New York Age
Saturday, March 1, 1930
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
Bish:Lawson Discusses Fairies’ Ball
===] Ohe New Bork Age
MOTHER OF 16-MONTH OLD BABY: BRUTALLY SLAIN BY HUSBAND
Abnormal Perverts:and What They
“Mean In The Light of Scriptures
, o
Preached On By Bish, Lawson Sunday
Prelate and Two Parishioners Attend Costume
Ball Attended By Thousands Seeking Thrill
and Tells Church What He Thinks Of It.
The block on West 183rd street, between Lenox
and Fifth avenues, was jammed with a seething mass
of humanity on Sunday night, February 23, and each
individual was striving with might and main to gain
entrance into the Refuge Church of Christ, at 52-54-
56, to hear what Bishop R. C. Lawson, founder and
pastor, was going to say on “The Fairies’ Ball,” he
having announced through advertisements and dis-
play cards that he would prea;h on that subject.
The subject was predicated upon
a costume ball recently given at
Rockland Palace by one of the local
‘faternal organizations, and former
“hulls have given this annual affair
“the reputation of being out of the
erdinary.
Attended the Ball.
Having heard from various ,sourc-
438 to the nature of this affair,
Bishop Lawson, after consultation
wth his church and officers, decid-
ed to attend this year, and he did
sin company with a church officer
and a church member.
And so, on Sunday night, the
cemmodious church’ aiiditortum’ was
ammed to” capacity when “Bishop
Ensen ‘announced as his. text
“Sve sourself fom this untoward
Reneration.: taken from Acts 2-40,
and his subect_was as advertised,
“The Fairies’ Ball," with a sub-
head. “The Faggots’ Rall, and What
It Means In the Light of the Scrip-
tures.” 5
In beripning his sermon, Bishop
Lawson Uisclaimed a purpose to dis
«uss any organization, believing
that people have a right to organ-
ue for mutual help and pleasure,
and declarvrg that the benefit of
feth bedies are obvious to any un-
biassed observer, Continuing, he
said
To Save the Perverts.
Neuter am I here to denounce,
ter 1 instruct the people who are
{9 unfortunate as to be born with
fomo-sexual tendencies, for they.
tr, are human beings, Therefore,
the chirstian ministry has a duty
‘them that they may know. the
power of an endless hfe through
Christ, that breaks the power of
pala sin, and sets the prisoner
Bishop Lawson then explained
that in order that the people mav
kw from the Scripture, the what,
she and how of these things,—
“What the Bible has to say relative
¥ ‘lanes’ and homo-sexualism"—
fe decided to attend this hal. He
fad "Acting as a Christian minis-
tr | acted within the scope of my.
fsunn to preach the gospel, and.
to follow im the prophetic steps nf
Fackiel who was commanded (Te-
Mel R13 te “Go in and -beho!d
the wicked abominations: they (the
eee i here!”
ter telling of conierring with
hs church and officers, he told of
aving the church alter night ser-
"ce, with Fis officer and member,
ind bers obliged, hecause of the
throng of cars of all types, to park
bus cara block away from the Ca-
wine. Said he.
ca efit For Words,
+ “After Parking the car, we pro-
(ceded to the dance hall, ‘purchased
Wekets ‘and were directed in, A.
sieht that challenged description
met our gaze, We were lost for
Nords then, and even now, in 2
Bvasure to describe what we saw
Betrtore we call to our aid, the #2
fort of \iy Gerry New York re-
frter tthe “Baltimore — \tro-
American and the report of the re-
puter irom The New York Age,
pe tes an her report, said
Fam front tn hack, from "side. to
side rv ceihng to floor, a color-
ful, hilarious, Miass of people surged
back and forth Every box, every
be rvery atair and zaih, was cov
teh wth eager people ‘wha had
fomr--as early ac ten o'clock=-to
MEN WHO OUT-WOMENED
MES AND WOMEN WHO
QUT MENED MEN, and Jor their
{Metlaniment there paraded a col
ft of goeegoue creatures deck
4 mat ay silks, satins, feathers and
weels and tor the | first time, a
Andle sumser af the enerect tuxes
‘2.014 women with heavy, throaty
lit os York Age said in part
MS tepwey
wpe hand Palace was packed to
Wtoeat on eh parheipants. and
nies: Hundreds of white cou-
Wee bewone for a thrill cthowed,
oie = % shoved with colored n-
“Heian got an eyetul,
PREACHED ON PERVERTS
Pr
PSs
cee ae
Le
ae
a
i
m
cl
ts
Paes
ce;
Bishop R. C. LAWSON
“"It was difficult’ to distinguist
sexes. Scores of males of pré
nounced effeminate traits graceful:
ly disported themselves in beautify
evening gowns, They might have
been mistaken anywhere for fzsem-
ating shebas.
“‘Some wore wigs. Others re-
sembled the mesmerizing maiden of
bobbed hair type. Not a few looked
uke delicate painted dolls.
“White ‘giris’ appeared to bem
the majority. It is reported a numt-
ber came from as far distant as
Chicago. Many uf the costumes
worn were goreogus, while in sev.
eral instances the —masqueraders
walked and danced ahput display-
ing shapely limbs, wearing jus!
enough to be withia the law
“There were also females rigged
up in masculine attire. They, too
were often mistaken for real sheiks
On the ballroom fidor 1 was difls
cult to ‘ell who was who"
What Does It All Mean?
“Now, what does all, this mean,
and whence cometh all this? What
does the Bible have to say about
this matter; and as this ic hecom-
ing a fad and 1s wide-spread, and
as many are interested in the sex
problem, | think at bigh time for
the ministry of our city to raise
their voice against this iniquitous
traffic in degeneracy. when five
hundred men cavorted, squirmed
and wiggled around with cach oth.
er, and hundreds of other people
looking down from balcony and side
lines, while they held their high
carnival of si unabashed, yea, bra.
zenly, drinking and firting. ‘bles:
pheming and making mock of them
selves’ and God.
“And many indulge in these ab-
normaltics in the spirit of bravado,
simply because they do not wish to
appear green; others take pleasure
in them asa new diversion, not
participating in the actual deeds,
tut take pleasure ‘in them that dc
them: and. this city seems to have
forgotten, God in their high carni-
val of sin that out-Sodams Sodom
a veritable valley of death to spirit:
val Ife, and christian ideals and
sagred tradition.
“Hypocrites. like hyenas in high
places, leopards) in human form
move stealthily from street to street
ions of power thundering thei
commands to henchman vassals and
slaves to crime, wolves of avarice
and selfishiess that devour the un:
der dog: the puppets, that terrible
treacherous reptile, the snake who
sells hig birtheight, his race. fora
mess of pottage, in sa much that
children are not safe upon the
Streets any more, whether little
girls or little hoys, fram these de-
Renerate hvenas which spells 9 sale
sly their hase: desires atthe ers
pence of vouth
(Continued on Seventh Page)
Joseph Prince, Alleged Numbers
Banker, Fails In An Attempt To
Secure a Divorce From His Wife
Wife’s Attorney Charged That Evidence Given
By Husband’s Private Detective Was False,
And That Prince Wanted a Younger Woman
After a trial lasting three days, a jury in Special
Term, Part 6, of the Supreme Court returned a yer-
dict in favor of the defendant in the case of Joseph
Prince, of 295 West 160th strect, against Francisca
Prince, of 210 West 147th street. The action was for
a divorce and was tried before Justice Black on Feb-
10- YEAR OLD
ATTACKED IN.
TAILOR SHOP
Raper’s Own Danghter Is
Victim of Another Man
With Father Knowing”
Anothet casq of rape in Harlem
‘ona child was brought to light or
February 17 through the efforts of
Detectives Webver and Robinson of
the West 135th street police station,
‘The detectives were walking througt
Li7th street when they heard a wom-
an scream in the tailor shop at No.
31 Upon investigating they found
‘William Marshall, 32, proprietor of
the shop, threatening his wife with 2
knife.
Mafshall was placed under arrest
and Mrs. Marshall brought to. the
police station for questioning. She
told the detectives that she bad gust
‘been told that her husband had rap-
fed the ten-year, old daughter of
neighbor, and when she accused him
‘he flew into a rage and tried to stat
her. 3
Further investigation by the detec:
tives, and the questioning of the lit
te girl in the case, revealed that an:
other man, one Alber Raven of 47
West 17th: street, had raped _ the
cleven-year old daughter of Mar-
shall, the man under arrest. The re
lations of the two men with thes
children had been going on since las
December, according to one of thé
girls, She told the detective tha
Marshall knew of Raven's relation:
with his own daughter, but neve
made any protest.
The children sed to run errand
for Marshall and Raven, and in tha
Jway came to spend much time in th
Fiailor shop,
After a hearing on February 25
both men were held i $1,300 bail fo
ihe’ délign ‘of the Grand Jury.
The two girls were placed in th
cancdy of the Children's Society,
Sanh at?
“What the Negro Thinks
Wins Favor In England
Tuskegee Institute. Ala —Dr.
Robert R. Moton's hook, “What the
Negro Thinks” is being favorably
received in England according to
reviews from the English press re-
ceived here. Like the American
reviewers the British critics look
Shon The sahunie ar’ notable. cow?
tribution ot the hterature of race
relations The Enghsh’ edition 1s
published by the Student Christian
‘Movement.
ruary- 17-18 and 19,
Mr. Prince, who is a native ol
Porto Rico, 1s well known in Har-
lem, and the case attracted crowds
to the court room He was arrest:
ed in 1926 for the alleged posses:
sion of policy slips and, according
@ the testimony of his wife, ha:
heen a collector for a large policy
banker for several years past, earn-
mg a. salary of SW per week and
commissions. :
The case against Mrs, Pritice was
based on the affidavits of one Mr,
Robinson, a private, detective, cf
1980 Seventh avenue, He alleged
that on the night of September 16
1929, he and a witness, ° Abrahar
Perlman, gamed entrance to Mrs
Pierce's apartment and found her in
bed with an unanamed min,
Denied Detectives Charge.
Mrs Prince denied the charge of
adultery. and brought om several
neighbors to testify! mn her behalf,
The lady m the adjommg apart.
ment, Mre Audrey, testified that_ne
fone had entered the Prime apart:
ment on the might the alleged raid
was made Two other neste rs,
Mrs ecanc Philips of JUL West
HSth street, and) Mrs. Patricta
DAR FEB. 12
BUT SENTENCED PRISON FEB. 2
. ee .
eh
= oe
Marcus Garvey Again =
i !
Hlected Counciiman |
In Jamaica, B. W.'L FS
The Negro World, New York's .
oe ee og the Universay New | s ci
Improvement Association, states. - inl] 3
its issue of February 22 that Marr] - = a
cus Garvey, President-General of the/'f
U.N. 1. A. had been returned. 387) .
Councillor from the Urban Ward.) i
No. 3, to the seat in the Kingston | a o ™
and St. Andrew Corporation... >-|:if i
Mr. Garvey had formerly been aiff . 5
member of the Corporatiog, but while ['f a F
he was serving a sentence of three [if
months in jail for contempt of court, ‘I
the Jamaicagbody declared his seat]!
vagant because -he was ‘absent from|'H :
three consecutive meetings of the'l'| se
Council. In his re-election on Feb- | = !
oe tohe tod no oppodtions "| dase tes ce ap paces ace
Marcus Garvey Gets
Six Months For Libel
Kingston, Jamaica, B, W. L—
Because he published hbelous at-
tacks én governmental officials,
Marcus Garvey was sentenced to
six months’ imprisonment on Feb-
ruary 21. The editor of his paper.
‘The Blackman, a Mr Aikman, was
sentenced to three months. Ap-
peals were entered in both cases.
-peals weed gitpred ia Berk ise
Retired Army Officer
At Tuskegee Institute
Tuskegee Institute, Ala —Mayor
General Clarence R. Edwards of
Westwood, Mass, ‘was a visitors at
Tuskegee Institute, Friday. The gen-
éral, who has been retired from ac-
tive service, was the guest of J. O.
Thompson of Roba, Ala. who for
many years has been a friend of
Tuskegee Institiste.
General Edwards addressed the
student body, telling something of
his experience as a soldier in France
‘and in the colonies, At one time he
was in command of Negro troops.
He has served as chief of the bureau
‘of insular affairs and has held other:
of insular a
Thomas of 2087 Exghth avenue, tes-
tified that Mrs, Prince was with
them until 11 o'clock on the might
‘of September 16. Mrs. Prince said
she went directly to bed upon her
arrival home,
The defense attorney alleged tha
the whole case was a frame up on
the part of Mr Prittce and the pri-
vate detective, It was charged that
Mr. Prince, since he had become
affluent, desired fo get rid of his
wife for a younger woman,
Gives Quick Verdict.
Judge Black charged the jury te
bring in a verdict of "yes® or “no”
on whether they beheved Mrs
Prince had committed adultery at
the time and place charged. and
after only a, few mnittes absence
from, the cotirt room, the verde
was bronght in favortig the defend:
ant,
‘AN counter action for separation
has been brought by Mrs Prince
and she a awarded temporary ali
mony of $8 per week
Former Assemblyman James Male
way the attorney for the plainti¢
in the divorce action, al Frank
J Ruva,wag the attorney of recotd
jor the defendant.
“WHAT THE COURIER ACCOMPLISHED”
In ats issue of February 22, the Pittsburgh Courier, which calls
itself “The World's Best Weekly,” carries a 2-column cut, depicting
five of the nine colored boys employed as messengers by the Western
Union Telegraph Co. in the branch office’ at 200 West 135th street,
New York City, A caption over the cut, also 2-column wide, was
“WHAT THE COURII-R ACCOMPLISHED.”
“The inscription under the cut THE CAUSE was that on FEBRU-
ARY 8 the Courier printed an editorial and cartoon deriding the fact
that the telegraph companies failed to employ race help. And that
“THE EFFECT" was that the Western Union had released the cut
of the five boys :
The Courter did not state that tS editorial on February 8 was
based on a news story printed exclusively in THE NEW YORK AGE
ON JANUARY 25, two weeks earlier, to the effect that colored girls
and boys would be hired by the Western Union, and that the Courier
editorial tried to cast doubt upon the authenticity of the story. Nor
did the editorial state that in its issue of February 8 the same week
of the “deriding™ editorial, The New York Age not only printed the
names of the ten girls who were bemg given the two weeks ‘intensive
‘(raming preparatory to the selection of four for immediate employ-
ment, but also the namey of the thirteen boys who had been em-
ployed as messengers, mine as regulars and four as substitutes,
"And following this up, The New York Age, m ws issue of Feb-
ruary 13, printed an exclusive photograph of the NINE regular mes-
senger boys who started work on Monday, February 10, with theit
names, and that of the FOUR GIRLS who went to work as counter
girls, 7
“WHAT THE COURIER ACCOMPLISHED" seems to have
been to try, two: weeks after it was printed, to discount the accuracy
of the story printer in The Age on January 25; and then, a week
after the full and complete story had been printed (February 15)
exclusively by The Age, with a photo of the entire staff of regulars,
to come out (February 22) with a cut of FIVE. of the boys, made
from a photo taken by Edward Lewis, a young lad who works for the
Amsterdam, News»as Boy Scout editor and photographer, and print-
ed im that papier on February 15, saying it had been released by the
‘Western Union. .
This leads up to the question, “What Did the Courier Accomplish
in the Hiring of Negro Girls as Clerks and Boys as Messengers in
the West 135i Street Branch Office?”
“What The Age Accomplished” was to print the story of the
the promised employment of colored clerks and messengers TWO
WEEKS before any paper in the country; and to print the only photo
of the entire group of nine messenger boys, other New York papers
of February 15 printing nly a pictureyz'milar to that printed in The
Courier on February 22 os
t aie
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H
aa :
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i wos bs
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H
{ue. "Garvey is the founder and
pesident of the Universal Negro
Improvement Association, “which
formerly had headquarters in New
York City. He has been in trouble
with the authorities on several oc-
casions for attacking the imptrial.
ism of Great Britain, the United
States and other countries as re-
gards to Africa, While in Ne
York he started a back-to-Afric:
movement for: Negroes of the west.
ern world and later went to the
federal prison in Atlanta for fraud:
uently’ selling stock in his steam
ship line through the government
wai Oo
Will: Name Candidates
For Cadets Through
Open Examinatior
Cleveland, Ohio.—Congressmant
Chester C. Bolton of the 22nd Dis-
trict has written City Councilmar
LeRoy N Bundy that he will make
appointments ta West Point and
Annapolis strictly on qualifications
without regard to race, creed of
color,
Through cooperation with Super-
intendent of Schools Jones, special
courses of instruction mn mathemat-
fear Engiuh’ and: hilord. ise
studies at the academies, have been
installed om the high schowls that
the students may have special prep-
aration for the competitive examin-
ations on which appointments of
cadets will be based. ‘
He emphasizes that there are no
restrictions .in the examinations,
and concludes by saying: “There is
ho reason, as you point out in your
letiec. ‘why ali bora WhO: tea toea-
Wife, Kills Sel
Insane jealousy is ascribed by the
police to a murder and suicide in
Harlem Saturday night, February
22, William Artote, 27, visited his
estranged wife's apartment at 267
West 140th atreet, comer of Eighth
avenue, and during a quarrel_be-
came enraged and shot Mrs. Edna
Artote, 26, the mother of his two
children thdough the temple, kill-
ing her instantly. He then tyrned
the gun on himself and fired a bul-
let through his own tentple. Both
were dead when the police arrived.
The couple are said to have sep-
arated about 31x months ago but he
had recently been trying to affect a
reconciliation. They had a son,
James and a, daughter, sixteen
months old
According to the detectives the
couple had. been quarreling ‘con:
stantly since their separation and
Arote became insanely jealous
when he heard rumors of his wife's
interest in another man in the
neighborhood.
According to the national office
of the ILD, Laura Wood, Negro,
60 years old, and a mother of four,
was lynched Tuesday, February 11
near Rarber Junction, N. C., by un-
identified persons after the alleged
‘theft of two hams
Tre steel cow chain that choked
the woman to death is now on dis-
play at the national office of the
ILD, whose representatives . aye
holding eee Protest meetings” o
white and Negro. workers in, the
gh ae ee
= up tothe standards required
shoukdy not be eligible for this ex-
aminatfon irrespective od color or
creed.”
——
English Author Visits
Tuskegee Institute
Tuskegee. Institute, Ala—John
Langdon Davies, English author
and lecturer, spoke to the students
‘of Tuskegee in the institute chapel
here Sunday evening on forces for
world peace.
‘The most important. problem
facing the world today is the eli-
mination of war. What the solu-
tion of this problem will be de-
pends upon the spirit of peace in
the individuals, We must strive
to understagd one another, to rea-
lize there are differences in hu-
man beings and to accept these
differences and he glad of them.
For out of the multiphcity of
Broups comits the greatest gifts
for human” “
North Harlem Medical Society Votes
me coon: He
Reprimand To Dr. Petioni For His.
, . . ea:
Statement About. Harlem Hospital
Says It Was Unauthorized and Did Not Repre-
sent True Attitude of Body; When Motion Is
* Adopted, Dr. Petioni Resigns Secretaryship:
At its last meeting, on Thursday evening, Feb-
ruary 20, the North Harlem Medical Society voted to
reprimand Dr. Charles Augustin Petioni, secretary,
because of a statement given by him to the local
press, and printed last week, expressing dissatisfac-
tion with the recent reorganization of the Harlem
Hospital staff, and stating that “the North ‘Harlem
Society as a body cannot be satisfied at the changes.”
Confirmation Service At St. Martin’s
Lenox Avenue and 122nd Street
SUNDAY, MARCH 2nd at 8 p.m.
“Second Amtiversary of the Oszanization of the Church”
Dr. Petioni stated also that “I
exect the whole matter will be aired
Jat the forthcoming meeting of the
North Harlem Medical Society.”
The Society holds its meetings
in the rooms of the Association of
Trade and Commerce, 2370 Seventh
avenue, and there was an unusually
large atedance of members at this
meeting. The president, Dr. Charles
C. Middleton, who was elected” in
December, past, presided, and he
presented to the Society the matter
Jet the statement given to. the press
by Dr. Petioni. It was declared
by, Dr. Middleton that Mr. Peti-
joni’s statement did not express
the attitude of the Society. and that
|the organization should take action
to clear up the situation...
ip the, situation...
ody Voter-Reprimend. ..
Dret l defetided.,bimeeli dee
taraeet the letter was Kis’ per-
sonat expttssion, and ‘that the So-
Siety as a body was not concerned
with it,
There was considerable discus-
sion of the matter before any ac
tion was, taken, but it was. finally
decided that Dr. Petioni should be
reprimanded; that the Society "en-
ldorses and approves the recent re-
organization a} Harlem Hospital”;
land that lettefs of appreciation and
‘thanks be sent the Commissioner. of
| Hosiptals, Dr. J. G William Greeff,
‘and to Dr., George 1 Stewart,
‘chairman ofthe Committee of Sur-
vey. :
|, Following this action, Dr. Petioni
immediately tendered his resiyma-
tion as secretary. which was accept
ed. and the Society lected Tr.
Farrow Allen to the vacant post-
tion,
The Formal Statement.
_ The following is the formal state-
ment issued by the Society, through
its, president, Dr. Middleton:
"AL its last stated inecting, The
North Harlem Medical Society
took the following action concern-
ing the recent reorganization at
Harlem Hospital,
“I, Iwas voted that a statement
be issued to the gress informing the
public that the statement isued by
Dr. C. Augustin Petioni about the
Harlem Hospital situation was not
authorized by the Society: that said
statement represented only _ the
views of Dr Petioni: that Dr Peti-
oni be reprimanded for writing
such a statement which tended to |
give the pubhe a false impression
of the Society's attitude, |
Approves Reorganization,
#2 Twas, voted tat The North
|The Rt, Rev. RC. Lawson al
New York City. founder and first
bishop of the Church of Christ of
Uke Apostolic Faith, was unani-
mously elected president of the In~
dustrial Union School and Orphan-
age of West Southern Pines, N.C,
last week, by the executive board
and trustees
The property, which occupies two
city blocks in Southern Pines, will
contmue as an industrial school
under the Ieadership -nf Bishop
Lawson, successor to J. M. Hender-
tn.
The bishop. in commenting upon
his selection as president, said that
he would serk to raise an educt-
Nional fund for the maintenance vf
the school and that he hoped to in-
duce one of the officers of the Dun-
bar National Bank to become trea-
‘surer of the fund, 7
Harlem Medical Society endorses
and approves the recent reorgani-
zation at Harlem Hospital, feeling
that it gives to the Negro. medical
profession a recognition hitherto
lacking and furnishing 2 splendid
example to the remainder of the
country to “go thou and do ike=
wise”; that the service of the hos
pital to the community and to the
rofession will. be measurably | in-
creased by the action of the: Com:
missioner of Hospitals.
"3, It was voted that letters of
appreciation and thanks for their
slendid service be sent by he pee
ident and secretary to Ir. Je: Ge
William | Greeff, Comotissionet -at-
‘Hospitals and .to Dr. George’ D.
Stewart, chairman of Committe of
Stover aman Sh See oe
This staement is issued -by the-
president of the society with the
authorization of the North Harlem
Medical Society.” *
Dr, Petioni’s Statement.
Dr, Petioni, in his capacity as sec-
retary up to the time of his resig-
nation, has released a transcript of
‘the happenings at the meeting un-
der the heading, “Wright ‘Eceam
Roller Carries the Day; Secretary
Quits Under Fire.” In this tran-
script, the secretary writes that Dr.-
Petioni " in his statement had
charged that it was a matter of pol-
itics and not merit or medicine,
which was at the bottom of the ap-
pointments; that Dr. Wright, the
former president, who had a hand
in the appointments, had not kept+
faith with the Society in its recom-
mendations; that injustice was done
to several eet vig men who had
served in the Out-Patient Depart-
ment for several years.”
Continuing. Dr, -Petioni. had
charged that “many of the positions
were given to obscure men and ver-
itable tyros; and that this mgt
be detrimental to the cause of Ne-
gro representation in the city hos-
pitals. He had admitted that it was
a commendable forward step from
the point of view of greater num-
bers on the staff, He ‘further stated
he had no personal grievance ‘in
the matter.”
The transcript continued: Mr.*
Petioni_said the statement was sent
in the first person, and it wa‘clear
from the context that it was a per-
sonal and not an official statement,
He strongly defended his right to
Itherty of action, and challenged
any one present to dispute the cor-
rectness of his statements in the
matter under discussion.” Not-
withstanding, the reprimand motion
was -carried, followed immediately
by the resignation as accretary of
Dr. Petioni. .
Say Wright Was Scored.
Talking to an Age representative,
Dr. Petioni called attention to a
statement in the transcript to. the
effect that "not a single physician
present ventured to defend the ap-
pointments.” excepting Dr, Louis T.
Wright. The transcript said: *
"As to the appointments, Dr,
Wright was severely excoriated in
the discussion which followed and
remarks were made by the presi-
dent, Dr. CC, Middleton; the -vice
president, Dr. Oma H. Price; the
treasurer, Dr. J. J. Jones; the sec-
retary. Dr. C. A. Petioniz and Drs.
Leroy Pelham, Hudson Oliver, Al=
bert Armstrong, Lucien Brown,
among others. Not a single physi-
cian present ventured to defend the
appointments with the exception of
Dr. Wright. who attributed them to
the committee appointed to make
the survey and the Commissioner
of Hospitals. He further said that
in such matters ustice could not he
done to every nrc, and stated that
more appointments will be made in
SOCIAL AND CLUB NEWS
PAGE TWO
Manhattan Personals
Mrs. Nallie Hale of Wheatfield, N.
J. spent the weakest in the city.
Robert W. Williams of Suffolk.
Va. is spending a few days in the
city.
R. Brinson and E. Cadette of
Newburgh spent the weekend in the
city.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Venerable of
Newburgh spent the weekend in the
city.
Miss Ruth Amos is visiting her
past Rev. and Mrs. T. Amos in
Hilburn, N. Y.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank S. Armatee are
spending a two-weeks' vacation in
Atlantic City.
Victor DeFreese of Hillburn, N.
Y. was in the city Thursday to take
the post office examination.
Miss Winifred Porter, a popular
young miss of North Adams, Mass.
i the guest for a few days of Miss
Ethel Riley Perkins, 200 West 142nd
street.
Mrs. C. S. Gunner, M. S. Watkens K. S. Savvy and Miss
Arthrola DeGroot of Hillburn, N. Y.
spent a very pleasant day in the
city Saturday.
*John McAllister of Springfield, Mass., is spending a week with his sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Alexander of 678 St. Nicholas avenue.*
*Mrs. S. S. Jackson of 328 West 145th street entertained at a time those in attendance were. Mrs. Mary Parker, Mrs. George Anderson, Mrs. Thomas Cephias and Mrs. Mary L. Cook.*
*Mrs. Agnes Neal of Highland Falls stopped over on her journey to Fall River. Mass., with her brother en George Bicker, 36 with six sisters en George Bicker and Mrs. Neal called to the bedside of their mother, Mrs. Margaret Blocket.*
*Mrs. Marcita Lenear and Mrs. Jang Hudson of Oakland, Cal., are visiting New York, stopping at the Emma Ransom House. While in the city for two weeks they will be escorted to various poets if interest by Mrs. Mabel Pita Tapp. Hudson is one of the most successful undertakers on the Pacific Coast.*
Anna R. McLeVeih entertained at a luncheon at her residence, 234 West 124th street in honor of her cousin, Philip Edmond of Chicago, Ill. Among the invited guests were, Irma Rutherford of Richmond, Waz Rouse, Blocker, Arminta Steothers, Ethel Fraser, Mav Williams, Ford Lloyd and Samuel Rose of Philadelphia.
The Friendly Column
By Students of N. Y. Business Academy
New students registered for Competitor are—Freda Carlson, Margaret Koenig, Lillian Mooney, Agnes Collins, Ruth Bransom, Joseph F. Taylor, Ralph J. Rilla, Sarah Carr, Gertrude Paige, Vivian Macaulay, Ferry Josephine Stall, Anna Mayer, Stella Wood and Goldie Stein.
New students registered for the business course this week are Mrs. Blanche A. Bond, Mivian R. Hall and Beulah Felton.
New students for the Addressograph and Graphotype are Anne Reyer and Winifred Meyer.
The Computer Made, stenographic test is set for March and April—the test will cover seven days. The Commission expects about 400 candidates each day, morning and afternoon sessions.
Mr. Stern, head of the Burroughs Machine School, with another representative of the school, visited the Academy on Thursday morning, and gave a demonstration and lesson to the Burroughs Calculating Machine.
The Academy purchased new machine equipment to meet the demand for trained machine operators on all business office equipment.
The members of the faculty—Missisa Roberts and Finley and Mr. Justice are taking special teacher's courses, in machine operation under the City College at the Burroughs Adding Machine Company School.
The Cosmopolitan Business League held a call meeting on Thursday February 20, at the Academy at 8:30 p.m. Plans were discussed regarding the change of policy of the present club, and the members are in favor of re-organizing under this new policy.
Mrs. Sinclair's Case Postponed to March 11
The case of Mme. Stephanie Sinclair was called in the court of special Sessions last Friday, her attorney, Ex-Judge Groel, requested an adjournment because he had another court appearance or a court or the same day. His request was granted and the case was put over until March 11.
Cathedral 852—Day's School of Pedagogy, Residence 1864 - 7th avenue. 357 Lenox avenue at 12th street.
Coaching in all subjects, 10, years success aiding Teachers to get students in the N. Y. City school system.
Revised Course—100 hours of Guidance, all questions for License No. 1, with answers from 1923 to date.
Reduced Rates for New York City Normal Graduates and former students.
Correspondence. Pupils who have done all directed work have passed
HOWARD DAY, B. S. A. M., Principal
CLUB AND FRATERNAL ACTIVITIES
CLUB AND FRATERNAL ACTIVITIES
CLUB FOURTEEN OF JAMAICA
The first regular meeting of the Club Foutteen was held recently at the home of Mrs. Jennie Valentine, 13:07-109th avenue. All the members were present and plans were laid for a public entertainment in the nage future. At conclusion of the meeting a delicious collation was served.
Officers and members of this club are: Mrs. Jennie H. Watkins, president; Edith Farrington, vice president; Florence Dunn, correspondent; Florence Dunn, correspondent secretary; Bertha Gall, treasurer; Miss Lola E. Jackson, chaplain; and Mesdames Mamie Sasser, Lila Coleman, Wilhelmina Jackson, Susie Jackson, Mary Coleman, Beatrice Clark and Gladys Smith.
A. L. SIMMONS' MODERN
SUNRAY, DANCE, ORCHESTRA
The Midwinter Frolic given by the Arthur L. Simmons Modern Sunray Dance Orchestra on Thursday evening, February 20, at the Imperial Auditorium proved to be an astounding process from early in the evening until closing time, who, by the continued "cheers of applause," were enjoying themselves dancing to the fine music played by the promoters. Those amongst the boxholders, who were King Bees Social Club; Saul Social Club; Primary Social Club; La Clique Royale Social Club, and Modernistic Girls Social Club.
The orchestra was ably presented to the audience, who gave a good hand individually, by the master of all the instruments Allen Benton, popular in fraternal and social circles. He also announced that this orchestra will be willing to supply music from one man to the full orchestra of ten pieces, requests to be sent to Simmons, Bradhurst 9042 I. Hines, Edgecombe 3341. The weather was fine throughout the evening.
Members of the orchestra are: A. L. Simmons, manager, trumpet; Roy Washington, trumpet; Linwood A. Clay, pianist; Benjamin McLeod, flat alto saxophone; Irvine (Jimmy) Hines, (secretary-treasurer) E-flat bassoon, (secretary-treasurer) F-slat tenor, tenor saxophone; Desmond Clement, banjo; William Hamilton drums; Philip G. Sabater, trombone, and John Beecher, tuba.
EPSILON CHAPTER ZETA PHI
BETA.
The Finer Womanhood Week, observed annually by the Zeta Phi Beta Sorority ended Saturday evening, February 22, with a special guest, Josephine Carroll of Brooklyn, Mrs Carroll, who is the retiring president of Epsilon Chapter, had the entire chapter as her guests. She was presented with a corsage of violets as a token of esteem from the members. In addition to the members the following guests were present: Anthony Bagley Jr., S. Ellis Blount, Samuel Carban, Charles Collier, Archie and George Glover. On Sunday morning the sorority was in body at Mother A. M. E. R. Brown, the Rev. Dr. J. W. Brown, past.
Miss Thelma Henderson of 80 St. Nicholas place was hostess to members and pledges at an informal tea session after February 22, 2013, interest program was presented with Mr. Testman at the piano. Mr. Henderson sang, "Goodbye Forever"; Miss Willey Branch recited the "Mianie"; Mrs. Henderson brother of the hostess gave talk on the gave wood"; and Dr. Charles A, Butler spoke on "Culture." Among those present were Miss Mildred Coleman, Stephanie Dawes, Miss Janet Vera Jr., Dr. Vera Ivran, Johann L. Testmian, Dr. Charles A, Butler, Miss Blanche Russell, Vivienne Shurland. Andrades Lindsay, Josephine Carroll, Thelma Henderson, Jocelyn Jackson, Muggs, Mrs. Doralye Spence Jackson, and Mrs. Lillian Pielton Glover.
M. Y. LEAGUE OF WOMEN
VOTERS
The New York League of Women Voters held a meeting at the Bethel Young People's Lycceum last Sunday afternoon. Mrs Bessay J. Bearden, well known newspaper and author, and the Harlem Branch of the League, presided as mistress of ceremonies.
Miss Pearl Bernstein, expert in the Board of Estimate, spoke on Municipal Housing Problems and "How to Avoid Having Them." She urged a good multiple dwelling law candidates to office but in seeing that they fulfilled their election promises.
Maria C. Lawton, former president of the Empire State Federation of "Women's Clubs and prominent civic worker of Brooklyn also spoke. She urged the women to exercise their franchise to the fullest.
Mrs Albert H Herrick and Mrs Willem were introduced to the
The program was under the direction of Mrs. Frances F. Hebbons. Musical numbers were rendered by Mrs Beryl Outerbridge. Miss Anna Matox, Mrs E. Young, Albert Daniel and the E. Jubilee Jubilee Club, led by W V Singleton.
INVINCIBLE TEMPEL, N. 77.
The Daughter Rulers Club will give a radio party on March 7.
Daughter Marie Hall has been appointed chairman of Charity Funds of the State Convention of Chicago.
Tuxedo Club of the Mite Monarch Iodge have invited Invincible Temple to join with them in their dance.
For seats see Brothers Richard Jackson or Dennis Armstead. Don't forget your overalls and cretonne dresses for Friday evening January 28, at the Alhambra Ballroom 201st street and Seyenvent avenue.
USHERS UNITED BENEVOLE
ENT LEAGUE
It is with pleasure that we report the splendid affair which took place Monday at Mother A. M. E. Zion Church, it being the regular meeting of the Ursula Ursula Benehemed S. S. president. The meeting was held as usual and after the regular business the officers and members join in a social hour exchanging greetings and partaking of the refreshments, church organization it being founded, church organization it being founded, church and civic affairs, about 15 years ago. This organization now has a magnificent bank account, with 62 churches in the league and a memorial best known men and some in the belong to this organization and they hail Mrs. Elizabeth Mayfield at their mother and grand organiser.
PERENNIAL BRIDGE CLUB.
Mrs. Mayne Battle entertained the Perennial Bridge Club at the home of Mrs. Margie McKoy, 108 West 141st street on Tuesday last. Custums present were Mrs. Agnes Greer, Mrs. Carter Green, J. H. Guthrie and Samuel Walker who won the guest prize.
MANHATTAN TEMPLE, No. 93. The Flower Club of Manhattan Temple, No. 93, held its first Sunday afternoon meeting and social session at the residence of Daughter Lucy Hicks, 100 West 137th street, having presented by Daughter Tas Booker, preading, Daughter Hicks assisted by Daughters Sadye Ladson and Helen Spencer served a delicious collation.
