most prosperous business men, has severed all business connections in New York and returned to Monrova, Calif., where he and his family will make their future home. Because of rheumatism, the winter climate became too severe for Mr. Rose and, last year he spent the winter months in southern California. He was so pleased with conditions in the West, he returned early this summer with the intention of selling out his barber and, restaurant business at 430 Lenox avenue and returning to California. His son, Raymond, who managed the business during his father's absence, left for California several weeks ago because of the illness of his mother, Mr. Rose, left Safarad, Sepembrh 8. Mr. Rose had been a resident and business man in New York for more than 20 years and his leaving will be reiterated by a host of friends.
Harlem Restaurant Owner Loses Court Suit For $13.80 Due Ice Dealer
When "Joe" Spinner, proprietor of Spinner's Lunch Rooms, at 13th Street and Seventh avenue, refused to pay his ice dealer, J. Thomas, a bill of $13.80, the dealer brought suit in the Seventh District Municipal Court. The case was heard on September 5 before Judge Lewis and resulted in Spinner being forced to pay the money in court. He was also subjected to a slinging rebuke for putting the ice dealer to so much trouble to collect an honest debt. Trouble between Spinner and Thomas followed the giving of the contract for the supply of ice to another company which underbid Mr. Thomas, who had been supplying the restaurants.
BE LOYAL TO YOUR RACE
Vote for MYLES A. PAIGE, a regular organization Republican, who is a candidate for the Assembly in the Primary September 18. Polls open from 3 to 9 p. m.
CORRESPONDENTS
Please have your news items in
ly Tuesday morning of each week.
Articles reaching the office later
on Tuesday, will appear in the
allowing week's issue.
ANNUAL CONVENTION OF BISHOP R. C. LANSON'S CHURCH.
Arkansas Court and Jail Officials Practice Mediaeval Cruelties Upon 2 Negro Boys, Convicted of Murder
Forest City, Ark. A story of mediaeval cruelty and torture is revealed in the tale of the conviction of two Negro boys, aged 14 and 18 years, respectively, for the alleged drowning of a white boy, aged 13.
Julius McCollum, the white boy who was drowned, was reported to have been seen with Grudy Swain and Robert Bell, the two Negro boys, and both of these boys were arrested and subjected to treatment that included threats of electrocution, brutal whippings and confinement in dark cells in efforts by Sheriff J. M. Campbell, Warden J. M. Toddquarter and a deputy sheriff to wring confessions from the boys. Another colored boy, Elbert Thomas, was also accused, but his drowned body was found ten days later.
N. A. A. C. P. declared that: "I felt as much interest in these little colored boys as if they had been my own children," writes Mr. Lanier, "and we made as strong defense for them as though they were our own boys. I firmly, honestly and conscientiously believe they are as innocent of the offense charged against them as I am or you are."
N. A. A. C. P. Gives $200. Mr. Laner further informs the N. A. A. C. P. a 12-year old brother of Grady was also accused, his clothes, saturated with oil, and that
Used 3-Foot Strap
According to a letter from Attorney W. J. Lanier to the N. A. A. C. P. in New York City, in which the facts are set forth in plain, blunt style, the Swain boy was arrested by the sheriff and jailed in Forest City, given the third degree by the same officer, who displayed a heavy six-shooter at his side, and who used a 3-foot leather strap with a steel buckle in whipping the boy.
Swain was taken to the Monroe County jail and to the penitentiary at Little Rogc, where he was kept in the stockade until brought to Forest Hill for trial at the March term of Circuit Court.
Bell was arrested by the deputy sheriff, a man of bad reputation, who had killed several men. On three different occasions, Bell was numerically and inhumely beaten by Warden Todhunter in the penitentiary, using a rawhide strap 4-1-2 feet long, three inches wide, with a handle. Both boys were cruelly beaten by this same warden, and were taken into the death chamber and shown the electric chair.
Denied Legal Rights.
When finally brought to trial in March, 1928, the boys were shown no legal consideration at all. A motion to disqualify the sheriff, because of his activities, from summoning a jury to try them, was overruled; motion to postpone because of absence of witnesses, lack of legal means of defense, and other well grounded reasons, were also overruled. Mr. Danier, in his letter to the
N. A. A. C. P. declared that: "I felt as much interest in these little-colored boys as if they had been my own children," writes Mr. Lanier, "and we made as strong defense for them as though they were our own boys. I firmly, honestly and conscientiously' believe they are as innocent of the offense charged against them as I am or you are."
N. A. A. C. P. Gives $200.
Mr. Laner further informs the N. A. A. C. P. a 12-year old brother of Grady was also accused, his clothes, saturated with oil, and that the child broke away from his canteens and hid in the woods after "confessing" that he drowned the McCollum boy. The father of Robert Bell threatened with dynaming of his house, fled the country.
The N. A. A. C. P. has contributed $200 to aid Attorney Lanier in his efforts to procure a stay of execution and reversal of verdict.
James C. Thomas To Vote For Al Smith
James, C. Thomas, a lifelong Republican, and forger Assistant United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, has announced his intention of supporting Governor Alfred E. Smith for the Presidency, Mr. Thomas explained that he considered it a wise policy for the members of his race to divide their vote. Governor Smith's record of fairness to all without regard to race or creed is influencing him to cast his vote for the Democratic candidate in November. Mr. Thomas is a practicing attorney, with offices at 15 Park Row and was once the Republican candidate for Alderman from the 19th Aldermanic District. He was born in New York City and educated at Cornell and the New York University Law School. His father, the late James C. Thomas, was the pioneer Negro undertaker in New York, and one of the wealthiest Negro citizens in this city at the time of his death.
950 MEMBERS OF
369th INFANTRY
AT CAMP SMITH
Harlem's Own Regiment
Under Col. Taylor
Left Sunday
The stirring days of 1917-18 were recalled in Harlem last Sunday when nearly 1,000 officers and members of the 369th Infantry, N. Y. N. G. paraded from the armory on West 143rd street down Lenox avenue to 125th street; and through 125th street to the New York Central station. The regiment was leaving for its annual field training of 2 weeks at Camp Smith, Peekskill, N. Y. The boys led by the famous 369th Infantry band. Lieut. Jacob Port director, and Col. William A. Taylor commander of the regiment. Thousands of people lined the streets and apartment buildings to bid them farewell.
Sunday, September 10, will be a big day at Camp Smith, as a large number of New Yorkers will journey to Peekskill to see relatives and friends.
The George P. Davis Post, No. 110, American Legion, is conducting a bus party out to the camp and will present the regiment with a trophy. Their buses will leave the Brooklyn Elks Home, 1068 Fulton street, at 8 a. m. and the 369th Infantry armory, 30 West 143rd street, at 8:30. In addition to the buses, a large number of friends will make the trip in their private cars.
Orthodox Episcopal Church Creates New.Vestry Board
St. Emilia Episcopal Orthodox
Church has created a Vestry
Board with Ebenezer Grant as
Senior Warden and Mrs. Maud
Semper as Thecusurer.
Liturgy and Sermon every Sunday
by Bishop Jack 11 a.m. and
8 p.m. at 37 West 118th St.
A full supply of hymn books
have just arrived from barbodes.
PRIMARY NOTICE!
Tuesday, September 18th, 45
Primary Day, Polls will be
open from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m.
If you are an enrolled Republican voter in the 19th Assembly District, you are urged to vote for MYLES A. PAIGE as against ABRAHAM GRENTHAL. You are for race representation. Stand up for a member, of your race.
Congested Traffic Conditions At Corner of 145th St. and 7th Ave. Call For More Traffic Direction
Citizens Ask Commissioner Warren For Traffic Officer For The Evening Hours, Until 11:30 P.M., In Addition To Present Day Services
Citizens residing in the neighborhood of Seventh avenue and 145th street have gotten together and formed a committee to wait upon Police Commissioner Joseph A. Warren to ask that the traffic post at that corner be made a split post, that is, a post covered by a traffic officer both day and night.
At present, an officer is stationed at this busy corner from 8:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., and the thanks of the people of that section are extended Commissioner Warren for this consideration, but it is pointed out to the Commissioner that traffic conditions 'there are so congested in the evening, that it is vitally necessary to the safeguarding of human life the, an officer be stationed during the evening hours, particularly from 8 to 11:45 a.m.
traffic here arrives from so many different angles, thus making it impossible and unsafe for the in and out of town motorist who comes in contact with the regular traffic and pedestrians.
"Hoping that we are not asking too much and that this request will meet with your approval and also your immediate attention."
"Respectfully,
"The Citizens or West 145th
Letter To Commissioner
The committee is composed of Mrs. Oscar Franklin, John H. Harold and Mrs. Emmett H. Johnson, and this group has addressed the following communication to Commissioner Warren:
"New York City, September 6, 1928.
"Police Commissioner
Joseph A. Warren:
"Dear Sir: We the citizens in the neighborhood of West 145th street and Seventh avenue, first of all, want to thank you for the consideration in giving to us a traffic officer for this corner from 8:30 a. m. to 6:30 p. m., which has meant much to this community. And since you have already seen the daily need at this particular point of our city, we are now asking the same consideration in that you would give to this same corner and community a traffic officer during the evening-hours from 8 to 11:45 p. m., as at this period of the evening the pedestrians barely escape with their lives, often seriously injured, and sometimes killed outright, trying to cross the street through the awfully congested traffic.
Lives Are Endangered
"Having lived at this corner for four years, in the face of the Roosevelt Theatre, and seeing crowds of people going and coming from the theatre and the churches of this vicinity, rather than take chances on their lives, they have been forced to walk many blocks before crossing to grass, their respective homes, as the
traffic here arrives from so many different angles, thus making it impossible and unsafe for the in, and out of town motorist who comes in contact with the regular traffic and pedestrians.
"Hoping that we are not asking too much and that this request will meet with your approval and also your immediate attention.
"Respectfully,
"The CITIZENS OF WEST 145th STREET & SEVENTH AVE."
ROCKLAND COUNTY NEGROES ENDORSE G. O. P. CANDIDATES
Sparkill, N. Y. At a recent meeting of the Colored Republican Club of Rockland County, held here, a resolution was unanimously adopted endorsing Hon Herbert Hoover, Senator Charles Curtus and the entire Republican ticket The resolution especially commended the qualifications of Mr. Hoover and expressed the opinion that he would be impartial in enforcing the constitution.
George A. Astwood, was chairman of the Resolution Committee and other members were Alice Rhodes and John Henderson.
Officers of this organization are Edward C. Frazier of Nyack, president; Rev. John Henderson of Spring-Valley, vice-president; S. L. Fuller of Haverstraw, second vice-president; George A. Astwood of Sparkill, secretary; E. A. Mitchell of Hillburn, assistant secretary; and Alexander Carter of Haverstraw, treasurer.
GREENTHAL SAYS EFFORT TO GET RID OF HIM IS FILTHY DIRTY, ROTTEN PROPAGANDA Is Supported In His "Big Stick" Policy By Preacher Who Rebelled and Quit Church Rather Than Obey Bishop's Order of Removal YEAR AGO-GREENTHAL ADVISED NEGROES THAT THE ONLY WAY TO GET OFFICIAL PLACE IS TO DO AS JEWS HAVE DONE
Pastor Bolden Said Those Who Oppose Gren thal Are Crazy; Dr. Julia P. H. Coleman Characterizes Fred Moore As "A Damn Fool"
On Monday night, September 19, 1927, at a meeting in interest of the candidacy of Fred R. Moore for election to the Aldermenatic Board, held at Abyssinian Baptist Church, under a splendid Mrs. James D. Wynne, Assemblyman Abraham Grenthal, Republican leader for the 19th A. D., made the following statement:
"YOU PEOPLE ARE TO BLAME IF YOU HAVE NOT GOT REPRESENTATION IN THE DEPARTMENTS OF THE FEDERAL, STATE AND CITY GOVERNMENTS. DO LIKE THE JEW—GO OUT AND TAKE THEM, AND YOU WILL NEVER BE A PEOPLE UNTIL YOU DO AS THE JEWS HAVE DONE."
The willingness of Negro men and women to remain subservient to the will and domination of white leadership, regardless of all racial considerations, was displayed blatantly at the meeting of the Central Republican Club, held in the club rooms on West 124th street on Wednesday night, September 5, when Assemblyman Abraham Grenthal, Republican leader of the 19th A. D., assembled his cohorts and was given further pledges of support by active
In opening the meeting, Leader Grenthal assailed the opposition to his continued domination as an effort to inject the race issue into the Central Republican Club, and that this was being done by spreading "a filth, dirty, rotten propaganda." This he attributed to the persons sponsoring the fight in interest of Counselor Myles Paige, the young colored man who is seeking designation as a candidate for the State Assembly on the Republican; ticket in the September 18 primary as against Grenthal's attempt to win a renomination.
Uses "Big Stick"
In what appeared to be a further expansion of the policy of Grenthal to use the "big stick" by dismissing any of the district workers who have the courage to favor Paige's candidacy, the district leader ordered every district captain to make a personal canvass of enrolled voters to find out just how they would vote in the primary, and to report the result of such visitations, with names and addresses of voters, to him at the club house on Monday evening, September 10.
Support of Grenthal's policy was voiced by Rev. Richard Manuel Bolden, chief pastor of the First Emmanuel Church, 105 West 130th street, an independent church established by Rev. Bolden some years ago when he bolted the Zion Connection in anger because Bishop Hood removed him from the pastorate of Mother A. M. E. Zion Church, New York City.
Rev. Bolden declared with vehemence that there is no fight in the Central Republican Club, that those who are trying to oppose Grenthal are "crazy", and he offered, if they were taken to Bellevue Hospital for observation, to prove his statement, to be true.
Lauding Grenthal leadership in the most extravagant venery, Bol
Certain women in Harlem are circulating malicious anonymous statements as to Alderman Fred R. Moore's opinion of the women of the community. Mr. Moore is too well known in Harlem for any sensible person to pay serious attention to these vile and nasty misrepresentations.
5 CENTS IN (TIN CENTS IN)
U. S. A. (FOREIGN LANDS)
Avenue
IS EFFORT TO
HIM IS FILTHY
IN PROPAGANDA
is "Big Stick" Pol-
Who Rebelled and
other Than Obey
mer of Removal
ADVISED NEGROES
AY TO GET OFFICIAL
AS JEWS HAVE DONE
Who Oppose Gren-
zia P. H. Coleman Char-
ve As "A Damn Fool"
October 19, 1927, at a meeting in in-
d K. Moore for election to the
Bassian Baptist Church, under au-
sie, Assemblyman Abraham Gren-
19th A. D., made the following
E TO BLAME IF YOU
PRESENTATION IN THE DE-
FEDERAL, STATE AND
DO LIKE THE JEW—GO
EM, AND YOU WILL
UNTIL YOU DO AS THE
Negro men and women to
me will and domination of
less of all racial considera-
tly at the meeting of the
held in the club rooms on
Wednesday night, September
Braham Grenthal, Republi-
D., assembled his cohorts
edges of support by active
den'ddeclared that he had been assured by Grenthal and other white leaders that the colored people up here in Harlem, under their direction, would get all that they wanted, and more.
Continuing, the preacher referred to a "friend" of his, who owed all that he is to the Republican party and the Central Republican Club, which had placed him in $5,000 a year position for two years, to do nothing but sit down and watch Tammany run the city.
What Bolden Said
This calls to mind the statement made by Bolden to an Age representative, published in The Age of March 10, last, in which he is quohed as saying:
"Fred Moore is a fool if he thinks I am going to help him fight these white folks. He wants me to carry out his fight but I am not going to do it. The 'niggers' get nothing except what the white people give them. These 'niggers' talk about the white people, but the white people make them. What I get comes from the whites and I am not foolish enough to try fighting them. They made me, they made Fred Moore, and they made all the rest of the niggers."
This statement was made after Grenthal had named Bolden as a delegate from the 19th A. D. to the Republican National Convention.
Then came Dr. Julia J. H. Coleman, who, at a meeting of the St. James Church Forum on Sunday afternoon, September 2, had refused to allow Counsellor Louis A. Lavelle, independent candidate for nomination to Congress, to speak, declaring that she was "willing to take shurs from ungrateful dogs whom we put in office and we beg you men to keep these thugs off us."
Dr. Coleman Is Wrong
Dr. Coleman recounted a tale of some years back, when she made an independent campaign for the State Assembly, in which she charged that when she went to Fred Moore for support, he fold her she was a damn fool for trying to buck the organization. Now
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the shouted, "I am saying to him that he is a damn cool for bucking the organization."
Alderman Moore, when asked about the matter declared there is no truth whatever in the statement attributed to him by Dr. Coleman, denying that any such interview ever occurred.
She recalled that when the vote was taken on Grenthal's designation some sweeps, back, she had whispered the name, "Grenthal" in announcing her vote. Now she is showing "Grenthal."
Mrs. Hattie Johnson spoke also. The night before the meeting at which Grenthal was designated, Mrs. Johnson had participated in a conference held in favor of Paige's candidacy; and had not only promised her support, but had offered to second the Paige nomination, but at the designation meeting it was alleged that she forgot her promise and raised her voice in seconding the Grenthal nomination instead.
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Hattie Johnson Talks Again
In this meeting, Mrs. Johnson uttered as her grievance the charge that she is tired of being under men who, as district captains, do nothing to help her work. Mrs. Johnson asserted that she did not know who her captain
is, and so on, about the information
mation, then? "Is Mr. Galliard. But she said Galliard could not be her captain and Fred Moore's worker, and asked Gremland, "What about it?" The leader would not make a direct reply but, told her he would see her after the meeting. A number of members of the Women's Republican, Leagus, an organization formed by Dr. Coleman, were present and expressed a determination to go through Harlem and put Grenhald over on September 18 and again on November 6, under the leadership of Mrs. Rosa Lampkins.
Counsellor Edward A. J. Johnson, who has been named for designation as the regular party candidate from the 21st Congressional District, made the most intelligent and interesting speech of the, evening, showing that he was well aware of what is necessary to make a successful fight in the coming campaign.
James Q. Moses, welcomed back to the club; said he had never been a Democrat at heart, and brief remarks were made by Col: Charles W. Pillmore and Counsellor C. B. A. French, a Deputy Attorney General of New York County. The latter, it was recalled by those present had "ducked, the blow" on the night of the designation, meeting by staying out of the club
room and not voting either for Grenhal or Palge.
In closing, Lander Grenhal reminded the district captains of his orders with reference to the canvass of the voters and warned them that while he drists most of them, there were several that he is keeping a close watch on.
Gneats At Laster Cottage
Spring Lake Beach, N. J.-Mrs. J. H. Briscoe and daughter, Miss Louise Briscoe, of St. Louis, Mo. have joined Mrs. Malone's party at the Laster Cottage. Other house guests are Mrs. Amy. C. Hopper, East Orange; Dr. Marguerite Scott and H. D. Scott. of Philadelphia. Dinner guests during the past week were: Mr. and Mrs. William M. Jordan, St. Petersburg, Fla.; Miss J. A. Barnes and Wesley T. Giles, Philadelphia; Miss Alice E. Johnson, South Orange; Miss Nora Randall and Mrs Emily Winton, Orange; Mrs. Mary Snowden, Staten Island; Mrs. E. A Gordon, New York City; George, Cole and Clar- T. Allmond, Philadelphia; Mrs. Lotie Griffin Taylor, Washington, D. C. Dr. Williams, Morristown, N. J.; Mrs. Billie Boree and W. H. Jones, Ashbury Park, N. I.
Washington, D. C.-Three- hundred, colored women, representing organized political clubs throughout the country, forming the National League of Republican Colored Women- held two sessions here one one of the hottest days of the year, following the annual convocation of the National Federation of Colored Women's Clubs.
Pledging its support to the Republican Party, the women declared for a program of organization, education and registration.
Leading Women Present.
Prominent among the women present were Mrs. George S. Williams of Savannah, National Committee woman from Georgia; Mrs. Mary Browne of Mound Bayou, National Committee woman from Mississippi; Mrs. Mary McLood Bethune, former president of the National Federation, founder and president of Bethune-Cookman College, Dayton, Fla.; Mrs. Daisy Lampkins, Pittsburgh; Mrs. Lethia Flemings, Cleveland; Mrs. S. Joe Brown, Ohio; Mrs. Mary Church Terrell, District of Columbia, and many others.
John. R. Hawkins, director of campaign work among colored voters, was given a tremendous gifting when introduced to the body; and this was emphasized as he declared that without women, neither party could, hope to win. Dr. Hawkins' plans were endorsed.
Misa Nannle H. Burroughs, president, called attention to the fact that women, for the first time, had been called into the party councils. Franklin Fort, secretary, Republican National Committee; Mrs. Mabal Walker, Willebrandt, Assistant Attorney General; Dean Keller Miller of Howard University; Mrs. Alvin T. Hert, vice chairman, National Republican Committee; Mrs. Williams, National Committeewoman from Georgia, and others, addressed the assemblage.
Roll of Officers
Officers for the next two years are President, Miss Nannie H. Burroughs, District of Columbia; Itt vioi-president, Mrs. S. Joe Brown, Iowa; 2nd vioi-president, Mrs. Belle Davis, Ohio; chairman of the executive board, Mrs. Daiyu S-lumpkin, Pennsylvania; corresponding secretary, Mrs. E. M. Kelly, Michigan; 1st recording secretary, Mrs. Rebecca Stiles Taylor, Georgia; 2nd recording secretary, Mrs. Ida Plummer, Indiana; 1st recording secretary, Mrs. Blanche Davis, Florida; financial secretary, Dr. Julia Coleman, New York; treasurer; Mrs. Mary Church Terrell, District of Columbia; parliamentarian, Mrs. Ora Brown Stokes, Virginia; department of voters, Miss Roberta Dunbar, Rhode Island.
National Benefit Insurance Head Visits The South
Washington, D. C.—"The Sunbeam," published monthly at Birmingham, Ala., in behalf of the agency force of the National Benefit: Life Insurance Company, in its issue, of August, 1928, calls attention to the friends being made for National Benefit by S. W. Rutherford, secretary-general manager, through the series of addresses he has recently been delivering in various parts of the country.
The Sunbeam says: "It would be impossible to estimate the large number of friends made for our Company, all over the country, by Mr. S. W. Rutherford, our Secretary-General Manager!
"Mr. Rutherford recently delivered an address to the citizens of Augusta, Georgia. Approximately one month later the people of that city were still talking of the occasion. And they were remarkably loud in their praise of his gentlemanly conduct, his radiant enthusiasm, and the common sense doctrine of thrift, industry and perseverance which he expounds from the platform.
"One of Augusta's leading business men said to the writer, 'No wonder National Benefit is successful. Any' concern would be after thirty years of Mr. Rutherford's guidance."
"Our Founder's ability to make friends, for himself and our Com pany, is a tremendous asset!"
PRIMARY NOTICE!
Tuesday, September 18th; is Primary Day. Polls will be open from 3 p. m. to 9 p. m.
If you are an enrolled Republican voter in the 19th Assembly District, you are urged to vote for MYLES A. PAIGE as against ABRAHAM GRENTHAL.
Vote for race representation. Stand up for a.member of your race.
We have some bargains in Williamsbridge and Mt. Vernon; one and two family homes with all improvements; Garages; Excellent transit facilities.
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When called upon to endorse the candidacy of Attorney Myles Paige, a young colored man, for designation to be a candidate for the State Assembly, in opposition to the present white incumbent, Attorney Abraham Grenthal, who is also the Republican leader for the 19th A. D., the Rev. William Lloyd Imes did not wait until returning from his vacation to express his opinion.
Not only did he give unqualified endorsement to the effort to secure merited race recognition politically in Harlem, but he took occasion to comment upon the fact that Harlem is afflicted with "some sorry people in politics, and we who love our race must band together and work together the very best we can."
will be glad to endeavor to stand steadfast with our race leaders in this matter.
Sorry People In Politics.
"It is a shams to admit it, but we have some sorry people in pol-
Mr. Ime's letter reads as follows:
"Dear Mr. Moore,
On the eve of returning from vacation I have your letter regarding the candidacy of Mr. Myles Paige, a young man of promise and uprightness. I am glad to respond that just as I tried to do the former campaign when our people at St. James supported you and others of our race, regardless of what some of our white fellow-citizens tired to do against you. I
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Delphis. This property can be bought on ver-
sale.
JOHN H. SMITH
Ber St. — New Brunswick
Phone New Brunswick 3799
All improvements, steam heat, newly painted and decorated. This is a real bargain. No reasonable offer refused.
I ALSO HAVE SEVERAL OTHER BARGAINS IN SIX ROOM HOUSES.
Lots 50 x 100 on Lincoln Highway, west of New Brunswick. A fine location for road stands.
Lots.100 x 125 on Lincoln Highway between Stelton and New Brunswick. Phone call or a postal will bring you a personal call or full information sent to you by request. JOHN SMITH
- High Class Property For Sale
- High Class Property For Sale
In Highland Park, New Brunswick, V J.
Four Rooms and bath all improvements, refrigerator, gas stove, hot and cold running water, tiled baths, shower baths, resta oil burners, Murphy Beds Built in Cabinets, Garages, Paved streets. Five minutes to main Line of the P. R. R., one block from Lincoln Highways. Direct Busses to New York and Philadelphia. This property can be bought on very reasonable terms.
FOR RENT
A very desirable corner store Street—especially suitable for C Store. We also have two small of business. We will let these a ultimate business only. Reference
Also Desirable Ap
Small and Large
APP
very desirable corner store at Seventh Avenue
especially suitable for Clothing. Confectionery
We also have two smaller stores, suitabe for
less. We will let these stores very reasonably
business only. References required.
Also Desirable Apartments for Rent
and Large — Desirable Loct
APPLY:
A very desirable corner store at Seventh Avenue and 139th Street—especially suitable for Clothing, Confectionery or Drug Store. We also have two smaller stores, suitabe for any line of business. We will let these stores very reasonably for legitimate business only. References required.
Also Desirable Apartments for Rent
Small and Large — Desirable Locations
APPLY:
TERRY HOLDING COMPANY, Inc.
2380 Seventh Avenue — Tel. Audubon 3073
Sun Porch, suitable for boarding house or a small sized hotel, with plenty of space for additional buildings
House Located In Splendid Locality In New Rochelle
WILL SELL ON REASONABLE TERMS
For Full Information
252 Power St.
will be glad to endeavor to stand steadfast with our race leaders in this matter.
Sorry People In Politica
"It is a shame to admit it, but we have some sorry people in politics, and they are not confined to any race either; we who love our race in Harlem must band together and work together the very best we can. I am wish you for Mr. Paige, and every other good and trustworthy racial representative."
Thanking you for your letter, I am
Cardially yours,
WM. LLOVD IMES.
Property For Sale
NNSWICK, N. J.
on the main line of the P. R. R.
new highway connecting with
100
at, newly painted and decorated.
reasonable offer refused.
OTHER BARGAINS IN
HOUSES.
Highway, west of New Brunswick.
Highway between Stelton and
bring you a personal call or
request.
SMITH
New Brunswick, N. J.
New Brunswick
Property For Sale
New Brunswick, N. J.
DEPARTMENT HOUSE
improvements, refrigerator, gas
water, tiled baths, shower baths,
dns Built in Cabinets, Garages,
main Line of the P. R. R., one
Direct Busses to New York
can be bought on very reason-
SMITH
New Brunswick, N. J.
brunswick 3799
live at Seventh Avenue and 139th clothing. Confectionery or Drugeller stores, suitable for any line stores very reasonably for legisl-ies required.
Apartmentes for Rent
Desirable Locations
LY:
LOCAL and LONG DISTANCE MOVING LICENSED PIANO MOVER
Main Office 78 West 131st Street—Haramel 5682
Branch Office 145 Nagla Avenue—Lorraine 7300
W. B. Stroxier, who resides at 152, West 14th street, has been prominent in business, social, political and fraternal life of Harlem for the past thirty years. He is past 'district deputy grand master of' the A. F. and A. M. Masons, Adam Lodge 101, and also a 33rd degree Mason, a chartered member of the United Sons of Georgia, and a member of St. James Presbyterian Church.
Mr. Strozier has been a staunch Republican in all of his career, started working, for the party in Chicago and Denver, Birmingham, San Francisco, Minneapolis and St Paul. He is at present the president of the 27th Election District Republican League, also, captain and leader of the District in the 21st A. D.
He was elected County Committeeman of a large majority of voters in the election of 1927 and also elected president of the 27th Election District Republican League of the 21st A. D. in the same year, and organizer of the 27th Election District Republican League in 1926. Mr. Strosier is hard at work to keep the district in the republican column, after a hard uphill battle to capture it from the opposite side, and to accomplish musician, who has had a successful experience in the theatrical world, and at one time was owner and producer of the Southern Sun Beam Comedy Co., and the Georgia Quartet, having traveled both in the U. S. A. and abroad. Mr. Strosier is well thought of in the community and can boast of a host of friends throughout the U. S. A.
Dr. Lewis, Editor Hill,
Washington, D. C.-Herbert Hoover and the Republican ticket deserve the support of the colored citizens of the country, Dr. Charles A. Lewis, Philadelphia political leader, and T. Edward Hill, editor of the McDowell Times of Key; stone, W. Va. took a political mass meeting of colored voters at Suburban Gardens, near Washington, on Labor Day.
Pointing to Herbert Hoover's courage and his record in office, Dr Lewis detailed the record of the Republican party in behalf of the colored voter, as meriting continued support.
Editor Hill discussed the general of the country under Republican administration, and as outlined in his acceptance speech. He warned that it is no emphasized Mr. Hoover's program time to change affiliations, and that a Democratic victory would mean suffering for the colored voters.
Stewart-Jordan Wedding
Charlotte, N. C.—Gettheisman A. M. E. Zion Church was the scene of a pretty wedding August 29 when Miss Ernestine Jordan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hood Jordan of 501 Carmel street, became the bride of Charles B. Stewart of Woodward, S. C. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. J. D. Cauthen, pastor, assisted by Dr. Charles Shute, the bride's uncle. Prior to the ceremony, Miss Ionia Shute, a cousin of the bride, sang effectively two numbers, "At Dawning" and "I Love You Truly." She was accompanied at the piano by Miss Ruth Jordan, sister of the bride.
