New York Amsterdam News — 1963-12-07

1963 18 pages ✓ Indexed
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N. ¥. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Dec 7, 19G3 • 7 G.l/s From N.Y. Taking Courses LACKLAND AFB, Texas-Two New York City men are being reassigned to new bases to attend technical training courses follow­ ing completion of U.S. Air Force basic military training here. They are Airman Mortimer M. Clarke, whose guardian, Samuel Stephenson, lives at 535 W. 156th St., and Airfnaa John C Ji . son of Mr and Mrs. John C. Green of 750 Ninth Ave. Airman Clarke will attend course for supply specialists at - 2 Amarillo AFB. Texas, AinMn- Green will attend a course for ’ J aircraft mechanical equipment repairman at Chanute AFB, 111. 8 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS. Sat., Dec. 7, 1963 Hospitalize Pa. Homeowner After Continued Harassment ■' h PHILADELPHIA, PA— Buy­ ing a home in a formerly lily- white section, Delmar Village near Folcroft, turned out to be a nerve-racking experience for a 26-year-old Negro. Horace Baker, described as a deeply religious man, broke down under the pressure ot three months ot repeated harassment last week and continues under ob­ servation at the Haverford State Hospital. Doctors at the mental institution said he will be treated for a period of 21 days, but may be held for further treatment if necessary to issue a traffic ticket to Baker for parking his car too far from the curb, instead of arrestipg the offenders. Baker's nervous breakdown is believed to have been triggered by the incident of three weeks ago when he was summoned for violating an ordinance by allow­ ing a Philadelphia plumber to re­ pair a water heater damaged in the Aug. 30 riot which a squad of 160 policemen allegedly watched while the vandals ruined Baker’s home. mission to th^ out-of-town plumb­ er to do the Work because no lo­ cal plumber would take the job. Spurred by protests from 27 civil rights groups associated with the Council for Equal Hous­ ing Opportunities, the State At­ torney General Walter E. Ales- sandroni has ordered an investi­ gation of the circumstances lead ing up to Baker’s collapse. There’s something for YOU on1 Hearing Scheduled every page of this issue of The A hearing on the violation was set for Tuesday, although a friend of Baker said Folcroft Mayor Hugh McVicker had given per­ Amsterdam News. Check and see —every week. Out every Thurs­ day. GO „ ,« "WEST" Heodquorters far Do-lt-YourseH Materials. Free Advice and Meat te Purchasers ef: Plyweed, Peybeard, Wall Tile, Glue, Windows, Doers, Cornice Material, Bed Beards, Formica, Mouldings, Halls, Ceiling Tile. LUMBER CUT TO SIZE WEST LUMBER CO. ■ Reasonable Prices 126 STREET A MORNINGSIDE AVE. Free Delivery M0 2-4220-1 N. Y. C. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT New Treatment Helps Arthritis, Rheumatism & You! “I WAS VERY NERVOUS & I COULD NOT SLEEP’’ “I NEVER FELT BETTER IN THE LAST 20 YEARS’’ This Helps You iJR id ■W Whb.-- tNg&faaiBI* VVr \ • • N. T. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Dec. 7, 1963 *-osg£S ?7 Week Iy News // /V // Funeral Home I 5 2 8th A L t , N V. 2 7. N V. Lewis Bcvett Island National Cemetery follow {ing services at Unity Funeral Lewig Bevgtt, 46. ot 1964)9 104th Chapel. 2352 8th Ave, officiated Ave, who died recently in Queens by Rev Ernest Cooke General Hospital was buried in He is survived by his wife, a Lon« Island National Cemetery su,.er, nephew and other relatives. Farmingdale, following services at Unity Funeral Chapel. 2352 Annie Poindexter 8th Ave, officiated by Joseph D Maxwell * Annie B Poindexter, of 320 St. He to survived by his wife: ,Nk*°**s ;Av«•’ wl» rec*D<- r- a «on and 1B H«rlem Hospital, was bur- led ‘in Durham, NC.. following ’ preparation of the body and ship- ment to the South by Unity Fun- vincent tdward eral Hom<> nh Ave Vincent Edward, 47, who died Surviving relatives include her recently in Jacobi Hospital, was husband Truly, a sister, two buried in Evergreen Cemetery, brothers and several nieces and Brooklyn, following services at nephews. Unity Funeral Chapel. 2352 6th Ave. John Poindexter Surviving him are his wife, a John k PoiDdexter. 44. of 217 daughter, a son and a sister. w 12SU who diwl recenUy 1 *____ , „ Edward Jones » in his home was buried in Long Island National Cemetery. Farm- . „„ ingdale. NY.. following services FElTh“ttB’wi?edied5,^i2C at t’nrty Funeral Chapel. 2352 E‘ n^L8* ' u h , 8th Ave. officiated by Rev. John in Bellevue Hospital, was buried In Long Island National Cemetery ... following services at Unity Fun- He is survived by his wife, eral Chapel. 2352 8th Ave Rev Dorothy : a daughter Sherrill, five Ave Rev ormed the"5’81*1*’ twt) brothers and other relatives, including a mother and a sister-ip-liw. William A. Ashley perf rites. f _ ■ . . ' . . , ’ . ’ He is survived by his wife, a son. two daughters and other rel­ atives. Katie Reddick John Marable Katie M. Reddick. 69. of 70 W. 128th St, who died recently in Harlem Hospital, was buried in John Marable, 67. of 3-5 E Sanford, Florida following pre- ll 6th St, who died recently in paraQOn of the body and ship- ins home was buried in Long Is- ment by unity Funeral Home, land National Cemetery Farm- ingdale. N.Y. following funeral services at Unity Funeral Chapel. , Shf 18 ’ daug,h*r' 2352 8th Ave. Rev. Joseph Max- d s0"- tU%?5a1'Jd<:hjldrefl'aih.ree wen officiated. 8th Ave. greatgrandchildren, “ to a brother, sister, nieces and Tommie Mothis Tommie Mathis. 58. of 2W7 . Elixobeth Salter CORRECTION - Mrs. Ida Jig­ Fifth Ave, who died recently Eillabeth Salter, 54, of 57 E. in Harlem Hospital was buried 122n(J S{ who died in Just completed her second book in Rural CemrtMjr. Ashburn. home, was buried in Roae- Georgia after preparation of the Cemetery Linden, NJ., fol on Jewish people entitled “Is- rael To Me”. Author of the in- srev, cesat UntiynF-er body and shipment to the South Ave Funen^services were held lowiag services at Unity Funer- ternationally famous “Religion. Ave. Funeral serv ices were held at Unity Chapel officiated by Rev Chapel 2352 8th Ave, official __ by £ey WiU>rd Monroe psychiatric social worker, has , of Jews ’. Diet and Health T „ ’’ getts, well-known author and Robert H. Jones. She is survived by three daugh-! which established her as an Surviving relatives include two {prs a and ^ber relatives., authority on Jewish life, Mrs. Dies Isiah Nesbitt ReV. 1 atC, Isiah Nesbitt, of 51 Bruckner daughters, three sons, several f ------------------------------r Jiggetts is donating the royal- grandchildren; mother, three sis-, tors, nieces and nephews. Blvd., who died recently . in METUCHEN, N. J. — The Rev. Knickerbocker Hospital, was bur-: Ncls®n TaU- Paslor «merius led in RosehiU Cemetery, Linden. ofSecond Baptist Church, died NJ. following funeral services Tuesday at his home after at Unity Funeral Chapel, 2352 8th a mDess His adless was Ave. Rev. Gyles Harris officiated «iven 45 100 Durham Ave. __ ties tff 100 copies of her latest book to the International Cul tural Center for Youth in Jer­ usalem. Previous reports pub­ lished in the press erroneously stated that all royalties from the sale of her book would be donated to this Center. Actual­ ly, St. Mark's Methodist Church, the YWCA of Wilming­ ton, Del, the Westchester Club of the National Negro Business The 93-year-ald minister retired Surviving him are his wile Ar- » 1960 a*1*1, saving as pastor of and Professional Women's lene a son his mother and fath- Second Baptist Church for 46 Clubs. Inc, the Sponsors in er. six sisters, brothers, grand- y*ars He was a native of Gran Philadelphia, the First Baptist mother and odwr relatives vfile, N. C, and a resident of Church of Greenwich, Conn, I Grace Baptist Church in Mt. He is survived by his widow. Vernon, N. Y, Grace Baptist Church in Montclair, N. J, and the NAACP will share in the proceeds from the sale of Mrs. Jiggett’s new book. Ida; four sons and a daughter, 1 Tillman Norried, 71, of 379 W. 26 grand children. 36 great-grand- 127th 9t, who died recently in children and six great-great- his home was buried in Long grandchildren. Tillman Norried this state since 1896. the rites. funeral ^3ne, ’ • ;.HC;-----r -,-r- - , , - - ■---■ ■ 2352 8th Hu, york 27, Hu, yo^ Gentlemen: Your Funeral Home teas given compliments by my friends and office workers. > I am grateful and appreciative for the efficient-like manner the funeral ---- f teas directed. Thanking you kindly, MRS. ESTHER V. JONES zj^Untiy 1 Funeral Home, Inc. i. 2352-4-6 Eighth Ave. «A At 126th St. New York 27, N.Y. MOnument 6-8300 4 "Your Loved Ones Deserve The Best" ■db >* ■Hi WNU»" Pre-Civil War Pleas . Of Negroes TV Feature A selection of speeches, ser­ mons and letters, all written by Negroes before the Civil War and each expressing the demand for freedom and constitutional rights, will be given dramatic presentation on ABC News’ "Di­ rections *64” Sunday. Dec. I (ABC-TV, 1-1:» p m, EST> In “We Shall be Heard.” act­ ors Earle Hyman and Frederick O’Neal will recall in dramatic readings the timeless words of I obscure yet important Negro writers — words which are as current today as they were over 100 years ago. It was in New York on Jan. 1, 1813 — five years after the outlawing of the African Slave Trade — that George Lawrence called for an end to Negro bond age and the beginning of univ ersal freedom. And in 1827 when slavery was finally ended in that city, the Rev. Nathaniel Paul defended his belief that slavery would cease and equal rights would be universally ack­ nowledged. Negro Fourth Paul’s sermon was delivered on July 5. and until the Em- 1 ancipation Proclamation, that day was known as “J he Negro fourth of July”. Tire program, produced by the Public .Affairs Department of ABC News in cooperation with| the National Council of Catholic Men, will also recall the writings of the Rev. Theodore S. Wright. 1 who addressed himself to the problem of Northern discrimina­ tion; of Frederick Douglass who asked for a rousing of the Am­ erican conscience; and of David Walker who ominously suggested that the Negro might ’’obtain liberty by the rushing arm of power.” Group Of Children But perhaps it was left to a group of Negro children in Cin­ cinnati to give the most passion­ ate expression to racial injustice After the end of the school year in 1834. they were asked to write on "What do you think most Dance To Aid Rights Drive by the. Rev. Clarence J. Rivers and directed by Lloyd Tweedy Wiley Hance is the producer of "Directions ‘64.” Woman Finds Relief From ITCH about?** This is owe of the ans­ wers: “Dear Sir — This is to inform you that I have two cousins in slavery who are entitled to free­ dom. They have done everything that the will requires and now they won't let them go. They Hrrs's biassed ral.af fraa talk of selling them down the loriurea ef vaginal neb, racial itch, chafing, rash river. If this was your case what ___ acieatifle and eciaeia with an inuring naw would you do? Please give me i f*oraiuiac«riad lanaCane.’ biafaH-acttns formula called LAN ACANE.TI Bicduaiad crema lutIs harmful bacteria germa your advice w|,il« it soo«he» raw, irrii—. i raw. irruatad and inflamed “We Shall be Heard” was t,u« s«om Kratch.M-w wwdi heahn». ntu> warulrrsmat. Naw written by bee Court, narrated1 Dosu^flGwLArJACATft« FAST RELIEF FROM DISCOMFORTS OF COLDS No need to suffer the “ache all- over” feeling and annoying pains that accompany a cold. Take fast­ acting BC. So gentle, so long last ing. Helps you over the robgh spots GUARANTEED EYEGLASSES for READING, or DRIVING, MOVIES, T.V. MADE WHILE YOU WAIT EXACtlY TO PRESCSIFTION Glosaaa auorontaad In writing unconditionally, lanaoa, fromaa and potta. Bifocals complata as low as $10.50 J -TMJA orrirrt TWO OFFICES Community Opticians MANHATAN 47 W. 34th St. at 6th Ava. PE 6-1181 B RON X 148 St. at 3rd Ava. ME 5-2217 * $TF.5O mi Price ComoioW From* & Lanaas Single Virion Any Strength Doily & So’, to 6: Mon. to 7:30. Toke El«»otor to 2nd Fleer 28 TEARS OF DEPENDABILITY TO OVER 800 OOO Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain GOING INTO TIME — Mother Alice Brown, who recently cele­ brated her 110th birthday, is flanked tl to r> by mode! Dee Simmons, w :th whom she pro­ vides a contrast in age, Mrs. Ficrence Rice and Dr. Anna Arnold Hedgeman. Mother Brown Is a member of Friend­ ship Baptist Church and pres­ ident of its Sunrise Prayer She also serves as hon- Band (Usi.cian < f its Senior orary Board 'Gilbert Photo> Usher Pastor Hits New Kind Of “Paganism” • There is a “new kind of pagan ism” undermining religion and 20th century man's hopes. “It's a naked worship of ma­ terial success,” the Rev. Eugene Callender told a group of clergy-! men of the Interdenominational Ministers Meeting of Greater New York and Vicinity Monday afternoon. “The 20th century pagan may not make a burnt offering (as did yesteryear’s pagan), but his purpose is the same — to pro­ vide short cuts to material suc­ cess,” added the Rev. Callender, minister of The Church of the Master, a Presbyterian parish at Morningside Ave. and 122nd The End Of Justice B.ALTTMORE, Md. — The State of Mary land completed its rendering of justice this week for a Negro waitress who died here Feb. 8, the day after she was struck In the head by one of the guests at a ball. The eane swinger. William Zantzinger, a Charles County tobacco farmer, is serving a six months sentence for man­ slaughter. ...................................... . In court action this week. Criminal Judge Anselm Sodaro acquitted Zantzinger's wife of a charge of assaulting a police­ man who arrested her husband. She was fined $50 for disorder­ ly conduct. Diva On Board Famed Metropolitan Opera sing- er Leontyne Price, ' of International Local :n “alum- Hospital House, at i the proceeds of its hospital divi-i 500 Riverside Drive, is one of five ision's third annual autumn dance new persons who have been added j will be given to its brotherhood Two of the three symptoms of 10 th* board of trustees of the-fund for civil rights and legis the new paean.sm are material- residence hall accommodating lative <'^'1^ Th* dan" ism and moral relativism, the graduate students attending col- will be held co Friday evening latter of which modern man uses to justify his wrongdoing by New Aork C.ty. ____________ tenter._______________________ I Professional schools in of this week at the Manhattan 1199 of the Drug Employees Union Two Symptoms ' St na said’ W~ TS6. W. T. dBqaMatt - Per tke M lr»t time aeience haa found a new healing substance with the aston- iahfnc ability to shrink hemor­ rhoids, atop itching, and relieve pain - without auryery. In case after case, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction (shrinkage) took place. Meat aBiaainx ef all-results were ra mads astoatskiac atatawaata like “Piles have ceased to ha a probleas!" The secret is a new healing auh- itaace ( Bio-Dyae*)-discovery ed a worid-famoaa research iaatltnto. This aabatoaea ia now available ia eappeettorp ar eealsaeat /ena ander the name PreparaAeea X At all j claiming ethics is a matter of geography and culture; hence good is a constantly changing. ! nebulous factor. Using the illustration of the ac­ tual kidnaping of a Christian mis- i sionary from a leprosorium by South Vietnam Cpmmuhists, not : to deprive the leper colony nf its ' help but rather to help in their ) own medical needs, the minis­ ter said “Christianity is still the greatest message of hope for modem man — it is still needed by the world.” Christian and non- Christian alike. Randolph Davis Stars Help Salvation Army Bazaar Brigadier B Barton McIntyre, executive dirccxir r.i the Salva tion Armv Red Shield Center 224 W 124th St., m now need thifll week the participation of num- erotn celebrities in the center’i forthcoming bazaar on Friday and Saturday, December 6-7 from 1 to 10 p m. | Among those lending support to this venture are: Frederick O’Neal, OMle D«vis, Jimmy Ran­ dolph, Ed Cambridge, Irving Burgie and Dick Campbell from the ' Ballad for Bimshire” Com pany, now playing at the May fair Theatre. Others who are joining in this venture are: Alma John, Ruby Dee, Eva Jessye, Edna Ricks, Helen Dowdy, Gertruda P. Me Brown, Sidney Easton, Joseph 1 Attles. Invitations have also been extended to Sugar Ray Robinson Monte Irvin, Elston Howard, Hil da Simms, Hal Jackson and Ratph Cooper. Benjamin Nelson, senior rase supervisor for the Dept. of Web fare Day Center Program for Older Persons, has received | special invitation. The Senior Cit izeiu Program for the Red Shield Center is sponsored by the Sal-1 vatiou Army and the DepC.of Welfare. Other representatives frmn the Dept. of Welfare day centers for the aged will be present. Salvation Army lxx»k for the red kettles of The Salvation Army on the street corners. They have been used at Christmas for more than years. ”1 HAT E A DREAM- r HAVE YOU FOLLOWED THE PROGRESS OF THIS MAN, THIS MOMENT, THIS "DREAM?" The march to freedom is a day by day, week by week challenge to everyone; Be sure you ’re part of it all! Use this form to Subscribe NOW tttrm City “Ong of America's Great Newspapers'’ ^XinnGrclain JJtbs Subscription Order flank 2346 EIGHTH AVL, NEW TOM 27, H. Y. Tdaphsaa a ACodawy 2-7606 1 Tr. .6 17.66 □ >446 □ i •■♦•r my tokscripMaa ta tfca Terk Amttmdo* Nows for jf (fsrtign, $1.00 oddit'l) I laclasa |Lj,_____ __ BANK CHECK OR U,$. MONEY OROEP ONLY Takn 1 •r 2 TabUt» fer Faat Bay State Plan Raps Job Bias NEGRO GOVERNOR OF MIS­ SISSIPPI? — Undaunted by the seeming futility of his hopes of becoming Mississippi’s first modern Negro governor, Aaron Henry (second from left) nev- ertheless has formally declar­ ed his intention of seeking leadership of that state. He is shown above with his runn­ ing mate, Rev. Ed King, as­ piring lieutenant-governor, dur- ing visit here talking to Harold Baker and Jerry Wurf of Dis­ trict 37 of the American Fed­ eration of State, County and Municipal Employees union. (Gilbert Photo). Baker, who lives in the Delmar Village home with his wife. Sarah reportedly was found walking aimlessly a long way - from his home. He was stopped by a pa­ trolman, and unable to explain where he was going or what he was doing in the area, he was taken to the Woodland Ave. sta­ tion , but later released in cus­ tody of his wife with the advice that he be hospitalized for psych iatric treatment. 62,000 Damage Teaching Career Not Enough For Him The Bakers began having trou­ ble with the police and the neigh bors shortly after they moved in to the white residential section last summer. Their home was damaged in a riot staged by dem­ onstrators causing damage es- Dr. Glanville was graduated timated at $2,000. BOSTON, MASS. — Governor Endicott Peabody has announced One career in a lifetime is formation of the Massachusetts from Howard University College A close friend of Baker said usually par for the course, but Plan for Equal Employment Op­ of Medicine last June — he also that be began showing signs of not for Dr. Cecil E. Glanville. portunity, which has received completed his undergraduate!strain fonowing He put aside a career as an special recognition from Presi­ work there — and now is intern­ educator to launch himself on a dent Lyndon B. Johnson and is believed to be the first plan cf-new career — medicine be­ ing at St. Peter’s Hospital in New Brunswick, N. J. “Upon lts kind adopted in any of the!eause he thought he thus could completion of my internship, I’d !fulfiU a 8reater need in hl® states of the Union. like to complete my residency tx i j . zx .. native Trinidad. He has invested Developed by the Committee on seven years c{ study in pursuit in the New York area, spend Industry, Finance, and tom- hjj medjca] future and ex- several more years on advanced ajiother six or studies in psychiatry and then merce of the Governor s Advisory [>etts jt t ommittee on Civil Rights, the Spygn years before he will return return to Trinidad.” plan was developed in committee (0 Trinidad _ as a psychiatrist. His medical studies at Howard mnetings extending through the ..There js a need for psychi- were aided by financial assist- past summer and fall months atrjgtg. and it is that godl which ance from Schenley Industries, by having red paint splashed on his car by vandals. the incident followed later Folcroft police found it easier ,_x whjch was _ Essentially. this Massachu- ! set for myself when I had the Inc. setts Plan for Equal Employment opportunty to come to the States “If it were not for the liquor Opportunity is designed to en- t0 study,” he said in his soft, concern’s financial assistance I courage employees to reevaluate slightly British accent, might have found it impossible opportunities available to Ne -j-; to enroll or remain in medical groes and other minority groups Alriknmn PlnnC i school,” he admits. and broaden them wherever pos I lUlld sble the Governor revealed Negro Cop Unit While he was studying at How­ ard. Dr. Glanville met and mar- fried his wife, Mattie, a native Form a good habit and read MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Police of North Carolina and graduate the Amsterdam News — every Chief W. M. Stanley made a call of Hampton Institute and Co­ this week for Negro applicants I lumbia University. She is now week! to form iTspecial police reserve teaching junior high school in Edis&n <N. J.) Township. They The all-Negro unit to be com- have a nine-month-old son, Ken- | unit. I FACTORY CLOSEOUT CUttOMSTHEO CABINETS ■"ur to 1 f •••’ a I V~rJ UMMafetod. fixithto O»M Svaday • ... »ra . CU8TOMODI rKJ Iimx St., N. v. c., YU 2-5790 1411 M Sn. » N «. S IX. M 1-02M prised of 36 men would be se-ineth. | parate from the regular police! He figures it will take him [force which has no Ne-janother six or seven years, be- [groes. Chief Stanley said the re­ fore he can return and make serves would receive training in the contribution to Trinidad that | police fundamentals and held has been his desire for nearly [ready for duty when needed. a decade. DR. CECIL GLANVILLE CREDIT to ALL WIGSV .-r r' ,- by LINDA FREE EFORE OFFERED NEVER FREE ■■■■ ONE YEAR CLEANING WITH OUR CUSTOM STYLE WIGS MADE BY RENOWN WORLD CRAFTSMAN GUARAHTEED 100% Human Hair ’ will not mat under normal use CUSTOM STYLED FOR YOUR COLORING & PERSONALITY FREE HOME DEMONSTRATIONS BY TRAINED CONSULTANTS I----------------------------------------------------- , | For a free personal no obligation showing in your | home or at Our showroom, call any day or evening. LU5-7151 I Party Every Thursday At Our Showroom Phone or Write for details Wigs by Linda may also be RENTED I 11 C X07d LU 391 E. 149th St., Bronx, N.Y. Suite 216 MRS. CLARA BURCH Before I started going to the doctor ot chiro­ practic I had back, pains, I had awful head­ aches, I was extremely nervous and couldn't sleep. I can now say I am the happiest person in the world and all my aches and pains are gone. It is wonderful to have that healthy-happy feel­ ing. I wish everyone who is sick would try chiro­ practic. REV. AND MRS. C. C. REEVES My wife had many aches and pains and was very nervous. Quite often she was unable to do her housework. After only a few visits to the Doc­ tor of Chiropractic she was improving rapidly. After much persuasion on her i»rt I began go­ ing myself. I only regret I waited so long. I feel better than I have felt in 20 years. So many things have improved I will not even try to list them. I will just say I now feel like a new man. "IMPROVED MY HEARING & KNEES” "MY LIVER, CHEST & BACK CONDITIONS RELIEVED’’ though I can’t say yet I am in perfect health, I can say that I am feeling better than I ever felt in many years. I would recom­ mend anybody to the Chiroprac­ tic Center of New York City be­ fore they think of giving up. "MY NERVOUSNESS, PAINS IN MY STOMACH, HEAD & EYES HAVE CEASED” , SIDNEY GRIMES TOM CORYE For several years, I had been j suffering from terrible pains in ! my kneecaps until I could not stand it any longer. I had de­ fective hearing also for about 50 years. I tried specialists, clinics and hospitals but none was able to give me any kind of relief. Then, I read in a newspaper about the Chiropractic Center of N.Y.C.i and the help their Doctors of Chiropractic have been giving many hopeless sufferers. I was skeptical at first. Yet, no one else could help me. So, I tried them es a last resort. I never tlwught of Chiropractic with re gard to my troubles but (bis gave me an idea and hope. Whjr not? 1 tried everything else. Well, to­ day, my kneecaps no longer pain me. 1 can walk and work with ease now. My hearing unproved immensely too. All the words in the world could not express how happy I am now knowing for the first time in so many years how ft feels to get around without pain, thanks to the Doctors of Chiropractic of the Chiropractic Center of N.Y.C. GERALDINE PEARSON For many years, I had suffering with a serious and xuc&t- condition and pains. 1 was taken to the hospital since my family doctor and! specialists could not help me. J They considered my case to be too complicated and that I would mrs. be better off in a hospital. I had .other problems, too, but my chest, back, and liver conditions were the important things. I was in the hospital for several months taking all kinds of tests, treat­ ments and drugs but they did not help me. I asked to be discharged from the hospital because T was only getting sicker and weaker. My friends recommended me to the Doctors of Chiropractic of the Chiropractic Center of New York City because they had good re­ sults there with their own health problems. It was only after a few visits when I began to feel better. I even started gaining back my strength. I improved to the point where I was able to stand up straight and walk straight. It has been only a few months that T am going to the Chiropractic Center of New York City and I pains seemed to have ceased R was about January 1963 when I became quite ill. Until then, I never had any problems with health. I suddenly began to my suffe * With headaches, pains in my stomach and around my eyes. I also became extremely nervous. All this lasted about 5 weeks but very little of the pains went away by themselyes. it just seemed that everything in my body was all wrong. I went to a medical center but I didn't get much relief. My girl friend who was going to the Doctors of Chiropractic of the Chiropractic Center of New York City recom­ mended me to go there also. I ___ "Not many men of four score went in for free consultation pfter whieh.’i had X-RAYS'takw' y,ears f'aim 8"ch comeback.” Then. I started to take treat Mr •’ 11 p > B^klyn. ments. Ever since then, my “Am feeling fine Haven't had j a rheumatism pain the last year." Mrs. 0. P., L.T. put mv crutches in my car.” Mr S. S. R Manhattan. HERE’S PROOF “Three days after treatment I pon below, . »9; • nodi ■ The coupon below, if mailed promptly, entitles you to receive the valuable book, “New Treat­ ment Helps Arthritis, Rheuma­ tism and You,** absolutely FREE and without obligation. Send today for this hope-filled, fully illustrated FREE book1 if you want to discover how you may enjoy all these benefits! > ' Mow to got roliof niot a • How to avoid crippling doformitio*. • How to eliminate the cause* of your ailment. a How to save yourself untold suf­ fering perhaps even years of confinement. • How dsluy in treating arthritis and rheumatism can bo dangaraus. But, that’s not all you’ll find in this wonderfully helpful FREE book that is a gold mine of vital facts for everyone who suffers from arthritis, rheumatism, neuritis, bursitis, sciatica, lumbago and associated chronic conditions should know...not by any means. Many exciting revela­ tions are in store for you when you read this amazing book. Please mail the coupon below at once, so we can rush your FREE copy to you. You'll be thrilled to read about a specialized treatment that works wonders for folks who suffer from arthritis and rheumatism. This book explains that this treatment is non-surgical, non­ medical — and brings blessed relief even to those who have tried other remedies without success. It even benefits many who have given up hope of ever being free from their aches and -* pains. You won’t want to miss read­ ing why drugs and medicines give you only temporary relief, and fail to correct the causes. We know from years of spec­ ializing in helping people over­ come these dread afflictions just how terrible the suffering can be. We know that the pain is sometimes almost unbearable. But we know that bfossed relief^ which seems like a prayer ans­ wered, may be possible. No won­ der, then, that we urge you to send for the heart-warming FREE book that tells you howl PLEASE ACCEPT THIS INVITATION TODAY! DELAY MAY BE DANGEROUS! If your condition is or is not listed, please describe it in cou^ , , , | Come in. phone, send a letter or post card, or fill in and mail coupon below and we will ruslv you this informative FREE boOk. Arthritis and Rheumatism usual­ ly get worse if not properly treaU ed in time. Don’t wait even on- other day to accept this FREE offer. Tomorrow you may forget all about it. or mislay thttf adver­ tisement. The loss will be yours. Now, while this advertisement is in front of you, fill in the reply coupon and mail it TODAY! Chiropractic Research Chart All statistics utod in this chart ar. boisd upon studies reported by the Chiraproctic Research Foundation of the National Chiropractic Association, the Committee en Research of the International Chiro­ practors Association, Rarfcer Chiropractic Research’* Foundation and the Chiropractic Information Center. These reports represent the results obtained under chiropractic core for a large variety .of chronic condi­ tions. The vest majority of these cases hod also been previously diagnosed and treated by practitioners other than Chiropractors. Cowdhiow ARTHRITIS WoH or Well or 90.1 % MIGRAINE HEADACHES 96.0% BACK DISORDERS ♦9.5% NflUSCLE INCOORDINATION R9.3% BACK STRAIN BED WETTINO BURSITIS CONSTIRATION CRAMPS DIZZINESS (Vortigo) FACIAL NEURALGIA FATIGUE (TlrodnoM) FOOT DISORDERS GOUT HEADACHES INDIGESTION INSOMNIA LUMBAOO MENTAL DISORDERS 95J% NICK DISORDERS NRRVOUSNESS NRURALOIA NEURITIS 95 0% 9S.0% 9Z.«% 91.1% B7 3% PARALYSIS 90.0% RHEUMATISM 97.4% 93.4% 94.3% 91.1% 90.0% 91.7% OVRRWEIOHT (Obesity) 9B.0% 95.7% 95.0% 79.1% 94.3% 93.9% 931% 931% R90% SACROILIAC DISORDERS 99.B% SCALP DISORDERS SCIATICA SLIPPED DISC SPINAL CURVATURES STOMACH DISORDERS UNDRRWEIGHT WEAKNESS 93.0% 94.S% 94.4% BO.4% 99.7% 97.0% 95.7% "I never felt better in 10 years than now.” Mr. F. H., Bronx. "I hung my crutches on a nail. I couldn't be better.” Mr. G. W N J. “I am able to be at easq,. for the first t'me in 18 years." Mr. O. L. P., Conn. FREE LECTURES Come to our FREE Lectures, Demonstrations, Movies, Exer­ cises every Thursday 7-6 P.M. HOUSE CALLS HOUSE Anytime! CALLS Anywhere, FREE CONSULTATION NO OBLIGATION r* Cemr In. mall, er phone WI 7-Slll "“j Chireproctic Center of N.Y.C. ln(. ■ 126 W. 42nd St. Dogt. AN 12-6 i I N.Y. 34, N.Y Timos Sg. | Send mo my FREE I no obligation, en IIX ■WWE|R» Stott Come In TODAY for a FREE CONSULTATION WITHOUT OB­ LIGATION and for IMMEDIATE RELIEF. Delay ia dangerous. Some patients feel better in one treatment! Office hours are Mon.-Fri. 6-9, Sat. 64. CONSULTATIOM NO OBLIGATION: Pl»«*e arrant* far a WlUtont Obllcatiee Is ■ nm. | Ieoe si peer Oertsra af CMregreeNs | at the CMrapraeMe Center el N.T.C. | (Day and Date af Week) (Timet I---------------------—— I HELP A CHIROPRACTIC CENTER OF N Y C. INC. 126 W 42nd ST., TIMES SQ„ N.Y. 36, N.Y.' WI 7-8118 Send FREE BOOK to my friend. I ___ I | Addrt„ ____ _______________ , LPUtili -TT" Tirmuni v H i ■ ...................................................... ....... a . 1 -V'T Why Picket Us? Asks W. “Why should the Congress of Racial Equality picket us?” Officials of Western Electric Co. works In Kearny, N. J., raised this question, as CORE plcketers demonstrated, and an iwered It: “(The demonstrations art) but- prising. In view of our record in civil rights.** But Robert Curvln, the New­ ark-Essex CORE chairmen, said the demonstrations ware opened becaupy the company fails to up­ grade its Negro personnel and has no Negroes among Ha 1,061 supervisors. Western says ft has 14,000 em ployees, 1,300 of whom are Ne­ gro. but conceded there were no Negro supervisors nor Negro se­ curity men on Its force of nearly 70. CORE wants 10 Negroes upped to supervisory positions and two placed on the security force. Beame Asks Tax Credits As Job Spur City Comptroller Abraham D. Beame has called upon the fed­ eral government to provide tax credits as a major incentive to business and industry to “train, guide and employ” the estimated 100,000 boys and girls in New York City who have dropped out of schools and are unemployed. “These untrained, unemployed hoys and girls are a lost source of useful manpower, and they cannot become the buying con­ sumers of the future unless they can be fitted lor permanent Jobe,” the Comptroller warned. Mr. Beame, addressing a Brooklyn luncheon meeting, said, "Government offers Increasingly liberal tax allowances for build­ ing new industrial - commercial fscuttles. NEW YMCA EXECS — With Executive Director Rudolph Thomas are the new Harlem Branch YMCA executives. From left: Mr. Thomas,Glor­ ia I. Vaughan, executive as­ sistant; William J. Johnson, food service manager; Evelyn B. Miller, membership secret­ ary; Warden B. Spraggins. group worker for Boys; Bertha Loewry, group worker for Girls; Aston L. Glares, Youth Work director; K. Leo Swans- ton, activities secretary. $75,000 More Helps Train Rights Lawyers The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund has received a commitment for 675.000 from the Field Foundation in continued support of its Legal Intern Pro­ gram. CCHR Talk To Air Low-Income Buyers Gripes Announcement was made by Jack Greenberg, director • coun­ sel of the Legal Defense Fund following communication with MaxweU Hahn, vice president of the Field Foundation, long time supporter of the civil rights struggle. Mr. Greenberg announced the unprecedented Legal Intern Pro­ gram in August of this year. The Field Foundation granted the ini­ tial 625,000 with which the Intern Program was started. * *• Prominent government and bu Mr. Greenberg pointed out that siness officials wUl join citizens there ia a dire need for civil from low Income communities to rights attorneys in deep south participate in an all-day confer­ states. The Legal Interns, after ence on consumer relations which is being sponsored by the Fu^’* v City Commission on Human York City haadquarteri, will set up practice in the south and assist in civil rights cases Rights at the Society for Ethical Culture, 2 W. 64th St., beginning at 9 a.m., Saturday. Dec. 7. "Why should It not offer tax credits for building manpower— the very foundation of our econ­ omy?” Beame naked He stressed that such a program to be of real benefit “must start on a foundation of absolute, and unquestionable non- dlacrlminii- tion. There must be equal oppor­ tunities for all, regardless of race or creed or origin, wherever these tax incentives are offered and ac­ cepted.