Daughter Katie L. Jones, chairman o the ball committee reacts wonderful progress in her work and is praised for her supporting committee.
Manhattan Temple's Band held its regular meeting on Wednesday evening at the home of Daughter Evelyn at 262 West Street. The honorary president and organizer deputy, Belle Phillips, presided. Daughter Pennie Woodruff being ill and unable to attend a sightful collation was enjoyed by all.
MISS C. DINGLE HOSTESS AT
BRIDGE.
CLIO CENTER NOTES
There was a large and appreciative audience at St. Mark's Lycceum Sunday afternoon to listen to the program rendered under the auspiration of the Malta Community Center, Inc. Children residents of the Harry and Laura Prampin School of Music did exceedingly well.
Miss Lenon Holder, a newly added trainer teacher to the Center, is the wood-work class in making decorated figures of wood-work. Frank Mitchell was the first boy to finish the Dutch doll, and James Gellam the first to finish the acrobatic bear.
The kindergarten class is making a Bear House's paper, consisting of Bear paper and finishes. Several chairs have already been completed.
The Girls' Sewing Circle is still embroidering work to be exhibited this spring.
E. Green Community League of the Centre, and Dr. Minott, president of the Centre, were hostesses for the refreshments served the children last Friday.
MANHATTAN CHAPTER, No. 3,
DISABLED AMERICAN VETS.
Manhattan Chapter, No. 3, of the
World American Veterans of the
World, held a meeting last Friday evening at 70
Moylan place, with Oliver Y. Gray,
commander, presiding.
Many new applicants were received.
A mass meeting drive for
members was adopted as it is the
chapter's chapter to count
every member with the object
enabled American Veterans of the
World War and its benefits, as we
are informed that many veterans
in our community need the assistance
of such an organization.
Those veterans have Halvorson,
financial secretary of Greater New York Chapter, who spoke very encouragingly of the
success of the chapter and offered
THE NEW YORK AGE
every assistance 'to promote this chapter; State Adjutant Paul P. Tahy who is well known to the man of Manhattan Chapter as he was the one who installed the officers. The National Commander, William J. Murphy of Cincinnati, Ohio, was escorted to the meeting by the mayor of Greenberg. He gave a heart to heart talk which was enjoyed by all.1
SUB-DEBS GUEST OF
MISS. GLADYS. BOSS
The members of the Sub-Debs Club were entertained at the home of Miss Gladys Ross, 470 Convent avenue, Saturday afternoon, February 22. At conclusion of the meeting, during which planners for future activities of the club were mapped out, a delicious collation was served by the hostess members present were: Misses Major, John Baker, Baker Muriel Payne, Ruby Allie Beatrice Ellegor, Vivienne Lewis, Marguerett Boyd, Cassie Johnson, and Fredericka Moore
WALL STREET BOYS ISSUE UNIQUE INVITATION
A unique invitation has been issued by the Wall Street Boys for their pre-Lenten dance which will be given on Friday evening, March 7. The invitation is in the form of a stock certificate and on the outside of the room in the certificates read Wall Street boys, Inc. Preferred Stock. 200 Shares and the time and place of the event.
The inside of the certificate certifies that the bearer is the owner of Two-Hundred Shares of the Preferred Stock of the Pre-Lenten dance given by the Wall Street Boys Inc., in the Renaissance casino, 138th street and Seventh avenue, Friday evening, March 7.
Officers and members of this club are Charles E. Handy; president; Thomas Stroud, vice-president; Samuel Morgan, secretary; Charles Treasurer; Walter Bray, assistant treasurer; Edward Sergent-at-arms. The board of directors is composed of Thomas L. brown, chairman; Albert U. Jones, Herman Wallace, Herbert Morgan, Cornelius Price, Charles Harris, Baird Wright, Thomas Carter, Samuel Baird Wright, Thomas Carter, James Rucker, Edmund Dwyer, Waven Poyas, William Wormley, Frank Brighthaupt, George H. Brown, Joseph Carter, Walter Dandridge, Nodie Williams, James Powell, Richard P, Nicholls, Roosevelt R, Richard P, Ball, Edward Brown, Joseph Bray, Oliver Cooper, Lloyd Brown and Alfred Jackson.
UTOPIA JUNIOR LEAGUE
The Utopia Junior League, a group of the elite maids and matrons of New York City, entertained a number of their friends at George Washington Birthday Party, part of the annual New York House, 170 West 130th street, on Friday evening, February 21. The club was organized for the purpose of sponsoring the play-school of the Utopia House and other acts of social service. This group sponsored a series of events belying benefited the at the Utopia House once each month. The first one is scheduled for the 28th of February. All are welcome.
The members of the club are: Marguerite White, president; Mrs. Elyse Hunter, secretary; Saddella Tylle, vice president; Melissa White, Mesdames Carlson Pavel Jackson, Ruth Jacobs Walters, Savannah Coles, Emmy Jenkins, Claudia Gibson, Dorothy Boyd, Paige, Constance Johnson, May Dore Day, Misses Virgina Boyd, Gertrude Bingham and Leanora E. Prittchett, club advisor.
EOUITY PROGRESSIVE CLUB
On February 23 there was a meeting of the members of the Equity Progressive Club Plans for their forthcoming 'Blue and White' meeting on Monday night at the Renaissance were discussed and delegated to the various committee. The acceptance of an honorary mentor from the London Bowlin of 180 Edgecombe venue was a highlight of the meeting.
SCOUTING
All Harlem troops of Boy Scouts are working for the Manhattan Council Rally, which will take place at the 102nd Engineers Army, 168th street, west of Broadway, on March 22. The program will begin at 11 a.m., signaling buildup, knot-tying and dressing race. No one scout can enter into more than two events. Contestants must be in uniforms. Shoes with hooks are not permitted, low shoes can be used; breeches must have the correct number of belt loops. Scout's desiring to enter this contest, attend the Scout meeting, complete details may be secured. Scoutmasters are urged to attend the Scoutmasters' meeting on Monday evening, March 3. Send your patrol leaders to the Patrol Leaders' Training Course, being conducted under supervision. Scoutmasters I, II and Asbury. Scoutmaster I next meet Friday, February 28, from 7:30 to 9:30, Urban League Building.
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3 KILLED, 4 MISSING WHEN POCKETS RELEASE 900 TONS OF COAL
Three men are known dead and four others are still said to be missing when 900 tons of coal spilled from two collapsed steel pockets at the McNulty Brothers Coal Company, 171st street and the Harlem River, Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock.
The bodies of two colored workmen, Brown Stewart, 50, of 364 West 119th street, and Walter Adams, 50, of 268 West 14th street, have been recovered along with that of a white man about 50 who is known only as O'Rourke. Two other colored workmen, George Cotter, *252 West 14th street and Jesses Pilgram, 20, of 2840 Eighth avenue, were treated at Morissagia Hospital for minor injuries. They were partially buried in the deluge of coal. The shed, which held six pockets of 500 tons capaciy each, was newly constructed and was being filled with coal at the time of the crash. Immediately after the crash, firemen, police engeney crews and lightning company employees with volunteer crews of operators drove steam showers to the site, where search for other workers believed to be buried in the mountain of coal.
Because some of the men were part-time workers and other got paid by the 'job, company officials could not tell by a check-up of employees how many were missing but it is believed that 4 men are still missing
Negro Baker Is Ousted From Union Because of Color; Was Foreman
Negro Baker Is Ousted From Union Because of Color; Was Foreman
"The lot of the colored man is hard," said Arthur F Cunningham, 100 West 119th street, a master baker, who has been foreman in some of the biggest bakeries in the city, for he has recently been Food Workers Union, which has recognized him as a foreman baker since September, 1926.
Mr Cunningham came to the city in May, 1926, from Norfolk, Va., where he had been a foreman in the city, and immediately after coming to the city he went to Denville, N. J., where he worked for a whole season as a pastry baker.
After the season was up, Mr Cunningham came to New York and became a member of the Union, where he was recognized as a forman. And then came a day when union officials called him to an executive meeting, refused to allow him to work in union shops and took aawk his
One of the officials, a German, told him "you should know that you are not wanted in this union," he was dismissed from the union. Since then he has been trying hard to get back into the union but without success, and all but one of the officers ordered him to be a gangham, because there were no charges of any sort filed against him through the union.
Alcidian Club Gives
Seventh Annual
Pre-Lenten Affair
Alcidian Club Gives
Seventh Annual
Pre-Lenten Affair
The Alcidian Club, an association of Harlemites, many of whom are well known in the business and professional life of Harlem, was host to 700 guests at the Rockefeller Avenue, on Friday last week. It was called the seventh pre-Lenten reception of the club but that was merely a formal description for the affair.
To be sure, it couldn't be fairly spoken of as a revelry, yet, as the members of the club created hall, the assembly of expensively gowned women and corrected men and the hundreds of tables, on which reposed those things that are rather conducive to conviviality, it was obvious that the term reception" was a most tame name for a Roman fee with all the trimmings.
However, there need he no cavilating about what The Alecandrians choose to call their annual fete. Lake in everything else, the name of the affair was simply incidental to the delightful and highly enjoyable features furnished by the hosts. Those features, besides the ones already mentioned, were the serving of a course dinner, a revue program from the Lenox Club and dancing. The musical program was furnished by John C. Smith's Society Orchestra. Officer's office were George Grorger president, J. C. Branson, vice-president, D. Edward Smith, financial secretary; Dr. L. R. Middleton, corresponding secretary, and James H. Thomas, treasurer.
& ENTERTAINMENT
By The
L GRAND LODGE
State of New York
ND PALACE
Eighth Avenue
FEBRUARY 27, 1930
MONARCH MRLODIANS
GAGES $3 BOXES $5
130 Seventh Avenue, Bradhurst 1234;
E. Mack, Andubon 6417-6418; J. L.
wes Rivers, Lodge Room 280 West
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STRAY HORSE PROVIDES A POLICE PROBLEM 135th St. Station Cops Up Against It As Nag Gets Stuck In Door
Early Thursday morning, Patrolman Turner of the West 135th street police station, while patrolling his heat, found a stray horse wandering aimlessly down the street with apparently no destination in mind. Now the books say nothing about the procedure of taking a stray horse, so putting a call through to the police station, Patrolman Turner got Sergeant Neeley on the phone and asked him what should be done. The sergeant was nonplussed, so he asked Lieutenant Sheridan, who was on desk duty. And here's where the story lies.
The littenant was so engrossed in what he was doing, that he mistook the sergeant's question, and told the sergeant to tell the patrolman to "bring him in."
Always obedient, Patrolman Turner brought his arrest in. But the horse was a little too large for the station house doors, and when the patrolman tried to squeeze the horse through the door, the horse stuck, half-way in and half-way out.
While the master minds of New York's finest treed to figure how to free the horse, who was being Patrolman Branched came to the rescue. It seemed that Patrolman Branch had had some experience with horses, being a former mule driver in the army, a little coogee, a dog, a horse, and the poor horse was free, at least from detention by the doors.
Safety Window Patented By Negro Inventor
Safety Window Patented By Negro Inventor
Gerald Thomas, 236 West 121st street, has received a patent from the Patent Office, Washington, D.C. on his invention, a Safety Window for the safety of window washers at the present time getting outside the window to wash outside panes. By installation of his patented window, Mr. Thomas says all windows can be made reversible. The window will not be uniglazed. The window will be made reversible. The new window will be a sliding lange which will be attached to both sides of the window frame and which is not seen unless one wishes to reverse the window pane through the financial assistance of Dr. Godfrey Nurse, prominent physician, Mr. Thomas was able to work over and perfect the invention which has just been patented
Noted Georgians Lauded By Ga. Friendly Society
Noted Georgians Lauded By Ga. Friendly Society
The Georgia Friendly Circle, an organization composed of women from Georgia, Mrs Amanda Middletown, president, sponsored a tea at the Bellman's Association, 308 St. Nicholas avenue, Sunday afternoon, February 23, from 4 to 7 o'clock.
More than 300 friends gathered to exchange greetings and cooperate in furthering the growth of this organization.
A musical and literary program was given, the principal speakers were Mrs. Anna Arnold, Y. C. A. Caplan, and sponsor who spoke on "Women"; Mrs. Bessie J. Bearden, representing the Chicago Defender, and Robert J. Douglass, who said in part:
"Georgia is proud of such characters as Richard R. Wright, Miss Luey C. Lanye, Rev William J. Williams, Jr., George S. Mayne) Williams and Albert A. Abbas] laid the foundation which forms the present status of the race."
He appealed to the group to use their talents and interest in the development of racial enterprises in Harlem and urged that in this present day civilization we demand and accept nothing less than an equal share in America and what it has to offer.
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Joint Birthday Program By Pupils of P. S. 119
More than 1,000 people crowded the auditorium of Public School 119, with standing room at a premium, on Thursday evening, February 20, the occasion being a joint celebration of the birthdays of George Washington, Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln and Booker T. Washington, under auspices of the Parents' Association of that school, Alderman Fred R Moore, chairman.
An unusually interesting program had been arranged, with plays, drill dances and other features by pupils of different classes: splendid music the school choir and addresses the lives of the great men whose birthdays were being celebrated.
The opening chorus, "Roll, Jordan, roll," by the Bye Club, under direction of Mrs. Robert Club, was followed by a group of quotations by girls of the 64A and 60p classes. Then came a play, "Washington's Birthday, under direction of Miss Hubert, and a Kimmel by girls of 64A, trained by Mrs. Blanche Hudson.
"An American Citizen Talks to an immigrant" was the offering made by 61B girls, and 64A rendered "Captain, My Captain!" The first formal address was made by Miss Olive Thomas, who spoke on Booker T. Washington, and then came on a big bit of the musical singing a Melody by the Glee Club, with Mrs. Peace and Mrs. Hunt in charge.
Miss Lucille Spence spoke on Abraham Lincoln and George Washington, an composition on Frederick Douglass was read by Odessa Potts, 64A, and Madeline O'Connor, 2A, spoke of George Washington. A play, Good Example, was given by 64A, and Rose Annapole, and Patriotic Drill was directed by Mrs. Washberg.
Mrs. Meské, assistant principal, spoke in place of Miss Anna E Lawson, principal, who was ill, and the chairman, Alderman Moore made a general summary of all that had been said and done. Following the program, refreshments were served in the school cafeteria, under supervision of Mrs. Ira Reid and Mrs. Terry.
Holsey Discusses Business at Library
A discussion on "Business Conditions in Harlem," was held at the 58th street library, on Wednesday, April 10, at Albon L. Holsey, secretary of the National 'Negro Business' League, who is now organizing the colorer merchants' of New York, spoke. Among those invited to take part in the discussion were W. M. Naight, George L. Clayton, James Salley, Emuel L. Foster, Julius M. Miegle L. Blocker, Lester A. Walton. There is being exhibited in the Division of Negro Literature and History the original illustrations of Aaron Douglas, taken from "Black Magic" by Paul Morand, and those of Charles Cullen, who illustrator of Cullen's books, "Color" Copper Sun and "Black Christ." These illustrations will be on view until March 20.
Man Held For Throwing Friend Out of Window
A Saturday night alteration between two men reached a climax when one threw the other out of a window and resulted in the arraignment of Bennie Baker, 18 of West Street, on Sunday before Magistrate Capohawk in Washington Heights Court on charge of felonious assault, Baker was held in 2,500 ball for hearing Thursday. Baker is said to have seized Jerry Penn, 140 West 142nd street, during an argument in his home on Saturday night and thrown him body out of the first floor window. Baker's a possible fracture of the skull, was taken to Hospital by Detective Flinter of the West 14th street police station who was summoned by neighbors.
Patrolman Seizes Still 30 Feet From P. S. 89 And Arrests Two Men
Following the explosion of a still opposite a school building in Brooklyn, the Police Department and the Tenement House Department have been making a thorough investigation of damages to the immediate surroundings all school buildings. In Harlem, Patrolman Edward H. Green of the West 135th street police station found a 40-gallon still in full operation at 109 West 135th street, less than 30 feet from Public School 89 and arrested two men. The man, giving names of George Clinton and Jeb Bush, that address were taken before United States Commissioner Cotter and held in $1,000 bail for hearing March 5. The still was operated on the fourth floor of the building. Besides the still, Patrolman Green, seized 12 barrels of mash.
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YWCA CLASSES OFFER VARIETY OF OPPORTUNITIES Educational Department Exhibit Attracted Much Attention
It is highly probable that few people saw the class exhibits during the anniversary without a desire to join a class. It is astonishing that such marvelous results come from such simple processes: one shows how, and in many cases, the learning is, and take lovely parchment lamp shades which are highly expensive in the shops. They are both simple and inexpensive to make. So it is with other kinds of home decorations and with French flower making and millinery. Even dressmaking and designing taken step by step, loses its beauty and its value, these and many other subjects have just begun and there is still time to register!
February and March are "low peak" health months—low for health high for sickness and it is the time when special health precautions must be taken. Exercise is a precaution most vital and most often neglected in the shut-in city life. The Physical Department offers a special pool and gym—that is as much fun as benefit. Register now!
Mrs. Josephine Pinyon-Holmes employment director in the Branch and Mrs. Emma Shields-Penn, education director, attended the Conference Information Guidance held in Atlantic City February, 18, to 23.
Misses Thelma Mims and Veek Dolhine and Mrs. Mabelle Williams attended the Nationwide Business Girls' Banquet at Alice Foote McDougall's Girl's Shop. The McDougalls were W. A. business girls all over this country, and in many foreign lands were holding banquets at the same time, and greetings were received in New York from California, from India from India, and from may other factions away from them; the them used at all the banquet was
Youth, youth must lead
About five hundred girls from
Brooklyn and Maghattan attended
the banquet.
Luther Burke, War Vet.
Given Military Funeral
Luther Burke, War Vet.
Given Military Funeral
Luther Burke, 42, war veteran who died at Bellevue Hospital on February 19, following an illness of only three days, was buried with military honors at the National Cemetery in Brooklyn on Monday, after funeral services at the chapel of Duncan Brothers. A detachment of the 80th Inf. N. Y. N. G. accompanied the body to the "cemetery. There was also a military escort from the Dorrence Brooks Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars. The late Mr. Burke was a sailor and served during the world war in the United States Navy. Although he had been suffering from stomach trouble for some time he was not considered seriously sick until Foster when he was removed to Bellevue. He leaves a window, the former Miss Lispenard Burke of Fortsmouth, Va., a brother and several other relatives.
Amsterdam News Employee
Held In $2,000 Bail On
Felonious Assault Charge
Amsterdam News Employee
Held In $2,000 Bail On
Felonious Assault Charge
George Garnetta, 28, of 2293 Seventh avenue, an employee of the Amsterdam News, was held in $2,000 bail for hearing March 4 when arraigned before Magistrate Sulbermann in Harlem Court on charges of assaulting a passenger from an automobile accident. According to police, Garnetta was driving on Lenox avenue near 125th street on Friday night when his car struck John Brooks, 101 West 127th street. Brooks was to a Harlem loss officer, suffering from a possible fracture of the skull.
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THE TARIFF IN THE SENATE.
A good many years ago a Democratic candidate for the Presidency was held up to derision by Republicans and Democrats alike because he insisted that the tariff was a local issue. Some years later a Democratic partisan aroused Republican scorn by training a parrot to reiterate the declaration that the tariff is a tax which the orthodox Republican would not admit. A greater interest in the principles of tariff making and a more intelligent handling of the subject, with regard to the schedules, has shown that very often the tariff is a local issue, in that it benefits or harms a certain industry, and in all cases it is bound to be a tax, because it is always added to the cost of the goods and passed on to the ultimate consumer.
Tariff making by the present Congress has, therefore, been regarded with more than ordinary interest, because of the fact that more people have come to realize that changes in the tariff law, nearly always increases, are reflected in additions to the cost of living. The present revision of the tariff was undertaken in response to the demand for farm relief, it being the intention to help the farming industry by placing a duty on foreign farm products, so that the farmer might be relieved of competition and secure higher prices for his domestic products.
But the process of revision did not run in the right direction. The House of Representatives gave some slight protection to the farmer, but also proceeded to increase the tariff on many kinds of manufactured goods, thereby increasing the profits for American manufacturers but also increasing the cost of these goods to the people at large, including the farmers. While a protective tariff on hides might add a few cents to the price that the Western cattle raiser received for his cattle, he found that an increased tariff on boots and shoes resulted in a greater increase in the price of footgear for himself and family. An increase in the tariff on sugar resulted in increasing the cost of the household budget with only a raise in the price of sugar beets as the farmer's reward. The same thing was found to be true in nearly all items of clothing and farming utensils.
This revision of the tariff did not commend itself to the farming interests, nor indeed to any of the class of ultimate consumers. The women voters especially were not pleased to find that these tariff changes would add materially to the cost of women's clothing, as was pointed out by a woman representative from New Jersey. So when the tariff bill came to the Senate, the Western Senators and the Democrats combined to reduce the schedules that had been increased in the House. The process of confining the changes to the original purpose of aiding the farmers has been lost sight of and the revision of the tariff has taken the old lines of increasing profits for the manufacturers of the East, with but scant regard for the farmers and the community at large.
Now, the Senate appears in the unfamiliar role of the protector of the farmer and popular interests in general, including the ultimate consumer. This is a strange role for the Senate, which has always been looked upon as the champion of the Trusts and the Interests, or Big Business in general. But, it must be remembered that the Senate is not what it used to be, since its members are now elected by popular vote. Time was when the State legislators elected United States Senators, without any help from the people. Now Senators have to get the votes of the average citizen the same as any other candidate. This has worked a great change in the kind of men elected to the Senate. Hence their interest in modifying tariff raising to the pocket of the consumer
RUNNING AGAINST DE PRIEST.
Ever since Representative Oscar De Priest of Chicago was elected to Congress from Chicago, in place of the late Congressman Madden, there have been reports of other members of his race who propose to enter the field against him for a renomination. It is significant that the publisher of the Chicago Defender, who was thought to be his most prominent
rival, did, not file his intention to run against the present member of Congress. Inatead, it is reported that Roscoe Conkling Simmons complied with the election laws, by filing petitions for his nomination duly signed by registered voters, with the Illinois Secretary of State.
This filing of intention to run for Congress by Simmons is not to be taken too seriously, as the prospective candidate is not averse to newspaper notice of any kind or for any reason. An entertaining talker and a newspaper writer of considerable descriptive power, Mr. Simmons has been known for years to many people in various parts of the country. But in the role of lawmaker, it is not likely that he could make the weight. His early essays at any serious political activity, aside from glowing stump speeches to not too critical audiences, were not much of a success.
To the disinterested observer in this part of the country, there does not appear to be any sound reason why Representative De Priest should not have a second term, which the voters of Chicago will probably give him in any event. The only object of fomenting opposition to him among the Negro voters is apparently to get them divided, and so bring about his defeat and possibly make it possible to put a white man in his place, either Democrat or Republican. This would be very poor politics for the colored voters of Chicago to play, and they do not as a rule play that kind of politics.
The sentiment of the race at large appears to be that Representative De Pries should be kept in Congress. With the experience that he will have acquired in his first two years, he will be twice as valuable as a representative in his second term. While he may have made some tactical errors of politics and said some things in his speeches that were not opportune, he has always shown himself to possess courage and dignity. He deserves a renomination and re-election, and if the voters of his district are wise, they will see that he gets both by an overwhelming vote.
Petty opposition to Mr De Priest's candidacy should be discouraged
REVOLT AMONG REPUBLICANS.
The spirit of revolt against present leaders appears to be rife among the rank and file of Republicans, and unless something is done to allay its fury, it spells disaster at the polls for Republican candidates in the near future. This spirit of revolt may have started among the lawmakers themselves, where we find the Senate divided against itself, with the insurgents voting with the Democrats to defeat legislation proposed by the regular wing of the party. With this precedent to guide them, it is no wonder that the ordinary voter voices his discontent with party policies and supports candidates of the opposition.
Over in Brooklyn we find the Italian Republican clubs changing their title, by substituting the word Democratic for Republican, and transferring their allegiance to the majority party. Nicholas Selvaggi, the leader of this group of voters, announced his withdrawal from the Republican organization on the ground that the party in Brooklyn had failed to give proper consideration to the Italian voters. As Selvaggi himself has at various times held office under Republicans as Assistant District Attorney in Kings county. Special Assistant United States Attorney General and Deputy State Attorney General, his complaint can hardly be regarded as personal.
In New York county the members of the Young Republican Club are insistent that the party leaders must take a decided stand on the subject of Prohibition, presumably for the repeal of the amendment, as the endorsement of dry candidates or dry legislation is denounced as leading only to the defeat of the party in the coming state election. Then there are other symptoms of revolt directed against the county and district leaders in all the boroughs. Most of the district leaders are charged with utter indifference to the future prospects of the party, so long as they can secure Federal offices for themselves and their favorites. Hence, the state of dry rot and disintegration in party ranks.
The Negro voters are not without their own peculiar grievances, growing out of the discriminations practiced against them because of race or color, in many of the Federal offices under the control' of Republicans. This has helped to promote a division of their votes, in which many of them find reasons for support of the Democracy in municipal and State elections. As the white Republican leaders discourage the enrollment of colored voters, in the same way that they neglect to build up their party among the whites, the delay of Republican organization is accelerated in New York City. In the two Negro districts in Harlem the party organizations have taken on new life under Negro leadership. There is need for a reorganization of the
THE NEW YORK AGE
Republican party in Greater New York, if it is to cut any figure at all in the coming state election.
LACK OF COORDINATION.
It used to be in keeping with the ethics of the newspaper profession to be able to say that the editorial department was strictly independent of the advertising and circulation departments, in other words that the business management of the paper had nothing to do with the editorial policy. Of course, this was not always strictly true, as most newspapers are primarily business enterprises and an editorial policy that drove away advertisers and readers would not long survive. But, be this as it may, it is not often that we come across so striking a lack of coordination between the news and the editorial departments, as was displayed in the Pittsburgh Courier during the past few weeks.
In its issue of February 8, the Courier printed an editorial on "The Telegraph Trust and the Negro," in which it defended the absence of a more liberal employment policy toward colored people on the part of the Western Union and the Postal Telegraph Companies. It took notice of the new departure promised by the former company for Harlem, in the following pessimistic strain:
The New York Age reports that the Western Union Telegraph Company has decided to modify its policy by putting Negro messengers and clerks under a Negro manager in its Harlem office. Let us hope this is true. It hasn't happened yet, but we can continue to hope that it will.
And yet in its issue of February 22, we and the news department of the Courier culturing over the realization of the promise unded a double column headline, proclaiming "What the Courier Accomplished." In addition it published the following modest summary of "Cause" and Effect":
Republican,party in Greater New York if it is to cut any figure at all in the coming state election.
LACK OF COORDINATION. It used to be in keeping with the ethics of the newspaper profession to be able to say that the editorial department was strictly independent of the advertising and circulation departments, in other words that the business management of the paper had nothing to do with the editorial oplicy. Of course, this was not always strictly true, as most newspapers are primarily business enterprises and an editorial policy that drove away advertisers and readers would not long survive. But, be this as it may, it is not often that we come across so striking a lack of coordination between the news and the editorial departments, as was displayed in the Pittsburgh Courier during the past few weeks.
In its issue of February 8, the Courier printed an editorial on "The Telegraph Trust and the Negro," in which it deplored the absence of a more liberal employment policy toward colored people on the part of the Western Union and the Postal Telegraph Companies. It took notice of the new departure promised by the former company for Harlem, in the following pessimistic strain:
The New York Age reports that the Western Union Telegraph Company has decided to modify its policy by putting Negro messengers and clerks under a Negro manager in its Harlem office. Let us hope this is true. It hasn't happened yet, but we can continue to hope that it will.
And yet in its issue of February 22, we find the news department of the Courier exulting over the realization of the promise unded a double column headline, proclaiming "What the Courier Accomplished." In addition it published the following modest summary of "Cause" and "Effect":
THE CAUSE.
In the February 8th issue of The Pittsburgh Courier, the appeared an editorial notice the heaping "The Telegraph Trust and the Negro, deriding the fact that the telegraph companies failed to employ race help.
At the same time, a "Holloway" cartoon gave the editorial added force.
THE EFFECT.
Last week, the Western Union released the above picture of New York City's first group of colored Western Union messenger boys.
The boys are working out of the office located at 210 West 135th street, in the heart of Harlem and officials declare the office is soon to be managed by an all colored staff. The boys, all dressed up and rarin' to go, are left to right: James Walker, Charles Jones, Joseph Adams, George A. Murry and Harold Watkins.
Evidently the ingenious news department of the Courier can read more into a editorial than the editorial department ever conceived to be possible. Is it the use of a journalistic Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Kyde? or, can it be an irreverent headliner merely jollying the staid and dignified editorial department of his own paper? Weve it up.
Evidently the ingenuous news department of the Courier can read more into an editorial than the editorial department ever conceived to be possible. Is it the case of a journalistic Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde? or, can it be an irreverent headliner merely jollying the stad and dignified editorial department of his own paper? We give it up.
FUNCTIONS OF A BANK.
In his comment on a recent change of banking policy by the Dunbar National bank, the new president of that institution, Charles C. Huitt, threw considerable light on the functions of a bank outside the mere receiving of deposits and payment of drafts, or checks. The change made in the bank's rate of interest paid in accounts in its savings department, from three to four per cent., was for the purpose of encouraging greater thrift
In his comment on a recent change of banking policy by the Dunbar National Bank, the new president of that institution, Charles C. Huitt, threw considerable light on the functions of a bank outside of the mere receiving of deposits and payment of drafts, or checks. The change made in the bank's rate of interest paid on accounts in its savings department, from three to four, per cent., was for the purpose of encouraging greater thrift among the people of Harlem. The old rate presented too great a disparity with the regular savings bank rate, even though the Dunbar Bank could give its depositors a wider range of service than the ordinary savings bank.
A word of caution was issued as to the present situation in the matter of buying property in Harlem. As an investment it was pronounced precarious, where the wouldbe buyer is only able to acquire a small equity without any financial resources to fall back upon, in case, of inability to secure renewal of mortgages as they fall due. The overhead expenses of keeping the property in repair and promptly meeting taxes, water rates, assessments for improvements and other details, have to be met from income. In case the income is checked by vacancies or any kind of disaster, the owner's equity is in jeopardy from foreclosure proceedings.
Buying property on a small equity was pronounced equivalent to speculating in the stock market, which many a Harlemite has found to be a hazardous undertaking on a small margin. Here is where the advantages of a thrift account are emphasized, as affording a sure return at a fair rate of interest regularly credited to the depositor. The main purpose of the bank, however, is to help the Negro to help himself, by the exercise of thrift and economy. Advice and service in financial matters are among the things that the institution offers the public, in all matters relating to investments. The promotion of thrift among the people of the community is the summing up of the many reasons for the establishment of this bank. In order to enable the bank to render
THE CAUSE
THE EFFECT
the fullest measure of service to the community, it should be given a sufficient volume of business to ensure its earning a fair return on its capital. This can be done by opening accounts, either for savings or for checking purposes. Advice on investments can be obtained from its officers and the details of such transactions ar-
COMMENTS BY THE AGE EDITORS ON SAYINGS OF OTHER EDITORS
Referring to the protest made by a group of Indians against "Virginia's 1930 Edition of Racial Integrity," the Norfolk Journal and Guide said:
A group of Virginia Indians are protesting against the measure on the ground that its assumen would automatically cause a number of them to revert to the racial status of Negroes. The anti-marriage law makes an exception for Indian blood by classifying as white all persons having one-sixteenth or less of the blood of the Indian and no other non-Caucasian blood.
But while the Negroes of Virginia are only passively interested in this legislative dolphin they are at times amused at the antics thrown by the American Indian whenever there is an intimation that he may be classified as a Negro. If the Indian dreads the racial status of Negroes, he dreads it no less than the Negroes would be affronted at having him cast upon them as a co-racialist. If the Indian has not already advanced too far toward mental and physical decadence to understand, he will probably be surprised to learn that the Sons of Africa regard themselves as a vigorous and up-coming race, assimilating modern civilization and culture, while they look upon him with pity as a dead and dying race and would prefer none of him as a racial fellow. Yet neither prefer a dying life when diversed in his tribal status, let him have it. That race is doublest better able to carry a dying appendage than the Negro. About the only Negro ever heard to boast of his Indian extraction was one who gloated over his traits of cunning and mischief for which he held his Indian blood responsible.
But what about the merits of the hill itself? Traced to its logical end it comes up against a pathetic and rather tragic impasse, which will in reality constitute a defeat of its own purpose.
The Virginia editor showed that the ways in which such laws defeat themselves might be outlined indefinitely. He insisted that affirmative legislation, making every father legally bound to give his offspring his name and support, would give the most telling blow to miscegenation.
Propounding the somewhat surprising query, "Can We Sing?" the Chicago Sunday Bee made the following criticism of racial progress in vocal music.
In a recent contest between the glee clubs and other contests of the students of the high schools of Chicago the best the representatives of our group could do was to secure third prize. Perhaps the colored students were not blame. Perhaps they received the identical training the other contestants did, but the fact is our group was at a distinct disadvantage in that their background of music was poor, their community singing had been neglected and they could not cope with the whites from those high schools composed largely of students of foreign extraction whose musical backgrounds and traditions were superior to our group.
Our music critics are too charitable in their criticisms of our adults, our choirs and our community and congregational singing. They should be severe and exacting in their criticisms of our singers and our singing. It is the only way by means of which our singing will be improved and will be an end to save to our group the last vestige of hope we have to return to our reputation as great singers. The white artists are filling their programs with our music on the concert stage. Soon white singing groups will appropriate our spirituals, chants and other melodies and we will beawal our fate in discordant wails.
The remedy suggested was to "pep our singing" and the National Association of Colored Musicians was called upon to initiate improvement through its locals in church and community music.
Contrasting the actions of "A Lawless Mob and a Lawful Jury," in two recent tragedies in Georgia, the Savannah Journal said:
Last Saturday two notable events occurred in Georgia, which caused much comment: by the press of the state and will probably be discussed for some time by editors, ministers and inter-racial committees. One of the tragedies happened in Twain County. Ocelli said an infuriated mob numbering about five hundred persons snatched from an officer of the law a Negro suspected of an atrocious double crime—assault and murder of—a young white woman. After riddling his body with bullets and cutting his throat they then engaged in a heathenish performance by saturating the lifeless body with gasoline and tossing it into a pile of burning logs.
The other incident took place at Walkinville in Orange County, an different section of the state. Instead of hearing asemblance of the south Georgia outrage, it was exactly contrary to the heedless mockery of the mad members of the mob who flaunted their feeble whims in the face of constituted authority and placed upon their state and section
ranged through the proper authorities. Then the stock of the Dunbar Bank itself may be acquired by those farsighted individuals, who are looking into the future and desire to get in on the ground floor of a profitable enterprise. The Dunbar Bank is prepared to play an important role in the material development of Harlem.
a stigma that even time cannot efface. In this case, two white men were charged with the brutal murder of an aged Negro couple, with robbery as the motive. They were given a fair and impartial trial by due process of law, and after the jury heard the evidence and facts, a verdict of guilty was rendered and the murderers sentenced to the electric chair. Both epms were horrible and deplorable and deserved the same penalty, but what a vast difference in the procedure.
The lynching while stated to be the first in Georgia for three years, shows that the mob spirit though dormant still survives. It will be interesting to note whether the white murderers suffer the death penalty to which they were sentenced.
The Atlanta Independent recently published a list of census supervisors for the sixteen districts of Georgia, with the following comment:
The census is supposed to be a non-partisan function of the Government from which no citizen is supposed to be barred on account of race or color; but, a careful survey of the hist disclosures the fact that not a single Negro is selected as supervisor, though the Negro constitutes 40 per cent of the population and only one known Republican is given a place The Democrats get 15 districts, the Republicans one and Negroes nothing.