Bridemaids were Misses Sarah Harry, Ethel Jamison, Edna Gaddy and Vivian Shute. Miss Lucille Jordan, another sister of the bride, was maid of honor. The groommen were Messra. G. E. McKeithan, Wilbur Jordan, Theodora Gunn and George T. Butler. The little flower girls were Little Pharr, Jorethea Little, Ollie Tate and Maxime Williams. A reception followed the. ceremony at the home of the bride's parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart will make their home in Carthage, where Mr. Stewart is a school teacher.
BE LOYAL TO YOUR RACE
Vote for MYLES A. PAIGE, a regular organization Republican, who is a candidate for the Assembly in the Primary September 18. Polls open from 3 to 9 p. m.
4. rooms, detached house with enclosed porch, steam heat, parquet, oak, lime bath and kitchen, pantry, shower, built in tub, driveway.
Dr. John R. Hawkins
To Speak Next Week
In Philadelphia, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa—Dr. John R.
Hawkins of Washington, D. C.
manager-in-chief of the colored
division of the Hoover Campaigns.
Committee, will speak here Sunday,
September 23, at Gibson's Dnbar
Theatre, Broad and Lombard
streets, in the interest of Wilberforce
University under the auspices
of the Ward, Civic Forum.
Other prominent persons who will
speak are Attorney, Raymond P.
Alexander, Mrs. Lena Trent Gordon,
Major R. R. Wright, sr. Dr.
F. P. Bishop, Dr. Preston M. Ed-
wards, Congressman Welsh, Bishop
J H. Jones, E. W. Rhodes.
The drive is for $30,000 in this
area between September, 23 and 28.
Returns From Europe
Mrs. M. T. Laimer, principal of the Cleveland School, Washington, D. C., returned Wednesday, September 6, on the SS Homemen from a two-months' trip through Germany, Switzerland, France and England, sailing from Southampton.
While in New York she was the guest of Mrs. Williams, 30 Edgecombe avenue.
CARD OF THANKS
I wish to express my gratitude to the many friends and members of the various fraternal orders who were so noble and kind in the hour of my bereavement, caused by the death of my mother, the late J. U. Jones, on Sunday, June 17, 1928.
(Mrs.) M. BERNADO, Daughter
House For Sale
Jackson Heights, L.I.
New one family house, 7
large rooms, all modern im-
provements. Heated garage,
paved street. Must sacrifice.
Price $8,750.- R. GLINNEN
30-46 91st STREET
Telephone Porey 4753
APARTMENTS, POR KENT
423 West 53rd Street
Four rooms; electric light, hot
water supply, gas, white slant,
newly decorated; reasonable Rent.
Inquire Bart Green, or Mrs.
Horton, Greens
or
J. P. & L. A. KISSLING
690 Eighth Avenue
MONEY TO LOAN
On First, Second, and
Third Mortgage
Apply To
L. C. COLLINS
Licensed Real Estate and
Insurance Broker
2313 Seventh Avenue
SMALL FARMS
FOR SALE OR:
EXCHANGE
30 Miles From N. Y.
B. & J. HOME BUILDERS
445 North Avenue
Dunellen, N. J.
CHARLES E. DAVIS
LICENSED PLUMBING &
HEATING CONTRACTOR
All work done under the Inspection and approval of the board of health.
Motor Car emergency Service
Night and Day
Phone Biggins 2163
Address: 3533 Third Avenue
Between 168-169 Streets
N. Y. C.
Jan. 7-5m
Apartments To Rent
2573 EIGHTH AVENUE
Between 197th and 188th St.
40-42-44 WEST 135th ST.
309 WEST 120th STREET
232 WEST 122nd STREET
129 WEST 130th STREET
311 and 313 WEST 119th ST.
47-49 WEST 139th STREET
121 EDGECOMBE AVE.
332 WEST 141st STREET
140 WEST 142nd STREET
Apply
Philip A. Payton, Jr.
Company
328 LENOX AVE.
Bet. 126th and 127th Sta.
Tel. Harlem 8092
FLIT Kills Flies Mosquitoes Other Household Insects
Bradhurst 0550
DISTANCE MOVING
MANO MOVER
EXPRESS
FOR and DELIVERED
Town Daily
31st Street—Harlem 5682
la Avenue—Loerraine 7500
Se }
FAS Srahc a Ha aE TT, —
Bi Soar on ener nce crete eee oe :
——— —— ia TMURSE A ep tee ae eee RW ORE Rem yon Coma rs
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i wit, nen @ YAP Sek ‘SA ey oe gee] cps id Fa wen ss ae SNe ee eS Ce ek ae US Re eee x Lona eo je ,
sored Campaigners In The Field /Brvert Meer Garee | Sioaiiratee Se er SR ee
Ven . ci i Bead eerie rite vas ene A. a] Mits|-Viola ‘Lewis, Rock! aoe Te Mav Se rata. weaitd ata maieitin cont ends ts
L Lamipalgners IB Ihe ries Aly nisilencs T “Udortaker “Ocganisition - Repabcan,| tector, was Se erate: ce Te Marry |Lincela: University... ©.) tid: 3¢-4, imadeiitc contin ete
i ies pg jokinness To Underiaker| Seyir;c eran shen ote sets wr ony ora oo won] Ske Give Dance Sed heat aly
Tor Ap | croc cn eee see TST ae eet te ue Hay Heer weal Set Gite Dance, |S crn e neatl
TO Bik ne iid to Mant fie | eee fit a place, | WN. ¥., ; Aree Soca fe n of scoot
, Sey ipa |. [Soceanioase someter == BMC: SESSION, see ghee ager arts rn muito] °) (At Seal Paras hg ee eh
ioe ge subjected] 6 wmecessary. thental: an-| Da M: ¢: “Conference Experiences and New] -qsnicc, Miss “Clariesa Adele] ise nt oi" nn Toya
\ i ia est muish becatse of the alleged selfish: ; . Objectives". “Reports, fram :sum-| Cwathmey, to! Frederick Benjami fa + eee Gehite cone head :
On ee ee ness and lack of service rendered by | mer ‘obaferences. were given, by| Johnson of,:the New Yi city|; A aroun ‘of stud ‘nei a ame pao
cpu 18 ies I, T CHICAGO. WILL Misg: Ophelia: Shields Miss We:| postofic, formerly. af ers nai ifaiversiey sth tv x vacate, Page i
: = LS a __ | Hi, Spel” Shit af Savannah, | UF eer ew Wore actives. ‘Mrs. CA. Ferguten da)
More Than One Miiot Nero Mae Ate Pali feureese pele od |? EU Ee See htes WW. Mite ‘Arnold| Ga, on Thursday evering, Septem:| CiY FAVE a seholdship, fund dance heen, oF He eae Tote
muy : Negro ih 28) gests, vias Pain, ‘Hes!’ REELECT MORRIS Opbetia Shields ted 2 dueeunsion oo ber 20, at 7:10 olelock atthe Mes| Fo en Te Smalls Paradies] “Mrs, itary Carpenter, pret!\D
f ety iB 8 *Harlem Hospital on ‘Ai 9 fields led a discussion on| Siah. Baptist Church, eae it was] den m cen Jo read
i, Western States’ lh Te * F as a.resulf of a hae wee | PTET [gait ea Gleb oe ft-| place, Yonkers, Ach one of the bine and Sin ae ae, Aire tet :
: ; errit ory, estern “pShE HRN the body to Me-“Rabain New York — “ag [ellte a, Ceanaing;Cemmanity?” “| Mina: Gwathmey is the charmin the collins have Pel" se ce cine. Come an
ace . iy tal 4 J . wim the alless promised to tke NEM J Group Under’ H.; cver tc'the discussion of The Ad.| 24, ficient cashier in-the Trek cis cates trned into a big fare] pr "Adeng’ Cx Minos pre a
; Rea B : all worry as to arrangements for the |T-_ i | [xiisistration "and “Unification of] {37¢h street YW. CA. st|well party as visors and students | lnsenB. Reyerr aie presidents
Division Being Reached By Speakers |SeaTic S°G3Rs Se] J. wards D. GM," |DGRS tat at| es acts rd stam Sef Hat Ee, oo
ba f pitti. ; (was. insured ia the Metropolitan], ""\ po "led'by Miss Ania Arnold sho} Position has won f ies wing the city, 2. nt. cnet, tasuren Tel
ri = - Lite Insurance Company, for $253] toe as just-come t a Re | mirati m for. her the ad-| = Among ‘those wise’ De MU Ma: Honey rare, Rel
" hicegs, UL Citored campaigners in the feld|is eres ae Sei, - UeltSe 8 fee ne Rete | mcr Soothe ke dat Ra [oe dal le ae
y 7 i cine. yy, the insurance ofice was cho: Saunders leds the discussi “room daily. She i i si He Bouchet Day, "Mr. eee Bees
ae meting with an enpeceented reception fn the| Eo see Ei tht Sl en eh Bale a By gd eater’ Be daca nae
: icts accordin: . ‘undertaker heard th: When] ‘Dye special “sleepers over th a ano, soloist in “Messiah. Baptist, Marshall Ross, Mr. and Mrs. Ed-| Rev. Dr. lJotn W inion, Ree
z h eta ae ig to reports re- | She sencycoull not be collecund [Me™ TORE, Cemiral: were ver ths| Rollowing ihe. evening: seadcal SEle musical SNe ne (Sekaw pace, ME an Mis R [De Gri Oliver: tion Eos
Min slate and tin ator Yo report | a ean YORE Cental ace rue foEeRS, WSSU aT BE| Me wedding cep, Eehen ‘Jonnston Dr. GoM, Olver, “Rev, ‘Dr, Albert 4.3
ored_ y publican | ustii after Tuesday, he refused to }lows who left on Saturday, Esky rector, demontrated, wath -the| low the adding reception will fo.| Misses, Blanche Levy, Charlotte oy ines Atdcrman ee
o}loys who left on Saturday, Sep-[Fector demontrated. with. -the).1"tye home of the bride's mother, tyes Alva Daves, Thelma, Bere Lord lees Aiserman, Fred: Rea)
f th ther.| lack; Cafmen and Ivy Nunes "Mary| tenn Te Werte jacob Block. Ak: ts
-Campaign headquarters.
"qwenty-cight states are under
the supervision of western head-
eters and_men and" women or-
‘prs have” boen sent tothe
Ayacipal cities in each state as rep
Muatatives “of the'National Com-
mittee to cooperate with the vari-
‘nis state organizations. ,, =
Vike speaker's, bureau ‘in “Chicago
has received Inindreds of requests
for: speakers to appear’ before
quch and club groups, fairs .and
other public meetings.
‘ Tasues Reached People...”
"On every hand there are indica-
tions that the issues of the cam.
eign, 25 we “have “foreseen them,
Pik reached the people. Colored
‘wters are looking for a substantial
fan aman who can accomplish
‘things: Thev believe Mr. Hoo-
yer'is that man and. they are
depending on him to’ aid in solving
swheir problems when he’ is elected
president” ea
‘= Mrs. Myrtle Poster Cook is di-
rector of the colored women's bu-
jreau, and Mrs. Lethia Fleming of
IEleveland, Ohio, is directing the
imumen in the Feld. C.F. Rich:
inrdson.’ Rickmond, Ind., is at head-
‘quarters with State Senator Adel-
thert Roberts of, Illinois, and is as-
Igisting in the direction of the camt-
pai. < a
the 28 states an the territory of
ithe western division ‘contain more
than one million. colored voters. In
Ilinois there are, 150,000 ‘colored
eters: Kentucky, 140,000; Tennes-
‘s; 250,000; Ohio, 195,000: Indian-
ta, 60,000; Missouri, 130,000; Mich-
jee Spon: | Nebrsats, TOON:
love, Minnesota afd Wisconsin,
{Qo}; and the borders of the re-
ae eene centes anmronimately 20000
EMMA RANSOM HOUSE
3B
on ee
ends i
are
ese, x N. Bass.
Ps Nori Sti Nene C
Eee oder thou N.C Ans
Buticore Miss. Vi Sula “Bayon
tore. Mise, Viola Ri Ne
E Bergemasier A Ba
ges enrietts Ray.
Bed erage Sonat Ms
Mrs. M. ist Letdore wie
J. Seale, perma Ms v
pace igs Tel _W.
Yalan: Nits Lun Bite
Me Conn, Miss Slane Bot
gts Marie Taylor, Mr er
Philadelphia: °D Florence “ao fs
Ye ities ied ie fone
Grae eh Miss CR
re a list Drake une
Ro "orb Chicas? Ms
Took Stes ‘Bibel Gta Bier Me
eee 1 haves Miss Ea
Cjde. Charlest pone Xie "pom
ie Crag. esto, SSE Paul
Msg e} "
| gs a Eu Spri :
Cae nya aud Tes te ies
Bellin. mand Have Ee
pee Ms Ving aa
on i, Vie :
Ew er ae
ane sty Bee ae .
Mis Minnie’ Fitegerald’ “Tena
se Fiagerald ‘Winston.
Mis Lila Mig acy Teme,
Fes eneh ate jor
bunk, Pat Mr 3, oat, Pits
i Bia ee le, Pits
Bas ats Fioward, "Sten,
Ra tes teelton,
Beech te Grace R. paneer
Mss yah Peicnouge Vet
s 2 eee eee antort
§,C5 ata Bi oe, Yor
fie os ache Gipvon, Claris:
So Be Sher tamer
Be : wee Miss we
te Fe pen negro
ae d Eel sanders, Wii on
es, Mises Mar He
Mas De ee me Ys
woe Mee Bowman, "So et
Were PE Shepard bs
jo Spa, Sie para, Bis
tee Ce Miss ee bee
Girt, Mass tees Mee Stine
oes Gray. Ceveland,
Fess Mes e Tenner, Ho =
rs Massachuste "Haas
alts Anse PG a
foe Loch, st ae
Bn ios ss Wenonah Bond,
Yreka te
Many Mies nee as
Sone a fete Vic MS
mr Hampton, Vary, Mie
P Lees fener ‘Mass.;
=, “tn Fe 3. Miss
He savas St aad
Min ie elon Me “x
eae ae ee ES
es Hosen Mary M.. Gi ‘
ra econ seme ilmer,
DC Stas Bertha “\vahington,
a «Bertha Hubbard Ce
Pr ish Mary, ae oe
ibe oat sire
ee Mis Clet oe: H.|
me ‘ween ‘Sho ir
er pe ail ane
Bee Be =
Miho a atte meet
na Mis Mate is Jeciaom
“i s . Pegues, Dare
te Gs “gia Washingt =
aed Mise Amn a Oe
reser A ie ae
oes Carla Johnson,
fe oe a iiss” Mattie
ee “¢ MsKinnes ae
choy Waste:
y, Waterbury,
Conn.} Miss Marjorie, Miss Marian
J. Gardiner, Orangesbirg,.. So: Ci
Miss Florence Franklin, - Ambler,
Pa.; Miss” Julia Valentine Jobnsoa,
Bangor,” Maine; Miss Fannie QM.
Griner,’ Jessup, Ga.; “Mrs? William
‘Lemmons, Allentown, Pa.; Mrs.
Frances Robinson, Hartford, * Conn.;
Miss Louise Jones, Mrs. Martha
Jones, Paterson, N. J.: Migs M. Ed-
monia_ Brown, :Montclair, .N. J.
‘Mrs. Dovey Van Hay Collins, Nor-
folk, Va: Miss Picola Gould, Ham-
let, N.C.; Misg..Helen B, Grant,
Roxbury, Mass.:' Mrs. May A.
Qhinn, °° Cambridge, Mass.; ~ Miss
Josephine - Wicks,. Washington, _D.
Cj Miss Irene Abrams, Providence,
R_ 1; Miss Mavis C. Bursterman,
‘Miss Esther Bursterman, New York
City; Mrs. Mary Bayne, Brooklyn,
N. Y.; Mrs. Mary Franklin, Mrs.
Mary Dortche. Conn,: Miss | Sadie
Hippard. Georgia: Mrs. Eva D.
Hoffman. “Charleston. S.C.
BP tee es .
Caroline Bagley To
Broadcast Friday Night
Sarai Bagley: caathce of the
recently published ‘book "My Trip
Through -Egypt and the Holy
Land” will be the guest speaken-
the Negro “Achievement Hour: un-
der the auspices of the Young
Men's Christian Association
Charlton Avenue Branch, Brook
lyn, This program will be broad.
cast through WABC on Friday
September Is, at 11 to 12 p. m.
Tiis marks the 34th-hour in the
series arranged by,"\Who's Who In
Colored America.” In this hour,
Mrs. Bagley, considered the ‘mos!
extensive woman trayeler of the
Race, will talk regarding some in-
timate experiences while abroad.
The YMCA program has been
arranged by E. B, Weatherless, Di:
rector of the Department of Ser:
vice and Activities. He is the son
of Nelson E Weatherless Head o}
the Science department in the pub-
Vie schools ef Washington. D. C
Among the musical features wil
be renditions by the Brookly~
Choral Club, Miss Andrades Lind:
say, and Mr. Waters, soloist of the
Club. .
=e
The West 155th Street Branch ‘of
the Young Men's Christian Associa-
tion has closed one .of the most_ac-
tive summers of its existence. Hun-
dreds of soxng men, strangers in
New York City. were handled dur?
ing the summer months.
Jobs were foukd for many who
came from the colleges looking for
employment during the summer sea-
son. During the month of August
over’ 350 were given roothing accom-
modations in the "Y” dormitory and
almost an equal number sent else-
where
‘During’ the month of September,
the various departments are organiz-
ing for the Fall arid Winter seasons.
The Boys’ Department is busy as-
sisting the members in outlining
their school prorams and helping
them to become adjusted to the new
order of things.
The Physical Department will be
closed ‘from September 17 to 30 un-
dergoing repairs and thorough reno-
Yations. All lockers will be fumi-
gated ‘and pet in readiness for the
opening of the: classes on October 1.
DULL HEADACHE,
and Pains In Sides
“For fifteen years’ I have
been using GBlackDraughh
when . needed, for biliourness
and_ constipation,” says Mr.
iO, Woolard! of Oriental,
N. G, “and I have always
found it to be reliable and ef-
fective, Tt certainly comes up
to all the good things that are
said @r it, and I am glsd to
recommend it. "
“T have found that
Thedford’s © Gil
se the system of
the polacks Shi secamalalg
when the organs do not act
properly, and I would not be
without it,
"I always give Black
Draught to the children for
colds. (when a laxative is
needed). It is fin for that,
“My trouble is chiefly con-
atipation, which is always ac
compenied by dull headache,
backache, and paits in my |
sides. I think Black-Draught
in the quickest and best relief
for this”
Get a package today.
Costa only 1 cent a dose.
Sold Everywhere
‘seed
Unkinieess To Undertaker
| Acaording to ‘Mrs. !Rose Phillips
Of..St.' {Nicholas avenue, she” was
bubjcied to uecesar, ental am
guish because of the alleged selfish-
ness and: lack of service rendered by
W. G. Rabain,.a Harlem, undertaker
‘with arebapel “dt 2519 Seventh: ave-
‘nue. ‘Mrs. Phillips’ fourteen year old
daughter, Vivian Phillips, ‘des vat
the. Harlem Hospital on August 31
as a.resulf of a brain tumor: ~~
-She'gave the body to Mr.“Rabain,
‘whom she alleges promised to take
all worry as to arrangements for-th
funeral ‘from her hands. The deceas
ed was insured in the Metropolitan
Lite Insurance Company, for $26:
but because of: the Labor Day bol
day, the insurance office was closed
from Friday until Tuesday. Wher
the undertaker heard that the insur:
ance ,money could not be collectes
uuatij “after Tuesday, he refused tc
émbalm the body unless Mrs. Bhil
lips give him:a deposit of $60.
She was unable. to raise thi
amount, as her husband is also sich
in the hospital and she is the sol
support of -her family. The under
taker, in the meantime, had remov-
‘el thé body to the morgue.
Finally after ao appeal was made
to various orgamizations and friends
the Social Servite Department o
St.’ Mark's M. E, Church, the Rev
J. W. Robinson pastor, and Verna
J. Williams, attorney, the necessary
money for. the funeral’ was guaran
‘teed by that church, and. Mis. Louise
B."Hart was. permitted: to prepare
the body for burial.
Because of changes made in un
dertakers at the last minute and the
removal of the body to the morgue
only immediate members of the de-
ceased family were able to attend
the fgreral ‘The burial took place
last“ Friday and despite the allegec
predictions of Mr. Rabain that the
insurance policy, was no ood, it wa
paid on Friday’ to the mother.
Other Harlem iundertakers say i
is customary to bury a person with
out any deposit in cases where there
is an insurance policy with a reliable
company as they are stre 10 ge
their money -out of the policy.
Homes Cottage Guests
satitogs, XN. Y—Guests at the
“Holmes Cottage ‘during the lat
week in August were: Mr. and
Mes. ALL. Myerse Flint Mich.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Thornton:
Miss Annie Scott, “Roselle, N: J.
Miss N. Royster, Mr. and Mrs.
James, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Har-
vey, Miss Bradford and Mr, Rain-
ey. Philadelphia; Mr. and Mrs.
Carr and family, Baltimore: Mr.
and. Mrs. Brown, Boston; Miss
Gertrude ‘Cruce, Danbury. Conn.;
Mrs. Alice Hawkins, W. E, Bent-
ley, WE Rentley.- Miss Esther
Calloway, J. B. Jackson and Mrs.
Davis, New York City.
ce PS ce
From the days of the Biblé to
he ultra modern times! The first
and the last word in the-curing of
Become, bad and worse! a
“ECZEMA: BALSAM’
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with newest discoveries of science.
-Old and new blessings under a new
name. If you are a sufferer, send
for one bottlethe cost is small,
‘whed the result is cure.
“PRICE $1.00—3 FOR $250
_ Stuzemal" Laboratories
+ 249 West 135th Street
_SNOWDALE FARM
| BREWSTER, N, Y.
Offers any attractions for a
+ pleasanty day's outing oF long var
Eation. 5
Large private grounds for “all
outdoor sporty, such as tenal,
Bathing, loox hiker and. picaice
Table upplled rom the products
of the farm.
All’ improvements’ Two hours
fide by auto or fail from New
York City. Express uains over
New York RR. ta. Brewster
goby Asto—te White Plaion” and
route. 2 nae
__ Parties served by “appointment
eat
Telephone! Brewiter 35-W. or
qrite Me A J HORAN, Brew
wer, N.Y. {
"When in New -York
STOP AT THE
E.. H, WILSON, Proprietor
A Select Transient
and Family Hotel
LENOX AVENUE AT,
+ 145th STREET
‘Telephone Audubon $976
| Qsick Servier —Never Closed
Johnnie Jackson's
i Iunch. -
{ 2285 SEVENTH AVENUE
Bet,’ 134th and 135th Sts
| Wholesome Food,
Home Cooking *
Estimates For Banquets
|__<_Cheerfutly Given
a, Phowe “$205. Chelan
iat teheteaclomecuatons or Ps
gem or reece ee iene
Ms Wee eb Se Bay Mth & mn Aras:
ote for MYLES A, PAIQE, 4
18, Polls oes Sees S a x.
B.C. SESSION.
ATCO) WEL
New York Group: Under’
“J. Edwards, D. C. M,"
=" Left Sept. 8
wo special ‘sleepers over the
New York Central. were required
for the representation of Odd Fel-
lows who left on. Saturday, Sep-
tember 8,-for the: Biennial Movable
Committee of the Grand United
Order. of Odd Felfows, in charge
of District Grand Master Harry, J.
Edwards of New York City, chair-
man of the’ delegation.
There were about sixty from New
York and others .were' taken on at
Albany, .Syracuse,* Rochester, Buf-
falo, Ithaca, Auburn.. and other
points. - The B..M. C. session is
being held this weck, September -10
cing bold
‘There is no opposition to the
present’ administration, according
to Mr. Edwards. and the outlook
is that National Grand Master
Edward H. Morris and his entire
staff, including Grand ~ Director
James F. Adair of “Brooklyn, will
‘be_reelected.. = é
The New Yorkers are to leave
Chicago on September 15 for the
Teturn, with a stop at Buffalo for
side trips to. Niagara Falls and
Canada. 2
137th Street Branch
ie »
Y.W.C.A.. Begins Fall Work
_ The past week has been the occa-
sion for some serious and thought
ful planning of the coming year's
work in the Branch. With Labor
Day the summer program of the
Branch—given over so largely tc
hospitality to hundreds of visitors
in the city—ceased aad the fal
program began. Activites in club:
and classes open in September an¢
2 period of completing and per
fecting plans, begun in the Spring
is entered upon immediately the
holiday is over. Mrs, E. S. Mich:
acl, chairman of the Braach, and
fifteen staff members headed by
Mrs. Cecelia Cabaniss Saunders
the general secretary, took the boat
for Rear: Mountain. on “Tuesday
morning, September 4th, and spent
three days in a Setting-Up_ confer.
ence fee the coming year's work
at our summer camp, Fera Rock
The group returned “Thursday
night. September 6th, after three
delughiful days together. The
days were spent in work for the
most part. as plans for the coming
year were discussed and means for
making the work more effective in
the community considered. But
there wag time for some recreation
for swimming, hiking and boating,
and whether at work or play there
as the caceniing delete of vba
a
| ig a
| wi
| | |
f , an: |
c f
ae
|
me A
7 nd
on 7 i
a |
HIGHEST INSERVICE
LOWEST IN ®RICE
205 West 135th Street
AT SEVENTH AVENUE
Singles. $125 and up” per
night. :
Doubles, $2 snd up per aight,
Steam heat, running hot
aid cold water in every
room, "
HELLO EVERYBODY *
Announcing
+ STATION Vv. T. Ri *
Located At”
24 WEST:13sth STREET.
"DAILY PROGRAM
* Weekdays
8500, A ME Qu Breaklait
12 Noon—Bush People’s
Luncheon, *
5-9 P. M.—Hawley's Famous
Dinner, : :
11:30 P, M—After Theatre
Supper. * .
Sundays 5
‘2,9 P. M. Special Dinner
Look For The Green Lantem
“At
THE VENETIAN
TEA ROOM"
New York’s-Coziest *
Eating Place
We Sign Of At4a,m 5
fe, > Open Saturday Evenings Until 10 o'clock '
—=—=—i«w et i ta —_—_
% We Are lL EY: . ye y a We Are 3
Dependable ri a 4 OCGA) PN Dependable o
“, — * i. a SO
wa 8 to 14 WEST 125th STREET Be
~4_— Just West of Fifth Avenue. «* NEW YORK Tel Harlem 4976-4977" .
4 . White Plains Store: 13:15 MAMARONECK AVENUE, Tel. White Plains 7805 . . 7
. ‘ . . 3 7
Dependability the Key Note in
Buying Furniture =~ 7
: ; ° - : f 3
When you’ plan to buy furniture-for your home there is but-one issué-at stake—DE- “&
PENDABILITY. This is divided into two component parts: ee
: _ 1—DEPENDABILITY of the House with which you deal DOs
. 2—DEPENDABILITY of the Goods which that House sells to you “ -
“! The matter of PRICE becomes:a secondary consideration. For the house that in
itself is DEPENDABLE by reputation, automatically, and as a matter of course, ,
sélls equally DEPENDABLE furniture at LOWEST PRICES. This is axiomatic. ate
It is this process of square dealing ONLY, that can confer the reputation of . “
DEPENDABILITY upon any retail organization. 1 cat 7
. For Fifteen Years’ DEPENDABILITY has heen the
KEYNOTE to -Riley-Hogan Success.
.. ‘The Siecess Which. Enabled Him to Open ‘Another Store at White Plains, N. Y. _
a Here you “may purchase medium-priced and better gradés of furniture with the
“+ full assurance that we 'never-misrepresent; that qualities are the best obidinable at
the price; that the merchandise is properly- constructed; that it will give utmost serv- .
ice; that our prices are competitive and as LOW or LOWER than elsewhere, A visit .
. here will convince you, : . : .
+" MORE THAN THIS NO MERCHANT CAN OFFER .
| Copyright 1925, by Riley Hogan Co, Int. , : .
ovtfol-door® life, at- Fern:.,“Rock:
Migs] Viola ‘Lewis, the Camp- Di
rector,. was. entirely successful “in
her rafe-of: Hostess and, made, the
grokp both ‘comfortable and bappy.
Mrs, Michael opened the confer-
edce. With a ‘short service of wor-
ship aad'led the first discussion’ on
“Conference Experiences and New
Objectives". “Reports, from :sum-
mer ‘obnferences were given. by
Miss, Ophelia: Shields Miss We:
nonah Bond, Miss Anna Arnold
and Mrs. M."W. Williams.
: On’! Wednesday morning Miss
Ophelia Shields led a discussion on
“Is the YW, C, A. Adapting. it-
self to a Changing;Commanity?" °
The afternoon session was given
cirer tothe discustion of The Ad-
ministration and Unification of
Membership” and. this discussion
was led-by Miss Antta Arnold who
has just.come to us as Membership
Secretary. » In the evening Mrs.
Saunders’ leds the discussion 07
“Clubs. and _ other Organized
Groups." |
Following ihe. evening: session
Miss Leolya Nelson, Physical, Di-
rector, demontrated, with, the
group, games for parties and if the
irls enjoy the games as much as
fhe secretaries did the success of
parties will be assored. 5
‘Thursday morning at the closing
session campaign ‘and fall plans
were discussed under the leader
ship of Miss Viola Lewis.
‘On “Friday evening, September
7th, the first meeting of the sea-
son of the Committee of Manage-
ment was held with Mrs E. S.
Michael, Branch Chairman, presid-
pany
St. Marks Lyceum Te
: :
. Open Sunday, Sept. 16
The lyceum of St. Mark's M. E
Church, the oldest organizatién of
its kind in .the city, will have its
fall opening Sunday afternoon, Sep-
tember 16. Among Ske speakers on
the opening progrém®are Alderman
Fred R. Moore, Attorney Myles A.