*’ Chris Madison Jones, CCHR execu standing service to the Harlem d'rec,tor» ^jd the conference has been called to map out a program that will probe the spe­ cial problems of consumers in minority neighborhoods, in eluding charges of undesirable practices by some retailers, in­ cluding supermarkets YMCA Branch. Dr. Allen re­ ceived his award at the An­ nual Dinner of the YMCA of Greater New York at the New York Hilton last week (Tues­ day, November 16th), The Legal Defense Fund hai expanded from staff of five New York based lawyers in 1961 to nine in 1962 to twelve at present Plans call for 17 by the begin ning of 1964. Form a good habit and read the Amsterdam News — every week! ■ Y MAN OF THE YEAR - Guest of honor, actor Robert Young gives Dr. James E. Allen, Board of Education Com­ munity Coordinator, a Mao-of- the-Year plaque for his out­ dims ttiuFtiTma mu nm comm it ibmm miki mranusktroit. moh. imfroof. aifaaacMMaiMVHWr. ♦ i Why is Canadian Club J* ■ the world’s most wanted gift whisky? < 1. It has the lightness of Scotch 2. The smooth satisfaction of Bourbon 3. No other whisky in the world tastes quite like it Beautifully gift-wrapped at no extra cost! .j* RIUMMUnigOBSlIWTEQ WALK WUE. CAIttM Bottled in Canada “The Best In The House” in 87 Lands fo.55 4/5 Ot. *4.15 ,h* 1 We’ll deliver j Why not put telephone service fM MN A kitchen extensior lovely, little Princess phone foi where space is at a premiun Chime that announces calls w FMM BAM Aft extension phone where he liket to relax. FOM TEEN-MEM Extension f end they mean extra privacy the Prinoaas phone And don’ directory listings. Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- * a THIRD AVENUE QUALITY AND STYLE LEADERS UNION FURNITURE Rev. Dukes, A Man Of Contradictions By MALCOLM NASH Since the resumption of construction of the Harlem Hospital annex, the Rev. Nelson C. Dukes has been pictured more prominently in the fight for equal Job opportunity. ------------------------------------------------ He is pictured as a civil rights Through the effort* of the Blue f> ghter of sincerity and , new. Ribbon Organization for Equal . Opportunity Now, which he comer m only to take out all of heads, close to 11 skilled Negro the headline glory. workmen have been hired at that jje j8 painted as a leader and and two other construction sites as a man wbo U lf he can>t in Harlem. ruje ' , , . , THE 5ONATA efully designed and tructed In hand ed walnut. Plano ;ed doors trimmed handsome Acacia Antique" brass EASY CREDIT TERMS EVERY FAMOUS MAKE ON THE PROBE — The Rev. Nelson C. Dukes of the Blue Ribbon Organization for Equal Opportunity Now talks to con- struction foreman, Viacotor Sa­ ia, at the De Witt Clinton hous­ ing project site at 109th St. and Lexington Ave to urge him to hire more Negro skilled and unskilled workers. Tommy Lyman, lathers’ foreman, lis­ tens. (Gilbert Photo). He expects more to be hired He is called a man of action before the end of the week. and a blustering blabbermouth. Who is Rev. Dukes? What are his methods? He is described as a man tall How successful has he really on know-how and as one short on been? formal education. Contradictory So far as he is concerned, he jS not a Come-lately on the civil The pastor of Fountain Spring rights scene. He said he first Baptist Church at 158 W. 128th opened his fight for equal Job St. is a man of contradictions, opportunity at Harlem Hospital REV. N. C. DUKES Form a good habit and read the Amsterdam News — every week! /» N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Dec. 7, 1963 e 9 in February before the coming of the recognized civil rights organizations. Just before the actual picketing started in June at the Harlem Hospital annex, under the leader­ ship of the Joint Committee for Equal Employment Opportunity, the minister said be, business^ man Arnold Johnson and Bishop Alvin A. Childs of Harlem’s Faith Temple Church of God in Christ orrganized the Greater New York Coordinating Committee for Equal Opportunity. . ' He assigns credit to that body, of which he was cochairman, of obtaining employment at the hos­ pital's construction site of 10 Negroes, two of whom were car­ penters. Aid Group Names Director - Edward G. Lindsey, a special­ ist in planning and organizing community health and welfare services, free-been tamed Direc­ tor of Health Services the State Charities Aid Association, it was announced yesterday by Gordon E. Brown, Executive Di­ rector of the Association.. Specialist Training g; LACKLAND AFB, Tex. 4 Alr- jnan Ronald C. High has * been selected to attend aircraft' main­ tenance specialist course at Shep­ pard AFB, TexaX, following com­ pletion of basic military training here. Airman High is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James High of $39 W. 133rd St. THE PLAYBOY indaome contempor- y design in rich wal­ nut. Compliments any style furnishings. With 2 doors, 72” long. INCLUDE... Garrard Cartridge end diamead If bi-aaial epcakar Installed at ao ««tr» at no chart*. M day free yuwr hum. M7b X * Kj Ijf t I.- I R-*' - COMPLETE PACKAGES AMPLIFIERS TUNERS Bogen. Harman-Kard- mon, Scott. Fisher . . . all famous makes. SPEAKERS Jensen. Noreloo. AR'g. University and many others. PLAYERS Garrard, Rek-o-kut. Audio-Empire, all the best known brands. UNION V/ 111 1 W ■ M 12163 THIRD AVENUE CORNER, T8 STREET PHONE LE 4-2630 mas idea with a personal touch- give telephone service. NO INTEGRATION PROB­ LEM HERE — Although white workmen weren't in this area when this picture was taken, Negro workmen were fairly in- eluded in the work force that built the 35-story office build­ ing at 641 Lexington Ave. In the above picture Negro skilled workmen plaster brick in the topping-out girder of the last two stories of the $12 million structure. (Gilbert Photo) Asks Jews Prove Their Feelings Negroes are growing more and ing t more impatient with American ing Jews because they feel Jews roes, should “prove their feelings, not forts just voice them,” Whitney M fight Young, executive direc*or of the "V National Urban League told a ed," meeting of Reform Jews last whiti store ' week. Addressing the gathering of the bol.’ Union of American Hebrew Con- Mi gregations in Chicago, Mr. Young that urged Jewish groups to stop us- if th SANFORD* Jewels Ceiaprt Villn 50c DOWN 50c WfERLF Kxecetlonai fine ttmekeaprri, handsomely styled. Choice of white or yellow Priced low. SCI SPECIALS IH OUR WINDOWS opcn mar ivining 1AI«H N.Y.'s Largest Watch Display tween the WASP (white Anglo- Saxon Protestant! and the Jew­ ish person, the Negro knows his best interests are with the Jew­ ish people." In his criticisms Mr. Young asserted that rabbis should "quit mouthing platliUles and salving people’s consciences.” Following his address the delegates unani­ mously approved a statement pledging stepped up action in the field of civil rights. William Clark, 50. of 210 W ,112th St., charged with the ille­ gal possession of narcotics and a loaded gun is being held in $2,- 500 bail for a hearing this week in Criminal Court. Police said Clark was arrested in a bar at 347 Lenox Ave. Sat­ urday night by Det. Bert Alvins of the Narcotics Squad whp re­ portedly found the gun and mar­ ijuana in his possession. Rf • K W f t A 1 I 1 1 ■Hr DEWARS SCOTCH 50G.li ■t Nhr.Mrtela 50 Cm* ■A PrtirMrtab 5— Dewars Tended Scotch Whisky IpOX SCOTCH WHISKIES ’1OOUCT of SCOTLAND ILEMDID AND 9OTTLI0 BY .wtrtwiu AND IOTTIIP whn Dewar & Sons L- distillers. *”*PESRCOTU® Bm- ' AL-‘. illy wrapped phones to put under the tree your Christmas list? tone to save her steps. Or a i bedroom or any room—even nd be sure to include a Bell FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY How about an extension phone In the family room or playroom or>near the TV set? If the family does a lot of calling, order a second phone line with its own sep­ arate number. Costs lets than you’d think. pretty musical notes, To order, just call your Telephone Business Office. We’ll deliver his work*hop or in any room gaily wrapped Bell Chimes and phones tor the service you order end we’ll come back to install them whenever you like. les mean a lot to teen agers, everyone. Girls especially like rget—teenagers like their own (Wrapping and delivery limited to orders received by December 18.) New York Telephone Smart Santas shop in Phonaland r.t Let Uncle Sam deliver it Send a check! It’s a very poor idea to carry much money on your per­ son. Manufacturers Hanover has two aafe and economical ways to pay bills or send money. Register Check ... tosts only 20< for face amounts up to $250. Looks just like a personal check. Special Checking Account ... beat way to handle your money. Costa only 10< per check plus 50e a month service charge. Your name printed free. >i MANUFACTURERS HANOVER TRUST Member Fcd-ra, YVpoeit Insurance Corporation • - «. A H * ' » •* . ■ * . * ’ >< <• -/ Nt? * • “r 0 ItlNMO ANO MOTTLCO •* •COTVA* ecwaw a »to >.*»■ Inyp.-iri Corporation. New hoc* 1 SCOTLAND .NO «OTTL«W ••snow uNoce •ovcwnmcn. »«* wn«n». World famous bite Label” Dewar’s...the Scotch whisky that never varies. Packaged in Scotland in burnished gold gift wrap of textured linen foil. Slip olf brand sleeve for giving. * ( Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- 10 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Dec. 7, 1963 Community Helps Keep Study Club Doors Open 'Now Airman , First Class O Reubln Howell Jr. of New York I- City has been promoted to air- y man first class In the U S. Air e Force. The airman, son of Mrs. it Johnnie Crump of 524 E. 159th >- St , is assigned to the 4638th Sup- o port Sqd. at Ft. Lee AFB, Va. Form a good habK aad read the Amsterdam News — every week! K * v ’W w 15m T - ALL HANDS TOGETHER — Batista. 10. as he reads cits Deborah Chambers and Mans tion presented to Frederick W Castello. both 11. assist Robert Richmond for his efforts in munity. Mr. Richmond founded the East Harlem Neighborhood Study Club in January. 1962. The club answers a local need for an after-school place where children of the area can do their homework In a quiet, well-lighted and heated mom. Mr. Richmond arranged for a corner store to be converted into a free study club open daily from 3; 30 to 7:30 p.m. It walls are lined with reference bonks and two paid A commurity of low-income i families and a couple of private I foundations Joined forces last I week in a public-spirited drive to prevent the East Harlem I Neighborhood Study Club, 100th i Street and Second Avenue, from ' closing its doors on hundreds of i students in need of assistance i with their school work. Negro, Puerto Rican and Ital-1 ian school children of the area • staged a local talent show at JHS 99. 100th Street und First Avenue, and raised over 81.000 to help defray the club's up­ keep. In addition, the New York Foundation granted 83.500 toward its operation and the Frederick W. Richmond Foundation is mat­ ching the contribution. Mr. Richmond, a civic-minded businessman, made; , this an­ nouncement in an acceptance speech given before the show when the Rev. Louis A. Marter- ella, pastor of St. Lucy's RC Church, 104th Street and Second Avenue, presented him with a citation on behalf of the com­ lest Deadline This Saturday The final qualifying exam for the year for the Peace Corps' Spring training program will be given in key locations In New York on Saturday. Dec. 7. The tests, lasting 90 minutes, will be conducted la Manhattan in the Federal Building at 150 Christopher St.; in Brooklyn, at the Post Office at 271 Washing­ ton St., and in Queens, at the Main Post Office, Jamaica. Booklet Explaii Injury Benefits Benefits available to worker; injured on the Job are detailed in a revised, updated, illus­ trated booklet readied for free public distribution by the Work­ men's Compensation Board, Col­ onel 6. E. Senior, chairman, has announced. The pamphlet, titled “What Every Worker Should Know About Workmen’s Compensa­ tion.’’ provides answers to num­ erous questions presented by em­ ployees regarding their rights to benefits following injury while on the Job. \ BOYS or YESTERYEAR — As time rolls around for their annual ball this group of Yes­ teryear boys hold a get-to­ gether recently at Jock’s Place to draw up plans for the up­ coming annual scholarship fund event at Reunaisance Ball Room Jaa. 8. Left to right: Ray Scott, Charles Hood. Norell Brcwa. Leigh Whipper. Dewey Wineglass. George Cuyxins, and Clarence Blake (Gilbert Hamilton Travis, Eric Ellidge Photo). Identify Man Slain On Street Individual or group requests for booklets, by mail or tele­ phone. will be honored at the Board's executive office. 50 Park Place. New York 7, or its five regional offices — at 1949 North Broadway. Albany 4; 221 Wash- Johnny Melton. 26. of 438 W ington St., Binghamton; 125 Main 162nd St., charged with his dearth Street. Buffalo 3: 155 Main Street 's b?‘nq held with out b?il for West. Rochester 14; and State action by the Grand Jury. Office Building, Syracuse 2. The man who was murdered Wednesday. Nov. 20 in front of 301 W. 125th St., has been iden­ tified by police as Wilbert Miller. 31. who is also known as Wilbert Healthy birds with bright plumage. Teach them to talk, train them to ride on your finger. They make exciting companions. Rare Varieties________________ 3.98 Mountain Products Guaranteed to ting A cheerful pet in any home. Strong, healthy bird with bright feathers will ting or your money refunded. Orange-Med Mate Stager Reg. 8.88___8-86 CLASSIC 86 Proof, Blended Whiskey, 65% Crain Neutral Sprits C 1963 Calvert Oist. Co , Louisville. Ky. Complete food kit and instruction book on care of canaries and parakeets. PARAKEET TREAT Specially prepared for canaries or paraikeets. A . full line of other famous 1 Hartz Mountain foods ■ and supplies for canaries 1 or parakeets. Martz Mountain Easily digestible chew sticks and bones will not atain rugs, genuine raw hidstoyi. All dogs love them. Martz Mountain DOG Reguisrty £ OQ 7.88 OsOO Z Plenty of flying spaee. 45” tall with stand; 11Mx12x28* II interior. Plastic crown and \ ’ base, clean-out tray, brass X plated tubular legs. FLOOR STYLE CAGE 6.88 Housetop style cage with perch­ es, cups and denning tray cornea on a 58* stand with 23* swing­ ing hoop. Assorted colors. 4 Includes aquarium with into- matie heater, filtere, air 5 GALLON KIT Aquarium, pump, filter, food, accessories in- etru ctions for beginners /W . QM Assorted styles of " W W > drees coats, rdn V TQ coats, hooded coats. ■ < > Fun doge. Latax “* completely safe. 1 Assorted colors, ■ bones, min, slippers, a patterns. YOUR MONEYS WORTH MORE AT If vou're buying Ca I vert Extra for your­ self, you may prefer it in the plain bottle. (It's just as soft in this one.) Forfrlends,you mayprefer something a bit fancier—especially since the decanter doesn’t cost you any extra Manhattan 125th St. and 7th Ave. Lenox Ave. and 140th St. 125th St. and Broadway Amsterdam Ave. & 162 St Fulton end Nostrand Ave Lenox Ave. and 116th St. 3rd Ave. and 121st St. Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- 18 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Dec 7, 1963 . —«»-» — \ J» — A Time To Hurry < .NBWYORK Amsterdam Neto s 1 .. T------------- - ' s- C. B. POWELL Piesident it Editor P. M. H. Sxvoav, SecyTreas. • J. L. Hicxs, Executive Editot ***** Comptroller; K. A. Wall. Display Advertising Director I Warren Manager, j. M. Walker. Cily Editor, j. W Wade. Classified D Sheppard. Brooklyn Manager. Dave Hepburn. Brooklyn Published weekly by tne Powell Savory Corporation at 234V Eighth Ave., N. Y. Telephone ACademy 2-7800 Brooklyn office, 1251 Bedford Avenue. Telephone ULster 7-2500 eubarrtpuoo retag: I year V7.0» - • mos Mi Editorials Harvest Time Attorney James B. Donovan, who is soon to take over the presidency of the New York City Board of Education, has announced that he will follow a policy of “Slow But Sure” integration of our schools. We are happy with Mr. Donovan’s promise of “sure” integration, but his. statement about “slow” Integration makes us downright sad While we find no arguments with Mr. Donovan s qualifications for the job, we feel we may as well tell him at the outset that we think his timing is bad when he starts talking about slow integration of New York City’s" schools. The late President Kennedy repeatedly quoted the third chapter of Ecclesiastes which de&ls with timing, and we would suggest that the new Board president read it. The first part of that chapter, which was part of the late President's favorite bibli­ cal quotation, reads as follows: “To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven: “A time to be bom, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is plant­ ed ... ” As of October. 1963. Negroes and Puerto Ricans, who are the main victims of segregation in our schools, constituted 40.3% of our school population and we are supposed to have been integrating them into our school population since May 17, 1954 when the Supreme Court ordered segregation in our schools ended. This newspaper feels that the time to plant the seeds of integration began back there in 1954 when the Court handed down its decision. And if, as the Board of Education would have us believe, we have been “planting” the seeds of inte­ gration for ten years, it is past time that New York City began to “pluck up that which is planted.” Thus we say to our new Board president, that in the field of integration, New York City is not at the “plant­ ing” stage. This is not “Springtime” for integration. This is “Harvest” time. And this is not the time to go “slow.” A Good Move The Board of Examiners of the City of New York has been lily-white for the past sixty-five years. Are Tears Enough? By GERTRUDE WILSON It is done. With a deep sigh, breath caught with a sob, girded by resignation to what must be, a whole nation turned from the open grave of the late President. Each man and woman carries his own burden of grief, with the stunned realization that this has really happened here. Each spirit stirs rtow to go on. There is noth­ ing else to do. Life goes inexor­ ably on, the day and the night following one, the other in a train of time which slowly takes a na­ tion out of pain. The new awaken­ ing brings sharp awareness of what has stricken us. like the ach­ ing throb of a wound which begins to heal. Shock gives way to feeling once again. And each man and woman, taking up his daily tasks, will ask what happened, and why, and how. Perhaps the whole enormous weight of all the questions may give us at last some answer. Blame and counter-blame, and claim and counter-claim must not now cover the path of that lethal bullet which brought this great nation to grief and tears on its knees in the Nation’s Capitol. We, the people, are the government of this great land. Of the people, by the people, and for the people, and yet, it seems, ruled by the neurotics. The Questions For what manner of men are we who cannot protect our own? What is the state of a nation, ad­ vanced in all technology, but lacking human values strong enough to overcome hatred and malice? These are the questions behind all others. We must find the an­ swers. For the haters still walk the countryside, rejoicing in the death of the man who was their President, too, using epithets they were taught in the cradle, and will carry to their own graves. The haters are in every walk of life, from barricades in ambush to the very halls of Congress. Despite all we do, they run our lives. When any man’s life is at stake because he would stand for de­ mocracy in a democratic coun­ try; for all the people instead of some, the nation’s core has begun to wear away. When it is that Nation’s leader cut down, his work undone forever, the people are left with nothing else but tears. Yet, are tears enough? A river of tears can dry on sunken cheeks and yet we must go on. In this, the country where democracy was bom and flourished in the face of denial of right and justice, we must now join forces once again, the myriad horde of us, bom of many nations and stations, to live as one in freedom. We must join behind our new leader, our will and determination to be free stronger than before. For if we did not know before, we know now what depths we plumb when freedom under law and under God Is sacrificed to fanatic passion. It was therefore, only natural that the handful of Negro teachers who got past this Board, and the thousands of others who appeared before it and fail- mu t be Signe4 Garnet uM be withheld o n request. No letters can be returned. All must be addressed to the Kditor ed to get past, should feel that race played an im­ portant factor in the number of Negro teachers flow­ ing into our public schools. I The Amsterdam News welcomes letters on either side of any subject. It it preferred that letters not exceed w>rrf. n„d has merely fostered the growth of Islam in this country. Pulse Of New York's Public A Bad Policy j __~ n Sir, ® . ** did. And we believe they were right in feeling as they After reading the ridiculous col­ umn titled “Home Plate” in which ex-baseball player Jackie During the past fifteen years this newspaper has Robinson so ignorantly comment bplieved that racial prejudice existed on the Board - •» of Examiners and we have had the courage to say x two of the S(W.ajied Negroes’ real leaders. I must say that I SO. And we believe today that the existence of only J” one bona fide and one acting Negro principal and a handful of Negro teachers is proof enough to support such a belief. day and time, but then I do not consider Mr. Robinson a true black man. Rather he is a white mind covered by a black skin. That is why this newspaper has argued so loud­ To Mr. Robinson’s sorrow, as ly and so long for the naming of at least one Negro he says, Mr. Powell and Mr. X have been accomplishing more to the Board of Examiners. And, It follows, that this mis-leadership than leadership in is why we are so elated this week with the naming the statements they- have been of Dr. Francis A. Turner to a $20,000. post as a full Jmaking recently. Is it because I' they boldly and fearlessly state fledged member of this board. :'. nth and point out facts insteac of parroting white-influenced statements that has somewhat upset Mr. Robinson’ Is it be­ cause they and real men like them are busy waking up our people to realistic thinking in­ stead of permitting themselves to be bought out and used by white businessmen and politicians with We think NAACP executive secretary Roy Wilkins is right on the target with hit announce­ ment that in the future the NAACP will throw away its non-partisan policy and go all out to defeat those members of Congress who use the influence of their money and prestige? office to prevent the passage of civil rights legisla- !« it because they are draw- ... a kt _ ing cards wherever they appear tion guaranteeing equal opportunities to Negroes. ’ ,, tb v are unafrai(1 Declaration Of W~r . . , , In the past the NAACP has followed a non-parti- «tand on streetcomers of th e black ghettoes and enlighten and uplift the masses from the pov­ erty and degradation that the white power structure has forced them to Ifve under? IX it be- san policy and we supported the NAACP in that policy because we recognized, as Mr. Wilkins and the NAACP Board has recognized, that the organi- xatton i. composed at Wfnocrat. RepubUcanx Lib- erals, Socialists and others which made it difficult ^oj^iy express it and in turn to say “we will back ‘so and so’ because he is a Re- give the masses the insight to see the kind of man that enslav­ publican,” or “we will support ‘so and so’ because ed ns 400 years ago. and in this he is a Democrat.” modern day and time, still re­ fuses to give us our freedom? Is it because they are teaehihg us that'We must learn to defend ourselves when we are attacked that possibly Mr. Robinson fears that one of his white friends may be hurt or killed in the Interim? When Mr. Robinson uses the term "we were shocked", to whom was he referring Who does he speak for, the white man or the black bourgeois’ Certain- But the NAACP is basically a civil rights organ­ ization working for the civil rights of all Americans, and as such any person or persons who work to de­ feat the passage of civil rights legislation is the enemy of the basic aim of all the people who make up thia great organization. So in sounding the battle cry for NAACP mem­ bers to go out and defeat the enemy, whether he be Republican, Democrat, Liberal or Socialist, Mr. Wil- kirn and the NAACP Board are performing in the highest tradition for which the organization was for his great achievement*,in dW|P founded. , ’ The enemy of civil rights is the enemy of the NAACP Let’s go out and defeat them. Thia Is a declaration of war and it’s about time for M. t " 1 « field of baseball, and who are now seeing him for what he real­ ly is. and I hate to say it, a White mans' tool! Dr. Bunche la considered one of the biggest handkerchief head- [| ed educated fools to ever be bom with a black skin He Is called the "George Washington of Is­ rael, and one of the greatest ex­ amples of tokenism in America Television is supposed to give today. I ask Mr. Robinson what us the news, and the Muslims are has he done for his race out- now making news, this is why we side of blast militant black aIs0 heard of the Muslims on T.V. .cadership and serve the white as we hear of anything else of man faithfully Does Mr. Robin- interest to the people in this son think that because Dr. Bunch country. went to a funeral in Mississippi that this shows militancy? Is it Mr M^,ason *as , ™de 22 below the standard of Dr. Bunche J”??7 h. j to stand on a street coner in Harlem and speak to his own people? Furthermore, who set up Dr. Bunche as a leader of the so-called Negro people? Cer­ tainly not the masses of black people who comprise a percen­ tage of 7-8 majority, excluding the 1-8 minority who make up the black bourgeoise who are too busy trying to be anything but black taking up for nth white so-called friends,’that it seems to me that he would wise up by this time and either remain silent or come back to his people. Perhaps his reason for not standing up being a true black mas Is that he is afraid that the result would be that his plate would end up being empty at home! about the silence on your part of this problem. I am also curious concerning the determination of white policemen to resort to make certain people are aware b umlity in Handling of the Negro citizens of New York City. • Considering’your past services n b.mging to the people the num­ erous injustices forced on the Negroes, I sincerely hope you will print this letter and use the voice of the press to stop this madness I withhold my name because I am a potential candilate for the police force. Name withheld Generous Coverage Sir: The Executive Board of the Greater Roslyn Committee for Civil Rights has asked me to express to you our sincere thanks for the generous cover­ sick and tired today of hearing Police Brutality age you have given the work of a lot of prettv speeches express- ,__ ed by black puppets on a string ar: Police brutality has been our housing committee In a re held by Charlie^ Black people on the. increas« recenHy l find cent i«ue of the AMSTERDAM Walter F. Scott Jr. Brooklyn. NY. " So-called Negroes today are in this day and time are fed up with a lot of far-fetched dreams of one day being accepted by their enslave* who will die be­ fore giving them their God-given rights. Sunday school picnic mar­ ches on Washington to beg a few crumbs from the tables of the master gain nothing but sneers ~nd dH asp’ct a id s.'.ow a definite lack of dignity misinformed Jackie Robinson, white people did not invent the Muslims, this is one thing the White man is not the originator of. Islam is the oldest religion in the world. It was in the world before the white man as were we. The white man, by his deeds that this is an exoerience among NEWS. Negroes, especially during dem­ onstrations against injustice to them. There is a disturbing sil­ ence on the party of city officials. Apparently, it takes a near riot before anyone of importance takes notice of a deplorable situation such as now exists. We are deeply grateful to you for your help in bringing our activities here in Roslyn to the attention of your readership But beyond that goes our collec­ tive — and individual — apprecia­ tion of the admirable editorial job you are doing in stimulating the Negro community to take whatever initiatives may be nec­ essary to lift the state’s anti- seems that he sits idly by allow- discrimination law's out of the ing his subordinates to Intention- everyday practice ally exploit the Negro. The commissioner could rec­ tify this deplorable action by it You may be interested to know that we have already re­ So to you I write this letter. ceived five Inquiries through in hepe that you will use your influence in correcting this In- *our n®w’P»P*r. and we assure Justice. By using the press you that we wil1 expend every effort to assist all interested families to find the home or apartment of their desire in this area of Long Island. can, within a matter of days, Also for the information of poor speaking out again* it. Yet 1 6 Mos. * Yr. .00 1 4.00 n America's Largest Weekly" NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS 2340 EIGHTH AVL, NEW YORK 27, N. Y. Tel. AC 2-7800 CHICK ORDER DESIRED ABOVE PHASE ENTER MY SUBSCRIPTION TO THE N.Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS FOB ■j . u , ___ ____—.____ State CHECK, OB UX MONEY ORDER ONLY Again, we thank you for your encouraging support and wish you and your readers every suc­ cess. Shirley Downes. Housing Chairman Greater Rosllyn Committee For Civil Rights. Roelyn Hts. NY Jo's Thanks Sir: Sincere thanks to you, the Editor. Mr. James Hicks, and Staff for the marvelous cov- : erage you gave to my recent Carnegie Hall Concert of Oct. 12, IMS I am grateful to you all. Josephine Baker Village Du Monde Let Meiandes, France. ^toBHSMMBSHRR 1 \ ' You And The World Quickest To Go By MARCELLE FOUQUET The youngest president to come, he was the quickest to go. There will now be no Age of Ken­ nedy, with its actual accomplishment of policies, which might well have given descriptive meaning to a whole new period of American life. The most he had time to do was to open doors through which others will walk if they have the will, the courage and the capacity. Compared with the greatest presidents of American history, he inevitably leaves more prom­ ises and less achievements. Two of the most important elements of his domestic policy, the Civil Rights and the tax cut bills have been held up in Congressional process. The bill to provide medical care for old people, which Mr. Kennedy called a “must”, sank without a trace. a. In foreign policy, Kennedy had begun to show greatness of mind in grasping the realities of the rev­ olutionary implications of nuclear weapons for the world’s future. He drew the proper conclusions from the Cuban crisis by realizing that it was not so much a question of the supremacy of the American power, as the dependence of the United States and Russia on each other. In this nuclear era, the real enemy was not Communism but instability and chaos. Consequently, for the first time, it seemed that Ameriean_arid Russian would have to pursue a com­ mon goal. They would modify their rivalry to pre­ vent a nuclear proliferation. New Era Only a limited test ban treaty materialized, but there lay ahead opportunities for the opening of a new era. While Kennedy lived, there was real hope that these opportunities would be achieved. His death has very much lessened them. This does not mean that the new president will change the course of American policy to a great extent. But the effectiveness of the Kennedy Administration stemmed as much from the way his policies were carried out as the action it­ self. He had a keen respect for knowledge, intellect and ideas. “In a period of complex and continuing problems, Americans leadership must be guided by the lights of learning and wisdom,” is a quotation from the speech he was about to deliver in Dallas last Friday afternoon. Kennedy’s prestige abroad was unique. His in­ tellectual approach to the tasks he had to perform in the best European tradition had a great appeal be­ yond the shores of America. He had, at the same time, a deep sense of world realities and adventure. He injected his own excitement into political life everywhere, yet he did not let himself be carried away by his own exuberance. Decision Making He learned from his mistakes during the first year of leadership to avoid emotional decisions. A cool calculating analysis of the situation and a specu­ lative evaluation of the repercussions of his action had become the basis of his decision making. He was in the process of leading the world through what has been called the “Cold Peace” to a more stable equilibrium guaranteeing real peace. That would have been the great task of Kennedy’s second term. It was his obvious intention to move more slowly and cautiously in his relations with Rus­ sia until he was sure of another four year term in the White House, and of the continued cohesion of the Western Allianee. ' But now that this brave and brilliant man is dead Mr. Khrushchev has a new interlocutor. Mr. Johnson has demonstrated that he is a very able politician but a man of more ordinary mould. Dealing with the highly intricate elements of foreign policy has never been his preoccupation. And he is taking office at a time of transition which offers vast possibilities for creative leadership, but also for disastrous decisions, or the lack of them which could be equally disastrous. Khrushchev and de Gaulle are now the two great world leaders confronting an untried President. Mr. Johnson must be ready to face the challenges he is facing. We wish him good luck. West Indian Reports By ROSEMARY REED In the forthcoming weeks I’ll be writing a column for you about Americans in Jamaica, Jamaicans in Jamaica, the Jamaicans due to go to America for various social, political or business reasons. I myself am an American from Yeadon, Pennsyl­ vania, just outside of Philadelphia. After graduating in June 1962 from Temple University, I went to spend only the summer in Jamaica. Each summer before I had worked in some area outside of Phila­ delphia to see what kind of job or studies I might want to go into after graduation. I worked as a secretary in Los Angeles in 1960, and writing and selling advertisement for the two English newspapers in Puerto Rico in 1961. I had really wanted to go to Africa, but finances and contacts seemed too tenuous, and I guess that I was getting cautious. I had gone to Puerto Rico on a one­ way ticket and I only knew a few words of Spanish. REED I got a job in 9 days, which was faster than in California, but everyone later was so astonished at my attempting to job hunt in Puerto Rico, that I must have slowed dawn when I decided not to try Africa for jobs in 1962. Jamaica, coming into Independence and con­ veniently the home of my brother’s sister-in-law, was my second choice. I don’t know yet what to say about that choice. In normal, good efficiency, the British Consul’s secretary in Philadelphia said that she knew nothing (Continued On Next Page) \ Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- 14 • N. K. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Dec. 7, 1963 NEW YORK AmsterdamNetos SOUTH AMERICAN FRIENDS — Mrs. Anna Arnold H«jge- man, center, always a sup­ porter and friend of the Ams­ terdam News, never fails to bring her friends from other countries to visit the Amster­ dam News and “points with pride” at us. She is shown with some members of the group of South American ladies visiting the USA under the auspices of the Methodist Church Office of the U.N. From left: Miss Sara Slack of the Amsterdam News; Miss Adelina Gonnet of Argen­ tina; Miss Duva Gutierrez of Columbia; Mrs. Hedgemaii; Mrs. Celia Osuna de Herman- dez of Mexico; Mrs. Yolanda Tognozzi Munhoz, and Mrs. Thomasina Norford of the Amsterdam News. — (Gilbert Photo) Mr. Jackson, son of Eugene Men included Cassius Clay. Ru- Jackson, of New York City is a dolph clay Ronnie King, George graduate of New York Univer­ Crowe, Harold Logan, Ben Wright. sity with a BS degree in market­ Irving W. Jones, Jesse H. Walk­ ing. A former advertising repre- er, Asher Sal men. Henderson sentative for the Amsterdam Ricks, Kenneth Copeland. Via- News, he is now with the John cent Brister. T. W. Wilson, E.E. son Publishing Company. Matthes. Eugene Jackson, Sr. Christopher Davis, Bert Cope­ land, Alfred Clark, T. R. Webber and John Haskins. The reception for some 100 guests followed the ceremony. The couple honeymooned in Bos- THOMAUHA NORFQ/ID WORDS FOR A WAT OF UFS ... "The greatest monument that any man can have It to live forever in the hearts of men" . . . —N. W. Walker A PERSONAL TRAGEDY . . . Like most Americans, I felt So keenly the death of President John F. Kennedy ButHjfelt it so PERSONALLY! My family, like his, live fit Boston. I knew him when he ran for the Senate and worked for him. I knew him as a Senator. I was co-chairman of the Women’s activity in New York state when he ran for president. I had visited them at the White House. I have photos made with him and Mrs. Kennedy. He had offered me positions in Wash­ ington D.C. that I had rejected because I have so far refused to “leave the man I love above all else.” to work out of New York City. He made me an Ambas­ sador to the Independence Celebration of Trinidad- Tobago in 1962. The last time I saw him was at a reception at the White House last February. He wandered through the crowds shaking hands, greeting old friends and came to where Marietta Tree and I were chatting and grabbed for my hand and said “I haven’t talked to you since the campaign”. I withdrew my hand and said “How nice to see you Mr. President. And I am going to be the ONE person tonight who will relieve you of the duty of shaking hands. I know you are doing the courteous thing. I’ll just touch your sleeve”: He grabbed my hand from his sleeve and said ‘‘No, I WANT to shake your hand!” Yes, It’s a very personal tragedy for me! Words seem so futile at a time like this. My hurt is even greater because tears come to me with great diffi­ culty except in times of anger. I cry inside. Orte of the greatest presidents of all time is gone! But we have President Lyndon Johnson. I know him, too. I was in Washington D.C. as the first full time Negro lobbyist in the USA as a representative of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority when I first met him as a member of Congress. He is right on the issues closest to our hearts — including civil rights. He will make a great president. I have that much faith in him and what he can and will do to, as he said it, “Take this country on to further greatness”. The King is dead, long live the King! As I go back to my personal tragedy and try to carry on the things that I must do each day. let each of us memorialize President Kennedy in the life we each will live from this day on . . . INTERNATIONAL SET . . . Martha Lewis arrived at Idlewild airport Friday enroute home from a vaca­ tion in Spain a couple of hours after the assassina­ tion of President Kennedy and heard the news in the Customs section where she was picking up her luggage. She did got call any one for two days -- she was that stunned . . . Shirley Rousseau home from a tour of Europe and Spain . . . GOINGS ON ABOUT TOWN . . . Some lucky person will win that 1963 Buick Riviera at the drawing at the Ball to be given by the New York Branch of the NAACP at the Renaissance comes Dec. 13. Other prizes are a trip to Puerto Rico; a color TV set and a Hi-Fi! Let me get my stubs in quick like! ... Inez Richardson, wife of Judge Scovel, master­ minded the showing of Purlie Victorious film in West­ chester last week for the benefit of the Westchester Deltas . . . Christine Tyson still reminiscing about the delightful visit of her father Primus Tyson of Morven, N.C. who visited her and her teenaged Gwen; his daughter Vivian Ferguson and Pearl Tyson of Brooklyn and daughter Brenda Tyson of NYC, daughter Clara Diggs in Montclair and Percell, Linwood and Jack Tyson. Must be great to hare that many children to love you so much now in his golden years! ... R WOMEN FOR CIVIL RIGHTS — The National Council of Women held its Civil Rights conference'at the Biltmore Ho­ tel last week Shown are some of the participants. From left: Mrs. Cab Calloway, Mrs. So­ phia Yarnall Jaecfos. president of the Council, and Dr. Rhetta Arter who was conference di­ rector. Vocations For Women Bulletin Albany, N. Y. — Three bul­ letins on vocations for women have been added to the “Car­ eers for Women” series pub­ lished by the Woman's Program of the New York State Depart­ ment of Commerce They are on the fields of medicine, life in­ surance, and engineering. Miss Guin Hall, Deputy Com­ merce Commissioner in charge of the Program, says that all are wide open to girls with the ability and liking for the kind of work involved. Shirley Chase Smith, sister of the late beloved Bill Chase, has returned to Chicago after a visit to NYC with the Horace Hurts and the Lt. Col. William Davises in Chester, N Y. ... SCENE ANp HEARD . . . Golden Towles Greene, one of the beatnful Towles sisters and schoolmarm from Detroit jetted into NYC for Thanksgiving to see the newest member of the family, Thomas A. Church, Jr. and her sister Dorothea . . . Among the New Yorkers enjoying the Sarasota Jung Gardens recently where rare birds, tropical flowers. flamingoes jtounique and make for a paradise for trainedg^tor. provide. an un the color photographer was Gladys Williams . . . Other career fields covered by the series — copies of which are available free from the Wom­ an’s Program office nt 112 State St.. Albany — are Fashion, Home Economics. Wal Street, Bank­ ing, Travel, and Real Estate, as well as one on opportunities for women holding business degrees mother on "Applying for Your First Jsb ” * That dynamo behind the machinery of Minisink Gladys Thorne vacationed in New England where she says “Mother nature has made such glorious colors”. I agree, Gladys, there’s no place like it! . . . IN THINGS AND THINGS . . . “Sportive” clothes are “in” — and you will doubtless have that word running out of your ears before it’s over . . . New name for fat folks is “foodoholic” . . . Winter will be boot-ier than ever . . . Mrs. Jacob Javits, one of the NY Am­ sterdam News “Ten best dressed” ever so smart in a mink vest . , . AIDING AND ABETTING . . . Pianist Mary Lou Williams, spends her spare time on her charity work including her Thrift Shop to help underwrite the expenses of her Foundation for Musicians. New York women are proud of the record Com­ missioner Bessie Buchanan is making. She has settled every case she has handled since becoming a com­ missioner in Governor Rockefellers State Commission on Human Rights. She has beauty and charm, too! A BACKWARD GLANCE . . . Folks still talking about the warmth and charm of the recent "music fete” for Dr. Melville Charlton at the Bertha DesVerney studio by the Ministers of Music and Drama League, Inc. You see, Dr. Charlton is 82 years young . . The Everett B. Simmons (Dr.) and sous, Everett. Jr., and Arthur, of S. Orange wont West to Los An­ geles with stops and sightseeing in between , precedents opportunity for girls to enter the field of med inne, according to a career bul­ letin, "Doctors Wanted - Women Preferred.” available free from the Woman'* Program of the New York State Department of Commerce Grand Daughter Ruler Is Feted Fresh from triumphs in Bos­ ton and her second term of of fice after succeeding herself Elks Grand Daughter Ruler Net tie B Smith la set for a Victory Ixincheon on December 15th at the New York Statler Deputy Annette Johnson and Lauvenia Robinson head the com­ mittee. Alma John upll be mis tress of Ceremonies Mrs Smith recently returned from the 5#th anniversary cele­ bration of Ettawah Temple 77 and the first grand daughter ruler on an official visit to be presented to the Temple She set up The Rose of Sharon Temple No. 1170 in Norwalk Conn, -where some atxty-nlne were initiated and Inducted dur ing Grands viait. Last weekend Mrs Smith trav eled to Philadelphia to attend the testimonial dinner for Judge Amoa Harris Deltas Aid NSSFNS The New York Alumnae Chap­ ter of Delta Sigma Theta Soror­ ity held its annual Schol­ arship Dance recently at the Sa­ voy Manor Ballroom. Proceeds from the dance will be contri­ buted to the National Scholarship Service and Fund for Negro stu­ dents. Mrs. Mattie Parson was chair­ man of the committee and Mrs. Isabelle Durrah co-chairman. Members of the committee were Misses and Mesdames Carole Aldridge, Zita Allen, Lavonnie Brinkley, Velma Cannon, Miran­ da Carter, Lala DuBose, Louise Fields, Mayetta Fields, Edith Francis, Eleaner James, Lucille Mayo, Constance McDaniel, Dol­ ores Meltz, Yvette Stills. Jane Washington, and Dorothy Willis. Mrs. Helen Williams is presi­ dent of the chapter. UNESCO To Aid African Girls A voluntary contribution of 2.402,000 Swedish Kronas (M01,- 732) has been made to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization by the Swedish Government to finance projects to extend educational opportunities for women and girls in Africa. This offer, made to UNESCO’s Director-General, Mr; Rene Maheu, was approved by the 00th session of the Or- gsniwtion's Executive Board now meeting in Paris. Need Volunteers At Uptown YW Volunteers, both women and men. are needed at Upper Man­ hattan Branch Young Women's Christian Association. 361 West 125th Street, to help in YWCA- orgaaized and sponsored group activities. ‘ * Persons are needed as pro­ gram aides and advisers tor teen groups at afternoon meet­ ings; tutors for study lounge, who are proficient in junior high and high school curricula. in­ cluding mathematics. English, languages (especially Spanish.) and history and are able to help In the afternoon and evening including Saturday; typists aad clerical workers at any time; A QUEEN OF THE BALL - Miss Yvonne Andrews, who won the ronlgtt and t was crownei Queen at the West Indian American , Club. tec. F< rmal at toe Sheraton Atlaatit Hotel lau Saturday. Mite An­ drews g / formerly from tee Port « Soatrr Trinidad. Hor­ ace Morancie la president of the club. (Gilbert Photo) hostesees for special Leaders are needed who are skilled in a variety of hobbies, such as crafts, sewing, music, and photography. Women and men with the above abilities, who are inter­ ested In helping their commun­ ity, are urged to contact Mrs. Sioux Taylor at Upper Manhat­ tan Branch YWCA. 361 West 125th St. UN 6-2400. Rafra - Jackson Wedding Attracts NY Socialites Mrs. Anne Rafra,of New Yori City was married to George Earle Jackson at his home at 710 Riverside Drive last Satur­ day afternoon where the Rev. Elmer Brooks officiated at the double ring ceremony. The bride was given in mar­ riage by Louis Perry. Mrs. Ber nice Hazelhurst was matron of honor. Former baseball star George Crowe was best man Music was a gift of two stroll ing musicians, a violinist and a guitarist, by Lloyd Price from his orchestra. The bride wore an ivory bro­ cade sheath encrusted with rhine­ stones and a hat to match. She carried a bouquet of white roses. Mrs. Jackson, daughter of Mrs. Annie Whitehead of Phila­ delphia. is a graduate of t h e Philadelphia Secretarial Junior College there. It is her second marrieage and she has one daugh­ ter. She is on the staff of the Allied City Wide Company. ^Wfr/jMluan of N.Y.U. ton and wiU live in New York City. Among those attending the wed­ ding rites were Messrs and Mes- dames Wiley Simmons, Ralph William. Laurance Holland. Cam­ eron Haynes. Ruben Flores. Wal­ ly Cowan. Alfred Morgan. Harold E. Carter, James W. Cobb, Leon­ ard Townes, Bert Copeland. Ber­ nard Waldman and Walter White- head. Also Misses and Mesdames Ana C. Webber, Elizabeth S. States, Betty Reubego, Vera Pile Jack- wo, Ada Lee. Patty Wright. Bar­ bara Williams, Cordle Prayton. Peggy Strauss, June Person, Jac­ queline J. Craig, Irena Smith and Joan Smith. And Marion Thorpe, Thelma Bartee, Virginia L. | Wright, Lil­ lian P. Hayman, Annabell S. Har­ rison, Janie Bartee. Patty Boone, Louise Roane. Madeline Gray, Mary E. Jackson, Dawn Hasel- hurst, Jewell Jackson. Tina Copeland. Gwendolyn Clark, Cath­ erine Clark, Renee Clark, Mm. Freda Staton. Beatrice V. Bronen and Ethel McRae. f \ . Cassius Clay Attends Mrs. Wright Guest Of President By THOMASINA NORFORD Mrs. Zephyr Wright was ttfo only Negro to sit with the John­ son family and guests as Presi­ dent Lyndon B. Joh^on deliv­ ered his address to the joint ses­ sion of Congress last week. Mrs. Wright came to the Pres­ ident and his family 21 years ago when Congressman Johnson requested the President of Wiley College to recommend someone as a cook. Mrs. Wright was study ing home economics at the col­ lege and was recommended. Mrs. Wright is the wife of Samuel Wright who is on the staff at the Capitol. She will go to the White House to do private cooking for the President and the First Lady while Rene Verdon will be in charge of State dinners and food for large groups at the White House. Many of the friends of the Pre­ sident rate Mrs. Wright as one of the really "great cooks.” , March Of Dimes Campaign Set An appeal for volunteers for the 1964 March of Dimes Moth­ ers March was made by Bor ough President Edward R. Dud­ ley last week in a ceremony in his offices where he greeted Manhattan Poster Child Robert 0. Xw- The drive for volunteers will be held through November. The March will be held on January 18* Borough mothers—and fathers —Were asked to call at their March of Dimes office at 2 Park Avenue, or phone MU 3-7900 and announce their will­ ingness to give a few hours of their time on January 15 In the battle against crippling birth de­ fects and arthritis. Funds raised in the Mothers March will help the March of Dimes program of patient aid and research. The funds are nfly needed to help support about 70 patient care centers around the country, including the Birth Defects Center at The New York Hospital. Medica' and other bills in New York Cky alone this year has amounted to more than 0235,000 and research in the form of grants to New York City in­ stitutions has cost more than $650,000. Miss Carroll Model Wig City, among the nation's largest and most completely stock ed wig salon <200 West 34th St.), will launch an extensive adver- ber with beautiful stage star Dia- hanh Carroll modeling Its ex- tenaiwe line of wigs, wiglets switches and falls. Miss Carrdll, furtenth catty heading at the Imper- Boa aft the Americana Hotel J Wig City booster at- the day the discount opened its doors last pril. * In the process of expansion. Wig City will install wig de­ partments in the Canadian Fur Company’s 38 stores on the east coast. The first one, In Newark at Broad and Market Streets, has already been opened, and Is of­ fering the same high quality, ser vice and value available at the Manhattan store. Quinman Mil- ton, chief style consultant for Wig City, is director of sabs at the Newark store. There's semethlag tor YOU on every page of thia Issue of The Amsterdam News. NEWLYWEDS - Mr. and Mrs. George Jackson are shewn as they were married recently at the home of the groom op Riv­ erside Drive by the Rev. JHmer BookS' PEPSI COLA PRESENTS THE WEEK’S CALENDAR OF EVENTS Now-Dec 13—ART EXHIBIT; Twentieth Century West 0*1- lery; Major West Coast Artists. Dec. 6—DANCE; Renaissance; Barber Beotia College Alum­ ni of N Y. Dec. 6—DANCE; 133 W. 44 Street; Amsterdam News Unit, N.Y. Newspaper Guild. Dec. 6—BUS EXCURSION: To Philadelphia; A. fc T. Col­ lege Alumni Club of NYC. Dec. 6—DANCE; Audubon Universal Grand Lodge. Dec. 6— DANCE; Audubon; Club Cosmopolitan of 70, inc Dec. 6—DANCE; Savoy Manor; Little Brown School House Cooperative. Dec. 6—DANCE; Savoy Manor; Idealltes Social Club. Dec. 7—BALL; Manhattan Center; King Solomon Grand Lodge, A F&M of N.Y. Dec. 7—DANCE; Hunt’s Point Palace; South Carolina Club. Dec. 7—DANCE; Audubon; Abrams Lodge Square Club. Dec. 7—DANCE; Audubon; Rockland Social Club. Dec. 7—DANCE; Renaissance; Eaton Benevolent Society of New York, Inc. Dec. 7—DANCE; Hotel Theresa; Sunrise Chapter No, 34. Dec. 7—DANCE; Savoy Manor; Adelphi Lodge No. 14. Dec 7—DANCE; Savoy Manor; Orchard Social Club. Dec. 7—DANCE; Webster Manor; Club Aphrodeala Dec. 8—DANCE; Renaissance; Exclusive Club of fifty. Dec. 8—DANCE; Dinner; Hotel Theresa; Charles Rangel Fund for Needy Children’s Christmas Party. Dec. 8—MONDAY NIGHT CAMP FUND PARTY; Palm Cafe; N.Y. Amsterdam News. Dec. 9— DINNER; Waldorf Astoria; CORE Ohandl Oom- i mlttee. Dec. 12—THEATRE PARTY; “110 Degrees In the Shade"; Hroadhurst Theatre; benefit Sheltering Arms Children’s Service. Dec. 13—DANCE; Palm Gardens; VIP Associates. Dec. 13—DANCE; Renaissance; New York Branch NAACP. Dec. 13—DANCE; Audubon; NYC Grand Lodge. Dec. 13—DANCE; Audubon; Richard, the Magnificent Dec 13—DANCE; Totel Theresa; Window Cleaners Local No. 2. Dec. 13—DANCE; Savoy Manor; Ten of Us Club. Dec 13—DANCE; Savoy Manor; Vulcan Society, Inc. 'rtiec. 14—CONCERT-PUBLIC MEETINO; Cooper Union; Emma Lazarus Federation of Jewish Women’s Chi be. Dec. 14—DANCE; Audubon; Border Union Lodge. Dec. 14—DAltCE; Audubon; Elizabeth Ross Oordon Temple. Dec. 14—DANCE; Renaissance; Montserrat Progressive So­ ciety. Oec. 14—DANCE; Savoy Manor; Jolly Vacationers. Dec. 14—DANCE; Savoy Manor; The Ins and Outs Club. Jim/ hen’s another big event: the new tall Pepsi _ In the 16 oz. battle Serve more, we morel Material for this spice is compiled by the N.Y. Amsterdam News. The Amsterdam News is responsible for ell announcements Karel#. r Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- 1« • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Dec. 7, 1963| Despite the pall that descended on all of us during the incredible past fortnight, many Camp Fund regu­ lars turned out faithfully to make a success of our soiree at Frank's Restaurant. Bill Lantz, true to his word, distributed ten tom turkeys as door prizes in addition to the regular prizes we always have. The fund took in >96, which was add­ ed to a prior balance of >1,069.20 for a current total of >1,165.20. Winners of the holiday birds included Millie Meri­ wether, who, immediately and great-heartedly, saw to it that the turkey was given to a family for Thanks­ giving. All of the other recipients also promised to see that their prizes would go to needy persons. These winners included: Eleanor Cummings, Paul Prince, Joseph Parris, Raymond Powell, Cleo Jackson, Mose Givens, Mary Archer, Mary Martin, Speedie Pugh. * Door Prizes Lucky lads and lassies who copped the weekly door prizes provided by the industry subscribers in­ cluded Mac McCloud. Libby Gladstone and Harold Cromer, to each of whom went bottles of Cutty Sark; Marguerite Mathis, our evening's* delectable hostess, retrieved a fifth of Canadian Club and Bill Henry joined her on the northern neighbor bit by pocketing some Seagram’s VO. The cocktail glass sets went to Evelyn Davis (Canadian Club) and Linda Reed Cole­ man (4 Roses). A lovely candy dish, given by the Chase Manhattan Bank, was the reward Alice Thomas received for attending. Our hearts were gratified by the letter from little Cherie Simons, of 139 W. 143rd St., thanking us for our comments on “Ma” Kline’s anniversary. Cherie is a member of the Tapawingo Honor Society (an adjunct of those services supported by our Camp Fund). WITH THE GIRLS - This was an enjoyable night for Jimmie* and Johnny, and why wouldn’t* it be with this bevy of females. The occasion was the Monday Night Camp Fund affair held in Pranks Restaurant. L to R, Doris Ruben, Jimmy Hillides, manager of Franks; ite Mathis. Johnny and Mary Mack. Marguer- Johnson (Photo by Dummett > New Sales Man For Seaeram The appointment cf Kenneth A. Harrison as a sales represen­ tative for Seagram - Distillers Company in New York City, has been announced by Bernard Freed, Metro New York manag- Before joining Seagram, Mr. Harrison was sales representa­ tive for a large brewery in New York. A native of New York, he was educated in the city schools and is a graduate of Villanova University. He is a member cf .Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity and the Villanova Alumni Club. Mr. Harrison and his wife, Con­ CHARITABLE MINDED — These ladies, regular support­ ers of the Camp Fund promo­ tion for needy youngsters, took time out to pose for this pic­ ture in Linnette’s Lounge last Monday. Front, 1 to r: Mar- garet Smith, Essie Curton. House of Flowfs; Millie Mari- weather, Bird jCage; Vernell Neal. Back, 1 fl r Edna Chap­ man and Lei) Johnson. — (Photo by Dunnett) I Welcome Back • Good news: Elaine Grayson sufficiently recovered from her operation to be up and about and we’ll wel­ come her to the next Get-together which will be held at the Palm Cafe Dottie Crawford’s much injured leg is out of the cast now and she’s looking good. stance have one sen, Mark and reside in Manhattan. KENNETH HARRISON To Do Comedy Sketches at Y The spotlight will be on God- na Ferguson, 'Jhelma Gardner, frey Cambridge, comedian and Virginia Harris, Janet Jablons, _ Juanita Merritt,' Irma Pace, Broadway performer, in a pro- Ethel pjiyne Rlth pugh Car] gram of c medy sketches entit- Reeves Sylvia T.iylpr and Bed ied. "Sin, Satire and Salvation," TySon to be presented at Upper Man- ’___________ _______ hattan Branch Young Women's.. . Christian Association. 361 W. Variety SPlOW 125th St., on Thursday, Decern- ber 5. at 8 p.m. At L»aCOIUll« ¥ . The Committee in charge of “Spotlight” programs includes. A variety show featuring sing Della Sutton, Chairman, Pearl ing, dancing and dramatic acl Boatwright, Hortense Bowery, ing by teenagers and young ad Lavoonie Brinkley, Barbara Da- ults was held Friday ;tnd Satui vis, Sandra Edwards. Vean- day at Laconia Pnlsbyteria Church, 3915 Laconia Ave., the Bronx. The church's young adult group sponsored the show, the second in two years, to help raise funds for the parish. Herbert, center, as Marie Sim­ mons. also of CORE, look on. The check represented the re­ ceipts from a cocktail sip at the cafe last Sunday. (Mallory Photo* CLUB PLAQUE — J o h n n y Matthews, president of the Bot­ tle and Cork Sales Club, pre­ sents the honoree. Charles (Chuck) Williams, vi<$ presi­ dent of Schenley, a pbque at a dinner In the Town Hfi Club. (Photo fly Layne) A LITTLE HELP — Roosevelt St.. Bronx, presents a check Goodson, right, proprietor of for $100 to CORE’S Solomon Good son’s Cafe, 754 E. 160th Danny’s Party Friends of Danny Miller, for­ mer manager of Dante’s, are throwing him a party ail day long Monday, Dec. 12. The party will be held at the Red Rooster, 138th St. and 7th Ave. and be­ gins at 12 noon. SCOTCH WWSKT’ SCOTLAND’S BEST Distilleries Produce Hal Singei Into Palm The Hal "Cornbread” Singer Quartet opens up Thursday night Dec. 5, for an unlimited engage­ ment at the Palm Cato. 200 W. 125th St., replacing the Sticks Evans Quintet which had been there for some time. Singer, one of the better tenor sax men around, has recently closed an engagement at the Room at the Bottom. Drama Workshop Repeating Plays Responding to papular demand, the Y Drama Workshop wfll a- gain present "None of Us Are Ever Born Brave” a three-act comedy-drama by Norman Har­ ris, directed by Franklin Thom­ as, at the Harlem YMCA Little Theatre, 100 W. 135th St. on Fri­ day Dee. 6 and Sunday Dec. 8 I at 8:30 p.m. “Lilies” In More Theatres Ralph Nelson's "Lilies of the Field,” prize-winning comedy drama starring Sidney Portier, will atari Its engagement as a United Artists Premiere Show­ case” attraction on Wednesday, Dec. 4, at 25 major theatres Je Greater New York, including the ! Astor on Broadway, and the ■ Murray Hill in Manhattan, where it will continue its long run. HARYOU Play Set Next Week Having cancelled the Novem­ ber 22 performance due to the assassination of President John F Kennedy, the HARYOU Drama Workshop will present "Dope” and "Black Chaos,” two one-act plays at the Harlem YMCA Lit­ tle Theatre, 130 W, 135th 9t. Saturday. December 14, at 8 p.m. The State Liquor Authority has the 134 Hamilton Corporation. 134 Hamilton Place, for 15 days, from Dae. t-17, for permitting gambling on the licensed prem­ ises diki/ie unttn sons styust > JOE KNIGHT O Hit All Shirt Johnny Taylor at tha Orian • CMmm Aawr. CvidM Free Adak Never ■ Caver » Coat. Made A Eat. 319 West 125tb St. J* Ret: UN 4-6481 ■ 8880 1134 Fulton Street, Bltlyit. ST Dance ta tha Mrslc at JIMMY OLIVYR and the SOUL TWISTERS / ' THURS., DEC. 5 HE HCOTNIERS CHOP HOUSE $ SEAFOOD, IBB) 313-315 WIST US* CHOICE WINES LIQUORS BIG FAULT'S Smoll't Paradise CONTINUOUS DANCING NIGHTLY 2 BIG BANDS WILLIS JACKSON AND HIS BAND PARTY TIME AT THE I IH THE HEART of HARLEM v 209 w*125th Sl MO 2-4362 VISIT OUR SPACIOUS and LUXURIOUS RESTAURANT AND COCKTAIL LOUNGE DELICIOUS LONCNEONS AND DINNERS SERVED DAILY FEATURING NIGHTLY HAL SINGER'S ALL STAR QUARTET FEATURING LAWRENCE 18 KEYS MW TOM 21, IL Y. - *U 17170 '♦hentlt Contenese Cuisine and good American Food SFFCtAt FACILITIES FOt SOC1AI OCCAiMMK BANQUETS • RECEPTIONS • OWNERS Ccckteil lounge and Air Conditioning Orders Prepared To Take Out CHEZ WELLWORTH CAFE 126ifh St. Car. 7th Ava. FINE FOODS & LIQUORS TOP CLUB LINNETTPS Cocktail Loungt 714 ST. NKIWUS Ml V AU U177 Our Daily Menu Specialties Are Truly Extra , FINEST FOODS SERVED AT AU TIMES Chinata American Cuisine Tha Place To Go Before And After The Show AU 1-6141 1702 AMSTERDAM AVE. at 144th ST. Special at Surpriefrgly Reason a bit Prices. Win FAMOUS FOR AKOLUTBY NOTHING! MADRID BAR & GRILL Ul 1402 7th Aroava aaar 114th $ treat HO.ED FOR OUR Sat stM dataf batlaeu at tbs SELBRA'S MIDWAY LOUNGE 411 W. 125th Itmt QN Ta Sam Yea, Baatrita, Saa|a, Roberta, laaab A Lamy 2017 5th Avenen SA 2 4806 Uptown's newest most elegant Supper Club & Cocktail Lounge — luncheon served daily DELICIOUS STEAKS, CHOPS CHICKEN and RICE DINNERS SBBWD l»AILT A. Iir - NOBMA ELLISON. LCCT FONT! AND RBOTBU Ul GOLDeSgn,, Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- s* • N. Y. AMSTERDAM MEW8, Sat, Dec. 7, 1963 The Dunbar Book Co. 117 W. 115th St., will honor Langston Hughes on Sunday, December 8 from 4 to 7 p.m. with an auto­ graph party. Mr. Hughes' latest books will be featured. Cocktails will be served, no admission. The Thinking Woman's Shopl Wigs or Hairwtaves "" ' BI SAFI NOT SORRY ^CONSULT SAMARA SffOtt ’"JYMC wigs i t FREE! • lye Lashes I. Franz-Jacques • Pedicure • Facial • Cosmetics Hoir-Wordrobe!!! Sola Hair Straighteners e Credit -Heme Demeestretien • Open - 0 Bays e Week BEAUTY UNLIMITED , AU 3-9360 > Barbara's Beauty Studio 1723 Morten at 145th St. Baa. M B1M1 PLYMOUTH J SHUTS HawlCwi STILL GOING STRONG - Above, Myrna White, extreme left, appears with Roberta Keith, Judy Alexander and Zero Mostel in the hit musical, “A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum" which is still going strong at the Alvin Theatre in its second year. Unemployed Dorsey Hunt, 34, charged with the death of 33- year-old Jacqueline Williams ear­ ly Tuesday morning is being held without bail for action by the Grand Jury. Police said Hunt and Jacque­ line, both of 2860 Eighth Ave., were drinking vodka in- their apartment early Tuesday morn­ ing and Jacqueline was knifed in the stomach. She died at Har­ lem Hospital several hours later. Shoot that take the casual approach ... to draw, street- wear or leisure. Flexible and lightweight as a shot can ba. Genuine moccasin construc­ tion . . . incomparably com­ STAGER SHOES Esthers. “SAVE FT’ “SAVE-IT" is Esther's new fermulu tar men and women—a product designed to help prevent the less ef hair by destreylng scalp bacteria and dandruff — a treahnent far breaking hair, thin temples, and ether thin spets-a product designed te restere aaturul nils, giving lustre, beauty end strength, con­ verting short, stubby, lifeless hair AT DRUG STORES AND COSMETIC COUNTERS SizM $1.00, $1.51 Esther's Beauty Aids SO West 12Stb St., N.Y. 27 TO BELITTLE YOUR MIDDLE « hand-span ... and bts yen keep on breath­ ing, too. It's made of Feataernap textured pare rubber that's feathersaft outside and skinside. Strategically (toned. Ad|nstable gar- tars ... Hooks in front. CLARIDGE SHOP 271 West 125th Straaf Naw York, Naw York Rl 9-9703 . / A Big Year For Actors Both On And Off Broadway Morris Graves, Adolph Caesar, Erby, Nathan George. Yvette Hawkins. Philip Lindsay. Helen Martin, Rex Monson, Nick Smith, Louise Stubbs. Dietrah Thomas, George Waller. Palmer Whitted. NEXT TIME I'LL SING TO YOU — James Earl Jones. A MATTER OF LIKE LIFE AND DEATH — Marlene Wor- field. IN WHITE AMERICA — Gloriaj Foster, Moses Gunn, Fred Pink- ard. WALK IN DARKNESS - Clar­ ence Williams HI, Richard Ward. Wayne Grice. Roger Robinson, Murray Arnold. TELEMACHUS CLAY - Clay­ ton Corbin. GOD, MAN AND YOU BABY— Bob Broadway. THE LIVING PREMISE - Godfrey Cambridge, Diana Sands. Exciting Looking Skin Can be Tours. Wou've seen it on TV and in magazine? I Hoard about ft on the radio! Mirada lighten­ ing ingredient Hydroquinone makes the difference. Wear Artra Skin Tona Cream under make-up. It softens, helps clear skin as it beauti­ fies ! Developed by doctors. Trial size 65c. 2oz. size $1. SKIN TONE CREAM ..for a Brighter, Lovelier You! Kennedy Awards Dinner Is Off The International Awards Din­ ner of the Joseph P. Kenne^’ Jr. Foundation, originally sched­ uled for December 4, has been postponed by the trustees, it was announced by executive director R. Sargent Shriver. Leona Fashions Ml IMPORTED LEATHER LOOK TRENCH COAT, WITH PILE LINING FOR EXTRA WARMTH. SIZES 6-20. Black or White Immediate Credit Leona Fashion Shops INC. 74 West 125th Stmt East of Lenox Avenue Off Broadway BALLAD FOR BIMSHIRE - Alyce Webb, Miriam Burton, Christine Spencer, Frederick O’­ Neal. Ural Wilson, Jim Trotman, Bobby Dean Hooks, Clebcrt Ford, Sylvia Moon, Jimmy Randolph, Ossie Davis, Fran Bennett, Laur­ en Jones, Hilda Harris, Charles Moore, Eugene Edwards, Bar­ bara Alston, Leu Camacho, Ray Gilbert, Gloria Higdon, Hilary Kelky, Joan Peters, Geri Seig- nious. THE BLACKS — Cynthia Belle 0-0-0O MY FEET’ THEY’RE KILLING ME! Why iwffar ogonn ., CORNS & CALLOUSES TltED, TENDSt, ITCH- k INC. OUtNING, P1 MaseiaiNG, F SMARTING KIT QUICK KEUEF! GET PROMPT RELIEF THE SURE WAY WITH RELIABLE JOHNSON S FOOT SOAP *AT AU DRUGGISTS ANO FAMOUS TOILfT GOODS DIRTS. SINCE 1170 JOHNSONS FOOTSOAP\ Artra Cosmetics Kenilworth, N. J. By JESSE H. WALKER The legitimate stage this sea- : son has seen the use of more Negroes — both on Broadway ( and off Broadway — than in - many a moon, if ever. As usual, the majority of the 1 Negroes employed in the dra- 1 mas and musicals have been In plays with all or nearly all-Ne­ gro casts, such as “Tambour­ ines to Glory" and "Ballad for Bimshire". But what has happen­ ed in many instances has been the utilization of Negroes in casts Wherein, up to now, they have not been expected. Such as Roscoe Lee Browne as. the narrator in “The Balllad of the Sad Cafe”. And the dancers in “Here's Love”, Negroes and whited together. And Myrna White in the year-old hit, “A Funny Thing Happened on The Way To The Forum. We are listing below the plays, both on and off Broadway in which Negro actors, actresses, dancers, and singers have been working this season. In many cases the shows have closed since this list was compiled. For those still open, the reader can simply j check the Broadway listings if I he is interested in seeing these | people work. But for what it's worth,- this seems to have been a pretty big year. On Broadway ONE FLEW OVER THE CUC­ KOO'S NEST — Lincoln Kilpa­ trick, Leonard Parker, Wesley Gale, Milton J. Williams. Monk Off Cover It was to be Thelonious Monk’s week. The modern jazz composer- pianist w.'-S to appear with a full orchestra at Philharmonic Hall Friday night, playing nothing but his own compositions. And the new edition of Time Magazine was to give Monk the cover treatment with a full story inside. __The story still goes. But President Kennedy’s assassina­ tion caused the magazine edi­ tors to abandon Monk's cover picture in favor of a portrait of President Johnson. The Philharmonic Hill con­ cert is now scheduled for Dec. .ON BROADWAY — At right- Llncoln Kilpatrick,- left, Kirk Douglas and Leonard Parker are in “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest”, now playing at the Cort Theatre. NOTICE AMBiTiOUS WOMEN IS RECESSION RIGHT AROUND THE CORNER? LET'S FACE FACTS • You may have a good job now but what about later on? • No matter who you are, you never know when you may be "let out" of a good job. Isn't that true? • Now is the time toprouse your ambition and prepare for eventualities. • Why waste your time. While you con af­ ford it, why not leorn a dignified voca­ tion in a depression-proof business. Be your own boss. • As long os there ore women in the world there will always be beauticians—and they make good money, too. • Surely you can afford to make a small down pavment—then pay as you learn. Attend day or evening class. — REGISTER NOW — BEAUTY SCHOOL The School With A High Prettige 135th St. & 7th Ave. AU 3-9702 SAME LOCATION FOR 39 YEARS 39tb SUCCESSFUL YEAR LUXURIOUS DANISH INSPIRED DESIGN...FITS ANY DECOR WlYFOAM 164West125thSt Near 7th Avenue OPEN EVENINGS TILL CHRISTMAS Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- 22 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Dec. 7, 1963 Martha Hubbard and sister Lusy Temple, could not share their affections so Martha's fun­ eral was attended by her par­ ents, the Redmond Williams, her husband Ellingson, and her bro­ thers, sisters and children. Lucy cried in jail... Musicians Wesley Dunbar and Charles Johnson had a fatal discussion about music... Eleanor Hopper proved to Wil­ liam Barr that she was equal the other night... “Gechie” Ro­ chester entertained eight girls at his dance the other night... Cal­ ifornia Bates* cook vanished so he bought a new Caddy to pacify himself with. Agnes Haywood wrote a poem in memory of President Ken- Youth Job Talk The East Harlem Crusade, for Full Youth Employment will hold a conference at 8 p.m. Dec. 10, at JHS 117, 109th St. and Second Ave., under moderator Eli Cohen, executive director of the National Committee for Employment of Youth, it was disclosed this week. nedy . . . The Grace Charms, named in memory of Daddy Grace, will conduct a fashion show at their church Saturday night... Eugene Richardson had plenty of time to think about Velma Holmes’ pains... Phil Black's annual ball is seeking a change of venue next year. Too many ruffians. Someone lift­ ed Linnette Phillips’ wallet with $300 in it in her own place. Leaves Club Aggie Insrenia and Bronx Club 845 divorced after 18 years... Har­ ry Pelton, a recent father, opened his 124th St. cleaners Saturday... Barmaid Mary Williams turned over $125 to gunmen... Luscious Velma Heath, Harlem “Y" wait­ ress and bus driver Elmer O. Haney, escaped injury when their plane crashed in the south... Jean Booker is sparkling after brief hospitalization?.. Sanford Stevens unwillingly handed his liquor store visitor $400 the other even­ ing... Tempting Alma Nelson's shoes and hat matched the Cad­ dy upholstery the other evening... Bronx butcher shop on 169th St. sells used clothing and chitter­ lings, ham. chicken and bacon in the same store. The Health De­ partment looks the other way. Dancer Queenie Owens is back in town... Carrie Blackwell was buried in Thoroughfare, Va... Christopher Poussiant, vacation­ ing in San Juan, P R., will be back by Xmas. Cleon Wilson said his two singers’ Shawn Renea and Lord Nelson have hits with their respective discs, "Good Morning World” and "A Party For Santa.’’ Disease Alarm Health Department alarmed over venereal disease among teenagers... judy Clay of Pater­ son, N. J., has a rocking voice... Luscious Lee Williams and her Lee's Smart Shop fashions at the Prelude Sunday was revealing... Investigator Leroy V. George takes pride in revealing h i s guards are personable and cour­ teous... Don’t forget to attend the NAACP’s dance on Dec. 13 at i the Renny... King Coleman, or­ iginator of the dance Mash Po­ tatoes captivated Sweden last Summer and has been invited to return... Dan and Elva Montgom­ ery, conductors of Bronx Mello- tone on Boston Rd., said there Is still a demand for Rev. King's Washington speech. Estella Hargrove wants hub­ by, James, to lay his hardware down... Lonna Gray and hubby, Walter, parted by a lamp which connected with her cheek, will reconcile... Eugene Jackson and Melvin Neal could not wait to get into Singleton's the other night... Former fight referee Jim­ my Freeman, now residing in Boston visited the city last week and attended pro basketball games in the Garden... The Mus­ lims Bazaar drew huge crowd into the 369th Armory Saturday... Joseph E. Faustin wrote a song in memory of the late President, titled “Mr. Kennedy”... Apollo Theater's Roy Monroe and his wife saw how the night people lived the other night... James Worthy said “Old Man Sonny” winged him the other day... Carl Hall, who sings like Cry­ ing Jimmy Scott sand at Baby Grand last Thursday night.. Princess • Pat Carson back from Sapin said her business Donut El Spano is booming in Ptiain and she is here to purchase ,uip- ment for auto washing business which she will open on her re-| jtum... William Brown warned Walter Blue but Blue would not ^listen. Blue was silenced... Idle threats against the U. S. Flag, Constitution and the President will be taken seriously by au­ thorities... Loew's Victoria man­ ager, Woody Woodruff, and his assistants, Oscar Aleman and Nathaniel Edmonds, keep the en­ tertainment spot like a show palace. Free X-Rays For Harlem Free chest X-rays will be avail­ able for anyone 15 years of age and over from 1 p m. to 6 p.m. at the following locations and on the following days this week and ' next: Thursday. Dec. 5 —#in front of Sachs Quality Store, 3rd Avenue & 121 Street. Wednesday, Dec. 11 — Middle oi, 137th Street, between 7th & Lenox Aves. Thursday. Dec. 12 — 130th Street it Lenox Avenue, between Lenox 4 Fifth Aves. The West 137th Street Block As­ sociation has made a special re­ quest for the X-ray bus to visit that block. Because of this, as noted above, the mobile unit will be in the middle of 137th Street, between Seventh and l^enox Av­ enues, on Wednesday, December 11, and people living or working in that area are urged to stop by that day for a free chest X- ray. Marjorie Costa, in charge of the X-ray bus, reports that occa­ sionally someone loses or leaves something inside the bus. Persons can check on missing articles by calling Miss Cost* at AC 2-7360. Be a smart Santa! Use our Layaway Plan to reserve your WITTNAUER PROMOTED —* Lieutenants Lloyd Sealy and William A. Cunneen were promoted to the rank o( captain in a recent brief ceremony at Police Head­ quarters. Also promoted were 15 sergeants to the rank of lieutenant and 30 patrolmen to the rank of sergeant. Capt. Sealy became the second Ne­ gro captain in the city’s Police Department. Super's Son Held In Bx. Slaying $3,000 To NAACP From Show George Ward. 18, was arrested Rev. Richard A. Hildebrand. and charged with President of the New York branch -7cd-..i of NAACP has announced re­ strangling <6-year-old Mrs. Paul-. . , , ' ceipt of a donation of $3,000 from ine Weinstock of 1212 University I Margaret Jackson, well- Ave., Bronx, over the weekend icnown promoter of the fabul- Ward is being held without bail ous annuaj fashion spectacular. | for action by the Bronx County - The Show shows.” Grand Jury. i ^rs ja(jjcson w-hose latest . fa Ward, police said, is the son of shjon presentation was a sell-j the superintendent of the building out affair at the Astor Hotel is an in which Mrs. Weinstock lived, ardent supporter of the civil right. Police said the strangling followed f^ht. For the past three years an argument between Ward and she has donated the total re­ ceipts from her yearly show to The suspect, police said, is also the New York Branch NAACP. accused of stealing $7 from Mrs. Rev. Hildebrand expressed his Weinstock s purse. Ward, accord- sincere appreciation to Mrs.1 ing to police, confessed to the Jackson and added: “Her gener­ osity is an expression of dedica­ tion and outstanding example of [how to translate words into ac- Ition". Jamaican Hails UN Declaration On Anniversary KINGSTON, Jamaica — Grant, an editor of the Jamaica i Diplomatic & Consular Courier, announced this week the forma­ tion of a "Human and Cvil Rights Committee” in commem­ oration of the fifteenth annivers- i ary of the UN's adcption of the 'Universal Declaration of Human Rights. [ Mr. Grant, organizing man of the new committee, said its purpose is to initiate a joint effort with the “colored people of the United States of America who are 'striving to express the highest dreams of the civil rights leaders.’’ ' Mrs. Jackson's future plans in­ clude the presentation of a fash­ ion spectacular in Jamaica, B. W. I. in January of 1964 as well Stan as a presentation in the New York World's Fair of 1964. Income Forms Going Out To Vets Survivors Within the next few days all cha r- veterans and survivors who are receiving a non-service-cbnnected pension will receive an Annual Income Questionnaire form with their pension check, according to an announcement by Frank V, Votto, State Director of Veterans’ Affairs. The Jamaican Government has "The importance of property {facially designated^ the week of ?ompleting the income question- Dec. 10 through 1< as Human najrc an(j prornpuy returning it RRhts Werk and wil1 hold aPPrt> •„ the office indicated on the form The sunniest rums are the U.S. Virgin Islands Rums! (And the price is full of sunshine, too!) Recognize them by 1. The lower price (They’re imported from the only U.S. duty-free port.) 2. The sunniest flavor that ever made a lemon smile. 3. The Virgin Islands Sun Symbol. Buy Virgin Islands Rums! (Imported from the sunniest of all the rum-making islands in the West Indies) Come down and sample them on their home grounds, too. The hospitable Virgin Islanders are as friendly as their rums are sunny! VIRGIN ISLANDS RUM COUNCIL. VIRGIN ISLANDS GOVERNMENT INFORMATION CENTER, 16 WEST 49th STREET. ROCKEFELLER CENTER, NEW YORK 20. N. Y, priate public ceremonies. cannot be over emphasized. Fail­ ure to complete properly or re­ turn it within the allotted time j could result in having pension payments stopped,” he said. AS LITTLE AS $1 HERBERTS A WEEK The Home of Blue White Diamonds 125th STREET, COR. 7th AVENUE MO 2-4242 EASY CREDIT TERMS - ONE YEAR TO PAY AUTHOWZD^^^z W-^/z^/ea^ JEWELER OVERHOLT B.B. • YEAR OLD $5 M Fi(,h LORD BELLEVILLE KENTUCKY BOURBON B.B $4-13Fi(th. M.F. PREFERRED BLENDED WHISKEY « Filth LENOFF VODKA □•13 FiWl N.A. GIN « F,„h KING GILBERT IMPORTED SCOTCH $4-35 Fi(. , GILBERT'S FRENCH BRANDY 1 53 ,84 Fihh WE DELIVER -- CALL AU 6-7722 IN HARLEM, IT IS ERIEDLANDS 619 LENOX AVE.ffZ 14.1st. ST. ! AUTOMATIC INSTANT COFFK HUnN & HAKUAKT RETAIL SHOPS RETAIL FOOD 'Less Work for Mother" Mr. Votto urged all recipients of the Annual Income Question­ naire to consult the local office of the New York State Veterans' Affairs for assistance in complet­ ing the form. The local office of the Division of Veterans’ Affairs! is located at 270 Broadway. f Niece Shot; Aunt Released In $500 Bail Accused of shooting her 13- year-old niece in the ankle Wed­ nesday night, Mrs. Rosa Hender­ son, 33. of 159-44 Harlem River Drive was released in $500 bail for a hearing this week in Crim- j inal Court on assault and gun CtfBTgPS----------------------------------- Police said Mrs. Henderson and her husband. Edward, were hav­ ing an argument Wednesday night when the shotgun went off accidentally striking Frances Sol­ omon in the ankle. She was taken to Mother Cabrini Hospital for treatment. Murphy Names New Chief Of Policewomen Mrs. Margaret Disco has been appointed by Police Commission­ er Michael J. Murphy to head Hi the Bureau of Policewomen. She succeeds Deputy Commissioner Theresa Melchionne. Mrs. Disco joined the police department in 1940 and has been assigned to the Bureau of Special Service, Property Recovery Squad and was upped to a first grade detective In 1957. A graduate of Wadleigh High School she attended Pace College and Is the mother of five chil­ dren. Mrs. Disco lives In Forest, Hills. Form a good habit and read the Amsterdam News — every week! To people OVER 65 and to their sons and daughters Metropolitan has developed a new series of policies covering expense of hospitalization which will be issued at all ages 6 and over. These policies can mean a great deal to the peace of mind of senior citizens and their families in time of need brought about by age or sickness. ? !* The premiums on these policies may be paid by the older people themslves—or by their children who may have the ultimate responsibility for hospital bills. And—under present income tax laws, these premiums are treated as medical ex- fx-mesoi the-taxpayer oi budcpcaUcnUtor pui p.^es of income tax deductions. If you would like further information on Metropolitan** ■ew Senior Citizens Policies, write or phone: / SOL HANDLER Metropolitan Insurance Consultant Estate Planning & Business Insurance r 401 BROADWAY, N.Y.C. OH. W0 6-3555 Rm. TY 3-4404 Clip coupon for further information | Sal Handler I Metropolitan Life Intvranee Ce. 401 Broadway, H.Y.C Nome Address Telephone ■ I Agt Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, New York 10, N.Y. Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- < 24 e. N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Dec. 7, 1963 SS America High & Dry In Bias Row There will be no more tail­ ings of the luxury liner America this year. There may not be any before February, unless the ra­ cial dispute that canceled its sailings during the past three months is resolved. Clerk Held As Fatal Bullet Ends Scuffle William Brown, 42, of 812-09 140th Ave., accused of fatally shooting 39-year-oid Walter Blue, -who lived at 177-12 105th Ave., last Wednesday at 177th St.- and 106th Ave., is being held without bail for action -by the Grand Jury. Brown, a liquor store employ­ ee, accused Blue of assaulting him. Det. Harold Cannon of the Jamaica detectives made the ar- (Civil Rights: Church Meet Maps Move Dr. Robinson W b, Will Present Kenya Scroll here are to keep the pledge they added, is io be addressed by made along with the hundreds Bayard Rustin who took of the Aug part in the Washington redress to include workshops on emplov-i v.ionrr i Aug. ». ~ The current lull In civil rights activity may soon be broken, de­ pending on the outcome of a of thousands of others meeting of the Metropolitan Con­ ference on Civil Rights Action on Dec. 14 at St. Philip's Episco­ pal Church. 215 W. 133rd St. - In announcing the meeting, the Rev. Edler G. Hawkins said “an effective and united follow-up to the March Is necessary In the metropolitan area df residents planning committee chair­ man and minister of St. Augus­ tine's Presbyterian Church at 165th St. and Prospect Ave., the Bronx. The civil rights meeting, he Mr. Hawkins is the conference lof.m lation and community organixa- scro„ on ,kH. tion. The conference, it is hoped, will lead to a reopening of “a new drive for equal rights” this area. in man of York, wil! present a 12 to the govern­ ment of Kenya on behalf x>f the 3.200.000 members of the United Presbyterian Church in the United States. Dr. Robinson will take part in i the independence day celebra­ tions at the invitation of Prime Minister Jomo Kenyatta, who ..‘Jj imporiint Mri” Professional Children In School Benefit The Maritime Subsidy Board rest Probably the best off-Broadway William Hammerstein, chairmen from other benefits as the Pro- Salvation Army Salvation Army vocal and in­ strumental groups visit hospitals and institutions to spread Christ­ mas cheer through music and song during the holiday season. presentation of the season will be' given by the students of the Professional Children's School at a benefit for their own benefit to be held at the Plaza on De­ cember 5. top talent of the school and prominent alumni, including Les­ lie Uggams and Lorin Hollander have prepared an unusual short- hair, long-hair evening of enter­ tainment. Mrs. Benjamin A. Javits and The event will be as different ceremonies. schools in the city. Music will rule- be provided by the Paul Winter Sextet and Gene Rayburn will serve up the acts as master of Dr. Robinson is the founder and director of Operation Cross roads Africa, under which Amer­ ican students of varying racial and ethnic groups are taking of the dinner-dance announce that fessional Children’s School is dif- in the British East ‘ ‘ African ferent from other independent crown colony’s struggle for self l/t/Je On l?Y part in work camps and related projects in several African coun- IwiA lx I vie xxll IX A. tries. The scroll which Dr. Robinson will present to government of­ ficials will be placed in a 'tlack portfolio,- lined <in green and laced in red. The colors represent the people, the resources and the sacrifices of Kenya's leaders. The New York City Department of Health recommends that you teach children to stay away from the medicine cabinet, and to take medication only when given by a oarent or other responsible adult. 3/4 CARAT $2S0 *•!»• Genuine DIAMONDS "'N°S matcmio DIAMOND 199 ” C0MrAM Bftk VALUES S6 DOWN—-t 4 WEEKLY pertly styled tot Happiness Kings Tull Fin. s|>.rkltn> t.nuins diamonds Ki Weight I Hus. Smarge.l lor detail. Ul SMCIAIS IN OUR WINDOWS •y H.Y.'a Lariatt Diamand Di'tpli OPEN EVENINBS sziruiToasT, bum. IVtSROAOWAY, Bklya. tl IS FIFTH AV, Bklys. >U FULTON ST, Bklya. 12 GRAHAM AV.. Bklya. EI.E7STEIRWAVST- ItS-M JAMAICA AVE. IM WEST lasts ST. Si WEST I4tk ST. ZU WEST MtkST. 43 CORTLANOT ST. ^tm7sR00SvAe“-0' UMAia ST, Wk.Fi. Ha Paymaati 'til Fab. I at RUSCHC a. vs lAtaut ntMt nwiuu THE JINGLING MONEY YOU SAVE AT A‘P SOON BECOMES FOLDING M0NEY1 SAVE REGULARLY AND... CASH! Delicious Way to Save Money! ANN PAGE Fine Foods Shop Early.. Mail Early! country who have contributed to the outstanding successes of the Association during the past year. Save cash ... the jingling kind and the folding kind ... by shopping regularly at AfcP. Do this by selecting from AfcP’s storewide values every week! And while you’re saving cash—you’ll be saving valu­ able Plaid Stamps, too. For even more * ne» s*™** pamphlet. I MvingS take full advantage of the values Moving Info Free To Public on quality-famous AfcP Exclusives: Jane Parker Baked Foods, Ann Page Fine Foods, and freshly-ground AfcP Coffee. Golden Honey £43* Marmalade £31 PURE GRAPE JAM 2 LB. JAR 53 Made from plump, juicy-sweet Concord grapes, a delicious spread for afternoon and evening snacks. Extra thrifty at AfcP’s low price. Creamy Smooth or Krunchy Style 12-OZ. JAR PEANUT BUTTER 35 SALAD DRESSING JAR 45 8c OFF REG. PRICE QUART Whole Cloves Nutmeg 6R0UND Cinnamon GROUND 1H« NhS- 2 k. tin 4 k. tin 15' 45' 35' Fresh...Flavorful and Thrifty! JANE PARKER Baked Foods BLUEBERRY PIE '.•xxw.w.wkvA JANE PARKER THIS WEEK Juicy-sweet blueberries made even more delicious baked in a flaky light, flavorful crust! Take home two at this low, low price! DANISH PECAN RING 45 LARGE SANDWICH CREME l-LB, 8-OZ. PKO. Angel Food Ring 49« Cookies combination 39c fresh-ground flavor you can’t get in a can! FRUIT CAKE |49 $295 $3" Dark Csks its. S9* a-ta. H.W I'A-LB. $149 195 3-LB. 5-LB. JANiPAXKB Enriched Bread Made With Buttermilk 2* l-LB., 6-01. LOAF VvSVA* •*.*•*•*• a*.*»‘ Bright moment in a winter’s day... the good-old days fragrance and flavor of AfcP whole-bean Coffee! (It’s never fac­ tory ground, because once coffee is ground, flavor fades faster even in the can.) You see it ground for your coffee­ maker right in the store to give you big, fresh, wonderful COFFEE MILL FLAVOR... treeh- ground flavor you can’t tet in a can! MILD AND MELLOW EIGHT O’CLOCK RICH AND FULL-BODIED RED CIRCLE VIGOROUS AND W1NEY BOKAR 3-lb. bag *1.59 l-LB. BAG 59' 3-lb. bag mb. *1.71 * BAO 3-u.mo *1.77 of the Department of Commerce granted permission to the ship's owners, United States Lines, to cancel any sailing Thursday of this week or on Dec. 28. The nation’s second largest liner on North Atlantic service will be moved from its drydock at Todd Shipyards in Hoboken, N. J., to Newport News, Vs., for a complete overhaul in January, lien. John M. Franklin, the lines' chairman, disclosed. After its ninth sailing this year, the liner was held in port on Sept. 14 when a racial dis­ pute developed between Louis Npurohr, tis first assistant en­ gineer of the Marine Engineers Beneficial Association, and non- white aid Jewish unlicensed crewmen who are members of the National Maritime Union. .The dilute has never been resolved, wkhough it went before NplU anJMEBA arbitration, but MtjU crewmen refuse to operate ttA-line until Neurohr is removed - which, MEBA says, would cause the walkoff also of MEBA crew­ men. Interest High For NAACP Meet r t T The NAACP annual meeting, subeduled for January 6, 1964, will bi preceded by the Freedom Fel lrwship Dinner at the Hilton Ho­ tel here. NAACP Executive Sec­ retary Roy Wilkins announced th&s week. Interest in the dinner has in­ creased significantly. Mr. Wilkins said, requiring a larger banquet room. The dinner will be held on January 5, the night before the meeting. The Fellowship Dinner is an important occasion for NAACP members when tribute will be paid to NAACP leaders throughout the Moving.” was issued this week b the Better Business Bureau of Metropolitan New York. The li­ nage publication, available free to the public, provides a store­ house of basic information about household moves, both local and long distance. Individual copies of the pam­ phlet can be obtained free by mailing a stamped, self-address­ ed envelope to the Better Business Bureau of Metropolitan New York. 220 Church Street, New York 13, New York. 'i Ttw m* d Ha Castas ■< • row tpaM tl quldy REMY MARTIN COGNAC V.S.O.P. REMY MARTIN AH over the world- when you order Remy Martin »-yotf always get V.S.O.P. REMY MARTIN CdJn/iC Of laser fc pti-wsHf etf to bear. the Remy Martin labef. REMY<NRTIN Pride of Cognac PEACHES 31 Ik. 13 TF A< JUP-Grstfe A Yellow Cling Sliced er Nelvee Chocolate Drink 13% ex- pkq. 33‘ WWts Homo —Mokes 12 Qnsrts Dry Milk Solids AftP Brads A — All Brsen Asparagus Tips AAP Brads A at. pkq. 0 7 IO'/i ax. can 35® Tomato Sauce 3 «*• 28 At? Brada A — Halvas • Vin«-Ripanad ASPGrsds A Bartlett Pears X’45€ lte.3 A|C n. con W | Tomatoes Applesauce Whole Beets "k 33c CAM A*’ 2 £ 27e WHITE HOUSE A*P O ©rad. A X I Grada A, EVAPORATED MILK For Holiday cooking and baking thare is no finer evaporated milk st any price! FREE RECIPE FOR HOLIDAY EGGNOG Partly*, f.bukMM, fun to mafc.l Ort the raelpa rt the Whlta Howm Milk display rt MP. L 13flsid I K. CONS 83( IN HANDY S-PACR M PtNF • HRFKII WWntS III . R.T A Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- L t M • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Dec. 7, 1963 Chides Church For Lethargy A Negro minister chided the Christian church this week for ^fcat he suggested has been its variy a century of lethargy that CMised its own destruction in So- wet Russia, the ravaging of the laws in Germany, the pre-Com iRUoist exploitation in Southeast and the moral blight in the Sbuth. lift the burden of second-class citizenship , . . frohr the backs of . blacks in America how much faith and trust could they, as Afriaucans and Asians, place in them," he added "The answer, ” he declared, "would be to send more black missionaries to these countries.” “In Just about every major na tion in the Christian world, ini our time, this creative and gi­ gantic spiritual body has been asleep," the Rev. Henry D Rue her said in a sermon Sunday at the New White Rock Baptist Church of Christ, 600 W. 153rd *1 have been told by many Asians and Africans that if white Christians . . are reluctant to Rathbone Leads Heart Fund Drive Monroe J Rathbone, Board Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Standard Oil Company i New Jersey i, will serve as Na­ tional Chairman for the 1964 Heart Fund campaign, the Ameri­ can Heart Association announced. ■ ... J8 Ihu x-4 ' jBP" ’ Plan Tribute In Feb. To Dr. Du Bois Helpful Suggestions For Your Xmas Mailing ses • return and torwaraing - should be shown on only one side of the package New York patrons may obta.n at any Post Office Station, Pam­ phlet ‘ POD No. 2 on "How io Pack and Wrap Parcels.” and POD Publication No. 3 on ‘ Dom­ estic Postage Rates and Fees." After the wrapping and addres­ sing is completed, parcels for distant states should be mailed by December 10: and for nearby and local delivery, by December Actor and playw. ight Os»;c «°»°wmg neipiui sux»«uuuS Davis is the chairman of a com- patrons in Christmas parcel mad- mittec cf writers, actors, eduea-ings in order to insure pre-Christ- tors and other professionals of mas delivery. African ancestry which is plana-! wrap packages securely, ad ing a memorial meeting in trib- dress c0,rectly with return ad ute to the late Dr.William Ed- dress including proper ZIP Cod< ward Burghardt Du Bois, writer? number historian sociologist and dean , of Afro-American letters. in (he day pref Ieiab|y before Pack Securely The tribute will be held at Car­ negie Hall, Sunday evening, Feb- ruary 23, 1064, the date on whi’h1 Patrons are urged to avoid tht the world-famous Africanist and risk of mailing poorly wrapper scholar wculd have attained the packages. Parcels should be sec age of 96. Dr Du Bois died in urely packed in wooden, metal Accra. Ghana, on August 27. u uocrb aid, uouble - laee< corrugated board, kraftboard oi 1963. at the age of 95. Among the members of the eh.pboard. Ordinary pasteboari initiating committee for the Du containers are unsafe and inade CORONET VSQ BRANDY CO*OW£> IS *n CpROMT <3> CORONET UNFORGETTABLE... Will your holiday gift be talked about after the giving is over? It will, if it’s Coronet VSQ Brandy. Unforgettable... because it’s the smoothened brandy. Unforgettable, too, is its superb Coronation Decanter in a colorful gift carton. The regular Fifth also comes in a gift carton. In every way ... Coronet VSQ will be remembered when other gifts are long forgotten. League Sends Wire Of Support To LB J , . . . L. Watson When he gave ins ad- «To fulfillment of such God- dress and installed the Officers faring principles and more, we of the League at their meeting oledge our entire support." hall at 141 W. 119th St. . .. i The shocking death of the President and the events of the day. should give us a greater sense O>e close of the meeting of resolve,” said Judge Watson I it "as later announced that all as he interpreted the impact of festivities planned by the League the President’s death on the na- that should have taken place with in the 30 days of mourning are tion . The Jamaica Progressive League Inc ' INSTALLATION - Jamaica Progressive League president Alfred Sewell, seated left, is sworn in by Judge James L. Watson during installation cer­ emony held recently at 141 W. 119th St. Other officers and members shown are tl. to r.' front row: Lucille Bernard. Beryl Henry. Daisy B John­ son. Hyacinth Dav.s, assistan. secretary: Irma Tully, sce- cretary and Etta Smalls, sec­ ond v.p.; Back row: Terrence Metz. Fitz Davis, Rupert Dun­ can. treasurer; Headley W >- son. first v.p., R A. Edwards and Vincent Johnston. VD Leaflet Is Free To Teens •'St' ictly fr T-n^s.'-s" • '-.v 1 'af 2t f 'n th- New 3.tv Department r! Health T'cvides inform?: n cn th' s. p.evcnti-'n and treatm nnu, Dra.i 23nCelled- '* (Gilbert Photr from kneaded dough Silvercup Satisfies a Man Seek Relatives Of Man Found In Courtyard Harlem police are seeking rel­ atives or friends of a man who las 02-3 uncjnscious in Harlem) Hospital since Sept. 14 when his body was found in the courtyard >f 100 St. Nicholas Ave Police said the man has been tentatively identified as Sigfried Welch and is betweeh 25-30. If you have any information con­ cerning this man contact the Am­ sterdam News or Det. Frank R-chferd at UN 4-3036. Pepsi lor those think about price Don't let other cola claims fool you. Compare when you shop. You’ll see that Pepsi Cola continues to be your best buy. Pepsi halt-quarts, tor instance, give you an extra serving in every single bottle. Ounce for ounce, penny for penny, Pepsi is still your best quality-cola buy. Officers The officers installed were Clif­ ford C. Sewell, president; Head- ley L. Wilson, first vice president; Irma Tully, secretary; Hyacinth Davis, asst secretary: Rupert Duncan, treasurer, Etta Smalls, second vice president. These who were installed as members of the Board cf Di­ rectors were: T.ucile Bernard. Beryl Henry, Daisy B. Johnsen. Terrence Metz, Fitz Davis, Vin­ cent L. Johnson, R. A. Edwards. Fred Reid. Eulogize President Immediately preceding the in­ stallation ceremonies vari us members of the League eulogized the late President Kennedy — "A great President — a champion of human rights and liberties — a friend of the free world — immortal — illustrious states­ man". Telegrams were sent to Mrs. Kennedy. Robert Kennedy and President Johnson. The following telegram was immediately sen', to President Johnson: "Dear President Johnson: "The death of John Fitzgerald Kennedy, a great statesman, our • i friend and champion of human rights and liberties is an im- I measurable loss to the entire world. “We cannot find words to ex- I press our grief. "Grd grant that you may con- ' tinue to bear 2nd hold aloft the rrc.i test was passed to a new Ask "KC Kennedy' Signs Go . CLARKSDALE. Miss In sharp condemnation of the poisonous atmosphere which resulted in the assassination of President Ken­ nedy. the NAACP has called for the Immediate removal of “K.O. ‘ th? K-'nnedys" signs which now dot the Mississippi landscape. In telegrams to Rubel Phil­ lips, recent Republican candi­ date for MUsjsst’jpi governor, and to Gov. Ross Barnett, the president of the Mississippi State NAACP, Dr. Aaron E. Henry, stated “such calls for hate as this have played no small part in the tragic assassination of ’President John F. Kennedy. Thei? “eelit b Tir.l? -re * fh , real influences that pull the trig­ ger of high powered rifles that kill men like Medgar Evers and President Kennedy." he warned. In a separate telegram to Presi­ dent Lyndon B Johnson, Dr Hen­ ry requested “any assistance that the office of the President of the United States can give teward the removal of these signs." Army Offers Variety Of Job Slots & Travel In tbe U.S. Army, there are many opportunities presently 'Wln ii f'r tram.ng in th? ep- cratieiT&nd maintenance of heavy scuipmct which Includes cater­ pillars <D-7 k D-S', steamrollers, road graders, cranes, turner-doz­ ers and other types. other attractive areas for train­ ing are available in all fields of electronics, graphics, telephone installer • repairmen, lineman, cable splicers, medical, criminol­ ogy and police, auto mechanics, aviation mechanics and numer­ ous others. All of the above includes unlim­ ited opportunities to travel world­ wide. For further information call MOnument 2-5546 and ask for Sgts Simmons or Sqiith or visit 271 W. 125th St.. 2d floor. Hi humid or damp weather, germs multiply fast — frequently cause annoying household and laundry odors. To stop odors before they can offend, mil­ lions of homemakers depend on Breath O’ Pine, the natural all purpose cleaner proven more effective against germs and viruses than ammonia. MORE HEALTH PROTECTION Breath Q’ Pine brings the gentle freshness of the outdoors to bathroom bowl, sinks, baby’s room, bedroom, kitchen, floors, woodwork, linoleum, garbage cans, pet quarters—helps guard health 4 ways as It cleans, disinfects, deodorizes and sani­ tizes. Breath O’ Pine gives you much more than sprays. And wince for ounce, Breath O’ Pine costs far less..' In laundry machine, Breath O’ Pine penetrates deep down—fights cross infection—helps prevent diaper rash. Clothes sU\v fresher—cleaner from washing to washing. When disinfecting, use Breath O’ Pine disinfectant strength.! ■. «*■> - a r ‘ •». * ififi JB >•; A •. *. ~ A BOTTLED IT PEPSICOLA METROPOLITAN BOTTLING COMPANY, INC.. 46-00 Sth STREET. LONG ISLAND CITY. NEW YORK. UNDER APPOINTMENT FROM PEPSI COLA CO., NEW YORK. N Y PEPSICOLA 4 > i .> .4 . \ I Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- * • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Dec. 7, 1963 ET THE CHUG-A-MUG! (Rheingold's handy new glass mug!) t (Pull tab straight out, straight up—flip top off No opener needed!) • ■ Wlr 1 a ./• Jp* A ? hH BPS 'jB' BLa ”11 fe-vir:...'. ■ •:•-< V i«f i ■J II (You don't even need a glass. Chug-a-Mug is Rheingold's new wide-mouth container that acts like a mug.) j (Chug-a-Mug holds the same, costs the same as a 12-oz. of famous Rheingold Extra Dry. No deposit, no return!) 4 Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- 32 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Dec. 7, 1963 In Brookl vn News Of Churches N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Pec. 7, 19G3 • >3 Prayer Of The Week. St. John s Monday Dec. 8 will be a his­ toric day at St John's Baptist Church. 480 Bainbridge St .Brook­ lyn. Rev. F. Arthur Reed, pastor. That day the church will burn its >41.000 mortgage deed to mark the extinction of the debt. Liquidation of the mortgage at this time saves the church five and one half years of interest payment. The church was or­ ganised June 8. 1962 with 12 persons and first met at 1680 Fulton St., the old Amsterdam News office. r Cornerstone The Friendship Club of Corner­ stone Baptist Church, 575 Mad­ ison St., will hold its anniversary celebration Sunday Dec. 8 at 3:30 P.M. Guest speaker will be Rev. Robert Harrison from Washing­ ton, D.C. Mrs. Katherine Water­ man is president of the club. That same day at 8 P.M. the Youth Choir will present a pre- Christmas concert with Berkley Tyler directing. Pastor of the church is Rev. Sandy F. Ray. Council The third of a series of five marriage clinics is being held by the Protestant Council, Brook­ lyn Division, Friday Dec. 6 at 7:30 P.M. at the Division offices, 30 Third Avenue. Focus will be on the emotional, physical, re­ ligious and cultural factors in­ volved in marriage. ) St. Luke’s At St. Lukg’a Community Church of Brownsville, a mem­ orial service for the late Pres­ ident John F. Kennedy was held Monday Nov. 25 at noon. Eulo­ gizing him the pastor, Rev. Wil­ bert Miller said "the bitterness at hate has slaughtered this great man at the height of his career. . His life is an inspiration to people everywhere.” Westminster Westminster Bethany Presby­ terian Churchr Howard and Mc­ Donough Sts., recently got its own pastor in the person of Rev. Claude C. Kilgore. The church is pursuing a vigorous program which includes remedial reading classes held Monday-Saturday. Instead of the regular released time iistruction, there is also a program of instruction and recreation given daily from Mon­ day to Fnday. Brooks Memorial Methodist Church, 143-22 109th Ave., Jam­ aica, present* a "Fes Jval of Ne­ gro Spirituals”, Thursday Dae. 5 at 8:30 P.M. The Senior Choir and Male Chorus will ba heard under the direction of Sylvester Stroud. Rev. Charles L. Carring­ ton in pastor. The Missionary Society of Mac­ edonia A.M.E. Church, 37-22 Un­ ion St., Flushing, will hold its annual Calendar Tea, Sunday Dec. 8 at 3:30 P.M. Mrs. Willie Lae Crumply, pastor’s wjfe, is Society president. A musical program will be featured and tables will be dec­ orated for each month in the year. Pastor is Rev. Grady G. Crumply. The Martyr Confirmation will be conferred APPEAL. .. .Sister Mary Mad­ eleine, director of Angel Guard­ ian Home in Brooklyn, largest child care center In the Met- ropolitan area, appeared re- « 38 /^Udren>. and.,17_*du1^ £* “cenlly on the Joe Franklin Show St. Alban the Martyr P.E Church, Farmers Blvd. and Dun­ kirk St., Queens, Sunday Dec. 15 at 10 A M. over WOR-TV, to tell of the ar­ gent need for foster parents, especially for Negro children. Many new applications have resulted from the appeal The Rt. Rev. Charles W. Mac- Lean, Suffragan Bishop of Long Island, will officiate in place of Bishop James De Wolfe who is ill. Solemn High Mass will fol­ low the confirmation. Rector of the church is Rev. Louis V. Sharpies. „ Federation Protestant Council Has Hopes The second annual Inter-faith Concert in Queens will be held Sunday Dec. 8 at the Richmond The Brooklyn Division of the Hill High School, 89-30 114th St., Protestant Council today ex- at 3:30 P.M. SpofHor is the South- pressK) hope west Interfaith Council of Queens whose president is William H. Hansen. Music of the Jewish faith will be presented by the Jewish Chor­ al Society. The choir of St. Mary Gate of Heaven, Ozone Park, will represent the Roman Catholic faith, with Greek Orthodoy faith music provided by the choir of St. Constantine and Helen. President Kennedy’s civil rights program will win early passage "as a monument to our mar tyred leader’s efforts to achieve equality for all peoples.” In a statement issued by the Rev V. Simpson Turner, the Di­ vision’s executive secretary aaid "although President Kennedy has been ruthlessly struck down, no assassin’s bullet can kill a government, nor an ideal nor a fervent desire that all races will one day live in complete har­ mony.” Protestant church music will be heard when a combined choir of churches in southwest Queens sing. Also there will be the music of the Inter-faith Speech Choir Dr. Turner noted that at a of Richmond Hill High School. September convocation of bor­ Last year's concert was attend- ed by over 1.200 persons and as ou,gh ministers, the Division then, there wil be no charge for P®ssed a resolution calling for . passage of the civil rights pro- _—1— ------------------------------------_ j gram now before Congress. Weekly News liroohl mi ( iiilv Funeral Home* * ■■■ I HY 3 1406 Pi tkin Avi Queens Jones fat Brooklyn Unity Funeral Home Home. Queens /ones, 87, died at her home, 599A Halsey St, Brook­ Elijah Jenkins lyn, Tuesday Nov. 19. She was Eiijah Jenkins, ot 356 Halsey buried at Evergreen Cemetery at, Brooklyn, died at Kings Nw. 25 foUowiag funeral serv- County Hospital, Saturday Nov.; ice at Mt. Sinai Baptist Church 23 He was 73 I ' The deceased is survived by His remains were shipped from three daughters: Mrs. Elese Unity Parkway Chapel 1406 Pit- ?nd Un AW Brooklyn, to Green- Mrs. Willie Mae Worlick; three vdle, N.C. for interment. A na- sons: Edward, Leroy and Cliftire of North Carolina the de- ford Jones; and three sisters: ceased is survived by nine chil- Ew Mrs. Mattie McDoniel. Mrs. Del- dren, five daughters, four sons, ** Bcott aad Mrs. Emma Lind- manv other relatives and a host sory. The body was pr prepared-of friends. CHESTER HOPE B Dies At 82 flev. James Has 3-Pronged, All Purpose Program Chester Raines Hope, former Associate Editor of King Features Syndicate, also Editor and Man­ ager of Universal Service, died last Wednesday. Nov. 27. He was bom in Cleveland. Ohio in 1881. Mr. Hope started his news­ paper career as reporter and then City Editor, Managing Editor, and Sunday Editor of the Cleve­ land Leader (1900-17). Later Sun- The Rev. Hylton £. James, pastor of Berean day Editor o£ the Newspap« Baptist Church, Brooktyn. is malting significant con- tributions to the development of the community in (i9i9-23>, and Editor and Man- --------------------- —■—-——’ager Of Universal Service (1923- three vital respects. There is the contribution to the iobs their parents are holding ^physical renewal seen in the con- strAction of a magnificent colon­ ial type church side-by-side with the. old one. The pastor’s reel d^aoe. next to the old church, enhances this aspect. Desides the large increase in membership which testifies to the prior’s spiritual role, there is the impact he is making in lift­ ing the educational level of hw membership. Advice Through the advice and inspira­ tion of Rev. James, member fam­ ilies are striving not only to see that the youths ’complete high school but also to put them through college. Thus thia year they have 68 college students strung from Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y. to Talladega Coi- lf*e, Talladega, Ala. » When Rev. James canoe to Ber- in May 1948, he met an old edifice on oae lot at 1641 Bergen 9t.,' arxi it was just two years short of the centenary of the church. By 1955 he initiated plans for a new church and purchas­ ed three adjacent buildings for the site. now. ‘ Pre-School News Photos <1929). Later Mr. (Hope entered the public relations representing the United Steamship Lines in 1980. aids missions in Liberia and Ni­ geria. This, as in the case of Nigeria, means helping provide education where there is a gen­ eral lack of public or schools. Within the old church there are facilities for pre-school age children and summer day camp Hc^ continued in PubIlc r*- aimost wholly underwritten by Nations activites untl his death. the church. There are some 350 Among his clients, was The boy and girl Scouus, 260 cubs and Brevoort Savings Bank in Brook- brownies sponsored by the church where he directed the bank’s Looking outward, the church Community Acititrities Division. Mr. Hope was commissioned Lieutenant in the U.S. Naval Re­ serve Force, January, 1917, in charge of Naval Censorship and f r e e | Naval Intelligence in San Antonio, Texas. Later, he became Chief All these endeavors came some- of Operations, Cable Censor in what naturally to Rev. James New York, Consultant Office of whose father and eldest brother Strategic Service in Washington, D.C., Publicity Director of the are also pastors. Born in Rich­ Treasury Department for 3rd and mond. Va., August 2, 1909, young 4th War Loan, in New York, 1943. James felt a call to the minis­ try from Ins earliest days. Chester Raines Hope is surviv­ ed by his wife, Eleanor Schorer Hope, artist and writer, formerly identified with the New York World. Education His mother wanted him to get a good education as a prerequis­ ite to the ministry. She also want­ ed him to learn a trade. So after St. Emma's Military Academy. Belmead, Va. and Hampton In­ stitute, he went to Virginia Un­ ion University and Lutheran Sem­ inary, Philadelphia. With the construction of the new building completed three years ago. Rev. James plans to erecta four story education build­ ing on the site of the old church. Rev. James is putting increas­ ed emphasis on education and .missions. He repeated, "o u r greatest emphasis is on our $w*h.” • "The years ahead are not go- dng to be as the past”, he stated, “'and boys will need a much ■higher education to get the typetace, Va. Rev. James was ordained in the Fifth Street Baptist Church of Richmond, Va. by Rev. C. C. Scott in Oct. 1929. He pastored in Virginia and Delaware before coming to Brooklyn with his wife. He met while in .one of his Virginia churches. Their only child, Hylton L. James, Jr., a graduate architectural engineer from Hampton Institute, is now serving in the army at Ft. Eus- Funeral services were held on Saturday. November 30, 1963. Church Marks 10th Year The Lutheran Church of the Incarnation, Foch and Sutphin Btetb., Jamaica, begins the cel­ ebration of its Fortieth Anniver­ sary Year with a Communion Service on Sunday, December 1 at 11 am. The Rev. Dr. Alfred L. Beck, President of the New York Synod of the Lutheran Church in Amer­ ica, 'will be the guest speaker. 