Prof. Wm. Burson is the only supervisor who is known to the editor of the Independent as a Republican. In fact, the Secretary of the Republican organization in the state never heard of either of the other supervisors and didn't know there were such persons on earth. Our information is that these Democrats voted for Mr. Hoover in 1928, and were given these places as rewards for bolting the Democrat ticket in 1928. Thousands of white Republicans in the state have been voting the Republican ticket for 40 years, but their loyalty to the Republican Party doesn't count: the patronage was given to the democrats as a reward for their treachery and "disloyalty" to their own party, despite the fact that they have returned body and boot to the Democratic Party, and will enter the Democratic primary in May and September.
These places pay from $1,500 to $2,000 and expenses, and these fifteen Democrats will be well paid for their one vote. The Republican referee will have some trouble explaining this discrimination against his party.
As Editor B. J. Davis of the Independent was formerly Republican National Committeeman for Georgia, his chagrin at seeing this census patronage bestowed upon Democrats, is easily understood.
Contending that the Texas statute intended to bar Negroes from voting in the Democratic primary has proved a boomerang to one of its authors, the Houston Informer said:
Meeting at Austin last Saturday the Democratic state executive committee voted to deny all "Hoovercats" (Democrats who supported and voted for President Hoover in the 1928 general election) a place on the official ballot of the party at the primary elections which will be held in Texas during next July. This action was aimed directly at State Senator Thomas B Love of Dallas, who was active in the Hoover camp during 1928 and who has already announced his candidacy for governor of the state at the July primaries. In discussing the committee's action, Senator Love is quoted in the newspapers as saying that the committee refused to bar Negroes from participation in the summer primaries and that the Democrats, while denying him the right to appear on the party's official ballot as a subrostrate candidate
The Dallas solon also stated that he was one of the authors of the present state statute which empowered the executive committees of Texas political parties to pass upon the eligibility of participants in such nominating elections, and he seemed to have felt outraged that he should be barred as a candidate by the committee's action.
Thus it begins to appear that one of the authors of this civil statute is the first man to feel its sting, and that the law is about to prove a boomerang to the North Texas politician.
Originally designed and passed to bar Negroes from participating in the Democratic primaries in Texas, after the United States Supreme Court had invalidated the infamous "white man's primary" statute, the new measure seems deigned to cause its co-author the same amount of trouble and expense, as anticipated by its proponents for the colored citizens of this state, to test its validity.
It is remarkable how often measures of a discriminatory nature recoil upon the instigators of them because confusion and disaster. As a homely proverb puts it, "Chickens come home to toast."
The lack of legal punishment for murder in Florida, where both kill-
medical tests began on Tuesday February 25, at 9 a. m.; and continue almost every day practically up to July 15, the first day of the written examination.
The Federal Civil Service Commission is offering an examination for the young boy for message boy. March 21 is the last day of filing applications. For application forms and full information regarding this examination, write to the Secretary, 2nd U. S. Civil Service District, Custom House, New York City.
The State Civil Service Commission mission has ordered the "following examinations—Storekeeper's Helper, tabulating machine operator, Grade 3, and stenographer-typist, Grade 3, Watch this column for information regarding the above examinations."
The State Civil Service Commission is offering examinations for accountant at $2,400 a year, several immediate appointments expected. Also for attorney, Department of Law, Land and Title Bureau, several appointments expected at $4,000 a year. March 8 is the last day for filing applications for the two above examinations. File applications at Albany, New York. File this week was another good week for appointments, with over 200 certifications for position in the various departments of the service in New York City. The least list was the one for clerk. Grade 5, with stenographer-typist, list following a close second.
Every week this column will prepare for you interesting and profitable information on Civil Service positions.' Many new examinations will be announced in March. Read your Civil Service column every week. The examination you have been waiting for may be announced any day and you do not want to miss it. If you want a position in the Civil Service-1930 is the year to try for it.
The Week of March 1 Astrologically Considered
The employment will suffer through lack of thoughtfulness in the birthyear of March 6. There seems to be an inheritance likely to many of today. Too much confidence should not be placed in strangers who offer a chance to get rich quick. The money should be invested only through a reliable bank, and those who lend money should never expect it back. The health of a close relative or marriage partner will cause concern. This is a year for patience and the best of judgment, and not for worry. The birthyear for March 7, promises some happiness in social and domestic affairs, but some worry through the employment or business. The who are employed should try to hold to the job. It is necessary to use only patience with the marriage partner or the loved one. This is not a very good year to consider marriage.
The readers who would like to know how to get ahead and to understand the planetary influences that are now affecting them, should send the full name, the birthday month, year, hour and place with a self-addressed envelope and ten stamps to Thearcher, in care at 135th Street, New York, Age 26, West 135th street, New York. This paragraph should accompany the data. All communications are confidential.
Nearly three million students attend public schools, academies, colleges and universities within the borders of New York State. Of that number more than two million are in public school.
Twenty-four hunters were killed and eighty-seven injured in New York State during the shooting season just closed. Last year thirty-two were killed.
The first regular United States Mail Service began with the opening of a Post Office in New York City in 1783.
There are in the United States eleven persons who last year paid taxes on incomes of $5,000,000 or more each. Of these, seven live in New York State, New Jersey, Illinois, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin have one each.
There are in the Empire State 235 butter-making plants, producing more than twelve million pounds a year, and 846 cheese-making plants with a nearly output of nearly fifty million pounds.
Gas and electric utilities of New York State in 1930 will expend more than 125 million dollars, chiefly in new construction to meet the increasing demands for service. Inhabitants of New York State are engaged in 4,338 different occupations. The list runs alphabetically from "abattors" to "tune" and includes such work as decking paper, making magic tricks, training feas and baking noodles. When the Dutch founded New Amsterdam they adopted the currency of the Indians. This was made of discs of pernicious shells and called "sewant." Later on beaverskins were used for more. New York leads all other states in industrial output, with 30,503 factories and products worth nine and one-half billion dollars a year. These factories employ more than a million workers, and pay in wages more than a billion and a half dollars yearly.
The first regular street car service in the United States was started in New York City in 1832 when horse-cars began to run between City Hall and 14th Street. The Empire State is this year spending ninety-eight million dollars for public education, and it is expected that in 1930 the appropriation will exceed 100 million. The State Health Department of New York has established anti-virus stations at Albany, Glenn Falls, Bighamton, Havenstra and New York City for emergency service in case of snake bite.
Here we are at the last week of February and Civil Service has been "going strong", for the past 2 months—both in the way of appointments, which averaged three to four hundred a week, and examinations, which were many for a period of two months.
With the coming of March, the first month of spring, many examinations are scheduled to take place. Stenographer-Typist, Grade 2—The written examinations will cover seven days, March 18, 21, 25, 28 April 1, 4 and 8. About 400 candidates will be examined daily, with both morning and afternoon sessions, 2,903 candidates, are expected to be examined. Two letters will be dictated at the rate of 100 words per minute and one must be transcribed on the typewriter. Also examinations will be held in spelling and letter writing.
Attendant (Male)—This examination will cover two days, March 11 and 12. The questions will cover the duties of the job, arithmetic and handwriting. The entire examination will be written.
Inspector of Steel, Grape 3—Both the medical and mental tests for this examination will be held March 7. Application Dates for City Examinations During March:
Nurse (Female) — Applications open March 4 and close March 18. Age 21 to 35. Candidates must be registered nurses with at least 12 experience, Salary, $1,740 to $1,100. There are 30 vacancies at $2,100 in the department of Health. Supervisor of Recreation Applications open March 4 and close March 18. Duties to plan, organize and supervise the work of a Bureau of Recreation in the Park Department for both children and adults. Experience necessary, Salary $2,500 a year. Many vacancies.
February 26 was the last day for filing applications for the examination for Fireman. The physical and
By "THEARCHER"
Those who begin a birthyear on March 1 will need to safeguard the health, and nearly every one will experience some family changes. The health of some close member of the family will cause some concern. Those who can use patience can accomplish very much of that faraway. Legal matters will only cause loss. This is a business year.
The birthyear for March 2 promises financial success, and unexpected journeys because of family affairs. It is best that no new plans be made, and those who can use patience and keep the pose will be able to make some headway in the birthyear. There is no need to expect the worst in every thing. Plenty of, sleep and rest will help retain the health. Success will come in mental vocations or professions.
Travel, success in mental vocations, and legal matters will bring interest to the birthyear for those of March 3. Family affairs will not be as pleasant as they could be. Patience will help a great deal here. A rather pleasant year aside from family matters
The birthyear for March 4 promises success in business, but a need for care in traveling and around machinery is indicated. Some very important social and family changes are indicated for every one of today. This can be a very successful year in business and employment. It is best to try nothing.
March 3 begins a birthyear that will bring some very romantic events and possible marriage. Legal matters will not turn out well, and it is best that every one of today be very careful of the speech and in writing letters. It is best that no time payments be contracted for, and no money should be loaned or borrowed. Quarrels will lead to serious results.
er and killed are of the darker race, moved the Florida Sentiment of Jacksonville to call for some procedure to "Stop Negroes from Killing Each Other." It said. "
The homicide rate among Negroes is startling. Last year thirty-one Negroes were murdered by Negroes in Duval country. Since December, the Negroes have been slain by Negroes in Duval county. The most surprising thing is the lack of serious punishment meted out to the murderers. Not a single Negro during the past year paid the price for inflicting mortal wounds on Negroes
What becomes of all the murders of Negroes? A casual walk up Broad, down Ashley and up Davis, disclosed the startling result of nine Negroes who were recognized as murdersers of Negroes in Duval county. Most of them were cleared at the preliminary hearing, but all of them free and walking the streets to testify to the laxity of the law when a Negro's life is at stake. In most of the cases the evidence of some irresponsible persons as to the bad character of the white man, and of some white person as to the character of the murderer has been sufficient to clear many Negroes. But, all the while, the law is mocked and murder among Negroes continues at a rapid pace.
The electric chair offers a solution. Murder can be stopped among the "gat towers" and "knife widowers" of the black belt. Drop a few of them through the trap door of the gallows or burn up some of them in the electric chair. Capital punishment may not be the best solution for murder, but it will stop the mockery of the law that has caught Duval county in its palm and made the life of Negroes among Negroes almost valueless.
This is another phase of the reign of helvessness which tolerates mob murder and lynching, showing that the state has abdicated its functions in the protection of life and property.
...
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hit Cerin of the Tiger Flowers
eS jay tiga at Liason Sqonre
t Friday night at Madison Square
dea, when Larry Johnson won
fren of the ten rounds in his fight
Fith Pete Latzo only to have the
dges award the decision to his
nite opponent. About five years
fen tht late Tiger Flowers all but
Ss eed Mike MeTigue out in the
ature - bout and then the judges
sre" McTigue the decision. The
ishman was the most surprised
fn the shoase, when it was an-
‘Sine was the, winner and
3 30° ‘he could hardly walk
the center of the ring. = *
"Latzo was’ likewise surprised by
decision as were most of the 1l,-
Mang who witnessed the contest.
jefore the contest Johnson was “a
"§ faygrite to, win by a knockout.
Because of Latzo's . peculiar style
if Gghting in a half crouch, John-
gwas unable to score a knockout
for the first five rounds he shot
fghts and iclts to Latzo's head from
Hi angles, ‘The _ex-welterweight
spion managed to duck many of
jese blows and cling to Johnson's
idle.
‘Most of the metropolitan dailies
ademned the judges for their un-
ir deciston. A sample of the cri-
jcism directed at: the Boxing Com-
ission may, be gleamed from the
lowing. afticle by Dan Parker,
hich agpeared in The Mirror:
"Those Boxifig Commission judges
ire interpreting their Bible too Jit-
ally of late. When the Good Book
ys that ‘the last shall be first and
first shall be last,’ xt doesn't_re-
ff to decisjons, in bouts at the Gar-
jen But that’s the way the ver-
ets. shape: up.
b How Referee Jim Crowley and
ige George Kelly arrived at_ the
pnclvsion, that Pete Latzo beat Lar-
Johnsen: last Friday might is be-
‘Ad the understanding of most of
ose who sat around ringside and
Ya clear ‘view of proceedings. If
tzo_ beat Johnson, Germany won
World War, Primo Carnera’is a
aber of the Singer Midgets, Rome
built in a day and there 1s a
of The or reasoning seemed to
©24neQ\ Johnson didn't break
thaw 4s bad been predicted
ame of the gentlemen who are
concerned (3t, times) about keep-
ig the game cWeet and pure, he
idn’'t deserve the, decision.
“I thought that Latzo put, upya
ry bia ny exhibition of defensMe
xing. If Larry fad been wielding
fsledge-bammer. he couldn't have
it "Pete, se ertfully did the Chesty
pvak duck, dodge and weave. But
he only end that is gained by de-
fensive boxing 15. self-preservation.
‘pornts ars piled up for- agaras-
rer886 nd punches tanded.
“Pete's| aggrestveness was confin-
to ond round, and even then his
dest Hows were pretty feeble.
the ofher hand. tough Johnson
sted a* million rights, he landed
ften with his left and it was. his
iMingmess to carry the fight to Lat-
ro that made the bout worth look-
gate *
"To some, the decision was 2 de-
jonstration ‘of the long-distance 1n-
uence of Jimmy Johnston, who man-
Aatroy Tf ay ‘sinister influence’
exerted by my good _ friend
ves. it Pertanbe was of the far-
hing type for he was in Méami,
4 mle away.
Tam glad to note, however, that
ugh be ras the victim of an out-
reously rank decision. Johnson will
lose his match with Maxie Ro-
bloom. which was supposed to
Ye been dependent on the outcome
Friday ‘night's scrap
ward Five Defeats
organ In Return Game
ashington, D> C—Howard
erat} defeated Morgan Col
for five vears Intercollegiate
‘ang in basketball, last Mon-
em in the Howard symnas-
with a score of 31-22
he accurate chootng of Wil:
sand Hall from the foul hine
‘ll as Howard'< superb defense
toward the downfall of the
rions Howard scored first
the ball was tapped from
wter of ‘the floor. as a tech:
oul declared on Morgan, {01
to obey the referee's ske-
Yhistle at the beginning of
ne,
the start, "Lanks"* Jones,
1's famous center and Spen-
t forward, rang two bask
rapid succession, which for
nent, looked had to the Bis.
lark, Morgan's star forward
arded’ so. closely by. Smith
was able to get only two
us during the entire game
te at half time was How:
sMorgan Il: ‘
isecond half the champions
1 deeperate effort to over.
} Howard lead pulling. up
“lane pamt of the Risons,
ard rallied to extend it:
Hp st maintained until the
a] game Wilhams, How-
. rtorward “shat ® fouls out
P while Hall, <peedy right
amy ood 3 straights
huyeiminary the Howard
—eegefeated the Morgan
ERD core of 33-29
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(nae lee Seridusly Ill |Lincoln Five Noses THEATRICAL JOTTINGS C The Lafayette Theatre | At The Alhambra Theat
t erian. Hospit J Tim Moore, the versatile and tov-| Dusty Fletcher, famous fu
Presbyterian’ Hospital] Howard Out Before |]. ,, scracaren’ [ase enauent ‘Slay “EIS! man ho seoms tbe having
2 —— i “1500 Yn |e heads & lange and cap-| food a time as the audience
sccatets Lee leading olored we] Orange, NJ.) Tames wernon Jonson |i Seucta Suu fon rerue|Alfembra th weck he And
the Presbyterian Hort vhest — ,, VISITS C. V. B.A, |whtch “eas staged by Irvin Co Mil-| Tribble and George Green
he waeseyterian, Howitgh where! orange, wy Lt It is always pleasant to mect men| ter and S. H. Dudley jr The revue) This trio keep the merrim
Repmaswemitted Tuesddy night,| , Orange N. J—In an exira game| of disunction regardless of race otis called “Say It With Girls." The! going with the assistant of V
HMA 18, upon his return from] Lincoln, University again defeated| color. From time to time individi-| photoplay partion of the program Sfechs, Ida and Berme Bro
Was IGE ee eee Howard's basketball team with a]alz who are interested in the wel-' has, as its feaure, the greatest of all: Grace Rector, and numeous oth
Uz aiMured in an automobile ac-| Score of 25-21. | The game was| fare of humanity are_ seen cFossing' singing, talking, dancing, laughing in the musiéal comedy, "By Mo
repurted (3 Mave conteee ek ecdd| Hocan ahem ea Ver deraey| the, iresbold of the) Colored Vande pictures: “The Hollywood Revue." . | ight.” ’
Feporte = | Howard alumni and was attended] ville Benevolent Association's club|” The cast of “Say It With Girls"| The auburn haired McClain tv
McVey Outpoints
Geo, Smith of. Newark
Jack McVey of Harlem, forme:
holder of the colored middleweight
championship, fighting in the light
heavyweight division, defeated
George Smith of Newark in the
main event of ten rounds St th
Olympia Club last Saturday might
before a crowd of 3000. McVey
weighed 159 pounds and Smith 170
In the semi-final bout, scheduled
for ten rounds, Jose Diaz of Cuba,
knocked out Gus Warman in 2°32
‘of the fifth round. In the other
ten round contest, Blas Rodrigue
of Mexico and Joey Ross of Ho-
boken fought a draw,
peacoat dal
Howard Amounces 1930
- Football Schedule
‘Washington, D. C.—Coach Ver-
dell of the Howard University foot-
ball team announced the following
schedule fog the 1930 season: Octo-
ber 11, Johnson C. Smith University
at Charlotte, .N. C.; October 18,
West Virginia State College at
Howard; October 25, Livingstone
College at Howard; November 1,
Virgima_ State College at _Peters-
burg; November 8, North Carolina
State College at Howard; Novem-
ber 15, Hampton Institute at Hamp-
ton; November 27, Lincoln Univer-
sity at Howard.
Hampton Cagers Beat
Virginia Union, 32-13
Hampton Instnuter Va. — The
Hampton Institute team completely
outclassed the team from Virginia
Union University before a big_holt-
day crowd here February 22 There
were few highlights in the game al-
though the Breaux-Ellis- Pasteur
combine made many ficld goals.. The
| Hampton subs played during the
ast five “minutes of the game.
epaelat of ieee
Harry Smith At
Olympia Club Saturday
Three ten-rounders, a six and four
comprises the fistic dish that Pro-
moter Jess McMahon 1s offering
Olympia Boxing Club fans next Sat-
urday night. Harry’ Smith, Har-
lem's colored middle and hight-
heavyweight contender, battles Osk
Till, of Buffalo. in the feature.
Till, the up-State star was finally
secured as an opponent for the Har
lemitg when other middlewesghts ané
light heavyweights turned offers
down to meet Smith.
‘Smith has been forced many times
to fight above his class weight hmt
ot 160-pounds, because the boxers 11
that class want no part of him,
Negro Art Theatre To
Present New Play At
Their Harlem Studic
Jeroline Hemsley's daring | drama
of Negro Life, "Wade in de Water.”
which was tried out at the Cerry
Lane Theatre last fall, will _ be
brought to. Harlem by the Kew Ne-
gro Art Theatre for the week begin-
fing March 4. The Harlem studio
of the New Negro Art Theatre is
located in the Urhan League Byild:
ing, 202 West 136th street.
The cast announced for “Wade ir
de Water 1s 4s “follows. Tnez
Clough, Hemley Winheld, Larvi
Lorear, Olivia Moore. Leila Gard-
ner. Ada, May. Frankie Barton, Ger-
trude Favde, D. DeWitt Spencet
Beatrice Wells, and others. includ-
ing a large chorus, formerly with
"Great Dav"
Gren ON a aeeeeii
Hackett ceseeseesereerees 0 0 10
Tones, Tn weceesessseeeees St TT
Wheatley ceeermeerreeree 0 0 0
Hones, Wocceceeeeeeeeeene OO 0
Jones, C. aeeereteseeensers UDO
Totals ceeveeseeseeeeee WD 2 22
ADVERTISE
YOUR FURNISHED ROOMS’
IN THE NEW YORK AGE
Linceln Five Noses
Howard Out Before
_ 1500 In Orange, N. J
Orange, N. J.—In an extra game
Lincoln University again defeated
Howard's basketball team with a
score of 25-21. The game was
sponsored by the North Jersey
Howard alumni and was atiended
by 1,500 Lincoln-Howard fans.
The Bisons began scoring when
after four minutes of eautious play
Harris shpped through the Lion
defense, dribbled the ball to the
basket and scored a goal. Lincoln
was unable to hold the ball. be-
gause of a fumble or a wild pass.
In their bewilderment, Taylor,
Howard's “sub-center, scored two
more points before fackson, Lion
forward, put his {gam into the scr:
nig column with a'neat angle shot
Harns, Howard's captain, fol
lowed Taylor's example and’ drib-
bled repeatedly through the Lin-
coln team, bemg fouled by his
pursurers,” As a result, he scored
five free-throws in ‘succession.
With the score 9-1" in Howard's
favor, the Ltons came to life and
through the clever shooting of Av-
ery and DeCosta, overtook the Bis-
on with a one point lead. Harris
scored twice from the foul line,
enabling the Bisons to lead by the
shm margin of a single point as
the half ended.
The second half opened with fast
floor work on behalf of both teams,
with Lincoln showing surprising
stamina, As a result, the Lions
ran up 9 points, while Howard
gathered 5, With four minutes to
Bo the Bisons recovered and ued
the score at 19 all. Avery shot 2
basket which sent the Lions ahead
by two points, which secured pos-
seston of the ball aid a long, hard
ass to Smith, who from a dificult
angle fipped the ball through the
net, leaving the score at tie, with
only 13 seconds to-go.
The game ended ina tie score
of 21-21. In the third minute of
the overtime period, Hall took, the
ball from tap off, dribbled madly
down the'floor and shot for the
basket, but ihe ball rolled around
the rim and fell on the outside.
Lincoln recovered and, the sensa-
tional basket by Smith and two
points from the foul line by: Rid-
ley gave the Lions a well-earned
four pomt margin, :
One notable feature of the game
was Lincoln's close guarding which
enabled Howard to get only four
field goals, a dupheation of the
fact in Washington, when Howard
collected only three field goals dur-
nig th entire game, although loos-
ing by a score of only 25-26,
Fortunate for Howard, this was
an extra game under the auspices
of neither institution, and. there-
fore, does not figure in the C, 1.
A.A. rating., Lincoln's return
game swith Howard will be play-
ed in New York on aMrch 7, which
will nov doubt be the crucial game
in deciding the C1, AA. cham:
Rgpnship. as Lincoln’ has lost two
Wine ©: 1A. A. seties, and Howe
ard Onis one.”
SM Ev ee
GFT
Hilly, scsssesssspevesseats 2 2
Willams pesecscsseeeeses O03 3
TavlOr’ seersessecercovere Wi ES
Sau necscsvsescsuesece 1 O 2
Wood veessesetsceeeees 0 0
Beatley wiewtiieeesereees 0 0 0
Harris: sccadseosssesesce 2) 3 9,
Totals es ivesciweaseced 13 2
VINCOLN
Al 28s ‘ t
\VELY eweweceresssenenecs 1
JackSOn cecccesecccescece 1 O 2
Sydnor wevescssesevsevseee2 04
Smith .eccmccccscsscscsee 1 2 4
Hawkins cecseseseseevene 1 0 2
Ridley ..evcsceserecoreeee O 2 2
DeCosta seccwvesecceereee 2 0 4
Torts: icciccsecsc.es2 10. 3 25
Referee—Martin, Time of halves
20. minutes,
BS oe
At The Roosevelt
| When Mary Pickford and her
‘equally illustrious husband, Douglas
Fairbanks decided to make a picture
together, search for a suitable story
was begun. After thoroughly scans
ning all the available material, st
‘Was decided to go back to the great
est playwright of all time— Shakes:
peare—and his immortal comedy.
“The Taming of the Shrew" was
chosen as the vehicle which would
present these two great stars in their
frst co-starring roles.
The stéry of the bold and hand-
some Petrucia who marries and pro
ceeds to tame (?) the fiery and sp
tited Katerine has become a rint of
fun and a merry melane of hilarity:
as an all-tatking picture with Mary
and Doug handling there roles: with
The Skill atk histonnee super abate
that is theirs,
“The ‘Taming of the Shrew" ie a
eu re Se
family Don't mise it at the Reever. :
ve}t where st will be shown for ve
days starting Saturday, March 1st,
THEATRICAL JOTTINGS
‘By BOB SLATER
JAMES WELDON JOHNSON
VISITS C. V. B. A.
at 39: SIWS7S PURASAML "VO IRCES. HEN
of disunction regardless of race or
color. From time to time individu-
als who are interested in the wel-
fare of humanity ‘are_ seen crossing
the threshold of the Colored Vaude-
ville Benevolent Association's club
rooms located at 424 Lenox avenue,
New York City. It is in this con-
ection that we take peculiar de-
light in mentionmg the name of the
Hon. James Weldon Johnson. Mr.
Johnson needs no encomiums heaped
upon him by us*or the reason that
as diplomat, autohr, poet, publicis and
National Secretary of the N. A. A.
CP, he 1s too well kaown, A’ re-
cent visit to vs by Mr. Johnson was
for the purpose of gathering data
Jogking forward for the compilation
of 2 work delineating the lives and
characters of members of the color;
ed race who have attained to some
Gecree of prominence as theatrical
artists.
We feel complimented that such
men as Mr. Johnson should repose
enough confidence in us as to try to
ascertain at least 2 portion of the
desired information. The task which
Mr. Johnson has undertaken 1s not
an sy one, several attentpts having
been made in this same direction but
for the most part were failures due
to an_unfamilrarity with certain
facts, There are many missing links
in the chain of the Negro's theatrical
history that need to be collected and
forged into concrete form. If we
can be of any service to Mr. Johnson
an this or any other work we will
be only to happy to render it
Glenn and Jenkins are at the Hip-
podrome Theatre, New York. City.
Helen Justa and Company is at
the Orpheum Theatre, Munneapols,
Shinn.
vows
Harris and Rgdehff are, at Keith
Fordham Theatre, New York Gity
Peg Bates is at the Loew's Valen-
cia “Theatre, Jamaica, Le 1 NY,
Danny Small and Co. are at the
State Theatre, Jersey Citys Ns Je
Norman Thomas five is at the R
K. 0. Madison Theatre, New. York
City.
eeee
Emperors of Songs are at Poli’
Palace Theatre, Waterbure, Conn,
Grace Smith and her Buddies are
at Loew's Grand Theatre, New York
Ms
At The New Douglass
Five big names—) actor sachs
len, El Brendel. Fi Dorsay. Polly
Moran and Raoul Walsh, each head-
finers—play an important’ part in the
latest Fox Movietone production
“Hot for Paris’ which comes to. the
New Douglas Theatre for five day's
beginning. Thursday, February 27, to
Monday, March 3.” 2
In the theatrical world. the name
ol Raoul Walsh as director stands
at the top of the hist. His “What
Price Glory" and the “Gock Fyed
World” will never be forgotten. Vie-
tor MeLaglen. famous as “Flagg” of
both “What Price Glory” and the
"Cock Eyed World” needs no inten:
duction, El Brendel, the "Swede"
comte of the “Cock Eyed World”
and “Sunny Side Up" 15 a riot. and
Fit Dorsay, the “hot™ lutle Paris
enne of “They Had to See Parts”
shines once more as a daughter of
gay "Pare"
‘On Tuesday. Wednesday and
Thursdav, March 45-6, that most
perfect of all musical screen shows
to date, “The Hollywood Revue”
will be shown. In the “Hollywood
Revue" the talking screen unfolds tts
crowning achievement, a revue blend-
ing the beauty and | talent ofthe
stage and screen into a magmificient
and mammoth enfertamment. Twen-
ty-five stars. chorus of twa hudred
big song hits, laughs, sketches with
John Gilbert, Marion Davies, Wil-
lam Haines. Conrad Nagel. Buster
Keaton, Norma Shearer. Anita Page,
Charles King. Ressie “Lave, Joan
Crawford. Lionel Barrvmore and a
host of Hollywood's most famous
stars A corking, $660 show for
poplar admission orice’.
At The Odeon Theatre
‘Where the late Harry Houdin left
off in his efforts to expose crooked
“spirit” mediums, beautiful Evelyn
Brent hegins and carries: on in the
all-talking mystery drama "“Darken-
ed Rooms.” which will be shown at
fhe deen “Thenite the ramon Se
eee nay
mUtrkened Ren” 9¢ hase 0 th
eee Sensi dee sod Wario
ender Sir Pisin tale each
fier glase Be gee) A a ele
chor girl the same cart of role
which she enacted so ‘well in “Broad-
way — i.
MANSFIELD *4T®* Opening Wed. Eve. ™stiees
"WANS! FEBRUARY 36 Wed & Sez
Beats Now At Box OfSce
: LAURENCE RIVERBSINC. presents
é 5 oy
he ’ uae
= : q CONNELLY
With « dletingulahed east dnciuding»
RICHARDDD, HARRISON, DAMIEL, 1. MAYNED, WESLEY Itt,
ALONZO "FENDERSON, SALEM “TUTT WHITNEY, GEOROH .
RANDOL, J. HOMER TUTT, JAY. MONDAYE, EDNA HARRIS,
SUSIE SUTTON, CHARLES H. MOORS, LOU VERNON, ARTHUR”
- PORTER, J. A. SHIPP, FLORENCE. PIRLDS, BTANLEIOH MOR-
RELL, JAMES PULLER, JOSEPHINE BYRD, BILLY CUMBY,
IWAN SHARP and JAZZLIPS RICHARDSON, Jr
[ WORLD'S FINEST TALKING PICTURES ;
135th STREET — Just East of Lenox Avenue
Thursday and Friday—February 27 and 28
| EDMUND LOWE
—" any =
“a i n ” |
| ‘THIS THING CALLED LOVE”;
| Saturday, Sunday, Monday—Mareh 1, 2, and 3, |
4 a ”
WALL STREET
FE POWERFUL TALKING MELODRAMA
At The Lafayette Theatre
Tim Moore, the versatile and ltoy-
able comedy star of Lew Leslie's
“Blackbirds” heads a large and cap-
able cast at the Lafayette Theatre
this week in a fast, funny revue
which was staged by Irvin Co Mil-
Jer-and S. H. Dudley jr.__The revue
is called "Say It With Girls.” The
photoplay portion of the program
‘has, as its feaure, the greatest of all
singing, talking, dancing, laughing
pictures: “The Hollywood Revue.”
| The cast of “Say It With Girls"
is, in itself, a very definite assurance
that this week's show at the Lafay-
étte Theatre 1s unusually good—con-
‘sidering even the fact that the popt-
lar Seventh Avenue Playhouse has
been offering its patrons the very
finest shows of its"rareer during the
past few weeks.““The cast includes:
Tim Moore, Lithan Brown, The
Wasiboare Serenaders, Barrington
Guy, Edna Barr, Gertie Moore, 5.
|H. Dudley jr., Walhams and Brown,
Lonme Fisher, The Three Cotton
Pickers and Irvin C. Miller's Prize
Beauty Chorus. Every one of these
acts “stopped tie show” at the open-
ing performance on Saturday. The
‘scenery and costumes and very at-
‘tractive and, from every point of
view.”
At Lafayette Next Week
| Another gorgeous musical comedy
is promised at the Lafayette Theatre
next week when Chapor: Chappelle
and Juanita Stinnette bring their
newest produchon “Let It Rain” to
we ‘stage of thr Lafa¥ette Theatre.
‘Ths cast cf “Les It Rain” is ex-
cellent and gives promise of a_fine
‘entertainment: Chappelle and = Sun-
rette, Keene and Raffin, Perry and
Cova, Lavada Snow, Emmett An-
thony, Aunt Jemima, Old Black
Joe, The Roxy Four, Joe © Byrd.
Lacra Etliott and a chorus of twen-
ty
+ The feature picture to be present-
ed next week; together with "Let It
Rain” is th) talking dramatic hit
“Peacock Allev" starring Mac Mur-
ray This is one of the mast grip
ping stores’ of intrigue and scandal
which ts screen has ever presented
Renaissance Theatre -
“The Marriage Plavground.” with
Mary Brian and Frederic March
tills el tha, Henayicomee Poeair
Wednesday. Thursday and Fridav
lof this week, The cast 3s made up
‘of all stars and six’ of the most
adorable children you have ever
coe
A Palm Beach setting makes an
ideal background for the wedding
and the subsequent events that leads
ae eee Nes save Seca
hea rthis entertaining love drama
and learn the remathable anewer
Clara Bow im her third all-tatk-
inz comedv-romance hit, “The Sat-
urday Night Rid" will be the at-
traction Saturday, Sunday, Monday
and Tuesday, March f, 2, a and 4
Sweet [atthe Jean Arthur also stars
wm tins eure,
Seer and heard.as a plucky, in-
dependent hinge aminuts
Basle sion gr Ge ae alae
ile for her self as well as for her
Dhue ine aneansble Clune (¢ der
cast in an ideal role, The preture
1s based on Ife ina typical dig
téun department store and surpass-
es tn anterest Miss Row’s “Danger-
joue Curses” It runs the «ale uf
“Neil Hamilton plas the part of
ihe road tartunt ene Cegenee
ated by love and suffering
“The Odeon +3 rapidly taking its
place as one of the most popular of
Harlem's talking picture theatres—
presenting the vere best of the talk-
ing, singing, dancing dramatic hits
ing, | singin
At The Alhambra Theatre
| Dusty. Fletcher, famous funny
man, who seems to be having as
‘good a time as the audience, is
joined in his comedy stuhts at the
Alhambra this week by . Andrew
Tribble and George Green,
This trio keep the merriment
going with the assistant of Viola
McCoy, Ida and Berme Brown,
Grace Rector, and numcous others,
in the musical comedy, “By Moon-
hight.”
The auburn haired McClain twins
lead the dancing girls in the moon-
hight fantasy opening. These girls
log so wonderfully alike | that
everybody 1s always in doubt as
‘to which is Ernestine and. which
is Josephine.
“Shell Shock”, a drama of a
‘hero of the world war, holds_at-
‘tention from the very start, Ted
‘ Blackmon 1s the youth who returns
from the great conflict a wreck
His best pal, ‘played by Mnote
Hawley, did not enlist. and devotes
his attention to his afflicted friend/s
beautiful young wile, played with
appropriate heartlessness by Fran:
ces Sheppard
Buster Colher is the handsome
ryoung star of the feature picture
"Two Men and Mard
| NEXt WEEK -
| The ‘famous, “Snake-Hips,’
whose proper name 4s karl Tuck.
.¢r, comes to the Alhambra nex
iweek. He will do all the remark
‘able dances that made his fame i
“Blackbirds,” and amazed firs!
) New York, then Paris, and after:
{ward Chicago and many othe:
cities of America, *
“A Wife for Sale,” is the ams
ing ttle of the cemedy-drami
which deals with the efforts of 2
‘young husbnad to get his frienc
tout uf the clutches of a.vampire.
Drama Club Ja Recital
Contest at St. James
| Eight members of the St. Jame:
‘Drama Club, aftthated «with St
James Prestyteman Church, the Rev
Witham Lievd Imes, pastor, engag-
fed in a dramatic recital contest on
‘Thursday night February 20, in the
man susan sah loka
Stockton as master oj. ceremonies
before a fair audience of apprecsa-
The Drama Cub is an offshoot of
‘the St. James Literary Society, rep:
irrscnting «a breademme ont wh th
Taner hedy's setts at unde
the able instruction of Richard B
Marriere. aed. ‘dremaus.” teader
Each of the readers taking a part ir
thes contest 8 pupil under hii
| The program opened with snging
of the "The Neero National An-
them,” the words of which had been
‘supphed the audience, with Mre
Blanche K Thomas at the piano
Without formality, Mr Stockton in
mecately presented the coutestamts.
iB inlens!