Paige. Hon. E. A. Johnson, Repub-
lican candidate. for Congress, and
the Rev. F. Joins. The tyceum’s
subject will be “What Shall We
Do To Be (Politically) Saved.”
Special, music will be “furnished
by the Coleridge Taylor Dramatic
Club under direction of Mrs. Nor-
vella “Pinder:
W. Clinton: Holloway, president
of the Lyceum, will. preside.
Sterling Forest Farms
Greenwood, N. Y.—Guests at the
Sterling Fortst. Farm House “were
Mz. and Mrs. Abraham Gage, : Miss
Florence | R. -Flit. New York City,
‘Miss Henrietta Jackson, Mrs. Han-
nah Jacksen. Brookbn, N. ¥., and
Mrs. A. Ro Marsh, Corom. N.Y.
‘Weekend guests over the Labor
Day holidays were Oscar Flaver,
‘Mr. and Mrs, William J. Wilkins.
Brosklm, N. Y.j Mr. and Mrs
Rosamond Johnson.’ Mr. fand Sirs.
McPherson. Mr. and Mrs. Howas
E, Riley, New York City: Mr. and
‘Mrs. A. H. Beng and children, Al-
fred B. “Henry and Samuel E
Blount. Breokivn. N. ¥.
of oe
Miss Gwathmey Te Marry
Mts. Henry Howard’ of 26 Wood
place, Yonkers,\N. Y., has issued
inyitations for the marriage’ of ‘her
daughter, Miss “Clarissa Adele
'Gwathmey, to’ Frederick Benjami:
Johnson of-:the ‘New ‘York - City
postoffice, formerly: gf .Sevannah
Ga, on Thursday evefiing, Septem:
ber 20, at 7:30 o'clock, at the Mes
siah. Baptist Church, - Ashburton
place, Yonkers.
+ Miss‘ Gwathmey is the charming
and efficient cashier in-the West
137th greet Y. W. C.'A. cafeteria
Manhattan, and htr attractive dis
position has won for, her the ad-
miration and esteem of the host al
patrons who throng the dining
'room daily. She is also the s0-
prano, soloist in ‘Messiah, Baptist
‘Church and has achieved consider.
able musical distinction.,
| The wedding reception will fo-
low the ceremony, and will be held
st the home of the, Bride's moter
Bride-Elect Is Given
Unique Linen Shower
“Yonkers, N. Y;—A surprise linen
shower was git in honor of Miss
Carissa A. Cwathmey on Thursday
evening at the home .of ive. Sarai
Crudup, 125 Waverly street, ‘Chis
shower was sponsored by Mrs
Gradup assisted by Mrs. Dora- Dav.
enport. The prospective bride was
completely surprised.
The linen gifts were englosed ir
a most unique basket in form of 1
massive cake which had to be cut
by the brideelect, The articles wert
of exquisite and attractive charac-
ter. The cake arrangement wa:
the handiwork of Mrs. Crudup and
Mr, Davenport. :
Music and games wert feature:
of the evenitig.
Guests present were: F. B. John.
son, the groom-clect; "Mrs. “Thec
‘Smith, Mrs. Rittie. Wilson, Mis:
Helen Wilson. Miss Annie R
Goode, Mrs. Dora G, Webb Mrs
Mrs. Frances Frantis. Mrs. Harr
'W. Howard, Mrs. M. G. Crier, Mrs
‘Henry H. Howard, G. F. Coles
Easily 3. Wischeter. Emme ©
A . Johnson, ~D
eee Mrs.” Seay... Johnson
Mrs. Andrew W. Johnson, Mes
Emily Johnson and “Miss Sadie
Wooten.” =e ee
pee sei ae
British Educator Guest
Of Miss Fauset-and Sister
Prof. John Nicholson, Director of
Education, in. Bristol’ University,
Bristol. England, was entertained
by Miss Jessie Fauset and sister
Mrs. Helen Fauset Lanaing, Thurs.
day sai. September 6,:at their
home, 195 ‘Seventh avenue.
| The invited quests to mect the
distinguished visitor. were Dr, and
Mrs: W. EB. DuBois, Mr. agd
Mrs. T, Amold Hill. ‘Dr. and Mrs:
Elmer Tmes, Mr. cand Mrs." EK.
Jones, Da, aad, Mrs Esteard Love
ry, Dr, “ind "Mra RiP. (Roberts,
Mr. and Mrs Tess k” Wallon
Mr. and ‘Mrs. “Walter, “White and
Wutniinn Sa fees
<7) At Smalls’ Paradise
. A group ‘of students’ of “Lincoln
University who live in New York
City gave a scholarship fund dance
Monday night at Small's Paradise
2B4Y, Seventh avenue, and it wa
one of the: biggest and test affairs
the collegians have “held,”
‘The dance turned into a big fare
well party as visitors and students
gathered for a last good time be
fore leaving the city, 202°:
Among "those present were’ « Dr
fand "Mrs, Binga Dismond, ‘Mr. and
Mrs; H. Bouchet Day, "Mr. and
Mrs. Frank P. Ryan, Dr, and Mrs
Marshall Ross, Mr. and Mrs. Ed:
gat N. Parks, Mr, and Mrs. R
Cohen Johnston
Misses Blanche Levy, Charlotte
MLykes, “Alva Daves, Thelma Ber-
lack; Catmen and Ivy Nunez, Mary
Colerian, Doris Versailles," Anvia
Smalls, Rae Olley, Eloise ‘Walker,
Lucille Anderson, Lucille Taylor
and‘ Marion Petfiford of Washing-
ton, D. C.; Evelyn Green. <
Arthur Demond gf Baifalo, N.
¥,; Paul Coleman, “Bill” Carpen-
ter, Herbert Harris, - Dr. “Smith,
Malcolm, Cut! Montero, “Buster”
Anderson, David Asberry, Marcus
Carpenter, Herschel Day, . “Boots”
Irving, Frank Caffey, Marks Parks,
Charles Brown,” J. “Burke Horne,
Sammy Wood, Eddie Goines, Frank
Taylor Eddie’ Parris, -"“Sunny”-Cun-
ningham, William McElvey, Jr., of
Savannah, Ga,, Mr. Williamston of
Washington, B..C); -Raddie Lucas
of Atlantic City, N. J.; Gus Moore,
Dick ‘Hatyey, Boh “Payne, Langston
Hughes, Ted Thompson. Charles
Brooks, Washington, D. C.; Travis
Freeman Sol Johnson and Ludlow
W. Wemer
Cho Welfare Center News
-The Cho Welfare and Community
Centre, Ine, 205 West 128th street
ad aa its house | guests recently
‘Mrs, Elizabeth Lindsay Davis,
Gheigo, historian” of the Naticnal
‘Association’ -of Colored Women's
Clubs and Miss Elizabeth’ C. C&@-
Yer, 2 president emeritus of the
“National” and oo of. the
Northeastern Federation of Wom-
en's. Clubs, :
Mrs. Eranies R’ Keyser, dean
emeritus of the Bethyne Cookman
College. at Daytona Beach, Fla.;
the Misses Ellen O, Paige and Jen-
nie V., Hilyer, teacher -and. super.
vising “nurse ‘respectively at the
FloridaNorma) and. ladustrial In
stitute, St. Augustine, Fla, “spent
Wednesday’ afternoog aad evening
at the Centre and were emertained
by. the officers and members of the
Centre “Beautiful Club and the Em-
manE, Green. Juvenile Club.
The * Centre’ Beautiful Club is
planning’ a ‘Whist tournament and
Social evening at the Centre, Thurs:
day evening, September Z/th.
The Emma E. “Green . Juvenile
‘Club,. was recently Serantied for
the, purpose of providing 2 tome
for Botkers: with’ one sor tb. cg
cen; between the ages, of 3-and™é
Fears; of age. -Every* home. facility
cer See Oey ere act
child” at's insdetate cost) and
child ot” chidiren’ cured for jduriag
‘the day while, the j.mother ;is ‘et,
work, /The small children of. school,
ages will, be” taken to and: ifroen
school, which is -located Sin’! the
same’ street with the centre, The
work of this club. will be Soyowed
‘up intensively’ bysjhe Centre in the
furore, a8 a permipent part of ‘ite
activities, “Mrs, C,_A. Ferguson is
president of the Ceritre Beautiful
Nes. Mary EC Car eat
Mrs. ER rpenter, esi.
dent of, the Emma E. Green fovea
nile Club, is resident, worker at
the Centre. na
The officers of the.Centre are:
Dr, Adena C. E. Minott, president;
Johnson B.. Revey, vice president;
Mrs, Reitelle L. Revey, secretary;,
Any. Win. Jone, wesnres, The
The Advisory Board of the Centre:
is composed. of the officers auge
mented by the Rev, Fr. S. H. Bish-
ep. Rev. Dr. “A. Clayton Powell,
Rev. Dr, John W. Robinson, Rev.
Dr, GM, Oliver, “Rev. Dr. Alert
Carter Sanders, Rev. Dr. William,
Lioyd Imes, Alderman Fred Ru
Moore, Dr: Charles A, Butler, Dr.’
Louis T. Wright, Jacob Bloch, At
torney. James S,'Watson, and ‘Mrs.
Sadie Warren-Davis. ‘
=.
‘Mrs. Jennie Allen Crutchfield .and’
Mims Essie M. Butler of New York
City entertained respectively ; the
Misses Eleanor and Margaret Hall;
of Boston, Mass, and “Miss Ethel
Maude Christler of Atlanta, Ga, af
a midnight dinner and dance | da
Friday evening, at the Bamboo, Inn's
fashionable dining room on Seventh
avenue and 13%h street, ‘New York
Gity. ra:
‘A wonderful five tourse diner
was served. Toasts were drank ‘to
the guests of ‘honor's health and
good dortune. A’ delightful time was
had by all from 12 to3. am
The guests of: Mrs. Cruthohfield
and Miss Butler first assembled ‘at
the home of the former and were
driven = to’ the Inn, Those _ present
were Miss Ethel Maude Christler
and the Misses Margaret and Elean-
or Hall, the three guests of honor.
Also, the Misses Margaret Cauld-
well, Minnie - Ivory, Beulah Gea~
broogG Susan Allen, Iphygenia Me-
Callum, Lethia Winchester,. Mra,
Jamesena Walker, and the hostesses,
Miss Essie M. Butler and Mrs. Jen-
nie -Allen Crutchfield.
Charles Wadlaw, Willie Cul-
breath, Frederick Thompson: Julian,
Powell, William’ Gross, Mr. Cum-
mings, Mr. Terry, Harry Reglar,
Ralph Warren, Dr. Edward Ferdin-
ang Jones, Willie Walker and John
J. ‘Smyer jr.. whose appealing wit
and ready repartee made him the
able toastmaster. 2
“Accompanied by Prof. Hall’ “of
Clark University’s oonservatory ‘of
music, Atlanta, Ga, Mrs. Wadlawg
also Of Atlanta, Ga, who is acting
a3 Miss Christler's chaperone on her
visis to Gotham.stopped in’ at the
Tan “while “dinner was -being served
to’ wish the’ gay-young revelers of
gieajer New York's younger set
Goth a merry and. ‘very pleasant
CHURCH ACTIVITIES IN GREATER NEW YORK
Bethel A. M. E. Church
Next Sunday will be Educational Day when a special collection will be taken for the benefit of Wilberforce University and the entire membership is asked to bring an offering for the purpose of the "Eather" as a gift by the Dramatic Sub-Day hour of the Young, People's Lyman will be presented by the Church School, on Thursday night, September 13th, at the church. This is the original cast from the first presentation. Children rises at babo, Children under twelve, special concession. The key, Taylor White, presiding elder of the A. M. E. Church at Liberia, Africa, prettied to a large and appreciative, congregation at the Sunday morning service of Bethel A. M. E. Church September 9. At 2 p.m., the church school held an interesting session. The church school cholr of which Mrs. Denham is directress deserves much praise for the splendid appearance they made last Sunday.
At 6 p. m., "How to Become Truly Educated" was the topic discussed at the Allen Christian Endeavor League. The discussion was led by Miss Mattie Griffin and Miss Grove. The president Ernest Hebbons is making plans to have the League function in a bigger way than hertfofore.
The assistant pastor, the Rev. Stephen Wigfall, delivered a practical sermon at the evening service. The Rev. Albert C. Sanders, pastor, will preach from the subject, "Watch Your Step" next Sunday morning. The day will be Educational Rally Day and is expected to be a red letter day for the auxiliaries. Miss Joella Alston, reporter for the intermediate A. C. E. League, has some interesting notes in The Excelsior. Get a copy at the church Sunday.
Mrs. Ethel Miller and Miss Dora Thompson rendered interesting selections at the service last Sunday. They reflect much credit on their teacher, Joseph Vandervall.
Sister Cruise is very faithful in seeing that flowers are sent the sick on Sunday evenings.
Miss Louise Scott entertained the Senior Stewardess Board recently. The pastor and Miss Sanders were present and all report a delightful time.
The following officers were recently elected by the Senior Usher James A. Cruse, president; S. S. Davis, vice-president; James A. Davis, financial secretary; T. R. Pettigrew, treasurer; Daniel H Baker, recording secretary; John Pepper, chaplain; James Roper, advocate; Ben Washington, custodian; Isaac Rutledge, sergeant-at-arms; and E. A. Nelson, chief.
Grave Church of Harlem
The well filled pews at the morning service showed that most of the members have returned from their vacation. Dr. C. Garner, the pastor who is also the chaplain of the 369th Infantry, was leaving early for camp at Peekskill, so the morning service was in charge of W. Herbert King the summer associate. Mr. King did not take his serpent from any particular text, but used as his theme the three different phases of Christianity, of Christians First; the "parasite" that leans on God for every thing and gives nothing in return; secondly, the "manifesto" that wants, one half back of what he and thirdly the "creator," the christian who, gives his all readily and is always branching into do more and more in God's service. and of a christian that God wants.
In response to the "fellowship" invitation Miss Hattie Wattie, 221 Ashland place, Brooklyn, and Mrs. Emma Bolden, 163 West 145th Street were given the right hand of fellowship as pastor, Dr. Garner and the church. Dr. Garner made a few remarks and led his blessing with the congregation before leaving for camp. The choir member have nearly all returned from their vacations and well, especially the anthem, "Semper Fidelis." Neson R. Scott had the tenor solo part Miss Olyva Hunter is filling very creditably the place of Miss Jeter, the organist who is on her vacation. Next Sundays service will be under direction of Mr. King and the follower, Dr. Perry of Georgetown will preach. Dr. Perry is the brother of Deacon James Perry. The vesper service was well attended and was under the direction of King. Next Sunday Cleveland Allen is an "holy Christian," Endeavor man" and an interesting hour is promised.
Remain the prayer service at 8:30 on Wednesday evening also the "school of instruction" for the "Financial Plan" Leaders at 9:30 p.m.
Miss Gloria Adele coloratura sopram and formerly a member of the Metropolitan Opera Company, and her pupil, Raymond E. Rodriguez, will appear in recital at Grace church on Friday evening at 8:15. This will also sing at the morning service. September 30. This first visit in the Church work and their second appearance will be for the benefit of Grace Church
Miss Ruth Ellis and her players will present "Abraham's First Birth at Grace Church on Sunday afternoon October the 9th at work. The Theology of Worship includes Ruth Ellis as Hagar; James Mosley as Abraham; Marlon Wallach as Sarah. William Chisholm as Ishmael; Paul Harrigan as the shepherd and William Daniels as the Announcer. The work of Miss Ellis well known and she needs
Church School begins directly after the morning service at 1:15 p.m., Mr. J. E. Reid, superintendent.
Mother Zion Church
Many of the members and friends of Mother Zion' Church have returned from their vacations and were found in their places last at the morning service. It marked the Quarterly Meeting of the year at Nell, the Presiding Elder, was the preacher, C. Milton Rosemond, the blind Gospel Singer, sang before and after the sermon. Two children were baptized at this service, and sixteen persons united at the church. There were a number of visitors to the church them: Mrs. Robert Jackson of Cleveland; Mrs. Helen Spriggs of Baltimore; Wilbert Moore, of Indianapolis; Mr. and Mrs. George H. Stockett of East Providence, R. Mrs. Adams of Chicago; Mrs. Munroe of Baltimore; Mrs. Bruce Ballard of Boston; Mrs. Rene DeLyons of Washington, D. C; Mrs. A. L. Newby of Morehead City, N. C.; M. Bessie M. Wagner of Brixton, Tenn.; G. G. Mole of Brixton, Cuba. R. Brown was the preacher at the Junior Church services at 10:30 a.m.
Church School convened at 2 p.m. A large number of scholars and teachers were present.
The formal opening of the J. C. Price Lyceum was held at 4 p.m. Mme Lulu Ronson Jones is president and D. Deileman is chairman of the Program Committee.
The tople for discussion was "Citizenship and Registration" and was opened; by Hon. Edward A. Johnson, candidate (for Congress. A general discussion followed. Excellent music was furnished by Manhattan Temple Glee Club, Eureka Temple Glee Club, Junior Choir and the Lyeum Choral.
At 8 p.m. baptism and Holy Communion was administered The meditation was by Rev. S. A. McNeill. Five hundred and twenty four persons communed.
Thursday, there will be a meeting of the board of leaders.
Friday, Prayer and praise service will be held at the praise of the Board of Stewards. Meeting of the Church Aid Society.
Next Sunday: 6 a. m. —Sunrise
Prayer Meeting. 10:30 a. m. —Junior
Church; 10:30 a. m. —Sermon by
Sermon; 10:30 a. m. —Vacation-What?” 8 p. m. The
Pastor will preach upon “Road
Signs on the Way of Life.
Sick: William Lee, 1966 Seventh
Hospital. Joseph Allen, Roosevelt
Refuge Church of Christ
The National Convention of the Church of Christ that began Sunday, August 16th, came to a close Sunday, September 9th. From beginning to the ending marked a straight faith of unspeakable 'joy and mercy' weiling success. Merriam service, September 9th, assistant general Elder L. A. Bell, who is also National traveling evangelist, spoke on the subject "The imperfection of man. His text 'Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in Heaven is perfect, Matthew 5:48. A picture was taken of the delegates and friends directly after the morning services in front of the Church.
Services were held at the church all day Sunday. Three street meetings were conducted on principal thoroughfares of Harlem. Binging at the church 8 o'clock. The spacious auditorium was filled to its utmost capacity many stood in the aisles and along the side of the walls. For the benefit of those who could find no room in the auditorium the downstairs chapel was opened in a short time. Mary forced to stand at the doorway and in the halls.
Two flashlight photographs were made of the crowd that thronged the building to hear of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Apostle and Gen. Eld. R. C. Lawson, the upstairs auditorium, Regardless of the chapel and auditorium being opened and service in both places many found no room in either place and crowds were turned away.
The delegates have departed to the respective houses with a happy message of the many things they learned while at the convention.
We appreciate the presence and efforts of all who came to worship the Lord of Host with us. With an earnest and sincere heart we look forward to 1929 to bring a large and better convention than a previous one. Of the numerous delegates that were present no casualties, or accidents befell any, all departed in the manner in which they came. R. C. Lawson, General Elder of Church of Christ Assembly, New York City; L. A. Bell, Assistant General Elder of St. Louis, Mo.; Chasal McCarthy, secretary of Trenton N. J. Lina Williams, National President of Women's Missionary headquarter, New York City.
St. James Pres. Church
The regular fall session began at St. James Presbyterian Church on Sunday last, with the administering of the Holy Communion by the priest, who was turned, from his vacation. The pastor was assisted in the Communion by the Rev. Johnson a retired Gospel minister of Charlotte, N.C. The musical setting of the communion as sung by St. James choir under the direction of Dr. Charlton made the service very impressive. Just before the communion the doors of the church were opened to the desire of uniting with the church by coming forward during the invita-
WHERE TO GO TO CHURCH
tion hymn. Namely, Eric Thompson, Amold, Gladstone, Miss. Amy Poppins, Mr. and Mary Lardiner and Mrs. Mary Givens.
Three infants were given The Holy rites of Baptism on Sunday morning just before the communion service. Namely, Harold R. Reward, the infant son of Mr. Harold Mies Gloria Elinor Black, daughter of Mr. Kenneth and Louise Black, and Master Earl Oliver, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Oliver. The main auditorium of the Church was crowded at morning service.
Quite a number returned for the getting service, when the British Jewenevolent Association worshiped with us in their annual sermon.
Four new members were received into the membership of the church at the evening service Miss Ruth Lawton, Mrs. Era Ryan, Mrs. Pera, Mrs. Garner and Miss Madie Pena, Mrs. Garner and many members who joined the church during the months of July and August, were fellowshipipped into the membership of the church before the Communion was administered. The Missionary Society of Saint James the Great Dramatic Bender, in a recital on September 26th at the Church All are invited.
Emangel A. M. E. Church
"How may I know their is a God?" There can be no doubt in the mind of anyone, who heard the pastor last Sunday morning, as to how we may be aware of the existence of a God. Rev. Nichols treated this subject with unusual skill. He first went into the depths of classified reasoning that there is a God. He gave the four traditional argu-
He, gave the four traditional arguments for the existence of God, and
BAPTIST
THE NEW ABYSSINIAN BAPTIST
CHURCH, 123th Street, between 9th
& Lenox avenue. Sun—11 a.m. & m., and 7:
Sunday avenue. Sun—11 a.m. & m., and 7:
Sunday School, 1:30 p.m. & m., Friday
9:30 p.m. Bible School, 8:30 p.m. General
prayer meeting, public Cemetery Invite-
ment, 123rd Street, Bronx, Audubon,
1114.
MOUNT OLIVEI BAPTIST CHURCH
201 Lenox Ave., Rev. William P. Hayes
D. D. Pastr, Rev. J. Keynond Hes-
erson, & his pastor, Presaching, Sun
8:30 p.m. & m., Church of the
Saint Mary, Y. P. U. 8:30 p.m. & m.
Communion, 2nd Sun, at 8 p.m.; Dorcas
Missionary Society, 8 p.m.; Church
Aid Society, 2nd and 3rd Monk Ave.
Prayer Meeting, Fr. Eve's 8 p.m.; Office
Phone, Monument 7836.
Public phone Cathedral 10184.
ARTE ST. PAUL BAPTIST CHURCH
33d W. 33th St., services 11 a.m.
& m., Church of the
Saint Mary, Y. P. U. Wed. nights 8:30 p.m.
Prayer meetings, Fr. night, 8:30 p.m.; Sunrise
meetings, Sun, 8 to 9 a.m.; Covenant
meetings, 8 to 9 a.m.; Missionary
missionary, third sun, 8 to
9 a.m.; Community third sun, 8 to
9 a.m.; Akkiyon Mooken, pastor,
rev. K. AKKiyon MOOKEN, pastor,
sunday school 3719.
UNION BAPTISM CHURCH-240 W
140th St. SUNDAY school a.m.
10:30 a.m. Sunday school a.m.
SUNDAY each month. Missionary Meeting
tournish SUNDAY, h. 2, w. 3, u. 9 to 10 p.m.
Moore, assistant pastor, New York,
SUNDAY pastor, Outstaff Alexander, Church
METHODIST EPISCOPAL
ST. MARKS METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH, 138th st. and St.
Nicholas Ave. Rev. John W. Robinson,
D. D. Josephson, Rev. John W. Robinson,
10:45 am; preaching 10:45 am; m. 7:45
p. m. Sunday school 2 p. m. Lyceum
4 p. m. Thurs. even 8:30 p. m. World
Lecture 4 p. m. Fr. even 8:30 p. m.
Classes Sunday 1:30 p. m. Tuet. even
7:30 p. m. Classes Sunday 1:30 p. m. Tuet.
even 7:30 p. m. Holy Communion second Sunday even each month... Welcome to all.
SALEM METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCH, 2100 st. JANIVAWY
M. BABURY GULLER,
preaching at 10:45 am, m. and 7:45
p. m. Sun.; Sunday School 2:40 p. m.
m. Men's Bible Class, m. m. Hearing,
preaching at 10:45 am, m. and 7:45
p. m. Sun.; Epworth League, 6 p. m. Sun.
Classes Monday, Tuesday and Wed. night
and at 10:45 am; Hearing, preaching
at 10:45 am; evening service, 7:45
p. m.; Sunday school 2 p. m.; Tuesday
night; class meeting, m. m. prayer
meeting, Sunday, League, 6 p. m. Tuet.
e. W. Kakestraw, pastor, Residence
40 West 125nd street, Phone Brandon 3900.
AFRICAN METHODIST EPCUSCIPAL
BENEIL A. M. A. CHURCH - 3600 W.
13200 St. Kev. A. C. baunders, D.
13200 St. Kev. Residence S. 14200 W.
St. Church services: prayer meeting, priests
bath. Necessity, 1979. Abbotson School
services, 1979. Abbotson School
services, 1979. Holy Communion, first
bun. Class meetings, oday nights;
Love Peace last oday nights.
EMANUEL A. M. A. CHURCH - 37:41
1919 St. Rev. D. Ward, Nicholas
M. A. pastor, 1919 St. Rev. D. Ward,
services—breaching 11 a.m.
and 8 p. m. Sunday school 3 p. m.
Alen League 8:45 p. m. Class Meeting
Wed. even. 10 p. m. Class Meeting
1 each month. Holy Communion 1st Sun.
1 each month. All are Welcome.
AFRICAN METHODIST EPIS
ZION
PRESBYTERIAN
ST. JAMES PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
(the local name) St. Nicholas Ave. at
11 St.-St. Rev. Wm. Lloyd Ave. m. A.
Pastor. Bun. 11 n. m. and 1 p. m. M. mid-
week service. Prayer. Wednesday, 4
m. Boys' Club. Music. 4 m. Boys' Club
thurs. 4 p. m. Church School. Sun. 9:10 a. m. Brothertown
dwell on the following poets: (1) the testimony of the prophets: (2) the revelation through Jesus' Christ; and (3) The witness of the Spirit. He further stated the mind of Shakespeare, the soul of Lincoln the thoughts of Plato, the music of Beethoven, and the spirit of Jesus must prove that there is a Supreme Being, who inspires men.
At 3 o'clock the Sunday school held its regular session. There was great interest concerning the Sunday school convention to be held this week in Yonkers, N. Y.
Some thing new and quite worthwhile was begun at Emanuel, when at 4:30 o'clock the pastor organized at Forum, which will meet every second and fourth Sunday of each month. With Mrs. Crawford, a former worker of Charles Street A. M. E. Church in Boston, as president great possibilities await us. Our object is to find and develop the best in Negro youth. There were about thirty-five quarter members and all expressed great enthusiasm for the movement. There will be open discussions and a short program at each meeting. All are welcome.
Many remained from the Forum for the Christian Endeavor, which is showing rapid progress.
At the evening service, Rev. George Maybanks of Bayshore, L. I., preached to a most appreciative congregation. He was at his best and all enjoyed a real spiritual feast. The attendance all day was very fine. Total collection was $200.56, and eight persons joined the church
Union Baptist Church
We are happy, to have our patrons
together. They said they had a very pleas
tion.
and Ladies Auxiliary, 4 p. m. Forum
1st and 3rd Sun., 4 p. m. Communion
1st and 3rd Sun., 4 p. m. Young-People's
Society, Sun., 6:45 p. m. A cordial welcome
to everyone.
RENALLD MEMORIAL PRESBY
RENALI CHURCH, 49.61 West 127th
St. Thomas, J. B. Harris, Pastor, Sunda-
tary services 11 a. m. 1 p. m. Sunday
school, m. Christian Endeavor, 8 p.
m. classroom. Every Wednesday 8 p.
m. Prayer service.
CONGREGATIONAL
GRACE CONGOEZATIONAL CHURCH
SCHOOL
Rev. A. G. CARNERN, pastor, Sun. Sun
day School, #45 a. m.; morning services
c. m.; afternoon services at 6 p. m.
Dayschool at 8 p. m.
Wed, Church Night, 8:15 p.m. other services in Bulletin.
APOSTOLIC CHURCH
THE REFUGE CHURCH OF CHRIST
is the most honored in the sisterhood of
the church and blessed influence which flows from
her spiritual life are known and felt by
the congregation. Bible lessons on Thursday night
and Divine healing on Friday night. Elder
Bernardine C. McCormick preaching of the gospel of Jesus
are welcome. 22-56 West 132rd Street.
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
HARTMEN SECOND SRVENTH DAW
ADVENTIST CHURCH, 106-108 W
m., prayer meeting; Sat. 8 a.
bible study; 9:30 a. m., Babbath school
People; Sunday 4:30 p. m., Special Ad
People; Sunday 4:30 p. m., Presaching. M. C.
STRACHAN Pastor.
SPIRITUALIST
HAND- IN- HAND $SPIRITUALIST$
CHURCH. 433 Edgware Cambroe: Away
Meeting every night at 8:30. Messages
by various mediums.
BROOKLYN
BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH Brooklyn, Summer Ava, and Decatur Bury St. Preschneider 10:30 A. M. and 7:30 P. M. Sunday School 1:30 P. M. B. Y. P. M. Mislonian Society 1:30 P. M. Mislonian Society, 8:30 P. M. 1st and 3rd Sundays, Brotherhood Wednesday 8:30. Prayer Meeting. Fri. P. M. To Strangers, a cordial welcome.
YONKERS
THE METROPOLITAN A. M. E.
ZION CHURCH, 76 Bkelnap Ave.
Rev. Edward J. Hawkes Pastor, Order
of St. John the Baptist
Sunday School 1 p. m. Lycum 4 p.
m. V. C. E. 9 p. m.; 815 Divine Worship;
Class meeting Tuesday evening;
Sunday rehearsal Thursday evening;
Phone 2008 306
ant-vacation. Pastor Sijns attended the sessions of the National Baptist Convention in Louisville, Ky. He said this was the most beneficial session of the August body that he had attended, a spoke of the great industrial progress of our people in Louisville. Dr. A. Clayton Powell preached the educational sermon, representing New York. He was at his best. New York was the only city Our Sunday School was well attended. Pastor Sijns visited each class. Most of the teachers and scholars have returned from their vacation. If a m. a. the preliminaries class, it was at the Master Clairfont Knox Archer was at the organ owing to the illness of Prof. Leon S. Adger. We are glad to report that Prof. Adger is much improved. The message was delivered by Prof. Sims subjecti "The Popularity of Jesus" were 13 additions to the church.