1 I Minister Catches Essence Ot JFK In Eulogy The Rev. George B. Lockwood, pastor of the People's Commun­ ity Church, Long Island City and paralyzed veteran of World War U, devoted the Sunday morning service as a memorial to the late John F. Kennedy. His text was taken from the 109th Psalm, verse 5, "And they rewarded me evil for good and hatred for my love.” He said, in part: “The words of the Psalmist could serve quite well as an epitaph for the late President Kennedy. He, of all men, was hated by some of his fellow Americans in spite of the good he sought to do; and yet, this stalwart and courageous fig ure spoke only of preserving the peace and of giving dignity to the human soul. He was generous in his dedication to the Ideals of freedom and brotherhood. "Moot of us are incapable of developing a true spirit of broth­ erhood. We look upon our world as a place where some are to be viewed with friendship and others with ill will and bitterness. “It is ironic that as we ap­ proach Thanksgiving, which Is an acknowledgement of God’s bounty, that there are so many with selfish, arrogant and inde­ pendent spirit of hearts. We lose sight of our deep obligation to life’s highest values, truth and justice and beauty, and a oneness in Jesus Christ. "Just now, the darkness of fears and hatred, of race prej­ udice and religious bigotry has suddenly closed in on us. It seems that there is an evil spirit in our heritage which has a way of black­ ing things out. But the torch of freedom, which Mr. Kennedy car­ ried to valiantly, will never be dimmed. "One of the great hazards to the national unity which he sought, is the inability of some people to adjust themselves to a changing society; and thus they develop neurotic behaviours which take them deeper and deeper into the quagmire of mal­ adjusted living. , ’.'Most people who understand what religion means and know its history will agree with me that when Jesus becomes the con­ suming passion of their lives that they are lifted to an enlightened and soul • satisfying experience where there is no room for hatred ignorance and discontent. "The simple truth of contem­ porary history may well be this; that John Fitzgerald Kennedy brought a new and vigorous meaning to our cultural and per­ sonal lives. He sought to open our eyes in the hope that we would overcome our moral and Intellec­ tual blindness. All that which is creative and essential in living were closely associated with him. The majesty of truth, freedom and the deep respect tor person­ ality. “The result of hi J philosophy brought him into sharp disagree­ ment with some Americans, but the day is not far when the rac­ ists and religious hyprocrites of our day will witness the uncon­ querable power of the ideals in which he believed and for which he died.” ' At Anton’s Restaurant in Queens Village last Saturday given by the Disabled American Veterans. Rev. Lockwood gave another eulogy on the deceased ’president. Youth Council To Meet At Concord, Dec. 8 A conference of Bedford-Stuy- vesant youth sponsored by the Christian Youth Council For Freedom will be held at Concord Baptist Church, 833 Marcy Ave., Brooklyn, Sunday Dec. 8 at 3 P.M. The Christian Youth Council was organized in June 1963, to coordinate youth activities in Bedford - Stuyvesant Churches of all denominations. Member churches in the CYCF are: Youth Groups Concord Baptist. Holy Rosary, St. George Episcopal. Our Lady of Good Counsel, Siloam Presby­ terian, 9t. Philip's, Newman Memorial Methodist, Nazarene Congregational and Berean Bap­ tist. The Council invites a 11 church youth groups, adult ad­ visers clergy and public to at­ tend the rally. The youth rally is to intro­ duce the council and its pro­ gram. It is felt that this unifi­ cation of youth of all denomin­ ations is an important approach to the solution of present com­ munity problems. In conjuction with the New York City Youth Board a six week course for youth group ex­ ecutives is planned to begin Jan. 10, 1964. Additional information on the conference may be ob­ tained from the CYCF, in care of St. Philip’s Church 265 De­ catur St., Brooklyn. NAACP Opens In Hempstead In an effort to more effectively meet the needs of the people the Hempstead Branch NAACP an­ nounced it has opened its doors to the community at large. Hence­ forth, the Branch office at 510 South Franklin Street, Hemp­ stead will be open from 7:30 P.M. to 9:30 P.M. every Wed­ nesday to assist local residents solve the problem# of employ­ ment, housing and education faced by minority groups. The program will consist of assistance with the filing of com­ plaints and referral to appropri­ ate agencies, release of Infor­ mation about Job opportunities and direct Branch intervention when indicated. The Branch hopes to add a grass roots dimension to the civil rights struggle and to increase the volume of com­ munity participation. Dignified Service H. R. HURD, JR. FUNERAL HOME, INC. FUNERAL DIRECTORS Maria Hurd Owens Poul B. Hemsley Emilio E. Owens SLocum brim 10 Tray Ave. or. Fsltan St. Breektye 12, N. T. Rev. Toy/or On JFK "The arrival of John F. Ken­ nedy on the national scene sig­ naled one more chance which God gave to the nation to rise to meet its high destiny as a people proclaiming and practis­ ing freedom”, the Rev. Dr. Gard­ ner Taylor told worshippers at Brooklyn's Concord Baptist Church, Sunday. Rev. Taylor was making 'Some Reflections on the John Kennedy Era”, in his first pulpit appear­ ance at Concord since the as- sination of President Kennedy. The late Chief Executive, he observed, threw two challenges to the nation. It met the first creditably when It elected Mr. Kennedy to the presidency. Rev. Taylor said the nation “must re­ solve to remain forever delivered from the bigotry of the test of creed for the nation's highest secular office.” The second challenge was to do away with "the color test for citizenship.” Mr. Kennedy did not live to see the end of this, but in introducing his civil rights hill, he lnitated vigorous action towards that end. "The hour has come for a great coming together of soul in thia land”. Rev. Taylor stated. "Sanc­ tified by a brave man’s martyr­ dom the nation, black and white, must make America great .truly great, by making our laud right­ eous both in our private careen and ptthtlc conduct.” BROOKLYN'S SSi MOST IlMi » Alai IS < -..->-y.-A i Ufa ■ ■ . MODERN •'«•••«" '« BIBLE SOCIETY AWARD - Rev. Moses Taylor, pastor of Long Island City Gospel Tab­ ernacle, was recipient of the New York Bible Society's Bible Award Sunday Doe. 1 at Morn­ ing Star Missionary Baptist Church, Jamaica. The occasion was the 154th anniversary ob­ servance of the Society He is seen left, with Rev. Roderick Caesar and Rev. Youngve R. Kindberg. (Gill Photo) Parkway ape I FUNERAL Oik » 'Iff 4 H' I I ■ HOME In time of need, come to Unity Parkway Chapel, where you can get expert funeral direction and every modern facility at a budget to suit every purse. Brooklyn r -• Unity Funeral Homei« Hyacinth 3-8200 , 1406 PITKIN AVENUE at Eastern Parkway & Ralph Avenue BROOKLYN, N. Y. "Your Loved Ones Deserve The Best" Mew*'. ■ ’• MAZIE A WILSON x • - i W Mazie Wilson Dies in France Mrs. Mazie Angela Wilson was killed in a car accident In France, in which her hueband, Sgt. James Wilson was injured. Sgt. Wilson, originally from McKeesport, Pa , suffered two broken legs and was brought back to the United States from France. He is still at a base hospital in San Fran­ cisco, Calif, The body of Mrs. Wilson was flown back to San Diego, Calif. where it was interred at Ft. Rosecran National Cemetery. Mrs. WBson died on March IB, 1963, leaving to mourn her mother and father, Rev. A Mrs. John Boyd: Staff Sgt. John Boyd, UB. Amy; Larry Boyd, UJ. Navy; Delon Boyd, Joseph Boyd, Janie Mae Boyd, and Mrs. Ethel GrlmbaU. Brooklyn-L I Church Services YOUR GUIDE TO BAPTIST BAPTIST BETHEL BAPTIST CHURCH "Cmm Si Is Worship and go Bar. W. J. BALL, F THIS SUNDAY l:M A M —Horsing W< l:li A.M.-CSsrcS Beh 11 :M AJL—Maniac W< »:M P.M. ilBBSit Wsi Erstp M Saads Alar Prsjror * itilp. Bsa. P. T. Predi Bis, Be*. W. J. COSNHtSTONE BAFTIST CHUKH Lewis Arsaw and Madlsoa Mreal, Brsoklya THE BBVKBEND SANDY P. BAT THIS SUNDAY t oo A.M.—CHUBCH SCHOOL lkM A.M —MOBNINO WO J:JO P.M— ranBNDSHIP 100 P M.-emUPTMAS BaHLY choib BY THE YOUNG PEOPLES 4 * *7 HOLY TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH Bn. Y. B. THIS SUNDAY Ho A.M.-aaa4ar Srhoel M « AM Miralac WmsMp (:« P.M.-B.T.U. Community CnUr. 4*3 Franklin An. ST. JOHN'S BAPTIST CHURCH »:00 A M -WORSHIP SERVICE • a A M -YOUNG ADULTS CHURCH SCHOOL 10 45 A.M.-church school 11:00 A M.—WORSHIP SERVICE METHODIST NEWMAN MEMORIAL METHODIST CHURCH 2S7 M«aaa Street (Neer Throop) Brooklyn, N. Y. REV. BENNY M DBAS, PASTOR THIS SUNDAY U:SS A.M.-"THE SEARCH rOR SPIRITUAL MATURITY" •;» P.M. - VESPERS FIRST A.M.E. ZION CHURCH THIS SUNDAY «■» A M.—SUNDAY SCHOOL UiM A.M -8UNDAY WORSHIP WEDNESDAY, «:» P.M.- PRAYER MEETING RIBLE ( i r it notr communion, ist Sunday W. O. CABBINOTON, THIS SUNDAY t:OS A M -SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 30 A.M.—JUNIOR CHURCH IU00 A.M -MORN1NO WORSHIP lr» P.M -KATSNDED SUNDAY SCHOOL S:SI P M -EVENING WORSHIP Three 12* Year-Olds Pray For President The prayers of three 12-year- olds of the Sunday school of Met­ ropolitan Community Methodist Church, Madison Ave. and 126th St., appear to have been answer­ ed. They prayed that President Johnson would continue the late President Kennedy’s program. nedy and help her in her sorrow. "I pray that L B. Johnson will oarry on JFK's good work, for when the fatal gun went off and the President went down in his wife’s lap and when the news was heard that (he) was dead, the country went into shock and The prayers of the three, two sorrow. Hflp us all God, please, .girls and a boy, were considered Amen." so eloquent their teacher .George Smith, turned them over to Ed- ! gar Flowers, Sunday school sup- erintendent of the church, who 'asked The Amsterdam News to j publish them. DR. ROBERT MANCE AME Layman Elected NCC Official PHILADELPHIA — Dr. Rob­ ert W. Mance, a Washington phy­ sician and treasurer of the Afri­ can Methodist Episcopal Church, was elected vice president of the National Council of Churches Wednesday at its sixth general assembly here. The AME layman is also a member of the executive com­ mittee of the racial and cultural relations department of the 31- denomination NCC. Dr. Mance, a native of New­ berry. 8. C., is the descendant of AME ministers. His father and grandfather were ministers. He was elected treasurer of the denomination in 1954. Gift Chairman Joseph C. Wilson, president and chief executive officer of Xerox Corporation, has been named chairman of the 1964 Special Gifts Campaign of the National Conference of Christians and Jews, it was announced by Dr. Lewis Webster Jones, president. Michael Parker In his prayers, Michael Parker of 2120 Madison Ave., said: | "Oh, Dear God, please give the new President guidance and strength to lead this vast, chang­ ing country and change this cruel and unjust world 'Please, Lord, give him wis­ dom and show him light. Give him ability and the stature of freedom for all in this segregated nation and the power to over rule the injustices. "God, the new President has taken the oath of office at a depressing time. Please, please, help him see that the Civil Rights Bill is passed. Amen.” Lucille Johnson Said Lucile Johnson of 28 W 128th St.: "Dear God, I pray that the new President will carry out the job that President Kennedy started The tragedy which occured in Dallas really didn’t help our country any. I pray that this will not affect our country in any way that will bring us war. To me, President Kennedy was one ot the best Presidents of the United States. "I also pray that the new Pres­ ident will carry out the things that.. are good for our country. I pray that the man who killed our President will get what he deserves. Amen." Linda Brown Said Linda Brown: “Dear God, now Wess Mr. John F. Kennedy for he was so good Bless the new President and help him to be true. Bless Mrs. Ken JOIN THE CRUSADE FOR SOULS Find God within yourself. Become a member ef the First Apostolic Church of Applied Christianity. Let Rev. JJ. Lovejoy show you how life can he a rewarding experience ef joy and lave through a belief in a living God. REV. J. R. LOVEJOY Founder and Pastor 500,000 Faithful Joined This Revival Be • port of this groat revival by joining the First Apostolic Church uf Applied Christianity. Come bock tu the fold. Join the revival ef souls. Coma bock to your living Gad. Reverend J. B. Levejey is heard ever 15 radio stations from coast to coast, by a congregation ef ever 500,000 faithful. Come in and join his newest church. Meet Rev. J. B. Levejey. Write him at the First Apostolic Church uf Applied Christianity at P. 0. Bex 6678, Washington 9, D.C. 1st APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF APPLIED CHRISTIANITY 274 West 145th Street (Corner 8th Avenue) Society Win Honor Dr. Givens For the past 38 years, the Rqv. Dr. John S. Givens has been showing folks many decades his junior, especially young minis­ ters, that the human product de­ signed and developed in an age when horses and buggies repre­ sented the peak of progress is at least equal, if not superior, to that fashioned since the airplane became the mode of travel. Since the beginning of this year, Dr. Givens has missed al­ most no Sunday from the pul­ pit of Mt. Moriah Baptist Church, Fifth Ave. near 126th St. - yet, as he frequently muses, he’s only ”99 years young in the sight of the Lord.” During those 38 years, now passed into pleasant, cherished memory, he has accomplished what men of lesser breed ap­ proaching the Biblical three score and ten would have sum­ marily dismissed from even lei­ surely imagination. He has multiplied the member­ ship of his church 750 per cent - from a meeting room group of 40 to a flourishing monument to faith of 3,000 vibrant, loyal, ac­ tive souls. His achievement has not gone unnoticed. On its 154th obser­ vance of Universal Bible Sun­ day, the New York Bible Society will pay signal tribute to an ag­ ing servant of Christianity when it gives its annual award to Dr. Givens at rites at Salem Metho­ dist Church, Seventh Ave. and 129th St., at 3:15 p.m. Sunday. To Share Pulpit With His Son The Rev. J. J. Strickland will share the pulpit of St. James Baptist Church, 406 Lenox Ave., with his son, the Rev. Paul Strickland, pastor of the church, it was announced thio week by the younger minister. The older minister, in whose honor the Harlem church was named at its founding in 1950, still t pastors * Baptist church in Georgia. He will reportedly commute be­ tween here and Georgia, perhaps once or twice a month, until he finally moves here to lolly share in the ministering of St. James Church. VOTE FOR FINALIST IN THE WWRL Organ Contest HEAR THE FINALISTS 10:15-10:30 A.M. Mon. - Fri. On Fred Barr's "Gospel Time" O God of men and of nations: We come to Thee with deep grat­ itude for our surpassing heritage. We ask that Thou wilt so under­ gird us that we shall never be disobedient to the heavenly vision of a righteous natioa with free­ dom and justice and opportunity for all. Forbid that in dangerous days such as these the precious oil of our national unity should be spilled upon the ground, to ignite selfish fires. Rather, may it still feed the flame of liberty’s torch as it enlightens the whole dark­ ened earth. In a revelation that may star­ tle us and open our eyes to the solemn facts of these volcanic days, make clear to* us that the massed difficulties besetting us are not so much political and ec­ onomic as they are moral and spiritual; and that In all our baf­ fled search for solutions, only by fresh awareness of Thee can the present social decay, which threatens the inner life and the outer strength of the nation, be changed to decency and righteous­ ness. We lift our prayer in the Sav­ ior’s name. Amen. THANKS FOR THE MEMOR­ IES — Washington Brooks (sec­ ond from right), 93, holds plaque given him by deacon Garland McEachin, in behalf of the congregation of Shiloh Baptist Church at 2226 Seventh Ave. in recognition of his years of faithful and distinctive serv­ ice to the church. Looking on at the honoring of the retiring trustee are his minister, the Rev. Leslie Wainwright (left) and deacon Lester Blaylock. Bible. Quiz What man: 1. Was freed from jail although he was guilty? 2. Said “Thou shalt never wash my feet?” 3. Was condemned to death for saying his prayers? < 4. Gave names to the animals on earth? 5. Sang in a duet with Paul in a prison dungeon? (See Answers Below) Correction The fifth question in the Bible Quiz In the Nov. 25 edition asked “What in the reel «*. «U EVIL?” aad question by I The aaewer shonld have been "For the leve ef meney io the root of all evtt,” si rsritfog to the text of First Timothy 8:18. The error wan disclosed by reader T. A. Morton of White Plaine. ATTUmONI CHURCH and SINGING GROUPSI CHORAL D8SW4BUSI CHOIR a PULPIT Robes on Credit 1ASY TERMS1 AS UTTLI AS $1 Down • o o 12 Months TO PAY o We coll on O Show now i icuvriQii, aryiv*/ db mmnmroIIggb O Take individual O Quote complete lew price Wear year rebee oe yea pay • Mei Phoee new • Day er IN NEW YORK ACademy 2-7100! Newark ReiMentst MHchuH 2*3861 Operators Oa Duty M Been SPRINGER ROBE Co. Advertised in EBONY New Jersey Presbytery Picks Rev. Anderson It's an almost sure thing the next moderator of the General Assembly of the United Presby­ terian Church will be a Negro. Either the Rev. Edler G. Haw­ kins of the Bronx’s St. Augustine Presbyterian Church or the Rev. Benjamin J. Anderson of the Witherspoon Presbyterian Church in Princeton, N.J. Or some other Negro, if any others are nomin^fed by any of the other nearly 200 Presbyter­ ies before next May 21 when the General Assembly meets in Okla­ homa City. Rev. Anderson, 44, was nom­ inated for the highest office of the 3,276,000-member denomina­ tion by the Presbyterian Synod of New Jersey last week. Rev. Hawkins, 56, was named on Nov. 6 by the Presbytery of New Ycrit City. The election of either one — or any o.her Negro — would be the first in the history of the denomination. Rev. Hawkins came within hair’s breadth of becoming mod- Mississippians Pray Together At JFK Rites erator in 1960 when he received 469 votes to the Rev. Dr. Her­ man Turner’s 471. Dr. Turner, an Atlanta, Ga., clergyman, chose Rev. Hawkins to serve as vice moderator. He was the first Ne­ gro in that office. The moderator serves in a one- year term as the denomination’s spiritual leader and travels throughout the nation in the non-salaried post. Mrs. Hedgeman In Radio Series Mrs. Anna Arnold Hedgeman will comment on the speech of the Dr. Robert Spike of the race and religion commission of the National Council of Churches and the Students Nonviolent Coordin­ ating Committee's conference in Washington at 12:45 p.m. Sun­ day on Radio Station WRVR. Mrs. Hedgeman, civic leader and coordinator of the race and religion commission of the NCC, will comment each week on a series of programs, aired from Riverside Church, 120th St. and Riverside Drive, which began last Sunday. JACKSON, Miss. — Negro and white worshippers knelt together last week Monday at St. Peter’s Pro-Cathedral to honor the memory of the late John Fitz­ gerald Kennedy. The mourners Included high state officials, with the exception of Gov. Ross Barnett who at­ tended similar rites at the First Baptist Church here. The Most Rev. Richard O. Gerow, 79-year-old bishop, re­ marked that he was "very grati­ fied" that leaders of all religious groups and members of both races were attending the mem­ orial services. Repeat “The Prodigal Son” Because ot the unanimous en­ thusiasm of previous viewers, “The Prodigal Son” will be stag­ ed at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at Walker Memorial Baptist Church, 27 W. 116th St. under sponsorship of The Prodigal Son Committee, it) was announced this week. The play, written and direct­ ed by James A. Jeffers, a mem­ ber of 9t. Martin’s Episcopal Church at Lenox Ave. and 122nd St, was presented at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church on Sept. 15 where it wowed viewers. MORTICIANS Estab. 1884 HUGH A. LASSITER 1315 Ametentam Ave. N« LONNIE B. 240 Wert 129 St. MARSHALL BALENTON 1292 Hoe Ave. ALLENE D. BOOZER 58 Went 10S St. LEE ROUSE 2861 Exterior St. VICTORIA GILLARD 393 Manhattan Ave. JOSE HERNANDEZ 400 Manhattan Ave. MINNIE COOK 1925 Seventh Ave. N« Norfolk. Va. nber U. MS Uberiy. KC 12. USS Little Rock. Ark 9, USS B.C. 13, USS Ohto IS. USS KC 15. USS n. uss Aiken. KC. sber tt, USS Tbs Carolina Chanel, Inc. 228 LENOX AYE^ N.YX. • UM|b 4X698 WAINWRIGHT & SON FUNERAL HOME, Inc. Undertakers and embalmers ECONOMY with Dignity Rev. Bdw. W. Wainwright Founder Rev. Leslie E. Wainwright General Manager and President LICENSED UNDERTAKERS AU 6-4290 LICENSED UNDERTAKERS Ida t. Wainwright Treasurer Grace W. Wainwright Notary 162 WEST 136th STREET WE Connect With All Undertakers in si taut Council’s Family of Man dinner here in New York will cherish that night for as long as life lasts. The council built a monument of faith fo him that night when it paid (tribute to him, the first Roman Catholic to receive its es­ teem, aid- to an he stood for by inviting spiritual leaders of the Roman (T&tWie and Jewish faith to laud an American who lived and died for democracy. A Mission Needed In addition to expanding and practicing universal brotherhood, Christendom could render a greater service to its founder and His ideals by converting as many nominal Christians to active, liv­ ing Christianity as is humanly possRdy; We have many churches and many more church members, but few real Christians as events ev­ erywhere, especially in the ordin­ ary lives of you and I, seem to reveal. Please Note Churches and church groups desirous of pifblishing events in this column should have them in not later than the Thursday of the week prior to the publication day (Thursday) of this newspa­ per — in other words one week earlier than piAlication of the edi­ tion in which it is to appear. For example: If a church wish­ es to announce an event which is to take place on Dec. 22, It should submit notice of same to the newspaper on Dec. 12 or earlier. Fast Drama Howard Fast, noted novelist and author, will make his debut on network television on Sunday, December 8, with an original television drama, "The Five Sons.” The play, written for the Eternal Light, will be presented on the NBC network from 1:30 to 2 p.m. Combined Rites The congregation of Harlem’s St. Mark’s Methodist Church joined last Sunday with the congregation of Janes Meth- odist Church, Reid Ave. and Mkm- roe St., Brooklyn. The Rev. Dr. Charles Warren, St. Mark’s pastor, also visited, but the Rev. Thomas P. Gris­ som Jr., presided at the rites. St. Mark’s also held its School Bazaar on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday of this week. Orthodox Memorial The Coptic Orthodox Church held its Memorial Service In hon­ or of the late President last Sun day at Pro-Cathedral, 2395 Eighth Ave. Piano, Anyone' Does anyone or any church want to get rid of a piano (one that plays) that is no longer need­ ed? The United Christian Baptist Church at 719 E. 223rd St., the Bronx, is anxious to get one. Its pastor, the Rev. Elias Minor, says the church must have one for its services. Festival of Lights Many of the city's Jews will celebrate Chanukah, the Festival of Lights, at sundown on Dec. 10 in commemoration of their strug­ gle for religions freedom during the tyrannical reign of the Greco- Syrian Emperor Antiochus Epi- phanes in 165 BC. NAAACT Fund The coffers of the NAACP’s de­ fense fund will be blown larger Friday evening of this week aft­ er Martha Pryor Anderson gives her dramatic recital at Bethel AME Church, 54 W. 132nd St. Soprano Elsie Marcelo, accom­ panied by Bernard Jackson, will also sing in the "civil rights” pre­ sentation. Rev. Reeves The Rev. Jasper Reeves, pastor of Harlem’s Community Baptist Church, speaks Sunday afternoon- at the United Christian Baptist Church. 719 E. 223rd St.. the Bronx, at the invitation of United's pastor, the Rev. Elias Minor. Gospel Singers New York’s National Gospel Singers Choral Unioc, headed by | Mme. Byrdie Bradley, will hold their annual local convention, Sunday through Dec. 15, night, at 303 W. 121st St., their) headquarters. JFK Those who last saw the late j President Kennedy at the Protes- Bible Answers 1. Barabbas 2. Daniel. 3. Peter. 4. Daniel K Adam. ____________ In Memoriam In loving memoiy of my hari»and. MELVIN WILUAMS, who slept away November 14th, 1961 Devoted wife, Edythe Williams GEBECH.’B, JOHN: In 1 wring mem­ ory of my beloved brother who ory of m ‘ Bd this life November 28th. rlf^artPd PRESBYTERIAN SILOAM PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH •* * J T < Votes mutt be received by Dec. 15 , i i rsaa a Marry Arsa. ___ BBY. DB. MILTON A. OALAM0ON. Pastor THIS SUNDAY N. T. Tune in for the Finalists and Voting instructions Services In Local Churches MANHATTAN BAPTIST MANHATTAN OTHER SERVICES THE BAPTIST CHAPEL OF THE FREE SPIRIT 3429 Park Ave.. Breax. N. Y. Between 186-187 Street! Rev. R. E. L. Hardmend. Paator Church School 9:45 A M. Morning Worahlp U A.M. Evening 8 P.M. Wed. 8 P.M. Prayer and Bible Study Paator'i Period of Consultations each evening Tuee -Frl. 8-8 no appointment needed Mr. Eugene Rush at the Plano Mr. A. Higgins at the Organ MOUNT OLIVET 201 Lenox Avev (Cor. 120th St.) Dr. O. Clay Maxwell A LoveUe A. Maxwell. B.D. THIS SUNDAY BUNDAY SERVICES: Sunday School 9 00 A.M. Worship 11:00 A M. and 7:10 P.M. Baptist Training Union 1:30 PM. WASHINGTON HEIGHTS CHURCH of CHRIST 108 W. 130th ST . N.Y. — HOWARD V. JOHNSON. Minister THIS SUNDAY 11:00 A.M.-LORDW DAY SCHOOl^ll OS A M. end 8:00 Mt-1 WEDNESDAY, 8:00 P.M. — BIBLE CLJ ALL WELCOME COMMUNITY CHURCH « EAST 39th STREET SUNDAY, DECEMBER I, 1963 U A.M.-DR EDWIN P. BOOTH, Profeaeor 1 Hlatory: Boston University School ef Tki L1QION" __________ , 4 P.M TREE FORUM: "CIVIL LIBERTIES: WHAT DTMDCTJON ARE THEY TAKING?" / Speakers — DR. CLARK FOREMAN. JOHN Oe J. MRS. ANNETTE PROVINZANO. ANDREW S. “ BROADWAY CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH (UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST) Rreedway at Mtk Street DR. LAWRENCE L. DUROIN THIS SUNDAY 11 :M A M.-"ANY GOOD TH1NO OUT OT NAZARETH** lO tf A M -CHURCH SCHOOL AMD NURSERY 4 4 DAY UJETVEMn CAI C FRIDAY & Saturday IIULvVlIII) OhLL THIS SUNDAY & MON. CARPETS Sil(- »r«. •Str I TO BROADLOOMS CARPET VALUES FROM S239 TO 17.75 SQ. YD. SkMBB fna aen Ibaa a dazai • BreadImm la all iaearafar • aba roa«n«fi aakara calara ____ . • Atailalla la 12* M< II' i vahrats, fwatfs, aarvtd wiffka • Com oarfy far ttlaefiaa BRING YOUR OWN MEASUREMENTS i • Fuff rslT»— bnfnacas of rails au worn FOAM BACK BR0AM00M 11:3S at • PEL b ‘M’- 9413 Church Ave., B’klyn (s.«rlmd.R ey CJfiOO 8M.) ’’Creative Toys Around the World,” is the title of an ex­ hibition of toys currently being sponsored at the Brooklyn Chil­ dren's Museum by the Creative Playthings Foundation The ex-! |hibit._ which opened Monday.' ^Dec ’2, will remain open ants) 'Monday. Dec. 30, in the mu­ seum’s Brower Park building, be­ tween 10 a m. and 5 p.m., Mon­ day through .(Saturday, except Christmas Day, Dec.26. Toys of all .shapes and sizes, carefully selected to represent the handiwork ot some of the world’s finest toymefcera, lead­ ing artists and designers, are dis­ played in an exhibit area de­ signed as a playroom tor pre­ school children. In keeping with the museum’s :p4icy cf invit ng visitors to han­ dle museum materials, children 5 years old and younger will be permitted to touch and play with toys oa display. The museum is located at Brooklyn Ave. and Park Place According to Frank Caplan, pres­ ident of Creative Playthings. Inc., the exhibit will subsequent­ ly be shown around the country. 4 BROC Atlantic A vei Eastern I Pitkin Ave Kings Highway NASSAU Oil Paintings 33-25 North Station F Oil paintings may be cleaned .by washing .a small portion at a time In lukewarm mild suds, dry­ ing immediately. When entire sur­ face Is cleaned, follow by going over lightly with a flannel mois­ tened with linseed oil. •FRI Postage-Fn SEND THI 1AIHIM r "lfs The End" On your Dial Devoted sister, Florence Gibbons. CONVENT AVE. BAPTIST CHURCH Card Of Thanka US W. 149th ST. (Corner ef Convent Ave.) Due to numerous condolences that makes It impossible to thank each ef you parwneHy. Hence a alncerely thank you here. The Sherman family 8:00 A M —Worahlp, Rev Wlleon. Preaching S:30 A M —Sunday Church School li ne AM.—Worship. Rev Wilson, Preaching <:tS P.M-BasUet Kvertn “ 7:30 P.M.-WoraWp, Rev. " THIS SUNDAY THE BEVEREND M. L. WILSON PASTOR CATHOLIC OUR LADY OF LOURDES CATHOLIC CHURCH W. la St. (Bet. Amsterdam E BT. REV. MSGR. HENRY J. SUNDAY MASSES: AJL-S:S» •:•». M:SS (H ns p m. WEEKDAY MASSES AM.—7, E 9. PM—13:OS. ADULT BIBLE-CATECHISM CLASSES-TUEB. E I AMS-TERIIAM NEWS, Sat, Dec. 7, 19€3 (j* Brook IVII , » » Westchester t Magazine Page Night Clubs amusements, theater t andering By CHESTER WEST Assasaiastioa of President Joobi And Virginia Conway and Hel- F. Kennedy affected and still at- ena Matthews did thrfr turkey fecta many thmgs . .’. Westches-) chomping down in Chester, Pa., ter Links changed from Christ- with Virginia's aunt and uncle, mas pbsnntng to Memorial aer- Mr. and Mrs. Richard Plater . . . rices, . . . first Westchester so- While Oiive and Chester Camp- eial club to do so. The Kappa bell did' their Turkey Day visit- Karntval's gaiety was forced ing with the Freeman Woodsons' when their annual affair occurred of Hollis. L.I. V. . Mr^,. Camp­ on THAT Friday at the Fountain bell and Mrs. Woodson were Vir- bead in New Rochelle . . . Rev. ginia Union classmates. G. P-Wiggins had his Mt. Olive: IncidentaUyi Mrs. Campbell Church services a fe* jiarc(jy digested the National waj hours after the president was •“a *'*L* * • * * * a * * 'for business and banquet at the Grand Session of the Prince Hall Victor Curry, who recently op- order of Eastern Star. Massa- ened a candy store and bought a chusetts Jurisdiction, held In Bos- new house, already has taken ton over the store next door with L plans tor expansion .’ . . Mrs. Daisy Peterson is the ’first’ to Louis Lomax, author, lecturer be on the Peekskill Sears’ office and former schoolteacher who, staff . . . Westchester County according to Sara Slack, once Press’ Doris McNeil Richards **« pastor of a church in Strat (remember her famous West- ford. Conn , her hometown, was cheater Notes?) has gotten her guest speaker at the Westchester driver’s license — finally! Can Committee for Justice Now me- y'imagine a girt baring a car mortal for Pres. Kennedy at the and didn’t bother tc drive?. . . Carver Center in White Plains Speaking of cars, pretty Barbara'- - Scott Davis’ spouse, Jean. Nanvood. Urban League Gal Fri- is director of music at Peeks- day, will be dazzling them this bill’s Woodside School . . . Cold time next week in her sleek, new weather has Mrs. Virginia Nelson yaHer Malibu sports model . . . dreaming of going to the Baha By-the-way, the Westcuester Ur- mas ... On our sick - but - get- ban League Guild packed ’em ting-sassy list is Mrs. Helen John- ill at thetr Square Dance at the son. ot Tarrytown, who just came Legion Hall. Elmsford. Janet home from Phelps Memorial Hos Hsyss is president . . . Paifc St. P»tal, and Mrs. C C. Conway, of AMEZion had a Bazaar . . . Elmsford. who is recovering THE LITTLE FOXES - Brook lyn social club had an jnusual “All for Nothing’’ party at the Cove last Saturday evening. For $8 00 patrons were enter­ tained. wined and l ined. In this picture are shown ‘ the Little Foxes ', left to right: Patricia Brown ipres.1, Fannie Bowie N o r in a Emma Ruta. and \aomi Wiilian Margar Smit Merr.tt Photo: * * W DeCarios’ opening night la Tar­ rytown attracted « lot of the Upperclassmen ... George Gran- benyp Flemtago Room has some from an operation at New York's; Presbyterian Hospital . . . Peek skill's rejected Negro applicants for the Volunteer Fire Depart­ ment have turned their cases ov- In Johnson's Gold er to the Peekskill and New York Room. GG hat been featuring State NAACP Legal Redress headliners but the Geld Room is Committees for processing. supposed to etar Della Reese in------------------------ a one-niter . , . Greenburgh's St. />«... e • Matha’a Rknscopal Church has its 1st Annual Pariah Dance on Pearl Harbor Day, Dec. 7th, at the Knights of Columbus Hall. White Plains . . . "God the Only Cause and Cre­ ator” is the subject of this Sun­ day’s Bible Lesson to be read at all Christian Science church serv- eooal Church has v,iiristliin SCICIICP Long, tall atrip off the “old” Bacoo, Ben Bacon, Jr. (6’3”) was ices’ home from the University of To- God's government of the univ- ledo long enough to peck his beg erse and all mankind will be em- with turkey sandwiches. Benny phasized in many of the read- —‘Ettie Ben,’ they used to call ings, including this Bible verse: him — is a freshman in the "For the kingdom is the Lord’*: School of Business Administra-.and he is the governor among tion . . . the nations" iPsalms 22 28'. BtAUllFt YOUR HOMt ,iii Custom Built Radiator Enclosures LADDER SCENE — This bevy^. of lovelies are some of the models shown during the "Lad­ der Scene” from "This Crazy World of Pants” presented by Ken Henry and George Bruce at the fabulous Fantasy East Supper Club in Hollis. L-R. $«6° 16 Decorator Colors Staten Island Cotillion Set Yoor measurements ap4 pkkup FurpHure Steel— 1A baked hi ti ir tw>to2V 2r tooctb $ 8.30 10.40 30* • 12.20 ” 36* 14.00 * 42* 15.80 * 48* Akm24’W<M$1.Wmnl’ 1 Black Tvnnsylvinia Ara. opans-aao sattaSJe Thurs to NATIONAL METAL 2618 ATLANTIC AVE BROOKLYN Paragon Progressive Community Inc. cordially invite you to attend its 24tl« ANNUAL DANCE Saturday evening, December 14,1963 from 11 pun. te 3 e.m. Music by CLAUDC "FATS" GREENE and his Orth. CHRIS COLOMBO and his Orch. at the beautiful RIVERSIDE PLAZA HOTEL 252 West 73rd Street (ot Broadway) Far raearvatiaos colt PARAGON PROGRESSIVE, NE 1-6983 DANCE COMMITTEE Elsie L. Gill, Laura Seale, Richard K. Smith, Richard Cargill Sabecriptien 6340 ----------------- --------- , The planning Committee of the annual Staten Island Cotillion for the benefit of the Staten Is­ land branch of the NAACP has been appointed by the president Henry R. DeHart. Chapel Players Chapel Players, the Dramatic group of St. Joseph's College for Women will have their annual major Fall Production Friday Members of the committee of the event scheduled for June 5th evening December 6 at 8:30 at the Nelson Terrace, include Mrs. Dorothy D. DeVaughan, |P.M. in the College auditorium. The play is open to the general chairman, Mrs. Rose Murray, public for a small fee. A de­ Mrs. Edna Williams and Mr. parture from the ordinary dra­ Hart ex-officio. matic fiare will be presented io an experimental evening, entitled “A Tribute to Garcia Lorca ”. 'Crazy World' Has Problems It was reported that due to a dash of personalities in manage­ ment, this dissolution was brougat about. Ken Henry and George Bruce have dissolved partnership after their second presentation of “This Crazy World of Pants” staged at Fuzzie s in Freeport last Sunday Uhder the direction of Nellie Vivas, noted play critic for the South American Theatre, the group will present Spanish drama­ tist Garcia Lorca's THE LOVE OF DON PERLTMPLLN AND BELHSA IN THE GARDEN Thia is a farce in one act, origi­ nally written for puppets. The oast: Kevin McSweeney, Joan Maher of Westchester, Kathleen Tighe (St. John's Place) Joan Fitzsimmons (51st Street) will interpret the characters as pop­ pets and will wear puppat masks. Reputedly, George Bruce re Mary Am Barry (95th St., B’klyn reived 51,000 for his end of the 9) and Toni Lombardo (Rich- deal. Henry wiH continue withiniond Hili' portray sprites who the company, while Bruce will are friends of the audience and go on to form a new group. This company had an the ear marks of producing successful en­ tertainment, hut the break-up has caused evident problems. -» ) let them in on several scc/ets. There’s something for YOU on every page of this issue of The Amsterdam News. Toys! Toys! Rosita Green, Hackki Thon son. Madelyn Haney, Ti Hall, Rosita Rodriguez. Ch lotte Stewart, Eliza Kelly a Dorothy Brown. 71 Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- Don Allen Agencies Have Chevrolets And Pontiacs The Don Allen Midtown Chevro- Sam Coran, Kenneth Alempner, let, Inc. and the Don Allen Poo- Don Ortey, Lino Yard, Dob Ber- tiac, one of the largest automo- anc| Norman Montague. bile agencies in the '* AmOng the Pontiac representa now displaying the 1964 Chevro- • let and Pontiac cars at its sale; «**• are Palomo' Shu1’ Comb Harlem For Last Of Escaped Mental Patients Rene Hernandez, 17, of 225 E. They forced the driver to i 99th St, last of ;he five escapees at 125th St. and Lenox A' from Rockland State Hospital in *here they abandoned him. K Orangebus,. V. T. w„ ,U11 be- X ,w^ ‘"d c,uU sought b, goUce thi, week as ‘ ""T ° "* lhe tM™' "h* Amsterdam New. went to stores at Broadway and 57th St. man, Dick Cain. Leslie Balogh, _reM Friday afternoon, Phillips ' tar VwS Beil Collins ccd bert Hrsson of the Snyder Ave detectives hiding under the bed in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Coak Cannon at 121 W. 21st St., Brooklyn. Police said Gainer knocked on the Cannon's front dqor and in­ quired about their niece. Edna Shoemaker who was not at home The 6-2, 225-pound Gainer stayed at the house, police said. , a Roberts, accompanied by ‘ Lw relatives, surrendered to the po­ lice at the Benedict Ave. pre­ cinct in the Bronx. He told police he spent two days in the Bow­ ery and on the subway. He be­ came weary and hungry and surrendered. Delay Mass Protests In Cambridge CAMBRIDGE, Md. — Mrs. Gloria Richardson, leader of the Cambridge Non-violent Action1 Committee, declared a morat-l orium on mass demonstrations here during the national period of mdnrning for President Ken-1 ' nedy which ends on Dec. 22. She stressed that the cancella- I tion of protest marches did not reflect any significant progress on the part of local people in working out the tense problems here but rather "our sense of - bereavement for a young Pres- » ident who had personally tried hi utmost, in the face cf strong, resistance from Congress, to make American democracy more than an ideal." ■ J . 1A , tOpenheimer were found hid Returned t« the hospital are tn the home of Phillips. brot, Albert Gainer, 35. of 545 W. 112th Richard, by Det. Sgt. Eug St.; Robert Phillips, 21, of 330 McDermott with detectives P< W. 144th St.Jsseph Openheimer. Booke and John Scionti of 15, of 218 I. «W» St., and Joseph West 123rd St. detectives. Phil D. Roberts, 23,. of 1105 Morrison reportedly told his sister-in-1 Eleanor, that he had been all Ave., Bronx. The quintet esaped from Rock- cd to come home for Thanks land State Hosgtal Friday by forcing guard WfJiam Davis, 32, to drive them toHarlem at gun Police found Phillips behind point In his car after binding door of the bed room and Q] and gagging atother guard, heimer in a closet. Winthrop Fyall, 3 and placing Gainer, who has a police ord of 13 arrests, was found him in a closet. In Closet Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Dec. 7, 1963 • 43 Dawnald R. Henderson, a 1960 honor law school graduate from the New York University Law School, has been appointed an Assistant U S. Attorney in the Civil Division of the U.S. At­ torney’s office for the Southern District, U.S. Attorney Robert M. Mnrgenthau disclosed. A bachelor, Mr. Henderson was a Root-Tilden Scholar at NYU and was Editor of the Law Review. He later received a Ful­ bright scholarship and studied for a year at the London School cf Economics. He asumed his new duties this week. BOTTLED IN LSCOTLANDgjjj wMAMKEY imnister ASK FOR HANKEY.. AND YOU HAVE PERFECTION 86 Proof Blended Scotch Whisky Sole U S Importers PEERLESS IMHPRTERS. II.L BROOkiVS * AUTHORIZED BUICK DEALER mmAUTO INSURANCE*** AMY AUTO •. ANY DRIVER • FASTEST FS1 A PLATES • 1 DAY SERVICE BEST FOR DRIERS UNDER 25 OR OVER 65 • LEARNERS A BEGINNERS OUR SPECIALTY Small Deposit | Pay Monthly • Your Credit's O.K., No Investigations • Contact Us Now 2111 7th Ave. N.Y.C (Between 125 A 126 Sts. Opposite RKO Alhambra) MO 64788 , The decision, which appeared I to be In opposition to the course ' preferred by the affiliated Stu- I dent Nonviolent Coordinating ' Committee, is expected to cause I' a reduction in the number of 'National Guardsmen who have I been on patrol here since the ' middle of last June. SCIENTIST SERGEANT - Sfc Adolphus Samms, "soldier sci­ entist” of Yuma Test Station, Ariz., looks through his paper on “Advanced Design Rocket Boosters." Sfc Samms, whose hometown is Boston, is in Wash­ ington D.C., with working mod­ els of his rocket inventions. He will confer with National Space and Aeronautics Administra­ tion officials on the feasibility of his patented ideas. Copies of the 60-page paper have also been sent, by request, to the Executive Office of the Presi­ dent, Office of Space and Tech- INSTANT CREDIT! OUR LOWEST PRICES! Now Showing the All-Now FINAL SACRIFICE CLEARANCE! on Special Inroductory Deals That Will Sava You Hundredsl 3510 WEBSTER AVE. at 210 St. Cor.Gun Hill Rd. Bx 014-7200 Open 9 to 9 BROADWAY'S SUPERMARKET 57th STREETS the Chevelle. Will Jackson and Bill Steiner. Applicants Sought For CG School WASHINGTON. DC. <- Col­ lege graduates and college sen­ iors graduating in January 1964 may apply for the Coast Guard Officer Candidate School class starting February 9, 1964. Upon completion of 17 weeks trainii^, graduates will be com­ missioned Ensign in the U.S. Coast Guard Reserve. Those who qulify may fulfill their mil­ itary obligation through this pro­ gram. The Coast Guard Officer Can­ didate School is at the Reserve Training Center in historic York­ town. Virginia, oa the York River For further iaformation, write Commandant t PTP-2), U S. Coast Guard, Washington, D.C., 20226. 1 with a one-week all tea paid trip for two at Beach, Fla. Other top len shown next to Tor­ re Joseph Biondo and ies Tseckares. spital Group es For Union gaining ■rbocker and Manhattan convict- nonmedical employees of Police said Burley, also an ex- f°rced the Sir> , to accompany him to a room to „ Ear and Throat hospitals the same bullding in which he , _ x voted for collective bar-> ijves iast Wednesday and erim- g representation by Local inally assaulted her. The girl was Drug and Hospital Em- taken to Sydenham Hospital „ >s union, the union claimed where she is confined. k Burley, who has a long police record, was taken into police cus- Foner, spokesman of Lo- t<xjy by Det. Clifford Fenton of 99. said the nonprofession- the W 123rd St. detectives ■rsonnel of Knickerbocker Thursday. Police said Burley, tai at 130th St. and Convent who bad lwo yea” of college- , . , . ,, . admitted the assault. William Lumaden, senior vice president of the Bowery Savings Bank, has been appointed co- chairman of the savings bank division for the 1963 fund-raising drive of Visiting Nurse Service of New York. The anhouncement wag made by Bernhard M. Auer, publisher of Time magazine and general chairman of Ute fund­ raising campaign of the 70-year- old nursing service agency. AUTO INSURANCE $20 DOWN NO EXTRA CHARGES ACRO BROKERAGE t Britain and other U.N. del 142 Rockaway Avanua 144 Sutter A veuve ■ ■no.ao,, huge inventory of lika-nu clean- ia-o-whiatla, top value used car,. Toke your pick of the lot for only 51 dodge '”'2.0,. s ewev *62 Ramble R&H *l e* 1 “7. *h,te _6J CHEV •<00r* E^'P. 'okaa, rforoori Aoto Pu, C * 5•s • *8' w 60 Lark DSMOBILES iS—SOME WITH AIR COND. 3 Executive Cars SEE TO APPRECIATE '63'$ and '64'$. . , IINCOIN MERCURT •62 CADILLAC 63515 Convertible, full power, black MERCURY . ,edan, equipped • bl 4-dr. .edan • auto, trans, •61 CADILLAC 4-dr. hardtop . air cond, 62 COMET ’(3 COMET 4-dr, ieden - equipped A.k about eur-0ne Year Nationwide Cre,t Used Cer WerTatty B'wey at S4th St. LT 1-7S00~Fir,t Ave. ,t*l.tSt. LT 1-7110 „ roar ,»i l-gl BUICK L* CADDY ’61* I.59 jagu**1* Ubuickb^ 1.57 mPR*’*c ■ •60 CHRYY 1 59 CHiYYk I.SB OLOS f Super 185 fl59 S4H' nh° 4190 Dofet'™ IWHtoEIXATE delivery On Almost Sr Y GENERAL Rotors PEPPER & POTTER BUICK Authorised BUICK Dealer 12S Fletbu.h Ave. Ext. Break tyn i Peat ef Manhattan Bridge Hwn« MA 4-0720«m«n.ww °*er “PMo, You eon bring your CHCVROLET to Don Allan Until Midnight far Our Fomou* Service CHEVROLET & PONTIAC GENERAL MOT Famous forthe Finest PICK YOUR PAYMENT PLAN! TODAY'S SPECIALS! 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Member Vnl-rard Charge Service COMET *875 &nd MAACI* PrcttenlB Talk As part of Its prograrn,. the fAACP Cultural Committee pre- enta a library digcuision on Wednesday, December II, B PM tt the Macon Library. The topic, ’The Pre** and Its Coverage of he Negro Community". Speakers !rom the metropolitan papers will participate in the diseuasion, tnd question and answer period, Thia will be the Oral of a aeries of diacusaion programs feeling with the Brooklyn non­ white community A “Quality Value” late model used car at ADILLAC NEW YORK ••Quditf Value"meere more comfort, greater performance, new 3i»wpp*»rnnceand condition-et extremely low coat. CHECl THESE TYPICAL CADILLAC VALUES •IT to ^LIMOUSINES •12 PLCTW00D •12 IKON. AIR-OONDITIOBED •12 COVE DEVILLE •II FLftTWOOD •II SE AN DEVILLI •IB SIpAN, AIR-C0B0IT10NED •BB C6IPE DIVILLI CONVIRTIBLI SPICIALf OVER STOCKED WITH IH I-1962* 1863 CADILLACS Bay ana far complete metering comfort all threagh the year. Pabalaua tavlnga. Imperial ■ Chrysler • Plymaath Valiant Aatharisad Dealer Since 1922 630 EAST FORDHAM MAD DRONX, N. Y. NEW-a 5-1200 USED - CY 66176 Over 100 New Cars, la Stack Naw A 1 »■ 4> a I p Must Sacrifice These Money-Saving 3HLL USED CARS AT ROCK-BOTTOM PRICES MANHATTAN SALES AND SERVICE OPERATIONS CHRYSLER MOTORS CORPORATION & 135th Street AU 6-7600 ALL '64 MODELS NOW ON DISPLAY OF COURSE YOU'LL BUY YOUR BUICK AT BENNETT «BUICK 1964 GRAND PRIX SPORTS COUPE PONTIACS AND TEMPESTS Grand Prix for Immediate Delivery ~ Bonneville Star Chief ~ TKABI ENM5 CouPe \ Catalina -, Large Selection Of Other Used Cars L_------ ALMOST EVERYBODY does: 1964 UICKS It just stand*^ta rtgsop ithat more follto on goinb to boy where the h«»t deal » I?'*'''* up by Hie, bwt sarvi^a. H row wonf the lowest Buick price, top trade-in allowance, crrpdit terms to suit your needs . . . why don't you see how ni re it is to do business with Bennett Buickl LAST CALL! Sava up to hundreds of dollars on our few remaining, brand naw 1963 BUICKS First Com« . . . First Served I Always a Fine Chatca af USED CARS at Pantattfcelly Law Prleatl ^JkWDEPOSIT GUARANTEES DELIVERY for XMAS •PayNexfYeor* 2025 ATLANTIC AVE . B KLYN ( Car. Hayklntan Ava. 1 EVS-3400 • OPEN EVES Authorized Buick Dealer Byaneh Shawream: ISJtb St. g Broadway . SW S-0780 Avtheriied Chevrolet Dealer M-14 etalnwiy Loeg WaM City ORIN FVEHINt AS 40700 (AT INI! atotnway M . Rahway Su DODGE *650 £and Co^ mr AMi CW IT T- BBnk Terms H.HART CY 8-8878 Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- 46 • N. ¥. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Dec 7, 1963 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS I ROOMS tv > - <. » Manhattan Famished Manhattan—UnfumiBhed hranx-Unfurnished Branx-Unfurnished Brenx—Unfurnis ed Breakfyw - Farwithed 4 ROOMS AND OVER 1-2-3 Ra 4 ROOMS AND OVER 1. 2 and 3 Room 1, 2 and 3 Rooms 4 Reairs end Over 1-2-3 R '<1 ST . * Sl Nicholas Ave. 4 lurn rm, 3 Working adults pret to inepecl call UN 7-7981 Owner 3-$7S; 5$, 17; 4 $41* 4411* AU 47170 AG6NT AU 47742 NEWLY RENOVATED 1tt-2H-3-4 W 107 ST Near Central Park W 4 rm apt 834 30 per wk PE 6-5380 10-5 30 p m Owner EAST&IDE. Downtown, dine Pvt tile hnttoiaw. rrtgl datre. Hardwood floor*. Hoar aub- way. 14 Rm, P) TW T-14T7 er. Manhattan—Unfurnished 1-2-3 Roams T- ’.Vk. 3ly. 3. 4. 5. 4. 7 Room Apts Prom *55 Up SQUARE ROOM RENTAL SOI W 145th St WA 4-41<M’ 9 ST. 729 2 Room, iee Supt Or Owner. EAST to. Apt LB. CA i 12UU * ST.. 733 EAST Newly renovated Building *70 2V» Room, Supt. Apt D. or Owner CA 8 1JM) 3 RMS Pvt wde Dr. (Convent Ann.) 8*n. AU areas. 300 W. US SL Rm. A MO 4-00601 J ATTRACTIVE ELEVATOR IN SUPT OR 8M RM Apt. 875; 3V, Rr CY 2-3777 E 131ST ST. IS 3 rooms, refrigerator. tila Renovated hldd 8100 AU 3-1011 AGENT 3 A 4 KM APTS. E address 314 E 100 St SA 1-1830 Mon . Tues . Wd A Thurt 3-8 p.m. NO FEE TO TENANT Coll AU 6-1122 ARTS. AVAlABlf HIGH CLASS APTS. 4 rms. W. 161 St. 4 rma W. 137 St 8*5 4 rma W . 100 St 8108 4 rma B'way. IOS St. 8101 4 rms Prospect Ave 399 5 rm. St. Nichelat Ave. $120 I rma. Modern 145 St M0 1 rma W 103 St. 8115 4 ram St. Nicholas Ava 4 rma W 188 SI. Unceln TR 44430 8150 Also open Sat. I East 125 St. 6 rmt. Upper Manhattan $M 834 wkly 4 rms turn 7th Ave. 8100 5 rms. Nice neighborhood 3 rms. furn elev . Nice sec. 8111 5 rms. Welfare NEWLY RENOVATED 2-3-4 ROOM APTS. SUNKEN TUBS TILED BATHS MODERN KITCHENS NO FEES OWNER CY 9655 APARTMENTS. Rental Service. 403 1 WA 64188 8STH ST , 160 W . Modern 2. 3. 4 A 5 living rm. kitchen. Supt er TR 4-8888. CY w S rms. Immed. Occupancy $41 Room 4 rms. Gas A Else. tael. - MS 4 rma Manh. Clean 2 NEWLY Renovated. 2 A 3 4 rms. New equip »» $85-895 1045 Fails St. nr Simpson 867 4 rma. Immed Occupancy St. Station. See super in basement 840 4 rma. Children - Welfare OWNER M0 41944 Carver 261 W. 125th St. Rm. 303 E BRONX. 23-1 RMS. Welfare. Children. Reasonable. W. Bronx. Beautiful 3 Rms. 880 . Working people pref. Agent 2572 B’dwy t97 St 1 After 3. LE 47758 3 Rooms Horn RIVINGTON ST. 40 (Nr. Delanceyli______________ OWNBM______. 870 mo A up 10STH ST 71 W. — Steam Heat |Se- Supt No Fee CA 8-13001 atad Quiet house SH. 8110. curtly FO 5-4819 eves. Owi NATIONAL Employees Business As- i 179 * sociataoa Room Service. 3187 8th HOE AVE Ave UN 13357 last your rooms • with us. Clients waiUng. Av. 4 RMS W 117 St 1 RMS E 103 St 3 RMS 3 RMS 3 RMS MS.5* •60 3 LARGE UNFURN1SIHH) PRIVATE BATH A CALL LO 8-4886. EVENINGS OWNER 138TH ST. 51 W - 3V> 870 871. 880 8118. 8115. « Ancnenerm JC SERVICE BUREAU 133 W. 118th SL Open from 18 A.M. In 8 PJ8. AU dap Ont 34-Hr. El West 14«h Street 5 Rooms. Elevat­ ed Apt. House. 391 43 per mo. Many Others GLOVER BKR: L0 8-1540 Bronx—Furaishad 1, 2 and 3 Roams QUIET RESIDENTAL AREA 3 ROOMS, $110 NEW PRIVATE HOUSE 3115 GUNTHER AVE. OFF HA.MMERSLEY AVE E OF EASTCHESTER ROAD APT. For rent. 3. 4 A 5 Rma. No « rm Apt. First floor, nice neigh borhood. adults — children pref Reference. Call between 12-1 _ Brokers Fee Call Owner LU 5-2818 8 A M to 11 A M. or 5 P M to tR 8 3002 Owner 7 P.M. ' WESTCHESTER Ave 3 Urge $ 69 Rented Unfurii. or furo. Owner itarge 4 rm ^pt. Also 1 single rm 244 Vernon Avq., Bklyn. N.Y. BUILDER OL 6-9309 * Farms Road 2's 855 . 3-841 III O.595I I------------------------------------------------------------- Sound view Vic. 54115; RENT CONTROLLED APTS. J Longfellow Ave 5ta- 84135.' $125 Weeks Ave. Concourse Vi' 84125. OL 4-1548. j 1301 Wilkins Ave. KI 24858 Brokers Neale TY 3-U41 2 TO 5 ROOMS ANDREWS AVE.. 2299 (Ford) Its.i 380 East 164th St WY 2-4651 Modern 3 Rms Reasonable 3. A ltk RMS. Modem, clean bldg- 968 POX ST.. LONGFELLOW AV 4‘a BELMONT AV 5 RMS 7 Av 5 RMS POPULAR REAL ESTATE 9450 AMSTERDAM Ave. — 157 St apta 895 monthly. Supt nt pre ►r call OR 4-0300. Owner Mt*)10* i l0eTH ST 2nd Ava. — 1V» rm : Complete kitchenette Tiled bath _______I rm. Large closets. renovated lag- Convenient tranap. 81 OWNER LE 4-3030 Rma plus bath 8100. W 138 St _________________________ , Bet 7th A Lenox). 3 Rma plus 188 E 100TH ST $83 IT. Rauf Realty FO 8-3434. MO 5-5418 -----------------------——. Newly renovated Ilk A 3 Free CM. Immediate Super on premises or Call: Nr W 155lh St., Hk. A - , UA 71SB (AGENT) Apts Color Tile batha. Well equip -I pod kitchens Business couples pret RIVERSIDE Owrcr FO 8-1138._______ I apto. OPENING colored tile bath. Porch A nice;OWNER > back yard, wkly, or mthly. After 6 P.M AGENT See Supt W. BRONX—2 RMS . ALL MODERN CALL WA 4-4325. Days only 9-4 OWNER WILLIAMSBRIDGE SECTION, 2Vi large sem-furn. apt. Business person pref CaU KI 7-4760 Anytime, owner SPACIOUS 3 Rm. apt. for rent In 2 family house Completely furn Respectable Working adults pref References required. OL 4-1377. Owner. 3834 E.AST 148 STREET 2 Rooms Ail improvements Business cou­ ple pret. $55 monthly TA 83014 — Owner ONE BLOCK Prospect station 3 room furnished apartment, work­ ing people preferred. Owner DA 8-0674 FURN Apts Weekly. Also, kitchen ettes , >15 A up. Rooms 88 A up. L. Harris AU 6-5166 AU 1-1280 2348 7TH AVE 167TH STREET 1104 FINLAY AVE. Modern 2's A 3's 885 - *99 No Fea LU 8-4510 OWNER 1246 MORRIS AVE. Nr 167tti St. 6 Grand Concaurte Modern Three Room Apt. 5110 See Supt. or Call LU 8-4510 Owner Newly Renovated 960 FOX STREET Simpson or Hunt's Pt. Sta. New kitchen, new ule bath. 3's $95 .. 4'$ $110 No fee — Owner DA 3-0657 2-2 RM Apts, Fura Couplg pref Also single rm. 415. With cook­ ing priv. Couple pref. WY 2-2026 Owner 7JTH St; 3 Rm apt. 2 glrla or or QA 8-6870 OWNER Couple pre( *25 Wkly. Near sub----------- way. Call after 5 p m MO 5-81% GJtO^ND FLOOR APT FOR RENT OWNER Owner NEWLY RENOVATED 3's A 4's NO FEE Inquire Supt., 1034 Hoe Ave. i®1' anytime TU 4-5930 Nr School & Tranap. See agent at 969 Fox St. 4 Rooms and Over 5 MODERN Rooms $129. WiUianu- Bndge Section upper Bronx. — Beautiful surroundings AU Im­ provements. Must be Interviewed by Dennis Williams. 3617 Broad­ way from 10 to. 6 Dally AU 6-0650 OR AD 1-1037. Modern 5 Room apt. For Rent 6 rms. 2nd Fir. 834 wkly, MODERN 2(y Room apt, turn or 6 rma. furn. G fcE 5 rma. Nice. 8100 unfurn Settled business couple, 5 rms. Crotona Ave furo 3118 or 2 adraaa preferred. EV 5-3054 5 rms. Immed. Occupancy $ 90 hy 4<adl5 Owner. 4 rms Clean Building I rms. Welfare. Children 4 rms Nice neighborhood 4 rms Welfare St. Owner 744 Beck DA 34301 6 RMS. *150, New 2 fam. House. 4 rms Crotona Pk Elev. , 5;, BU»ORD Section. 1 Rm,, private g 73j hath, newly renovated. 2V> blocks subway Business eoupla pref — $ A) Reference PR 8-7711 Owner *112: _____ * *0 yu a sec 1^ F^mIi- - 1 - — ~ M0 -6-944 em equipment, gas sad elactric 5 BEAUTIFUL Rms Ground floor 9x1 uu ITCsk Cs Dm IQI ,r**« Inquire supt at 400 Tomp kin, Ave . NeaTJafterson. (W^r all modem conveniences. Call — I -ms. Crotona Pk Ol. 5-5513 or FI g 540* Everett Carver GR 9-4228. If no response see 1489 W- IZaWI »<♦ E. 172nd St. Nr Wheeler Ave . A LARGE SELECTION OF 13 RU Security Owner FINB. WEST fc raST BRONX ! , APARTMENTS 8110 *140 Tremont Vic.4% large ----- • *-3 *75. So. Boulevard vic-Sty beautfiul » *5 143 St. St Ann s. 5, Freedom Land vicinity 5, 149 St.. So. Blvd . 4. GREENWALD REALTY. MO 5-1(02 West Bronx-44 elevator — *112 2 RMS Apt. Private kitchen, prl- RM 306. Tremont Vic-4>Y extra large .. 8 90 vate bath *30 Wk; 2 .Adjoining 384 E. 149 St . „ Rms. $19 59 Wk; 3 Rms to’ to E WB"ONX' 7 ,.U,r,,\ kltchenatta 81830, Large and small rma. Broker HY 5-8310 — 2O2L4 Fulton St Concourae Vic-3' , elevator ... Working adults pref $135 Brook Trrm<int v.c-j>i large________ ------ - West Bronx-ti-i large, modem M<ny olher* West Bronx 311 large J Apt. furnlahad. all modern equipment, gas and electric free, inquire at 2555 Pitkin Ava.. near Montauk Ava., Owner 8 85 $ 84 * 58 *721 $ 85 Call Broker MO 5-7773. II 4 Rm apt. Laconia Ave. 4 Rm apt Murdock Ave. 3 Rm apt E 222nd SI 3 5 Rm apt. E 172nd Si. 5 Rm. apt Daly Ave. 6 Rm apt. AGENT (>AE included apt laingfellow Ave tl». *120 *110 $ 95 •115 $125. $160. KI 7-701* rms ■ mi 2’ • rms : mt rms M 1 ms rms 2-j rmt rms 4888 3rd Ava. 229 E. 128th St. 254 E. 138th SL 367 W 136th St. 54 E. tttod St. _ 243 E. 121 St. 61 E. 117th St. 04 W. 114th St. 433 W. 13801 SL 1450 5th Am. 124 W. 127th St. 170 E. 107th St. 152 W. 124th St. See Supers in NO APTS. 322 E. 109tfc St LE 4-4352 ST.. 388 W [. 3 h 38k rms. free Gas. Supt- 1R ar Owner LU 34670. rm. 4 1 nn kit eheuetta. Working people pref — CaH OL P8M7 or JA 9-2111 HR.N1SHED Room fur rat. quirt Working people preferred neighborhood. Near all Trans porta lion OL Mill BI-SINESS M*n~ir i5man"pr«f ‘ m Tranap AX 7-4190 1, 1. A 1 PurnKnu.Caimiumas. JA Naval JAMAICA, Sunlit rm. 1 blk, from Mbway AX 1-8135 Furnished Wanted ATTENTION LANDLORDS Please Hat your Rooms. Kitchenette Apia with PEACE ROOM SERVICE We will turnish you with reliable dependable working people WA 4- 7100. day or uight i LIST YOCK ROOMS KITCHENETTES A APTS House »f pf Service 1R1T RENTAL SERVICE Employed, reliable tenants wait­ ing Lot your rma. kits. A apta Can Broker WA 4-4443_________ Moving and Storage J. JACOBS LIGHT HAULING AND MOVING ANYTIME — ANYWHERE I CALL MO 3-888S________ 1 man plus van 87 an hour 3 men 810 an hour _________ SA 2-82M___________ TWO GUYS EXPRESS 138 W. 118tt St. MO 8-1708 Night phone MO 2-7T~ Manhattan Furnished 1, 2 ami 3 Roams 25TH ST . W8 w - 38k Rooms Gas A Electricity Included See Supt or CaU CY 3-0943 BLUMENSON - SUSSMAN NEW LY RENOVATED Apartments IV, Rooms A’so f urnished room! AU 1-4862 OWNER Unfurn apt. large rm, A kitchenette Call Miss Blair M0 2-1600 136TH ST . 115 WEST lh I 2Vi roam opts. ltk AND JVk ROOM Apartments. [ For rent, sea mp4. ApU R. (Owner) Furnished. With private batha. TR 74115 Ask for Lewis Superintendent Owner 3 ROOMS $55 ROOMS AGENT 2 L 125th St. FI B-3669 4 ROOMS 881- S 102nd ST. 9 single and Niealy _ kitchmatta apta BERGOTT STUDIOS. Hh ra> ur.furn apt. W. 159 St. jj GL 4-5794 Owner gJTH STREET.. 138 Waft - Newly £ RMS - ELEVATOR AGENT u.^XbeoX00.- 723 St. ^idihta* Aw TR 342221W. 146th St. S«6way at 6W«.) | bateot up to date Improvements 18 E 130th ST. Newly moderated 2 Pr]vatc References No fees ta- rm apta. Attractively fura. 834428: lre Sup( ca)1 owner, FO 84408 ...» weekly. Adults pref. Joe Wallace -------- _ Supt. 38 E 130th St. Basement MODERN APARTMENT 12‘ a rooms 63 W 127th SL Owner RM Apt AU modem conven- 3 rooltl modern apartment bat lencea Clean quiet bldg Good SMje ggg monthly Owner traaap- Low floor Reasonable No (N 24277 hr CO 5 *356 fta. Sm Mm. Young. 1« E. 124 ---------------------^r,^— ' LENOX AVE., Ill (Near 118 St.) At­ tractively furnished 2Uj room apart­ ment Remodeled Building. — Agent Monday thru Friday MO 5-0208 r/i - 3 In Manhattan, fare. No fe 4 rm opts. Bronx. Bklyn Wei Wi " - HIGH CLASS APTS. ltk. 2. J. rooma. Private baths. Famished 320 week fc op Also on furnished BARBERA REALTY. No fee to tenant. Apply 501 W 142 St AU 6-9000 1tt.ll; 2-21? 3-25; 4-32. 238 W. 135 Si AU 87178 AGENT AU 87742 •S $tw 100 W. (Calamhat Aw.) 3 rm. apt Newly Mod equipment Tile Supt EN 2-8303. Agent 1125 6 L llllh St. Modem 3 rm apt. Freshly painted No fee. See Super Owner._________ _ 62 L 125th St. Modem 3 rm. apt. Freshly painted See Super No tee. Owner. LENOX T ACE 1‘k h 2(k renovated 133rci 7Ul Ava. AD 4-9873 OWNER ’t'*1; ST. ANNS. Ave 645 2'-j Rms Completely remodeled, new bath- rm. 825 Wkly ME 54873. Owner Distinctive 3tt Sahas Room 24 hour 2tk Rm- apL Largs Good tranap. Young 108 E. 134 M. tacinera bldg. gat Mrs EAST llTH 2-$ 4 3‘$, $75 to $45 month. Broker. 288 W IS ». Rm 212 BROOK Ave . 543. 3 Rms Complete ly remodeled, new fixtures. 825 Wkly ME 54973 Owner__________' 3 rm apt for rent. CY 9 8072 Owner Neatly furnished apt 3 rms A bath Respectable people pref. CY 2-1688 Owner MI 1-7849 Renting afflca 10 w 135th 2-6380 St Elevator Apartments 2 RM FURN APT >4* Brad burnt Asa., ear 3 Reams_________ 154th St E. 21’TH ST. $125 AGENT *20 WK KI 7-7018 Large, Frat Elevator — Incinerator Colored Tile Baths 10 cu R Frigidaire Ref IND Stanray 2 blocks 3 rm fum ap( II 1-9263 OWNER Owner operated — No Fee 4 Rooms and Over AU 6-7170 AGENT AU 6-7742 Newly Renovated 3 Room apartment. $100 See Super 451 E. 140th St OWNER - NO FEE WILLIAMSBRIDGE E. 212th St. — Brand new 5 rms. | <2 Bedrms i Wall oven $135 Murphy. : AC 2 8585 Sun.-TU 24188 E. 242nd St. 4 rm apt. Adulta pref '009 E ^3RD TU Z-4440 3 lovely rms ButM,ne wo 2-9719 Agent Owner 4 RMS - ELEVATOR 150TH ST. — Morris Ave. 3lv rma. *1*° 850 k,.2 Alexander Delta Cese 384 E. 149 St MO 9-1405. 1057 HOE AVE. (Comer E. 165th St Nr. Simpson St Station i — new ly decorated and floors scraped. Very high class call 31q Rms. to rent. 1845 Schleffelin I building No fees. See Supt Ave. cor of E. 225th St. Ground miner FO 8-4480 floor level. *110 per mo plus ae-, curity. Inquire landlord up stairs Owner. • wen wtearte ~4<« KfcllT yiRccT, BAZ Completely altered 48* rms. New We bathrm New kitchen equipment ■ »— -- | APT To rent, 3 Large rooms. -I, mo Working couple pref DA 9-4127 Owner OFFICE ON PREM1S1 ’ OPEN FOR RENTING Son to Fri. 9 AJf. to 5 PM Arm HOURS APPLY SUPT. TpxrtnsTTSn^^alnte^^orkiifg people pref. 848 Wkly Pay own 2*-* EAST 148TH Street 2 rooms gas A electric JE 84727 Owner *11 improvements. Business cou- -------- 'C ' ■ __ -I------ ------ -—-7-^------ r---------------------— Pl« prefer-ed 845 Monthly RBCE27TLY nBfOVATED BUILD- 3 Rms Longfellow Ave. INGS. ltk. X M $116 •110 apts No w. 122 St 4 Rms >i ixioa Fogular RmI Estate M0 6-9450 Fee. H R. KAHN OO. TA 8-3014 Owner 4035 PARK AVE. ■ I rm» well furnished, gas A elec vor ,7’ 5,1 super or CY 2-9S50 Owner 3 rooma. modem See 271 West 12* SL N.Y.C. St Floor Alee furnished rms tai working adults pref .. Briber DA * 3109 St. New 6 rm. 3 ___ _ Security. Nr. r*bway BIO 2-N715 beairriFin. m rm renovated spa DA 9-3109 AGENT Broker sUjve' NO FEE OWNER (3# E 141st Sl Near Wiltta Ave 3 basement or DA *4198. Owner I INTERVALE AVENUE? 1M2? Room apartment *70 per month ( See Superintendent. Apt 1 Owner 231 ST., Modern 5 Rm apt- new.' •130. W Bronx 4 Rms. *135. —! Hunts Point 4 Rms. *110 BGERTO.N DENNIS CY 2-3777 3PARTMENTS For rent 4 Rooms *70; 5 Rooms 878 : 2 Rooms *57. 3 Rooms 845 Call MO 84823 Agent -”13 7,h ' ■r 167th St. 4 Large S. 134th St.. 5 Rooms E. Tremont 5 Large OTR HRS AVAILABLE. 515 COURTLANOT AVE 871.38 870.00 11*1 RACIFK STRUT 1 rm apt. chlldrea IN 7-1784 «<*>* OWNER BROKER | LU 5-8877 NORTHEAST BRONX — 6 Rms . 3 Bedroom*. New house. Convan lent everything 8150. Trotta Realty________ FA 5-8388. 5 RMS Unfurnished E. 134th St. Bet WUUs A Brown Place. Near Alt tranap. Steam A Hot water. Apt. In excellent condition Work- 5S6 KOSCIUSKO STRIST 2 Rm apt. children. OWNER___________________ HI 3-5732 2 AND 4 ROOM Kllckiaittl apta. Fum or unfurn . call after 4 p.m. MA 4-3484 UL 5-8793 Owner 3 HM APT. Kitchenette, rms. furn and partly turn, cell ;OL 3-3338. Owner, after 19 a.ha. MO 5-742! AD 4-8269 S RM Apt for rent, new kitchen facilities. Respectable people pref LU 9-0857 Call anytime Owner 3 ROOM Furnished apt for rant. Couple or 2 aduUs pref 835 00 A week 1 week's security CaU NE 8-9337 Owner ____ __________ BEAUT1FUI. 4 Rm apt. Immaru-, 12M DEAN STREET. 1 late. Modern kitchen A Bath Ni j Kitchenette, and hath. Furnished Foi-dham University. Adults pref Business couple preferred. James Price: $125 per month Graen Realty Co PR 2-4800 SMALL Furnished Apt Working pea pie preferred. CaU 33 Lefferts Place or 25 Lefferts Place. Owner APT TO RENT CaU after 6 p.m. CY 9-8199 Owner 2 RJd Fura apt. oe parlor Between Ralph A McDonoui Call before 8. P M Owner. DI 2-8881 3 RMS for rent 2 Rms for rant Owner CLERMONT AVE. 434. Rm Furn or unfurn apt Gentleman preferred ST 3-4708 LIVE LIKE YOU OWN YOUR OWN HOME Move to the Upper Bx. 220th area. I Beautiful neighborhood. 64150. 8-1 ’130, 88125. 3-8106, Pvt. entrance It's like owning your own home MC DONOUCH ST . 448A, 3 Room apt. newly decorated Bustaeas CaU OL 24H24 pratenad Rwerac. Own- Furn or unfurn CaU Owner DI 2 3823 NEWLY Decorated. 2 Room apt. IMPORTANT: Call me. I can save you money con- — -- ------------------------------------- ---------------- cerning any apt you might have MODEHpV Efficiency Apt modem <»**"< I kitchen, full uled bath, fully furn AGENT Welfare. MA 4-4138. NI Owner. FmI Rconx-3«q large, modem Concourse Vic.-2tv elevator j 73 CROWN HTS AREA — 1 MANY MORE WE 3-1313 *~Ubl- KIOK 73 E 183 ST IN 7-ug» 8 rms. $t» per mo. nr BUSHWICR And :ubway Adults pref. CY 3-4270 2 Rm. apt. Private Or working coiole Owner FI 148<. Pkwy .. Slagle . CaU 4, 5, 7 RMS. REAS. BRONX J r(X)M Furnished apt. gat A etac- A Manhattan. .Adults pref. 217 W 125th St. Agent. MO 2-3 tric mcludsd Wertang people pre- ferred Owner C6I1 M 4-4181 Brooklyn—Famished 1, 2 and 3 Roams I 'UL Pnvale. 2 ’ AU U luma’ drea. *25 73 Wetkly. Owner PR 1 RM. Fum apt. Atlantic and Eas­ tern Parkway, kh Ave Subway Call Mr Powell DI 6 1323. after 8 p m. DI 8489. 2 RMS. Park PI •22 50 4 Rma ’'erllng R *27 SO . 3 Rms. Putnam Ave *23 50 4 Rms. St. Marl* Ave. *24.75 NE *4757 1 PllulocM Realty _ *B CLAREMONT iVE.. > Rm apt. ! Privata kitchen. *1* Wkly. infer­ ences. sacurity. business couple ! preferred Inqulr* Murdock after 4 pm OWNER I HERKIMER FT . 0. * Rms. UMBO- tet Oaa MADISON ST, 588 3 Rms, tome ! thing nice Sea la«y parlor floor, I r Owner 1 2lF MACoSTsf*! tm apt for rent HURK1MER ST,. $7 NR. Redford 1 - 2 beautifully furnished, tile Itaths. kitchenette,, gas A electric BEAUTIFULLY free Elevator Rent controlled. Aduil* pref 8th Ave A Brighton Lines. Agent on premises. 3 Rm. apt. Business couple preferred, refer­ ence, Interview 9 - 3. bet Sumner- Throop. GL 24402 Ritchea aag bath newly derorated 7* HOYT ST . lta *70 Monthly. 2iv 2 RM APTS MODERN BATHS. $81) Monthly Gas A electric In- Kitchen. Refrlgeratkr 980 mo. eluded. Nr. all subs. Welfare. See Supt Owner. GL S 4604 AGENT 2 A 3 rm furn. apt. Children ~ ' TO S-S726 2tt rmt., bath, medera. Bu*i- M*t adult* preferrad. Owner PR 4-2076 ' Small apt., fatty furn. ST 9-6853 SMITH 162A Albany A* 2 Rm apt. Chlldr OWNER_________________ PR «4«17 lib MODERN STUDIO ATkRTMENT *21.50 per week , AGENT UL 7-6017 Macon RT. jty Rma. Furn apt. iTita hath with tub A Mower — 1*25 50 Wkly. Nr tramp- Bumneaa Couple pref. PR tJTU Agent LAROE 2 AND 4 RM APTS Reaaonahte Call Mra Slmmc MA 5-0421 5 RM APT — Preferred. GL 2-2170 Frigidaire OWNER 4 ROOMS A OVER clous apt. ■ *- Uth St., Near Central Part W. *120 Mo Agent ■ ■ an I I dill M *448* Owner ST NtCHOI-AS AVE., Nr. 14* St 2 Rms. Kitchen A Beth 1 Security. Call agent '■ ' ' BnillX-Unfurnithed ■ u—— 1-2-3 Ream 1S8TH ST Dr. 8. Nr. Riveraidt large 2H Rms. apts 286-1115. 67180. 4 ROOMS AND OVER 2tk Rm -Park Ave. Nr. 168 St. *75 3 rms., Jennings St. Nr. 174th St *80 3 Rms. Clinton Ave ar. 180 St. *75. 2Mi A 3 Rms. Wash­ ington Hl. 800495 * Rma. W. 86 St $106 2V, A 3 Rms W 102 St *80400 YU 2-3347. Agent NEAR 225 St 3 Rm. apt Private entrance. Livlngrtn. bedrm, kit­ chen unit. A foyer. CaU after 5 p.m. OL 34754 Owner. YOUR SEARCH IS ENDED > rma. Watadagtaa Bgts. area. Quiet neighborhood au A venae nr CMy NO FEE. 170 TH ST . Modem 3 College Kitchen baa Slattery mod A 4 Rm apta Backyard Ref — em gas range Youngstown sink- CaU after 5 p.m W1 2-6*16 Owner tub combination Large Admiral re _____ _________ frigmtor with acmes the top'freex-| !M7 WEBSTER AVE.. New 3Mi rm dlah caMwet Be Jpt |wal wlter modem ap people definitely pUanct8 supt at 1241 Webstar *W *.710* NEW APT 1743 148 9L Utrtag Amat. Ave. or > rm, 2 bedTrna.l’ Owner 3 burglar alarms A master TV antenna. No rental tee. *1*1 a manta. Supt Apt IB. • a m. ta • p.m. AU 3-8*33 Lovely mod 3 rma apt Freshly T p.m. FA 7-82*6. i painted. No lae See Super, Owner 162 KELLY STREET CY 2 4 RM. Unfurn apt. *75 Per month' MANY ARTS AVAILABLE 1 nrata'a aarurity Working pen i rma. *5) up — pte pref. 80 E. 118 St Apt. 1., R-oker •4 4 rma 577 up CY 3-4270 ('S i« m Ave Ave. •76. mo *90 mo •62. mo •VSttn rms. 2nd finer from. New i-vr ’-RsrrV Ave. A 179th St - ground floor refrigerator and cabinet, ( Modern rmi. Trlnted complete Very clean sete building. 8*8. monthly. See Super n,„s„, Mr. Carlos CY 24*34 - MO 34174 B"*rr________________ --------------issa e sax ew^~-------(NEAR E. 165 SI A Morris Ave; 8 Rms. Semi-private. 