Georre Swanson: "Face Upon
the Rarroom Fleor™ 5
Margaret Young: “Give Me Thy
Heart" >
Mary (Wingo: “The Woman's
Question”
Rubv Bailes: "The Mantae™
the emotions and provides the prop-
er balance “of rih-tukline comedy
coupled with murscal interpolation,
Commencing Saturday, March 8
Gearge Bancroft m “The Mighty"
comes tothe Renaiscance Theatre
1 @ You'll Never Know How Good Talking Pictures Aro @ |
s Until You See A Show At The Odear .. &
- 145th STREET
ODEON isnsme
Saturday; Suriday and Monday, — March 1, 2, and 3 a
‘EVELYN aad
i 66 ”
i “(DARKENED ROOMS” |
a
————————————————
i “Harlem's Largest Talking Picture Theatre” * “i
| Lenox Ave., Cor. 142nd Street — Phone Edgecombe 8012
jean re ee ee eg
| . . Beginning Thursday, February 27 for § Days
i Victor McLaglen — Eibrendel — Fifi Dorsay |
: — i eS 7
‘HOT FOR PARIS’
An All Talking Riot — Hotter than the “Cock Eyede World”
ROOSEVELT THEATRE!
|
: SEVENTH AVENUE AT 1Sth STREET
5 DAYS~STARTING SATURDAY, MARCH 1
' MARY pouctas
PICKFORD “4 FAIRBANKS
‘Together for the first time in the All-Talking sensation
f “THE TAMING OF THE SHREW"
Thursday and Friday 2 DAYS ONLY March 6 and 7
The Musical 11 of Tits!,
© “SUNNYSIDE Ue”
: With JANET GAYNOR and CHARLES FARRELL
Ov OCGREATEST "FINEST
*TALKING PICTURES : MUSICAL COMEDIES
|
iz 7th AVE, at 1320 ST. =
| NOW (Last Performance Friday. Midnight)
TIM MOORE “row
Edna Barr | — Washboard Serenaders
In IRVIN C, MILLER'S
“SAY IT WITH GIRLS”
a — Also — :
The Greatest All-Talking, Dancing, Laughing
Hits 5
NEXT WEEK — BEGINNING MARGIT 1,
CHAPELLE and STINNETTE
And a Cast of FIFTY
In The Revue ¢ ‘ < 9
« SLet le Rain
Tatkhe MAE MURRAY “futcos"
a es gegen ema eect
~Sadie Ellison Stockton! “The
Raven) i
Irene Bailey: “Hagar.” .
Mildred Blount: “Boots.”
Shara Belle Jefferson: “Sioux
Chiet’s Daughter.” .
The judges for the occasion were
the Rev. A. A. Corprew, assistant
fastor.of Mt. Olivet Bantist Chureh;
Prof. Wallace A. Battle, former
principal of a southern school, and
Detective Sergeant Samuel J. Battle,
first colored man named to the Po-
lice D.partment. the only sergean
cand detective sergeant in the force.
Three prizes were to he awarded,
but after a fong drawn out confer-
jence, lasting quite a half hour, the
judges reported that the excelience
Of the recitahsts had made it neces-
sary for them to add a fourth prize
of their own contribution,
TH. EB AT R &
10 ee and eee
| Seer narcns
indniw soware
roa ‘ano BERNIE BROWN
frist ‘Wieae Pannen noe
[oeo. ‘onsen, wccoain wine
| _
|
| BY MOONLIGHT |
| Drams of a War Hero
| SHELL - SHOCK
In mar 5 Tre a tam, Hee
fy Sectielg oon aay
SNAKE-HIPS
inees EARL TUCKER tos
Hance ae noe
| Besides the Comedy-Drama
A WIFE FOR SALE
‘They named the ie |
fows: Mrs, Stockton, fist}
Blount, second; Miss" Ruby’. Batity
third; special fourth, Miss Jeffersba
The pastor, Dr. Imes, Spoke BARES
Ty, while he judges were im éodifys
ente, and then awarded the prishe.
Officers of the club are Misa: 1A3
E. Finnie, president’ . Mra,
Stockton, vice-president; Mrs. ME
Houston, secretary; Mrs. Mi
‘Brice, assistant secretary; Mrs, MG
aries. tréscives, “ite
[RENAISSANCE
THEATRE |
Seventh Avenue, 197th. Street}
|" THREE DAYS . if
|Wed, Thurs, Fri, Feb, 26, 27, ”
6 ¥
"THE MARRIAGE
| etn ~ 4
MARY BRIAN AND:
| FREDERIC MARCH:;
| See and Hear This |
| Love Drama °°,’
| FOUR DAYS ONLY; !
|Sat. Stn, Mon, Tues,
| March 1, 2,34)
Pua RS B OW!
in s
(THE SATURDAY:
|. NIGHT” KID?
SPARKLING Fun—
—PEPPY Partit
| An All-Tatking BOW HIT}
Isgrrtbess erty ne el yg she ne TE ay age, os
BWGE ese ec IRE Sat SR ra ES TREE
> -wseepbigpday.” March 1, 1930 oar ae SS Ce ee
eked L 1, 1930 “- ee ORE RW FORE RES rr So eT TT ry errata ot ge
an <= TY - = —— a aeinennen a AOE 8
‘oS = - 3 co . a. = ——_—_—_—_—— : —_ cae
eta B - A q } tm ee
CRTs, = eee eee - a
a ‘Lake's A.C. Church | 7ssident of this club, Rush Memorial Cl i 2 ee ee
Fed davies at StL abe Allen, Christin Endeavor] was furnished by Chareh, Munley Wellre taunds Lezpold Tuner ne, Mere, Aor 8, Ereparationy Ove Ch veneer eiae
PeNG Teielces at St, Luke was in| f@#ue had invited sixteen of the| orial choi - treet; | for the emtertaininene af the tees | moteingy Fettuary 2 1 i, pasioe
pedeng wi abe stan, /Shu amas sn Lt arial hate ne Aetna ing gered P| oe aeiet Chueh, Sundey]. «Revs Mi Le BHEPARD Set Mita Trabemaa aa
{KE 790 a, m,, low mass was c cir services. Each clu sani i the pastor preached | MeClymont, 188 St. Nicholas ave-| co n it being considered, The} of the way to know Ged, —o a tarehy 42 *
ERAGES® tumplow ey wn cela elision. the fen lub sang] to'the Ladies ‘Aid Soci sec Bemine Eppes Roosevel| of Buinsephir and Waskincses | Sopheused aot of he above and eC bate hie, Pas etpetes
Hirted by the Rew Fr. Epiphanius.| quartet of the junior male usher , ‘Among the visitors present dur- Hospital or eu adelphix: and Washington | emphasized many of the new things , West Philadelphia, Bu, aby deeeider
TRAP ie, ind am) Sur Fhe gat cla ee| OE He day gare" Eee Hel | Sips feaching as far as Viegina. Being| of new creatures or creation aa after he had flied theo
“Rev. <Crenon Celestin. gdivvas he unior female usber| F.,Chume, Ming Lena G. Nash Williams Institutional the leaders from all party of the] pratenss Wests and Bnally = new a see Ot te, renee
Abid By te Sidey school card, The topic for discussion| Bicoa Nes, Sarth Payne apa, hte! country are expected "to be pres| Jerusteg. ee Y * TY Re Bets Sheard ce tot
1 pom, the Suilday school] was The Value of the Bible for] D'go%, Mrs Sarah Payne and Me a \e" pres-| Jerusalem. , Be “Rev, Shepard came to, thi
eee rere tinder leadership [non-Christian nations.” gpd "Xtes, “Cunningham of New CM. E. Church}._the program by the Silver s An infant was prayed for, and aed Hatle more, than three (yelrs, “Ags
GLSA™ seats Race | te sunt 2 ree " ees oe ST Nye shes Soce | ntresng. cases wee eld eb [Secs eee
defpoke the par senvtces ee neanee aL MMS eveRiG| Thursday, annual banquet, Adu at we had a great service Sun-| W2s mich enjoyed, “Thete young! 'AU'the Bav. Bri 4 gaalstan 2 Al
Labeart te pains that had been) X¢e. Waters, singing 'S angele and| Department, nual banaue, Adult| day last is the verdict of Veet SER | Peoptes wilt sotssiabor ae "Leoeel oaslluane ceitay sees he erincioal . se Baptist Church. He has.’built!- 4S
AND p, me aolemn vegper was DEGREE AE the, speaker, using Department, Church School, Fri-| audience present both at the morn-| NOU every month, eee aesitaot meiner was the: orlecie ; SS, Miata me onene
sungiby the Rev. Canon Celestine [7th chapter of Sark Special services under auspices of] 8 S74 SYening worst. pa wee thaened by ti Gene SR PA) |S Rev tear, gt Sexes
aulted ‘by Rev, 8.18, Lamont ng text the 24th (verse of the) she Missionary “Societies, — Rev.| pat, beats Bevign prewehed 2 Paradise Banti ue reidered by ee ee oie] | Shanty de Soomete er when
aT se en |e, wf SOMES Tt ins Oe ame ageea| adise Baptist Chureb | tl i) | iges seat ae
aermén ‘was preached by the cele-| United with the church, will preach, using. a3 hig subjects] Sermon tial greatly effected the] | Sunday morni Sesriem, brewed ort es fh Pere a
ermine pregehed by the ec es ee cy evenings AVES Hapren At The Jude-| et sche the pat _Sindsy morning, Februtty 23, al SPD coring io Answers The pars, alo secre ol te
“pramts Sclemn Benediction of the orayer meeting, Friday _evening:| "Se syne rae oer i oe, Drs Clary) LOPE sermon was preached by! Sricipal theme Answers ae 5 ars Gg” | board of the en ia tea
irs to a close. prayer ,mecting, Friday evenings) “Next Sunday: 6 2, m.. sunrise] delivered the annus! seemon 10 the Licentiate Otis Bogany of Me Calc) Paiveinal, theme was tHe Fightcors Be ci aM) | Conveltion, and assistant seeretén
Tees Celstine Schoot Guitd| Sick: Ida May. Hunt, 33° peNext Sunday: 6.4. m. sunrise] te tnhoe Commandry, No. 5, R. T| Vary Baptist Church, subject, “Wi jusdament of God and the Blessing ated | ,| of the Foreign, Mission Board af th
nent ae aietlgs, Seteel Calld| soihtt tan, Habart Warkingioe| [ha a nena ee en eee Pane A, Ai." Dresse f=, That Man?" from (ohn Ave] Of te, heart rom, scerat, als Bees Aanaeg| ‘| National Baptist Conventos. ity
pees see jvednenday syentne and Noval Hisspial; Brookiyay Stier | pe se, necinen GF Rave Be Bal nl cd'In full uniforms, accompanied] After his | mes in Cohn 1:19).| | Beginning Monday, February’ 24, Ra we eae spednt ediice wo ton
Birapieenisive crowed. wat ous| wal Heyy Brookins, Stter] p,m. eimon by Rew. 6. uBricg| By, the grand may Aceon ated a Soi Teal Weve ae toue Mea by alnaee oF tbe lone fd tian Review. His weekly eum
Sa fem strange faces, | Meeeat, Mee Fields, een Fie shee” Alaina Hayes’ Gi] colmmandaries, and grand and sub-] One, soul Srlruual spvocaniga, and Boer led by siaters of tbe chorea Ya thder the eapon “Shear <i
Mom "edness Arh", eel Bathe, Mr ied, membey of] were itn ste: Maan oe ae aae rt the lodge made a| 1m The evening We [imi prseedes the can yal enraeet y isle Popalar and wey ree
tee faety, inthe eerary, "| Bhieabeth epelcial League: “Srs.| 1286 Thied avenue’ Emme Gilmore, | fvoreblg spurts, the lodge rads 8] an by Licenimie' Ge Aleck oy) Jee, jokione Sunday. Rey,| — pi ceaalir satbeawe. Be
ha . Elimbeuh Hard, Casa mem:| 10) Wess 130 sueqentat gre, favorable impreayien or at whose] te £06 eentate G. 1, Mack oni]. C, Jackson of Hartford will! = - °"~ — Fi
eee | [icine eae ohne Gehl Ove) ence. EB resory at whee] Us gue get Us Wake UP") ad sacra = CHICAGO CHURCH”:
a ‘yprian’s Chapel J irom the church at 2'psm| Elise Kelly, 640 Herkiner etree | dently-congratuiated for the inter.| Our services are: __ Sue persons joined church dur-) Rey, M, L, Shepart R
“s ney AO ER EP Brooklyn, Hi, Yur Emine Cosgrove, | est shown botl in the lodge and] ing eevee Ui a, BD, Br Usd During past week funeral sero es e : RV:IN:
. Ne oe ee eee eee tac ot cer toch
Heads Quaker City : at
\ Sts Cyrprian's Chapters, senior
_\nd junior. of the Brotherhood of
ft. Andrew, assembled at the Ca
redral of St, John the Divine on
fasbington’s ‘Birthday, Saturday
fbruary 22, in conjunction, with
xf! other Chapters of the Broth:
:Behagd of St. Andrew, to hold ther
*aanual Holy Corporate Commun:
fon and mass meeting.
"s:Hbly Communion was held at
8:80 a. m., the celebrant was the
Right Rey, Willan 7. Manning
‘Bishop "of the diocese." After the
communion service, breakfast was
‘Weld in the undereraft of the new
fod Hill, at 9:30. m_ at 10:30.3
jliddresses were made in the new
“Synod ‘Hall by. Bishop ‘Manning
and Charles S. Tuttle. US. Dis
‘trict “Attorney. Subsect was
"Youth and the Church.” and he
openly declared himself for equal
“pppertuniieg for black: and whit
fe. Ta those people who be
Fave in separate churches, etc. thi
Bmmunion service was. a picture
B the solution of the race’ prob
am. one communion cup being
fed from white and colored
eNall one in Christ
UYThd preacher atthe morning
service) was the vicar, Rev. John
‘Weslyh “Johnson. who preached
from the Ith chapter, 30th vers
af tHe Second Epistle of Paul tc
the Corinthians The rector warn
ed the churchmen that the churck
has (0 be maintained ina simila
manner as your home, by daily
Work, and no'matter what you hae
done’ in the past this would do
{you no good unless vou contidued
Yo perform your duties to you
neighbor and state in God's sight
fhe preacher at the evening
iseryies was the Rev, MeClean
PERUT pm, there was held. by
‘the Sunday school a patriotic serv:
ice at which veterans of the wars
were present. The speaker was
Counselor Robert R Penn, super-
Mintendent of the Sunday schoo!
WS The preacher ,at_ our next Sun-
day morning service will be the
Rev. John W Johnean Subsect,
Totty “Greatest. Christian Virtue.
Grace Church of Harlem
~ A large percentage of the mem-
persrof Grace Church came gut
“the morning service on Sunday to
year the pastor, Dr A C Garner,
fala most eloquent and teresting
4 ~ Ls
Dr. Garner took his text from
Isgjah 3rd chapter and as his
heme, “What 1s Worship?” Dr.
Samer brought’ out all the tin
poul's in his subject and sent many
lessons home with his hear
rh.
} Miss Hyacinth Lord, 107 West
’ 126th street, Was received into
membership .
The, choir sang well, especially
the Spiritual, “My Lord, ‘What a
morning
V At the morning service, a new
‘church superintendent, Joseph
CMfilds, was clected to succeed W.
"Herbert King. who has gone to
Washington, D. C, to Plymouth
Church, Dr. Garner's former pas-
torate,
Six new teachers volunteered
their services to fil the places left
yacant by a number of resignations
They are Mrs Caldwell, “Miss Hu-
bert, Miss Laura A. Shaw, Miss
Hattie Green, Miss Ingraham and
Gilroy Butler,
—~ On Sunday evening the Ladies’
Aid Society held, their sixth annual
woman's day service Mrs Clara
Bruce of the Paul Lawrence Dun-
bar Apartments was’ the speaker
Mrs, Bruce chose as her subject,
“Women” There was special mu-
sic by the Ladies Aid Choir, and
others, and 2 silver offering. Off
ers are Mrs. P. W. Bean, presi-
dent; Mrs. Solomon Ward, vice-
president; Miss Hilda Damels, sec-
gretarys Mrs M. J Perkins. treas-
urer and Mrs,” Annie Tait, chap-
lain.
Mrs. Floyd W Terry, secretary
Hof’ the trustee board. 1s’ mourning
athe 1082 of her aunt, who was bur
"ed on Friday.
h Church school 930 am; Grae
sendis Club, 2:15 p my: mid-weekly
~prayer service, Wednesday at 8 p,
¢ Bethel A. if. E Church
© Large crowds attended the serv:
Seek throughout the day,
7, Rev. Clarke used as has text,
iMthe Bth verse of the 10th chapter
auel, Matthew, the theme being
“Freely you ‘have received, freely
eve
] At the close of the sermon, five
Persons united with the church
“Mrs, Ollie Hart, soprano solorst
Pring “Alone with’ Thees andthe
hoir rendered the Spiritual, “I sst-
fron 40 the laine = i ‘
re, Memorial “eeraices; tir: tke tote
8 dev, HK. Spearman were con-
POTneted att pom, under the ate
proves of the Vlora Cire The
rauuttal arraneine nt of the fave
ITC. conesting of baster Lilhes,
pubJjlahilhes, ape oH rubber
ts, gave'the church the aspect
WAS Easter. Mase Sa Buges a dee
President of this club,”
The Allen. Christian Endeavor
League had invited sixteén of the
church auxiliaries to be present
at their services Each club sang
‘selection, the feature being the
quartet of the junior male usher
board, The largest club represent
ed was’ the Junior female usher
board, The topic. for discussion
was “The Value of the Bible fo
non-Christian nations."
The attendance at the evening
services is increasing. The Rev.
Me. ‘Waters, singing evangelist and
Preacher, was the. speaker, using
as his text the 24th verse of the
7th chapter of St. Mark, =
At the close of hig sermon “two
united with the church,
Class meeting Tuesday evening:
prayer meeting, Friday evening;
Love Feast, Friday evening,
Sick: Ida May Hunt, 35. East
130th “street; Herbert Washington
Naval Hospital, Brooklyn; Sister
Kemp 19 West islet street,
“Deaths; Mz. Fields, member of
Bethel Beneficial League; Mrs.
Elizabeth Hilliard, Class 6, a mem:
ber of Bethel for 43 years; funeral
Tuesday from the church at 2 p. m.
a
St. James Pres. Church
‘The final Sunday of February
was a time of great interest in
St. James, with the celebration o}
the first ‘annual ‘sermon of the
United Adult Bible Classes of the
Church” School.” The Wm. C.
Hundley Bible Class, the Sunshine
Bible Class, all were out in large
delegations, with invited guests
from the adult classes of other
Bible Clasgt and the | Win-One
churches in the city,
‘The pastor, Rev. Wm. Lloyd
Imes, preactied the sermon. from
Woman and the Bible,” based upon
the theme, "The Modern Man and
Psalm 195111,
“He stated that the Bible is the
‘world’s ‘most_modern book and
‘that instead of this peniod Being
the ‘Twilight of Christianity,” it
[was more in accord with the truth
to eall it the dawn of the larger
day in the Kingdom of God on
earth A large overflow audience
completely filled the church aude
orium, and on every hand there
was evidence of deep interest in
the york of Bible cass instruc
‘tion Rnd plans for a large increase
in its organization
"The trustees are leading a Schoo
of Stewardship each Wednesday
evening and great interest 1s be:
ing manifested by all. Each per
son attending, this school, will re
ckive a specially embossed and 1
Jummated motto suitable for fram:
ing and Keeping, entitled "My
Church”
“The Missionary Soctety held 2
splendid pew ‘rally service at 8 p.
m, on this past Sunday. and pre
sented a program, including an ad
dress on "Work for Delinquent
Gilt: “by Mrs, Bessie Cheesman
of, Wilmington, Del. and a brie
tcord from the pastor on the "Stew:
aedship of ADssionasy Work” Mr.
Michael, presidenvof St James
Missionary. Society, presided, as:
sisted by Miss Catherine Brown
and Mrs Wilham H Brooks Mrs
Maud Jackson gave the report of
the soxiety s former public meet
ing Plans for the coming y¢at
were made, and a feature of the
oceasion was the reading by_ the
president of letters from the Rev;
and Mrs Tevin W. Underhill, jr,
an Cameron, West Afnea | St
Tames thares sn the support of
these splendid missionaries
Sunday, March 2, 1s communion
day and the Lord's Supper will be
observed at the evening service
The chorr will sing the service in
£ fiat by Eyre ai
Renali Memorial Church
Sertices “at Rendall Memorial
was conducted by the pastor morn-
inging and evening
Bri ulaens spoke an the morning
on “The Christian in Polincs”
"ar the evening. service the, min
isiee spoke on *Povsibiities “ane
Impossibilines in the Realm of
Chastan, Grace’
"The Sabbath school sas well at
tended and. most of the, teachers
were at their posts. Harry S
Johnson, acting superintendent, ts
Sisco affairs. The Rev. Henry
Sitch Furnald, chaveman of the
Presbytery’s Committee on Re-
figraus Edueanons was present and
fide an interesting talk to. the
Mrs Virginia Thorne, the presi
dent of the Tirelese Workers, re
ported for the club the sum_of
$26 to the board of trustees The
Gibraltar Men's Club reported to
the trustees $8 from the regital on
Sunday. February 9
The musical feast and entertain-
ment, held. between Rendall cand
Mt Calvary M_E Church, on Feb-
ruary 19, and 20, was an soisyable
affair, Mrs Estelle Sheppard Rob-
inson’ dyrccted. for Rendall, and
Leon Adger directed for Mt, Cal-
vary Church. ~ *
Recent additions to the member-
ship are Mrs Almeda Wilhamson,
David Blair, Robert Green T E.
Miller and Mrs Mabel Foster
Sick “ists Ars Emma, Gover,
Miss Ruth Godfrey, Mrs Lucinda
P Smith was able to. worship. at
the churhe on Sunday after an ab-
sence of two months due to ill-
ness, Mrs Dorothy Scott ts also
Behe eck inte
Mother Zion Church
“Two Epochs In a Great Man's
Life” was Dr Brown's sermon sub-
ject at Mother Zion Chureh last
Sunday morning He preached to
a iares tnd upprecrative audience
AL the cloce af ins discourse four
Persons unjted with, the, church
Hire dau Bin Rese Savory
hipped at thie sevice
seis carch crevices were held
nine lecture tian Enemies
Pe Gan cca came
Tian Sebood ponvensd id
oak
AC th an, special serves
were held lundes, Seenices’ af tn
Queen Esther Circle, Mrs Minme
Bi ifueley, precident’ Serman was
bx Rev, iE, D, Douglas, pastor
WHERE TO GO TO CHURCH
Rush Memorial Church. Music
was furnished by the Rush Mem
rial choir.
AL 8 p.m, the pastor preached
to the Ladies ‘Ald Society.
‘Among the visitors present dur.
ing the day were: Leonard Butler,
Es Crump, Miss Lena G. Nash
Mio, Tames §."Roby? hors Sf
Dixon, Mrs, Sarah Payne and Me.
and ‘Mes, “Cunningham of | New
York. :
Thursday, annual banquet, Adult
Department, Church "School, Fri
Ger prayer and. praise service
Special services under auspices
the Missionary "Societies. — Rev
James 8, Hatcher of Roanoke, Va,
Will preach, -using’ as his subject
Andi Will Hapnen At Phe Jugs
mant Seat of Christ"
Next Sunday: 6 a. m.. sunrise
prayer meeting 10:39 a. m, junior
Ghurch. "Baptism and communion
il'a, m, sermon bythe pastor, 6
D. m.. seemon by Rev, B.A. Price
The” sick: Agatha’ Haynes,
West 133th street; Maggie. Fisher,
1788 Third avenue; Emma Gilmore
Ist Wear 130gh ategeaiatie Ov
ington, 738 St. Nickolas avenue;
Eliza “Kelly, 610 Herkimer strect,
Broehtyn, Ki, We Emine Congrove,
136 Wea 117th street; Irene Bark:
er, 205 West Mdrd stecets Mary
MeNair, “Mi “Edgecombe ayenue:
Ethelena Holgate, Harlem Hospit
al Marie Morgan, 48. West 100th
‘treet; Julia Hopkins, 2603 Eighth
avenue; Carrie Sloore, Roosevelt
Hospital; Mamie White, 20° West
10th streets Marion “Scott, 2512
Seventh avenues Clarence.” Bush,
Bellevue Hospital: Rachel Branch,
HH West 1a rset aoe tee
ks BAPTIST
TT
Tan Ew aaa Br
CHURCH. iat Bue between 18
sans tee aad
Bet PL Ke Sete
Peete cid
TST" Wear 138th qtreet, Phone: “Audubon
woop ouven einen TURE
MSU OUT BNET on
BPs Pade laa)
teen Gy eee ee
Bas Rtst, a8 Poet
Ser barat eet
pallies ee EP ae ee
Eerrpnceiettate A Se
beta ate
SRE Fy, PAGE pAPTT gLRSE
ETN Ee
cat ey ing Soe eae i
Soh eee Ee
SUL Gye aoe tinea
perigee ta eget
Pe BP
$p. mi Communion third Sun eve. Rev.
MH. ARTHUR BOOKER ( pavior. Ree
EAM Rear toee ape
TuOW SAGE Gigaen ae :
Heath net Eat, Saath
foment se coun bat
few ica net, Rhee tte
fore Seg 2 oe aa
Soe ore = oe 2
ferten ceca, San
eee
ST, MARK'S METHODIST EPISCO-
PAL. CHURCH, B38m Su and St
Nidhctes Ave. Rey, John W. Robinson
DL DY pence. Pavtonege: | 49" Ede
fonts Aven Beegchian 1003 a) 7
prim: Sunday Sehoot 2 pm Lyccum 4
Eu.mactiy ee to nm Eowore
spe 6:30 p.m Bun prayer meetiog
Oem Fav ete B30 pm Classes Su
Gay 130" p. tm Tyee, Wed. and. Thure
feta 8 30"p ch, Holy Communion sce
Sed’ Sun eve each month Welcome
weet
SALEM METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHUNCH. a108 Th AVENUE. The
Rev PREDERICK ASBURY CULLEN,
Pastor, preaehiog at 10:48 am. and 7s
Bey ms Sent Sunday ‘Schaal 2:39 "9
ni Men's Bible Cun, 230" 10 4p
fe Dyceum, pm Sun. 8:30" pL me
Fue’ Epworth “League, og. 7. Sun
clesits Monday, ec. and, Wed nigh
ind at Som: ‘Brayer Meeting,
Het Ged” Brotmerhood, Tues. sights:
Holy Communion, Sev Sunday.
RPRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL
pasion
BETHEL _A_ MB. CHURCH a0
Wein na ‘su Ree ET Clare. De
Be pon Residence, SW, tnd Se
Rial aeevteen Braver meetin, Feldey
flan Preaching, 10-48, Sebbuth Schoo!
see AES ES ktague, 8p a:
Buel cerviees, 7:45. “Holy Communion,
Fre ‘Sum chase’ meetings, Tusey
Riphtes Love “Peart {an Friday -niehts
stents ee
EMANUEL AME, CHURCH a7-41
AW. tisth. St Rey. D. Ward Nichola,
we an pastes. “Perigrage:. 209) Ebee:
tombe” Ave, Sunday “Serices—Presehiog
{PR any and tp. m, Sunday School
Spire ‘allea League 6-48-p. mo. Claas
Muse Weer eves, #20. pom Prayer
Mectlog, Prigiye eves. Holy Communton
Iit'Sonday la each month All are Wel
crm
APRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL
on
|HEW MOTHER A. M. E. ZION
CHunch stab Wi" isith Bt Rev)
aE MgROWE Be Se. poser: sartosuae
Wy BOWING, But teri cdtbteats
BT Pee tha Seka me meses
Neg; be tunion ery setond Buns
see ge RB ended
Rocigiaen tice, "pees tyeaen
Saeed eg AS meee
Re irgee aces Preyer metig Panes
SUiRe "Endeavor ‘every, Fri. afternoon 4
PME Shas cecemmany ae
Shu whtadin Se phone te
Seats Pree. All Welcome, ou
es sree A Gia _—_
COLORED _u_E CHURCH
WILLIAMS INGTITUTIONAL c
EB, CHURCH x
gieeae WORSE Sw
oS chadule of Stevie.
‘Schedule of Services.
230, A.M ‘Sunder “Benger
ito “a Ma. Mornings Worship
250" pe adh" Zoworth League
$30 BM Evening Worthip
aiieWeek:™ Monday leh” Offcta
gous; Tuesday mien, Cl’ Meeting,
Wedecutey nigh Thuredty
ini Heschel Fearing Say By
BIN Choir Practice: Evarpbody” Wet
fame Ber NW. Clarke Be DY Mie
fet Reigence: 216" Wet” a3oin Sc
Phone, “University 0133
Re aac
PRESBYTERIAN
SENDALL, MEMORIAL paeany.
MERIAN CHURCH, si-el WEST Tinh
ae Thomas Jy De Harrin, Pastor, ‘Buse
Shy ees i har a andy
Shoal WS. ‘me, “carattan” Endeavors
Boats Se, Heer Weta 35 on
BR IAMnS PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
inna leatogh Micha Age
Pe eto a
Punters Sun 'Th, sm and 8 pin Mi
werk arrvice lol “Prayer Wedeesdern
Rit. ‘Gise’ Chota, “Tac, and Pet's
Be, Toye’ Chobe “Thur prome ‘Church
Scho Gun 19-30 ar ro BusineThoed nd
Ladies Avaierys 4 pcm. Forum tat and
ed Suny 4 bw.” Communian Service
It Suny"t p. fm Voune’Beoviet Gnclei,
Sun tris) pm. Angscdlal elcome.
nee ee ee
‘Welfare Island; Leopold Turner,
143 West 136th’ street, Emma, Al
len, 90 West 134th street; Jane
McClymont, 188 St. Nicholas ave-
nue; Santana Epps, Roosevelt
Hospital.
—
Williams Institutional
CME Church
‘That we had a great service Sun-
day last is the verdict of the large
audience present both at the morn-
ing and evening worship.
‘At Il a..m., Rev, William, Me-
Ewan, assistant pastor, Eccrched a
sermon. that. greatly effected the
whole congregation.
At hight, the pastor, Dr. Cjark,
delivered the annual setmon 49 the
Ivanhoe Commandry, No, 5, K. T,
‘Prince Hall, F. and A. N..’ Dress.
ed in full uniforms, accompanied
| by ‘the. grand and subordinate
commandaries, and grand and sub-
ordinate courts, the lodge made a
favorable ‘impression on the audi-
ence. H. M_ Gregory, at whose
instance the lodge came, was ar-
‘dently..congratulated for the inter-
fst shown both in. the lodge and
fhe Ghurch. Many lingered. after
benediction to thank Dr, Clark for
his pomted and forceful sermon so
eloquently delivered.
Rev. J. S. Blain, New York Dis-
trict, will preach next Sunday at
Hla! m. Holy Communion will be
elebrated at night. Being the last
Guarerly conference for the year
all members and friends are urged
to be present, .
he, TT gs nee alll atk
,- POURTH MORAVIAN
~———~"jesua saves
arya ( Hopayian
rans, ih, MODAYIAN
Rev. CHAKLES D, MARTIN, D. D.
ORS eee
Pee asennad
Faith Se at Ay Mae
wise CP wh ad a
lst SEP dh
r CONOREOATIONAL
eats couceeaationa: cquneh
BPE GOURREGATIONSL cunch
Bor ETRE BP Se
1 GS Seek ee Se
lee oF eS ees Oe
ieee Me Tis yo ote
vemeed Io Bullet
—_wWostoLie _cHuRcH
Fi REruon cxuncu 07 CHRIST
ei Smet ater, ee state ct
‘ame aod blessed. indutnce ‘which own
is nataae stcct Seer
Setar ee as
SRL “Butt Piast Bc,
fonpel of Jesus’ Carat Come soos, acd
a dee esas
SEVENTE Day ARYRNEIE
uASERTL DAS ARVENTISE
eet gE COG aEhe et PAE
PN ay a ga
oe eee tes Fe ts
bie “sivéy;” 9:30 mt. Sabbath school)
fare iatiins readies, eras
Hoot aes LP ke
SERRCHAN, Basra, “NMEA
SPIRITUALIST mt
ee oe
este ate TS atte ty
snenpecaeinganenaininaumnsinnetics teaser.
|S hoRey A © enUKEH, aw
Bias sid Sine ‘Chufes ~ wher
cangers ied at Norte. Why Hot Male
Ten Your" caureh: Homer “cteey Se
He a Kogeen Rector Cason A. “C
Hanlon, ‘Aue Recior, Re P, ‘Aiton
fo Palm, Bescon, i, 6, R. Lange
Shot ot Sun. Sehces it Graven Wo
N. Bi: Bu Celevtine Guile meews tn the
Recioiy on Wednesday att pre. Cases
RCP taton OCS, B ‘Deets
Se nese
BROOKLYN
peace COREE
BEDCR Sk QM R cuuncn,
ou Ser Ree BUWARDNE 3
a be penne cedcees
ied dunia Se, Teepboas ilaaphe Se
San, services Bresetoag fo ds ate Oot
tad Snaey, ys eae ead
in eta Madball’ Satis
Bedtavey Levaus oris'p. oer oucernaas
ety bree NClaiee Su YO
set aay asa Nilapeity betalan
Bim Prager meta, Pitagy Eat?
Br Rata weleowe WS sttsnct
es
SUGET ST, MEMORIAL FIRST _A.
tee 71M CHUN TR oA
St" Kee, Wallum C, Brown speek
So Sa SS cence ae
my Frank A Kay, General Supe, “Var.
Tex Cunatia Basetbor So pars Mee
ete Waar tbscs Paget Sete
Te Odes pene! EA asses ae
Aittarecaebalg weleeae?
ee eee Sere
AZARENE | CONGREGATIONAL
NATGHER Lefferts Place and Grand
areas, Becoklyay Nev, Des ately Sad
Sietts, “piney ™preccnag say Hage
tees >. Suncay Sebel aes SS
ee eG nae Bi uete Iaeea
Wiedocrdey ‘a:ko 5p ‘ase Charemeeiek
POP ctinduation and dine
Social “howe ‘tolloming "Sutiey” ules
srg 9a ch rc ile HGRA
ia tike enhwtg tot Raven om, Masa
‘wantley "to." Fulton itvated 1a
tym, , teanaley to Fulton levared
eo OARS TOUS AN CHURCH
tad GARISILTIQUSE: Palarete ave,
rt Clanoe dna rasttin Auveyhtes
Bee Ctee HORE SE Ate
Bi X; pasion Mase, aan ciate Ae
Fea eda bist Beane aed,
et ible athool, “RSME See
on gig churn? Ain
Pe Sipe Bue Meaty
ayer Mecting every Weds ocif" (oj
pra Commanleel Inst ta Se
ptanby ican Gin Moun Ie Sth
7 to 8:30; Boy Scout: Hriday ‘evening;
Irothetboss rd Wee! neste Seen’
bectnerhoeds 2rd Wena cath ‘iene
CORD BAPTIST CHURCH ee
Ra Sedcony SA Bage, NYP Gee
a adames Mosiices Combiunly Bg
Of incre to al “Pease "Oa theater
Sharh ede of Bevsicer. Sse eut
SEU Se, Ben® wractnle 208
frunon op Hit bandty venir
Ron "asd tapetit acs eo
Wotve your Tard sth “uahere, 2
Se Te are
ETHANY BAPTIST CHURCT Wax.
Ayn Summer Aven and” Besse oR
ave ‘dint, Ait aM peer Be
Brcicnine to0 “A. Mas Pig
Resta Sahoo Nudh ES, B
OS Cemmunton ind aah i
te! oa aint May a
hood Wedneater O58. ease tet
Be RET Fe Ststerl SE
in Tatcan,
Se NE a,
TEREAN BAPTIST CHURCH, Vay.