The communion service was well attended. Mr. Abner Brown delivered a very beneficial sermon, "Subject: 'Prayer From A Troubled Heart.' The hand of fellowship extended to a medical ministers were visitors at this service. Among them were Dr. W. A. Campbell and Rev. Filreda. The evening service was very well attended. Pastors Sam preached a very interesting and, practical sermon from the subject: 'If our Not So Greatness Tail Down Your Sign.' Offering amounted to $410.70.
Salem M. E. Church
Membeds and friends packed Salem Church last Sunday morning on the occasion of the pastor, Dr. F. A. Cullen's first Sunday home after a vacation of two months spent touring of Emma's settlement. In the return of Dr. Cullen was the signal for the home coming of the Salem members who usually plan to have their vacations and simultaneously with their pastor's. In the vast congregation Dr. Cullen used to message a message of Christian courage and cheer—a message which he had prepared on French soil. Revelations 2:10 afforded the text, "Be thou faithful." Stressing the things we must be faithful to Dr. Cullen stated with equal emphasis both in the things of this life and in spiritual attainments.
Much interest was shown in the Lycme program at 4 o'clock in which interracial cooperation was discussed. Professor Jenkins of this city spoke on the apparent failure of the Church as viewed in the United States in nineteen nations and international peace movements. Anne Anne Haylor of the Presbyterian Board of Missions referred to the former distant attitude of white women leaders and students the country over now changing for one of cooperation and a desire for better understanding. Jugt before the meeting closed the Mrs I. M. Blackstone called upon certain prominent persons in the audience who expressed themselves on the value of interracial cooperation. Miss Caroltta Chattman, soprano, sang; also did Mrs. Blackstone. The Lycme Choir rendered choral numbers. The choir, directed by Prof.杜鲁德格兰, was One of full strength, Mrs. Sate Greenidge, contralto, sang a solo at the morton service.
On Tuesday evening Dr. Cullen will lecture on his trip abroad giving to the members the benefit of some of his experiences covering many countries in his mission will begin holding, its sessions at 1.30 next Sunday, September 16.
(Mrs. Florence Spivey, president of the Ladies Aid, who has been away on account of poor health has returned home many times, Sunday, Mrs. Portia Nickens the superintendent of the Church School is well enough to be back at her post again.
Mount Olivet Baptist Church
There was a large attendance at the morning service at Mount Olive Baptist Church Sunday, September 9. There were solos excellently rendered by Miss 'Daye Harding and J. Lowe. The sermon was preached by Rev. W. J. W. Harding in his liturgy from Matthew 21:19. "And when he saw a fig tree in the way, he came to it, and found nothing thereon, but leaves only and said unto it, Let no fruit grow on these henceforward for ever and presently the fig tree with confession away." The theme of his discourse was the "Insincerity of the outward form of some protesting Christians and not of some protesting Christians and not of some making an open confession of accepting Christ as our personal saviour; he expects us to hate fruit and not leaves.
The entire discourse was very powerful and penetrating. At the evening service the sermon was preached, by Rev. W. P. Hayes. The theme of his discourse was the knowledge of Christ creates in man a desire to sing, and to journey on towards the kingdom. A kingdom onwards makes the heart joyful and drives away the sadness. The entire discourse was very instructive. Five people joined the church and the collections for the day amounted to $424.96.
St. Paul Baptist Church
The 'B. Y. P. U. held its first meeting for the fall, and, after devotions, the president, Marion Stokes, asked the pastor to speak. He spoke, suggesting an outline of the committee was then and there appointed, which arranged, to hold a meeting on Saturday afternoon. This meeting was held, and plans mapped out for the next six months. Thus, the young people are staring at the armrest to do a great work in Harlem. The regular prayer meetings, Friday night and Sunday morning, were held, with a goodly number in attendance, but the pastor, deacons and leaders are urging the people to make each of the prayer services more enthusiastic and enthusiasm than they have ever been. In fact, emphasis is now laid on the praying church as the prosperous church. We cordially invite Christians who believe in prayer, and who go to God in prayer for deliverance from God to come out for
The meetings has just begun its work in Harlem, but it is taking every step to let the people of the community know that it is here for service. Cards of announcement and invitation were printed during last week, and some of them distributed before Sunday. There are more than 100 out at the morning service the largest attendance we have had; and seven persons united with the church at the morning service. Elder Chance brought the morning message, thus relieving the pastor, who was "down for two other sermons." The afternoon saw a number of members of the Bee Club, at which time the pastor spoke on "Cooperation in Christians Work." In the evening he spoke again on "Drawing A Crowd." The day was beautiful, and all services were well attended. The people, for the first time, felt at home in Harlem, and all lights were in place. All, however are not yet in, but they will doubtless be in by the next Lord's Day.
St. Martin's Chapel
Rev. John H. Johnson's first semester after his vacation, was very inspiring and acted as an incentive to start us 'on our work here with realility.
All of the activities will start their various activities shortly, some with meetings this week, to outline plans for the year's work. The Sunday School opened Sunday, September 9, with sixty children, which will be materially indented in the account of other pressing activities Miss Lucile Spence has been compelled to relinquish the superintendency but will remain as a teacher, Mr. Jaq. A reid has been elected superintendent. New Club will have a meeting on Tuesday with September 11 Beginning on last Sunday the afternoon noses servers at 4:30 will be featured by special program. Mr. Francis Kairson, baritone soloist, was the guest soloist and was indeed very pleasing. The quartette under the direction of Mr. Arthur F. Redding were well received
On next Sunday afternoon Mr Irving Barnwell, violinist, will be the visiting artist. It is the "desire that the congregation and friends show appreciation for these services by a good attendance.
Paradise Baptist Church
Our pastor, Rev. H. W. Stanley, returned from his vacation looking as [fresh as a flower. He spoke from the 1st chapter of Joshua, 2nd verse. Aime and go to Jordan." Why Should We Stay in The Valley?" He said the Lord had given Joshua command to go up to Jericho with the children of Israel and if they would pull together and stand shoulder to shoulder that the Lord would be their captain and fight the Lord had appointed him and the children of Israel did as Joshua, their leader, had commanded them. From the sound of the trumpet blown by Joshua and the shouts of the Israelites 'the walls of Jericho fell. This was the only victory the Israelites obtained without having a battle. Such miraculous victories may be accomplished for us today providing we cooperate with each other and bear one another's burdens. As the Israelites did with their leader. Rev. Stanley's subject for the event, which is taken from the Kings 3rd chapter, "Why Should We Seek Wisdom."
We should seek wisdom for the Lord told us so when he said get wisdom and with all that getting get understanding. We should seek wisdom for Christ tells us so when he said "Be as agents and patients and harmless as doves. He Solomon used his wisdom in discerning who was*the rightful mother of the living child when both women claimed it. Without wisdom we could not serve God and be the recipients of the cures. If any man among you lack wisdom let him ask of God who giveth to all men liberally.
Rendall Memorial Church
After travelling 2,700 miles by automobile with his family during his vacation, visiting points North West and South, Dr. Thomas J. B. Benson and Dr. Thomas J. B. Benson, September 9, and conducted the services throughout the day. The pastor used a text on Sunday morning, Exodus 14:15, "Go Forward." The minister services over the remains of James J. Parker, a member of the church were held at 1:30 p.m. The pastor preached the sermon. At 8 p.m. the United Sons of Grace held their annual thanksgiving service. The infant daughter and the little son of Mr. and Mrs. W. Thomas received Christian baptism at the morning service. The autumn entertainment will be given by Mrs. under the direction of Mrs. Virginia Thorne Friday, September 14.
Rush Memorial Church
The Majesty and Mystery of God," Job 26:14, was the subject on which Dr. Oliver preached last Sunday morning at the 11 o'clock service. Much stress was laid on Sunday morning at the 11 o'clock of God, and on the mystery which seems to attend the works of God, At 8 o'clock Dr. Oliver again preached. Text, Chronicles 15:20: "God, Dwelling With Man." The Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary Society will hold a service—beginning with an Old Lady's night, September 17. Something interesting and helpful will be going on every night. You are invited.
Nazarene Cong. Church
The Rev, Dr. Henry Hugh Proctor, returning from his vacation in New England, preached at both services Sunday. At the morning hour he made a plea for the deopening of the life intellectually, economically, morally and spiritually. At the evening time, he spoke of the contribution of Harriet Beecher Stowe to the life of the race and
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THE material contrast between the structures with which (Hooker a satisfied man) and the present great, ample and common plant is unlikely to be sufficient to serve for an man to bring about. But satisfactory and encouraging as this is, it is, but an imperfect measure of Dr. Washington's work and acumen. The education for lives useful to themselves and their families is of course a most commendable and helpful work, but that was only one part of what he did and sought to the honesty from a certain point. Tuskegee the light of the homely but ever living truths which must form the real advance for his race, or for any race—WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT, Thief Justice United States Supreme Court.
THE
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 UNBURPASSED FOR HEALTHFULNESS
WRITE FOR CATALOG OF INFORMATION
ROBERT R. MOTON, Principal
Tuskegee Institute, Alabama.
the nation through her epoch-
making book.
The choir was assisted during
the day by Cecil Thaddeus McNair
Emboro, N. C. who sang a
number of classical and spiritual
selections.
Among the sick of the church are
Julius Bledsoe, Mrs. John Wood-
ford, Mra. Albert Heuston and
David Hawkins.
The church deplores the death of
Mrs. Catherine Priscilla King, 688
Gatesaven the oldest member of
the church in point of service.
She joined the church the year after
its organization.
Among the new members are
William Harper, William King and
Clede Jones.
The register of the church:
August L. Arthur Thompson and
Miss Edna Mason; September
William C. Jones and Miss Bai-
atrice Jackson; September 5. L. A.
Robinson and Miss Thelma Paiker.
The pastor will fill his pulpit
both 'services next' Sunday, speak-
ing a morning hour on "Hair-
ing Hours" and evening hour on "John Brown the Greatest
Hero in the American History."
Fleet Street Memorial
A. M. E. Zion Church
Religious services at Fleet 'Street Church on Sunday were conducted by Rev. H. B. Norville, Bishop F. M. Jacobs was present and lent his assistance. The sermon at the morning hour was delivered by Rev. Norville and the evening sermon by Rev. Edgar King.
The Sunday school session at the regular hour was well attended. The meeting of the teachers for the lesson study will be resumed on Wednesday evening. Special preparations have been made for the opening night.
The pastor, Rev. W. C. Brown, will give his first sermon on Sunday morning, September 16, since his return from Chicago and other points of the West and East.
Concord Baptist Church
Returning this week, as delegates from Concord Church to the National Baptist Convention, at Louisville, Ky., are Rev. James B. Adams, pastor; Alfred R. Nash, secretary trustee board; Mrs. S. Dorsey, christian bridge; assistant superintendent Sunrise School; early president Wm. T. Dixie Circle. With them come Mrs. Lottie Henderson, Mrs. Hattie Fuller, Mrs. Hodge, Mrs. Evelyn Gray, Mrs. Alexander Brown members of this church who attended the convention. These people are bringing not only verbal reports of the convention, but practical body in the world, but practical methods to be put in operation throughout the year.
Rev. Vernon M. John, Director Negro Religious Education Center in Harlem, under the American Baptist Home Mission Society, preached an intensely practical service to free Experiences of Abraham. Sunday he said the first was the experience of God moving him out from where he was, to an unknown something, in the spirit of adventure. Negroes became free because certain men had adventure against age old customs, move out or change ideas or prices aren't experiencing God: The second was the experience of God in a sense of security, "Fear Not." Negroes are afraid of God, afraid of the devil, afraid to live, afraid of the animals they grew on out of white men to pick, millions of dollars at four dollars per day. The third was the experience of conviction that no matter what we achieve we are still personally responsible to God to be upright. At Abraham we would walk out of Abraham to walk before Him and be perfect. Big fish are bound by the same laws that govern little fish. Much is said about the 'sins of youth, but they do not plot viscousness, break up churches, or murder the Christ. It is gray and cold. It is hard to do things. In closing Mr. Johns used a poem expressing this brought that no one ever graduates from God without crushing his soul.
In the evening. Rev. J. Milton Waldron, pastor Shiloh Baptist
PRIMARY NOTICE!
race
Tuesday, September 18th, is Primary Day. Polls will be open from 3 p. m. to 9 p. m. You are invited to vote on a publican voter in the 19th Assembly District, you are urged to vote for MYLES A. PAIGE as against ABRAHAM GRENTAL. Vote for race representation. Stand up for a member of your race.
Churii, Washington, spoke the subject of the person and of the Holy Spirit.
Siloam Presbyterian
With the vacation period since Siloam opened its fall season when the administration of the Statement of the Lord's Supper at Marmora church of Worcester, Marmora Shippen Stark, pastor, took his text for the morning's meeting from St. Mark 9:23. He emphasized faith as the fundamental principle of life, in every ambition and every desire, the principles of Christ as the principles of all Man. The following person invited his institution of the church at this service: Mrs. Bessie Wilson, 290 Greene avenue; Miss Annie M. Culbert, 1070 St. Marion avenue.
Sunday marked the opening of the Bible School at 1.15 p.m. The school begins its season with Mrs. Culbert's presentation. A program is being mapped out to bring the school up to a larger degree of efficiency.
Evering services were held by the Wasttr instr Presbyterian Church of Jamaica at 8 o'clock. The sermon of the Lord's Support was given by Rev W. R. Lawton assisted in the services of worship. The sermon of Baptism was administered to the infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs Shaw. The following persons were received into the membership of the church Charles E. Shaw, M. Mary Shaw and Mrs. Carrie M. White.
The organizations of the church are planning their fall and winter work, some of them holding the opening meeting of the season during the week.
The program for the obsession of 50th anniversary of the church will be presented on the fourth-Sunday morning of September.
This year is to mark another milestone in the life and history of Siloam. All forces are to be mobilized to make it outstanding in the life of the church and in its influence for good upon the community.
Many of the members and friends of the church have returned from their vacations and were present at her service of morning worship. A head service of morning worship Mrs. Grace Hinds who for so long a time was seriously ill and confined. She was in attendance at the morning service. Prayer meeting services will be resumed the first Wednesday evening in October and worship will begin the first Sunday night in October.
A Correction
In reporting the Elks Grand Lodge convention last week, a mistake was made in the names of the secretary and treasurer. The Age's informant, R. Ree, whispered of the Lodge No. 45, where the information that both Mr. Bates and Mr. Carter had been re-elected. The new grand secretary is James Martin of Chicago and James C. Kelly of Birmingham. Ala., succeeds James T. Carter of Richmond, Va., as grand treasurer. James T. Carter of Pudach, Va., as grand treasurer. James T. Carter of Pudach were Dr. D. H. George of Paduch, Ky., grand esteemed leading knight; and Andrew T. Mitchell of New York, grand esteemed lecturing knight.
Dorsey Wood Park Farm
Powell, Pa.-Guests at the Dorsey Wood Park Farm during the past week were: Mrs. Stanley Little and daughter of Pittsburgh; Ruby Sweet, Detroit, and James Grosse, New York-City. Miss Laura Field has returned to her home in Plainfield, N. J., after spending a month here. A sad accident occurred not far from the farm last week when an automobile driven by Carl Shader, who was alleged to have been under the influence of liquor at the time, ran into a telephone pole. The car was completely demolished and Messrs Dunn and Colts, passengers were instantly killed.
Phone Bradhurst 0657
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Gifts Called For And
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Sept 15-3 mo.
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JUST A PHOTO OF MY NINE SONS SQUARE- TAKE A LOOK
WELL YOU MUST BE MUCH PROUD OF EM-CARRYING THE PICTURE IN YOUR BICICLE LINE THAT
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Inter-nat'l Cartoon Co., N. Y.
LINCOLN GIANTS TAKE TWO FROM PHILLY PROS
Big Crowd See Local Team Add To Its String Of Victories; Cubans Coming
While 85,000 fans were watching the Yankee beat the Philadelphia Athletics at the Yankee Stadium Sunday afternoon, another crowd of 5,000 saw the Lincoln Giants gain a double victory over the Philadelphia Professionals. The Lincoln wo n'the first game by a score of 17-10 and administered a shut-
The first game was a free-hitting affair but the other was one of the best pitchers' duels ever staged at Protectory Oval. Despite the Lincoln's four runs, Burke held them to five scattered hits, while "Bullet" Campbell held the Philadelphia's to four. Campbell was also responsible for two of the Lincoln's hit made a single and two baggage in three games at bat. Game was also featured by three double plays and was played in one hour and forty minutes.
The attraction at Protectory Oval next Sunday will be the final appearance of the Cuban Stars in the Bronx this season. They will try to even matters up with the Lincoln's for their double defeat several weeks ago. The Box score of the second game last Sunday was as follows.
Ab. r h po a e
Ebert, cf ..... 4 0 0 3 0 0
Gallagher, ss ..... 4 0 0 2 0 0
Munch, 1b ..... 4 0 0 12 0 0
Malay, 1f ..... 2 0 1 3 0 0
Green, rf ..... 3 0 1 1 0 0
Dopson, 2b ..... 3 0 1 1 9 0
F. Williams, c ..... 3 0 0 2 0 0
During, 3b ..... 3 0 0 0 2 0
Burke, p ..... 3 0 1 0 2 0
29 0 4 24 13 0
Lincoln Giants.
Ab. r h po a e
Gray, cf ..... 4 0 1 2 0 0
Lloyd, 1b ..... 3 0 0 10 0 1
Riggins, 3b ..... 4 0 0 2 3 0
Seales, 2b ..... 4 0 2 2 3 0
Bejerano, 1f ..... 3 1 0 3 1 0
Mason, rf ..... 4 0 0 2 0 0
Spearman, c ..... 2 1 0 5 1 0
B. Williams, ss ..... 3 1 1 1 1 0
Campbell, p ..... 3 1 2 0 2 0
30 4 6 27 11 1
Phila, Pros .. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Lin, Giants .. 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 x
Stolen base, Berjano. Twobase
hits, Scales and Campbell Double
bags, Long Dopson to lunch
Campbell to Speech to Lloyd.
Riggins to Scales to Lloyd. Strike
outs, Campbell 4, Burke 3. Hit by
pitcher, Lloyd and Beierano, Umpires, McGhee and Connellly.
State College New Stadium Ready For Fall Practice
State College New Stadium Ready For Fall Practice
Orangeburg, S. C.—A new stadium at the South Carolina State A. and M. College will be ready this fall when Coach Smith begins practice with his gridders. This an announcement came from President R. S. Wilkinson, who has been making many new improvements and additions for the recreational activities of his large student body. Leon C James, formerly on the faculty of Bethune-Cookman College and coach has been added to the coaching staff. This addition has become necessary on account of the many candidates that are expected to answer the first call for practice. While several of the varsity men have been lost by graduation, State College expects to have her best football year. Those missing from the regular line up this year will be left tackle Walker, center Whittington, left-end Miller, and left-half back Poole.
Acy Lennon, powerful guard who was missing from the line-up last year and played with West Virginia. Institute, will return this year to add strength to the line. Other old veterans that are expected to return are Power, Golden Gate berths, Ningham, Davies, Cotton, Greene and Ford, half-bees; Gresham, McDonald and Jordan tackles; Dawkins and Gar-
George Aaron Gets Second Leg On St. Nicholas Golf Trophy
George Aaron Gets Second Leg On St. Nicholas Golf Trophy
In a steady downpour of rain, the St. Nicholas Golf Club held its annual club championship Thursday, September 6, at the Pelham Bay Park golf course. George Aaron, the club champion, successfully defended his title and he now has two legs on the club championship cup, which must be won three times before it becomes the permanent possession of a member.
Participants and scores were as follows: George Aaron, 86-91, total 177; B. K. Oston, 92-97, total 189; Elmer Brent, 93-97, total 190; Charles Tatum, 92-106, total 197; George Mullins, 107-102, total 209
Nip Winters No Longer With Lincoln Giants
Because he is alleged to have completely ignored the training rules, Jess "Nipp" Winters, one of the best known left hand pitchers in the country, is no longer on the staff of the Lincoln Giants Winters was given his release by James J Keenan's owner, just before the double header with the Philadelphia Pros on Sunday, September 9. Before coming to the Lincoln's Winters was one of the star pitchers with the Hildale Club of Philadelphia They released him early last spring and for a time it looked as though he was making, good with the New York team but recently he was out of form at every start. When in condition he is still one of the best pitchers in the country and the players and fans of Lincoln Giants games regret his passing.
Being a, race man, who takes a keen interest in the activities of his own race, as well as being a "Lover of Sport," I am writing to commend to the readers of your valu-
able journal the wonderful showing on Miss Pauline Jackson of New York the green 3rd Wrigleyley Marathon belt connection with Toronto Exhibition
Miss Jackson entered the water in a state of over excitement, induced by the fact that the man who was acting as her manager was not in a position to fulfill his financial obligations in connection with the race, and it became necessary, at the last moment, to make other arrangements. This, necessarily, caused Miss Jackson so much worry that on the day of the race she was in a state of semi-nervous collapse. In the circumstances, her performance stands out from the fact that she outclassed such swimmers of note as Millie Cade Corson, Denmark; Edith Hedin, Toronto; Millie Hudson, England; Miss Vogel, Switzerland; Lée Fourrier, Long Beach, Calif; Marie Butler, Holland; Puals 'Kuronen, Finland; Clarebelle Barrett, Myrtle Huddleton, Bromz, N. X. Out of 75 swimmers only 16 finished. Miss Jackson completed 6½ miles of the 10 mile swim.
Miss Jackson made a favorable impression with Johnny. Walker, well known instructor of George Young, who predicts a great future for her.
Yours in sport.
WALTER R. SKANKS
PRIMARY NOTICE!
Tuesday, September 18th, is Primary Day. Polls will be open from 3 p. m. to 9 p. m.
If you are an enrolled Re-ssembly District, you are urged to vote for MVLES A. PAIGE as against ABRAHAM GRENTHAL.
Vote for race representation.
Stand up for a member of your race.
diner, ends, Frazier, Player and Ellerbe, guards.
A. Roy Reide for a number of years manager of the champion Negro quintet, the St. Mark's Flashes, announces the formation of a new basketball team to be known as the Rockland Big Five. Games against the leading professional teams of the East will be held on Saturday nights at the Rockland Palace Court (formerly the Manhattan Casino) located at 153th Street and Eighth avenue.
Among Pride's leading performers are George, 'Specks' Morton, "Hop" Hubbard and "Stretch," all formerly connected with the Reaissance our artists of Harlem Farrel and Morton are at the forward wing, while "Hop" and ward wing, while "Hop" and "Stretch" hold down guard and center respectively. In "Phenom" Perry, Waddell Tucker and "Six" Garcia, Pride has three stars who were once with the Original Harlem Big Five, "Hacky" Rhone is coach and director.
A game with the 'Original Celtics is bing sought for the opener to be held on Electon Day. The seats for 7,500 fans having been arranged
When the Tuskegee Tigers and the A. and T. Bulldogs meet in the first big inter-sectional football game of the season at the World War Memorial Stadium on October 6, the Tuskegee team will be accompanied by the famous Tuskegee band and a group of Tuskegee rooters who will make the trip to Greensboro by special train. Considerable interest is already being manifested in this contest and it is expected to attract the largest crowd to ever witness a colored football game here.
Call To Football Team
Atlanta, Ga.—A call was issued this week to 29 members of the 1927 Varsity Squad to report for preliminary practice September 18. This number will be augmented by several promising recruits from the entering Freshman Class of more than 150. Practice will be held twice daily until the beginning of the regular class work. It is expected that, Coach Harvey, assisted by F. L. Forbes, Varsity half back 1924 to 1927, who finished college in June and has spent the summer at Springfield Training School, will have the Maroon Tiger well groomed by the date of the opening game with Morris Brown on October 6. Following the, Morris Brown gnine, the 24th Infantry, Howard University, Clark University, Atlanta University, Tuskegee Institute, Ala. State Normal and Johnson C. Smith University will be met on successive weekends.
The traditional Thanksgiving Game with Fisk University is still unsettled, due to an attempted adjustment in schedule between Fisk and Tennessee State. However, it is hoped that the matter will be cleared in the next few days, and the fans of the Southeast will not lose their opportunity of seeing the South-Eastern Classic of possibly, the longest continuity of years' of Football contests, between Negro Collegiate Teams
A number of innovations will greet the men on their return, among the most important being, the reservation of the South West ends of the first floor of Grave's Halls as Training Quarters. These rooms, formerly teachers' apartments, will be fitted especially for the men with reference to training necessities.
The second of the musical 'comedies organized as a result of the recent conference of theatre owners in Pittsburgh will be presented at the Lafayette Theatre next week. It is called, "Miffies of 1928" and was produced by the world-famous musical composer and comedian Shelton Brooks.
"Nitties of 1928" is the answer of the colored theatre owners to the demand all over the country for a better type of show. From all reports, it is one of the finest shows ever organized. Supporting Shelton Brooks are Lena Wilson, Hunter and Warfield. St. Clair Dotson and Yvette. "Wilbur White and Chick Marguerite. Billy Hayes and King Hunter Most of these artists have not been East in years. Then there is a chorus of twelve girls—recruited in Chicago and in New York—said to be prettier and faster than anything Harlem has yet seen.
As a special added attraction, the management of the Lafayette Theatre announces the appearances of Jack Johnson next week also. It is Johnson's first appearance in New York in five years and his friends here are expected to give him big welcome. The photoplay program will include "The Leopard Lady" starring Jacqueline Logan.
Dover Furniture, N.Y.—The annual water carnival of Camp Sharpeon took place on Sunday afternoon, August 26, before a large gathering of visitors, many of whom were parents and relatives of the boys of the camp. The carnival was under the direction of Joseph Batchley, swimming instructor at the camp.
The winners in the different events were as follows.
"Around raft race"—1st place
Vernal Bell: 2nd, Leroy Williams; 3rd, James Gibson.
"Crazy diving"—1st place, Bradley Lewis: 2nd, Robert Bowers; 3rd, Henry Lichens.
"King of the Raft"—1st place
Bradley Lewis: 2nd, Leroy Williams.
"Fancy Diving"—1st place, James Gibson; 2nd, H. Payne; 3rd Leroy Williams.
"Beginners Phunge for Distance"—1st place, B. Mays.
"Plunge for distance, advanced swimmers"—1st place, Leroy Williams; 2nd, H. Williams.
"Beginners 30-ft race"—1st place, William Hutcherson; 2nd place, Harold Payne; 3rd, S. Brown.
"Endurance under water, 7 non-swimmers"—1st place, S. Price; 2nd, M. Glover; 3rd, Curtis Giddings.
"Spoon race"—1st place, Mordecar; 2nd, L. Odents.
Eureka Temple To Give Theatre Party At Alhambra Theatre
Eureka Temple No. 22, ladies organization of Imperial Lodge of Elks, will give an immense theatre party at the midnight show at the Alhambra Wednesday, October 10th. There will be quite a program of volunteer talent from leading stage people besides an augmented Alhambra show. Tickets are already in the hands of a very active committee of Eureka Temple members and are in great demand. They may be had from Mrs. Sadie Perkins, committee chairman, 203 West 120th Street, telephone Monument 4109. The orchestra seats are 75 cents, and the box seats $1.
NOTICE
CORRESPONDENTS
Please have your news items in
by Tuesday morning of each week.
Articles reaching the office later
will appear in the
following weeks' issue.
It looks like "Porgy" will extend their run at the Republic Theatre for eight weeks longer.
Eubie Blake assisted by Marion and Dade are at Keith Albee Hippodrome Theatre, New York City.
Clarence Dotson is at the Drake Theatre, Oil City, Pa.
Kit Kat Four are at Keith's 81st Street Theatre, New York City
Wilbur Sweatman and Co. are at Auditorium Theatre, Quebec, Canada.
Easton and Howell are at Loew's Greeley Square Theatre, New York City.
Brown and McGraw are at the Orpheum Theatre, Sioux City, Ia.
Jones and Jones are at the Premier Theatre, New York City.
Danny Small and partner are at the Chester Theatre, New York City.
Hightower Trio are Pantages Theatre, Calgary, Canada.
Norman Thomas is at the Palace
Orpheum Theatre, Milwaukee, Wis'
Buck and Bubbles are at Poli's
Theatre, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
George McClennon is at Proctor's
81st Street, New York City.
Ada Brown and Co. are at the
Rivera Theatre, Chicago, Ill.
Worthy and Thompson are at the
Lyric Theatre Hoboken, N.J.
HUDSON THEATRE, West 44th Street
Even, 8:30 Mata. Wed. & Sat. 2:30
"GOIN' HOME"
Another good play about the feverish life of color
Serious, sentimental and sensational. Exciting
—Hammond, H
THE CAST, INCLUDES:
Richard Hale
Barbara Bulgakov
John Irwin
Arvid Paulson
Georges Renewant
Russel Hicks
Alexander
AND AN EXCEPTIONAL GROUP OF NEGRO AC
AND DANCERS, INCLUDING
Clarence Redd
Brennan Burnett
Seferti C. Pyle
F. Barclay Trigg
Perdinand J. Accoor
J. William Maxwell
Frederick D. McCoy
Thomas Moseley
Leb Bailey
Charles H. Brown
The First Colored Thatre in Harle
LINCOLN THEATR
44th Street
d. & S. at 2:30
Popular Prices
HOME"
Overliver life of colored folk.
Exciting entertainment"
—Hammond, Herald Tribune.