2nd Fir., Broker Adults pref 604 t. 141 ST. 1-4 rooms, modem, see aupt or call (owner) CY 2-9650 Adults pre! wv ■» inn, 619 E. 141 ST ST , ultra modem 2 rm apta. Near shopping A transp *7* A up (rivner No Fee — MO P Modern 2 A 3 room apt*. <32 E. 141 St. 530 St Pauls PL 3311 TWrd Ava. Na faa. WY 3-128* NEWLY RENOVATED 4 Roams A 3 Roam* $95 - $120 See Supt. in basement 979 Aldus St., Bronx Owner WA 6-6000 6 RM. Unfurn apt- Available Btu- ineas couple pref. *115. per month Call TY 3-7333 for inquiry Owner ■K Apts. Apts. Apts All Types All Types — Call Now For The One Yeu Need. Dersetf LU 9 5120 WY 1 2M7 BRONX - New 5 A « Rm. apt, 2939 Tiemana Ave. Corner Adee Ave. off E . Gnnhill Road. 460 LEXINGTON AVENUE Children — 2 Rm apt. -----------------------IP.*—1 Union Ave 4 Rooma. in eleva- 1 RM F“rn J"- ren* ®*J*OC* OWNER NEWAPARTMWT Ineinerator building Muri he! aeen to be appreciated *140. Spec lal Security Measures. 1 block, Pro, pact Ave. IRT Station See Super M , Or Call GR I 14M after ™" **•; WeUa^- CaU w *,''EATLY Fum 4 Rm. apt for rent 5219 or AD 4-44*4 Evro After *:30! All day Sal. Owner Richard WUpqu 111* Parlor Floor Brooklyn. N.Y. Furnished. Working cou 4 ROOM Furnished Apartment _ r 6 30 No. p)e Preferred Call MA 8-1339 Working men preferred Nicely ST 3-8441 Or JA 2d55«0 Early morning, or Furnished Owner late ev ening,. Owner -- CROWN HEIGHTS. 3 Rma, $130 . PER MONTH, - --------- ---------------------- .V1ODERN FURN 4 RM. AFT. *125 MQCURJTY — ■ - ------------------ ■ —r Nicely fura. newly decorated Nr Bus. sub, shopping Man ar adulta Preferred Unfurn *188. R4. Hughe, MA 247*1 CHILDREN KA 8-2*1* MARCY AVR. U tecllitie, 6 rm apt. 4 flights up, -I nkers Fer Owner Front PO 5-8828 Owner 24q RM MODERN Apt. private en­ trance, excellent iwighbortiand. nr ■hopping A Transp. rent month. Agent CY 2-7172 9 80 am lo S 30 pm wbdaya. No fee,. ‘ HULL •*IO 7 9322 “.FFiciENt Y Apt. Mtra madera? 4* 2 MODERN 4‘q RM APTS Wall ovr-x. We bath,. Patio •140 A *158 OWNER AVE. 3049, 4 Rm 812* E, 139 St. 2 rm. renovated near Ml. Vtrnrot vicinity. Profe, ,tonal perron pref. evea, all day Sat. FA 5-9019 owner. or OI, (6067 Owner _____ CaU Weekdays. MO *-*449{3 RM Apt, rum. Pacific St.. 3 Rm apt, Bedford -Stuyveaant Mr Andrew 8 ROOM Apartment, unfurnished. *180. In new 2 family house All____ 5 Rma. 1 Private bedrma 837 per . wk. Security Gaa Eeluctric Ml Inrludsd. (lean Buataem people preferred Reference required — MA 1_______ _____ ________________________ ________ Owner MA 4vr Ave Aro Morris Ave Avr NEWLY RENOVATED APTS. U)VF4.Y Neighborhood 3 Rm apt. Private house. 149 W 179 9t. *85 On A Electric included. Also 1 turn rm for rent. AL 5-3812 Owner U68 Belmont Ave 3 rm1 474 E 141 St 3 rm. 880-W5 424 E ’29th s:, 2 rm,. MO-*65 9 rma 880 386 E 138th St 4 rms 8110. 430 E. 1113 Findlay ’4"*h St. J rms **> mo J?'| 2 rma *70 *75. 3 rma 8*5 Bee aupta. Ne teas. Owner 895. ma „ __ ~ Nelson Ave 1272. nr 116 8t “ 188 jo mo. i 2 rmt Mt par mo. w m« JE A6254 OWNER 3RD AVE . 4284 3 8r 4 Room apt. From 8SS Up. Owner CaH SC 4-1336. 175 St . Cone. Vic. 3 late. Crotona Pk. E 3-888,, Fordham - 4, 4th Fir Bkr 2270 Or Cone WE 2-7338. lion, mo 13 rm apt. 181 CauMweU Ave, Nr. >70 mo * tranap It 1 school,, welfare EN 9-6885 BA 3-7824 i WEBSTER AVENUE, iw 17Wh tt.i 2 Room, *88 00 3 Rooma **8 001 0WNII Painted, clean. Children Owner In Chlldr,n ------------- ^.-^jMta-------------k Ave_______ Grady Enterprise, IS UENOX AVE Good Heated Apt* • rum W. 1*7 M 4 rms B 113 M 4 raw W 143 St 3 man Amatordam Ava. 4 ram W. Ifl » 4 rum 8 mat wd am B'way 4 raa R Ml *1 4 rum E 111 *t. ] to 8 rma. TU 1-0900 Lacanb Realty I ’.OVIIIY Modern 3 Roam apart available Excellent loca _ »1 tirtn* Ma (mc CaH LU ’ tlona Ne feus. 165 St (1012 Brook Ave ) 2-3 ROOM ART. 8711 No fee. Supt . Apt. 8. LU 8*71 Owner 8120 — ■ ................... — ItgMauy Apts. Avail. AM Atom. >7! i - . .. S ^IRVING SILVER A SON IM _ WE 3677(1 Owner W\SHIN(JtOH - AVE 2 rooma remodeled >81 Weakly nr Ml Monthly No fee CaH SV 7-5768 MMOB. 1 ELTON AVE , 778 Modem It* j Hollywood k.Hchen Weekly Ran-| tai Gae A Electric free (OWNE modern con(enien«i. OL 5-5818. WELFARE PREFERRED No Fee j RMg, I WurttM flrta Renter- Owner Many 2H. 3 rm apts. furnished red Working glrla preferred — or FI *-5408 R. J. HUGHES MA 2-1796 Owner GL 13888: HY 1*800 161 St 4 rma, 3 rma lupt In basement Grand Concourse I, m, 4 4 ! aupt in baiemenl 835 Kelly St. 3 rms. 4 I See aupt la basement 2', 250 E 124th St. 2H n See aupt Apt 2-D STURMAN RIAL ESTATE 391 East 149th St LU 54100 To Place A Want Ad In Amsterdam imJt room FnnHalwa **t ter r*M — Ntaa neighborhood, near all trass- . portaUon. *1788 per month. Bue- ST 3-1371 5 RM APT, FURN Adulta preferred — Owner __________ST 9-^734 2^, > BEAUTIFUL 4 RM APT Modem Kitchen A bath. CMMrun AGENT RR 2-S953 Broaklvn-Uirfwaithod 1-2-3 Raawi ApartmnnU News Call I NFURN1SHED apt. tei , private bath. 4 rum. 143 Laum Ave. Uuuota — Alas Open Sat W*Hor* A ChMdran T1 64431 I Iwt 125 St. WASHINGTON HEIGHTS V MI R I nm 8148J*. Broker. AC 2004 WASHINGTON AVE. Nr 179th Sl 2 rma, modern Supt nr CY 2 0650 No fee Owitar 149TH or., 4M t. Modem 1 8 te'l RM UNFURN APT Rm apta Monthly rental Gae A Adulta prof Alas tarn Electric free (Owner) WE 3-9070 OWNER I RI 9-5300 461 EAST 140* ST. I NEWLY Rauunted nntarw, ar. auto | ioi« E. »« ST J rooma and 4 rma Children Con- A Buaaea. free gaa • elactric. no Working per Na tee Real Fee. See Sugd M3 Forest Ave.,- 83M Evenings. ha,, nr HI 1-8111. Owner Render ?nd Sunday Owner Large raw. tf Can 1(1 7- day Saturday U L 7-2500 Call p.m. Ca^it. a a E^iH^iafl^i^j ^^ti^j^i FREE - FREE - FREE 1777 Madtaon Ave. - I 4 I rma. 1 Week's Rent Free Modem apartments. Fiat Gaa A Elactric. Sac aupt la apt 23. IO9 BROADWAY. lVh. and 3ia Rooma All modem imnrove- ments 2 elevators. Incinerator, night watchman service Reason _____ 10 to T dalty^ tej Sun Agaat J ] 4°^n^Asmo' RIV'ERSIDI'; Dr. nr 158 St. Apt 2 ST., 161 EAST 3 room apt, 871 A »W See Supt. Apt 3. Owner __ 2 A 3 jljfl E. 128 St Rm apta *$lr. Transp. D4 3-7*24 Owner 115 ST, 423 EAST 2Cj rooms. 888 month. No fee. See Supt or Owner, CA 8-1288 films W. 138 St. 3 Rms W. 117 St. 3 Hint W 117 St 4 Rms W 121 St 8 Rma W 111 St 1949 7th Ava. 8 40 9 85. * 18 *80 tits. Tartar Realty 109 ST, 164 EAST 2k. rooms. 852 month No fee. See er Owner CA AO**- 3 STw 214 EAST , 2V, rooms, from *47 heat. No tee. Supt or CA *-1200 W. VK BW » ton* *“* Central Pk W Area. Nice 4 Rmv *115. Walk-up, others Agent 2572 (97th St.) after 3. private bath, unfurn MO 3-3788 ____________ 1 Rooma or studio. Frat apart­ ment. Unfurnished or furnished References WA 6-0773 Owner 3-4-5 R(X)M Apts All boroughs Reasonable. Broker, 2282 ltk Ava. UN 4-9992. ltk * *--4 RM APARTMENTS Unfurnished A Furnished BROKER AB Areas Ml St. Nicholas Ava. (Cor 152nd) WA 44443 PARE AVE - Nr. E. 127 St. 2 A 2H Rma Modem equipment Consult D. Edward Smith 710 St. Nicholas Ava. ar AU 12KTH ST , A 7th Ave. — Attrac- M Rm. out. Wark- No leas. MO 44170 (Ownar) NEWLY Finished modem lit rm. apt. Ref. New availata ter reat. Couple pref. Owner WA 8-0962 12 ST., 640 EAST 1.21. nr CA 8-1*80 Owner. — FORSYTHE ST. 3B (Hr. Canal) * mams, aleam heat *49 A up. No tea See Supt. or Owner. CA AIMS _ 18. “11 ST ,631 EAST ?'k mums, steam heat *42 !"""£* No fee Supt or Owner CA 8-120(1 Xi1 ST, 224 EAST 2»4 rAwns. eteam heat From 847 A No lee. See Supt . or CA 8-1 1*0 W. 134TB M. 1 A 4 Working people prof (awnerl. ’17 8T fCOE) nog 8TR At ELEGANCE DELUXE LUXURY Itt-ROOM ARTS FREE GAS • PRIVATE BATH , Pfl.EVATOR-INCINERATOR • 1MMPD1ATE OCCUPANCY MO-------- TREAT Modern l'k A 3 room apta RENT FREE TILL 1964 ONLY A FEW LEFT For Appotntment. Call: Mr SMU. YU 2-3808 Mtaa Kathleen. TE 8-4123 13S ST, IDS WEST 3 ROOM APARTMENTS . AVAILABLE Madam 2 A 3 raaai 311 E. 126 St. 212 E. Ill St. 171B Park Ava. Na Fan. WA 66000 2&3 no. opto, lean, well planned nntte NeW hat. A Bronx. Na faa. Owaar Apply at Apt Agent WA A6000. 2 rms. furnished Private bath h kitchen. Adulu pref *27 wk Ref. Quiet home. Owner. AU 14763 D|t- 2W *80. 1C, 825, Rm Apta. Fum. un-1 fura Pvt batha. Chotoe locations 208 W. 125 St. Rm. 114 Jones — MO 84888-1 I RM. Fum apt. fngidaire and hath, working people preferred, GL 54988 WA *-2837 Owner 19M SIOCOND AVE. 3 ROOMS All improvements 8*3 weekly. TA 8-3014 . OWNER ■ ■ X-----------------------------------—— FURN Apta Weekly Alas, kitchen­ ettes *15 A Up. Rooms *8 A *P L. Harris AU 84MI. AU t- 2*6* 7TH AVs 1S8TH ST . 628 W M Rooms <188 Mo WA 8-7531 2 AND Bb ROOM Apartments, far ntahod or aafarakdied. All modar n Conveeiancaa. EN 8-2737 AU day Owner. TOR RENT - 2H. J. 4 Em. apta In Manhattan-Bronx. Bklyn Welfare. Owner J*0 » l-™4t ISrHsi•. Ida. w car t* 70, *w 1H. A Hi----- --------—" bath Elevator 137 WEST C5TH STRFFT bathroom. ttl e Idt- 2 BOOMS — Na toe — i,Y EN 2-2148 W 150th St. A Amsterdam Avu , 2 Rms Privata bath 819.37 per AU 5-1727 Owner. APARTMENTS. FURNISHED OR I NFfl RNBIIED MR 9O38«EY COMirr. 133 WERT 128TH ST TE 1-2788 ____________ 138 W. 137 irr. I nu furn apt ter rout. 829 per wk. 1 whs aecnrt Cal AU. 1-7804 2 RMS - ELEVATOR 721 H. Nkhuto* Ava. (canar W. 1461k It. Subway al bld«.) Private ^Referuara No tern. In up* er enl Owner. FO * 8888 grruraO^APAHTMENTR ATntACTTVF ‘at Vrxzril.i 1 ROOM, mc—.. _ -. private bath Modem tamMure ,Ju«t completed Beautiful remotte*- bldg Near all transport at i(». 127 ST, 105 EAST ---- - AU 34182 GLOVER* RKR^ ’’"lO 1-1540 TO PLACE 118 Or, M EART 2 A 3 ROOM APT. ton Apt 8. He tee. Owner 147 WEST WANT AD CALI 12 St., 524 E (Ave AAR) -vs rooms. *45 A up Steam heat No lae. Supt.. or CA AH** Omor MODERN 3Vi Apt ( olor«1 tile beta Can UN New facilities. 72 E. 128 St pref Ml 98 bet *4 P M • AVE 2241 (Near 121 Sl ) Attractive 4 Rm. apt. MELROSE AVE., 734 Nr E 158 ft 2 rma. modem Free,________ _ Supt. or Agent I c„. See Suet or Owner CY 2-965813 RM xFT, , FMght up. rear. New IN NEW YORK CALL Ri 9-5300.. TO PLACE WANT ADS.. IN BROOKLYN CALL UL 7-2500 CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE 5 R-M. CLASSIFIED A0 DEADLINE 5 RJN. TUESDAY RRICEDING THURSDAY Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- 'J \ - A SO • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Dec. 7, 1963 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS Sale Quotas For Sal* Queenj Far Saia Far Saia AiidAne Caur Caul A wnguiiu ■ ww *wiw Qua*ns—Far Sal* Sale «■hia For Sale Cent. Procadiii|^^aja JAMAICA I $13,990 I CUSTOM COLONIAL $84 MO. MTGE. [ NO CASH VETS! $490 Other* I This never to ba forgatteal , modern dertgr horns Is! I straight out sf a picturo| book. Space saving ultra, modern deluxe kitchen. tor-| BM1 dining ran. party-aized. living rm. staanlng J croee-| ventilated bedrms. modern, tile bath. Many extras! I I I ! 20th ! i century! i Sales, Inc. i I 168 - 10 | Hillside Ave. j OL 8-9000 I I lAoMricaaa Roach Hoom From $490 Down low Carrying Charges I NEW ALL BRICK - ALSO| 2 FAM HOME See Ranch Model 153-11 111th Ave.. Jamaica IRE Mill MO 111701 COLONIAL - $20,500 4 hedrooms. gracious home with ultra modern kitchen. F-i bathe. 30; a 100. garage A-l area. CL *500 cash. FHA $1,000. TROJAN AX 1-0100 HOLLIS $16,990 AU BRKK 12 YEARS OLD , Don’t miss this sacrifice bar­ gain! S large, modern rms. 3 gorgeous bedrms. Oversize gar­ den grounds — Fine residential neighborhood AD conveniences. NO CASH GX $690 DOWN CIV. KENSHORE 171 St A Hillside Av. Jamaica OL 7-3800 OZONE PARK 6 ROOM — 3 BEDROOM BRAND NEW RANCHES COLONIALS AND - * ■ 6 ROOMS — 3 BEDROOMS — 2 BATHS »'• $17,990. LOW DOWN PAYMENTS • EXCELLENT MORTGAGE TERMS See Models at 116-49 Van Wyck Exp'wy Opan Daily, Sat. A Sun. 167-10 Hillsid* Ave. Jamaica Fraa Parking AMES OL 8- LARGEST BUILDER OF NEW HOMES 4000 "QUEENS HOLIDAY SPECIALS" HOUSES OF THE WEEK BROOKLYN 1 CAMBRIA QUEENS BORDER HEIGHTS 2 Family Detached Stucco 9 Rooms, DETACHED, GAS 7 Rooms, 3 Bed Van Wyck Vicinity rooms. Garage 4 Bedroom House, sT a I , rOKI | B a s e m e n t, All Huge Basement, SO. OZONE PARK VCMlFkirFC " Conveniences Many Extras $14,990 $15,990 $16,500 AGATE REALTY 1BB-1B LINDEN BLVD., ST. ALBANS, N. Y. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 9 AJM. TO 9 P.M. PLENTY OF PARKING SPACE AR 6-3233 HOLLIS $18,990 ENGLISH TUDOR ALL BRICK 17 Magnificent Rooms. Wood] | Paneled Finished Basement. | | Garage, I Short Blocks to| | Jamaica Avenue. Near All| I Shopping A Transportation., AGATE RLTY 15911 Hillside Ave., Jamaica. N.Y. Open 7 Days a Week 9 AM to 9 PM Plenty of Parking Space JA 3-4521 St Albans 2 family brick A atuc- co. 5 A 4to. oil. nr transp. Sharpe LA 7-2700 Owner DESPERATE LAST CHANCE Brick Ranch Only SVj Years Young, Large Rooms, All Modern. Vacant. Finished Basement, Hollis Gardens. Price Only $13,500. DOWN ARCADIA JA 6-7300 <199-19 HUIeide Ave » (Open 7 Days Weekly) (9 to t> S-OL-ID B-R-l-C-K? IAL. aLrans DETACHED COLON-' Newly renovated. 5 modem kitchen, tile hath, Oarage vk VACANT 4 MOVE RIGHT IN NO CASH GIs $400 DOWN OTHERS JAXMAN REALTY 169-12 Hillside Ave., Jamaica AX 1-7400 SMem Kitchen, Large Rooms (Mt-Garage, aad Fletdy of Land on- Can move In within 7 days. Hurry — Will net 1$ $B LEGAL 2-FAMILY 1 Tremendous 5-Room Apto. , Modem kitchens — Hollywood bath Automatic Oil Heel Gl’s $500 DOWN OTHERS LOW DOWN PAYMENT Coll Aft. B. Hazel OL 8-2100 ’11,0 FULL PRICE QUALIFIED AXJ0900 M9-14 Hillside A fOpew/9 to 9 every day)_____ keeetHal I*- 4 RMS, KITCMlirmS AVAHJLBLl A fan beeement. $11,99*. He »re*1 LA MPMb • GOODYEAR • • 0L 7-6800 • I 17 $4 1481b IK I North of Hillside Ave. I Open Daily, Sat., Saa. 9-9. Moffiar - Daughter augnr VERY LARGE HOUSE 2 KfTCMENS, 2 BATHS 6 ROOM COLONIAL 3 Large Bedroom*, Ptirirfud meet. OO Beet. Ntae Residential ;_________ .gbtMKhood. Beet oner Over $14. 500 PRINCIPALS ONLY OWNER OL $-1961 HOLLIS New So. Ozone Part -r New section. 4 hedrm bungataa*. 3 car garage, pet is. outside swimming pool. $4,509 rash above mortgage, pay $157 month. Also 1 and 2 family Broker Tebiat W. FA 21914. JA S-H39 YOUCAN BUY in St Afeaas. Nr Linden A 21$ brick. 1 hedrm. 1 toantly 2 family brick 5 and 6 roams Excellent condMkiu O L. only MW Cash Dawn Immediate occupancy Live rent free! Walk to subway. LONG ISLAND HOMES 1(1-12 Hillside Awe.. RE 9-73M tor prsctteally 2 beths 19 AU wiOi garage, fin. rm. Ito AR fenced to. "Yew Dream Use B either as a I family, er a large ewe Call Agent near to see it You'D toes R. Mr. White JA MM1 Good credit A a to OWTNAA h23 115th Drive SPRINOFTEU) Gardens — Beauti­ ful sew 1 family house. 9 Rms. seml-ettactwd. Ito baths, alee to rattan, tlSAto. no down payment AGENT Mr Simmons AX 7-273$ After $ p.na. FI 1-17$$. 2 FAMILY - 6 A 6 5350 TOTAL CASH LOOKING FOR A LARGE LEGAL 2 FAMILY HOUSE? THIS IS IT! Completely detached with garage. a fine area with Subway, bus. Rooms are tremendous, can be had for as little as $19,990. Full price. Call Private AGENT now. OL 9 9WV LEGAL 2 Family house, 3 rooms Finished basement 2Vi Rooms 3 Rooms, second floor. Ito room. Finished attic. Storm windows doors, blinds. Price *17490 I .A 7-2539, Owner. Qt FENS - Sacrifice Lovely 3 Hedrm Cape. Principals only. — Call Mr Scott JA 3-3444. HfHJ.IS ^5 RM BRICK Bungalow, attached garage. Porch. Extras. OWNER GL 4-5145 I CANT SLEEP MUST SEU IN WEEK My Husband Left Me. Can’t Pay My Expenses Bank to Foreclone t nleea 1 sell wMhtn Week Call My Agent Now Te Look at thia Hoe It has $ Bedrooms. Ftatlahed Ba ment. Brick All Around, with Oar­ age. and located In 9t. Albans Selling for Only $9,000 Cash. | Ask for Mr. Rite JA 9-7371^ I. r HOUSES Queeat Far Saia Quota*—Far Sola OWNER DESPERATE WILL PAY ALL COSTS, FEES, ETC. ABSOLUTELY NO CASH RE(; RED 5 Bedroom Houso Approved by the Veterans Administm.| MOVE IN IMMEDIATELY! 107 - 04 Union Hall St. $17,500 CALL OWNER AX 1-1803 with income from upstairs _ GI No Caah Needed as Down ~ Immense 1 fam. home, 5 A r tremendous bedrooms, science W O kitchen, detached, modern A V near all schools and transp. A w 5 BMlrms $15,150 • A bath, landscaped 33x100 plot. V Payment, $550 for Civ. A Q $100 Closing Foot te All • • St. Albans $19,950 J Why pay rent when you can V • LIVE RENT FREE £ A rm apt down and 4 rm apt apt. This home features ( 9 • up. complete finished bate- V A ment with kitchen and bath, a _ detached with garage. 30x100 W plot, fine residential neigh-A • $o. OionoNt $14,500 Q borhood. extras includes No ™ • £ Cash GI. Civ $950 • A just credit check required Q No Cash. • Brifa Home 9 • - .Corp. 9 • V Open 9 AM - 9 PM. 7 days A A Rentals available Richmond RIO 19, N.Y. V AX 7-1440 • 5>s rm home, detached, gar- _ age. extra large kitchen. 2 A rms in finished basement, move u rn* WS0- 01 ™ A ” mortgage already arranged, 115-1$ Liberty Ave. Baitley Pork - Queens So. Ozone Park Beautiful Park Area New 1 A 2 Families N* Dawn Payment fTO QUALIFIED BUYERS) Colonials & 6 over 6't MODERN KITCHENS. FULL BASEMENTS. LARGE PUTTS Immediate occupancy or FUTURE DELIVERY Foch Park Homes Furnished Models at: i 150-34 Foch Blvd. Baisley Pork, Queens AT CORNER SUTPHTN BLVD. Weekends JA 9-9867 Eves. FI 2-3265 ST. ALBANS r $16,990 VACANT. MOVE IN Sacrifice Sale. Must SeH This De­ tached. English Colonial. with « Large Rooms A Modem Kitchen A Bath 4 Garage, on 4.000 Sq. Feet nf Landscaped Trees A Shruhs. Priced for Quirk Sale^^Haafifita Occupancy. CAMBRIA HEIGHTS VIC *21,990 WIDOW S SACRIFICE Detached 10 Year Old Brick A •Shingle. 2 Family with a 5 A 3 Room Apt. Available. With Streamlined Kitchens A Baths, + Semi Finished Basement, with Bar, [i E erylhlng GdW Mtttt Sell G.I. or FHA «<*) DOWN MANY OTHER 1 A 2 FAMILY QUEENS HOME SALES 179-13 Hillside Avenue 018-7510 Call for appt. Open every day. $19,990 ST. ALBANS Beautiful stucco legal 2 family, 3to A hath on lat fleer. 4 A bath i>n 2nd floor 2>y room apartment in basement, top neighborhood, con venlent to everything, loada ef extras Live comfortably RENT FREE! It'S Your: BEST DEAL BI 9-6067 1 FAMILY Brick. 109TH AVE . — Jamaica Caah $15M. Vacant on closing 5 rm. A 4 rm. apto Jo Management Ca. RI $-4415. 1st Section Sold Out, 2nd Section Going Fast! THE FIRST ALL-ELECTRIC HOUSE IN JAMAICA. QUEENS 6 ROOMS e 3 BEDROOMS Large Heated Basement, 2 Bath Units On a tree linedtfreet Immense roams, 24 ft. living rm. Two 17 ft. bedrooms, 16 ft. din­ Featuring: G. E. Kitchens, ing roam, 16’/2 ft. kitchen. Built-in dishwasher and re­ 200 Amp. heavy duty wiring, 5 walk-in closets. Extra thickness frigerator, Electric cooking Fiberglass insulation. and water heating, Separate thermostat in each room, 5 year heating guarantee. Combination storm-screen doors and windows, large railinged balcony, close to schools, churches, playgrounds, porks, shopping and transportation. 22,990 Exceptionally Low Down Payment Arranged 30 YEAR MORTGAGES ELECTRA HOMES i 143rd St. fir Brinkerhoff Ave., Jamaica DIRECTIONS: Grand Central Parkway, continue on Van Wyck Expressway fa Linden Blvd., turn left to 143 Street, turn left again to Brinkerhoff Avenue and model. Site Phone RE 9-4209, Office OL 1-2020 , This Is A Gold Medallion Home Live Better Electrically “BETTER BUYS AT BETTER” HOUSES FOR SALE NEW HOUSES & RESALES NO CASH DOWN Gl's OTHERS MINIMUM CASH IN MEM0RIAM TO OUR LATE PRESIDENT JOHN FITZGERALD KENNEDY FIGHTER FOR PEACE, CHAMPION OF THE RIGHTS OF ALL MANKIND AND MARTYR TO HIS COUNTRY BETTER REALTY JA9-HOO I IL 7-3100 JA3-3377 135-19 Rockaway Blvd. 103 09 Northern 159 12 Hdltide Ave. SO OZONE PARK- CORONA JAMAICA MA 3-3800 IV 9-5800 ‘ 277 Nassau Road 17 S. Franklin St. Roosevelt. L.I.. N.Y. Hempstead, N.Y. ALL 5 OFFICES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 9:30 AM TO 8:30 PM CASH NEEDED NUMBER OF SECTION ROOMS MONTHLY FULL SALES BANK PAYMENTS PRICE $300 S450 S4 5O S450 $600 $600 $1,100 BAISLEY PARK SO. OZONE PARK SPRMGFIELD GDNS. JAMAICA CEDAR MANOR HOLLIS S+BATH 5+BATH 8 + BATH 6+BATH 7+BATH 7+ BATH 6+1 BATHS CAMBRIA NTS. G.I/* NO DOWN 53.69 S S 78.74 71.74 s 81.55 $ s 87.00 s 91.00 $112.00 PAYMENT S 9,500 $14,500 514,500 514,990 $15,990 $16,500 $20,500 ALSO LARGE SELECTION: 2 FAMILY HOMES EXAMPLE Here 1» What You Get With Only 9(00 Down: 2 Large Beautiful Apto. With Recreation Basement. And Plenty Of Space Outside For The Children To Play. AD This For The Unbellrveable Low Price Of tl(J00 h ' LIVE PRACTICALLY RENT FREE E. J. DAVID AX 7-2111 t 159-05 HILLSIDE AVE., JAMAICA, N.Y. (Open Every Day. IncImHng Sat. h $ua.. I M to ») IN NEW YORK CALL Ri 9-5300.. TO PLACE WANT ADS .. IN BROOKLYN CALL UL 7-2500 CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE 5 PJR. TUESDAY PRECEDING THURSDAY T CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE 5 PJM. TUESDAY PRECEDING THURSDAY 4 Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- X • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Dec. 7, 1963 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS houSh* Mortgage Monty «e 4 Nassau-Swffolk-For Sale *1S’UW lM juiiuik rut Jure J5 fanU|y o, Franklin Ave., Bronx. Pay* 9111.0 Mo - U years Price »10JOO Call Joeei “*• < Cut. From Preceding Page 6 RM HOUSE FOR LEASE SI 30 per mo Furn heat Children Agent JA 9-4407 FOR RENT Mother-Daughter Set Up 9 Rmj, 2 KHchs, 2 Baths, * Finished Basement, Garage $105 MONTHLY NET OWNER AGENT RE 9-3440 ST. ALBANS RENT WITH OPTION TO BUY 3 Bedrooms 585 MONTH CHILDREN WELCOME JAMAICA RENT WITH OPTION TO BUY 3 Bedrooms $75 MONTH CHILDREN WQDOMK AGATE JA 3-4521 JAMAICA — 5 Room Cao move in today. II chil- P*y sp <-smi AGENT HOLLIS — 5 Room brick houa transportation SI1S month. can move right in need $345. AGENT SP 6-9602 ST ALBANS — 7 Responsible couple, children, animate. Rent *110 Agent SP 6-9602 OZONE PARK — 5 Sim month Children. 2 year______ AGENT Must pay fuel SP 6-9601 BOLUS — > cben. living room * Big back yard Rent $130 Children. Agent SPRINGFIELD GARDENS 4 BEDRMS-RENT Detached Cottage Type Home $110 Mu RENT WITH OPTION TO BUY IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Saks Ol B-7510 JAMAICA 9 rm house, 2 baths 2 kitchens. steam oil AGENT HSE FOB LEASE. Private. 11 man. LA *4896 2 baths, can be Rent - Baisley Pk. 7 Rms — $85 mo. OPTION TO BUY Agent OL 8-4646 JAMAICA 9 Rmt — $88 mo. OPTION TO BUY Agent OL 8-3533 OWNER WILLRENT 10 RM BEAUTRIl HOME $115 MO. Will Arrange Sate for Right Party AX 1-1404 AGENT CEDAR MANOR — 18 Kim. 2 Family < „ Rent tar only $89 par month AGENT AX 1 JAMAICA ----- LEGAL 2 FAMILY 15 RMS 2 KrTCHEHS?Tbaths . $120 MO. 2 Year Lanta aeair «x 1-14M 80. OZONE PARK are you handy? IT'S A DANDY! "HANDYMAN SPECIAL" 10 RMS $95 MO. RENT OR BUY AGENY JA 3-1617 ROOSEVELT S BEDROOM SPLIT LEVEL with 3H Bath*. Finished Ptayroam. Reasonably Prired (or Quick Sola NORMAND REALTY IV 1-4133 RENT - OPTION TO BUY JAMAICA 8 RMS 4 8EDRMS Newly decorated, gas heat, privete' drlVeway, detached, walk te subway. $65 MO. MANY OTHER HOMES FOR RENT Agent AX 7-1925 BUY! SAVE $$$! BUY RIGHT! SAVE $$$ BUY — BY 4th Ave. Realty And Save More $$$$! GIs No Money Needed as a Down Payment $16,500 $20,400 518,990 RICHMOND HILL RENT WITH OPTION 2 FAMILY 6 DOWN, 4 UP LIVE RENT FREE CALL NOW AGENT JA 3-3460 S. OZONE PARK 2 Family 5 It 3 rms Rest for $100 per month AGENT AX 11303 Brickl A beefy heme in ■■ Appealing heat el Lexerieas even, warm, beautiful resi- areal Located or 6,000 $g. dential area. It kas 3 mast ft. of land, beautifully land- Beautiful A graciaus. Field- stone and brick exterior I 3 large bedrms, separate fer­ . mal diningrm, even lovelier desirable bedrms ef which scaped. Contains a gorgeous jpocious livingrm, with ., . j u-j . al d ' 14 ft. wide by 20 ft. long, spacious bedrms, lovely liv- Plus an adorable and free- mgrm, ballywoad batbrm; ievs livingrm, largo kitchen, addition a side portico 1 measures approximately beautiful big kitchen, 3 brick wood burning fire­ place. Large knotty - pine paneled kitchen, plus addi­ tional breakfast rm, colored tile bathrms, finished base­ ment, storms, screens, Ven­ etian blinds, gas range, car­ peting and others. See this meat, many extras. Why pay demanded by many. Splen reef, take advantage. " tat tai did! Nassau-Suffolk Fur Sale ALL MEN ARE CREATED EQUAL IN THE SIGHT OF GOD — OBSERVE — j ’1#rT °n rh*n"fl ’• Monday at 10 pm. left the audience which Included In all probability— ba'Mrrs. home owner*. landlords. tenants and children, in a state of disgust. This program depicted and maligned, leaving the impression that all brokers and representatives specifically engaged la tkis particular business are corrupt, dishonest, and in violation of the law. We recommend further research and verification. We personally believe it will antase and en­ lighten haw little the total truth has been told We also believe a great harm has been dona to Negroes and other minorities. (This may not have been Intentional) an an illustration:— how many Negroes or alher minorities have this type of money to purchase a home la the Ml.000 classification? How marh is this away from the actnal facts? What proportion of Negroes and other unfortunate minorities ran purchase the Ml .068 classification In comparison *• .Ul*te "IT *kle *• pur<'h‘*”' *• '*”■ $13 000 to $20,000 classification? How did they hoy their homes' How many purchased in a conventional mortgage or taking over the existing mortgage and have the money, in comparison to those nho purchased thru the FHA with a minimum downpayment and those who bought thru the Veterans Administration? The FHA mavimnm mortgage whirh includes the minimum downpayment. The VA actually tevstaates the priee ef the home and property. "Left get the record atralght! Wo are not all good — hot neither are wo aU had!” Conclusion------------- Amen. 1 I I I from NYC dial 516 thaw IV 5-2477 5-2477 219 So. Franklin St. • Hempstead Westchester-Fur Sale New Jersuy Fur Sale Houses with Stores For Sole ENGLEWOOD Shirk Xmas Specials! 8 room Colonial, in tip-top condi titan. Very deep plot. Illness forces OWNER sa|h •— $16,900. I $4400 SPECIAL. 209 St. Marks 3 room apt. store, vacant. brick ft*'- UL 3-6707 j-------------------------------------------------------- ;---- PRICE *8.000 _____ 7 rm brick Cape Cod Uv rm w/flre- 1=351 189,n ® 1 Family house I place., att. garage. Very clean 4 rooms, store and basement / Sacrifice $22,900, DA 8-5917 LOW DOWN PAYMENT — TO ALL WHO QUALIFY SHIRK REALTORS 103 W. Palisade Ave.. Englewood NJ. Dial" 201 - LO $-4422 OWNER ----------- r-------- 2713 HTH AVE., Building to be re­ habilitated. 8-5 room apartments 2 stores 1 vacant. Gas heat $6,000 annual rent. Price $14,500. $7,000 Cash. No violation, TR 7-1621 or UL 8-3930 Agent OZONE PARR Rent lor J95 per AGENT AX 1-2384 Springfield Garden* BUNGALOW 5 RMS $95 Mthly was 9 RMS $125 Mthly Flair Realty LA 1-7757 HOLLIS “DO IT YOURSELF SPECIAL" NEEDS PAINTING Nice Neighborhood 9 RMS 2 KITCHENS $65 MO. OPTION TO BUY NO CASH G.I. AGENT JAMAICA AX 1-1401 LARGE HOME F TOT Fontabulous Ranch No Cash Down $91. Mo. Pays The Bank ...v uuim Good for 2 Families I3 bednn’' 5^1 IKitcnen, uolywd bath, piayrm _ FULL I “ PIKE ___a________ ■ dow. living rm. country tvne ■ 12 ROOMS SHARE RENT OF $100 MO. -i RENT WITH OPTION Using rm. country type kitchen. Holywd bath, piayrm sue base’mt, gar., large corner, I gar., large corner, beautifully landsc'd plot beautifully landsc'd plot $15,500 AGENT JA 3-1516 SO OZONE PARK 7 rm* 3 Bedrms Large garden plot. Rent for only 990 per month AGENT_________AX 1-2382 SO. OZONE PARK 5 rm Bungalow Large garden plot Rent for $78 per month .— SPRLNGFIELD GARDENS 12 Rent AGENT kit Handyman Special fob *100 per month AX 1-2384 AGENT___________________ AX 143921 ROOSEVELT. Long Island 900 other homes to choose ranging from SS.000 te *25,000. IN NYC DIAL CODE S16 I IV 3-1805 1 382 S. FRANKLIN ST. I ■ —PS»D Wash­ ington Park Section. 7 rooms — Split level, finished playroom 3 large bedrooms. 2 baths. lOOx 60 plot beautiful landscape. Va­ cant; immediate occupancy *2.- 500 00 over mortgage Owner PR 3- 3490 No Brokers. Be in before Christmas Must sell. ’ WESTBURY Split, 3 bedrms, ltk Baths, living rm. dining rm. wall to wall carpeting, eat in kitchen, panelled den, utility rm, attach­ ed gar., patio, tree shaded cor, appliances, aluminum storm, ex­ cellent schools, $22,500. 516 ED 4-6385 Owner SPRINGFIELD GARDENS 7 rms. 2 Large bedrms Rent for 290 per month AGENT AX 1 ROLLIS 7 RM HOUSE MOVE IN NOW IF QUALIFIED NO FEE $80 MO. AGENT HOLUS JA 3-0272 AVAILABLE NOW! 8 RM FURNISHED HOME 2 Batha Will Take Children $100 MO. Bent or Buy AGENT AX 1-1400 SPRINGFIELD GARDENS SPACIOUS 7 RM COLONIAL Large Plot. Many ' JSxtras $100 MO. ; i Available to Qualified GJ, AGENT AX 1-1402 JAMAICA 8 ROOM FURNISHED HOME Children OK $90 MO, RENT OR BUY AGENT JA 3-3928 TO PLACE HOUSE OF TOMORROW UPPER WESTCHESTER 3 bedroom, modern rained ranch. Landscaped Vi acre. Fully carpet- ed 2Vj baths Stereo-Hi-Fi and in- ter-com in every room. Large rec room with fireplace 2 rone gas heat, utility room. 2 car garage Ideal location Good for profes­ sional. $27,000 Must have $7,000 cash 914 IAkeiand 8-R512 Owner I MOUNT VERNON FREEPORT CORNER Modern 12 i| FAMILY*, 8 rms, room or 2 fam. legal. Profession. 2 fami,y, rm5 al die. Brick 2 car garage. Oil heat. Extras Principal and appt only Owner 516 FR $-3088. 3 family, 10 rms. $19,000 *24500 *21500 Many others. Low cash required on Most WEST HOUSING CORP. Elmont Lakeview » E 3rd Mt Vernon, N.Y. MO 7-4010 NEW RANCHES A CAPES $17,500 UP. GOOD RESALES AT REA­ SONABLE PRICES HARRY R. ZIMMERMAN 522 Hempstead Tpke., 516GE 7-1984 3 BEDRM Boone, finished basement 75x100 Plot. 1 bedrm unfinished Asking $192)00. 11,000 down Call 916 ED 4-6542. Owner. WYANDANCH. Legal 2 fam., plus finished third level, with bath & kitchen tar third apt. 3 yra old, all Improvements, bus. railroad, shopping. *19200 916 JU Owner. MT. KBCO — 1 Family House. Big back yard. $15,000 NYC NE 9-2245 OWNER MOHEGAN Lake. New York. Two Story, 7 rms. tk acre lot. Oil heat, finished basement, Suited for Doctor or Dentist $23500 Agent HY 5-3732. MT. VERNNON — NEAR PELHAM UNE 3 FAMILY SOLID BRICK 6; 8Vi: 3 Room APTS 2 CAR GARAGE. METICULOUS THROUGHOUT FULL POSSESSION — NO CON- THOI5. ASKING *32500 TERMS LOMBARDI REALTY 914 MO 8-2443 TEANECK $17,900 Lovely Colonial Gl HO $$ DOWN .. ____ . . ... All other approved buyers only *800 Mr down. Thia spacious home has large living room, full dining room, huge — .Totten • est-u, kitchen, 2 twin »ze bedrooms, . 'MODERN STORE plus three 5-rm apts. Good location, good rental,. Building in excellent condition. Only $1,500 Cash Hy 3 ” ZZTZ Z *<^^.br'Sk 3 1 family and Store. $2/M)0 down Take over mortgage All vacant BU 7-4472 Call OWNER garage, many extras! All on a good size plot. Nicely landscaped In NYC Coll LA 4-6210 Lester Handelsman REALTOR 111* Teaneck Road No. Teaneck, N.J. TEaneck 3-1222 RIVERVALE _ Comfvtnbie home with acreage. Half fr-from New York. Write Box D-4. c/o A mat. News. (Owner). FLORIDA For Sale DUPLEX on 4 city lots. Fruit trees Alt. 19 Florida. Low taxes Fine neighborhood. H J. Nyholm — 1022 Mohawk St. Clearwater, Fla MONEY MAKERS — *3500 DOWN?’ Two 2 fam houses with store,.: St. Johns Pl nr Kingston Av* Income $555 Carrying charges *339.91. Call Mr. Revell ST 9-6652 eves A weekends Call DI 2-0137 BARGAIN INCOME *S.»)0 per YEAR Owner will sacrifice, (his 3 family A store Solid brick building for only $23500 Call Owner *' LA 8-2181 MADISON AVE.. 1820 - 10 Family 2 large stores. Vacant Apt. To settle estate Edward Sisters AU Haases Wawted-Ta Bay Church Property Fur Saia FREEPORT - Legal 2 family, 5 A bath down. 4 A bath up. Patio full basement, oil heat. 2 car gar. age. Excellent location $1*580. — EMICO Realty 516-IV 3-3400. FREEPORT - Attractive hong a low ( rooms A bath, 3 bedroom*. Oil heat Full basement, extras. Low taxes $13580 GI total cash $1*0 Emico Realty 516-IV 3-3400. HEMPSTEAD — Beautiful spacious Colonial. 7 rooms, both, full ment Oil heat. 1 car garage, tras. *17500 Emico Realty 410 — IV al Choice area. Beautiful ra cK 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, vacant. Attor­ ney Price reduced. 516GE 7-4242 l FAMILY Cape, $ rms. 2 2 Car garage Finished basement Vacant immediately IV 3-2399 "LARGEST SELECTION" In the BETTER sections of L.I. THE NEIGHBORHOOD SEUR . . OUR HOMES! HIGH RANCHES — CAPES — COIDNIAIR 2-FAMIUES e NEW h RESALES Home yoar Tewa, Type Home ALL LX Price Range Wm. URQUART 91 Grove 81. Hempstead. IV 3-8915 FREEPORT - 1 Bedrm Garage. pteR™ 1" Extras 516-MA 3 2084 Asking $19580 OWNER Hew Jersey Far Sale ENGLEWOOD — ___„ FOR CHOICE HOMES0 IN THE BEST RESIDENTIAL NEIGH­ BORHOODS. CONSULT ONE OF ENGLEWOOD'S OLDEST AND MOST RELIABI-E FIRMS. ASK FOR MRS NORVELLE AT: Hansen & Hansen REALTORS 262 Grand Ave., Englewood LO 8-9086 Eves., Call LO 8-8729 EXCLUSIVE Exec. Home 840500 up Neighborhood 3 lge bedrms. 2 baths, rec. rm. tee livingrm. with fireplace. Lge kitchen A din ingrm. On dead-end street. Com­ pletely enclosed with evergreen trees on Vt acre plot School, walking distance 8 vwimmlng 20 miles to G.W. Bridge $49500 OWNER 212-391-3403 eves itlonal Exclusives New bl-level ranch. 4 bedrooms. $23,500 Lovely elsnlal. Prime area. $23580. Many other homes tat Bergen County from *12500 up $17590 2 bedrms. Tea- neck Qualified Gts no down pay- neat. All others low down payment. WE HAVE ONE FOR YOU CHEROT A CO. 307 W. Palisades Ave. Englewood Diol 201 L0 84100 ENOLEWOOD. Elmore Ave. Large 2 family. 1st floor - $ rm*. im­ mediate occupancy. 2nd floor rent 4 rm*. full attic Full basement 2 car garage, extensive grounds With fruit trees, oil. hot water beat. *25508 For appointment Phone 201-TF. 87394 OWNER TEANECK — *13,000 NO $$ DOWN FOR QUALIFIED VETERANS 3 BEDROOM COf/)NIAI. Ite RATHS — 1 CAR GARAGE Vacant' We have the key! Spark* living roam, full dining room, mod­ ern kitchen Low taxes, steam oil heat. BROKER ROTHMAN REALTY CORP. DIAL 201 . L0 9-5300 411 Grand Av* at Rt. 4 Englewood. N. J. Open dally and Sunday till t ENGLEWOOD — 2 family. 5 A good neighborhood. $27598: 4 bi rm brick. *22#on TEANECK - G.I Forecteeure, bedrm, $11580 W9AS9. 4 family LANDLORDS’ Ltet your Hot and apts lor quick re Arnet Reatty Corp. Catt MRS SIMMONS MJ » PLENTY CASH » PITHJC NOTICE Buy 1 or 2 family, any condition Bklyn or Qoeena—Confidential Reliable -C.Hff Franklin JA HOUSES WANTED ALL AREAS Bklyn, Monk, Bronx West, LI, Nassau ALL CASH OR CASH I Over Mortgages) Highest Prices Immediate Decision 41 Hoar Closing Na Commission Charge | I Call_PL^7-6985' Houses Wanted To Root ROUSE WANTED TO RENT 7 or I rms Near school. SW 4-7421 Long Island or Bronx _ CRE8KILL - 4 bedrm. W level HOOSOS With StOTOt For Root NEW MILFORD - $ bedrm Cel- ENGLISH-POLITE REALTY ASSOC 248 W Forest Ave.. N J 281 LO 84HH7 SPECIAL 18 rm house with stare $1*5 month 2 and 2 family hoosas *479 cash 2 and 2 family hnuais 5179 HY 5-4310. SMALL MISSION FOR SALE. FUL­ LY EQUIPPED. INCLUDING HAM MOND' ORGAN. CALL MRS. CA GLE EN 916546 FOR SALE AT ONCE — Church Fully equipped 5 Rm. apt to help with income (Steam) PR 2- 8649 UL 7-4287 Owner CHURCH BLDG — Bklyn Seats 630. furn. equipmsnt. air con­ ditioned. Must see to appreciate JA 6-3466 MR. KAY Church Fully equipped Bushwick Ave.. 3 story, extremely modern interior, parquet floors with lavish fixtures. Drapes A rugs, seat­ ing 400 people pins basement suit­ able for school Many extras Fully air-conditioned Chairs, water - cool­ er. wan mirrors Public address system. Coat room, nr subway A 3 bu« lines. Call now for appt. to see CoU Mr. Steinberg IM 7-7477 777 Nostrand Ave. CHURCHES For Rent CHURCH For rmt. tor Fully equipped. Monday, Tue«- day, Thuraday. Saturday. Sunday Mortqaqe Money Home-Owners Business Owners Refinance Plan LOANS TO ANY HOMEOWNERS 1ST AND 2ND MORTGAGES Pay all Mortgages Pay all your bills Pay all your taxes Pay all ysur loan* Pay all your repairs NO DELAY 1 IZ)W MONTHI.Y PAYMENT AVAILABLE TO REDUCE BILIK Amount of loan 9 1508 $ 2500 $ 3500 $29,000 10 yr* 11.11 22.21 33.21 27737 9.44 18.0 2S3 13 yrs. 7.17 14 33 21 50 179.12 LOANS SECURED ON ANY AMOUNT $32,000 ON EQUIPMENT AND FARM 1 3216508 ON MACHINERY $88508 2ND MORTGAGE ON OFFICE BUILDINGS AND MANY HOI SE I/)ANS BEN FRANKLIN Commercial Corp. Lk. Mortgage Broker 54 WALL ST., RM. 700 Now York 5, N.Y. HA 5-1765 Sat., Hrs. 9-5 A WANT AD LEGAL 3 Family house. Plus 2 ear garage Ukevtew, L.I. Owner *ft«r 6pm 516-IV 1-3618 CALL ““.a. AMSTERDAM NEWS NosMO-SuffuNi-Fur Runt Ri 9-5300 UL 7-2500 NICE 4 Bedroom house tar re* «90 Per mo Including garage Immediate occupancy May have optieh to b*y Owner. 