Mi thea Steet Brooklyn, WY, 622:
gt ELORIBOR, Miniter, Cocke
frunty,pronran to Inteer a DoGete
Rae Peete, “and Met Pegs
School 1130” ma and 8p. im. Bue
acemiates Be, Mealy he
Picayune at Ap ane Peahet eet
br tad ah steep ee
yene here April 8. Preparation
Jor the entertsininent of the larg
delegation is being considered, The
‘conference compres the testitory
‘of Philadelphia and Washington
reaching as far as Virginia. Being
neal conference. year, many al
the leaders from ‘all parts of the
‘country are expected to be pres-
ene
__.The program by the Silver Spear
“Club, a group of young people,
‘was mitelt enjoyed. These young
people will entertain at League
Four every month
Paradise Baptist Church
Sunday morning, February 23, a
forceful sermon was preached by
Licentiate Otis Bogany of Mt Cal.
yary Baptist Church, subject, "Who
Is That Man?" from (John 1:19).
After his message the choir
chanted a Spintual invocation, and
Jone soul was added,
In the evening we heard a ser-
mon by Licentiate G, L, Mack on
the subject “Let Us Wake Up"
Matthew 33:5,
Our services are:'Sunday morn-
ing service Ila, m, B, Y. P. U.
6 p. m., evening service 8 p. m,
Mildred’ Vaughns, reporter,
| —
~ Emarsel A. 4. £. Chorch
The Junior Church held its reg:
ular sence atten, clock 5
Which time the pastor, Rey, Henry
Nelson, preached. There was i
splendid Crowd in attendance an
the chour under durection of Afr
Mamie Jones, rendered excellen
muse
At the eleven o'clock service the
pastor, Rey"D. Ward Nichols, fill
Satie pulpit and, prevened. rom
the subject, “The Valley of Deer
Son. De Nichols was, 98. usta
very forceful and full of | spint
The large congregation listened
attentarely cat this, instructive
Sesige ct detvsredl
The Sunday School met at the
usual hour with an increased at-
Tendance interesting. session there
was a brie teachers meeting. to
Complete plans for our spring Cow
om :
‘AG four thirty she Forum en-
dutied ¢ unmue pergtons edt th
leadership of Douglas Donner,
The Rev, C. T. Colling was the
speaker at" the evening! service
Hosea for ies. subject “Commuc
rourtell to" God’, Rev. Collins
brought out the fact that all things
are possible to high who: pute hus
set in Gods hands
Five persons joined the church
and vhe'aud colleen for the day
was S263 :
Net Sunday, Holy Communion
veil'be served st ott services and
the pastor all preach.
Dinner will be served immed-
sacle aller morninga cence at
isch une the newly bedecked
Tay teow, dite’ parler “aad
church office, will be on display,
fei wll Da ow at
St. Mark’s M. E. Church
Last Sunday morning the pas-
tor Rea joke We Rebacon
reached, from the text. St Mat
Brew ii 27 hus auger hem “The
Great American Cats” In avery
testing manner he precured te
Rhetient sf the eharehin the smal
Tees seate-Son and: teen an com
Weir Sotaced aie church at tee
Gy in the large cues, with it
eae Seven dana week’ proscam
Uethag wh abe. eartoue soer
Seales couch eeaitont it eeery
Sele suaved char-whnle in Har
fax many cporumires have been
Dpened to ue pennie, there sl
seen vats suman of se0rK 10
Eodine be ihe charches
‘The assistant pastor, Rev R.A
noes weached he eet
,
St. John’s A. M..E. Church
The morning services were well
auignded and ihe pactan Ree €
i Sdquette; spoke einquentic and
Feeneahy cupsa' the sutieet "Com
ference ‘Voice cf Oflense"y
Re fo wm the Junin ‘Church
convened with, Nite Ruth Deas
speaking on “Knight? of the King”,
Mies Lots Jones was introduced as
assistant. ta) Miss Denms, and.
pledged her support to the work
eee sr ktareh gat te clock the
soiune neaple of Bethel wil be the
Zoncts the tuner, Charen and
weectne'a pesetain, Millen Jars
and committee ace in charge, |
St. Paul Baptist Church
The pastor, with officials, mem-
bers and the Choral of the young
ber eeent Seer ta Alt Sonal
Bapust Church on Tueeday myght,
where a vege interesting service
ae held
‘On Wednesday night all the Sun-
dav school workers were called in
aaurcrence wath Ales ‘Clara Moore,
SP IGremas “aetstane. superimtend
dav and the teachers of the school
Tine Setneshenemts were served a
the close of the conference :
Thursday malt Key RS Brown
ie his lectire on “Domestic
Happiness
Bhday might the prayer service
wat ‘eall wiended: and sprrtealy
helpful
Shay morning early, Licentiate
JH Doughtry had out a ‘goodly
Jumber athe praver- service ane
der the Prayme Band” |
ALL, the senior choir furnished
tnSianiet send the pastor eache
Ui rielcermen, mile ia the even:
faethe “came, cheve_ sing, wine
Mrs Mary Hodges was the soloist,
and Rev WH A Booker, assist-
Bie pastor, preached the sezmon.
‘At its close the auxiliaries made
nett Hat quarter) report
The pastor contmucs to have
wekness tn ins family, his daught-
sete Tale A Beaker, haeing
(reat tinckew Wednestax’, Hebrie
Het tree NN enmtined to
BY pak Wate the dieters. ace
Mis Bloyd, mother of Mis Rook
BS aie ie beet all all he cat
Mt. Olivet Baptist Church
Revelations 21, was the text chos-
em hye RevebWpoi Mayes ar Al
Olivet Baptist Church, Sunday
morning, February 23. He spoke
of the way to know God, to be
born of the Spirit from above, and
emphasized many of the new things
of new creatures oF creation as
having new hope, life, desires, as-
pirations, ideals and finally a ‘new
Jerusalem,
“An infant was prayed for, and
interesting. sessions were held by
the two Bible classes,
Ac'the BY, P, U, hour, the
assistant pastor was tie principal
Seaker. “An teresting, program
was rendered by Mrs, Griffin,
“The assistant pastor, Rev. A. A
Gorprew, preached from. the 4th
chapter of Amos, 12th verse. Sub-
ject, "Preparing to Answer.” The
Principal theme was the righteous
judgment of God and the blessing
‘of the heart from secret faults
| beginning Monday, February 24
there are noon-day meetings of one
‘hour led by sisters of the church
This precedes the revival: services
‘which wil begin, Sunday. | Rev,
J.C. Jackson” of Hartford will
lead’ the services,
Six persons joined church dur.
ing the day. :
Daring past week funeral serv-
ices were held for tWo of our faith.
ul members, sisters Eliza Morgan
and Eleanor Robinson.
——2—__—
7,
St. Martin's Chapet
-"Eeeding the Fires of Hope” was
the “sermon topic discussed las
Sunday morning, by the Rev. Joht
H Johnson, viear of St, Martin’
Chapel, 122nd street and Lenos
avenue, based on the, text a:
recorded in the 2nd verse of the
6th chapter of Paul's Epistle to th
Galanians: "Bear ye one another's
burdens and so fulfill the law of
Chest.”
“Hope is ane of the thege car
dinal virtues" declared. the min
ister. Cardinal, because of the im.
portince given’ them in the New
Testament. | Hope of Paradise is
horn mm one’s own, breast, and can:
not be transmitted, But it is pos
sible to give Worldly hope and en:
couragement, A kind look, 3
friendly word or a sincere hand
shake will cometimes uplift a bur
dened soul ess
“In another verse of this chap-
ter, Paul has said, “Each man must
bear his own. burdens.” This 13
trae. Bur it is also true that we
can we renewed hope to our fel
Townen, And in this, sense, we
are bearing each other's burdens
The heart of religion 1s contamed
in being friendly and in loving one
another. If we fail to help those
that come within our doors, seek-
ing solace and strength, then we,
a Christians have. missed our
createet opportunity and the church
has sanled in tts purpose.”
Fiowers for the altar were con-
tnbuted by Miss Marte John ‘in
memory ot her sister and father.
The annual parish supper under
the auspices "of the Women’s
Guild will be sefved Tuesday even:
ing, March 4, beginning at 6
oincke
COntemation service will be held
next Sunday evening, March 2, at
Fb clock.
Union Baptist Church
During the past week, Mrs, Is
apelle Bundy ‘ot Washington, D
C., has been conducting very suc-
ccistul, sermces. Each evening. 2
large number attended.
fee Johnson and his staf of
Sundsy”sehuol workers were. bus
uth the children Sunday morning
ihe attendance was very good. At
ihe, tose, ol the services Paste
Sims‘cante tm and started a renvval
Among. the children. W. H. Lloyd,
wdc ince Ovesby at the pe
ho, rendered the music, 63 eld
ren came to Christ.
Every seat was occupied at the
mommg, service’ Sunday. Suter
Randy delivered a great’ message
which Was swell "received. The
Misionary. Circle had 2 very ie
teresting, mecting,. Site Bendy
Was the speaker The prograar i
the BYP. Ce was intereoung,
The closing message for the day
was delivered. by Sioter_ Bundy,
Another large “crowd attended
Onerng amounted to $1,252.70.
Baptismal. service this Saturday
cvraing. Sicier Bunay will be wie
us during the week and Sunday,
eens
Siloam Presbyterian Church
Pca aba, Rciian Rekha dati r
Shlnam, Dr, George Shippen Stark,
pastor, carried in a forceful and
Appealing. manner, the message of
the meaning of the Scriptures as
we lead up to the Lenton season,
Hand carried the pertinent question,
How readest -thou? If we read
the Bible aright, if the Bibie as in
our heart, no tan can throw it
away, In'it we find the practical
ineshing of Ie'today; it must be
‘read With a purpose,
The Bible School met at the
close of the morning service, Next
Sunday, in keeping with the spe-
isl program for the first Sunday,
Mr Weatherless, member of the
Staff of the Carlton avenue branch
of the Young Men's Christian As
‘sociation will be the speaker,
‘The Men's Club had an anspir~
ing meeting at four o'clock. An
excellent musicale program’ was
Fendered consisting of instrument
al and vocal nambors. ‘The speak-
er was Melville J. France, ex:
United States Attorney. of “New
York for the Eastern District. He
took for ins subject “New Lamps
for Old” In his talk he illus-
trated how. man has extended his
and, his foot, his voice by man's
inventions, automobiles, aeroplane,
radio Whether we are better tor
day because of these wonderful in-
ventions than our ancestors dew
pends upon how we use them,
Siloam" Young People's Union
held its evening hour of service
from 0 to 7 o'clock, A socal hour
‘The lube of the churelt are at
work Gechse the eligeeh's fseal
veae im alimanner tht sliall make
the’ aril of uate, financhlly
able to clear aff all emall outstands
ing bills and atart the new church
yeir uneneumbered, A pew rally
service will be held by the Ladies
Church Atd-om the alterndon-of
) PPV HE material contrast between the structures with which (Boolie’
Tae ae ae eee a ae
Hatha, Salto aed Socoutelag Bice Hb
} tmgartnct eneurg of Dre WasBlagton’s work and sehlevemeau ‘fhe
ea det une cl oe a sant tines goose me
- Tecadtae"Sg Mapa? meee ant hal alice Te ots he
, SRTeteh ede "He plrbone Oa te cline neh aah ce IN
/Helshtat She homely But ver Tata caine tas eR aagterlig ahs
Relate, aneat shits Soot "Ste EEN WARS nye
lon THE eas
| TUSKEGEE. NORMAL AND INDUSTI¢ ns
INSTITUTE is Mee
"Founded by BOOKER T. WASHINGTO!
| Offers Excellent Opportunities to Young Taek
- and Women to Secure an Excellent Litere.:'i
|, and Normal Course, and a .Coursesii!*?, "*
/ , Mechanieil Industries, Women’s «
Industries or Agriculture fin{%' Tt
: LOCATION UNSURPASSED FOR HeALTHFULNESs. sel it i
WRITE POR CATALOO OP INFORMATION — ¢ potent’
ROBERT R. MOTON, Princi"",,.. »
Tuskegee Institute, Ala! 20
. 1, Rev, M, L, BHEPARD
oo
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a fe
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Rey. M. L. Shepard -
Heads Quaker City _
. Baptist Conference
Philadelphia, Pa—The Baptist
Ministers’ Conference of Philadel-
phia and vicinity, the largest organ-
Biion of “its kind in the. Uaited
Sinten set a. precedent recently in
Seale Ae SPs tod eeaheeted
NAT BAPTISTS <
TO HOLD GOLDEN
JUBILEE IN SEPT
Half-Century of Growth
To Be Marked By Ses-
sion in New York
Chicago, Iil.—~"Few survivors are
left to us after fifty years of carr
ing on as 2 religious bedy. who wit
essed the amalgamation of and the
setting up of the National Baptist
Convention of America fity years
ago." declared Ren. S. S. Jones, cor-
tesponding secretary of this nation.
wide convention of Negro Baptists
They are to hold their Golden Jubi-
‘lee Celebration in New York, the
‘metropolis of the nation, September
10-15, at whlch time they, will ob-
serve the half-century mark.
Few of the younger generation
mow that the National Baptist Con-
vention of America, as it is now
styled. called and named, is the amal-
gamation of three national councils,
Te was the bginning of mergers, and
while more than two score years and
ten have pissed since that date, thr
seligious organization has pushed
forward. The bodies that came to
gether were the Educational Conven.
tion of America, the old National
Convention, and the Foreign’ Mission
Convention, The uion of thes tnree
bodies took place down in Montgom
ery, Ala, September 1880,
‘The Golden Jubilee ,
It is planned to hold in New Vork
City a jubilee and a celebration that
wall depict in date, in exhibits and
4m achivements what has. taken place
in ity yeaes, in the early beginning
when the Negro Baptists had few
churches, no erature of their ovn,
and a” lmted number of «prepared
gospel_ ministers. The acting. pres:
ident, Rev. J. W. Hurse of Kansas
City,’ who is ‘Alling out the unexpir=
ed term of the late Dr. J. Edmund
Wood. yall instruct that ‘each board
prepare its historical data to be pre=
sented in connection with their ane
nual report during the Net York
gathering. A commissioner has been
named from every State convention
affhating with this group of work.
ers.
This is the Convéntion and Group
to which the late R. H. Bord, found-
er of the National Baptist Publish-|
ing, Board, belonged. |
New York will be the meses, and
the churches, numbering between,
thicty’ and forthy, some. very. smail
and others large, will join in one
tremendous effort’ to give the. first
National Baptist Convention. méets>
to be held within the confines of the
Empire State, a rousing welcome
arid 2. civdial reception: |
Rey. Marshall L. Shepard, pestoe
Mu Olivet Tabeprads® “Bay
Church, 42nd and Wallac. ¢tree of}
West: Philadelphia, Pa, as:greviéer
after he had filled the, -unexpirr
term of the late presidents ;Pr.tniag
MeArthur Sullivan’ sess" Mey
Rev. ‘Shepard came’ to: thi lf) ay)
fittle more, than three "years, “apace
from New York City, whige be: wan
assistant pastor of the ~ Atyasinlan
Baptist Church. He has." built’: aSenj
one of the largest congregations V Yq
the city and one of the most influet
tial. Rev. Shepard, at 3036813. ology
i pehape he younger mab to: ee
the Philadelphia Baptist group.
is also secretary ‘af ‘the spi
board of the New Enast eee
Conveittion, and assistant secretin,
of the Foreign Mission Board of this,
National Baptist Convention,, “Incas
and canribstng editor 40 the
fie Ben a oe
under the caption “Shepard Bea
is quite popular and widely. ready:
CHICAGO CHURCH
WINS VICTORY IN":
Ex-New York Pastor, .R
GM. Oliver, Leads. His 7
Church In Fight 9/2
Chicago, Ill—Walters A.i3&, Bey
Zion Church, the Rew.George Ma
Oliver, pastor, has wonemsignal vio
tory after six months of Tiqu
over the property withthe- Progress
sive Bond and Mortgage Cay whith,
company had entered sult to enforetg
payment of back interest and unpaid"
fotes on the martgaged indebtedness
In a statement issued by the trus
tee board thequgh its president, Jol
W. Anderson, and secretary, Et
E. Croook, it is brought out that tj
burden of debt under which tf |
cherch labored had caused a falling
off of the membetship and 2 genet jg
apathy “among. thote who femain
The mortgage svas more than SICH
000, and the annual interesteamot {i
ed_to $7,000, _ “ihe
The Rev. Dr. Olivet, wher placed
ed Rush Memorial A. ML a chance
Church, New York Gity, 1oney sbodd
coming here, was sok ss. a relia
op J. W. Martin, and shis fird mong
fort " was to pay’ several thouk Tk
dollars back interest and at the samus
ume take care of current expensega
This was found impossible, 9. the
church allowed ita payments to des
fault. and the mortgage company en
tered suit. A. receiver, representing
the Strauss National Bank, was nam
ed. and he demanded $1,000 monthfyy|
tent. ou
Rent $150, Not $1,000. : a
‘The church was represexa BH
Counsel’ Israel S. Barlaran, whe]
maintained that too much maney’ hat
already been paid and that the coteus
Bregation ought to de. allawed
Occupy” the. shitrch building with,
paying any rent. The court ordered]
an appraisal bY which to determine
the ‘real value of the property and
its ‘rental possibities. A repo
showed the actual value to be Mad]
000 to $50,000, and that 2 is otal
rentable. a a
As a result, Judge Feinbysg.e, 24]
dered the, payment of S1St af % Gi
instead of $1,000, as We ‘ropa
the receiver. sas a
The church, by this decision, x
more than $60,000, and is, put}"«
position to take over the Prdycta
at the reduced figure whenever
in financial condition to do 4%,
membership has gained new li
is duly jubilant over the grea My <4
tory which has been won endef
leadershin of Dr. Oliver.
NOTICE!
| 4, CORRESPONDENTS
|, Please. have your news items
by Monday morning of each
Articles ‘teaching the office I
then Tuesday. will appear in
following week's ircae.
| New York Academy i
Business
et ci gered
447 Lenox Avenug New Yorkag
Phones Matlem 2287 ™
Day “And Evening Classes
LINCOLN,
SECRETARIAL SCHO.
264 West 125th Street, N-A.S
Storer! = Gommecsla
Se an eateaernee eft
OFBtudente Mey “Beate Any
‘Ta, MONUMENT
IN THE REALM OF MUSIC
THIRD MORNING MUSICALE OF ASHLAND ASHLAND PLACE Y, BROOKLYN, MARKED BY SINGING OF ELLA BELLE DAVIS
By LUCIEN H. WHITE
The third annual *Holiday Morning Musical under auspices of the Education Committee of the Ashland Place Branch Y. W. C. A., Mrs Matchie, Marshall, chairman, in the auditorium of the Central Branch Y M. C. A., Hanson and Fort Green places, Brooklyn, on Washington's Birthday, Saturday, February 22, at 11 o'clock, a m., was featured by the delightful singing of Ella Belle Davis, a charming young soprano from New Rochelle.
This young lady has been heard on a number of previous occasions hearing the perilous artistic strivings, and the manner in which she performed her task on this occasion justified all the prognostications of the past as to her future promise. Her bones were luscious and velvety, pure and sweet, with no sign of whiteness which would seem to think a necessary quality. Impeccable articulation, beautiful phrasing, unusual breath control, all combined to make her singing a joy and a delight.
Her accompaniments were Pelayah her sister, Marian D. Davis, and a true sisterly spirit in the sympathetic understanding which marked her work
William Pease, 15 Orient avenue, Jersey City, N. J. 1.00
Maurice T. Smith, 124 West 3rd street 1.00
Mrs. William Rogers, 33 West 118th Street, Apr. 5 1.00
George Flomman 1.00
Mrs. Cornelia Johnson, 65 La Salle street 1.00
Mrs. Helen Chirisman, 2285 Seventh avenue 5.00
Mrs. Eva Banks, 122 Burd street, Nyack, N. Y. 1.00
Quincy Edgeworth, 252 West 149th street 2.50
Charles E. Walter, 149 Edgecombe avenue 1.00
Harry Brown, 71 West 137th street 1.00
Other features of the program were found in the violin playing of the dean of present day concert violinists, Joseph H. Doughlass of viola, and the pianist, Steven does not need enhancement through the fact that he is a grandson of the great Frederick Douglass, and instrumental and vocalistic renditions by Carl Diton, pianist and baritone. Douglass played three groups, exhibiting all the wizardry of his masterly art, while Mr. Diton first exhibited his pianistic skill by playing a Chopin Nocturn and the Lost Polonaise in E Flat, and later in group solos by guitarist and bassist Brazel, using his own arrangement of a Spiritual "Swing low, sweet charm!"
During the intermission between Parts I, I and II, Mrs Marshall, chairman, made an appropriate little talk, thanking the members for their cooperation and evident appreciation of the musical offerings
Ms. Frances Gunner is general secretary of the Ashland Place branch, with Mrs L. A. Milligan as branch chairman, and other members of the committee besides the chairman, are Medames Caroline Bagley, Matyra Rae Dabney, R P Hamlin, Emma Howard, Hannah Jackson, Sadie Harper Jefferson, Milton J. Lacey Jacob Morriss, R. Quan-Ann Howard, Hannah Jackson, W Talbert, Eleanor Teagle, Dr V Morton Jones, and the Misses Bratte Henderson, S. Louse Powell and Margery Talbert
The group of pretty program girls included Mary Brown, Vel-Gaddee on behalf of the bakers, Iwuena, Anna and Midred Taylor
An attractive feature of the program was the printing of appropriate poetical selections on the program pages, and one of the most attractive was by Marjorie Marshall, one of the several talented young daughters of Mrs Marshall herself Marjorie wrote:
would be one with the morning
To hold in my throat
Soit ecclesies
Old husband."
Monarch Band Plays Fifth Sunday Concert
Sunday afternoon, February 23, at 3 o'clock, the auditorium of Harriet Brecher Stowe Juniun High School at 135th street and 'Edgecombe avenue was again filled with an appreciative audience for the final performance by the Monarch Symphony Band under leadership of Lieut. Fred W. Simpson. The audience filled every seat in the room, with a number saddening in the rear. They had the pleasure of listening to one of the most interesting programs Lieut. Simpson presented, featuring a feature being the playing of Lungs "Egyptian Pallet," in which the heavy brass and the reed section were particularly featured. The smoothness of the bass horns and the flexibility of their tonal utterance gave evidence of the degree of techonics in which these musicians have attained.
The host for the afternoon was Curley J. Johnson, an active member of Monarch Lodge, who serves as an usher at each concert "He sang most effectively. The Pagan song comes again." being compelled to repeat a portion of the latter song. The hand's program, opening as usual with the "Star, Spangled Banner" and closing with "Auld lail song" included also a March, "His Sangles (Sanglese)," "Pauce Dandelion (Dandelion)," "Cocoonat Dance (Herman); Indian Love Song, "By the Waters of Minneotaka (Lieurance); Remembrances of Havana, "Night on Prairie (Lake), Intermezzo, "Wedding of the Rose" (Jeset); Painful Down South (Quaterdaire), "Detecting" "Forge in the Michaelis)," an opportunity was given the audience to contribute both to the land for free summer evening concerts and towards defending excerpts of the Sunday afternoon concert on the band members have personally paid. Contributions to summer concert fund were as follows:
M. I. acknowledged ..... $94.77
Additional Contributions.
M. I. Knicker, principal
100 st. ..... 1.00
M. I. Fane, 100 West
100 street, Apt. 7-A ..... 1.00
M. McNeal, 42 West ..... 1.00
William Pease, 15 Orient avenue, Jersey City, N. J. Mauce Smith, Smith, 13 West St. Lillian Roger, 13 West Mrs. Lillian Roger, 13 West
118th street, Apt. 5
George Flomann
Mrs. Cornelia Johnson, 66 La
Salle street
Mrs. Helen Chirisum, 225
Sensata street
Mrs. Eva Banks, 22 Burd
street, Nyack, N. Y
Quenie Edgecombe, 252 West
149th street
Charles E. Walter, 149 Edge-
combe avenue
Harrive Brown, 71 West 137th
街
Mrs. Mamie Burnette, 90
Edgecombe avenue
Mrs. Ursaline H. Duncan, 155
West 143rd street
Miss Cora Harris, 246 West
111. 21st street
125th street
Eugene A. Webb, 39 West
135th street
Clarendonordy 45 West
138th street
Dennis Arrestad, 2265 Seventh
north street
enth avenue
Henry St. George, 124 West
127th street
12th street
W F Muid. 33 West 12th
Wanamaker Is Showing New Piano Tonal Device
The Crea-Tone, a new device for sustaining the tone琴, the invention of Simon Cooper, scientist of Brooklyn, is being exhibited to New York musicians this week by the John Wanamaker Stores in two recitals, one having been given on Tuesday afternoon, and the other to be held on Friday, 2.9.8.2014. Mr. Cooper's device, as described by Dr. Alexander Russell, concert director at Wanamaker's, is the result of many years of experimentation and research and according to reports from musicians, is capable of great artistic possibilities.
For a number of years inventors and manufacturers have attempted to devise some means of sustaining the tone琴, but does not modify the original piano tone, which is characterized by the hammer stroke on the string. In this respect it represents an extension of the tonal range of the piano, which sets up the gamut of harmonic tones which add beauty to the tone color.
The device can be placed on any piano without necessitating any serious structural changes in the instrument. In the Wanamaker designation a built-in large size device is equipped with the Cooper device will be used.
The program on Tuesday afternoon was given by Marjorie Garrique, pianist, with Radina Parmor mezzo-soprano, the Grea-Tone Beechman, by the singing the Rachmanoff G Major Eprelude and in accompanying two songs.
The Friday program presents Miss Pazmor again, with Constance Beardsley as pianist, and the Creata Tone piano will be used for a group of compositions by Borodin, Groebel and Albenz, and a vocal solo. "Jauple en reve" by Hue. The first piece is a heroic a crossover bussy's compositions, played on the Bechstein piano that Debussy used for eight years.
Fisk Jubilee Singers
In Brooklyn Friday Eve
Fisk Jubilee Singers
In Brooklyn Friday Eve
The concert of Negro Spirituals and folksongs, which the Fisk Jubilee Singers will give in the opera house of the Brooklyn Academy of Music Friday evening, February 28, will inaugurate an annual series to introduce to Brooklyn audiences the singers of all the outstanding Negro colleges in the South. This plan is being developed by the Academy of Adams pastor of the Concord Baptist Church Brooklyn, and a trustee of Morehouse College in Atlanta, who is sponsoring the concert Friday evening.
Among the Spirituals on the program of the Fisk Jubilee Singers will be "Study War, No More," "Great Camp Meeting," "Band of Gideon," "Little Play, David on Harp," "Nobody, Knoifo," "The Trouble I See," and "Ezekiel Saw the Wheel."
In addition, Luther King, tenor, whose voice has been praised by many of the leading teachers and musicians, will render a group of solos, including "You May Burry Me in the East," "Manselle Marie" "Look My Mother's Heart in Me Two Hands" and "The Massa de la Reine," for this initial concert are obtainable at the box office of the Brooklyn Academy of Music or through Mr. Adams at 170
---
Adelphi street, Brooklyn. The proceeds will be divided between Concord Baptist Church and Fisk University.
MUSIC JOTTINGS
Marian Anderson, contralto, of Philadelphia, is making her first appearance here this season on Sunday afternoon, March 2, at the Eagles Hall, under auspices of the Eagles Hall Square Club. The program at 3 p.m. includes sets from 75 cents to $2. William King will be at the piano.
Winifred Watson, soprano, and Andrew Watson, tenor, are appearing in a joint recital on Thursday at M. E. Church, Wavetown, at the German M. E. Church, Wavetown, at the Maple streets, Yonkers, under auspices the Stewardess Board, No. 2, of Bethany A. M. E. Church, with Carl Diton at piano.
The Schubert Music Club, E. H. Margestson, director, will sing at the church of Heavenly Rest, E. 29th, The Rev. Dr. Henry Darlington, rector, on Sunday afternoon, March 9, at 4 o'clock.
The Senior Fellowship of St. Philip's parish will give their benefit musicae Friday evening of this week in the auditorium of the Parish House. The proceeds from this musicae will be used to defray the expense of the coming annual conference in May.
The following, well known artists will appear:
Karl Margetson, pianist; Henrietta Hopkins, soprano; Augustus Burrell, violinist; Valdo Freeman, baritone; Gertrude Mae Hill, reader.
The music committee of Mt Calvary M E Church, the Rev. E. W Rakestaw, pastor, is arranging to be given at the church and musical to be given at Edgecombe avenue, on Monday, March 3, from 6 to 11 p.m.
Harry T. Burleigh, baritone and composer, was the guest of honor at the Larchmont Avenue Church, Larchmont, N. Y. on Thursday evening, February 20, when he appeared in a joint musical recital with Ella Belle Davis, soprano, and Marie P. Davis, pianist, for benefit of Emanuel A. M. E. the composer A. M. E. the management of Samuel J. Davis of New Rochelle Miss. Ella sang numbers by Loewe Weaver, Bachlet and Verdi. Miss. Marie played compositions by Beethoven, Debussy and Detti, and Dr. Burleigh and the meaning of the Negro Spirituals, closing by singing four of his own arrangements. Some 500 people
Madame Marie Selika, of 160 West 136th street, has opened her class of voice culture at the Martin Smith Music School, 139 West 130th street.
Carcelle Hall, Sun. Afc. Mar. 2 at 3 Prince Hall Squirt Club, Inc. presents MARIAN
Tickets 75c to 22.
New on Sale at Box Office
Recital Mgt. A. Judson (Steinway)
EDWIN COATES
139 W. 136th St. New York City
Piano Composition
Harmony Ear Training
Harlem Conservatory of Music
257 Lenox Ave. (Near 123rd St.)
Telephone Monument 1011
Director CHARD. HAAS
Director of Music
Oldest and Most Reliable School in
Harlem
Student may call for confidential
advice and information without ob-
ligation. Special department for Radio
Broadcasting and Public Appear
CONCERTS AND RECITALS AR-
RANGED AND MANAGED
Our orchestra presents
staff of all-artists instructors in every
branch of music—Piano, Violin, "Cci-
lari," Choral and keyboard, Soprano,
Mandolin, Harp and Soprano,
Theory, Harmony, Sight-reading,
composition.
TEACHERS—COURSES
DIPLOMAS AWARDED
VOICE CULTURE AND ALL
ITS BRANCHES
Open Daily For Interviews, Voice Trials And Examinations
WILSON LAMB
VOCAL STUDIO
105 W. 180th ST. New York City
FIRST EMMANUEL CHURCH
Saturdays at 2 p.m.
Homa Studio Music Hall Building
Orange, N. J. Phone Orange 7244
"Anyone Can Learn Music"
CARL DITON
Piano, Voice, Pipe Organ,
Theory.
188 St. Nicholas Avenue
Apt. 33
University 2030
Martin-Smith Music School
Incorporated
135 WEST 136TH STREET
New York, N. Y.
Academy Auditorium 8216
Music taught in all its branches.
Open All The Year
DAVID L. MARTIN, Director
Dr. H. T. BURLEIGH
were present and the Daily-Times of Mamaroneck paid high tribute to the artists.
The recital of James C. Smith, baritone of Englewood, N. J., sponsored by Bethel Young People Center, been postponed to Thursday, March 13th at 8:30 p.m. at Bethel A. M. E. Church, 52 West 132nd street, Mr. Smith will have his accompaniest, Miss Andrades Lindsay.
Montclair, N. J — The Men's Club of St. Paul Baptist Church is pleased in recital the following artists: Muriel Stowell, lyric soprano of New York City; Mrs. Maude Basume Cormans, pianist of Brooklyn N. Y., and Richard B Harrison, dramatic reader of N. J. The recital will be held at Glenfield School on Maple avenue with Mrs. A. N. Bell directing the program. The date is Tuesday, March 4 at 8:30 p.m.
Washington, D. C.-Eight Howard University students, under direction of Prof. Roy W Tibbs, sang before Vice-President Curtus and his brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs Edward Everett Gann, at a dinner given by Representative Hamilton Fish the guests entertained were the Ambassador of Cuba and senoro de Ferrasd; the Austrian Minister and Mme. Prochink; the Minister of the Netherlands and Mme Van Toen; the Secretary of the Interior and Mrs. Ray Lyman Wilbur, and the Secretary of Commerce and Mrs. Robert L'amont. Mme Robert L'amont, Mrs. Levington Smith, Walker Allen William Syphax, James Butcher, William Soles, Paul Smith and Daniel Roane.
ACTIVITIES AMONG UNION MUSICIANS
ACTIVITIES AMONG UNION MUSICIANS
BY PERCIVAL OUTRAM"
"The fastest growing, organization in the world. That's the Music Defense League. Every mail brings hundreds of signed membership coupons representing the theatre in every State in the Union, and every Province in the Dominion."
The above is the first paragraph of the International Musician, the official organ of the American Federation of Musicians, depicting the progress of the intensive campaign against mechanical devices which have created favor, by displacing Union musicians in the剧院.
This campaign aims to prove that the public really wants living orchestra and organists in the theatre, and looks with disdain on substituting mechanical music.
Coupons which the public were asked to fill out and return to the Federation's headquarters, deluged the office force, and extra help was acquired to handle the situation. Many music lovers not content with the letters, describing their objection to canned music and their learning for return of living music, continues the International. Many asked for blanks to have their friends join the Music Defense League. Most correspondents stated they were not musicians, but just a good friend. Special are said to have offered financial and some sent checks. Of course, all money or checks were returned with thanks as the Federation feels itself quite able to finance the campaign. The general advertising campaign was launched October 21, 1929. The commencement of the Music Defense League made the newspapers January 30, 1930. This checked substitution, and "in some cities orchestras were restored."
This concerns race musicians all over the States, if we judge by the conditions which exist in Harlem. In Harlem we have several theatres, which employed in the aggregate the musicians regularly. All these theatres have choral mechanical devices for the music. These, thirty men have joined the army of unemployed musicians to compete for the single engagements.
Harry PRAMPIN Laura
SCHOOL, OE. MUSIC
131 W. 136th St. N. Y. City
Phone Audubon 1987
COHEN FACTION WINS IN NEW ORLEANS
New Orleans, La.—Allthough seemingly outstated from power by his jilly-white opponents Walter L., which are not as prevalent as formerly, it looks then as if it behooves us to get some of these coupons and help push the Federation's efforts over.
Bill Brown, trombonist, of Brooklyn, who was leading his orchestra at a dance hall in West 42nd street, has edged over nearer to Broadway Bill changed his job, without the loss of a day, to the "Blue Bird," located in the Knickerbocker building and is located on the outside of the premises as "Bill Brown and his celebrated Brunswick Recorded Orchestra."
Lieut. Jake Porter and his orchestra were again heard on the radio Sunday, February 23. Jake seems to have had his time increased. The orchestra is gradually assuming a more intimate role. The orchestra has developed a sense of restraint in blowing, which spells better reception to the listener. Now, we know that a piano is included in the orchestra. It was also noted that the accompaniment to the solo instruments was better coordinated.
Dave Johnson's String Quartet was heard to advantage on a 15-minute demonstration on a radio station on Sunday.
Louis Armstrong, the sensational cornetist who flauted high tones on his instrument, billed to work at a cabaret in West 125th street, with his orchestra on February 26, for an extended engagement.
Charlotte Murray Sings at Cheyney
B. GEORGE W. BLOUNT
Chesney, Pa—An outstanding feature of the Pennsylvania State Negro Council in session here February 22, day and night, was the recital of one of America's greatest artists, Adam Charlotte Valentine, madam Demetrius Hall at 7:30 p.m., with Miss Ollyve Jeter at the piano.
Program: Sebben Crudela (Caldara). Du bist so sung (Erich Tischler, Sibelius, Haun Adenance) (Bardon), Haun Adenance ("Gagen") Bizet, "The Procession" (Franck): "It was a Lover and His Lass (Quilter). "Do Not Go, My Lye" (Hageman). "The Sleep That Fits on Baby's Eyes" (Golde), "Warum" (Tschakowsky) "The Tears at the Spring" (Leach).
Innately, as well as by education and training, Madam Murray is decidedly an artist in every sense of the word. Miss Olive Jeter gave as fine an exhibition of vocal accompanying as has been heard in Cheyney for many years.