INCLUDES:
Upton Ralph Cullinan
Renevant Alexander Zaroubine
ICKS OF NEGRO ACTORS, SINGERS
INCLUDING
Dam Maxwell Charles Benjamin
D. D. McCoy Fred H. Jennings
Moseley Ray Giles
ley H. Brown Snippy Mason
entre in Harlem
THEATRE
"Another good play about the feverish life of colored folk. - Serious, sentimental and ecasional. - Harmond, Herald Tribune."
135th Street and Lenox Avenue
NOW PLAYING
"DIXIE VAGABON
With
With GRACE SMITH, BOB & BABY GOINS,
DIXIE KID, THREE GINGER SN
12—LINCOLN STEPPERS—12
THURSDAY TO SUNDAY
"Easy Come, Easy Go" With RICE
AMERICA'S
UNRIVALLED
REVUE!
HIT!
5th Sensational
LEW LES
BLACK BIR
ADELAIDE HALL
AIDA WARD
WORLD FAMOUS BLACKBIRDS OR
and JOHNNY HUDOINS
PLAYING
MAGBONDS"
With
BABY GOINS, DOC STRAIN
ZE GINGER SNAPS
STEPPERS—12
TO SUNDAY
"With RICHARD DIX
ensational month
NEW LESLIE'S
K BIRDS
with
BILL BILL ROBINSON
TIM MOORE
BLACKBIRDS ORCHESTRA
NY HUDOINS
"Easy Come, Easy Go" With RICHARD DIX
ADELAIDE HALL BILL ROBINSON
AIDA WARD TIM MOORE
WORLD FAMOUS BLACKBIRDS ORCHESTRA
and JOHNNY HUDGINS
THEATRICAL JOTTINGS
By BOB SLATER
What it takes, to make a first class artiste, Adeliae Hall has it. She is versatile, good to look at, symmetrically formed, clever comedienne, pleasing voice, graceful dancer with a wonderful personality and last but not least originality. To be convinced drop in to see Lew Liesle's Blackbirds of 1928 at the Liberty Theatre.
Tim Moore, principal comic of Lew Liesle's "Blackbirds of 1928" was walking on 7th avenue the other day when a man approached him and said, "Hello Tim Moore" Looking around Tim did not recognize him but extended his hand to the stranger who said, "You don't know me, do you?" Tim said, "No who are you?" The stranger said, "I can't going to tell you, I am going to let it worry you." As for worrying Tim he is a little bald but not gray.
"Coquette," the show in which Abbie Mitchell is one of the principals, will terminate a run of 45 weeks at the Maxine Elliott Theatre on Saturday September 15. The company will open the following Monday at the Shubert Riviera Theatre, 96th street and Broadway, New York City.
Ethel Waters scored a big hit last week at Proctors 86th Street, New York City. This week she is at Proctors Theatre, Newark, N J.
Glenn and Jenkins are proving a big draw for the Loew's Circuit, heading all bills. They have added Clarence Rohichem, the champ rag popping bootblack, who went over very big. They are at Loew's Grand Theatre, New York City.
With
fastest, funniest & most
tuneful extravaganza
including the song success
of the Nation....
'1 CANT GIVE YOU
ANYTHING BUT LOVE'
PRICES EVES $100 to $13.00
MATS $100 to $25.00 NO TAG
LIBERTY
Theatre W 42' ST.
MATS WED SAT
EXTRA MIDNITE
SHOW EVERY THURS
M. & S. New Douglass Theatre
'AMERICA'S LEADING COLORED THEATRE'
LAFAYETTE
70 AVE. 132ND ST
NOW PLAYING (UP TO SUNDAY, SEPT 9, INCL.)
NOW PLAYING (UP TO SUNDAY, SEPT. 16, INCL.)
Irvin C. Miller's Greatest Musical Comedy
NEXT WEEK—BEGINNING MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17
SHELTON BROOKS
NIFTIES OF 1928 JACK JOHNSON
Feature Photoplay
JACQUELINE LOGAN In
"THE LEOPARD LADY"
PERFORMANCES CONTINUOUS - 1 P.M. - 12 MIDNIGHT
FAMOUS NEW MATS 25, 35 PHOTOPLAY MUSIC
JAZZ BAND EVES 25, 35, 50 CONCERT ORGAN
EVERY WEEK
GALA MIDNIGHT SHOW EVERY FRIDAY SEATS RESERVED
DANCE REVUE CONTEST AT LINCOLN THEATRE Prizes Offered For Winners of "Lindy Hop"; Engagement Also
Dancers, private and otherwise, who have been priding themselves on their own ability will have a chance not only to "show the world" but if entered in the "Lindy Hop Dance Contest" starting at the New Lincoln Theatre next Monday their reward will be a substantial prize, to say nothing of an engagement at the Lincoln. These contests will take place every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday night for a month. Each night a cash prize will be given and the winner for the week will receive a double prize on Friday night. At the conclusion of the contests the winner will be seen "doing their stuff" on the stage of the Lincoln for a week
"Dixie Vagabonds" with Grace Smith, well known movie star, Bob and Baby Goins, Doc Strain, Dixie Kid and the Three Ginger Snaps, with the popular Lincoln Steppers, are regaling Lincoln patrons with their brand 'of entertaining which has been-keeping the crowds in good humor from Monday afternoon.
The latter part of the week will find Richard Dix, star of the new Paramount Picture. "Easy Come Easy Go" appearing at the head of the splendid release. The picture run and long and successful run was acclaimed a unanimously popular success. It is a thoroughly laughable entertaining face-comedy, with fast moving situations and a humane theme.
The "Landy Hop Revue" which is underlined for next week will introduce Lottie Brown, Cy Williams, Brother Albert, Wade and Wade and will feature George (Shorty) Snowden and Pauline. All in all, Lincoln presentations these days are right in line with the best of its kind offered at other houses and being centrally located, the Lincoln, now that the regular season is in, will draw its full quota of patrons from a fast growing clientele.
Bailey and Burnett Of "Goin' Home" Have Had Interesting Careers
Leo Bailey and Brevard Burnett, the colored comedians who provide so much mirth in "Goin' Home," with their impersonations of Negro doughboys in France after the war, were born and brought up on the sidewalks of New York, bit on different sides of the town.
Bailey, the smaller member of the duo, first saw the light of dge on East 99th street while Burnett was born on West 147th street, and it was on these streets that the two lads commenced careers of swaying and dancing by performing for pennies which were tossed to them.
Later they each played in a number of shows, "The Wild Rose" is "The Casino Girl." In Paris he appeared in the famous "Follies Bergere," and in London he did a vaudeville turn. Returning to this country, Bailey teamed up with Burnett for a tour of the Keith and Loew vaudeville circuits. Burnett, in the meantime, had appeared in the all-colored "show," "Strut, Miss, Lizzie," and in stock.
In order to appear in Brock Pemberton's production of 'Goin' Home at the Hudson Theatre, the team turned down vaudeville bookings, as they felt that an appearance in a dramatic production on Broadway would greatly enhance their reputations. This has proved to be the case, as the boys received excellent notices
"Gypsy Love"
Drama of Those Strange People Who Wander Over The Earth
"Rag Baby Dolls"
Unique Sparkling Revue BESIDES PICTURES 3-in-1 Program. 25c 35c 50c The Drama Next Week
"At the Stroke of 12"
Mysterious Murder of a POLITICAL BOSS The Revue Next Week BRIGHT EYES
IN THE REALM OF MUSIC
By LUCIEN H. WHITE
MI-TEE MONARCH BAND UNDER LIEUT. FRED W. SIMPSON WINS HIGH HONORS WHILE ATTENDING GRAND LODGE ELKS
Lieut. Fred W. Simpson and his noted aggregation of musicians, the Mi-Tee Monarch 45 Band, came back from Chicago and the grand lodge session of the I.B.P.O.E. of W., literally covered with honor, not alone from their own organization, but from the entire citizenry of Chicago, from highest official to humbleest resident.
Under the auspices of the city's Commissioner of Parks, Monarch Band played a program in the exclusive Washington Park, on Thursday night to an audience that stood ten deep behind all available seats for two hours, and which displayed an unusual unwillingness to have the musicians stop playing. The Commissioner of Parks and his entire staff were present, and they told Lieut. Simpson that not only was his the first colored band to play in that park but it was by far the best.
On Monday night, under a contract made in New York before the band left for Chicago, the musicians gave a program in the Savoy Ball Room, a recreation center operated by the same company that conducts the New York Savoy, and the place was jammed to such a degree that playing was most uncomfortable. Notwithstanding, the program was given with marked success and there was every evidence of appreciation on part of the hearers.
The program included Schubert's "Unfinitished Symphony," Tschaikovsky's "1812" Overture, the Mi-Tee Monarch March by Lieut Simpson and "World War" by Luders.
In the mammoth parade on Tuesday, the New York aggregation was the centre of attraction. It was given a wonderful ovation throughout the entire line of march, and added to its popularity when, at the monument on South Parkway erected by Chicagoans in honor of the Negro soldiers of the 8th Illinois Regiment who served with distinction in the World War, it stopped and played "The Star Spangled Banner." It was a notable tribute to a notable group of soldiers.
The national band contest held on Wednesday in Comiskey Park found the Monarchs the only organization entering in the Class A group. The program as laid down by the judges was played through and the first prize of $200 awarded the band.
The Monarchs travelled to Chicago in regal state over the New York Central Railroad. The train equipment included one club car, one baggage car, three day coaches, eight 12-section Pullman sleepers, one dunning car and two compartment and observation cars. The club car was in charge of Clifford W. Clark of 208 West 141st street, who gave the boys every attention, and two railroad officials accompanied the party to see that everything went off all right.
P. E. R. Dennis Armstead was chairman of the Marching Club, and members of the order aboard the Mi-Tee Monarch Special were.
Exalted Ruler and Mrs. James Veal, Lieut. Feed Simpson, Russell West, Joseph (Blondy) Brown, James Keyes, Richard Jackson, Henry Wilson, Jerry Srother, John Green, Ballard Edwards, Rutherford Jackson, Robert Freeman, Gillard Thompson, John Brown, James Ray, Thomas Brown, Mr. and Mrs. John Brunson, Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Covington, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bell, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. Fernie Ferrell, Mr. and Mrs. Frank McLaughlin, Miss Daisy Fox, Mrs. Viola Fischer, Mrs. Lossie Henderson, Mrs Beatrice Adams, Mrs. Kate Ovington, Admiini Hayne, Herbert Hilford, Clarence Holmes, Wallace Gasway, William Parker, Joe Ganor, Seaborn Smith, Albert Maxwell, Halvor Adams, Otthello Jackson, E Ray, John Martin, James Wilson, Leslie Booker, James Sammjs, Eric McLarty, Sidney Davis, Roy Scotland, Walter Thompson, Leroy Nealy and Harry Turner.
Even before the Mi-Tee Monarch Special left the New York Grand Central station, there was a wonderful demonstration in the band's honor. Through the insistent request of General Passenger Agent Codene of the local office, the band played a 30-minute program in the pacious station corridor, which was heard by thousands of travelers and their friends who occupied the balconies and all other available room, and who applauded enthusiastically and appreciatively.
Again at Syracuse, the band was called upon, during a 3-hour stop over, and regaled a large crowd with their splendid music.
The climax came on Friday, August 31, when the New York Elks came to the famous LaSalle station to board their train for New York only to have Mr. Codene call upon them for the unprecedented performance of a band_recital in this station by a group of colored musicians. And the ovation given the musicians was in keeping with the other similar experiences.
To Resume Sunday Afternoon Concerts September 30
It will be of the utmost interest to admiring music-lovers of New York City to learn that the Mi-Tee Monarch Band will resume its monthly Sunday afternoon band concerts at the Girls' Junior High School at 135th street and Edgecombe avenue, on Sunday, September 30, playing from 3 to 5 p. m., and that these concerts will be played on the last Sunday afternoon in each month through May, 1929. Lieut. Simpson is planning to include many new works in this series of concerts, and will include a number of the big symphonic compositions which have been available in the past only to the symphony orchestras having strong and capable string sections.
The development of competent reed sections in the modern brass band has made it possible for bandmasters how to use these numbers with fine effect and more and more they are being made available for such rendition. And the Monarch Band, under Lieut. Simpson, is in the vanguard of these musical organizations.
Palmer Jones, Pianist, Dies In Paris
An elaborate funeral service, at the American Church, was held over the remains of Palmer Jones, pianist and entertainer, who died suddenly on Wednesday, August 29. Mr. Jones was one of the owners of Chez Florence, and had become one of the best known of the Negro artists in Paris. The funeral was attended by people from all walks in life, and many floral offerings were sent to the church. After the funeral service, the body was cremated.
Eddie Burks, Dancer, Attempts Suicide
While in Dinard, France, Eddie Burks, the fantastic dancer, attempted suicide by slashing his neck. He was brought to Paris and is in a critical condition.
No reason is known for the action.
Sissle Engagement Sensational Success
Noble Sislea who has become famous overnight as an orchestral conductor, ended his national engagement at the Restaurant des Ambassadeurs, Paris, on August 29. Monsieur Sayag paid a wonderful tribute to the excellence of the orchestra and praised the deportees of the fifteen musicians.
The orchestra played the difficult Broadway revue after two rehearsals. Mr. Sislea was the star of the revue during the month of August. The matre of the Ambassadeurs said: "Monsieur Sislea is the greatest success in the history of the club. No artist has received such an invitation nightly during the entire engagement."
Sislea has some offers for engagements in 'London, Paris, Budapest and Berlin, but he cannot accept them because of other plans which shall be announced in the near future.
Orchestra Leader John Ricks Praised
John Ricks, orchestral leader, of 4 St. Nicholas Place, New York City, was highly complimented in the offices of the Restaurant des Ambassadeurs by Messrs. Noble Sissie and Edmund Sayag. Much credit is given to Mr. Ricks for selecting the men and bringing them
to Paris immediately. He was able to get all the passports in two days and left New York a few days after receiving the cable from Sissle.
The musicians who came to Paris under the leadership of Johnny Ricks to form the now celebrated NOBLE SISSLE ORCHESTRA are: Johnny Dunn, featured cornetist of Plantation Revue fame, Dave Richards, first cornetist, Otto Hardwick, alto saxophonist who was formerly a member of the famous Duke Ellington band, and William Blue, tenor saxophonist and clarinetist.
The aforesaid musicians are returning on the S. S. Rochambeau. They are occupying the de luxe suite the booking of which was specially arranged by Monsieur Sayag.
100
Lieut FRED W, SIMPSON Under whose baton wiT Tee-Moon arch 45 Band won new, and distinctive honors route to and from, and while in Chicago for Elsa's Lodge.
Paul Robeson's Singing
By JAMES DOUGLAS,
Editor of the "Sunday Express
Editor of the "Sunday Express"
There are relations which melt the worldling's hard heart and renew the worldling's withered mind. After they pass, even the worldling is sad because the things which he has learned from his life are as he watches the glory die away and fade into the light of common day.
I went into Drury Lane Theatre to hear Paul Robeson singing Ningbo Spirituals. For near, hours he transfigured the packed mass of worldlings with mystical emotion. We sat there in a trance of noiseless ecstasy as he touched our heartstrings with his marvellous voice.
He is more than a great actor and a great singer. He is a great man, who creates the soul of a people in bondage, and shows you its kindness with a lettered soul of man. We became like little children as we surrendered to his magical genius.
We laughed and wept. He broke our hearts with beauty. As he wiped the tears from his eyes we wiped the tears from ours. He shook some of us into sobs. We applauded until we were weary, and we made him sing till he was weary. I have never seen a more unsated and unsatisfied audience.
What is the secret of his mastery of all our highest moods and all our holiest emotions? I.拿握 there in a plain tweed suit, h.拿 piece of paper in his two immobile. Not a gesture. He is a giant, an athlete, a Rugby player, and a man of culture.
He is not quite black or quite white. His skin is mellow ivory. His features are negro, but they are so plastic that they shape even shade of feeling and imagination. His lips and his eyes changes with every tone of dramatic vision in his voice.
There were seconds when his face was alight and afame with seership. We saw the rapt mysticism gathering in intensity until it reached the height of the mood, and then it slowly faded like a sunset, and he locked the door on it with a tightened, tense mouth.
Dream-State
Before he sings a note he looks at you with his dream-carched eyes. Then, as you yield to his powerful domination, he turns his head with a smile to Lawrence Brown at the piano, and nods. He has you, and he holds you in a dream-still the song creeps back into the silence out of which it came. Vainly I seek comparisons. There is none. Duse perhaps, worked wondelessly the wonders that soar above art in their culture, their truth, their purity, their wistfulness, and their hints at things that lie too deep for words or music.
His songs are the Bible as we heard it on our mother's knee. They are the mother-songs of mankind, the hidden songs that all men aid all women hear whispering in their buried memory. It is not only the dreaming Negro soul that years in these cumulative refrains. It is the sad soul of humanity reaching out into the mystery of life and death, caught up into a seventh heaven of cage by the fire, the grand voice that cries like a violin from depth to depth and breadth to breadth of vision. The man sees what he sings and we see it as he sees it and sings it.
Sculptor's Despair
No wonder that Epstein, with all the subtle strength of his later imagination, has toiled to mould the mystery of that head. Robeson in one afternoon moulded a hundred heads before our eyes. He is the sculptor's despair.
I have heard all the great singers of our time. No voice has ever moved me so profoundly with so many passions of thought and emotion. The marvel is that there is no monotony in the spiritual spell it is effortless enchantment moving through fluent states of thought and feeling. At the house we wast along the path of prophecy I knew that, as a people, we are mystical to the corg, and that even the worldliest worldling is capable of being captured by the great, good simplifications of religious faith.
By Mr. MARTHA HILL BROWN
Wife of Rev. J. W. Brown, Pastor
of Mother A. M. E. Zion Church
It is impossible to describe the
bewildering beauty of Hooholu and
the glory of its thousand flowering
trees and shrubs, which line the
city's waterfront and wonderfull
wonderful city. The climate is
ideal, neither hot nor cold, month
after month, liquid sunshine, sum-
mer skies, soft and balmy.
'The Hawwin motto is' ("U mau
ke ea o kon", ("The Life of the
Island is preserved in Righteous').
'Hooholu is, the gateway to all
plains, without the squail, dirt and
disease; the Tropies, without their
awful heat, and insects. It is a
Metropolis, with its high social life,
fine hotels, big department stores,
newspapers, trolley cars and factor-
ers, Hawaiian charm that never
pulls at the heart strings, when you
haire "Alofa Oe."
Under the Queen's Tree.
Leaving the little tea room where we took our shoes off and squatted at the low tables, we went to our hotel, the old Royal Hawaiian, once the Queen's home. We are writing a beautiful oleander, varicolored hibiscus, and golden cassia cluster around this home of history and romance.
After seeing the plumeria bloom, and the scarlet flowers covering the ground, papayas filled with cracked ice, and crunching crisp, fried frog legs and talking with our slow speaking friends about a fine tomorrow and we must not lose today—we forget what caused our first stunt, but to learn and see new things in a land where everything is new, we find there are no more thrills left.
An Amusing Sight.
We were awakened at 6:30 a.m. after a refreshing sleep, by the sweet haunting strains of Hawaiian music. Breakfast poi, kona coffee, papayas was served on the "lanai" or hotel veranda. While waiting for our trunks we were amused to see a man weighing about 200 pounds, putting on a cloth, carefully pushing a small trunk on a hand-car and resting and fanning. The little fan seemed so heavy for trim.
An. Oriental City.
One never becomes accustomed to stepping from a beautiful residential district to a section that has been transferred bodily from some oriental city.' The Buddhist Temples, which appear in the most unexpected places; now a brown cave with a clumpy 'carabou' or water oxen, gypsies everywhere, and then the sea.
WAIKIKI.
One of the world's greatest *watering places* is Wakiki Beach. There is neither extreme heat or cold there—the same clothes are worn the entire year—the bathing everywhere. We see the wonderful ponciana trees with their gorgeous blooms, and the hibiscus, red and pink; the large banjau tree with its hundred roots, and avacado or aligator pear tree with their orange or delicious fruit; or hundreds of little brown-skin bodies diving into the clear blue water.
We wish we could describe the moonlight nights at Wakiki Beach. Haajai waves, pretty girls, the midnight fishing, and hathing.
A. Exciting Sport
But surf-board riding is the most fascinating of all of the sports. There is no place in 'the world where surf-riding has reached such perfection, such grace, such ease, Graceful figures 'of the natives stand erect on their boards, riding swiftly and steadily, toward the beach where the waves meet the shore where the waves meet the water. So expert are the natives, this sport is not indulged in until "the waves are at their greatest height.
Chinese Funeral
We went to a Chinese funeral tonight. The same rites used 2,000 years before Christ were used. As we entered the ladies were given tea and the men cigars. The service began at 6:30 and continued until the next day at three. We re-entered the smoldered from burned papers used to chase the devil away forced us to leave. I was admitted as an Hawaiian. The women in white robes on one side of the room on the floor and the men in black suits, with scarf around head and waist, sat on the opposite side. Two servants stebd by the casket holder, on the floor, with scarf around the foot of the casket were rite, chicken, salt pork and other Chinese dishes for the departed to use on her way. A priest in a handsome robe read the burial service and sang a, la-
"Water Boy, where you are you hide in?" "Hear de Lamba a crying?" "My soul's a witness for de Lord," "I'm gonn't tell God all my troubles" "Were you there?" "Steal away to Jesus," "Deep River" These songs open the old wisdom we despise, the ancient arena that we deride. "Strange that a Newy singer out of the Snow Boat" should be able to fill a vast theatre with the divine witchery of Bouyan and Wesley, and reveal to astonished worldlings the world beyond the world!
meet. Musicians in queer Chinese robes played weird-Chinese music, also to keep the devil away. A storm of the old lady was on a chair, flowers filled the room, incense and paper in big rolls were burned continuously. At the close of the service silver money, wrapped in blue paper, was given to each person present.
Churcen.
Sunday was a very busy day for us. At 8 a.m. we visited the Hongwani—Buddhist Temple. We were asked to remove our shoes, after which the Japanese ushers treated him with a spoon of hyma, the gong, after each verse, the reading of the "Seven Jewels of the Law," the invocation from the Giamese, the salutations, and the address in Japanese and English by Mr. Apsley, and the solemn Nunberg, or the worshipful Temple with its beautiful Altar of Gold, is surrounded by a "Janai" or balcony. The tropical garden of surpassing beauty makes a natural amphitheatre for it. We were somewhat surprised to see a natural of the audience "hoole" or white
Leaving the Buddhist Temple we were in time for service at the Queen's Church—the Kaiwaikoa, Hawaiian Church—and sat as near as possible to the former Queen's pew. Rev. Akene, the pastor, a handsome brown-skin Hawaiian graduate of Harvard, conducted two services, one in Hawaiian and one in English, "How long will Thou forget me" by Pleuger? beautiful girls in white were ushers, and here also were a large number of "hooels" (whites).
A Wealthy Family.
- We met at this service Mr. and Mrs. Nolle Smith, the wealthiest family of our group here. We were their guests at dinner, and later, with three Chinese friends and a Dr. Jones, motorized boat. We were on the Oakhawk Mountains. From this historic spot, we saw acres of pineapples and sugar cane, extending miles and miles to the sea. On one side clouds hover low over the mountain, and on the other side the winding concrete plate of the extended wonders plate one of the greatest wonders here.
End of The Rainbow.
We were rather nervous, coming around the mountain, 1,000 feet above the sea, with the fog so dense we were forced to turn our lights on. But a sigh of awe and relief escaped me when the liquid sunshine cleared the fog and a wave of rain fell from the mountains into the valley, and the end of the rainbow for the first time.
In the center of a 5-acre plot on the side of a large mountain, is a beautiful, richly furnished cottage under palm shade trees, where fruit trees and flowers of every description abound. Here fanned by cool breezes from the rainbow mountain, with their Mrs. Nolle Smith, with their four beautiful children, Near them is Mr. Smith's mother, in a cottage cottage.
The Last Service.
Our last service for the day was the Young People's meeting in St Andrews's Church. This church is in the center of an old Hawaiian garden. It is called "Prayer in Stone" Th'church was built by Bishop Willis of England, taught the stones in England. A beautiful service is held each morning by 600 school children.
An Easter Ceremony.
Not far from our hotel is the Punch Bowl, a volcano crater now extinct. It was once the "Hill of sacrifice" and the site of the Sundial. Christians of all denominations and races climb the slope to the Punch Bowl, and there worship the Risen Lord. On the hills one seems near to the Lord, the covered with green tropical vegetation are cloaked in soft misty clouds
Next Sunday we will visit the Filinojo Church.
PRIMARY NOTICE!
Tuesday, September 18th, is Primary Day. Polls will be open from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m. If you are an enrolled Republican voter in the 19th Assembly District, you are urged to vote for MYLES AARON against AGBRAHAM GRENTH. Vote for race representation. Stand up for a member of your
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VOCAL STUDIO
105 W. 1300. ST. New York City
WIRST ELMANUEL CHURCH
Saturdays at 2 P. M.
Home Studio, Metropolitan Building
Orange, N. I.
Phone Orange 7344
STUDIOS OF
FRANK S. BUTLER
Serious and Advanced
Students
PIANO, HARMONY,
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ETHEL R. DAY
TEACHER OF SINGING
158 West 74th St. N. Y. City
Trafalgar 1069
HARRY PRAMPIN LAURA
SCHOOL OF MUSIC
Most Progressive School In
Harlem
131 WEST 136th STREET
New York City
Telephone Audubon 1987
Phone Bradhurst 3957
DAVID JOHNSON
MUSIC STUDIO
Violin, Piano, Ensemble
66 West 140th Street N. Y. C.
On Friday, August 31, the Canteen Committee of *Abyssinian Baptist Church*, *Mrs. Blanche Glover*, chairman, Mrs. Marguerite Jackson*, secretary, and Mrs. have an outing to 60 children and their parents to Bath Beach, summer house of the Children's Aid Society. The committee carried 100 bottles of milk, 20 sandwiches and 40 cookies to the young folk. They were also given souvenirs of toy balloons and hats.
Among those who assisted" the committee were Mesdames G. Page, L, Allen, M, Pires, Frey Nelson and Osterhouse.
New Rochelle, N. Y.
New Rochelle, 'N, Y.-The two weeks revival at St. Catherine A. M. E. Zion-Church began, Sunday, September 9. The Rev. Mr. Murdock of South Carolina is the evangelist in charge.
The three act melo-drama, "Ship A-hoy," written by Miss Constance Grayson and presented at Central Junior High School by the Community Club on September 6, was a dramatic success. When the tickets have all been accounted for the amount realized will be announced in The New York.Age.
If you do not wish to be worried about getting a moneyorder to review your subscription to The Age, call to see Mrs. Harper and give her the money.
Sam Scott and Chester Jones entertained a number of Hampton and Virginia State College students last week.
Herman Scott was killed in an auto accident last Friday. Funeral services were held from Bethesda Baptist-Church with the Rev. Mr. Crutchfield officiating in the absence of the pastor.
The amount raised at St. Catherine A. M. E. Zion Church quarterly meeting on September 2 was $95.05. The Rev. W. O. Carrington, pastor, was complimented by visiting ministers.
In the note last about the visitors who called to see Mme. P. H. Harper-Booklyn and New York City the follow-up names were unintentionally omitted to Mr. aïd Mrs. Homer Walton, Mr. and Mrs. C. Walton, Mr. and Mrs. A. Foote Miss Jessie Swain, Miss Ethel Jones, George Hill, Witcher Walton and Edward Elam of Brooklyn.
William Murray of Webster has just returned from a trip to Chicago.
Friends of Sir'ir Lee Crawford will be sorry to hear of his relapse after being discharged from the New Rochelle Hospital. He left Wednesday for Saranac Lake where he will take 90 days rest on the advice of his physician, Dr. C. P. McClendon. The Rev. and Mrs. Bodde of Bethesda Baptist Church attended the National, Baptist Convention in Louisville, Ky., last week. Robert J. Ford of 49 Clinton avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y., is a quitter of his friends, Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Fergusset Pler, R. I, for a few of his balmy days during vacation.
Warwick. N. Y.
Warwick, N. Y.—Last Sunday was a busy day at the Union A. M. E. Church The Rev William Anderson failed the pulpit at the morning service, preaching an excellent sermon from the 124th churches and the afternoon six congregations united in a service at E. Church, Middletown. The Rev Simon Guy, pastor of the Port Jervis Church, delivered the sermon. A. M. E. Church by the Sunday school, Miss Lillian Anderson directress. The net proceeds were $350. Mesdames Etta Lippon, Mary Braxton and Allie Booker made the Rev and Mrs. C. J Lawton happy with presentations.
James Masten is at the sick host Mrs. Braxton, Mr. and Mrs. Royd, Mr. Henderson and Mrs. H. Tyson motored to Newburgh last week.
The Rev and Mrs J. H. Tyson Mrs. Etta Lippon and William H motored to Middletown last Saturday.
The Rev H. S. Tyson, Floyd Hickens and Mrs. Albert Hickens made a business trip to Newark City. Friends from New York City are spending their vacation with Mr. and Mrs Roland Braxton. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs Jackson and her family have re-entered the New York City after spending two months vacation with her parents here.
139 WEST 136th STREET
New York, N. Y.
Telephone Audubon 8216
Music taught in all its branches.
DAVID I. MARTIN, Director
159 W. 135th St. New York City
Piano Composition
Harmony Ear Training
RAYMOND CLAYMES
233 WEST 138th STREET
New York City
Concert Oratorio Recital
Phone: Edgecombe 6944
"Mr. Claymes has a voice
with a soul and a Rare Interpretative Sense."
Choosing the right afternoon frock during mid-season is not so difficult since satin has been declared the smart fabric for the first days of September. In *Pattern* 1306 the new feeling in Fall fashions combines with the established mode in such interesting ways as the diagonal tie, the cascading jabot on the boule and the gracefully flared skirt.
A beige satin bodice may boast a brown, satin skirt and trim; black and white is a smart combination; navy blue and grey are lovely. Indeed one's choice of color schemes is vast for the development of this dainty frock.
May be obtained in sizes 16 to 44. Size 36 requires 2½ yards of 40 inch material for blouse, 1¾ yards for skirt and trimming.
This model is easy to make if you use this pattern which is indistinguishable from a substantial paper, not tissue. A perfect fit in every size is guaranteed.
Patterns will be delivered to any address upon receipt of 15 cents in coins, or stamps, preferably coins. Always mention size wanted. Fashion book showing spring and summer styles will be sent upon receipt of five cents for mailing costs. Address all mail and orders to The New York Age Patterns Department, 243 West 17th Street, New York City.
Newburgh. N. Y.
Newburgh, N. Y.-The Rev. H. E. W. Blount, past the of the A. M. E. Zion Church, preached an inspiring sermon last Sunday morning. Communion was served in the evening.
The Helping Hand Club was entertained at the home of Mrs. Estelle Kwins and Mrs. Almore Hawkins and Mrs. Estelle Green were hostesses.
The open air concert and box social given by members of the Willing Workers Club last Friday evening was a grand success. Miss Anna Glenn was in charge of the program.
Mrs. Melvin Johnson and young son, junior, returned to their home in Paterson, N. J. last Sunday after spending the past week visiting her mother, Mrs. Lavinia Jamerson.
Mr. and Mrs. Simon Johnson worshipped at the A. M. E. Zion Church in Highland Falls last Sunday evening.
Miss Alice Brown, a student in the Downingtown Industrial School, in New York City, to attend the funeral of her father, the Rev. Mr. Brown.
Miss Henrietta Judd will leave next week to resume her studies at Downingtown Industrial School, Downingtown, Pa. She will be a Schoonmaker of Chamber street has been confined to her home the past week by illness.
Miss Helen Ford entertained last Saturday evening in honor of Miss Estelle Martin of Winston-Salem, N.C., the present wege: Mr. and Mrs, Banks of Morristown, N. J.; Mr. and Mrs, Ledbetter, Miss Audrey Saunders, Mr. and Mrs, Earl Trent Mrs. G. Campbell, Dr. John Randolph, Mr. Willa Ella Wright, Willa Ella Aggleton of Newburgh, Mrs. Louis Campbell of Washington, D. C. and others. A buffet supper was served.
Mr. and Mrs. George W. Ford have returned from a motor trip through the South. He was wished by Winston-Salem, C. Richmond and Fauville, Va. and Washington, D. C.
Riverhead. N. Y.
Riverhead, N. Y.—Harry Williams has returned to his home in Brooklyn after a visit with his brother here, James Williams.
Miss Isabelle Porter returned to her home in New York last week after vacationing here.
Mrs. George Tucker who visited in Norfolk and other points in Virginia, has returned home.
Miss Helen Bess, who represented Suffolk Temple Daughter at the Grand Lodge Convention in Chicago, reports a delightful trip. The chicken and spaghetti supper given by the Stewards of Goodwill A. M. E. Zon Church was largely attended and the receits good.麦dames G: Bess and J. Hawkins headed the committee in charge.
Mr. and Mrs. Preston Christian of Richmond, Va., spent a few days here visiting their niece, Mrs. G. Bess last week.
The A. U. O. F and S. and D. B. S. of Moses, No. 143, observed their second anniversary sermon last Sunday at Goodwill A. M. E. Zion Church; The Rev. H. B. Certain attic officiated and Mrs. Elizabeth Mayfield of New York City was the install mistress. She was presented by Alexander Richardson, grand marshal of the W. W. G. E. Solos were rendered by Mrs. L. Sells, Mrs. Williams and Mrs. Certain. Mrs. Anna Johnson was mistress of ceremonies and was introduced by Mrs. J. Murray. Presentations were made by Mrs. Johnson, Mrs. Lewis Mrs. Helms and Mrs. Bless.
Vauxhall. N. J.
Vauxhall, N. J.-Monday, September 3, an enjoyable bus ride was had to Atlantic City in charge of two of the clubs of the Union Baptist Church, Mrs. P. Powell and Mr. C. H. Mitchell, leaders. John Scott, has returned from Monmouth Beach, N. J., where he has been spending the summer. Joseph James is still confined to bed; he is greatly missed among the members and friends of Union Baptist Church. We pray for his speedy, recovery.
MARIE
Mrs. Margaret Harmon and brother, W. Sayles, went on a trip to Richmond, Va., Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Moses Saunders have taken up their residence in Scarsdale, N. Y., they will be greatly missed among our town's younger set. Mrs. Bessie Carter and James Lewis were united in the holy bodies of matrimony, Saturday evening, Rev. J. Garfield Bryant, officiating.
Montclair, N. J.
Montclair, N. J.—Mrs. George E. Austin has returned from Royal Oak, Md.
J. Wesley Austin of Wilmington, Del, left the holidays with his parents on Gray street.
Mrs. Greene of New Rochelle, N. J., has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Austin of Gray street.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
News items for this column
be signed and will be received in
the Pittsburgh office, 711 Aimbeim street, up to Sunday afternoon of the week of publication.
Pittsburgh, Pa. - Miss Cora Francisca Wood, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. Scott Wood of 711 Aimbeim street, Pittsburgh, Pa., who was graduated from the University of Pittsburgh, June, 1928 with an A. B. degree, left Sunday, September 16, 1928. Where she has been elected by the board of Edward Waters College to teach French and English.
Mrs. Cora A. Wilder, only sister of the Rev. Scott Wood of Pittsburgh, died suddenly on Thursday, August 21, at White Sulphur Springs, Va., at his home in Chicago, Va., and made her home in Chicago, Ill., where she was buried.
Williamstown, Mass.
Williamstown, Mass.-Rev. A. R. Foxworth of Bridgeport, Conn., was the weekend 'guest of Mrs. Bessie Stanton.
Mrs. Charles Bland has returned to her home on Beilden street after having spent the summer in Morristown, J. and Boston
George Clark has returned after spending the summer in Saratoga, N. Y.
Fitzgerald, Ga.
Fitzgerald, Ga.—The Rev. Mr. Bass preached an inspiring sermon at Salem Baptist Church last Sunday morning.
The Rev. J. H. Johnson of New Providence Baptist Church has returned from Florida where he preached at Tampa and Jacksonville. The Community Fair at Bethel A. M E. Church was a success.
James Cunningham of Atlanta is visiting relatives, the Evans family of East Pine street.
Miss Mary L. Evans left Friday to resume her work as a teacher in Troy, Ala.
Mrs. Mary Jones left last Sunday for Atlanta where she is spending awhile with relatives.
Mr. Jefferson of Cordelle, Ga., was the guest of Miss Mayne Daniels last Sunday.
Miss Mimie Nicholson will leave for New York City in a few weeks. The marriage of Miss Lucille Jackson to J. C. Brown took place at the home of the bride's parents, 314 Mary Lue avenue on Sunday, September 9. The Rev. W. A. Tucker officiated, Gladys Davis was the bridesmaid and Leroy Gary the best man. A reception followed the ceremony. William Nicholson and Fred Williams motored to Tifton on business last Saturday.
Feen-a-mint The Laxative You Chew Like Gum No Taste But the Mint
INTERESTING ITEMS GLEANED BY THE AGE CORRESPONDENTS
Schenectady, N. Y.-Elite Washington is on the sick list.
Mrs. Mary Myres and daughters,
Misses Margaret and Edith, spent the weekend in New York City.
Mrs. Dock White left Tuesday morning for home in Holyoke,
Mass., after spending two weeks with her niece, Mrs. M. M. Days.
Rev. and Mrs. Days and Inez Henderson spent Friday in Saratoga.
Dr. and Mrs. Flowers of St Louis.
Mo. stopped over, with E. Collier enroute home.
L. H. Erwin spent the weekend in the city.
Miss Inez Henderson spent Saturday and Sunday in Binghamton.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Smith are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Smith's mother in Round Lake.
The Ellis family spent the holidays in Wilmington, Del
Schenectady, N. Y.-Mr. and Mrs. E. Washington, Mrs. Days and Mrs. Thomas motored to Albany last Wednesday evening to attend services at Beulah Baptist Church. The Ellis family has returned home after a pleasant stay in Wilmington, Del. Hubert Lynch left last Tuesday morning for his home in the West Indies. Mrs. Holmes and mother, Mrs. Smith, have returned home after spending the summer at Round Lake. Mrs. David Gleason of Detroit, Mich. is visiting her sister, Mrs. J. P. Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Smith and mother motored to Watertown last Tuesday to attend the funeral of a cousin, Mrs. Susan Booker. The Rey and Mrs M M Days motored to Fort Hunter last Sunday.
Foughkeepsie, N. Y.
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.-Rev. Dr. Taylor, pastor of South Street A. M. E. Zion Church, preached two stirring sermons Sunday. Despite the rainy weather both services were largely attended. The Livingston Quartet gave a concert at Zion Church Thursday, August 23, which was largely attended. Dr. James Mason, financial secretary of Livingston, gave an interesting short address in regard to the work being carried on at the college this year. Rev. Dr Taylor and Dr Jas E. Mason of Livingston College, attended the reception and banquet given in honor of Mr West, Poughkeepsie's only colored policeman.
Miss Annie Jackson, who has been a guest of Miss Rossie Taylor at the parsonage, left for home Saturday after a visit of three weeks, during which time the friends of Rev. and Miss Taylor made her visit a very enjoyable one. Dr. Taylor left Wednesday of this week to attend the Hudson River District Conference which was held at Nyack, N. Y., in St. Philips A. M. E. Zion Church where Dr. formerly pastored.
Manuel Medina of Nyack, N. Y., was guest of Rev. Dr. Taylor Sunday. Mr. Medina was a stanch member and worker in the church during Dr Taylor's pastorate there. Mrs. Alfred Munn and sons. Alfred jr., and Chauchey will leave for home this week after spending the month of July and August with her father. Rev Dr. Taylor Mrs. Munn is an active worker in the Community Center where she is assistant secretary of the Board of Directors and chairman of the entertainment committee of the Center. Alfred Munn will motor to Poughkeepsie for weekend after which Mrs Munn and sons will return home to Waterbury with him. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rhodes of Nyack, N. Y., were the guests of Rev. Dr. Taylor at A M.E. Z.arsonage over the weekend and spent Labor Day Mt. Rhodes is president
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Winner of Philadelphia Prize Medal
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of the Trustee Board at the church where Dr. Taylor formally pastored and Mrs. Rhodes is christopher of junior chair. They returned to Nyack after a very enjoyable visit to the parsonage.
Alfred H. Muhn of Waterbury, Conn., was also a weekend, guest of his father-in-law, Rev. Dr. Taylor and returned home Monday evening after a pleasant stay.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rhodes, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Munn and son Alfred Jr., and Miss Rosie Taylor motored to Rhinebeck, N. Y., Sunday afternoon.
Rev. Dr. Taylor preached and inspiring sermon Sunday evening, after which Holy Communion was taken. Visitors who worshipped at Zion Sunday morning and evening were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rhodes, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Munn and sons, Alfred Jr., and Chaucey.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Syrpacus, N. Y —Miss Mildred Theus, daughter of the proprietor of the Sawow Hotel is spending her vacation here with her mother. She club entertained Miss Edith Johnson of Baltimore at the home of Mrs. Palmer last Monday night. William Turner and Mrs. J. Wilson, who recently meet with serious injuries as a victim of an automobile accident, are improving. The Rev Richard A. G Foster, new pastor of the A. M. E. Zion Church, has been appointed the former Miss Garabelle McWhirter of Spartanburg, S. C. whom he married about three weeks ago. One of the early activities of the A. M. E Zion Church is reception to the Rev and Mrs. Foster.
The second annual dance by Shabo Temple, No. 3, Dermative Order Knightle of Omar, which was held at the Syrva Center, and the largest group attended. Out-told guests were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wright and James Ward, Watertown, N. Y. The committee of arrangements was composed of L. B. Slater, W. M. Roe, J. Roe, and L. B. Slater, S. D. Slater, committee: John Depuy, S. D. Slater, Henn and W. H. Robinson, entertainment committee. A. L. Ames, James Foy, John Timmons and W. R. Lippins, funeral services for the late Miss M. Timmons; S. D. Slater, staff were held from the F. J. and E. Synder funeral parlor Saturday afternoon, September 1 Interment was at Woodland Cemetery. A. C. Bain, proprietor of the Bain's Garden, visited Syrva and Miami, Fla. is visiting in Syrva home and plans to make this his future home.
The local branch of the N. A. A. C. P., will hold its first meeting of the fall season Sunday afternoon, September 16, at Bethany Baptist Church. The Rev. R. A. G Foster of, the People's A M E Zion Church, will deliver the principal address and there will also be a special musical program.
Oneonta, N. Y.
Oneonta, N. Y.—Mr. and Mrs.
John Elmandorf and Mr. Spring
motored to Delhi, N. Y., last Mon-
day and were entertained by Mr.
and Mrs. Perris.
Mrs. Lettie Jackson is spending
a few days with her father, William
Elmandorf in Sydney, N. Y.
Miss Helen Harris has entered
upon her first year in high school.
Miss Ruth A Harris is now in
the Academy School, grade 8A.
Messrs Delmar Harris and David
Myers of Schenectady, N. Y., were
callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
David Harris last Saturday.
Messrs. Diggs and Richard Wal-
don of New York City spent last
Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. David
Harris.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Ball motored to Binghamton one day last week.
Messrs Barton, Rux and Brown
and Mr. Mrs. Arche of Binghamton were guests of Mrs. Rux last Friday.
Charles Breese, formerly of Baltimore, after spending some time in the far West, is now making his home here. The He is a man of broad business experience and an active worker in the church and community.
Haverstraw, N. Y.
Haverstraw, N. Y.—The Calvary Baptist Sunday School enjoyed a very fine outing to Bear Mountains Thursday and the children had a wonderful time.
Mr Thorns of Ohio is visiting his friend, Peter Roger of this city. Harold Jones is agent for The New York Age. He will be glad to serve you.
Mrs Willie Green of this city visited her sister in Hackensack, N. J.
Mrs. Hattie Burton is visiting her sister, Mrs. Lewis in Poughkeepsie. Hubert Walton and Docky Wright will make another trip south sometime next month.
The newlyweds, Mr. and Mrs. Altron Jenkins, have returned and are making their home on Jefferson street.
Mrs Manue Walker of Kearney, N. J. is visiting her sisters here.
Mrs. Margaret Puryear of Nyack is visiting her sisters here
Mrs. John White is visiting her sister and other relatives in Delaware.
Mrs Willie Green of this town is visiting her sister in Hackensack Harold Jones is agent for. The New York, Age
Mrs Knight of New York, City is here visiting her mother.
Mr and Mrs. Willie Griffin are planning a trip through the southern states for this month.
Mr and Mrs Allen Jenkins of this town have returned from their honeymoon and are now living on Jefferson street of this town.
Isaiah Fuller has purchased two acres of land in White Boro, N. J.
The Bear Cats played a wonderful game with the St Nicholas A C of New York City. The score was 15-12. Wright pitched and J.
Nixon caught for the local team. Mrs. John White is enjoying herself self-visit in her home in Delaware. The Fairmont Church, Rev. Hall pastor, is giving a concert some time this month.
Sparkill, N. Y.
Sparkhill, N. Y.-Marie Sisco, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Sisco, underwent an operation for appendicitis at the Nyack Hospital Tuesday, September 4. She is doing nicely.
The Rev. and Mrs. J. H. Brockett and family attended the Orange County Fair Labor Day.
Clarence Crise, son of the late Rev. F. G. Cruse, an ex-pastor of St. Charles Church, with Mrs. Cruse and children of Flushing, N. Y., Mrs Davis and son of Jamaica, N. Y., and Mr and Mrs. Lamar Smith of Springfield, N. Y., were callers at St Charles Church and parsonage last Sunday.
The Junior Choir of St. Charles Church, under leadership of Miss Sarah Smith, will make its first public appearance Sunday, September 30.
Mrs Elizabeth Jefferson of New York City is visiting her niece, Mrs. Leslie Sisco.
Mrs. Causley has returned to Sparkill.
The Rev Mr. Brockett and members of the St Charles chore have been invited to worship at the Rockland County Alms House by Superintendent Tenack on the first Sunday in October.
Miss Edna Hunt of Montclair, N.J., spent the weekend here as the guest of her grand father. William Brown, Sr.
Rochester, N. Y.
Rochester, N. Y. - The Rev. J. E. Rose and family attended the National Baptist Convention in Louisville, KY, last week.
Mrs. Carrie Williams of 29 Favor street died suddenly Friday, September 7. Funeral services were held from Mt Olivet Baptist Church Monday afternoon Burial was under direction of Undertaker M. E. Latimer. The deceased is survived by two sister, Misses Hattie and Lillian Jackson and a brother, Benjamin Jackson
Miss Mildred Butler and mother are spending their vacation visiting friends in New York City
Dr. and Mrs. C. T. Lunsford arrived home last Tuesday afternoon after a month's vacation during which they attended the Medical Convention in Baltimore and visited friends in Highland Beach and Atlantic City, N. J., New York City, New Rochelle, Montclair, N. L. and Swiftwater, Pa.
Dr. and Mrs. James W. Parker and family of Red Bank, N. J. spent last Saturday with Dr. and Mrs C. T. Lunsford. They were enroute home from Niagara Falls Mr. and Mrs George Mines of Cleveland, who visited his aunt in Hossek, N. Y. stopped off here enroute home and took his sister, Mrs Hazel Stockweathers, back to Cleveland with them Soloman and Charles Young were called to their former home, Hendersonville, N. C. last Friday because of the death of their father. Among those attending the B. M. C in Chicago this week are Mr. and Mrs Walter Derham, Mrs. Charles Carter, Mrs. Annie Towns, Mrs. Charles Stanian, Miss Margaret Evans and George B Hawkins. Mrs J. G. Lee, Mrs. Mable McIntyre, Warren Watson, the Rev J' C Taylor and W Henry Green attended the district meeting at Binghampton last week
James H. Rogers of Chicago was in the city last Thursday, enroute home from Adriadacks where he spent, the summer.
Miss Lydia B. Jones has returned to town after spending the summer at Hampton Bay, L. I.
Miss Parlee Jones and sister, Mrs. Ruth Tumlin of Detroit are guests of their sister here. Miss Lydia B. Jones and Mrs Charles Evans
Miss Geraldine Stewart, a nurse at Harem Hospital, New York City, is home to spend the month of September with Mrs. Ida Stewart of Thomas street.
Little Miss Kathryn, Hunt of New York City is, the guest of Miss Stewart and her mother.
Flower City Lodge of Elks have purchased the 14 room house at 285 Clagia street and expect to take possession on October 1.
Mr. and, Mrs. Nathaniel Hayes of Atlantic avenue served a very enjoyable dinner in honor of their guest. Miss Annie B. Dixon of Savannah. Ga. Other present were Miss Harmon of Buffalo, the Rev. J. C. Taylor and Mrs. Gibbs Mrs. Dixon is head of the Home Economics Department-at State College in Savannah.
Mrs Janet Lewis of North street has returned home after a week's visit with friends in Auburn. N. Y.
Niagara Falls. N. Y.
Nagara Falls, N. Y.—The Golden Reel Sewing Club will hold a chicken supper at the home of Mrs. Walter Mack September 15. The barbecue at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Davis, under awnices of the local Knights of Pythias, was a success. Mr and Mrs Harry Thomas are proud to have four boys in schools. Rev Mr Wheeler will attend a Baptist convention in Brooklyn this
week.
Mme. C. Etta Phillips of Bridgeport, Conn., gave a beautiful program at Shiloh Baptist Church last Sunday.
Mrs. Carrie Johnson of Belden place was visiting in Ely avenue last Sunday.
Yonkers, N. Y.—The hops of many persons in and about the city were fully 'realized last week as stained Lodge, N. 17, K. 10, stained the anatomy of the street, Friday and 'Saturday evenings, the 7th and 8th. The threatening rains kept a few people away on the first night, but on Saturday the entire block was crowded. The old reliable Melfody Dance Orchestra was on hand and satisfied with the present. A surprise came about '11 p.m. on Saturday when it was announced that the attraction of the evening would be a boxing exhibition between Jack McGraig (165 Iba.) and Wendell Willis (165 Iba.) and make progress in the fastic game here in Yonkers and are promising material. Stanley Morris was referee of this four round bout while the reporter Curtiss Ruth was the timekeeper. It was just one big evening of merrymaking and fun. First Private James Richardson of Company K. 369 Inft N. Y N G. left Sunday for training at Camp Smith, Peekskill, N. Y.
Mrs. Carrie V Richardson of 20 Culver street has returned to her home after a long absence. Mrs. Ellin Upher to the southland.
Sunday, September 2nd, was a big day at Bethany A. M. E. Church. The pastor, Rev C W Walton, had the Suffolk Jubilee Singers render a musical preach of which Rev. Towns preached an able sermon. The district conference will be held at Bethany A. M. E. Church, beginning September 12th to 14th, in their new church, on the corner of Maple and Waverly street. Sister churches are cordially Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Bright of Nepenthan were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Ellis of Amsterdam, N. Y., on a motor trip to Wilmington, Del. Labor Day. Miss Rosetta Davidson of 122 Woodward is spending a short vacation at Sheephead Bay as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Hyland Jackson
On last Sunday the local preachers' union had its meeting at Mamaroneck, N Y. Mrs Elizabeth Graham of Yonkers was elected to the presidency githa union she was 30th well admired. She was in the 30th of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Mang of JFJ Riverdale avenue, a bouncing baby girl. Dons Mother and daughter are doing nicely. On Wednesday evening last Ms. Lillian Mang of JFJ Riverdale gave a party in honor of the Muses Ola Ruth and her cousins Doris and Glades Wyatt who left for Virginia State Normal. A lovely time was had by All among the guests present were Miss Grace Porter, Helen Wilson, Mathilde Brooks, Esther and Stanley Griffin, William Jackson, Robert Allen and Curtis Ruth.
On Monday evening, August 22nd, McM and Mrs Theodore Ross of 6 Fifth street Neptune Heights entertained me. Guests were Miss Hazel Lee of Newark, N. J., and Misses Julia M and Helen Rivers of Atlanta, Ga., also Mr, and Mrs H Jones, Mrs Hazel Homer, Mrs H Jones, Mrs Hazel Homer, Jack C Morgan Miss Lee has become a noted person, having been singing over the radio especially station WGCP Mrs Candace Flechet of 11 Morgan street has been confined to her home for the last days with tonsilitis. She is convalescing. Rev S W Smith and family have returned after a four weeks vacation which they spent at Atlantic Highlands, where each service to greet the pastor Sunday, there was baptizing at the morning service and also a conversion. Mrs Louse Smith was called to Philadelphia to the sick bed of her brother. Mrs Nettie James and two sons were weekend guests of her father over the weekend. The people of Yorkers are coming home from their vacation now at a rapid pace.
Services at the Metropolitan A M E Zion Church were largely attended all day Sunday. Rev Hawkes pastor, preached, at the morning service. At 1 p.m. the Sunday school was opened with fifty scholars present and only two officers were absent. The Lyceum and Christian Endeavor are still holding their own with Mrs Slade and Mrs Hazel Banks, leaders Mrs. Fluellon preached to a large congregation at the evening service on "Faith" A rally, to complete the work of putting in a basement was planned for the fifth Sunday. Mrs Anna D. Borgen, organist at the Metropolitan A M E Zion Church, is home after having attended the Moose convention in Toledo, Ohio. Mrs Borden was reelected supreme organist of the Supreme Temple of Moose. Mrs. Elose Smith, assistant organist at Metropolitan Church, is indoposed at her home on Saw Mill River road
Mrs. Schoonmaker, a member of Metropolitan Church, passed away at the hospital The funeral services were held from an undertaking parlor.
Goshen, N. Y.
Goshen. N. Y—Mrs. Florence Baker, who attended the State Fait a. Syracuse. N. Y., has returned.
Lewis James of Sumter, S. C., is planning to spend the winter here. Mrs Samuel Brown and daughter of Middletown, N. Y., were visiting their parents and grand parents respectively last week. Mr. and Mrs William Baker, Sr. of 26 Green street Miss Jennie Ransom of Goshen
Friday afternoon, September 7,
funeral services for the late Mrs.
Phoebe DeFreese, who had been sick
a long time, were held from Brook
Chapel with the Rev. T. H. Amos
officiating.
Friday afternoon, September 7,
funeral services for the late Mrs
Phoebe DeFreese, who had been
sick a long time, were held from
Brook Chapel with the Rev. T H
Amos officiating.
Mr. and Mrs. Willie Williams and family have been visiting Mrs. Witherspoon for the past two weeks
Mr and Mrs Jesse Duncan and children have been visiting in Warwick, N.Y.
Hudson, N. Y.—Mrs. A. Delong is visiting her sister. Mrs. E Ed Bost of 90 North 7th street. The Rev H. D White and family and John R. Tucker and family were guests of Major Henry Hudson and family at the Chatham Annual Fair last Wednesday to hear Coul Theodore Roosevelt speak. Oliver Hawks has just returned from Norfolk where he spent his vacation with relatives, and friends. The chicken dinner at the State Street A. M E Zion Church was a decided success The Stewardess Board prepared one of the best dinners ever served
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and Marcus Earl of Washingtonville, N. Y., were united in marriage last Thursday night. Mr. and Mrs. William Baker jr., were visiting friends in Washingtonville, N. Y., Sunday afternoon. George Jackson of Warwick, N. Y., was visiting friends here Sunday.
Rossville, S. L., N. Y.
Rossville, S. I., N. Y.-Miss Hazel Pedro was a surgical patient at the St. Vincent Hospital last week. She had her tonsils removed.
Miss Josephine Henry is spending her vacation with her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Henry.
Mrs. Beatrice Bevans and her son, Master Hayward Bevans, spent Wednesday in New, York shopping.
Mrs. Wallace McCoy spent Labor Day in Philadelphia visiting her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Carey.
Mrs. Florence Robinson is spending some time with Mr. and Mrs. Wallace McCoy after spending the summer at Allenhurst.
Mrs. Georgiana Landin and daughter and son, Miss Gertrude and Master Kenneth returned home after spending some time with Mrs. Landin's daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Henry.
Miss Blake of West New Brighton spent Sunday with the Misses Olive, Hazel and May Pedro. Miss Barrigher and Mr. Kirby of Tottenville were visitors at, the Rossville Church Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Wallen motored to New York Sunday and spent the day with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wallen, they then visited Bronx Park.
The Misses - Hellis Etheridge, Dorothy - Sargeant, Mabel Decker and Olive Pedro; Messrs. Harold Taylor, Otis Vanderhost, Bromly Munro and Harold Moody motored to Port Richmond Monday evening and attended the Ritz Theatre.
Miss Malvina Moody of New York returned to her home Saturday after spending some time with her grandmother, Mrs. Josephine Harris.
Mrs. Emily Henman of Bridgeport, Conn. spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. William Bishop, she took her daughter, Miss Idas Henman back home with her. Mrs. Elizabeth Taylor and daughter-in-law, Mrs. Dorothy Taylor of Great Kills spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Everret Suffern and family. Mrs William Pedro spent Wednesday in St. George, Stapleton and West New Brighton calling on relatives and friends. Mrs Mae Craig of New York is spending some time with Rev and Mrs E. A Carroll. Rev James Decker, Alfred Wallen and Hugh McDonald of Rossville and Master Robert Mitchell of Rye, N Y., spent Labor Day at Princess Bay fishing. They caught 172 Lafayette.
Mrs Florence Robinson and Mrs. Ethel Hemman went to Westfield Sunday afternoon and Mrs. Robinson preached for Rev. J. T. Goode. The Steward and Stewardess Board of the Rossville A.M. E. Zion Church gave a farewell, reception at the Parsonage Saturday evening for Charles Moody one of the Stewards. It was attended by twenty of the members. A lovely dinner was served and the evening was spent socially. Bromly Munro accompanied by Wesley Hudson and Charles Moody motored to Greenport. L. I. Sunday where Mr. Moody will remain until Spring. They left home at half past seven and were back at half past eight after covering two hundred and eighty miles Mr. Moody will be greatly missed by his many friends. Mrs Florence Robinson had dinner with Rev. and Mrs. Lewis Roech on Sunday.
Rev. E. A. Carroll, Mrs. Ethel Hennan, Miss Vera Landin and Miss Dorothy Sargent attended the District Conference of the Jersey City District at Bayonne, Wednesday. Thursday and Friday, Miss Landin was delegate for the Church and Miss Sargent for the Sunday school. They made very excellent delegates which was proved by the reports brought back. Miss Sargent was elected Financial Secretary of the Conference. Rev. J. O Sargent preached for Rev. D. A Lewis at Perth Amboy, Sunday morning. Mrs J. A Sargent of Paterson spent Sunday with Rev and Mrs J O Sargent, on Monday Mrs J. A Sargent accompanied by her daughter-in-law. Mrs J. O Sargent went to Lakewood to spend a week.
Mrs. Florence Robinson preached at the Rossville Church Sunday morning. In the afternoon the Juvenile Choir gave a very interesting programme and, at night the pastor, Rev E. A Carroll preached Visitors were present at each service and the collections for the day were $61.15.
Friday morning Samuel Craig motored from New York and brought his Russian Police dog which was sick thinking the change would be good for him, he left him here with his wife who is spending some time with Rev and Mrs E
A. Carroll, but on Saturday, evening Mrs. Craig phoned for, him to come and, get the dog so, he sent for him and had him cholorformed. Sunday Everet Suffern had to have his fox terrier shot. Mrs. Marie Robinson and sod, Billy of Westfield and John Van Horn of Somerville motored here Sunday evening and attended the church service and spent the evening with Rev. and Mrs. E. A. Carroll.
Mamaroneck, N. Y.-Mrs. Matilda Augustus spent Labor Day with her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lewis. On Wednesday and Thursday she visited her niece, Mrs. M. Keeler of Portchester, N. Y.
Mrs. M. Harris and Miss Patsy Wynn of New York City, spent the weekend here as guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Lewis.