Emma Ransom House
Miss Pearl Pleasant, Miss Helen Hubbard, Miss Leota Gonzales and Miss Lulk Jones, Chicago, Mrs Jane Hudson and Mrs Marcea Lea, California, George Caird and Milton Caird Boston; Miss Anola Miller and Miss Lexne House, Tuskegee, Ala, Miss Leila Payne and Mrs Georgia Williams, Patsburgh, Miss Alice Mundy and Mrs Catherine Woodland, Baltimore, Elizabeth Palestine Syrgoura, Atlantic City, Miss Laura B Jones, Brookline, Mass; Miss Carmen Lawrence, New York City, Miss W J Schooler, Knoxville, Tenn, Mrs Elizabeth Watkins, York, Pa, Rowena Rhyne, Pa, University of Rowena Point, Conn, Mrs Mary Broadus, Conn Rochelle
Miss Sarah Bluthe, Washington,
D C. Mrs. Louise Smith, Jersey
City, N J. Miss Russell Giles,
Cedarhurst, L. I. Mrs. Grace Wiliams,
Huntington, Schneidert,
N. I. Miss Mary, Schneidert,
N. I. Miss Mary, Long,
Reach, Miss Delores Harris, Hartford,
Conn. Miss Maggie Beaure,
Jersey City, N J. Miss Emma Woodbury, Englewood, N J. Miss Misty Williams, Mount Vernon,
N J. Miss Nannie Bell, Mount Vernon,
N J. Miss M. E. Sanford, St.
Louis, Miss M. Mattie H Holldas, Philadelphia, Miss Margaret Saddler, Dorchester, Mass. Miss Grace Willems, Miss Margaret Sandler, Gardens, Cambridge,
Miss Bertha Wornley, Worcester,
Mass.
Spokane Negro Refused License to Marry White Woman; Will Bring Suit
Spokane, Wash — Antonio Biggs, Negro, said when questioned by reporters Saturday, that he was starting legal proceedings to obtain a license to marry a white woman, after a license had been denied him and Miss Cecil Robinson, white, by the Spokane attorney in this prejudicial country," he said.
The County Auditor denied the couple a license on the grounds that he had the right to question the said woman, and that he mistreated her in a Negro. Mr Biggs returned to this by obliterating an order directing the auditor to appear in Superior Court and show why he should not be a witness.
Deputy Prosecutor Colton rallied to the support of the auditor, saying that a state judge who whistled on a marry one with more than one-fourth Negro blood.
How One Woman Lost 20 Pounds of Fat
Lost Her Double Chin—Lost Her Prominent Hips—
Lost Her Sluggishness
Gained Physical Vigor—Vivaciousness—a Shapely Figure
Cohen* succeeded in placing four of his candidates in the City Commission. Council. After having fought losing fights in the courts and in politics, to keep his organization intact, Cohen's sudden return to power has thrown a bomb into the lily-white rinks. The candidates are John P. Cohen for mayor, with Paul Marshall, M. J. G. Jousis and Dr. P. J. Fletchinger, all white, for Commission in Council.
ALABAMA DEMOCRATS TURN THEIR BACKS ON SENATOR HEFLIN State Chairman Returns Check, Saying It Was His Duty
Selma, Ala.—Edmund W. Pettus, chairman of the State Democratic Committee for accepting the qualifications of United States Senator J. Thomas Heflin, rabid Negro hater, as a candidate to succeed himself in the Democratic primary on August 12. Pettus told Heflin that the affidavit did not meet with requirements and in his letter stated "my duty under the resolution is to return your check."
31 Haitians Leave Jail After Arrest For Part In Memorial Meeting
Port-au-Prince, Haiti—Thirty-one Haitians arrested, by the National Guard on Wednesday at a mass meeting in memory of Haitians killed in a clash with marines last December, were released Friday. Eleven were fined $2.60 each, but the fines were remitted. Three of the leaders and eleven others were freed without trials.
Rev. H. Thomas Given
Birthday Surprise
Orange, N. J—The parishioners and friends of St Paul A. M. E. Church surprised their pastor, the Rev. H Thomas with a birthday party recently. The party was given in the auditorium of the Y. W. C.A., which was beautifully decorated with potted plants and sweet peas for the occasion.
The program for the evening included the anthems "Let Mount Zion Rejoice" and "O Come, Let Us Rejoice" and the songs "solos by Maddie Aion I" and "son and Howard Aaron; and readings from Dunbar and other Negro poets There were also several quartet selections
An elaborate collation, consisting of salines, punch, olives, salted nuts, ice cream and cake was served Rev Mr. Thomas, who has been pastor of St Paul Church for the past eight years, received a purse from the church, a handsome reward from the school and other valuable gifts from other auxiliaries of the church
The Rev J F Vanderhorst, presiding elder of the Newark District a number of his fellow ministers were present
Howard Will Abolish
Evening Law School
Washington, D. C.—The board of trustees of Howard University in its last semi-annual meeting decided to abolish the evening law school, beginning with the 1930 fall term. The day law school will be more fully developed. The university's budget for the current year was stated to be $2,692,624.
Dr Louse C. Ball, elected to the board last June, was in attendance. She is a city dental physician in New York and a fellow of the American Medical Association. A new addition to the faculty is Dr M. Raims, associate professor of botany. He is a contributor to the American Journal of Botany.
The trustees were guests of the faculty at dinner in the newly decorated dining hall Chas. H. Wesley spoke on behalf of the faculty and Gen John H Sherburne, president of the board, responded President Mordecai W. Johnson was master of ceremonies.
How One We
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Lost Her S
Gained Physical Vigor—Viv
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(Continued from First Page)
There is no longer any red-light district. It has spread from the Bronx to the Battery, from the East River to the Hudson. New York is a cesspool of vice and corruption. The clanking liquor bottles, the stink of mash, the crack of guns, the cry of murder, and the dash of fugitives, together with the march of harlots, move to the tune of jazz. This is the valley of death—this is New York.
"I feel impressed; by the scriptures to cry sland, and spare not, and to lift up my voice like a trumpet, show the people their transgressions." In the first place, the scriptures condemn man wearing the clothes of women." The woman shall not wear that which pertaineth unto a man neither to wear a garment. For all the do so are abomination unto the Lord their God." Deuteronomy 22:5.
"Instead of people applauding men that dress like women, they ought to weep and fear God when He is insulted by creatures that make themselves an abemination. Read other scriptures: 2nd Timothy 3rd chapter, Remans 1st chapter, Jude 13th verse.
The "Fairies" and Whence They Come.
"First—There are those who are born 'fairies' because of prenatal influences.
"Second—Those that acquire habit through lack of training by asleep in bed, by curvers, also through separate boys and girls schools.
"Third—The seekers after thrill, who willingly adopt habits and practices.
"Fourth—Those who develop the second third sex instinct because of debilitation caused by double-standard of living—a wife and a sweetheart.
"Fifth—Intellectual idifference to the call of the gospel. In Plato's phrase they had the soul the souls of conscience, and hide themselves in the light of God's revelation through Calvary.
"What Should Be The Church's Attitude, Toward Them.
"First--Should she hold out deliverance to them? Should she remain indifferent to their salvation and silent to their sin? Yes, she is indifferent, having these things. There is no one beyond the pale of God's salvation. Though their sin be as scarlet, He will make them as white as snow; they will make them as red as crimson; will make them as wool. Ye, the poet sings.
"He breaks the power of canceled sins, He sets the captive free. His blood can make the foulest clean. His blood avails for me." She also has a warning for them, namely, men are punished here in this world for their sins, as well as hereafter. This is a form of retribution according to Romans 1: 16-32: second chapter. We will verse, in general, the judgment of God upon New York, such injustice will do it, history is not uncertain in its voice and precedents of gross immorality bringing down judgment upon cities of ancient time. We have Sodom and Gomorra as examples which suffer from the judgment of God when we have Pompeii of mediaeval times Genesis 19:1-29
"Third—The wearing of clothes of the opposite sex is an abomination into the Lord. To cohabit in the opposite sex was punishable in old times by death, and today, it incurs the wrath of God and will surely be punished by Peteuteronomy 22:15: Leviticus 18:22 19:21 Corinthians 6:9: Leviticus 20:13
What Meeneth All This In The
Light of The Scriptures.
"It is the fulfilment of prophecy found in 2nd Timothy 3.1-14, 2nd Peter 2nd chapter, which describes the condition of the times that shall precede and presage the conting of the Lord Jesus Christ; who said, 'Iniquity shall abound and the love of many shall wax cold. And through the Apostle Paul, That women shall call Patience deceiving and being deceived.' Enoch prophesed these things in connection with the coming of the Lord, when he said, "Bethold, He cometh with ten thousand of His saints to execute judgment upon all, and to convince all that are ungodly among them of all their ungodly deeds which they have ungodly committed, and of all their hard speech, and of all their spoken against him." "One outstanding thing that makes me burden for fear am-belief of them who reject Christ as their Saviour, and those who accept
Notice also that you have gained in energy your skin is clearer—your eye sparkle with glorious health—you feel young in body—keener in mind. Your skin gives any life a joyous surprise.
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Christ as their Saviour; but, with not walk in obedience to His word, is the imminent danger of the coming homo-sexual, because they -in against Jesus or the light they have being forward and unwilling to abide and live as God-ordained; they are given over to a reprobate mind, to dishonor their bodies among themselves. Men with men, and women with women who burn in their lust one woman, this suffering judgment from God, retribution for their sins. Women putting themselves forward in the role of men to take the place of men as preachers, etc., and men taking the order of women, thus perverting the order of God, who placed men as the head of every woman, the sexuality of women, and femininity of women, thus giving our age with a generation of generations.
"Jesus said, 'While you drive the light, believe in the light; and again, talk while you, have the light, light do come upon you, and great will be among the darkness of degeneracy, insanity, and damnation.
"Do not become entangled with the light, and save YOURS from THIS UNTOWARD GENERATION."
F. B. White, Prop. J. W. Taylor, Maf
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eEIGET: voy Ao ek ___ THE NEW YORK“AGE : 9 . pein : t, 199
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7. Mary Clayborn were weekend ‘guests, Mes. Rebecca Hatchett have return) Mr. and Mrs. Solomon, Mrs. A. GJ Mr and, Mrs. C. Lee, Edwar| Rev, White's family’ while he was) his pulpit at Mount Zion ‘A. M. E.ptce of Mauagement :and the eq
of Mr. and Mrs. "Walter, Johns .of|ed from “Cleveland. ‘Van Dunk and Grace DeFreese.| Martinez,arid Miss Gladys Alfonto| paying the last respects to his fath-] Church last Sunday. ! It was Men's} tary, Migs -Edng M. Stratton,
NEW Jersey City. Mr. ‘Mra. Joseph Venerable | Everyone had_a real pleasant time.| of New “York City Were guests of| er of Norfolk, Va. Among the vis-| Day and there ‘were special services ——
The Dougbiss Republican ‘Chub| spent” 5" wtektind Seen Merk | Victor, DeFreese went to, New| Mrs, Alice Howard on February 23.| tors were Mrs. Brouke and daugh-| throughout the’ day. in the morn *New Brunswick, N. J.
and the, Women's, Republican Cub] Mr. Venerable recently purchased York City ‘Thrsday and took the " Novee:—Please leave, news and ler of Rigen: N. Yn Mines E-Jing the plato’, subject was.” ‘Fish-| , * NGI 5
RY. vnited We night. Hereafter] the billiard parlor at 127 Smith St.| examination’ forthe post office. | orders for The Age at the home gf|-Jackson, ©, Jackson, Sarah Hines] ers of Men” and a men's choir, un 4
Yonkers, N. Y. sited Weduesday. sight. Hereafter) the billiaed parlor. at 167, Siutly St.) cei re Cromer, Merwe Se Wate [ce tothe fe er eieee Gun Meas SL Cook, Rabert Tyler, Leder the direction of PrOl, Aliredy, .. (Week of Fei 22)
King of 104 Belknap avenue was. the
hostess to the Eunigue Bridge Club
“list ‘Thureday evening, Those. pres
én deluded Ste, and Mrs. George
-Browo, Mr, and Mrs, Downs, Me
‘and’ "Sirs, jones, Me and. Ars. C
Poe, Mr, and Ars, Veldell, Mr. and
ight, . Smith, Mrs, Gook’and’ Mrs
King.” “Avery pleazant evening wa
enigyed by al.
<A” memorable event, the Annual
+-Waldort Dinner, ‘was given bythe
‘WBrotherhood of the: Memorial A. M.
E"Zipn Church of 42- Irving. place
ou last. Friday ‘evening. ‘The audi
torium of the church was decorate
gorgeously inthe holiday. colors bs
2am able committee headed by Monre
Foy, st. About 156. persons were
Jjerved a ‘very. appetiting chicken
‘inner in courses. Robert Taylor,
“feqving as tosstmaster, introduced
Dy. John A. organ’ of this city
who was the principal speaker. He
Spoke oa "The ‘Trend of Business,
ad its Effects on the future hopes
of the Negro Youth." Speakers fol
owing represented the variows or
BatSaont” Rests trom the sor
ie, Rev. RS. Oden, marked the
‘losing’ of this great event.
‘het Jonge ‘Bape of the. Memoria
AMEE Zon Church were defeat
ved in baskethall by the Crimson Star
©. C Wednesday evening lst at P.
S. 6 by 12-29. %
«The ight annual dance and re
seeption of Palisade Lodge No. 3
HRP ho. Evof W. was a. huge
success. "About 500 persons. jaramed
Eehemselves into the ‘palatial Phils
“burgh, Hall oo, Washington's Birth
(May eve. The Westchester Lodge ot
Tarrytown, N.Y, received the, si
yer loving’ cup for having the larg
Si tumout. Daughter Curtis's Or-
cEhestra of New York City gave the
ferowd the treat of its I.
‘The matinee dance given by Sam-
H. Dow Post 1017, American’ Legion
Zon Saturday, Febrinry 22 at the
$Mfasonie Temple was quite a success
*Mr. ‘Henshaw’ and his jazzy oupe
royally catertained “the crowd:
Last Fridsy evening, the Nepper
Shin Repubiiaa Club tame to town
gave a dance atthe Masome
Preggic under the fuidance of its
Tpreatag George Bonner. Quite a
is was present.” Mr. Hen
Seas eae again With the crowd.
ERT. tee dmg prod of Se He
Jen R Wilson. NZ years of age, and
Se nee r Yorn High School
amen ye Bi So
“feing the frst stlent to de promet-
Be oe keel a terse
Siemmie conse at her school,
eae oad She has spe:
SiGe a WMS of sie, and
bow it seems thot she ‘will ‘enter
Right school, and also study voice
gelture, ‘Having "completed "her
‘Courses locally she will finish at the
Noy England Conservatory of Mu-
Be She is a member of Messiah
Baptist Chorch and is vell-liked by
Bi to now hers Were prot ot
_ The Les Courtisans Douse repre-
‘sears Oe finest and highest standaro
ff young men to be found answhere
4a the county. Last Saturday ever
Eig, tbe boys had. ther installauon
‘of ofScers for the’ new term. The
‘home of Mrs, Lyons of 238 South
AIO Street, ‘Bk. Vernon, vas. the
‘sore of this great .oceasion. Blas
Sorate preparations were made for
cthege boys and their lady friends and
‘alsg the special guests, Arthur ‘Gide
Sings, who imtalled te officers and
sbis wife, Soe Heese, pepemaanla:
Hye, ‘Corties -RUth and his wife. A
Sof toy decks Giaer ves oar
She guest by Misses Doris Seay,
Celestine Leese and Rosetta Avery,
Following this feature of the pro.
gram the ‘officers. were installed
Ramely: Thomas. Seay. ir, nres=
Heat; Sylvanus, Godbod, vice-pres-
‘dent Lester Kingsland, " sccretary
George Davidson’ jrye treasurers
Grant Moore, financial secretary:
James Richardson, chaplain, and
Gerald Seay, press agent.” The pres
‘deat was given avery handiome
walle Sod. ‘Misees Marjorie Kings
land and Gwendolyn Palmer, each 2
boudoir lamp for their services dur
ing the recent misatre given by the
fit, “Dancag and all Kinds of fun
legt everybody happy 10 the wee
Sours of the morn.
‘On, Wesinesday evening, February
19, "Mra Mable Giddings of 354
Warburton avenue gave a, luncheon
vas her home in honor of her grand:
other who celebrated her” 7ath
Birthday. " Among. the guests. pres-
ent were ‘Mrs, Hattie "Henderson,
Mes"Eten Witltt, Mrs, Rebecca
Sweeney, Mrs. Margaret Bell and
Mix. Bra Winston, She received
2a abundance of gifts.
Tast Tuesday, Nira E. Butler of
386, Riverdale mvenue’ was the gucst
of Miss Anna Woods of Tarrytown.
X. 98 On Wednesday, Mrs, Tatler
And “Miss Woods were the dinng.
Huetts of Mrs, Scott of Tarrytoun
ey
~ Mra. Doggthy Scott, Miss Berths
Lee Teeringion and ‘Mes. Viola Dax-
is of White Plains. were. the holiday
quent of Mrs J. W. Queenan,
‘The Yonkers Fortin 1 certainly
in the limelisht these days. “Sunday
the chapel of the Messiah Baptt
Chueh "was erovwded with the eck
people of Vankers te bene slus Ries
Mary Clayborn were weekend guests
of Mr. and Mrs. “Walter Johns . of
Jersey Gy.
“The Dougliss. Republican ‘Club
and the Women's Republican Clut
vnited Wednesday night. Hereafter
they will work together'as one unit
At the. Metropolitan Church Sun-
day morning the pastor, Rev. Har-
old H. Kirnon preached an inspiring
yermon from Natthews 28:20. At
the close, one person joined i
church. Sunday school opened at
pom. We were glad to welcome our
efficient superintendent, C. S. Evan's
at his place again. The People's
Community Lyceum’ and Forum
opened at 4:30 p.m. with a good
number present. The children ace
taking an active part cnder the fine
leadership of Edward Smith, jr.
Sunday, March 2, Dr. S. A. McNeill
presiding elder, will preach at 2:30
after which ‘the third quarterly con-
ferenot will be held. The services
next Sunday morning are’ to be con-
ducted by ‘the children.
We are glad to announce tha
Charles Borden is improving rapidly
from his Pecent ines
Mamaroneck, ‘V. Y.
‘Mamaroneck, N. Y.—The service
at the A. BG E. Zion Church, Bar-
fy aveme, wis well attended Sun
day, it being a real spring day. Dr
Onque of Newark was the speaker
Inve ‘atieoor, Dome” Efien ot
more gerons went to White Plain
te attend the fourts, union meets
with Dr, White of Mt. Vernon whc
Was the speaker, His choir furnish:
th the musiey then vey Journeye
Sle home ett night and listened
a wonderftl lecture by Prof, James
'W_ Eichglberger, jr., of Chicago, Ill
‘Some attended the mid-winter Sun-
day, Sthool and V. CE. conven:
G8 St the Lang island dint a
eee Chester. Fritz Mitchell, dis-
trict superintendent, was assisted by
frat Eichelberger and Bishop Cald-
ell ns
pee
| Tarrytown, N. Y.
PIR i estan oP Lape lees ech
‘cup was awarded to the members o
Westchester Lodge, No. 116, 1. 8
P.O. Elks of the World, last Fri
Gy creping for having the Larges
numberof members inthe — Elk
Grand March held by Palisade Lodg
at Philishyrg Hai in. Yonkers, |S
¥. ‘The cup was received by Exalt
ed, Ruler Lois Matthews.
Master-Peyton Miller is mach im
proved after am operation at, Grass
Iapds Hospital i
‘The Religious Educational Schoo
belt" commencnent ston
right and among the receivers o
Scrsbeses of rere wee Mew Al
Williang on “How to Teach Qui
dren”; Mrs Addie Jackson, Mrs
Mildred Lacey’ on "How to Under
wand Bors and Gish Frank Pas
chall, Ediyonia, and Emily, Saunder
fon “Life of Chfist” Mrs, Susie Me
fen, Mes. Marie Plater, Mrs. Ad
Turner, Mrs. Lonzo Smith on. "Hoy
to Teath Young People” ‘The. ex
ercises were held at the First Re
formed Church, Rev. Blodgett, dire
tor.
"Fhe Ells of Westchester Lodge
116 will. initiate thirty-five nen
members into the mysteries of the
fonder this Saturday night, March I
Rt their lodge rogms. 8
‘The Bible Study Class held thei
meeting last Thersday at the resi
donee of Nr. and Mrs. MacNelson
2 Division street. It yas taught
ite fourth Bible teacher, Mre Pas
aire Maly Gi
fq. Maly Givens was the gugs
of ‘Mrs. Josephine Jemerson a
Poughkeeprie. N.Y, on Washing:
tons Birthday.
1a the elimination contest of bas
Ketball players to take nart on
team ina contest for a, silver cup.
held at ¥, St. CAL Miss Geraldine
Lenoir won third piace by making
SS tashans tun of OS teu:
Syracuse, N. Y.
Syracuse, N. ¥.—W, L. Andrew:
of the Nick Peters Clothing Co
has been transferred to Schenectady
te act ab special agents Tie. wil be
missed by his many friends here.
Ses Coorganaa’ Cook vet with
serious “sccdent lst week hen th
eoke her reht leg. above. the hee
Although connned at {he Good Shep:
inetd. Hospital for sereral days, sh
fae now returned home
‘Mrs. Sune Parker and daughter
have returned {roman extensive
it'te “Couondate, Fis where tee
feemt some: time with Mrs Parker’
mother. *
Mist Wortham of Gloversville, X
Y¥., was a quest at the Savoy Hotel
last, week.
“News for this column must be in
the hands of William H. Jackson
G03 South Metre. stret ot lave
Cran Thursday. for publication in th
following, week's paper.
Newburgh, N. Y.
Newburgh, N. Y.—Mrs. Wedhng.
ton Taylor has returned home afte
{wo monjhs vacation in Richmond
Washington, Baltimore and. Th
delphia.
‘Mrs. A. Brown of New Rochelle
was a “sisitor in town last yweek
Wile here Mes Brown was the
guests of Mr. and Mrs, A. Ward
‘of Gidney avenue,
The Boosters Chun met at the res
idence of W. MeWilhams last. Pri
dai nip Officers of the, cluh are
W, MeWithamas, 1. D Grows, E
Martin and Charlies Brown. A grand
hall will he iver at the Greenwich
Manor, March 6 at Goshen. The
committer i+ compmed of J” Mur-
rv H Freeman and H Rove, Mu
‘sic will he furnished by the Rose
brothers orchestra,
R. Pinson and FE Cadette spent
the weekend fn New Yorke
‘Mr, and Mrs. Eugene Washington
cave a sdimer toat Friday biel on
Tonner if fremde fran Trowkdvn
4 Mise Fate Hraaht crate fluted the
Wr Te Chil last Sialas exes
Maver Walter Reon ie Noite
frivete a Chea
Mrs Dorathe Clashorne ant? meth
ct wietne in Philadeto'n
Edward Branch, Louis Finnie and
Mrs. Rebecca Hatchett have return:
‘ed_ from “Cleveland.
Mr. Mes. Joseph Venerable
spent fe ts New York
Mr. Venerable recently purchased
‘the billiacd parlor at 127 Smuth St
‘The Smith Street All Stars de-
feated the Plaza basketball team las
Friday night at the Academy of Mu
i :
Sergeant Lafayette Hunter will
menage the Palatine baseball team
Shomer senone
Matchmaker John Springs ha:
promised another big week to th
Foca faltowets of the Gghting rater
nity. He started the“ ball rolling
Tuesday night with the first round
‘of the annual senior amateur tourna.
ment. The semi-finals will be fought
‘Thursday night, The best simor
‘pures in this district have qualified
to ght and there will be enough ae
ion to “satisfy the most” exacting
en.
iim —
Fonohheepsie, N. Y.
ROO «re. earteee |
Mrs. Lewis Johnson have rented
Mrs. Colley’s apartment on Fallhall
avenue
The | choir sounded good under
Mme. Mamie Robertson's leadership
Sunday.
‘Miss Priscilla Porter 13 vacation-
ing foc.a month at the home of her
parents at LaGrangeville.
Wits StaieTanaes ie hasan of
a turkey suger which will be give
Tharsdyy, March 20. Lots of eke
ih have ‘beet old. already.
Mr. Cropp of Pershing. ave who
hay been seks is improving. at thi
writing
The C A. Club will entertain its
friends and. members with» formal
dance at the New Elks Home on
Friday evening, February 2. The
lob was organized by Mts. Dorothy
Eggleston Hil Tas March and. th
present oficers are: Fred. Futrgiles
president; Ethel Green, vice-pres-
ident; Dot Pierce, secretary, » and
‘Aaron Bowman, treasurer.
Mrs. Margaret Jackson of 79
Pershing averive is sick in bed.
The qudden death of, James K.
Lewis, sm, at his late residence, 107
Bine sttect on February 12 was 3
great shock to his family and the en-
tre comminity. "He was the fount
er of the Rose Leaf Lodge, No. 3539,
G. U. O. of O. F. He held some
of the most responsible postions o
his race in this city. He died at the
age of 63, During the last three
Years of his life, Mr. Lewis. vay W
Poor health, He as surewed be hi
Sidbon Mrs, Margaret Lewis, thee
agin Mrs Ethel Miller of
South Bend, Ind; Mrs. Blynche
Lewis of Cedarhurst: L. [.. Mrs
Roberta Tuyman of this Gy; and
ofie son, James K. Lewis, yr. There
sre fourteen rand-chlren and on
ater’. cf
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.—The Friend-
ship Club and" frends _gave_ a ive
course dinner at the Bon Ton Inn
Glenham, "N.Y, and, covers were
laid“for the following guests Miss
Carne Francs, Miss Louse Jone,
Muss Margaret Boone, Alus “Atma
Boone, Miss Maria Dawson, Miss
Grace Deyo, Frank Gause, Robert
Gause, Aaron Bowman, John 1
Moran, Sirc"and irs Samuel Le-
Fevre, Mr. and Mrs_ Elmer Cum-
beck Mr. and Mrs. (Chiferd Wen,
Mrs. A. Roberts, Mr. and Mrs
Crawiord MeGerald, Mr and Mr,
G.Anthony, Sirs. Bowman, Mes
SN “South ‘Miss Edaa Vunbiergen,
Mrs. Estelly Logan, Mes. Anna \aa
Duesen, Mrs. Curtis Potter, Mrs,
Ea ‘Colden, Mrs. Fanny Roberts
Mr Rolsnson and Mins, Me SMe:
Antosh
Miss Mary Givens ot Tarsvtown,
NW spent the weciend with Air
and Sirs. Robert Sullwan wt Gres:
ory, avenue.
Pride of Hudson Lodge, No. 44
LB. P.O. E. of W, met ig tere
lar sestion’at their homes 9% Cathe
arine street, Beother”‘Scatand Car-
sei ipremlel Brother Vas brogh
Chapman, chairman of the State Ac,
section Committee gave: a Teper
hus work ater that the. subrcrme
mittee to dates. There was @ Juin
eplerisnment Weingsday» cveniny
Februar Many new Sppicd|
tons ate now oie |
Rev Lous H Taylor. pastor oi |
the A, ME, Zion Church prencod
an eloquent sermon last Sundy;,
morsang ‘an the “Lord's Peover" Mt
miata the Kaghts of Pythras had:
Prof Wm J Regan of the ext)
wed school, yal! sidrese the CE |
Cat 4p om Sunday Mah 2nd
“Ree UF "Crutenteta paste oe
Union Hapnat “church "vi New
Rechelle, NY, will preach at he
nerer Fant’ “Church. Sune,
Mare 20."Mes. fefiersen Wal ans
3 chaieman of afsaneements
The Choral Club ot the © CoC
gave 4 rectal at the Cement
Sunday before a capacity hense The
ther special mimiery. rendered ese
onl elon Sire’ Romane fame
and Mre Charles Caries Mire Teli
Zson Willits ceeiok nom.
Wed, “Late Mer Geereme "Kelle
Smith wat in chatte the Recera
veaisted i Muss Heten Robinson af!
lara, MY,
| Hillburn, XN. Y—The W ‘ing
Workers" Secety ‘celebrated the
15th aniversary at the lire Chay
elon Frwy, Mrs Sara_Mexandher
Sice-president, presided The tuilow
ing. program age peewented velo
address, Mre Mexander, secretary’s
report, Mrs Anna Ssiamon, neal
solo, Miss Rite DeFreese addrese
Mre C's “Gunner: ‘rentme Stee
Stel Wateaner adeese es Th
Jones, A" hesitut bouquet
Rovers wit presented ta. Mre Sus
Van Dante one of the reanuee
who as stl living, Mee Van Dank
Brcaenied 1 the church $25 from the
dhuke
Nie. and Mre Ruwell Ref eee «
Paterson, NOT. entortamed mew
hers af the Mieke Choral Clee ee
Hare ret wereata Ahsan
teri’ whan. Thinee Piero Tc
Likivere Rane Dek uewe Aeels
Van" Tag een Van Tk
Ginies “Houde Veena Marten
Mildred Van Dunk, Victor Delrcese,
Mr. and Mrs. Solomon, Mrs. A. C
Van “Dunk and Grace DeFreese
Everyone had_a real pleasant time
“ Wietor DeFreese went to, New
York City Thursday and took the
examinations forthe post office,
Mrs. C. S,.Gunner, Mrs. S. Wat-
ios, Mrs. K."Savery and Miss Ar-
Aelia DeGroat spent avery pleasan
day in Brooklyn and New York
‘York, Saturday.
"The Hillburn Girls played a bas
etball game with the Hackensack
Girls and. were sietors at Fireman
Hall, Saturday afternoon,
Miss Ruth Amgs of New York
City is visitmg her parents, Rev. anc
Mes. 'T) Amos.
Samuel Wo DeFreese and _ Miss
‘Margaret Mann were married Satur
day afternoon.
“Phe Willing Workers Club as
delightfully entertained at the home
of Ss, Wiliam Morton Wednesda
aternoon,
Vincent Walker of Paterson, N.
J.. spent the weekend with his grand-
father, Samuel E. DeFreese,
eet Soe
Rochester, N. Y.
Rochester, N. Yi—Mrs. Martin
Cooper of 37 Favor street was host:
cfs at tea and cards last Thurs,lay
Siternoon Her guests were. Sirs
E. Tyler, Mrs. H. Hardy, Mrs. J.
Harris, Mes Ly Odom, Mrs. Ju La
vana, Mrs. M. Johnsun, Mrs. C. Ors-
by, Mrs. M. Mayet. Mrs. G. Wil-
ae ee” sie
Dixon, Mrs. Walham Gilbert, Mrs
James Carter, Mrs. S. Herndon
Mes Harold: Mores, Nes. J. Dam
Fiels and Mrs, B. J. Hawkins, whe
]was the guest of honor, Eiest pei
Beards Seas: won bys Mes" Carpen
tee. second by Mes. Mfore, and th
[Bonhy went to Mrs, Carter-
The Rev, James C. Taylur of the
ALM. EB Zion Church preached Io
Sunday to the students of Spracus
presi
Horace Jentons and John Coles,
who are. working ye Albany dur m
the session of the State Legusiaturc,
spent the meckend at hoine wth the
families.
Tien Cobb, who was employed 3
umber of sears. as fireman ath
“Burke Steel Works, died on Fehru-
an) 13 Funeral services were held
the following Monday irom his late
fesidencer 13 Nassau street. ith the
Revs Mees Love offerning Burl
was) under direction of Mr. Late
Sirs. GW, Stehee af 13. Morn
street w3t_called tu, Phadelphia ae
Monday, February 24, 10 attend the
funeral of her sister, Dr [da Colack
Nyack, N. Y.
yack, No Yi—Funeral services
for the late Mrs, Ehea Mayg were
held from St. hips A, M. E. Zion
oa Thursday, Febreary 20.” Kev." 1.
H Taylor of Pouahkespsie, N.Y
conducied the services, giving Mrs
Mayo only the eredit that was duc
free She’ had always been a. great
warker on all church affairs and. at-
tended her services ceqularly unless
illness prevented Mr» Mavo. bas
the credit of berg une of the tounge
es ot pk Phils AME dion
Uurrg “also the founder et ths
Unted Sisters in Friemiship The
hard was ailed ty tasty with
trends and reatnes “The Unned
Deters 19 Fremisny abo turned uit
11a body. Mr Mave was inet
tre yeare wld at Uk ite of her
death ,
Die Carte Javrer 1s improving
afier underes img 3 minor uberatien
ab the henpial, .
Me atid Mrs towth Giles of 243
West Mii trees. New Yor Co
wsere the sean gactts of Me and
Mrs, Jese Daigats or Nyack, N°
a
Ateard party mae wen at she
fave er Meat Mey Herman he
man on February 13 s\mong the
Sot) Who gat! a vere enimabie
gsening were Me and Mre SN
Starke of Noack, Mr cand Mex L
High a and Me and Mes. B Cetee
man of Redgeweanl, NT
Rev Amos Wo Neil, a former get~
went ui Nyack, NY passed awan
a is howe at Hempstead, Lot
Funeral serviers were held forse
fate rouleton a Fergiry 2 Hae
snd Bat avd Kalwan Frasier of Nye
ok, aitended the cervices
Rev Ty He Taslor of Pauehe
wepsie, NV. was the finger yet
“Mr an Sirs Retet Rhodgy ot
Teheine 30 |
Mee Mn Chetan, fre Tada’
Peeveae Mrs Wile Bailey aid
Mev Tore Ge ed ser apenas
ae eg sted ty ther boone,
LW Sine os ietabay Get gy
fren Motta Vater leaped ns pit
erm Rants! Oar ee Bet psary ot
A Fetheat we enen in tee y
af Mee TM ice ut Orinceinge
NV at ie tame ot Mes D.
Strom © Prot are TO" Thase ps
art were Me vt Mie M. Edw iedy
Mec J. Murer Meo TE Mu het
ant Miss LH Sher
Jente Hauer ite Witiam ene
fehl amd Keo smin yt West Lead
were guests of Mise Toth Grier mn
le rane ct '
‘No Inrtielay party was een an
aor ol Trot Rrcere Few ast,
IS Among the ueste were Mee
Hew’ Smith, Mise Laageline. Sante
Mr aml Mrs Pidwand sane fee
Hester Batwa n, Mew Pwand Fea
ner and Mre WoC Bbmnt '
Miss Ente Monee et Walon |
bree, Heniiss heard re « eabn her |
vant Mrs Re art Khas at Nae
he 8 |
Gemge Miller passed away at ney
wae on bel ruar H ealeae |
urteen vary wath a stroke seven
sears af whith wwe wae an ativatd |
Very “iinpressive nneral services
te bet teen Palgenm Hapte) |
bitsy th Sumvlaw | Pebraney 2 |
SH gMEE od Pstinanetartied ost |
kev TH Reones et T nelewanl, Ss
P ceandcted the” cervice
GOP Ager wie recrathy Bennet
4 ly toons soe eed ta thie pet ey!
1 Tae tora Dt leashau it teat
rita Oiske st edd belt ove
Mes Wher te Me
| ae anuak wl Ce ae ONG
Neth Cate tat Ve EW Teedaer
SB cll were cong. thine whe
wrewhil se late Mas. Magus tune
eral Servivets
Mr, and. Mrs. C. Lee, Edwarf
‘Martinez ,afid Miss Gladys Alfonte
gt New. ‘York City Were guests o}
rs, Alice Howard on February 23
‘Notice:—Please leave news and
orders for The Age at the home of
2 C., Blount jr., on or before Sun-
te
James Douglas has returned tc
Nyack ater avery. successful
to Quogue, .L. 1, and to Washing
ton Des
‘Mrs, D. Stroud was dinner guest
ef Sie and Mes WEG" Blourt on
Wednesday,. February 19.
‘Miss Emily Moore of Philadelphia
has returned to her home after spend-
ing a very pleasant two weeks with
her aunt, Mrs. Robert A. Rhodes.