Bessie Plummer of Astoria, L. L., has returned to school after spending the summer at Mamaroneck with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. T. Lewis.
Don't Aarget Christian Endeavor Sunday evenings, from 7 to 8 p.m., at the church These meetings are helpful to all.
The Rainbow Circle is giving a supper and concert on Thursday evening, September 27, for benefit of the Fall rally. Miss Mildred Peterson is president.
Mrs Mary Chambers who has been at the hospital for some time is home and is convalescing. The services Sunday morning were largely attended at the A. M. E Zion Church. The pastor, Rev. H. W. Allen, preached an inspiring sermon At the evening services, Rev Mr. Small, a local preacher from Centennial Church of Mt. Vernon, delivered a most helpful message, taking his text from Judah 55 At this service, Enoch Stitch united with the church. The Fall rally will begin September 16. A hearty cooperation is expected of all members and well wishers Mabel E. Lewis, delegate for the Women's Home and Foreign Missionary Society, rendered her report of the district meeting recently held at Westbury, L. I. The regular local meeting was held Tuesday evening, September 4, at the home of Mrs. C. Best.
"On Labor Day, was the annual field-day outing. Because of the rain the outing was held at the church instead of at the field grounds of Central High School. Many persons were present and a pleasant time was enjoyed. The proceeds go to the annual Fall rally.
Hillburn, N. Y.
Hillburn, N. Y.—Quite a number of people from Hillburn attended the funeral last Thursday of the late Albert Van Dunk at Tallmans, N. Y. The Rev. J. A. Caldwell delivered the eulogy while members of Brook Chapel choir rendered several beautiful selections.
Mrs. Soloman and Mrs. Hattie Mae Withersoon have been on the stick list.
Mr. and Mrs. Willie Williams and family have been visiting Mrs. Withersoon for the past two weeks Mr. and Mrs. William Amherst spent a few days in New York City.
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Duncan and children have been visiting in Warwick, N. Y.
Quite a number of people from Hillburn attended the funeral last Thursday of the late Albert Van Dunk at Tallmans, N. Y. The Rev J. A. Caldwell delivered the eulogy while members of Brook Chapel choir rendered several beautiful selections.
Mrs. Soloman and Mrs. Hattie Mae Witerspoon have been on the stick list.
Mr. and Mrs. William Amberst spent a few days visiting in New York City.
Hudson, N. Y.
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Mrs. H. D. White and her Baby Liner, attended services at St. Charles Church last Sunday.
The two Misses Jackson are rapidly improving at the hospital and hope to be discharged next week.
Mrs. Mary Tucker of Columbia street is ill.
Mr. Watking is convalescing at the City Hospital after a serious operation.
The Rev. H. D. White preached to appreciative-audiences last Sunday morning and evening. One new member was added to the church rool.
Bridgeport, Conn.
Bridgeport, Conn — Mrs. Gertie Ge spent several days with relatives and friends in New York and Jersey City. Jease Gillam, L. Lennon and David Shomow spent Labor Day with Mr. and Solomon Kelly of West 103rd street, New York City. The Rev. and Mrs. J. D Davis attended the annual convention of the Church of Christ in New York City last week. Thomas Nelson of 105 Beardysland street spent his vacation in Washington, D.C., and motoring through Virginia, North Carolina and Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thompson of Islandbrook avenue were recent guests of friend in Plainfield and Atlantic City, N. J. Will the person the detective gave the pocketbook to in the South End last week please return the keys to Mrs. Marie Ellis of 50 Columbus place—she owns a house in Plainfield. Mr. and Mrs. Burt Sauls have returned after an enjoyable motor trip through the states of New York and Massachusetts. Mr. and Mrs. Anderson Jordan motorized to Harrisburg, Pa., where they visited friends and to Washington, D.
Mr and Mrs. R. I. E. Evans of New London spent Labor Day here with Mr. and Mrs. James Fady
and Mrs. James Fady entertained a number of friends from New York and New Jersey Labor Day.
Mr and Mrs George A. Wheeler were recent guests of their mother and sister in Richmond, Va.
Mr and Robert C. Cook of Pittsburgh were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs Henry Wilson
Mr Ida Wilson of Hartford was a recent guests of Mrs. A C. Davis
Mr and Mrs William Yates of Gregg and Mrs. Robert Wells of Gregg and Mrs. Robert Wells in Jersey City
Mr and Mrs John Loss had a delightful outing with friends in Lowell, Mass, on Labor Day
Mr J. W. Askew and friends mordred through the Connecticut Valley at week
Mr and Mrs William Henderson of Pittsburgh spent the weekend with Mrs. Marie Smith
Mr Irene Richards was a recent guest of Mrs Nellie Wilson in New London
Baldsey street entertained friends from Washington, D. C., Labor Day
John I. Johnson of Davenport street entertained friends from Chicago over the weekend.
West west spent Labor Day with his mother in Pittsburgh.
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Bullock Creek, S. C.-Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Tigler of New Rochelle, N. Y. spent a part of August here as guests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Tigler.
Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Willie Haynes had as their guests, recently, Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Tigler of New Rochelle, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. Mannie Worthy had as guests last week Miss Delphing Hooks of Wilksburg, S. C.
Little Effe Thompson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thompson of Charlotte, N. C. is visiting Mrs. Frank Jeter and Misses Eliza, Beatrice and Estelle Thompson.
Miss Louise Brown had as guest last week Prof. H. K. Thompson of Sharon, S. C.
Mr. and Mrs. John Byerg and Napocean F. Byers motored here from Miami, Fla., in their Hudson six and were guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. Boyd last week.
Mrs. Olive Jeter was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Will Brown last week.
Sick list: Miss Lelia Good, Mrs. John P. Good, Mrs. Sarah J. Thompson and Mrs. J. H Hardrick. Mrs. H. Gore and Mrs. Ozella Hardrick are out again after being indisposed.
Mr. and Mrs. F. Robbins and Mr and Mrs. Walter Hall of Clover, S. C. are new readers of The Age.
Miss Roberta Dunwood was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Will Fester fast week:
It is reported that Prof. H. K. Thompson has been appointed cashier of a bank in Chicago, the appointment to become effective March 15, 1929. Prof. Thompson was, in Durham, N. C. last week confering with C. C. Spaulding, president of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, with reference to the appointment.
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The following sonnets and poems are from the pen of Miss Marguerite Abrams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Abrams of 2355 Haddon Blvd., Jersey City. The father is an old employee of the Pullman service. Miss Abrams is a graduate of the Jersey City Teachers' Training School, and is now a student at New York University. In the interim she will do substitute teaching in the public schools of Jersey City this fall, having passed the New Jersey's teachers commission.
"SACRIFICE"
Only the ashes to tell of the fire
That burned at the alter of desire
Is this faded rose all that's left of the giver?
Nobody knows—save the wind and the river.
"TO MY GRANDMOTHER"
I.
A faint sweet odor of lavender,
A wisp of fine old lace
A smile more radiant than sunshine,
Lending quaint beauty to your face.
II.
You've led a life full of goodness,
And virtue has made you so fair,
That God has placed a starry crown,
In the glorious snow of your hair.
III.
Ah, but you were a belle in your youth,
When you first made your gay how,
You need shed no tears for the passing years,
Sweet little grandmother of now.
IV.
Your heart is so full of contentment,
Tell me love reigns there, angel adored
That your soul is the abode of righteousness,
I envy your rich golden heard.
V.
I wish thou couldst live always,
But thou art exquisitely made
So you'll dwell, dear one, in my heart's deep race
Forever, and never fade.
I.
oea,
face.
II.
air,
w.
hair.
III.
youth,
how,
passing years.
ow.
IV.
ent,
al adored
whiteness.
heart's deep recalls.
A faint sweet odor of lavender,
A wisp of fine old lace
A smile more radiant than sunshine,
Lending quaint beauty to your face.
II.
You've led a life full of goodness,
And virtue has made you so fair,
That God has placed a starry crown,
In the glorious snow of your hair.
III.
Ah, but you were a belle in your youth,
When you first made your gay how,
You need shed no tears for the passing years,
Sweet little grandmother of now.
IV.
Your heart is so full of contentment,
Tell me love reigns there, angel adored
That your soul is the abode of righteousness,
I envy your rich golden heard.
V.
I wish thou couldst live always,
But thou art enquiringly made
So you'll dwell, dear one, in my heart's deep recents,
Forever, and never fade.
"CALL OF THE MILLS"
Imust go out to the hills again,
To the low hills fringed with gold
For my pulses keep a wondering beat
With a thrill that grins me whale.
All the flesh in me seems vagrant
All wild life of me a part—
Q, will you envy the wonton hills,
If I offer them my heart?
II.
I must go out to the hills again,
To rest my wayward soul—
For the passionate beating of the rain
Is a thrill that's dear and old
Where rose-gold heavens and life-thronged sod
Off communion with my God
Life leaps, and giving birth a new,
Sings to me of the earth and You.
III.
When I go out to the hills again
To die, come to that place,
And say, as you hold a bit of sod
That the wind blows from my face,
"You hills, you sun, played huring things
On her throbbing grypsy heart-strings—
Drop the clod, let it lie there.
Let me be part of the wild free air—
Part of the magic that filled my soul,
Part of the wondrous star-shine, sun-gold.
"TWO PRAYERS"
IL.
gold
boat
sale.
IL.
rain
shrouded sod
You.
IL.
face.
things
strings—
free air—
soul.
time, sun-gold.
PRAYERS
high
with the sky
say,
d today."
IL.
ded knee.
Pharassee
r.
d to hear.
IL.
il.
e soil.
was home.
V.
floor,
poor—
will know
long ago.
EMENT
spark.
ear earth.
foot
The rich man longed a mountain high
So that his prayers could reach the sky
So that the Lord would smile and say,
"You did your duty, you prayed today."
II.
The rich man prayed loud on beaded knee,
With his heart like the ancient Pharassee
Back he went to his luminous dear,
Proud of the prayers God failed to hear.
III.
Down in the lowlands a son of soil,
Bowed his head to the humble soil,
Repentent and contrite, all alone,
The poor man prayed, and God, was home.
IV.
When both are dust upon earth's floor,
The rich will mingle with—the poor—
But the soul that is blessed God will know
By an earnest prayer prayed long ago.
Look up and see the stars,
Then set your in northern goal.
Gave gave you life, your hearts the spark,
To keep your faith aglow.
Before you stride.
Look up and see the stars
Then learn how tall you are.
Look down and see the hare, brown earth,
See struggles, thrice beyond
O, you have struggles in your flesh.
But you've a soul to lean upon.
Before you pace.
Dig up an earthworm with your foot
Then learn how small you are.
And stealing away,
Left as a down
That was cold and gray,
There lay my heart,
Shivered as glass
In a thousand pieces.
On the grass,
The wind blow the dust,
From broken guitar,
Drove over the rust
From a fallen star
I hug to my breast
A wee regret,
You, Pierrot,
I, Pierette.
Roselle. N. J.-Mrs. Alzellia Johnson has returned home after an extended stay at Point Pleasant. N. J.
Mrs. M. Joyner of First avenue spent a pleasant week in Atlantic City. She has returned with a much needed rest.
Miss Clao Johnson visited Mrs. Ruth Turner of Jersey City.
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Cooper have returned home after a two week's stay with Mrs. Cooper's father in Montreal.
"DEATH"
Just a little leaving off
In the midst of work and one
One more task to be completed.
One more victory to be won.
One more burden to be borne.
And another hill to climb
On more—but the trail is broken
Over the long and weary grind.
On more tear for earthy wedding
One more star in golden crowns
On more—Ah how sweetly
pleasant
In this simply living down
CHINA CUP'
Pale gold tea
Such dainty things, darling.
Wright for me,
You gave me love
Two fragile to hold,
My coarse fingers shattered.
The china and gold.
"TRYST"
I Picrette—
You, Picrette
Did we forget,
When the moon was low?
I had a star,
You a guitar,
We laughed, we loved,
Morn second so far,
Night gathered her mumbo
Roselle, N. J.
Mrs. Susie Stucky of Bhipholey, S. C., is visiting her so-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mickman of Plainfield avenue. The Harvest Home Recaption given as Reform. Hall Thursday evening, September 6 under auspices of the Missionary Society, Mrs. L. J. Elam chairman, was quite a success. The Mohawk Band, highly entertaining the audience. The grand march began at 10:35 p. m.
Mrs. Julia M. Clark of Newport News, Va., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Veronon Clark and the two other Clark brothers on Muelenberg place.
Mrs. Grant, Goosby of West 3rd street has returned from a wonderful trip to the Pacific coast. She visited cities from New York all the way across the country. She went horseback riding in Canada and was making and firing snowballs, atop the tallest mountain in August. She also had a grand reception in St. Paul where she had dinner with Mrs. F. M. Lindsey. In Salt Lake City she enjoyed interesting music by the Mormons and had the pleasure of leading the bears at Yellowstone Park. The trip was under suspices, of the Raymond Whitecomb Land Cruise, Inc., and required 34 days.
Mrs. Hueston of 211 Plainfield avenue gave a party September 1 in honor of little Edna and Hazel Dulvall of Cranberry, N. J. Twenty-five children were present and had a wonderful time.
Mr. and Mrs. E. Wiggins, formerly of Madison, N. J., are now residing in our city at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Venable of 614 West 3rd street.
Mrs. F. W. Taylor of New York City spent the past weekend here as the guest of her sister. Mrs. M. Wright of West 3rd street.
Mr. White of 642 3rd street is all confined to his bed.
Miss Carry of 203 Spooner avenue, who has been sick, is now much better.
Mrs. Lottie Pierson of St Augustine, Fla., is visiting her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. McKenney of 423 John street.
Miss Susie Bagley, formerly of Middletex, Va., but now residing in Flushing, N. Y., spent the past weekend here as the guest of Miss Carrie Miller of West 4th street. The Rev. Mrs. M. M. Summers, evangelist, formerly of Spooner avenue but now residing at 687 West 3rd street, will appreciate calls from friends and strangers in need of spiritual advice.
Miss Annie Duvall, well known church worker, spent the past weekend in New York City as the guest of her sister, Mrs. Celia Lee of 624 Leroux avenue.
A joyous service was held at Shiloh Baptist Church Last Sunday evening. The choir under direction of Mrs. Judkins and with Miss Georgette Hill and Herbert 'Barnes as soloist, rendered 'special' music. Communion was served by the Rev R. C. Lamb, pastor and the deacons. The offering for the day was $79.80.
Mrs. Sarah K. Wallace has returned home after spending three weeks with relatives and friends at Williamsburg, Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Lont and Mrs. Ingram of Brooklyn, N. V. and Miss Magnolia Clark and Mrs. Dabney of Newport News, Va., were weekend guests of the Clark, brothers here, beginning with Vernon and wife of Myselberg place.
Our Rainfield Giants lost an exciting baseball game at Cedarbrook Park September 9. Their opponent was a team from Perth Amboy. Our boys played great ball but a streak of hard, luck struck them. Butter luck, next time brews.
Philip Carey and Miss Gustaf. Anderson motioned to Lisburn, Va., last week, and returned safely. They enjoyed their visit very much.
A. S. Venable of 614 West 3rd
street and Charles Irbey of East 3rd
street have returned home after an
enjoyable motor trip to Toledo, O.
where they were delegates to the
Moose Convention. They also visited
segalal other cities anrouse.
Mirz Elizabeth Ford of Philadelphia
was a weekend guest of Mrs.
A. S. Venable of 614 West 3rd
street.
Mrs. Battis of Philadelphia formerly Miss-Gertrude Cruse, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R
Cruse of West St. ard street. She is looking the picture of health and her many friends are glad to see her again.
The Rev. James Carter of Plainfield avenue, now confined at the hospital with an attack of peteonia, is resting comfortably. His many friends ayamizitate with his wife, mother and son, James jr. Fumalier service for the late Mr. McKoy, who departed this life Saturday, September 8 were held Tuesday afternoon from St. Marks Episcopal Church with the Rev. Fr. Hall officiating. The funeral was under direction of the Cornish Funeral Service of Richmond street.
Miss Eva D. Bowles, national treasury, will be the principal speaker at the local branch Y. W. C. A. Sunday, October 14. The public is cordially invited to come out and hear this wonderful speaker.
Miss Luhu Elsey of West 4th street, who has been sick at her home, has quite some time is still improving.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jamison and Mrs. Manerva Partee of 118 Johnson avenue, with Mrs. Mae Nickerson of Philadelphia, motored 43 Canada and Niagara Falls on Labor Day.
Miss Lula, Butler of Brooklyn spent her vacation here as the guest of Miss Malissa Blair of 116 Johnson avenue.
Mrs. Hobson, mother of our former druggist, Dr. C Gustavus Hobson, who has been very ill, is now much better.
The members of Mohawk Lodge of Elks heard reports from the delegates to the Grand Lodge convention at their last meeting. C Gustavus Hobson, the newly elected exalted ruler, made the report. Exalted Ruler Aubrey Lambert, Jr. presided at the meeting and the other officers were at their posts of duty.
Mohawk. Lodge, of Elks held a special meeting at Curtis Hall last Saturday evening at which time 12 new members were initiated. The members and candidates then journeyed over to the Elks home were a delicious collation was served. The Rev. J. J. Derrick; pastor, preached an interesting sermon to the members of Zion-A. M. E. Church last Sunday morning. His text was from Genesis 17:17, subject "God's Covenant with Abraham." In the evening he preached from St. Mark 6:3, subject "The Carpenter of Nazareth." The attendance was good at both service and the offering was $94.
Mrs. Mary Johnson of Plainfield avenue, who is now confined to the hospital, is resting comfortably.
William Kline, jr. of Plainfield avenue, who has been sick for a few days, is resting comfortably at this writing.
The Women's Auxiliary to the Morelard Branch Y. M. C. A, held an interesting service at the Y. last Sunday afternoon. A fine program was presented by a group of young people under direction of Clarence Alexander, a student at Hampton Institute and a member of the school quartet. The program included some wonderful readings by Misses Ma. lissa Blair, Odessa Quarterman and Miss E. Grobes; vocal solos were rendered by Mr. Alexander and an address was given by Mrs. Murf, a returned missionary from Africa.
A large number of members and friends greeted the Rev D. W. Hoggard at Calvary Baptist Church last Sunday morning and congratulated him on his safe return from his vacation.
Miss Grace Haddock of Philadelphia was the weekend guest of Mr. and Mrs. U. Grantor of West 4th street.
Flemington, N. J.
Flemington, N. J.—The Rev. W. A Allen filled his pulpit both morning and evening Sunday He delivered two splendid sermons. A clothes line rally will be given for benefit of Bethel A. M. E. Church Sunday evening, September 16, under auspices of Mrs. E. H. Hunt. Members apu friends are cordially invited to attended.
Mrs. Wertez of Newark, N. J. is spending the weekend with her relative, Mrs. Emma Huffman, 30 Brown street
Mrs. Haltie Jackston, her niece and two nephews, are guests of Mrs. Huffman, Mrs. Malinda Brown and Mrs. Hattie Jackson.
Miss Bessie Wertze, niece of Mrs. Jackson, is a field worker in the New England-State Convention.
Mrs. B. F. Woolsey, New Brunswick, N. J. spent the weekend with her father, Boston Harvey and brother-in-law and sister. Mr. api Mrs. Albert Buhell of Pennsylvania avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Johnson and
son Clifford, of Somerville, N. J.
and Mrs. Mary Gray of Newark,
were guests of Mrs. E. Huffuay,
the past week.
Walter Brown and Frank Cole-
man Jr. spent last weekend with
friends and relatives.
Your correspondent was talking to Mr. Quintioia, a "citizen" of Flemington, who was born in Spain in 1850. Mr. Quintioia studied for the pre-religion but declined and came to America in 1872. He has a "wonderful vocabulary and liberal human views." He's a Republican.
Princeton, N. J.
Princeton, N. J.—Services at Mt. Pisgah A. M. M. B. Church were wellattended all day Sunday. Rev. Griggs of Haines Institute.—Grapea in the morning, at which time a handsome pulpit bible was presented to the church by Harrison-Brown. Local preacher. Rev. J. O. Vick, the pastor, accepted it for the
Mrs. Gertrude. Gov. became the bride of Robert Taylor on Sunday September 8. The ceremony was performed in Trenton Rev. Rev. White. Mrs. Laura Morton of New York City and others from Newark and Bloomfield witnessed the marriage.
*Passive,* *N.* *T.-M.*; *Mr.*; and *Mrs.* *Henry A.* *White Bloe of Bleech street had an gushtie* *B.* *E. Boyd of Richmond,* *Va.*; and *their uncle* *and aunt,* *Mrs.*; *Mrs.* *S.* *H.* *Boyl of New York City,* *Miss Boyd* *and home after extended,* *vacation,* *4.*
*Mrs. Ella Gwyn of Harrison* street entertained at dinner on September 5 in honor of Mrs. H. J. Dickson. Those present were, the Rev. and Mrs. J. W. present, the Rev. and Mrs. J. W. worth, Ernest H. Dickson. Miss Rita Dickson and Mrs. H. J. Dickson. Mr. and Mrs. Nohl Penniwell of Paterson, former residents of Passaic, have returned home after visiting relatives *Mrs. Harriet Hazard*, an old time resident of Passaic, is reported quite sick at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. N. Robinson of Second Street, Clifton, where she now resides. *Miss Elma Jackson of Harrison street* to the residence of September 2 to Miss Vola Newman of Passaic, Johnnae. Hammond of South, Carolina and Mrs Carrie Latta of Hillburn, N. C. Miss Theresa Elms and Mrs Anna Mair. Wilder "have returned to Passaic" to the wedding of Miss Scerra Walkton to the Rev. S. A. Donnell, pastor of Roger Williams Baptist Church. *Mrs. Earl Keeling of Oak* street returned, home last week with her two children who spent the summer with Miss Scerra. Arrangements are complete for the christ party, under auspices of the Five Point Church of Quedaes Chapter, No. 12, O. E. Ss. at Redmen's Hall Saturday evening, September 15.
The Rev. L. J Widley, pastor of Mrs. Mison Baptist Church returned to his last Sunday after a month's vacation.
Mrs. James Dickens and family of Burgess place returned home last Sunday, after, spending several weeks in Baltimore.
Westfield, N. J.
Westfield, N.J. — Miss Dorothy Taylor, entertained Labor Day Misses Gladys Booker and Ethel Morgan and the children and Charles Gibson of Washington, D.C. — Miss Mary Jane Brown of New York City, was the holiday guest of Mr. and Mrs. Alex Taylor. Miss Taylor and Ethel Morgan left Friday to take up their duties as teachers in the Atlantic City Public Schools. The dance given by Lincolnites, at Shady Rest last Friday evening was well attended. Dr. R. H. Thompson is back in his office, after spending some time in Canada and New England children silent the weekend in New York City. They measured to Buck Hill Falls, Pa., last Friday.
Rutherford, N. J.
Rutherford, N. J.—A large congregation worshipped at the Mt. Ararat Baptist Church last Sunday morning. The pastor, the Rev. W. T. Parkes, delivered an inspiring sermon from the subject, "A True Life in Christ." The Sunday school which had been on a month's vacation, reopened under direction of Superintendent Robert Burrell. The other auxiliaries of the church have also begun their fall activities. "Miss Grace Black, president of the Mt. Ararat Church B. Y. P. U. boro; Penn, where she visited relatives and friends." Mrs. Frank Chase and daughters have returned from Jamaica, L. L., where they visited their sister. Frank Chase is back from his vacation in North Carolina.
Mrs. M. J. Cathey and daughter are back from their vacation in New Hampshire.
Raymond Cathey is back from his vacation at Alexander Bay, N. Y.
The Rev. and Mrs. A. C. Grayson of Long Branch, N. J. were guests of the Rev. and Mrs. W. T. Parker last week.
Prof. and Mrs. F. R. Lampkin and daughter of Americus, Ga. were guests of the Rev. and Mrs. W. T. Parker last week. Prof. Lampkin and Rev. Parker were classmates at Georgia State College.
FOR
Perfect Eyeglasses
Dr. D. KAPLAN
Optometrist
Reliable and Reasonable
For 18 Years At
531 LENOX AVE
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Parker, of New York City, Miss Almie, Freyl of East Orange, N. J. and Mm. Hauzel, Williams, were guests, last Sunday of the rev. and Mrs. W. Parker.
Mrs. Josephine Lanier of New York City spent last Sunday with Mrs. L. J. Fitzgerald and family here.
R. D. Griffin and Miss Alma Harris are on the sick list.
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Norton of 148-Mozart street, East Rutherford, had as guest last Sunday their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. J. Isadore Norton of New York City.
Paterson. N. J.
Paterson, N. J.-Miss F., Byard, Mrs. L. Sisco, Miss S. Hicks, Miss B. Willson and Mrs. A. Diggs spent a week in Port Jervis with Mrs.A. Budd? They had a wonderful time, Mr. and Mrs. Walcott Hines and daughter, Carlyse, of Providence, R. I., with Mrs. Roberta Hawkins West, Miss Fouche-West and Master Ashby West of Newport, R. I. were recent guests of the Rev. and Mrs. Pillmore, Smith and family of 39-12th avenue. Mrs. West, who is the daughter of Attorney W. Ashby. Hawkins of Baltimore, is a prominent soloist, and rendered a sole, "Were You There" at the morning service of St. Augustine Presbyterian Church last Sunday. She was accompanied by Miss-Clara L. Smith.
The Patersonians who attended the marriage of Mis Emma J. Amos to James E. Newby in New York City on August 30 were Miss Dorothy Jackson, Mrs. Filmore Smith and daughters, Mr. and Mrs. John Huggs and daughter, Miss Amanda, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Jones and Miss C. E. Field. The Monroe Catering Company served the supper..
Mr. and Mrs. Russell. DeFriese
have just returned from a motor trip
with friends, Mr. and Mrs. Holland
of Brooklyn. They visited Albany,
Saratoga, Montreal and other places
of interest.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Richardson
and Mrs. S. Washington spent a
few days in Atlantic City recently.
Mrs. Gaston Hinton and children
went to Philadelphia to spend Lair-
bor Day with her brother, Charles
R. Jordan.
Mrs. M. Maupin and niece, Flora
B. Lindsay, with Miss C. E. Fied,
spent last-Sunday in Jersey City.
They visited Lafayette Presbyterian
Church, Monumental Baptist Church
and were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. J. B. Burns of Storm anquee-
Charles M. Walker ar... is improving but is still confined to a
New York hospital.
Mrs. Charles Johnson of East 101th street entertained in honor of Mrs. Poole of Richmond, Va., are she left.
Newark, N. J.
Newark, N. J.-Mr. and Mrs. John
Burrell n. l. Prince street have returned
home after a motor tour to Chicago
III where they attended the Elks' Convention. They were accompanied by Benjamin Hempel.
Trenton, N. J.
Trenton, N. J.-Charles W. Cross and a large group of friends motored to Atlantic City on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglass Gordon and two young children spent one week in Atlantic City and enjoyed the bathing.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rodman are taking three weeks vacation at Atlantic City, Ocean City and Millville.
George H. Hill spent Sunday here as the guest of Miss Bessie L. Nelmes.
Mrs. Marie Wayne Thompson of New York with Mr. and Mrs. Browne and their little daughter and Mr. Thompson visited here on their return from Atlantic City and spent a few hours with Mrs. Agnes L. Kemp.
Mrs. Matthew Mitchell of Washington, a student at Howard University, spent the weekend as the guest of Miss Robert Harvey of Montgomery place.
Miss Clara Jones spent the weekend in Philadelphia, Pa.
Mrs. and Mrs. Edward Friman on Spring street returned home on Monday after spending a month's vacation in Oswego, N. Y.
Miss Milford Dixon returned to her school duties on Monday after spelling the entire summer with her
Babies Love It
For all stomach and intestinal troubles and disturbances due to teething, there is nothing better than a safe Infants' and Children's Laxative.
SANTAJ
MIDY
New York Academy of Business
Fall Term Begins SEPTEMBER 10th
Stenography, Typewriting, Bookkeeping, Civil Service
R. W. JUSTICE, Director
Harlem 2287 447 Lenox Avenue
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Phone Bradhurst 0678 Phone Bradhurst 3653
Civil Service News
State's good jobs for many of us
here in Hartland, 30 State text to the
held September 29, applications open
due to State Dept. of Civil Service,
applications may be made in
may be vacated throughout New York State. The list
includes: Graphophyte operator, inspector,
Dept. of Agriculture); social worker, worker,
field agent; (social work); Dept. of
Military); social worker, Dept. of
Corpseship); market reporter, mail clerk, underwriting
clerk.
Unwritten examinations—for the following positions, no written examinations will be required, but qualifications will be required, experience and general qualification—Assistant teacher and librarian, foreman, industrial inspector, physician, supervising nurse, teacher of physical training, and supervising parole officer.
127. probationary patrolmen were in jail in last "Tuesday and were assigned to make a legal class of 182 which is short 128 patrolmen eligible for waiting jobs.
137 were graduated last Thursday evening at the 163d Regiment Engineers' Armory, 167th street and Fort Washington avenue.
Next Letter-Carrier Test October 20
mother in Troy, N. Y.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Reynolds of West State street motored to the Delaware Water Gap on Sunday: Mrs. Stewart sr. and Mr and Mrs. Hughes Stewart jr. were also in the party.
A big Republican rally will be held at the Booker T. Washington County Club on Saturday and Sunday.
Jersey City, N. J.; Mrs. Ethel Morgan, of this city and Mrs. Marjorie Davis of New York City have returned to Washington, D. C. weeks vacation in Washington, D. C. mother of Mrs. Morgan. They also guest of Mrs. Elizabeth Carpenter, Mrs. W. F. Kelly of Henderson Mrs. W. F. Kelly will be her home for the past three weeks. day for Washington, D. C. where she will visit friends. While in Washington, she will enter the hospital and undergo an operation. Mrs. Anne Jones, daughter ruler of Protetayai Temple, Mrs. Lilian Burke; Mrs. Florence Jerome; Mrs. Maudle A. Brooks, state president; Mrs. Selena F. Branham, state deputy, have attended from Chicago, IL, where they attended the annual meeting of the Grand Temple.
Reuben H. White of Forrest street is still confined at home suffering from the fall, he sustained on the Fourth of July.
The Tabirie Social Club will present a surprise dance at Columbia Hall, West Side evening. September 24, with dance music being furnished by two orchstras.
Little Mary Lee Mary of Age aveau who was confined in the hospital where she had to undergo an operation on her kneecap which was badly injured when she fell on some broken glass, in home again able to be among her little playmates.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Thomas, formerly of this city, are now running in the city agang. Mr. Thomas will be remembered as the star baseball and basketball player of some years back.
Miss Florence Mills and Miss Arresta Mills DeKaly avenue and Mrs. B. D. Baldwin Amiaxie; L. L. N. Y. are spending their holidays in Toronto and Ottawa, Canada. They report having a wonderful time.
New York Acad
Fall Term Begins
for New York post office. The Post Office Closers' examinations will be pursued in November. The extramurray salary in $1,200 per appoinment with promotions until the maximum of $2,000 is reached. Prepare now for those eligible to take the largest list to be certified. The longest list to be certified was the City list consisting of 400 names, many Harlemites among the list, including geographers, typists, librarians, supervisors, and many in the Labor Department. 19 appointees as typographers bookkeepers, in the Department of Finance, Gr. 3, Male, at a salary of $1,200 per examination was held November 1927. On July 28, 642 persons computed on the state tests for engineer, clerk, draftsman and examiner. 27 Male third grade clerks were appointed to the Department Water Supply, Gas and Electricity, in all Boroughs, at $1,000 per year.
New examinations for students begin inspector watch—Pendula college for dates. No. 124 in the last week appeared on the Friday, May 8, 1928, and No. 126 in the last week marked qualified. This is a first opportunity to get into the City Service. The list for inspector of weights and measures, grade 2, expires. November 18, 1928, for our exam will be held on August 25, 1928. Academy will chance for our men, in Martin, Worth for dates for examination.
294 names on state stenographer board examination held May 12, 1928. The pointment will soon be made in August 25, 1928. Salary will be $1,200. The first three names on the list assistant Medical Examiner, grade 4, appointed by the Chief Medical Officer at a salary rate of $4,000. Year the list was established November 24, 1927. No. 6 is the last eligible name. J8 have been appointed for Public Officer, Board of Child Welfare. No. 16 is the last eligible appointed from the list. The salary is $1,500 and in the City Magistrates' Courts.
Remember this is your column. Specially prepared and edited for you. Typically given here. Don't miss a week, your chance may be next.
N. Y. Academy of Business
The N. Y. Academy of Business began upon its 21st year, an intensive training in the field of Business Education, Monday, September 10, 1928. The student body is always enrolled and representative of every type, from Africa, South America, the West Indies, and the United States then a Chinese or a Hindu from East to middle and learn together with our own native students of every American State.
In this connection we regret that Mind Ada B. Spencer who arrived in New York Harbor on the Furious bate, S. S. Warner, and W. W. I. has been detained at Ellis Island temporarily. However, the expatriate get her charm papers and quater school during the work.
The Misses Ernestine Boyd, Helen Ray, Journalling, Jackson, Connaught Barnes, Arkansas Andrew, Ethea Johnson, Lillian Lilly, Lillian Sayers, Sara Bryan, Madeline Dangerty, Martha Wilson, Ethel Jones, Duncan Scott, Rachel Canning, Wanda Brissette, Mary Belle Coleman, Gladys Campbell, Louis Irving, are pending the old and new dates. September 10, Some are doing advance work, and others will form our senior class.
Missus Lillian Carr, Catherine De-Freita, Gladys Eraking, Olive England, Helen Richarda, Dorothy M. Steward, Leona M. Webster, Doree Jay Wimsey, Paul Hobart Carrie R. Hogwarty, Charlotte M. Tahka are among the new Fall students.
Miss Mary Eccles, a former student of the Academy, has been certified the appointment as Typist in the New York State Insurance Fund.
Academy of Business
SEPTEMBER 10th
ing. Bookkeeping Civil
Every Day Doings Of People You Know In Greater New York
To serve adequately the banking needs of the Harlem section of New York City
THE DUNBAR NATIONAL BANK
OF NEW YORK
150th Street and Eighth Avenue
(DUNBAR APARTMENTS BUILDING)
Will open for business
September 17, 1928
A new national bank completely equipped in personnel and facilities to provide immediate and direct banking accommodations.
Established particularly to serve the business and personal banking interests of Harlem's Negro population.
Compound Interest Department. Safe Deposit Vaults.
Capital $500,000
Surplus and Undivided Profits $540,000
DIRECTORS
J. Howard Abbey, Vice President,
National Bank of Commerce
Emanuel L. Borkland, Chairman of the Board,
Merchant Fire Insurance Corporation
R. C. Bruce,
Resident Manager, Dunbri Apartments
Evanett Colby, Lumber,
Barry, Wainwright, Thacher & Symmets
William R. Cormelin, Lumber,
Van Doren, Conklin & McNevin
Harvey E. Cooney, For President,
Equitable Trust Company
Brettam Cotter, Trustee,
Equitable Life Insurance Society
Frank A. Dillmoran, President,
South Pointe Rice Sugar Company
Charles O. Heyt, President,
Empire Mortgage Company
Joseph D. Hogins, President
Robert C. Hall, Chairman of the Board,
Consolidation Coal Company
Charles C. Hetty, President,
Ampere National Bank, Orange, N. J.
William Teague, Jones, Jr.
James B. Colgate & Company
George Leah, Retired Master
Herbert L. Peaty, Chairman of the Board,
Standard Oil Company of New York
John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
Arthur H. Thain, Vice President
OFFICERS
President, Joseph D. Hogins, formerly Vice President,
American Exchange Irving Trust Company
Ulyse President, Arthur H. Thain, formerly with
American Exchange Irving Trust Company
Cankles, George C. Loosdin, formerly Assistant Auditor,
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Madam Marie Selke, of 160
130th street, is back in the
city and ready to receive her
voice culture pupils at the Mar-
tin Smith Music School, 139
West 130th street.
Sept. 17—tf.
Arthur Demond of Buffalo, N.Y.
in the city for a few days.
Miss May Rollnick, who recently
an operation, is rapidly
improving.
Mrs. H. C. Blue of 2888 Eight
aven. is visiting her old home for
week in Charlottesville, Va.
Attorney Robert Queen of Trenton,
N. J., was a visitor in New
York on Monday and was a caller
At The Age office.
Miss Ida J. Charlton, clerk in the
Grand Central post office is spending
her vacation at Sunset Inn,
Great Barrington, Mass.
Mr. and Mrs. John Arnold of
155 Pacific street have clipped their
camp at Lake Tithe Bear Mount.
Martin A. Menafre, treasurer of Workes Normal School, Denmark, S. W. was a visitor in New York on Saturday and called at the Age. Miss, Bertha Cai Grelhan of Atlanta canelt Thursday for her affair spending a most pleasant vacation in Boston and New York City.
Misses Gladys and Marjorie Walton and Ruby Allen have returned from Camp Guilford Bower, New Paltz, N. Y., after a three week's vacation. Miss Marguerite Kennedy of the Dunbar Garden Apartments has returned to the city after spending some time with her parents in Worcester, Mass.
BLEEKS'
Dressmaking School
Pattern cutting, Draping, Operating, M
inery, Flower raking, Costume Designing
and Illustration.
Victor H. Tulane of Montgomery,
is spending a short vacation in
New York as the guest of his son-
law and daughter, Dr. and Mrs. U. Con-
nent. While here he visited The
age oce.
Mr. and Mrs. Pernell Wendell of
the Dunbar Garden Apartments
had as their guests for dinner
Sunday Miss Ethel Prendell, Mr. and
Mrs. Stays and Rev. George W.
Allen.
Mrs. Edna Sobero and Messrs
Herbert Morton, Everett Matthews
and Richard Campbell were the
guests of his Professors
dolph Grant at his Long Island
Home.
Attorney and Mrs. Pope B. Bili-
plus of 21st West 135th street have
returned home after an absence of
three weeks attending, the Elks con-
vention in Chicago and motoring
through Canada.
Robert T. Bess, head of the stock brokerage firm of Robert T. Bess and Co., is spending his vacation traveling in Europe. A card from him states that she has visited Berlin, Paris and London and is now in Rome. He will re-visit on the S. S. Paris this month.
The United Sons of Georgia, whose "Million Dollar Ball," last fall was the talk of the town, will duplicate that affair, so far as grandeur, mirth and joy go, on Thursday evening, September 20th at Rockland Palace (formerly Mainhattan Casino) 155th St. and Eighth Ave, when they hold their eleventh annual moonlight dance. F. L. Perkins, who is chairman of the board of management, and whose supervision of the former Affair contributed greatly to its success, says this dance will be equal to any ever held by the Sons of Georgia.
Muisse will be by John C. Smith's Crestra, Ticets and reservations on sale at Harlem Flower Shop, 2365 Seventh Ave. (Advt.)
The premier dance of the social season, both in place and time, will be held at the New Rockland Palace (formerly Manhattan, Casino) 150th street and Eighth avenue, on Thursday evening, September 20, with the United Sons of Georgia Club as the host. As one of the foremost fraternal associations in New York, the social affairs of this club are always events, at which a good time may be had. The Sons declare that this affair will be no exception to that rule.
Thomas L. Williams is president of the association. The other officers are E. H. Roberts, Dr. C. M. Middleton, J. H. Horton, C. W. Pittman, B. H. Godfrey, E. W. Stewart, R. T. Clark, E. J. Styles, J. H. Marshall and B. G. Smith. The entertainment committee includes J. L. Perkins, W. A. Spaulding, C. B. Smith and W. H. Jackson.
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Lopez and Mr. and Mrs. George Stockett of Providence, R. I., motored to New York City to visit. Before leaving performance of Lew Leshit, stockhirds. James Nelson Bugg of 318 East South Raleigh, N. C., left New York last week returning home enroute to resume his demal studies at Meharry College, Nashville, where he will be a junior during the next term.
Miss Anna S. Payne, teacher of Tnglish in Shaw Junior High School, Washington, D. C., spent her vacation in New York with her mother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. H. 33rd street. During her stay she was guest of honor of many dinners and theatre parties. On her return trip to Washington, D. C., she will visit Atlantic City, N. J., Philadelphia, Pa., where she is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Taylor.
Tuesday, September 19th, in
Palm Beach. Polls
open from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m.
if you are an enrolled
Republican voter in the 19th
Assembly District, you are urged
to vote for MYLES A. PAIGE
as against ABRAHAM GREN-
TAS.
Vote for race representation.
Stand up for a member of your
race.
Send self-addressed stamped envelope for detailed information.
Mr. and Mrs. D. Edward Smith, with their guests, Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Hayley, returned home last week from a pleasant motor trip to Atlantic City.
Miss Thelma Smith, 192 West 135th street, has as a house guest, Miss Remona Moss of Cleveland, Ohio. Miss Moss is a cousin to Miss Smith.
Miss Ellen Henderson and James M. Robinson of Washington, D. C., who will visit New York during which time they were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Turner of 115 West 53rd street.
Dr. and Mrs. P. M. H. Savory of West 131st street, who are spending their vacation in Europe, write that after eight pleasant days they will return home about the end of this month.
Dr. and Mrs. E. R. Alexander, 234 West 139th street, have returned from their vacation which included in motor trip through the Berkshires, Catskills and Adirondack mountains, Quebec and a weeks trout fishing in the mountain streams of Vermont. They report a fine time. Mrs. Anna Norwood of East 213 Street, Williamsbridge, had as week-end guests Mrs. Josephine Pocahontas Foster of East Orange, and the Misse Irene Flippin and Viola Brown. Miss Emma Hicks, Mrs. Norwood's daughter, entertained twenty friends at a party Saturday evening. Mrs. Florence Black Henderson, a teacher in schools, has just returned home from an extended trip in the West. Mrs Henderson was delegate to the annual conference of the N. A. A. C. E., which convened in Los Angeles in June and returned in Dallas, Oklahoma, Kansas City, Chicago; Niagara Falls, and in Iowa.
Mrs. Josie Banks and daughter, Mrs. Stephanie McNeil, of Greensboro, N. C., motored by way of Richmond, n. c., 16 to Toronto and Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Rochester, Albany and New York City where they stopped over for a short time as guests of Willie Lauk Murdock of West 6th street. They returned home, Sunday, September 9, by Philadelphia and Washington, D. C.
Mrs. Charlotte Curley, superintendent of the Mills Memorial, a home for the aged, Savannah, Ga., and her two daughters, Misses Amanda Mildleton Curley of the U. S. Veterans Hospital, Tuskegee, Ala., and Agatha, Regis Curley of the Savannah public schools, have been spending parts of their vacation, in New York,
Bleeding Pain
at Certain Time
7. I was very sick, and
that she had to be milked
by my sister. She was
very ill. (1828) Whilst she
flew to England, also, 7. I was
almost bleed, the pain was
so severe, the eye was
"This was when I was just eating the super change gelatin get behind. I swallowed with my back, and sided, then, Bosombone suggested that my which I was, any thankful, I took 6 bottles, at that time, and was soon strong and well and did not have to eat certain periods.
Twice since I have been a grown woman I have taken Curley, and it never failed to help me.
CARDUI
Helps Women to Health
during which time Miss Amanda underwent a minor operation. Miss Agatha has returned to her school duties in Savannah, but Mrs. Curley is, remaining in New York until Miss Amanda has recuperated sufficiently to return to her duties as dietitian at the Veterans Hospital. Mrs. Herbert, Harris and daughter Ethel have returned to the city after a pleasant vacation at Bluff Point, Clinton Co., N. Y.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Glover of .228 'W. 150th street (Paul Laurence Dunbar Apartments) left Saturday, September 8 for Chicago to attend the 24th B. M. C.'of the G. U. O. of O. F.; M. Glover to the P. S. and delegate of Matthiasan Lodge No. 5477.
BROOKLYN NOTES
Kenneth Wibakan has returned to the city after spending his vacation at Stockbridge, Mass.
After spending an enjoyable vacation, Miss Marion T. Hooka like returned to her desk in the office of Fleet Street Church.
Mrs. Susan Pollard-Ryan returned to the city Thursday, after a tour of the city with his sister Ga, at the home of her father, Lacklan M. Pollard.
Alfred R. Nash who went as delegate from Concord to the session of the National Baptist Convention held at Louisville, Ky., will return next week after stopping off at his old home at Boydston, Va.
John G. Brooks, real estate broker at 1966 Herkimer镇, who, with his wife, will vacation on his farm in King William, County, Va., had his vacation cut short by an important real estate transaction.
Miss Rose Bell of 91 Kingston avenue, entertained her cousin, James H. Jones over the weekend and holiday. Mr. Jones, returned Wednesday to his home in Boston, Mass., where he is a law student at Northeastern College.
Mrs. Sarah J. "Poole, district grand mite noble governor of the district. Grand Household of Ruth. City of Ozark. State of New York' left the city. State of September 8, to attend the B.M. C. in Chicago. Ill, the week of September 10.
Mrs. Ruby Lucas, wife of Clarence E. Lucas, former accountant and assistant treasurer at Howard University was here. Sunday visiting relatives and friends, Mrs. Liairn coming back to register in October to be eligible to vote for Hoover and Curtis in November.
The Society of Daughters of Virginia, held, its first meeting for the fall at the Commercial Community Building, 1660 Fulton street, Busselton, son, president, presidel. The society will hold a social tea at the same address on Sunday, September 30, from 4 to 7 o'clock. 1. Recorte L. C. Dade of St. Barnabas F. L. Church, Rev. Jeremiah Brown M. E. Mission, Rev. Clifton Down and Rev. W. H. Rasherry, have all joined the F. H. Gilbert Republican League of the 22nd Assembly
WHO? HOW? WHAT?
WHICH? WHERE?
WHEN? WHY?
Whatever your question
problem, give me my information
for it $1.00. Don't grope in
dark. Your money will be
funded at once if you
entirely satisfied.
MIDA
Dept. 82—Information Burge
12 Fairview, Avenida
Jersey City, N.J.
District and are giving N. B. Dodson, the president, beauty cooperation by bringing in new members. Mr. and Mra. Miraj. Poster of Dodson, Va., motored with S. B. Biddle, president of the Southern New York College, from Norfolk to New York. Poster of Dodson, the Poster of Dodson, Mr. and Frank Stokley, were the house guests of Mr. and Mra. Fred Stokley, at 513 Greene avenue on Wednesday. The Stokleyes gave their guests a pleasant and varied social entertainment. Napoleon P. Doston, the successor, director of the Stokleyes College, New York, the past summer, has gone to Englewood, N. J., where he and Mra. Dotton will have charge of the Englewood Community Hobie until another camp season. Mr. Dotton is a graduate of the College, has done some college work and is a graduate of the Springfield, Mass. Training School for Y. M. C. A. workers.
Those in attendance, at a party, in honor of Mrs. E. K. Dodd of Baltimore, Md., at the home of Miss Pearl E. Hooks, 25 Lefferts place on Saturday evening, evening, Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. J. Hooks, Mekdines E. H. Dodd, N. R. Mosely, R. Hawkins, Emma Griffin, Sarah Beckles, Eleanor Smith, Mileses Pearl and Marion Hooks, Ada Ferris, Jamie Johnson of Richmond, Va. Dorothy, Dodd and Grace Waters of Baltimore, Md., Measers, Samuel Carroll and S. Steward.
Homeseekers Invited To Visit Annityville, L. I.
Sol. Levington, president of the Morinton R.alty Corporation, is announcing the opening of a new development consisting of 811 lots in Anityville-Manor, Amityville, J. L. This property is located in the heart of Amityville-and is surrounded by large manufacturing towns such as Farmingdale, Babylon and also Lindenhurst. The above mentioned towns employ good many thousands of help.
This property is already for building purposes or as well for the investor-as the investment point: Amityville-Manor is surrounded by many State Highways and also The New Southern State Parkway of 164 feet wide which is now under construction on L. L. runs right through our property. This new parkway, no doubt will do for Long Island in value of land, as much as the Bronx River Parkway did for Westchester and the Bronx.
These-lots are bing sold on easy monthly terms and the company is also ready to help the purchasers for building purposes. They could build their home on easy monthly terms. This property is located within a walking distance from the Amityville. Station and buses pass the property in all different directions.
Anyone who has not seen Amityville Manor is being advised to come out and look, over this new development. The company will run every Sunday, the DeLuxe buses from Lenox avenue and 135th street at 12 o'clock sharp for the convenience of the public to visit this property. For full information an reference to this property, write or telephone the Morinton Realty Corporation, 110 E. 42nd street, N. Y. Telephone Ashland 0720 or Ashland 3646. For the convience of The New York Age readers and subscribers, they can get full information from the New York Age office at 230 West 135th street, N. Y. Telephone Bradhurst 0864.
King Bees Social Club
To Have Club Rooms
The popular King Bess' Social Club, at their last meeting, which was held at the residence of Thomas H. Roberson at 2484 Sventhev ave.
Dr. D. H. Mackie is now located at 406 West 146th street. Hours: 8-10 a. m.; 12:30 to 2 p. m.; 6 to 8 p. m.
212 WEST 142nd STREET
Bet. 7th & 8th Aven. New York
Help For Hip Hop Club
City. Referees. Call The Week.
DOMESTIC COMMERCIAL
Broadway Auto School
217 WEST 123rd STREET
Phone Morningside, 0934
New York City
Special $10 Auto Course
15 Driving and 15 Shop
Lessons
For Winter Months Only
Also Courses In
BRICKLAYING and
PLASTERING
B. F. THOMAS. Prop.
6 6 6
-Cutes Malaria and quickly relieves
Biliousness, Headaches and Dizziness
due to temporary Constipation.
-Aids in eliminating Toxins
and is highly esteemed for producing
corticoid watery evacuations.
Open leap, Ulcer, Enlarge Vein,
Goiter, Heal, healed while you
leave. Enlarge Vein, Enlarge Vein,
Hip, My Sor, Legs a, Home,
Describe your case.
may be given to get a job, after their fall ball on October 23. The dance will be given at Jupiter Land, Palace, formally, Manhattan Casino, and a feature will be presentation of a silver loving couple club, adjudged the most popular. Officers and members of the King Been, Pallon, J. Benton, Jr., iden; Thomas, H. Robinson, vice-president; Leslie Taylor, financial secretary; Hubert B. Pierce, treasurer; Leanne Davis, recording secretary; Earl Nichols, sergeant at arms; Albert Bastone, James Veal, Albert M. Smith, J. Datings, Steele Dr. H. Johnson; W. T. Hurley, Harriot McKenna and Andrew T. Mitchell sr.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Bagley
Give Garden Party
Shephead Bay, N. Y., Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Bagy gave a delightful garden party over the past weekend. Travel pictures and a musical program were the features.
Among their guests were: Mije Cecilia L. Tshabalala, formerly of South Africa, Mr. and Mrs. King S. Harris of Englewood, N. J. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Jeter and Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Thomas, Montclair, N. Miss Gertrude Jones, Warn Palm Beach FL, Mountains Pavilla Derby, Bertha Ariar, A. J. Saunders and Ruth Whitehead Whaley, New York City, Mr. and Mrs. L. Hollingsworth, Brooklyn.
Harry Prampin To Wed
Mrs. Nellie Harrison
Harry Prampin, director of the Harryf and Laura Prampin School of Music, 131 West 136th street, will marry Mrs. Nellie Harrison, widow of the late Alfred Harrison.
Mrs. Harrison was born at 228 Sullihman Street, New York City (known today as Greenwich Village) in the year of 1896. The ceremony will be private and will take place at the school.
Free Evening School
For Girls and Women
The Board of Education announce the opening of a free evening school for girls and women at P. S. 90, 225 West 147th street. Monday, September 17. Registration for classes take place this week.
The courses, offered prepare students to receive diplomas for admission to high schools. Certificates will also be awarded for attendance. Subjects taught are arithmetic, grammar, geography, history, reading, writing, mathematics, reading, stewing, millinery, flower making, embroidery and novelty work. Thomas G. Schwartz is the principal of Evening School 90. :
OBITUARIES
Vivian Phillips, dearly beloved and only daughter of Mr. Harry A. and Mrs Rose L. Phillips, died August 29th, at Harlem Hospital. She leaves to mourn their loss, mother, father, two brothers, grand mother, Mrs. Laura E. Doseb, of Jacksonville, Fla., who came to attend the funeral; 4 aunts, husband and host of other relatives and friends. The family wishes to extend thanks to Rev. Robinson of St Mark's M. E. Church, Councillor Vernal Williams and Mrs. Roberts of St. Mark's M. E. Church, also to Mrs. Louise Hart, who had charge of funeral arrangements. Interment in Mt. Olivet Cemetery.
WORK WANTED
Public Typist—Reasonable work at home or office, apply 2423 7th Avenue, Apt. 2.
FOR SALE
3 room furnished apartment for sale. Rent reasonable. All in-provenance. Call evenings. Bradhurst 888.
**AUTOMOBILE FOR SALE**
Sale Price: $7,750. Maximum in good condition, $100. Captain T. J. BURRE, Armory, 29 West Kingsbridge Rd., New York City,
HELP WANTED
BARBERS WANTED
Experienced barbers wanted for torsional parlor. Anita's Tonsilial Parlor, 2155 Seventh Avenue.
WANTED STQCKSLESAMEN
Competent, reliable, experienced man or women to sell stock of a well established Fraternial Corporation on a commission basis. Must be able to give references and furnishance of duty. Reply by letter only giving full details in first letter.
J. F. A. 1201 St. Marks Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.
A New York doctor's treatment controls the pain, stiffness and swollen muscles. It shortly drives the truggle out of the system. It is called the system.
```markdown
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Mary druggist, now here
it. A "R" on her shirt.
if you call. Band 10, cents
if you wish it mailed.
Atkins Chemist Shop
Open Daily 10 to 4
175 E. 63rd St., cor. 3rd Avenue
New York City
UNDERTAKERS
2332 SEVENTH AVE. Audubon 9239
Mrs. MARTAH R HOWELL President OEORGE E WEST Vice-President
HAROLD H HEDGEMAN Manager
PRICES TO SUIT ALL USE OF CHURCH FREE
130th St. 215 W - Furnished room,
kitchenette, basement room, also
small room, all improvements.
130th St. 205 W Art. 3 F - From
130th St, 305 W. Apt. 3-E—Front room, neatly furnished, strictly private, rent-reasonable. Modern improvements. Suitable for couple or friends. Home privileges. Must be seen to be appreciated.
131st St., 221 West—Comfortably furnished rooms in quiet house. Steam, hot water, electricity. Reasonable, for respectable people only. Slater. Sept. 15-3t
133 St. 153 W—7 large rooms, all private, elevator service, convenient to subway "L" and Bus, near park. Apply Supt. on Premises.
133rd St. 250 W. Apt. 4-East—Large front room beautifully decorated, with full apartment privileges. Light, clean, ideal for students. Call 4 to 7 p. m.
130th St. 239 West—Furnished rooms with kitchenette privilege. Oil heat, telephone, all modern improvements. Aug. 25 4t.
141st St., 170 W. Apt. 4-E—Two neatly furnished private rooms. Men preferred, with young couple. $6 and $7. Call mornings. before 12 o'clock, evenings after 8 p. m.
146th St., 305 W. Furnished room for respectable working girl. Apt. 6.
150th St. 402 W. Apt. 1—Beautifully furnished room call, Bradburst 7827.
FURN-UNFURNISHED
146th St. 225 W. Apt. 100-Large
light, furnished or unfurnished
room suitable for couple with child.
Use of kitchen.
Bradhurst avenue, 39- Two rooms
with kitchenette, furnished or
unfurnished, in quiet home.
LOFTS TO LET
Lenox Ave., 224 (126th)-large,
light loft, desirable, beauty par-
lor, office, etc. Bachrach, 144
East 60th, Atwater 2784.
Children To Board
Lady to care for children from
1 to 12 years old by the week,
month or year.
Mrs. Bertha Lane, 30 Church Street, Matawan, N. J. Aug. 25 4 tines
UNDERT
W. DAVID BROWN
Undertaken a Establishment
Under the Management of
ANNA R. BROWN and MARGARET BROWN GOODY
WALTER L. ROWELL, Assistant
HIGH ORDER, LICENSED
UNDERTAKERS' and
EMBALMERS
2315 SEVENTH AVENUE
Bst. 133th and 134th St.
Telephone: Bradhurst 0442
Phone: Morningside 6813
J. R. S. MCLOD, Mgr.
MARY LANE
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND
EMBALMER
PROMPT FUNERAL MODERATE
RATES—FUNERAL PARLOR AND
CHAPEL FREE.
112 West 133 St., New York City
Phone Harlem 8221
TO LET—In first class apartment house, 4-5-6-7 rooms all, modern improvements, elevator service, rent reasonable, apply superintendent on premise, 321 St. Nicholas avenue.
59th St. 312-318-324 West (6 and 7 rooms, bath; colored tenants, steam, $30 monthly. St. or HUBERTH & HUBERTH, 2 Columbus Circle. Circle 7820.
59th St. 326-328 West—cold toilet, colored tenants, 3 and 4 rooms, bath, $32 monthly, up. Apply 328 West 59th st. or HUBERTH & HUBERTH, 2 Columbus Circle. Circle 7820.
59th St. 334-336 West—Colored tenants, 6 and 7 rooms, bath, steam, $50 monthly, up. Apply 338 West 59th or HUBERTH & HUBERTH, 2 Columbus Circle, Circle 7820.
117th St. 523 E—Remodelled house, 3 light rooms, beautifully decorated, hot water, electricity, white sinks, rent $18 and up. Inquire Janitor.
312 West 121st (Manhattan Ave.)—Sixes, sevens, some private, all outside $65-$75. Atwater 3220.
121st Street, 312 West (Manhattan Ave.)—Sixes, sevens, all outside, some private. $65 - $75.
130th Street, 411 East—4 rooms, steam, bath, electric, hot water, lately improved. $28-$38. S8-41
Two Rooms Por Rent—Running water in catch, electric light. Apply at laudtie. 317 Water-land St. 142nd St. 317 W. Six rooms, bath, electricity, steam heat, $65. Live, large rooms near school, electric light and bath $35. Carage if necessary. Phone Olivinville 1973. 1103 East 215 Street.
2-3 and 6 room apartments with large, well lighted rooms in beautiful section of the Bronx, near subway, parks and schools. See owner at 3131. Villa avenue, between Grand Concourse and Jerome avenue. Rent $15-$22-$30.
APTS. TO RENT-BKLYN.
4 minutes to Atlantic and 4th avenues, all subways. 6 rooms and bath. Guests, heater, water, electric, gas ranges, newly decorated. Reasonable rent. Move in now, rent starts October 1. Supt. on premises.
Charles J. Cartwright & Co. 81 5th Ave, Brooklyn, New York 1051
TAKERS
PHONE 4936 BRADHURST
WILLIAM C. PERRY
PUNERAL DIRECTOR & BERHLMER
LARGE FUNERAL PARLOR
248 West 132nd Street
Between 7th and 8th Ave.
Sept. 1-1m. New York City
Phone Lagecombe 9049
Open All Night
—Notary Public
Kodney Dade & Bros.
UNDERTAKERS AND
EMBALMERS
2244 Seventh Ave. Cor.
132nd Street, New York City
Branch
758 East 229th Street
Lola E. Brown, Mgr.
Phone Olinville 3337
Tel. Harlem 5063
R. A. Miller, Licensed Embalmer
Miller & Shepard
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
64 WEST 127th ST. New York
(Downtown Branch 319 West 41st
Street Tel. Pennsylvania 9126
Phone Prospect 0536
Allen Dillard
Lillian C. Dillard
UNDERTAKERS
468 Franklin Ave.—Brooklyn, N.Y.
(Corner Jefferson Ave.)
DOLPH
VELL
CHURCH, Inc.
Audubon 9239