Warwick, N. Y.
Warwick, N. ¥.—Services at the
A.M, E. Church last Sunday were
3 fellows: Sunday school 10a, nes
morning worship, 11 a. m.; Endeav-
or League, 7b m. with Alethea
Wruht' charges” prevchieg ‘at
pon by the Revs Hiram S-'Ty20n,
Pastor.
‘Tig “repairing. of the church has
been Zonmpeted and the now bell wi
be unveiled Sunday afternoon, March
Me. and Mes. Floyd Hicks, Mes
janes Masten and the_Revy Hiram
S. Tyson motored to Brooklyn last
Sionday: to take ‘Mes. Allie Booker
ie:
Snarkill. N. Y.
~ Sparkall, N, Y.—Last Sunday wa:
'quatterly meeting day at St Charles
AME E."Zion ‘Church, Holy com
musion seas als obgervad,
ate Siege Senter bes hp te
spending. sone time with her father
Gillian Beown, jr hae returned
her home in Englewood, N. J.
Mis, “Drockets secompanied |b
her chnldrem, Bessie, Samuel an
‘Tits spent Washington's burt
duy sn Englewood, visiting relatives
Shu inends
Many smemters of St. Charles
Chueh ateoe il the funera)_eervice
Sr the ine Sirs. Elea Mayo. lag
‘Thursday aiternoon at St. Philip's
Ghureh yo ‘Nae
Mrs, Sarah Jane Willams va
guen a surprnse.byethiay. dinner a
fhe tegnerve uf Wit Brows, ye
dns ‘Brains Oiher guests presen
ere Mrs. Stel Sears, Mt and
Mre C A, Brown and Moss Deda
Halleck.
‘Ainong those on the sick st ar
Walp Bigs Pty AL Brown
aod Betue: Sims.
Piermont, N. Y.
Piermom, XN. \.—The call of
missions brought many people to
Macedora Church last Sunday
moming. The Rew. Mrs, RL Ne
well on Passaic, N ], preached irom
“Eis 18 in the afternoon the Rev
BY Borter ‘of Engleword, SJ
Brought adhe smresting_ message
irom Magthens 3.14 Inthe, even
me Sider Timnes of Englewood
suk :
Cornwall, N. Y.
Cornwall, No Y.—The Rev E. J
Hautes, nlled sspaipn, atthe” 2
St Edun chan tore Sunday Th
feat at, the morn servae "wa
from Acts 7 W, subject "The De
fnerance “of Teeth Men Man
Tinekner deiseredea. fervent prayer
Mis Makes sreseudea fe pre
Gram at tre Christian Endeavor hupr
Siiyect. ‘The Value ef the Bite
NeicChertan Nato"
The Re RA. Medley was 3
Mister at the AM Es Zion par
sienee last Thursday =
Mrs Hutto and Mrs» Pinckney
visited the parsonage Sunday.
Be _inttoaees, Seater
Hudson, N. Y.
| “Hudson, X. Y.—Services were well
attended both morming and evéning
Puivday The pastor spoke Teoin the
une "Standards of the Kingdom,”
sv the mormng and inthe evening
on TOW Age” The juror cher
fendered the music im the moet
ani the senior chor in the evening
The Has’ Clu lost their frst
garve vt buskeiball at the Boys’ Post
fest Wedesday evening but will play
eum next Wedbesty.
‘The Rev Hardy Do White was
called to the bedsde af bis sk
fankee tn Norfolk” V3, ‘last Tues:
dav His tither passed away met be
Cite te arrived Me cremated in
Norieth tie the tsneral aml bie!
Prt The pastor af Rant Street
Rugner Church detiveredl the eee
The romans were depsited m Cale
sary cemetery
The Wonuins Progressive Club
wie entertained tast Liurseay ever
se by Mrs. Cobbs.
They Eljert, the ‘pastor, and Res
‘TUsanpson the distriet superintend:
et. were tuth present at st Johis
M1 Chureh sunday evenng.
Linbay IP White, sun of Bey
Meat nosed fram New sek
Saturday bemieme ne father ne
Mr Wiste 1a student at femmbia
Univeraty. Me was in attendance
wath Me "Sharte atthe services at
‘Zeon’ Church Sunday ,marning.
Shulohy Baptist Chugh held a. spe
wal Supday school settee at 3p
mm Siniday
1 Miss “Esther Brown hae accepted
‘x tematton at Weer Pont, She leit
Stewkis atterniodn
The fattowing are on the sick hist
Mrs Alice Jackson, Mes Maui
Wakes, W than Conk, Mrs Are
thar Whiteade Mes Hertha Rogers
aml Mr Felwardte
A lurtinlay party: wae given at the
ae Ese
Sattiday to their Fittle sn, Cale
whey Iecame S vears ok Many. af
tnitle frienle were. present te
tke dinwer auth iy ensaw the ate
+ at coy granulate: hin
Me and Meo “Artie Wiuitesute
‘e steved thear tte sents Arthie ye
4 Suttle parts Satna He te
See cere aM eftestanents wet
Hy Dts Be hatte Feieade tly alle
Vat sso atin atcslind In a hay
eethabas ul mean F then
Mam intends Bs cats. aed mee
sengeés exteyed their sympath, *»
Rev, White's family’ while he was
paying the last respects to his fath-
er of Norfolk, Va. Among the vis-
flors were Mts. rool and daugh
ter of Kinderhook, N.Y. Misges E.
Tackson, ti. Jackson, ‘Sarah Hines,
Mrs. M. Cook, Robert Tyler, L.
Gerry, A. Tucker, Emma Charles,
Victory Becton and Mrs. Cobbs,
ease and Mat Ge
Beacon, N. Y.
Beacon, N. Y—Olivet Chapel
opened last Sunday morning with a
large Sunday school attendance. In
‘the evening, the Rev. P. W. Sewell
of Washigtonville delivered a won-
erful serman-
‘The Loyalty Club of Girls are giv-
ing a church, social at the home of
Miss Kose Green, 352 Green street,
Friday night, February 28.
Mire Willan Waker jy and hée
sister Miss, Nelhe Van Bunk were
failed io" Moretowa, Xen dy tat
‘week to the bedside et dete" unde
tote
Mus. Helen, Marie Jones ‘has: re
cagersted afte two, Weeks liness
Sirs Walls Jatison al” Paterson,
XN. Ja spent last week here ‘visiting,
her father, William Baker sr. of 26
Geen ance
Mrs. Geneva Booth, H. W. Sum-
ter. John Allers and Jasper Darley
Wanted tends ww New Tork En}
It mete
Edward Lucas, Mrs, Crocker and
,George Jackson of Warwick were
anors 9B tows last Suivay. an ot
tended service at Ohvet Chapel.
Read The New York Age. and
keep posted on the domgs of our
psc.
Plainfield, N. J.
News, memorials and adver-
using eadguartere of The New
Yor Age: $18 Plainfield avenue
gecings
Advertising in The New York
Age reaches the most ieeacted
Business people in the contey.
Tey stand sce what good results
may. be obuained. News, tems
for this column must be signed,
Snd well be received ‘up to San"
oy night of the week of publ
Say nl
Sr LS gee Lees Te
Epps of 113, West 12nd. street
York Gity, who recently underwent
a serious operation, 1s, 50. tel un:
proved she hs retuned home, which
5 geal news to her husband, td
suns and other relatives.
The Mohawk Bignd of 40_ piece
under dition of Prof: Saulters
gave a windecial wusical “at the
Moreland Branch Y. MC. A. las
Sunday auternoon,~ The program 1
dluded Insoeation, C. Edward Epp»
chaplain of Mohawk Lodee of Elks
saxophone solo, Mr. Relthrop amit
ant mstrucer, vecal solo, Mrs
kabth Waison, piano soln, Mrs. Gers
tende Saviders. quarter selections
Goth Prot. Saulters suvsttunng tor
tone memb F et the quartet who was
tunable tu Ue present) and a numther
ts Leautitul seiections by the band
‘Miter velleutian and just berore d
amiseal a few appropriate » regark
woe male b Dr. C Gustavus Tub-
509 .
Funeral services tor two ef our
war teterans, iho served overseas
were held last week The funeral
of James Patrons was held irom the
chapel mt Undertaker \ndtew 1.
Brown, 817 Plainfe i avenue, with
a Newark migisterueiure. as.
sisted Sy the Res VD. Jones, pas
Wor of Mount Oise Baptist Church
‘The other veteran why died Was
Wilby Harns.
Funeral services for the late Mr
Hankerion. who died. at Tiseataway,
NIJ, were preached by the Rev A.
D' “jones. pastor of Moun ng
Haprst Clutch It was under the
dhrgetom ot Cadertaker® Andrew
Brown,
Wilur Brown, better knwwn as
"Toots", met his death when run
dow, yan automo 9 fee ve
ag. His fumeral way ism the ctape
clot Andrew L, Brown un Wels:
Jay. February 34, y
The pig roast gnen at the Elks
Rest on Fedruary 23 way a success.
I additwyn tothe Iarbecued pg
there were fifty chickens soll The
Iotge members turned out in great
nuenbees
A Feaenful party was even at the
here ot Me and Mrs William tas
AU Wer avy street ott February
3 Alert steen nests were ree:
ent and en’ ved card games, date:
ine, ete, until the wee huues ot the
mrninis
Josh ‘Smith awho has been confine
el home beraase af an automobile
nevident 1s out ARAM.
Mrs Mary Smith of “Wed® Sed
digest 16 aMle tn he ont again
A splewlel birthday arts was give
ch Miss Etphene Pikes in ‘her
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mre S-aie
uel Prcxens af 10H Weet Sra gteret
lst week A large group of young
friends emoser a lively evemns.
Interesting services were held at
Shale Bapt st Chireh Inst Sunday
ening Te Rev Mr Kerser, pase
ot preached a wetulerfel serman,
There were several additions. to. the
‘hurch This pastor alsa. held a
Firge baptrane last week ‘and new
neinbers are constanth Weing. added
Phere will he a morteace irmne at
he church nm Thursiay evening
Fehenary 27 Ths offering forthe
fay at this cboarehy wae S71 10
Mrs. Worle. fe mpeving. from
wer recent illicce
Miro Mvewhy af So th Scennd
trect ie sill an the fieputal and Tue
awit #6 abit the. eame
The Wes Nise oC Saaaaw ana
|. - RSTABLISHED 25 YEARS
Mrs. Ida White-Duncan
- HAIR WORKER
18 Peewott St, Jerry Cin, M3.
wes Haslde:” Sones" Bamocior
Tepetomatingn,” Coping, ean
ine iN nacre, Hae tage ERT
tings Raton fest toning
fevtin aicwont alti nae" mole
his pulpit at Mount Zion A. M. E
Church Jast Sunday, Tt was Men's
Day and there ‘ier special services
throughout the’ day, Inthe morn
ing the pastor's subject, was. “Fish-
ers of Men” and a men's choir, un:
deg ig, drection, of POL.” Allred
White dang beautiful music, . There
was also a. tenor solo by Nathaniel
Clay. “The Men's Day. program in
the afternoon included ihe following
numbers: Spirituals, quartet (S. H
Webster, Clark Wilsoly, George
Jackson’ and Edward Blair); solos
James Smith and William Peterson’
declamation, James Sims; _ paper
Pegsident Kelly. Theodore R. Kel:
ly. was the presiding officer. ‘The
collection credited. to the men was
$547.79, >
Mr. Maynard, who recently under-
went “an operation, Is getting. along
nicely. z
‘Services at Calvary Baptist Church
lest Sunday morning opened with 2
selection by the choir under direc:
tion of Prof. J.B. Whiting, with
Miss “Antoneite Whiting, a5 organ-
istz the pastor. the Rev. D. WV. Hog-
gird, read the scripture lesson from
the 92nd Psalms. After prayer and
‘the: reading of the notices by Miss
‘Quarterman, the pastor preached an
inspiring sermon from the subject.
“The Richness of the Patm Tree”
[Receipts for the previous Sunday
[were reported as $69.58"
S"Walliam: Randolph, our tonsorial
atst, ds still itl,
SPECIAL NOTICE,
Sunlight Lunch, 324 Richmond
‘street, near North avenue. Best
‘euffece and all. good home cooking,
tae Shh andhe: cumceites end’ Cigatm
Trenton, N. J.
EERE G oe ke eter eee ara
Emory Wilson, pastor of Mt. Ziot
A ME, Church, filled his pulpit a
oth the morning and evening, ser
vices last Sunday He also, spoke t
the yun er church on George Wash
iugton, the damage of a lic All th
services were well attended.
TTA large congregation worshippet
at Nilo Baptist Chureh, the Kev
J. AL W jute pastor, last Sunda
morning. At tie junior church, Wm
E. Marze teader, the speaker a
Nir. Freeman, Whose subject wa
“Keieain. from Deception.” On Sun
day, March 2, the speaker at) th
jyunior church’ will be Miss Hele
Tackion, Girl Reserve secretary 0
the YW. GAL
The New Jersey Branches of th
xoA ALGOY, will hold a conven
fon an Newack and Urange iron
Fubenary 28 ty March 1, anslusive
Jul D. Hopkins, president. of the
Trenton Branch, anuouuces that th
‘delegates. will be Mrs, Bessie Nelme
spall and “Kev. Me. Ferguson, wit
Mz_ Seott_ as altertiate.
Mus. Roberta Harvey, who
tacking 1m Ro.ky Mount, X. C., and
‘Muss Lottie Hargett, teaching at Le-
iia College, Baker, Ala. are meeting
woth sucgess in their school work
Both “are Trenton girls and both
praéated at Howard Unversity at
Cie same Une
Dr. and Mrs. William S. Hayling
oi spring direst have recently renov-
Sted their home from top 10 bottom.
Deuglass Gordon, a member of our
group, handled the contrac. He i
D muster ots trade.
Mey "Agnes L. Kemp was hostess
ata dinner party last Thursday eve-
hing. ‘Thee present were. Mr. and
Mis James Lytle, Mrs. August Jen-
ict Mes Gretchen L. Holmes, Mrs,
TG. Richardson, Miss. Byrd Jack-
sin, Miss" Mabel” Heacock of Mag-
folia and Cede W. Jensen. After
Gamer the Fauio and’ cards were ent
reyes,
‘une a delegation from Atlantic
Tuy and Camden vised Mrs. Ag-
nes L, Kemp on Friday afternoon.
Mrs “Kemp was ecently elected
supervising president of the South
Jersey Womens Republican League.
wah Mrs. Edna L. Weston of Ate
lane City as vice-pres.dent.
Witham Wallace Swann of the
Prladeigha Tribune was instru-
tvental im having Mea Gretchen L.
Uiotmes, teacher of music at the
New Lincoln School, “and \Walliam
Lewis uf Atlante City” appear over
ris rado Iagt Tuesday on the Negro
Achievement Hour,
‘The Rex Cosby Wilson, pastor of
Galilee Baptist Chirch, preached for
Rev Braga’> congregation at Shiloh
Baptist Church vi Bordentown last
Sunday atternoan, Two bus loads
ind several autos with members and
iriends accompanied “Rev. | Wilson.
Mrs, Sarah stow of Browns Mali
wail Ne ne af the models at Shiloh's
coming celebrats an,
The sudden death of Mrs. Jenne
Potter, mother of Mrs. Fane Swan-
oti, a5 a. terrible shock to her many
iewnds She was screed with “andi
wextton and died in ten minutes. She
Nad invitee a member of St Phils
v's Church in New York City bee
jure tesiding here with her @qush-
i. Funeral services were on. Sat
vray afternoog, with the Rey Fath
sz Jensen ofhcaung. LJ News
‘nie was the undertaker | andthe
sall-hearers were Hilmer L.. Jen-
et, Chhiton Bryant, Preston” Crews,
"Harold lehinson, John Borden
avl Harry Greene. “Those sending
lowers were the family, Miss Ella
Mills, Muss Rhoda Roberts, H. Mas
sae Arthur Theodore Long. Mes
Agnes I. Kemp, Mrs MCrews,
Mire Jessie Lynch, Mre H. Quatt
lebauin Mrs.” Gertie Tohnson and
Mex ‘Shaw Interment was at Greene
veer
Tie TheV hovs are reyoteine over
he retnmn of Mr Maite, their ade
eer, who could not he with. them
rie the night haa tem, as he
‘The Panthers Club held a. creat
vet Tooalay mieht at the Montgam
ry Street Regueh VW Ca
Nei shateake: Cae ae ae
MS Oe on te ne eee ce eee ee
) ANNOUNCING
The SOUTHERN INN!
4 Manis St = New Rockette, N.¥ |
) BOARDING & LODGING |
em ttiephone—N. OR. BIS
So hae Bs Be Stews
New Brunswick, N. J.
(Week of Feb, 22)
New * Brunswick, “N. | Je—Mry
Eligboh Davin, who wan 2 raed
at St. Peter's Hospital, bas’ returge
ed home and is steadily’ improvieg,
| Mrs, Mary Ruley:is very sick
is im the Aivddleex Howpial "4
Miss Claudine Cummings spent
weekend with relatives. . _
J. W. Gregory of Highland Park
is visiting his) mother at Newport
News, Virginia,
Afr. and Mrs. W. G. Campbell of
Metuchen attended” the missionary
quarterly meeting held at St. Luly
ALM. E, Church Newark, NoJ-
Don't forget the recital under aun
pices of Stewardess Board No.1, 3
the Mt, Zion A.-M. E, Church’ by
Mme. “Viola Fox and local "tale
Thursday evening, Febriiary 27. Mry
Annie Jackson is president of the
board.
Rev, Horsby and sons motored ta
Newark Friday and attended the
closing seisions of the NL Brmy
Missionary meeting.
Nem gg bramswi, N J Nr
Mary. Ruley, a patient at Middlesey
Hospital, is quite, sick.
Mrs. Elizabeth Davis of Pla
street is. still very ill, A
Mrs. Watson of Ward street died
on Sunday, February 16 in St. Pee
ter's Hospital after a lingering ile
ness. Funeral services were » held
February’ 19 with Rey..1._C. Heed
sey, pastor of Mt Zion Qhurch in
charge. The deceased was a membeg
‘of this church,
-_ Services at Mt. Zion A. 3
Church Sunday morning were large:
ly attended. The pastor, Revs Hore
sey. delivered an inspiring sermon,
At this service we were favored wit
a male quartet by John Perry and
others. At the evening services Rev,
Horsey delivered another — splendid
We have a_néw physician in om
city, Dr. G. Frazier Miller, located
a 2 Talmadge street. It is to be
hoped that our people will patton
ize the new doctor. We wish bint
much success.
Sunday, March 2, will be the quare
ferly meeting at Mt. Zion Churety
“The presiding elder will speak at the
renin deevices:
Newark, N. J.
Newark, N. Ju—Mr. and Mra
Thomas Foster ‘entertained a ew
friends in honor oi their charming
Gavgher,” Miss Grace Foster ot
Monday evening at their home ig
Monmouth street. Miss Fortes
rected the guests ina) bend
gown of brown satin back crepe of
the latest model, After: the guest
ad enioyed themselves in game sta
dancing ‘they were invited into the
beautfutly’ decorated ‘dining’ room
where they were served a deliciouse
ly prepared repast. The guests in
fluded Mee "and Mess "Theodore
Smith; Mrs, E. Littles, Gordon S
Dickerson and Miss Grace James of
New York; ME and :Mrs. Williany’
Lomack” of East Orage, ‘Nh
Moses Mary Strong and Deve
Tedd; _Mys. Edna Spencer, Mis
Mary. Sanders, Mr, and’ Mts. Cone
nell” Foster, Misses Janet, Alberta
and Dorothy. Foster; Messrs. Wi
lism H. Lewis, George Hadley, Hert
tert Lewis, Jonathan Gitess Manta
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NEWS FROM OTHER STATES
Saturday, March 1, 1930
More New Jersey
Princeton, N. J.
Princeton, N. J.-Large congregations are attending M. Pisgah A. M. E. Church this week to hear the Rev. H. H. Thomas, pastor of St. Paul's A. M. H. Church of Orange who is attending a two weeks retreat here, Rev. Thomas, in addition to being a great preacher, is also a sweet singer and is meeting with marked success.
Mrs. M. A. Moore of 8 Spring street was quite ill on Sunday but is now much better.
Mrs. M. S. Robinson, who has been ill for two weeks, was able to resume her duties as organist of M. Pisgah A. M. E. Church on Sunday.
Mrs. Edna Holland Hunter of Asbury Park and Miss Sara Marshall of New Brunswick, who have been visiting Mrs. M. S. Robinson, returned to their respective homes this week.
Miss Larraine Cole, who has been ill at the Princeton Hospital, is home again much improved.
Miss Elsie Green, who is in the Princeton Hospital, is much better.
Westfield, N. J.
Westfield, N. J—Mrs. Florence Robinson and Mrs. Francis Hebbons gi Freeport, L. I., were weekend guests of Mrs. Louise Mauran.
Louis Miller spent a few days last week in Trenton.
Missella Colista Green of Green place has been confined to her home with a cold.
Miss Laura Philip Morgan are the proud parents of a baby girl, born at Somerset Hospital, Somerville, last Wednesday. Mrs. Morgan is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Jones of Dukes Park, Somerville.
Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins of Montclair were the dinner guests Saturday evening of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Ross.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Downing and sons, Frank and John of Richmond Hill L. I., were the Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Lynch, newlyweds, called on Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Jones, Sunday evening.
Miss Grace Evans spent Sunday afternoon with her friend, Miss Geraldine Gordon.
Mr. and Mrs. George Branch and family of Madison called on Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Ball, Sunday afternoon.
Thomas Paige motored to Keyport Sunday and spent the day with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Paige.
Mrs. Nellie Hale spent the weekend in New York.
Mrs. Phila "Wormley and Mrs. Gertrude Minor called on Mrs. Murray of Green place, Saturday after-begin.
Mrs. Clyde Proffess of Bayonne spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. A. Lurkins on Madison avenue.
Mrs. Charma Caldwell of West Bristol Bay spent to be out again after being confined to her home several weeks with illness.
Mrs. Gallope, mother of Mrs. W. M. Moore, was called to North Carolina by the illness of a daughter.
Mrs. Gallope has spent several months here with her son-in-law and daughter, Rev. and Mrs. W. M. Moore.
Mrs. Blanche Berry of West Broad street is confined to her bed with illness.
Dr. and Mrs. H. P. Brock were called to Carlisle, Pa., Sunday by the death of an aunt of the doctor. Mrs. Martha Somerset of Plainfield spent Sunday afternoon with her and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Alphonse. Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Lynch spent Saturday afternoon in Hackenack, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. Moseley. Mr. and Mrs. John Hammond entertained at dinner Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Jones, Miss Bratheau and Foster Richardson. Mr. and Evans motorized to Bordentown, Sunday to see his son, Harry, and then to Abury Park. Mr. and Mrs. William J. Ross celebrated a wedding anniversary Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Bartley of Somerville were the weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bartley and Mr. Mamie Davis of West Broad street. Dr. and Mrs. R.H. Thompson were called to Maryland, Saturday by the illness of Mrs. Thompson's mother.
Saturday evening the Mindowaskan Club entertained the Avolante Club at the home of Dr. Brock The playa played a '500' tournament; the lace bead the men by a score of more than 4,000.
Tuesday evening the Avolante Club was entertained by Mrs. Blanche Ross. Prizes were won by Mrs. Pansy Thompson, Mrs. Vivien Brock and Mrs. Virginia Brown. The community Club of Roselle, held a party Wednesday evening at the lace bead the men. C. G. Poulse present from Westfield Dr. drad Mrs. H. F. B. Brock, Mr. and Mrs F. S. Lynch, Mr. and Mrs C. Braxton Mr. and Mrs. D. U. Grieft Dr. and Mrs L Talbot and Mrs Albert Somerset Langton Hughes, the poet, left Saturday for a trip to Havana, Cuba.
Mrs. Malissa Cook is able to be on call still suffering with a very bad cold.
At St. Thomas Church at 11 a.m. the pastor, Rev. S. A. Gatlin, from St. Luke 22:31-32; other from St. Fulton 8:2 p.m. he beached from St. Luke 15:11. Subtitled "The Procedural 15:11."
There will be a Southern Supper
home of the St Luke's parsonage,
in avenue. Thursday evening
there will be the Mid-week Club
Church; super 35
in the white is cordially invited
to attend.
Centenial Lodge No. 400 I. 1, B. P. O. E. of W., held their regular monthly 'meeting' Tuesday evening at Hughes Hall. Seventeen candidates will attend for initiation. The solemn ceremony of initiation will take place Tuesday evening, March 4.
There will be a special meeting of Centenial Lodge No. 400 and Centenial Temple No. 246, I. B. P. O. B. Centenial Temple is 246, I. B. P. O. B. This meeting is held at St. Luke's Church. Boy Scout Troop No. 9, held a demonstration of knotting and bandaging at St. Luke's Church Friday.
Mr. Martha Bullock has been confined to her home with illness. John Taylor of Green place is still confined to his bed with illness.
Rahway. N. J.
(Week of Feb. 22)
Rahway, N, J.—Presiding Elder and Mrs. J. F. Vanderhorst , Rev. and Mrs. J. W. P. Collier and other members of Ebeneasear A. E. Chu, President of the Jersey Association of the New York Woman's Mite Missionary Society held at Newark, last week.
The celebration of the thirty-sixth anniversary of Second Baptist Church and the fourth of its pastor, Rev. C. H. S. Watkins, came to a close with a reception February 17. The various speakers during the week were Monday—Rev. H. M. Hutchins, Cranford, and choir; Tuesday night, Rev. Wm. M. Moore, Bethel Church, Felld, and Ed.; Wednesday night, Rev. C. H. Hilder, Newark; Thursday night, Rev. I. C. Price; Friday night, mass meeting, Rev. Dr. T. S. Harten, of Brooklyn, principal speaker. Other speakers were Mayor, Olphil Ulm, Judge, and William Williams, architect; Rev. Fanny Keech, pastor of First Baptist Church, and Rev. C. C. Weathers, New Brunswick. There were solos by Howard Hatfield, and selections by the Plainfield Humming Four (quartette). An offering and desserts were taken for Building Fund.
Second Baptist Church closed the celebration of its 10th Anniversary and the fourth of its pastor with a reception last Monday night. Over one hundred persons were present. A program was rendered by the members of the Allen Misses Mabel Spearman, Florence Taylor and Dorothy Bailey; violin solo, John Eisby, accompanied by Miss Pauline Hammond; reading, Mrs. O. Heyn, accompanied by Mrs. E. G. Edgar, Mrs. M. E. Shell acted as accompanist for the pastor as minister in the chamber. There were short addresses during the serving of the collation by Rev. H. C. Hutchings and Mrs Hutchings, Rev. F. T. Carter, Misses Jessie Watkins and Elsie Owens sister and friend of our pastor; Mrs William Hammond and others. A appreciation was presented or behalf of the members by John Maden.
Miss Gladys Walcott of Canada who has been visiting her mother and sister, Mrs. George Clarke, has returned to her duties as teacher. Miss Walcott came on account of the illness of her mother who is ill. She will probably return here for an indefinite stay when her school closes.
Paasaic. N.J.
Passaic, N. J.—Members of the Women's Co-operative Club and friends enjoyed a card party Wednesday evening, February 19, in the Y.M.C. A. Boys Club on best night at the Girls Club and Mrs. Alice Coller were hostesses. Many Brooklyn friends contributed to the success of the party through Mrs. Flippin. Four prizes were given the highest scorers and a booby prize to the lowest. The proceeds from the affair were divided between the Women's Co-operative Club and the Women's Mollie Langford of Red Bank, N. J.—give with the members of the Women's Co-operative Club on Monday and planned a program for the near future. Rehearsals will be on Tuesday at the Roger Williams Bay Beach Club, the Rev. S. A. Donnell pastor, the Rev.
Odessa Chapter, No. 17, Order of Eastern St., held an interesting meeting Friday evening, February 21. Several committees were appointed by the worthy matron. Mrs Fannie Pattin is chairman of the entertainment committee of 15 members, which is planning a celebration in honor of the chapter's 50th anniversary. Mrs Mary C. Curridge is chairman of the sick committee, Mrs Mary K. Lewis, chairman of the auditing committee, and Mrs Alice H. White, chairmzn of the investigating committee. Degrees were conferred on three candidates at this meeting.
Paterson. N. J.
Paterson, N. J.-Charles Johnson is still very ill at the Valley View Sanitarium. Leonard Kyle is also being treated there. numerous were conducted from the New Calvary Baptist Church for Mrs. India Thompson Brown last Sunday afternoon at 1 o'clock. Her loss was mourned by relatives and friends.
The concert given by the Jubilee Singers for benefit of the Zion Bison Club was attended and the program was very credibly rendered. Miss C. E. Field was among the out-of-town patrons.
Saffol Huggs is rehearsing in New York City for a musical play. New Aster Morgan is in charge of the Francis Brahman spent Washington's birthday at home. He is attending Lincoln University. Miss Daisy Walker is successfully conducting her new Poor Beauty Shope known as the "Aida" Hillin, Bill and Mrs Johnson of Ridgwood visited friends in Paterson last Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Giles and daughter were; among those from Paternson who attended the Howard-Lincoln basketball game. Mrs. George Jackson and Mrs. Newby are successfully completing a course in Apex hairdressing under the instruction of Mrs. Ida Hopgood.
Orange, N. J.
(Work of Feb. 22)
Orange, N. J.-Ladies Night was held at the Y. W. C. A., 66 Oakwood avenue, Thursday evening, February 13, being sponsored by the Prince Hall Square Club. Bettel Lodge No. 10, as a get-together meeting of the wives, sweethearts and friends of the members. David Beasley, president; James Carraway, vice-president; Willie Fleming, secretary. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Bowers, R. W. G. S. were guests of honor. D. Corrin acted as toastmaster and presented the participants on the program, which was followed by a meal, repast prepared by Mrs. James Carraway, Chairman of Committee on Arrangements.
Somerville, N. J.
Somerville, N. N. J—Miss Louse Jones, a student at the Cheyenne State Normal School, spent Sunday, February 13, with her parents. The Misses Teresa and Nahala Fieldes at Fair Haven and Pine Brook, spent the holiday weekend with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Amos Field of Hamilton street
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Vessels, the Misses Lydia Emmanuel, Hannah Field and Mary Teresa motored to Trenango, toward the basketball game between Bordentown and the South A C at the Elks auditorium. Young Mr. Vessels is a member of the Bordentown team.
A bus load of Elks and friends journeyed to Princeton last Thursday evening by car by Sailight Lodge of Priceton and the Pride of Someret Lodge of Somerville.
Mr. Robert Auten entertained the Sunshine Club at her home last Thursday evening. Business of importance was discussed, after which members with delicious refreshments
The Sharp-shooters defeated the Westfield girls basketball team, 30 at Fields Hall on last Thursday evening. The Orioles defeated the Madison team last Friday evening at Fields Hall.
When Miss Margaret Voorhees of East Main street entered her home last Wednesday she discovered that it had been rainstormed and matter instead was expected to lie police who are working on the case.
The Sunshine Club will hold a cake and food sale on Saturday, March 1, at St Thomas Church beginning at 11 a.m. and Mrs. John Henry Werts have purchased a house on Davenport street, which they plan to occupy soon.
Mr and Mrs. Edward Beekman and Mrs. Alice Van Ness have moved to the home of Mets Lena Russel.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Condit and Mrs. Someset, Mrs. J. H. Doman and daughter, "Grace, and Mrs. G. Stives attended the funeral of Miss Elizabeth Weyckoff last Tuesday, Mrs. C. Field, Mrs. last Viveen and Mrs. also present. The Rev. Joseph Garner filled his pulpit at St. Thomas church last Sunday morning. His text was from St. Luke 46, 46, subject "Inconsistency." The junior church at 12 45 was led by Mrs. Frances Van Dunk The Sunday school was conducted under supervision of Mrs. Buckner, superintendent, and the Mrs. Van Dunk was led by Mrs. Lyda Enauhel.
The Ladies' Social Club met at the home of Mrs B. N. Peterson last Friday evening. The present officers were all re-collected as follows: Mrs Jannie Gumbek, Mrs Jannie Hammel, vice-president Mrs. Mamie Phillippe, secretary Miss Harriet Lane, treasurer After the regular business, George Washington hats of the club colors (yellow and blue) were passed to each member and the hostesses, Mrs. Clark, invited the guests to the sun parlor where five tables were beautifully decorated with favors of little hatchets at each place and a candle on each table. The following menu was served: Fruit cup, cream chicken and muffin breads. Purses, candies, notatio chips, Virginia ham, ice cream, assorted cakes, coffee, candy and nuts. As this was the club's twentieth birthday, a huge cake with twenty lighted candles was passed to the ladies. Those present included J. Hammel, C. Phillippe, B. Moore, C. Buckner, M. Doman, C. Schenck, E. Howard, A. Van Ness, A. Beckman, G. Van Ness, I. Field, A. Hoffman, H. Clark, C. Johnson, A. Johnson, A. Van Ness, C. Clipper, L. Peterson, Miss H. Lane and the special guests, Mrs E. Hoffman of Fleming
Miss Ida Brevard, was the dinner guest of friends at Princeton last Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. James R Doman enchanted Mrs. Chara Schenck at dinner on Sunday.
Mac Ibry was rushed to the Sem-
THE NEW YORK AGE
erset Hospital last week suffering with appendicitis.
Edward Hall is able to be about after being confined to his home since last December with a fractured leg.
William Field and Richard Van Ness, patients at the Somerset Hospital, are reported to be emerging from Schenck entertained friend from Newark on Washington's birthday.
Mrs. Eliza Auten, Mrs. Annie Hurling and Mrs. Hannah Field are suffering with lagrige.
CONNECTICUT
Greenwich, Conn.
Greenwich, Conn.—A large congregation greeted the Rev. James Eichleberger, A. M. E. Zion Church, general superintendent of Chicago, at Bethel A. M. E. Church on Sunday, February 23. He spoke on "The Qualification of Leadership for Educational Work in the Church," he captivated his audience with his earnestness in appeal for a higher standard and special training for those who would be leaders in church work. At the Sunday school hour the superintendent turned the school over to the pastor who introduced Rev. Eichleberger. He spoke on "The Model Sunday School," and again demonstrated his ability as an organizer. At the evening worship, the pastor presented, using as a subject the hymn "Stand up for Jesus." Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday evenings, February 25-28, the annual devotion will be held. Samuel Ross is president and we expect to surpass all previous records
Stamford, Conn.
(Week of Feb. 22)
**Week of 10**
Stamford — more than 500 persons gathered in Union Baptist Church to hear a talk by Mrs Charlotte Hawkins, principal and founder of the Palmer Memorial Institute at Sedalia, N. C. Mrs B. L. Mathews, chairman of Mrs Brown D. Alfred Grant Walton of the First Congregation Church spoke briefly Mrs Amy Bailey, director of voice culture at Palmer Memorial Institute rendered vocal solos her speeches and held the foundation of the Institute and emphasized the need of trained Christian leaders for the Negro race
A tea was given in honor of Mrs Charlotte Hawkins in Brown by Mrs B. Mathews at her beautiful residence. About 50 ladies were present.
Bridgeport, Conn.
Bridggeport, Conn.—The Rev. Mrs. A. Paulusce of New Haven was the weekend guest of the Rev. Miss Lena W. Johnson of North Beardale street. The store visited Mrs. and Mrs. Nicholas Sanionia of Port Chester last week and a sweet baby girl. They were recent guests of Elder and Mrs. James Williams of Charles street. Elder and Mrs. Henry Langston of Williams street entertained friends from New Haven over the weekend. Miss A. Ella Holdbrook of Atlanta, Ga. spent the past week with her sister, Mrs. Daisy Taylor. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ross of Newark were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Faraures and Miss Ella Holdbrook of Atlanta, Ga. were happily married Saturday evening, February 15. The Rev. Joseph D. Davis performed the ceremony. A reception followed at 119 high street afterwhich the young couple left for Washington, D. C, to spend their
Mrs. Alberta Askew was the weekend guest of Mrs. Alacie A. Davis of 438 South Main street
Mrs. Walter Harris of Washington D. C., was the weekend guest of Mrs. Lacy Nell of 432 Warren street and her daughter, Milfred, were hostesses to a birthday party on February 15. A buffet supper was served and the young people enjoyed music and home games. Mrs. Milfred received many beautiful presents. Among those present were Rosetta Scott, Elizabeth Williams, Ethel Jackson, Margaret and Kelly Stuart, Maggie and Dan Kelly, Robert Ballon of Jefferson street entertained guests from New Haven over the weekend. The pig foot and chittering super given for benefit of Mrs. Nancy Lucas of 64 Hills street last Saturday was a grand success. Nishard Sims of Howard avenue was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. David Lewis White the past weekend. Mrs Mabel Lates of Gregory street gave a social dinner for friends from New York City last
Mrs. Mabel Jones and Mr. and Mrs. Robert West of New Bedford Mass, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Scott of Islandbrook avenue. Thomas David of Boston was the weekend guest of Mrs. Begle Brown of Crescent avenue. James Baker of Davenport street was the honored guest of the Toliver A. C of Jersey City last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. William Evans and Charles Evans of Dandville. Were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Thomas. The debate at Bethel Church last Thursday night—"Can a Man Live Without Soil?" was largely attended. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Johnson of New York City have returned home after a pleasant visit here. Daniel Carter, David Carter, Mr. and Mrs. George Wilson and Thomas Simmons, Pa. were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mines.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith, Mr. and Mrs. John Smith of Pittsburgh were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Banks.
Mrs. David Ferguson, Mrs. Ella Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. David Sampson of Washington, D. C., were recent guests of Mrs. Mabel Gibson. Mrs. Gayle Giants Athletic Club entertained at their club room last Tuesday evening. Many out-of-town guests were present.
James K. Tolliver of Denver, Col., was the recent guest of Mr. and Mrs. James Lawrence.
Mr. and Mrs. Watson Taylor of Norfolk, Va. spent a week with Mrs. Mary Harrison of this city.
Mrs. Clara Wilson spent the weekend with friends in Philadelphia.
Mrs. David Burroughs of Columbus place was the recent guest of Mrs. Henry Taylor of Fatterson, M. J.
Boston, Mass.
Boston Mass.—The Pythians of Boston on Monday evening, February 24 burned their second mortgage on their Pythian Temple. The seventh International Music and Song Festival was presented at Symphony Hall on Saturday. Picturesque talk songs typified the art and beauty of Finland, Ukraine, and Sweden. Italy and Poland were sung by competing choruses of other nationalities. Negro Spirituals were sung by the joint chors of the Union Baptist Church of Cambridge and the Eleanuer Baptist Church of Boston. A degree of Harvard students under director of Proof Roy W. Tibbs sang before Vice-President Curtis last Tuesday night at a dinner. The Brotherhood Dining Car Waters gave their annual ball on Tuesday, February 18, at Paul Revere. This ball proved to be another big success like their previous functions.
Mr and Mrs. Lorenz B. Graham returned missionaries from Africa spoke at the Fhenzeer Baptist Church on Sunday, February 23. Mr. and Mrs. Graham were very convincing speakers and their accounts of Africa was found to be very interesting.
Bishop R. J. Ransom will lecture at Charles Street A. M. E. Church on Monday, March 3.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Young of New York City are visiting their parent Mr. and Mrs. Louis Pasca of Greenwich Village. Deaths James E. Dawson passed away in Boston on Friday, February 21, after a long illness. Mrs Margaret Panner passed away on February 8. The funeral was on the 16th at the Fhenzeer Church,敛 Wm. S. Ravenell officiated.
Marriage intentions Charles A. Porter and Edna A. Pierce, 12 Kendall Street, Poole, 14 Windsor street, Boston, and Susie V. Grant, 66 Streets street, Boston
Cleveland, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio The Cleveland Morehouse-Spelman Club celebrated the four anniversary of Morehouse College at the Phillips Wholesale Association, February 18, at 8:30 p.m. in the Morehouse College address. This was followed by a musical concert featuring the Zephyr Concert; group Between four and five hundred enthusiasts witnessed the program. At the close of the recital the Morehouse-Spelman group grouped out and headed to B. B. Bowen's residence on 101 street where the ladies entertained the men.
Greensboro, N. C.
(Week of Feb. 22)
Greensboro, N.C. The 5th annual public welfare institute starts Wednesday. February 19 will continue to Friday. February 21, at the Agricultural and Technical College, this city.
Special speakers will be Dr. Dr. Mordean W. Johnson, president of Howard University and Dr. W. C. Jackson, Southern Institute and Commission.
Levantean Lawrence A. O'Brien, director of Division of New Work of the North Carolina State Board of Charities and Public Welfare.
The faculty is composed of commissioner Kate Burr Johnson of the State Board of Charities and Public Welfare Dr. Frankie O'Nish American Social Honor Association Dr. W. C. Jackson of Dental and Health Dr. T. W. Wooder University of North Carolina, Miss Lily F. Matchell, Division of Child Welfare and N B Simmons State Director, Vocational Agriculture
Laurinburg, N. C.
Lauriumburg, N C - Mas, Lorenza Shaw, wife of Dan Shaw, underwent a serious operation at the Breezewood Hospital Friday morning at last week. She had been admitted for two months after operation was the only relief for her long admittance Dr N J Jackson surgeon, and Miss Nadie Maston head nurse, carried the operation through successfully and to the delight of all concerned. We wish for Mrs. Shaw to celebrate her birthday. Lauriumburg basket tosses, swamped Wagram on February 5. Far scoring by N Jackson and Bethea made it impossible for Wagram to make any headway and Laurium beat the house team to a time of 41. The team won all 11 field goals, Bethea 8 T Graham 4 Lineup for Lauriumburg N Jackson captain, Bethea. Foumun McDuffie, F Jackson substitute Hamilton I. Imam for Wagram were Cupkins, captain, Ward Mallon, T. McDuffie, T. McDuffie, Referees (Tuskegee)
Donnie M. Gillespie of our 1929 class who was suddenly called from New York City in December to the University for her last three days for New York City. She is engaged in Pullman service. Miss Gillespie passed away in January.
AMONG PULLMAN EMPLOYEES
THINGS SEEN, HEARD AND DONE AMONG PULLMAN EMPLOYEES
By JAMES H. HOGANS
FROM WITHIN
(The sixth of a series of articles on the Pullman service and the porter, of which the following is the first by John Reeve, a fifteen-year porter). I started out to be a medical doctor, the profession which lies nearest the heart of every ambitious mother below the Mason and Dixon Line for her favorite son. Here I am after fifteen years—a Pullman porter. The outlook is I shall be this until I die, am retired or perhaps fired. The realization that I would be nothing more was not a happy thought to my dear old mother while she lived. There is one thing, however, that I have learned after fifteen years of broiling steaks, making up berths, and wiping off car handrails, and that is: Nature never intended in its building to chisel every mental groove alike. The successful doctor would never have made a successful porter; neither has she succeeded in making one who gazed upon the still form of Porter Daniels of Chicago, who lost his life in a New Jersey railroad accident seve-
Now, I consider myself successful in a certain sense; and I have achieved this thought as a result of study. I have studied the extent of my ability to follow someone I like, and I have studied the extent of my technique which would repay me. Therefore, my ideas regarding the Pullman service are obvious in the beginning. Nevertheless, after fifteen years of experience I am fair enough to say that the subject of the Pullman service and the porter is difficult to state so as to get a fair fact, not unlike the subject of prohibition, you can debate it from either side, and still be right. As I view the subject, however, the Pullman service is no philanthropic godfather to its porters, as some of its employees with the Pullman complex would have you believe in the use of these employees so faithful and true as some would have you think.
On the other hand, I might mention two instances, in the history or the Pullman service - which proved this organization to be as charitable as any corporation could possibly be expected to be. I will mention the ingress of the Pullman and Wagner companies. When the Pullman Company absorbed the Wagner Palace Car Company, many of the porters in the latter company formerly worked for the absorber. Some of these stories, which were discharged for infractions of rules which forever debarred them from the Pullman service. But when the Wagner Company was taken over these infractions, were erased from these puller's service cards. So far as the Pullman service was concerned, these discharged men were without an
Within my own time, the absorption of the New York and New Haven Railroadies sleeping and carriage drivers is another example of the follow-up by the Fullman system. The way in which I look at the subject, the attitude of the system in these two Miss Helen J. Wall, secretary to Principal E. M. McDuffie, is continued to her bed in the Bigelow Hospital, Dr. J. McDuffie attaching her. At this writing Miss Wall is doing nicely. The entire school is at a lass with her out. Miss Danne Peguese, student of the first year in the Institute, is in the Bigelow Hospital, where she undergo an operation for appenditis. Miss Sadie Alston, nurse at the Bigelow Hospital, has been on the sick list for a week. Friends wish for her a speedy recovery. Mrs J. A. Moore, teacher of the Bigelow Hospital, was suddenly called to North Park, where the bedside of her sister, Mrs Small, has been ill for several weeks.
Miss Verdelle McDuffie instructor of arts at the school here, is spending the weekend in Clarkton, N.C. Friday night Miss McDuffie played at the contest at Farmer's Union. Monday Miss McDuffie, of which A. L. Williams is principal. Miss Verdelle McDuffie, Carrie Brown, Mattea Mallow and Regina McDuffie mourned to Red Springs last week to attend the funeral ceremonies of Mrs Malinda McColm, grandmother of Misses Bertha and Wilke McNeil who are members of the second year class in the Institute
Morven, N. C.—Willie Jones died
february 18.
On February 18 the Morven
School boys played the Chewat
game and the basketball game.
The score for the boys was
18-8 in favor of Morven, the score
for the girls was 18-3 in favor of
Chewat, S. C.
The farm agent demonstrator visit
ed the Morven Colored School on
February 13.
On February 13 the Morven Colored
School boys played the Lakesville
Boss a game of basketball and
won by the score of 13-3. On
February 14 the Morven boys host to
Woodbury High School by 14-12.
The Theodore Steel gave a party on
Monday, February 17 for all of his
little friends.
U F Days and Johnmond Johnson
spent Thursday night with Ishua
Olans.
The copy of The New York
Sire from Iasar Smith, Price 5
cents a copy.
Mittalule, S. C.-George I. Rest
of New York City has returned
Morven, N. C.
Allendale, S. C.
incidents proved its charitableness towards its porters. But from another peak, I see the devotion, loyalty and steadfastness of the porter to the organization of the Porter in the organization. I was one of those who gazed upon the still form of Porter Daniels of Chicago, who lost his life in a New Jersey railroad accident several years ago, trying to save his wife. Then there is the record of the porter who hewed his way out of the train wreck in Missouri some months ago and pulled each one of his passengers to safety. And there is the porter—his number is 10,000—who thoughts are for the interest which he represents.
Mott Haven Yard News
Becoming tired of occupying the cellar-position in the Pullman service band league, members of the Pullman Porters Band in this disjunct of the city, J. W. Porter, plan director, for the reputation, which is traditional with things that have the "New York" tag.
One of the ways in which the leading minds of the New York musical unit hope to do this, and which is the reason for the Pullman musical league, is to receive the monthly demonstrations of the band, which are to be followed by other features for an evening's entertainment, such as peaking and other social activities.
Watch this column for the beginning of these series of musical and social affairs. It was at a meeting of the band, held at Imperial Elks Home, 160 West 129 Street, on Tuesday evening, Feb. 16th, 2014, the proposed campanula were laid.
Speaking of music, a midnight show will be given at the Alhambra Theatre, 126th street and Seventh avenue, on Saturday, March 1, 2014. On Sunday, March 4, the 369th Regiment Band on which Lieut. J. W. Porter, also leader of the Pullman Porter's Band is director, will render several numbers on the program.
Henry Outlaw a porter many years ago placed on the board of Bellevue Hospital on Thursday, February 20, for observation, as to his mental condition.
home after spending a few days here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Best.
He is being People's Club of Lompong Lompong met at the Mount of Mr. and Mrs. Marion Manner last Tuesday night. An enjoyable program was rendered, including addresses by Mrs. Rose Manner, W. A. Field and M. F. Manner.
Andrew Graham, one of the oldest citizens in this vicinity, died in Funeral Services were held at St. Mark's Baptist Church, where the deceased was a deacon, on Monday.
The Rev. Mr. McFarland, presiding elder of the Charleston district, made his first appearance here last week and left a good impression. Herman W. Fennell is out again after several days illness. May pledge from this town attended the Roland Hayes' recital in Augusta, Ga., last week. Miss A. Irewn is now teaching at the Rosenwald School of Luray, S. C. Mrs. leelan Cannon is rapidly recovering from an operation at the hospital in Darlington. The Rev. H. H. Lee, pastor of the Rev. H. H. Lee, Baptist Church, is building up to date service station on Railroad avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Lun Glover were here on business last week. They also called to see several friends. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Neals entertained on last Sunday with a delicious dinner for a few friends. The affair was one of the classic social events of the season, and was enjoyed by all present. Among the attendees were John Durant, J. W. Singleton, John Bling and Marion F. Maunger
The Allendale County Training School basketball team was defeated Friday evening by the Rosewold School of Ellerbee. The game was interesting from start to finish. The visiting team was the best and the players were highly entertained at the home of Miss L. G. Callahan. Miss Alene Irwin who is now teaching in the Rosewold School at Luray, was home on Saturday to see her parents and many friends. Miss Lelean Compton is at home again from the hospital and is doing well. The Young People's Club of Mt Tahoe Baptist Church met at the home of Mrs Alexander on Monday night. A very interesting program was rendered and a good collection was taken for the church. The Home Missionary Society, Miss Rosa Richardson, president, is doing a rock among the suck and fortunate ones of the city will. We hope the town in general will rally to their support.
The 369th Regiment Band, which has among its members many players who started in the Pullman Porters Band and are still in the Pullman service, played at a reception held by the medical staff of Thursday evening, February 20. Fordham Hospital to its nurses on the reception was held in the hospital.
This is no canard—this correspondent saw it with his own eyes. It was typedwritten, and read: Mr., of the National Broadcasting Company, will grant Mr. T. E. Gibson an interview on Tuesday, March 4, for engagement as a solo tenor.
For getting there by push, shows or pull, "Gib" heads his class. When the smooth Englander goes on the air, then is when this correspondent will feel that it is time to invest in a radio.
William Parnell, who celebrated his three-score and ten years a short time ago by a party at his home, has been granted six months extension time, (the retirement age being 70) by the Pullman management.
Frank-Ringle, one of the oldest lunchmen car operators in this district, has been a 'patient of Dr. Oma Price for the past two weeks. A heavy cold, which settled in his head is given as the root of the illness. With his Mr. man's run to North Adams has been taken care of by C. H. Lawrence.
Others on the sick list for the week ending February 22, are as follows: J. Hughes, 146 West 142nd street; E. H. Paris, 1502 Brook avenue; E. F. Effort, 172 West 141st street; R. A. Wright, 984 Morris avenue; E. J. Shelton, 171 New York avenue, Jamaica, L. I. N. Cohen, 242 West 148th street; E. W. Johnson, 100 Brook avenue, E. P. Darden, 402 West 153rd street.
Penn Terminal Notes
J. T. REID
Last week we asked for car dates for our baseball club and week we want to ask all porters who can play. We amendments to kindly report to P. A. Mapple, welfare worker telling him just what instrument it you play. Here is a chance for you to get music lessons free.
Investigator W. K. Banks of Washington, D. C. has been in our museum. Sunny. Mature. Pick a week, checking up all of our new men, we were glad to have Mr. Banks around because it gave him a chance to see the young porter in two forms: one while seeking employment and the other after employment. I am sure he can note the difference. We often wonder will Ed Hall everston being so grouchy.
Miami crack crew, W. P. Beaty, J. R. Drewery, W. G. Thobbs, C. Davis and N. L King are going to make it hard for all porters in 1930. We understand that they have raised the prices even on oranges. We were glad to see our old friend, G. E. Callahan, around last week. W. Moore was on the show last last week but kept to his post in the check room. Don't forget porters. If you can visit the sick, don't forget to do. Read the New York Age and know all the news and incidentally some of your shortcomings about Wanted—1000 porters who can smile at anything.
A New York doctor's
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pulses, and swollen
abruptly out of the system. It
succeeds the system.
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OFFICERS OF BARBADOS SOCIETY IN COURT
Officers of Barbados Friendly Society Are Charged With Gross Mismanagement, Misappropriation
J. N. Carrington, Organizer-Founder, Deands Inventory and Accounting and Court Names Referee To Examine Books and Vouchers
Charging that its officers had grossly misappropriated funds belonging to the Sons and Daughters of Barbados Friendly Society, Inc., James N. Carrington of 138 West 143rd street, founder and organizer of the Society, and other members, through his attorney, W. D. Farrington of 44 Court street, Brooklyn, has secured the naming of a referee for the making of "a visitation . . . of the affairs of said corporation."
Bringing Rockaway to Harlem
The image shows a train station with multiple tracks and platforms. The station is surrounded by trees and buildings, indicating a suburban or urban setting. The train tracks are laid out in a grid pattern, and there are several platforms visible. The station appears to be relatively quiet, with no visible crowds or trains. The architecture of the station is modern, with a combination of glass and steel elements. The surrounding area is green, suggesting a park or garden nearby.
OPENING DATE MAY 24th,1930
Newest and finest outdoor swimming pool and recreation centre. Pool 200x75 feet, containing over 600,000 gallons of pure croton water, daily capacity, 5,000 people, sand beach and playground, 15,000 square feet, roof garden dancing, hand ball courts, roller skating, basketball and physical culture exercises.
PAGE TEN
OFFICE
Officers of Barbados Society Are Charged Mismanagement,
J. N. Carrington, Organ Inventory and Account Referee To Examine
Charging that its officiated funds belonging to of Barbados Friendly Socrington of 138 West 143rd zer of the Society, and of attorney, W. D. Farring Brooklyn, has secured the making of "a visitation said corporation."
The appeal for an examination and accounting of the funds of the Society was filed September 18, 1929, with former District Attorney Joab H. Banton, but that official directed them to file the request with the Supreme Court, First Judicial District. This was done on October 5, the motion was heard October 28, and on November 14, Justice Curtis A. Peters, sitting in Part I, issued an order granting the request for a visitation, naming Walter G. Dunnington of 5 Nassan street as refractory, and that all books and vouchers of the Society be seized by him for inspection
Officer Facing Charges.
The officers named in the petition are P. A. McIntosh, president, 4 West 118th street; Irene Harwood, secretary, 5 West 137th street, Albert Grant, treasurer, 423 Sixth avenue; Cecil C Carter, manager of real estate, 200 West 135th street; Linton, chairman of charity fund, 123 Fifth avenue Since then, Mr. McIntosh has moved to an address on 127th street, and Miss Harwood to 633 Lenox avenue. The books and records were seired by Referee Dunnington on February 14, and a hearing has been ordered for February 28.
Associated with Mr. Carrington in the demand for an accounting are Frederick Hall, Leshe Yearwood, who made two affidavits, Alfred Inness, Duncan Seale, -Cecil W. Cummings, Clementina L, Cummings, Marie Somers and Clara Carrington
Founder Is Expelled.
Following the filing of the request the Society, it is alleged, under direction of President McIntosh, suspended all of these members, this being done in October, 1929. However, early in November the suspension of seven, of these pedons was lifted, but Messrs Carrington and Yearwood were expelled. Interviewed by an Age representative, Mr. Carrington said that the Societyay was founded by him on September 7, 1913, and that papers of incorporation were granted on May 5, 1916.
During 1926 the property at 4 West 118th street was purchased for $34,000, the Society paying $8,000 cash. To date, said Mr Carrington, $3,000 has been paid on the mortgage, giving the Society an equity of $11,000.
Says President Paid No Rent.
Mr. Carrington states that the principal object of the Society is to take care of the sick and burry the dead through voluntary contributions from the members, and that there are charity and real estate departments. The gross mismanagement is charged to the offices of the secretary, treasurer and manager. He charges further that the president, Mr. McIntosh, was found to have occupied an apartment in the building for eighteen months, paying no rent during that period and that he only moved from the building during January, 1930
Bringing
PETERS & HAMILTON
306 WEST 143rd STREET NEW YORK CITY
CHANNING TOBIAS HEARD BY TOLEDO INTERRACIALS Spoke Four Times Daily For Four Days Before Interracial Groups
CHANNING TOBIAS HEARD BY TOLEDO INTERRACIALS Spoke Four Times Daily For Four Days Before Interracial Groups
Toledo, Ohio—The guest speaker for Interracial Week, just closed here, was Channing H Tobias, National Y. M. C. A., secretary of New York. For the past five years Toledo has been observing Interracial Week, but never before has there been a program that touched so many areas of community life and proved so effective in changing long-set interracial attitudes.
Mr. Tobias averaged as many as four speaking engagements, a day for four days. His first appointment was as speaker at the Sunday morning service of the history of Washington. Congregational Church, made famous a generation ago by Marton Lawrence, international Sunday school leader. In this address Mr. Tobias challenged his hearers to respond to the religion, and spirit of Jesus of Nazr.
six rooms, being "railroad" apartments. This would mean a rental of $450 monthly or $3,400 annually. In spite of this, charges Mr. Carrington, there has been no benefit derived by the members other than the payment of $1,000 on the mortgage, during a period of nearly four years. In other words, he saves, out of a gross rental of approximately $21,000, it apparently, has taken $17,000 to the office apartment for that period, and he believes his charge of gross mismanagement will be upheld by the referee. At present, he said, the property is probably being handled by the banking committee, although the officers named are still functioning Assistant District Attorneys. Thomas B. Dyett of 200 West 135th street is attorney for the accused officers
arth, which - magnified human brotherhood.
"The time is past," the speaker declared, "when the Church can satisfy its brotherhood conscience by sending barrels of old clothes to Negroes in the South or in the Real question or whether or not the church will open its doors of membership to all the sons and daughters of God without respect to race, color or language."
To School Principals
Another important meeting that the guest speaker addressed was the assembly of school principals with the city Superintendent of Education to discuss questions of relationships between colored and white teachers, and colored and white students. Thorough preparation had been made for this assembly through a report by Mrs. Kennedy, a colored teacher, on certain conflict situations that she had handled during her last years of publication both books and periodicals, by and about Negroes, had been prepared looking forward to distribution in the schools for educational purposes.
Other meetings addressed by Mr. Tobias were a mass meeting at the Douglass Community Center, another mass meeting at the Collinwood Avenue Presbyterian Church (white); the Ministerial Alliance assembly, Y, M, C, A, and Y W, C, A forums; an address before the Exchange Luncheon Club, probably the largest businessman's club in the city at which time Fletcher Henderson's orchestra furnished the music, and finally, and probably most significant, he was the Lincoln Birthday orator at the Kawaii Club.
The Interracial observance in Toledo is promoted by the local Federation of Churches in cooperation with civic organizations. This committee is made up of people of both races, with Dr. B. F. McWilliams, pastor of the colored Baptist Church, as chairman. The Chairman of the program committee was Dr. C. A. Wood of the Presbyterian Church Herbert L. Miller, secretary of the Y. M. C. A and C W. Stannecker of the Douglas Community Center, cooperated. The outstanding social event of the week was a banquet given by the Square Club of the Y. M. C. A.
Couple Held On Federal Charge After Acquittal By District Court
Couple Held On Federal Charge After Acquittal By District Court
Oklahoma City, Okla — A Federal charge of assault with a dangerous weapon was filed Saturday against John and La Tosca Young. Negro couple acquitted by a State District Court jury at Stillwater of the murder of O P. Butler or End, Federal Prohibition agent. A Deputy Marshal was sent to Stillwater to take custody of the pair.
The charge was filed in connection with an alleged attack on George S. Donhour, another dry agent, who was with Butler when he was killed. It was issued on a complaint from the office of Ree de Monbrum, District Prohibition Administrator.
The acquittal was attributed by County Attorney, Ernest F Jenkins to the fact that the Federal search warrant used by the agents in entering the home was gold invalid because its description of the location of the Young home erred in distance by one-shelf mile, and to the presentation of the defense contention that the State did not prove the presence of whiskey in the house.
THE NEW.YORK.AGE
SOCIETY
INTERRACIAL GROUP SEEKS MILLION FUND
Dr. Moton Heads Drive To Raise Money For 10-Year Period
Atlanta, Ga.-Dr. Robert R. Moton, president of Tuskegee Institute, has accepted the leadership of a campaign to raise $1,360,000 to continue the work of the Commission on Interracial Cooperation through another 'ten-year period. The campaign is sponsored by a committee of nationally-known financiers, educators and religious leaders of both races, and two pledges aggregating $500,000 have already been received - $400,000 from Spelman Fund and $100,000 from the Conference Fund. Confidence in the express that the remaining $660,000 will be promptly pledged when the need has been made known
Organized In 1919.
The beneficiary of the campaign, popularly known as the Interracial Commission, was organized by a group of Southern leaders in 1919 in the hope of checking the wave of interracial conflict that spread across the country at that time resulting in numerous destructive race riots North and South. After meeting this emergency, it set out upon a constructive program of interracial adjustment, including the correction of oppressive conditions affecting Negroes and the improvement of those interracial attitudes out of, which unfavorable conditions grow. The Commission conducts a far-reaching educational program through the press, through religions and civic organizations, in schools and colleges, and from the platform, and deals with specific situations through a large number of state and local interracial committees.
Both Races Represented.
It's membership comprises a hundred representative men and women of both races, and the affiliated committees enlist more than a thousand others. Its work has attracted favorable attention throughout the United States and abroad. Though the Commission has made no effort to organize outside the South, its methods have been widely adopted in other sections of the country and also in South Africa, where there is a similar movement well under way. Among the prominent colored leaders sponsoring the campaign, along with Dr Moton, a e Dr Mordecai Johnson, Dr John Hope, Bishop Robert E. Jones, Dr George E. Haynes, Fred R. Moore, C.-C Spaulding, Watt Terry and Dr. Channing T. Tobas.
Health Week Bulletin
Tuskegee Institute, Ala — The National Negro Health Week Bulletin, issued annually by the United States Public Health Service as a guide for the observance of Negro health week, is now available. The Bulletin contains a plan of organization for observance of the week. March 30 thru April 6, suggested topics for health talks; brief articles on improving health conditions, and re-
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And as for soft cornns, a few applications each night at bed time and they just seem to shrivel up and scale off.
Druggists guarantee Moone's Emerald Oil to end your foot troubles or money back.
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New York City
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IN COURT ports of the cities and communities which were adjudged to' have best observed the week last year.
Copies of the Bulletin may be ordered from the United States Public Health Service at Washing- at $10 per 1,000, or $1.25 per 100. Copies of the Public Health week poster is also ready for distribution and may be secured from the Public Health service at $1 per 100, $10 per 1000.
Late George Myers
Left $28,000 To Widow
Cleveland, O.—The
A. Myers, proprietor
lenden. Hotel barben
net estate of $28,000
his will which was
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was made the chief
Sergt. Morrell Dead
Jamestown, R. I.-Sergeant Benjamin Morrell, M. A., retired, was given a soldier's burial in Cedar cemetery last week, following funeral services at the Hambly funeral home The Rev, Mr, Connell of the Union Congregational Church and the Rev, Dr. Jeter of education, the Squad and a hugler were sent from Fort Adams for the burial.
- Pall bearers were Messrs A. L. Golden, James Barry, E. O Jackson, W. A. Jackson, J. H. Burney and Dr. A. L. Van Horne
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-Miss. Ella. Mae. Hawr, 406 Jessamiu St. Memphis, Tenn.
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S. J. COTTMAN
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2303 Seventh Avenue
New York City
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328 LENOX AVENUE
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Highest prices paid for diamonds, gold and precious stones Pawn Tickets Bought
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FURNISHED ROOMS
Manhattan Avenue, 446 (Apt. 43)—Furnished rooms, small, for one or two, call after 7, privileges. E.22-4t
7th Avenue, 2252 (One Flight)—Furnished room for respectable gentleman, $5. Mrs. J. Taylor.
7th Avenue, 2394, Apt. 45—Large front room, reasonable, furnished or unfurnished.
St. Nicholas Avenue, 738—Large and small neatly furnished rooms with running water and bath, reasonable. M1-4t
130th St., 224 West—Front, base-
ment to let for settled coupe,
strictly quiet house. Feb. 15-2t.
7th Avenue, 2394 (Apt. 71)—Out-
side rooms, well furnished, single
or couple. Telephone Bradhurst
1347.
Manhattan Avenue, 400 (Apt. 22)
Attractive furnished room for
one or two. Privileges, reasonable.
Feb 1-2t.
Manhattan Avenue, 400 (Apt. 73).
Neatly furnished rooms for
single or couple; call evenings.
Feb 14-t
St. Nicholas Terrace, No. 1 Apt.41
—Room to let, private—telephone
service, call evenings.
Edgecombe Ave., 131 (near 141st Street)—Mrs. Emma Baker has two desirable furnished rooms for single or couples.
St. Nicholas Place, 52, Apt. 52—comfortably furnished room. No other roomers. Phone Audubon 5641. Feb. 15-2t.
112th Street, 12-14 West—5 Large rooms, all improvements, newly decorated; reasonable rents, $38, $40, $43. Janiter. F22-It.
113 St. 105 W.—Neatly furnished room, couple, or friends, respectable people, one flight up, east side.
113th Street, 133 West—Apt. 61—Large and small richly furnished rooms, in elegant apartment house. Excellent for couple or two girls, elevator service, reasonable rent.
IN MEMORIAM
HOOKS—In loving remembrance of the dearest of mothers, who passed February 24, 1928
that she cannot not and not say
That she cannot not and not say
.Daughters—Pearl E. and Marion
T. Hooks.
SPECIAL NOTICE
The public is hereby notified that the UNDERTAKING ESTABLISHMENT of my late husband, James Veal, 2492 Seventh avenue, will be continued at the same address under the name: ESTATE JAMES VEAL, Understaker & Embalmer, where the same efficient and courteous service will be rendered to all.
I sincerely ask the support of his friends and the public at large; and will assure you that your confidence is trusted to my care will be carried out to your complete satisfaction.
Signed:
Mrs. Tela Veal—(Wife)
Estate James Veal
Understaker & Embalmer
No 2492 Seventh Avenue
Between 144th and 145th Streets.
Phone Bradhurst 9674.
James I. Perkins, Licensed Undertaker, Mgr.
INFORATION WANTED
W11.L anyone knowing the present
address of Madame H. Hart
Butler, hard dresser, formerly of 200
West 141st street, New York City,
please communicate with Box
LAWW, care New York Age, 230
West 135th street
Lost Bank Books
LOST—Pass books No. 2803, No.
2972 and No. 3463. Finder please
return to Dunbar National Bank,
2824 Lighthouse avenue, New York
City.
GAIN FOR SALE IN
CA, L. I.
DOOM HOUSE
All Improvements
— CASH $500
IS NECESSARY
apply
ON JR. COMPANY
Telephone Harlem 8092
NEED MONEY?
XII III IV V VI VII VIII IX X
CLASSIFIED ADS
UNDERTAKERS
127th Street, 19 East (Apt 4)
Bed-room and parlor, strictly
private, also small room, $4.50
Private house. F8-28
Phone Edgecombb 9048
Open All Night—
Notary Public
Rodney Dade & Bros.
UNDERTAKERS AND
EMBALMERS
2244 Seventh Ave., Cor.
132nd Street, New York City
Branch
758 East 229th St.
Lela E. Brown, Mgr.
Phone. Olinville 3337
Phone Columbus 9408
Phone University 7386
Geo. A. Seymour, Inc.
Undertakers
211 West 62nd Street
New York City
116 West 118th Street
New York City
Phone 4936 BRADHURST
WILLIAM C. PERRY
Funeral Director & Embalmer
LARGE FUNERAL PARLOR
248 WEST 132nd STREET
Bet. 7th & 8th Aves. New York City
H. ADEN
HOW
FUNERAL C
2332 SEVENTH AVE.
Mr. MARTHA E HOWELL, President
HAROLD H. MED
PRICES TO SUIT ALL
FURNISHED ROOMS
148th St. 802. West (near St. Nicholas Ave.) Apt. 44. Redecorated cozy, comfortable outside rooms. Twin beds, steam heat, running water. With young couple Home conveniences. Very reasonable. 153rd St. 258 W. (Apt. 6) -Private room all conveniences, bachelor preferred, call Thursday only after 4.
Furnished—Unfurnished
Nearly Furnished and unfurnished rooms with running water, 70 St. Nicholas Place. Febl 4
FURNISHED ROOMS—BKLYN
New York Avenue, 47—Large and small furnished rooms, all improvements, telephone Lafayette 4391. Tibbs.
ROOMS—JERSEY CITY Storms Avenue, 118—Furnished rooms for man and wife or two ladies or two gentlemen. All conveniences, telephone Bergen 614W.
APARTMENTS MANH
Seventh Avenue, 1967 (118th St.
Just finished, eight rooms, steam,
electric, modern, each room private,
$85.
St. Nicholas Ave., 580 (Gartland
Apts.)—2 and 3 beautiful large
rooms, modern, elevator, reason-
able rents. —February 1-8
111th Street, 255 West—5 rooms,
all improvements, moderate rent
apply premises or Jesse Oppenheim.
Monument 3870.
Feb. 15-4t
2 ROOMS $45
113th Street, 141 New showers,
built-in-tubs, parquet floors,
white ranges, side wall fixtures
M1-1
356 WEST 119th STREET—Six
rooms and bath, Heat steam,
electric lights, french doors,
panelled walls. All improvements,
$55 a month. Enquire
superintendent, premises.
129th St., 109 West—9 rooms; all private; Elevator, Steam, Electric, $133, Wonderful furnished room proposition. Dec. 21-fd
133rd Street, 537 West—1 rooms, all improvements, new law house, decorated to suit. $43—$45, apply Supt. Apt. 4 Feb12
274 West 135th Street 5 Room apt. All improvements Inquire superintendent; Apt. 41, Edgecombe 2719
135th St., 274 West—Two Rooms and kitchenette to let; home-like Phone Edgecombe 2719 JESSE FRANKLIN
135th St., 274 West—5 rooms, all private, steam heat, Edgecombe 2719
OPPORTUNITY
136th Street, 101-A—Two front rooms, suitable for business or living, arranged to suit. Phone Bradhurst 9862. M112
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
You can Rent, Lease or Sell
your Property through my aggressive methods. Send description
and best price and learn how.
AUSTIN A. MILLS
REALTY COMPANY
2143 Seventh Avenue, Room 103
Phone Cathedral 6147.
Jan. 25-4t
STORES FOR RENT—N. Y. C.
7th Ave., 2019 Cor. 121st Street
Stores for any business. At-water 4642.
Store To Let—108th St., 126 E.
Good for any business cheap rent.
Feb. 15-4t
TAKERS
Economy Efficiency Service
Residence Phone University 1992
Notary Public
Edward M. Fentress
Universtair and Embalmer
212 WEST 142nd STREET
New York City
Office Phone Edgecombe 3838
Chaise Prep ready Attendant
Remains Shipped all parts of
world
Under the Management of
ANNA E. BROWN & MARGARET
BROWN-ARNRINGTON
HIGH IGHT UNINSED
UNDERTAKERS And
EMBALMERS
2315 SEVENTH AVENUE
Bet. 135th and 136th St.
Telephone Bradhurst 0442
Phone Harlem 6448
J. R. S. McLEOD, Managed
ESTATE OF
J. WESLEY LANE
Incorporated
MARY LANE, President
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
AND EMBALMER
Prompt Service at Moderate Rates
Funeral Parlor and Chapel Free
112 West 133rd Street
New York City
DOLPH
ELL
CHURCH, Inc.
Audubon 9239
N. GEORGE E. WEST Vice-Pres
HERMAN, MARY USE OF CHURCH FREE
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