914-IV 1-3919 jShar ‘« p m. WE NAVE Houses for Rent CAU NATIONAL REAL ESTATE 732 Sums* Rwy. Babylon (516) M0 1-3800 ' Money available — any type} | building -do you need money| LOFTS i . CHILDREN I BOARDED LA 8-1671 129 ST.. Ill E. LOFT 25x50. Beau-1 CHILD CARE. All ages. Pick up tiful. clean place, suitable for any service. LA 8-8863. work. Fireprooi bldg. CaU — | SPACE FOR RENT STORES SPACE FOR KENT STORES MODERN AM COND­ ITIONED OFFKES FOR RENT 1711 Amsterdam Ave. (145th St.) 1000 SQUARE FEET Ideal for: Realtor, In­ surance, Accountant, Lawyer, Doctor, Den­ tist, Bank, etc. Avail­ able on or before Feb. 1, 1964. Impressive panelled walls, modern stora fronts, vena­ tion blinds. Kentilt floor*, floure$cent lights, 2 rest room*, 3 ton General Electric air conditioner. Basement. Excellent laag Term Lease te Respensible Tenant* Phene: Wl 2-6B00 nr $ee WIFE * BROWN CO. 4BS1 Breadwny (207 Street) STORE TOE RENT Also suitable for church 1816 Madison Av*. Reasonable Rent. Call AC 3-7008 OL 3-0362 502 W. 147TH ST. Near Amsterdam Ave. AGENT j3j UN 5 7600 Heated OFFICES 166 W. 125th ST. (Cor 7th Ave.) Modern office bldg UN 5-7600 *125 BOOTHS Booths for rant. $15 wkly. Cnll PR 1-8256 nfter 5 pjn. WET BOOTHS FOR RENT M J. Phillip*. 2133^x Seventh Ave­ nue. UN 4-8428 Child Cart BROOKLYN SPECIAL CHILD CAKE EV 4-1696 CHILD care by the day. bet Atlantic and Herkimer. SL 6-8301. CARE FOR CHILDREN at own home PR 4-4519 MOTHER will care for child for wkg mothers. Mr Daniels GL 9-3602 CHILD'S CARE with playroom 708 Washington Ave. ST 9-8704 Bklyn. N.Y. QUEENS CHILD care for working mothers daily. Hollis. GR 9-5214. MOTHER Will care lor chiktren — ages 3 and over 310 weekly. . AR 6-8589 (St. Albans vicinity). TR 4-6729 GARAGES DEXTER GARAGE - HEATED Space now available Reasonable rates. Cap 155 autos. 24 hr service 316 W. 118th St., or call: UN 40747 Profnssional Apartments HOUIS 4 Room professional apartment. Suitable for Doctor. Lawyer, ac­ countant, etc. For Inspection CaU: GL 4-4086 AGENT EASTERN PARKWAY — 7 rooms was doctor's office, suit any pro­ fessional HY 5-2234. evenings OWNER EASTERN FaRKWAY.. 458 CORNER ROGERS Professional apt 4 rms. modern OWNER HY 8-2610 CHILD CARE MANHATTAN CHILD CARE. Dally or weekly W 127th St. Reasonable MO 2-5360 WILL Care for children for work lng mother, 5 days a week. —- UN 4-6586 WILL Care for 2 children any age Daily or wkly. MO 3-4486 CHILDREN Cared for during day. Good environment $7 00 wk — EN 9-2962 DAY CARE. Christian home Pre nursery age girl pref Near 149 St b 7th Ave. $10 weekly AD 4-1650 AU 6-8400 Rm 427 CHILDREN all ages Convenient 116 9t. stdroay MO 3-8442 CHILD care daily. Call Mr*. McNeil AD 4-57X1 MOTHERLY care for children all age* Wkly. dally SW 4-7012 CHILD care, 2 yr* up Nr aU transp UN 4-6148 CHILD CARE dally MB St R St. Nicholas Ave. AU 3 3623 CHILD CARE — Girl Age 9-12. — AU 3-5511 eve*. Careful home Bronx MOTHERLY Care for your CHIld Reasonable. Dully or Weekly Meals Included. DA 9-8633 CHILD care, pood home. W. Bx. CY 9-1349 BABY SITTER AVAXLABLB — JE 84151. CHILD CARE. 1 YEAR UP JE 7-4648 CARE for children daily, 2 yrs 6, up DA 3-4568 CHILD car* by the week or by the day. CY 24308 E 17Sth St Cone. Mon-Frl Former nursery teacher, balanced meals. Yard, piayrm. near transp. school ' Days-Wkty TR 2-5325. I.IFERSFJ) Mother. Care for child- ren. 7 days week. Chrisrtan hem*. ME 5490 CHILDREN. Age* 2-9. 3 day*, con­ venient transp Gr fl apt DA 94920 age. I)»lly or weekly TU 1-8414 E 1R0TH ST — Private house Dally or wkly care. Het meals TV * recreation. Transp provided. WE 3-4878 BROOKLYN CHILD CARE. Win caO tar and GL MOTHER win take care of childrea any age. 912.90 wk. Private home CL 75231 CARE For infants to 4 year* dally HI 3-8770 or wkly. lx»w rate COOPER ST., 280 — Child 3 te 3 years of age. Can leave overnight. GL 9-7119. NURSE Experienced, ceptale day care Infanta and up Hot meals, private home, yard. Lincoln Rd near Rogers IN ')4WM EXCELLENT CARE. YARD. GL 3470 Nr transp. A CHRISTIAN Mother who loves children will care for yours by day or night. Hot meal. Call- Mi 74419 CARE for children All ages. Christ ten home. PR 3- ROOSEVELT PL . 27 Nr garatogs Dally care for children CHILDREN cared for by the day Give lunch. MA 2-O3M CHILD CARE Pickup PR 34831 delivery LET A Trained Baby nti Child Cell GL MOTHER wlU care for child dally or wkly for working mother. AR $-3064 BEST OF fluid Care All egea. Private home. Playroom. TV. Yard. gym. hot meals. Day or Week LA 7-7707. CARE For children daily Nr. Mer- rick Rd. AX 1-8988 will RE children in > week. Ue- CHILD CARE 7 days wk. 123rd Av* A 140th St. JA 8-2873. NASSAU-SUFFOLK MOTHERLY care for children 1 month to 5 years. CaU Ste SE 2-4197 Services BIRTH CERTIFICATES SECURRD Affidavit*. <ample!* Notary Sar- vlee. Iseeme Tax. Federal sm and Stale. A. COBKN, 2181 Sth Ave. (Between Utah. 117th Bta.l BI 8-8188. HOME IMPROVEMENT - General Contractor, garages. Homes built Basements finished. sidewalks re­ paired. waterproofing, violation* removed. plastering, carpentry. 5 years to pay C. H Williams 1408 Prospect Ave. KI 2-2710 THOMAS ALLEYN’E — 40 AaWord Street — Finished Carpenter and all kinds of alterations. PALVnNG In and out. Celling. $15. Entire room. $30. Celotax ceilings and gutters and leaders. CaU — GL MANAGEMENT Apt Buildings - AU boroughs We handle tnereae- es. violations, evictions Joseph Management Co. RI 9-4415. ATTINTION LANDLORDS AND RIDKERS Stop the inspectors A tenants from bothering yon by simply calling ST 9-6184 from any section of Brooklyn. N.Y. for repairs and plastering ef ceilings, walls and roofs, also painting and decor*I lng. No cost or obligation for estimate. ACCOMMODATION for elderly Indy Refined surroundings, care, diet cheerful attention given, laundry 3 in a room $19. each LA 9-RE7 I rs true tian PREPARE by Hom* Study for Gov- ernment Civil Service Entranc* Exam*. Phone MA 4-1860 or write: NATIONAL TRAINING SERVICE. INC.. Box N-4. e/o N.Y. Am* New*. UP TO DATE, Easy ihort course* Piano, theory, harmony, etc Af­ ternoons. evenings. Webb. 308 We*t 135th St. WA 8-700. EX-Gf puts disturbed kid* on beam" — Recent newt write up Child­ ren A Young adults-academic A emotional problem* Sat se* ■inns tar normal children. Transp A11 boroughs Settlement AaeocU- ton 120 Jackson St Bklyn. N.Y. GL 44)104. HY 9-6365 JAZZ New round*. train, record Piano, voice, gospel. <dance »3> CBS Bldg. Elderly welcome. Some Placement CI 6-0897. IF 4-7SM. ——T I 7i.ii Situations Wanted YOUNG Woman willing to learn position wanted — part-time af­ ter 6 pm. evenings A Sat. Call PR 34)770 after 6 pm. and Sat. EXPERIENCED^kind lady-like* to take rare of children or elderly people Steep-ln or out. 518 IV 3-44M TMl/)RBoshelman?«o<»ers 19 yean ex*. Neighborhood tailoring ladies, geate Available 8 half day* or 3 full days per task MU 95721 BARTENDER With experlene. Wishes to work tall W part Urn* LU 9-9111 TO PLACE A WANT AD CALL Amsterdam News Ri 9-5300 UL 7-2500 RI l-Ml! MONEY MORTGAGE FAST CLOSINGS 1st-2nd-3rd Unlimited Money I 24 HOUR MTGL COMMITMENT MORTGAGE 48 HOUR MORTGAGE CLOSING STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL Fereclosurt* Prevented MORTGAGES BOUGHT ANY LOCATION AU CASH FOR YOUR HOUSE I Your present debts or mort-t i gages consolidated to redooe^ |>our payments. MANHATTAN-BRONX BKLYN, QUEENS,WEST*! IMMEDIATE ACTION RADIANT REALTY CO. PL 7-6985 MORTGAGES Immediate Inspection and Commitment. FHA A GIs BPECIALTY. LET US CONSOLIDATE TOUR DEBTS TO REDUCE YOUR PAYMENTS. For 1st, 2nd and 3rd mortgages, quick action on foreclosures. We fi­ nance repairs, alterations and building loans. We'll Buy Your House - All Cash We offer deeds for sale AND LEASES at lowest cost, on residential and business properties. FINDS AVAILABLE FOR LAND MORTGAGES. Any Type Financ­ ing Considered CONSULT US FOR . CONVENTIONAL * DIFFICULT FINANCING (CONFIDENTIAL - PERSONAL - ANALYSIS AND SERVICE RENDERED.) CROWN ESTATES 1034 Lafayette Av*., Brooklyn Hickory 3-5590 SPACE fop Bent STORES poslte public School, 865 a mw Owner before 9 a.m. or after p m FA 7 5294 or see snper 1649 AMSTERDAM AVE. DOUBLE WINDOW STORE HUDSON HOTEL EXCELLEJ.. FOR GROCERY OR ANY OTHER BUSINESS ASK FOR MISS B IN HOTEL OFFICE. STORE FOR RENT West IMst 84. fCee. 8th Opposite project Fxrellent for shoe repair shoe shine parlor Call AU 6-1122 WHITE PLAINS - 29 Grove gt - Fully equipped Superette for rent 3900 sq. ft. plus storage are*: lat­ est equipment; Register*; Scales; Open Refrigerated Display Cases Near Winbrook Housing Develop­ ment. Hoblnowitz, ($14) 948 3132 or 948 6190. BEAUTFUL FJNLSHED Basement available tar private part lea and club meetings PR 1-017 STEBBINS AVE., it Formerly beauty equipped. Call shop Partly STORE. For private or mail or­ der business Gas and electric Free, use all you wish Writ* box D-9. C-e Amst. News. STORE Completely (Urn. Fish, chips and barbecue and other foods Must rent due to Illness. Good location. .Can ST 3010 or ST 3-4491 LARGE STORE 1500 aq. ft. $190 per mo het Kingston A Bklyn Ave nr AAP Super Market Good location lor Meat Market. CaU Mr Revell ST 9-8652, eves A wkrnd* DI 2-0437. NOSTRAND AVE. Newly decorated Mahogany paneled walla. N8w fixture* PR 1-0 J E I13TH RT — *79 monthly EDWARDS gOTEJte AU AMSTERDAM AVE — nr 184th 81. 14 x 0. Suftobte any buslaeaa Except luncheonette or candy IANOR REALTY FO 8-1130 L.Y, druut rare of BU Rev Cant, or Fallowing Page N NEW YORK CALL Ri 9-5300.. TO PLACE WANT ADS.. IN BROOKLYN CALL UL 7-2500 CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE 5 F.M. TUESDAY PRECEDING THURSDAY CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE 5 PAL TUESDAY PRECEDING THURSDAY Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- 54 • N Y AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Dec. 7, 1963 Why Pick On Kids At Christmas Time? By CONRAD CLARK In recent weeks the newspapers have been carrying stories that the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King has endorsed the suggestion made by author. Baldwin some time ago. that no toys should be bought at Christmas for the children. —Editor* Note: Dr. King did not rndorve the idea. The purpose. Mr. mg clothes for the convention, Baldwin lodging and other incidentals that • go along with the annual get- states, is to counteract the justices being done to Negroes, i to-gethers and by refusing to make these purchases for the Christmas sea­ son, will help "the fight.” The question is often raised, and justly so. . .since the Negro has no such accommodations Over the past weekend I visit- ,ha, can be utilUpd by hjs fe, ed the race track at Atlantic.juw Megroes attending these con- City, and prior to attending this ventions ,n hls honie t in- sports of the kings, at AC. 1 ;vhosc pockev, arc fjlled bv th also visited the Big A in Long dollars ,hat are Island, Monmouth Park m lbe Negroes? Oceanport and the Trotters at Freehold, the latter to located in New Jersey. Elks Confab At the Elks’ convention in Bos-1 Ever Visit I wonder if Dr. King or Mr. in ton last August, it was decided TAKING IT LYING DOWN — to hold next year’s, contention!. Nurse Ma.ur««n -lames gets wlH theta Clifford Storey in position land give up Miami, Fla. Where some blood to the Red Crass bloid bank while W T. Baker and Mann Rosenberg watch at Masonic Temple. 455 W. 155th St. Masons have already given 3,390 pinto of blood to Red Cress in campaign. iGilbert Photo* Baldwin has ever visited one of NAACP, the Baptists, Methodisti,1*) fn»n,e mind' I > these race tracks and counted fraternities, sororites and other the Negroes in attendance? big Negro groups hold their con- There is an old saying about ventions, conclaves • in 1964° ’one cutting off his nose to w:u some statistician take a spite his face, may well apply few j1Ours of his time, and com in this instanoe Pregnant Women Not Getting Pre-Natal Care pute how many Negroes will be attending these annual affairs, how much money will be spent, and who will be the reaper at harvest time? An alarming rise in the num­ ber of pregnant women who ccm? to delivery on the ward services of hospitals in New Is it possible that Dr. King and York without previous medical although a large number of preg­ nant women work. Paper work is long and com­ plicated. Some women get sev­ en forms to fill out. Mr. Baldwin could sell this idea to these various groups and ask I Center Association them, instead of having these an­ nual “spend money” affairs, re­ frain and put the money that would be spent in a treasury to help the “fight,” and let the chil­ dren have their Christmas, as they have been having it in the past? in a report care is disclosed by Maternity, Facilities Poor Food facilities are generally :f a recent conference on Pre- absent - usually only soda-pop natal Care ia N^w York City, in vending machines. In some issued recently. The Association clinics, mothers bring their own declares that 47 per cent of the lunch and eat it in dirty, un­ women delivered in, New York attractive toilets. There may be municipal hospitals and 34.7 per but 1 toilet for 50 women.' cent of those delivered on the Communication between doc- ward services of voluntary hos- tors and nurses, and patients tsi pitals in 1961 had no prenatal care whatever or applied for care too late in pregnancy for it to be effective. These women land their babies have the highest incidence of preventable abnor­ malities and complications. The environment of most pre­ natal clinics is unattractive, un­ hygienic and discouraging to Why don't women go for pre- patients; consideration for their generally poor. Women get al­ most no opportunity to ask ques­ tions or express their fears and personal concerns. During the war years, when no substitute conventions were held, the or­ ganization did not die out, and I am sure they will not do so, now. jONG RECITAL — Camiu. Williams, well known soprano, is being presented by The Wayne-Godfrey Music Studio in a song recital at the Corona Congregational Church, 102-18 34th Ave., Corona, on Sunday, Dec. 8th at 5:00 P.M. Jacob Landers Wilf PROMOTIONS — Sani­ tation Commtasioncr Frank J Lueffc swore in newly promot­ ed senior clerks in the de­ partment last week L. to R. are Comm. Lucia, William W. Manzoor, Noel S. Armstrong, Clifford D. Allen, and Gc roc Hancock. New tots Station Being Remodeled Negro, White Leads Debate From an adult’s point of view, the suggestion might be rather appealing, but on the other hand, how will these same adults (par- i ticularly parents of little chil- olic and Protestant, will discuss dren) explain to their little ones racial justice at two panel dis-J On Christmas Day. “no toys this cussions in Brooklyn and Queens year, children.” Negro and white leaders, Cath- Work on the reconstruction and squiring it to be closed to pas-Dec. 10 and 11, under the spon-| Why must the children pay the sorship of the Brooklyn Cath- price that the adults can easily olic Charities and the diocesan pay by sacrifice, and refusing to Catholic Interracial Councils. live as the' Jones’ family, that The panels will discuss the can afford to the way they are modernization of the New Lots sengers for four mdtaths. When station, on the BMT Canarsie that platform work has been fin- pa starts Monday. December ished, the Manhattan-bound plat- “*“'*’* 1------ ----------------- ------ ’ form will be closed for about moder- four months to permit its moder­ ^ 1963. at 9:30 a m. The $214,700 station nization program, which w i 111 nization. thie about 11 months, will re- For the convenience of even- place the station's wooden plat-'ing .rush-hour passengers forms and underpinnings with for the New Lots station on Can- njhr reinforced concrete a n d arsie-bound trains, the TA will steel platforms, as well as new stop shuttle bus service between canopies supported on reinforced the L.vonia aad New Lots sla- concrete piers and footings. The turns, Mondays through Fridays, change booth control area will from 4:15 p.m. to 7:15 pjn. Pas- be repainted and incandescent sengers can get off at Livonia iawy rqriaced by fluorescent Avenue station, get a free shuttle ligWftig The stairway leading to bus transfer from the, railroad the northbound platform will be clerk: wilk to the southeastcor- ner of Livonia and Snediker Av- rebuilt and enlarged During the first phase of the enues to the bus which will take project, the Canarsie-bound plat-'them to the northeast corner of form will be reconstructed, re- New Lots and Snediker Avenues. American principles, which are living? also Catholic principles, needed Will it be in order, for the to bring about racial justice in writer to make a suggestion, or education, employment, hous- as a club member would do at ing. income and medical care, meeting. . .make a Participating in these panels motion for the whole? are the Urban League, the NAACP, the N.Y.C. Commission on Human F'.’hts, the Board of Education and the U S. Depart­ ment of Labor. Louis F. Buckley, Regional Di­ rector, Bureau of Employment Security, U.S. Dept. of Labor, will address the Tuesday Dec. 10 meeting at St. Joseph’s High School, Brooklyn, at 6 P.M. Gas Rationing During the hectic days of WW II many things were rationed for Mr. and Mrs. Average American, particularly the things that were not considered of extreme neces­ sity, such as gas for ordinary pleasure riding, etc. Monsignor Archibald V. Mc- Lbse School Battle; But Win On Housing Transportation to and from, I in cities and out of cities, by car, bus or what have you, was almost "taboo” unless it was an Lees, paster of St. Pascal Bay- emergency, or was to help the Ion Church St. Albans, and well'war effort. known in _the field of race re-i Conventions were out. and \ lations, will be chairman of the many of the largest organi- Dee. 11 session at Dominical Com-zations, (I have in mind, the mercial High School Jamaica, Elks I curtailed their yearly! Queens. Dr. Aaron Brown, mem- jaunts from state to state. This ber, Board of Education and curtailment not only saved gas, which had to be used for the _ ____ ____ war program, but saved the av- aa v.»y v.,.v.u.u were among scheduled panelists, .erage individual lots of dollars affecting Brownsville and Bedford-Stuyvesant £arjjer discussions were held which he or she would have had to spend fear transportation, buy- Brooklyn integrationists won one battle and lost Russeii N. service, Executive another as city officials made housing and school de- ""7“ ® cisions Dec. 3 and 4. , over the week. 1 S7 U/ natal care which they know will comfort, convenience and per- V/ieifc protect the life of themselves sonal dignity is minimal. Many ’ l»N3 Parent Workshop and their babies? The Associa- of the physical deficiences in tion. in preparation for the con-i antiquated, outgrown clinic quar- ference of clinic directors, other I ters would require drastic meas- By SELMA NEGRIN phvsicians and nurses, conduct- ures for correction; but if was Paul Zajan. Bureau of Early ed a spot check of prenatal agreed that great improvement ch* “^duca^“ s^er clinics m 12 municipal and vol- could be made in the existing I untary hospitals in New York setting if the first consideration which revealed that:' were serving the needs of the expectant mother. Remedies Suggested Among the remedial measures Reasons Outlined 5 Mothers are actually discour At the November 14 session of aged from early registration in! a number of clinics. In one din- Pr°P°sejJ wc.rel the workshop a great deal of -t-r-v____ ___ . ®ordinat'*<>” of registra- intercst was sbown j„ tbc func. ic, for instance, applicants wait-, ing to be interviewed were told lion in Prenatalclimeswith thej^ of guidance program as en masse “Don’t stay to register capacity of each hos,pital s mat‘ part of the Higher Horizons on­ erations in our school. Several if you 2 - Registration and screening parents, who attended last year. move," Technologically, maternity care of new pat!ents by professional have returned to participate in irses- discussions through which they is good, but impersonal nurses 3 - Establishment of central gain insight for everyday practi- and devoid of warmth. Mothers rarely know the names of their doctor or nurse, and they are not spoken to by name. information centers in each bor- cal living with their families. iugh with up-to-date listing of Hostesses for this meeting were available clinic and ward fac- Mary Martin. Catherine Rkhard- ilities, for use in interhospital (son and Fredericks Rivers, par- referrals. was guest speaker at the High­ er Horizons Parent Workshop, (Thursday, held in the principal s ! office. She discussed, “Readiness lor School.” haven’t felt your baby er”‘,y uards- ents of our school. Interviewing is not private. Women are questioned about marital status and income in the hearing of others. One clinic seats its registrars in an en­ closure similar to those used by bank tellers and the applicant stands in line to be interviewed. More Clinics Needed Surprise 4 - Establishment oi neighbor­ of Education Visitor: hood clinics by hospitals with overcrowded central clinics, set Mr. Jack Landers, Coordinator so as to ensure continuity of °f the Higher Horizons Program York City, visited care and coordination of medical in a^ and administrative services at our school last week and ex­ clinic and hospital. Board Evening-Weekend Clinics In tirre-querters of the clin- with of our ics checked, the mothers had pa-id obstetric directors to ante- read*n!l kst scores on standar- j cintact with the doctor or partum clinics, with authority dlzed tests. The combined efforts nurse of their first visit, unless commensurate with their respon- °f ou7 *taM ambers have pro- duced the gains we have made. - Assignment of qualified. pressed his “outstanding pleasure success” 5 many they presented a serious prob- sibiiRy. Victory came ia the fightjpf the Brownsville groups against con­ struction of a low-income housing project in the area bounded by Powell and Watkins Streets; Glenmore and Pitkin Avenues. Following public hearings in October, the City Planning Com­ mission last week approved a $9.5 million middle income pro­ ject for the site. AH fl Fringe Site In Bedford - Stuyvesant the ' Schools and Assemblyman Thomas R. Jones. They had argued that the school would be­ come segregated as it was in a predominantly Negro area. That would be contrary to the profess­ ed policy of school integration. Plannecf’Parenthood Maps Educational Campaign “In 10 years, birth control will be as routine a part of maternal The middle income project for and child care — public as weH Brownsville will consist of 440 as private — as polio shots are units in three new buildings and today,” Dr. Alan F. Guttmacher, one rehabilitated structure. The president of Planned Parenthood fight for this type of housing was - World Population, asserted in led by the Van Dyke Residents Association, Tilden Tenants As- a report at the opening of the sociation, Brownsville Tenants national family planning orgap- Council and the Brownsville Im- DIRECTOR — Actor-playwright Jerry Laws, will direct the “Good Cheer and Candlelight ing to agreement on the princi- . Program” of the Holy Trin- ple that family planning is re- R Baptist Church, Brooklyn, quired to accomplish responsible Dec i at 3 p.m. His parenthood. Ferment on the pop­ work with the youth groups ulation question within the Cath­ has spanned three years. olic Church is adding a liberal­ izing dimension to the dialogue between Catholics and non-Catho- lies on the subject of birth con- ization s annual meeting at the trol. struggle was against choice of o provements,Group, among others. Hotel Roosevelt, site for a new P.S. 5 withn the H minority group area. The oppon- ent. olU,eloc.ti.n, approved by-|- ^an gxam ggf the Board of Education, wanted the school built on a fringe site. But the Site Selection Board stood with the school officials and on Monday approved the site 'bounded by Hancock St., Ralph Ave, Howard Ave and Halsey St. site now Final action on the •* rests with Mayor Wagher Opposition to the school site was led by the Halsey-Hancock nA* Committee Againot lnot Begr Phi Deltas Dinner-Dance For State Area An examination for Treasury Enforcement Agent, paying $4690 and $5796 per year to start, was announced this week by the Board of U.S. Civil Service Ex­ aminers for the Treasui'y Depart­ ment. » * * positions are located in York Btate wiA the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax, Intelligence, and Inspection Divisions of the Internal Revenue Service, and In the U.S. Secret Service, the Bur- ' eku of Narcotics and the Bureau C*>jof Customs. dar Garden Restaurant Haroil- For all positions, college level tod Square, Trenton, New Jersey education may be substituted for was the unique setting for the i all or part of the experience, sixth annual Dinner Dance of The application form and a of \nnoo/icement No. NY- the National Sorority of *1^63». rwtly be obtained in Delta Kappa, Pi Chapter. | Mn. Sadie Touey Was general4rfy ^rt office in New York State chairman. > except,New York, New York; the This affair is presented as a 'BifeM pf U.S. Civil Service Ex­ project for the benefit of the amlners. Infernal Revenue Serv- Scholarship Fund to assist lee, U S. Treasury Department, worthy girla in furthering their Room 1107, 90 Cfcnrch St., New i KgMhrk k' training gien. U.S. Civil Service Commis­ siou. sion, 220 East 42nd Street, New ization York. N Y. year the tehchtog profes- . rk N. Y : tptors of Be organ- $50,000 last ig inrHH 68 - hapt . r.«i|W im The Field Of Fire Reintroduces Bills For Free Tuition Charging that a great “While differences on methods This dramatic change will oc- of family planning persist, the cur, he said, as the medical, so- areas of agreement are increas- ial and economic necessities for«ingly being emphasized and these factors are creating the precor- family limitation are more wide dition for the most important de­ ly recognized and accepted by velopment of all: intensified gov­ "presently timid public health ernment and private support for and welfare officials." He added research to perfect methods ac­ pointedly, however, that “t he ceptable to all — easy, cheap change will, not be automatic; it and effective. requires a nwesive mobilization of the medical, social and reli­ gious forces now concerned with the unmet needs — especially in low income groups — for effec­ tive fertility control right here in America. This mobilization is be­ ginning, through Planned Par­ enthood and in other ways, and it will be accomplished.’’ Public Education Aids "Adding impact to these fac­ tors is a new public awareness of the threat to world peace and stability explicit in the popula­ tion explosion abroad and in the United States. AH recent public opinion polls show increasing Am­ erican approval for the incorpora­ tion cf birth control in public 1 Scieatifit and professional ap- health and welfare services and 'Mature failed to approve cf nv tions to discharge the hill from committee. Abrams said his bill would seek to provide for free tuition' at all public institutions of higher education, including the com mupity colleges, in New York ay. '• 15r the last session when the Leg- , preval rt birth control Is IT twjfor assisting other nations. peak.”; he said. “The American Medial Association, which was “FlnaDy, concern with ris'ng amohg he first to hold that birth responsible h >n itn{«rUH afSNMM famMy V , icting famHy health and pobH. officials and inWRlted » velfare. has new been joined bv.irens fo seek to make birth con- an impressive roster of other or- Irol information and services -anuatipns. among them the Am- available through tax . supported -rtoan Public Health AsaociaUonJlMtitutions In addition to thesev- thc American Colie<? of Gbstet- ateR* - Florida. Georgia, •ideas Md Gynecologists ard the|M>»«l*iF0i. North Crrbl'na.Snut’: <ticnal VejSrtby hl' Sciences. Caro! «a. Alabama and VUginit — which for many years have frtWtoat • *$cJentlfie orgartzatiotf Deluded family p anning as a ’iC»«ureWsnf.llta‘tlw*ree'm-P*rt of public Maternal A Child w-d they would launch a •----------»—------------------- - -— Health programs, such services1 are being Initiated increasingly today in a widening cirde, - TZ—V -------I- « •—- - » a ' /i'ryfln ♦ h Kill request, to cope with their popu­ lation problems. The measure was defeated dur i clt ! re8dyi*« 1,11,5 for the ?s, ch«’'rman r' th-’ c m:r. the United States A.M.A. Approves Other Measures , ‘•tatewide drive to have domes-, . t’cs, many who now cam than $.75 an hour, inc’uded un­ der the state’s $1 25 minimum wage laws. Two State Programs “Maryland and Illinois have in- In some clinics, women Negro and Puerto Rican students lem. - Use of automation wher- are being denied opportunities to make two visits before they see pVer possible to give professional personnel more time to spend discover their educational capa- a doctor. bilities, Bronx Assemblyman Mel All mothers are required, taiwith patients. ville E. Abrams announced this a number of clinics, to supply y week that he will reintroduce a blood donors whether or not they en<j bill into the legislature providing' will need blood. for free tuition at all city and! state ' supported institutions. , Trial of evening and week- , prenatal clinics. 8 - Appointment systems based on patient as well as staff con- in the evenings or on weekends, veniencc. No clinic sessions are held I 6 local Boy Elric Johnson, former student of P.S. 157, J.H.S. 120 and Brook­ lyn Technical High School came to address the student assembly on November 15. while home on leave from the U. S. Ak Force. Elric is getting training in elec­ tronics, while in the service of our country. 9 Designation of a staff mem- Personality By Pprflimp Choice ber for each patient, responsible ___ _ He impressed the children with for coordinating all aspects of bjs earDest appeal for getting as care and maintalni“£ a’muco education and knowledge e I'tJIIUIIie kyllUlUC meaningful relationship with her. as po^ie. they want to have Maternity Care Council a good place in the world of , . p , p' . . 8 the establishment of a broadly - -________ _ t conference recommended work, w.ien they grow up. Your scent<can give you away! latest renort on Derfume is that character traits can be be- by fump cb)| Research by a French perfume company shows thaf certain per­ sonality types are drawn to spec- . u,,.-___,-.-1.1.1 Meanwhile as legislators began *^c basic perfume scents. Hark,m Assemblvman min< for example, your perfume If y0U re °f Sn unconventiona, " ---------- Southall announced that Preference runs to scents with Mark T______ I____________ he would introduce a bill to pro- a aandlewood base. If your na- vide for granting minimum wa?e ture is rnore sympathetic, gentle bencf to for domestic workers at anfl ,hen you 11 ** par’ tF” recucst "t the C'mmittee I- tia* to a V- Sanded D-mWi'es Geranium is chosen by he perfume. ’’Irrlier Attorney Marion O. 3 oVe u" valley bv those who are shy ana modest Honeysuckle reveals toe composed council on maternity e__« i ia/ care to act as a watchdog and i0C101 WOfRert In Rights Meet implement corrective measures that have so often been proposed In Washington and for which the need is so ffrpat todav The conference Chairman was To provide strong backing trom social workers for the civil rights Dr. R. Gordon Douglas. Chief! legislation now before Congress of Obstetrics and Gynecology at and to initiate comprehensive the New York-CorneU Medical study and action for the further Center and Chairman of the Med­ improvement of human rights ical Board, Maternity Center As­ and opportunities within the field sociation. of social welfare itself, the Nat­ ional Association of Social Work­ ers called an emergency Hu­ man Rights Assembly in Wash­ ington. November 24-26. a Fi ting Nurs** of o Discussion leaders were Miss ar» «hv «ndi^nna Fillmore, Director of tne ,. being said whimsical mind Get Perfume Advice ...hoc. (psS doesn t pay attention to what s the ladv who York- Dr' Harvey D- Gollance, General Medical Superintendent, New York Crty Department of Hospitals and Dr. Bernard J. Pisani, Director of Obstetrics and Gynecology, St. Vincent’s Hospital. Each of the 166 chapters of the Association, embracing a mem­ bership of 37,000 professional so­ cial workers, was asked to send a delegate. In announcing the Assembly, Dr. Kurt Reichert, president of the association said: "We are meeting In Washing­ ton at~thls time in an effort to convey to members of Congress the urgent need for passage this year of the current civil rights legislation from the standpoint — ____ . Other basic scents that talk will be observed Sunday, Dec. 8 *of its impact on'social problems Since all important perfumes have at least one of the fragrance basics, it's easy to know how true-to-type your own perfume preference is. To be sure of the perfume base of your favorite scent, ask the girl at any quality oerfume counter. Then compare these facto with the fragrance. Women's Day At Ebenezer The 23rd Annual Women’s Day ■ possibly happen is that he is going to “tX get hit by one of those bullets stream- ment directive encourages local ing across tttot field. estabizh family pbr. Memorial Marks B’ham Mi^Mers a* 4imber of county health d jpart. Pl»»s, No Santa *•.......... v-------- ments have quietly begun pro- F ve counties n Colorado _ it shotfld be. • - Manv white people claim that they don’t know what offends Negroes. But blr h c*ntro1 5ervicr* North Dakota, Montana, Texas plain common sense would seem to dic­ and Arizona are among otherc where heal health departments tate that the first thing a person fight­ have initiated programs. Many ing on the dide of Negroes should learn more could be cited. And addi- is how to fight for the cause and still) tional communities are being add- not get hit by a bullet from the guns on * lt5ts each ™nth Th«'‘ are the factors which make it his own Side. .... -X>sslble to predict with confi- •tence that the controversy over • rth control wi’l be completely ’"ded In less than a decade " It’s hot such a difficult job if one is smeere. It’s the insincere soldiers who are who were bombed and murdered about you include: verbena — at Ebenezer Baptist Church, 36- and social needs Burmingnam was held 9 chosen by those who r*aUy en. n« prince St. .Flushing, N. Y. We also hope in life; am- The Rev. Timothy P. Mitchell to the bold i8 pastor. p.m., Wednesday, November 20 joy the good things in the Skyline Room of the Hotel bergris — appeals Theresa, Avenue 125th Street and 7th and audacious: musk — marks Guest speaker at 11 a.m. will the quarrelsome and obstinate be Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas, of The theme was c e n t e r e d natures, and red rose Indicates Jersey City, N. J. and president around “No Christmas Buying the affectionaate and loving. of the New England Missionary This Year — Santa Claus Is In Perfume can change personal- Japtist Society. At 8 p.m. the Mourning!" John O. Killens, lec- ities. For every weakness of speaker will be Mrs. Sara-Alyce turer, and author of best-selling, rharapter, there appears to be Wright of St. Albans, national And Then We Heard The Thun some scent that will overcome councilor for the YWCA of New I-r.” was ouesf speaker. this failing. For example, a man York. in this country. to provide the ln- itial thrust in an intensive ex­ amination of human rights and opportunities in social work and social agencies with the goal of further improving them. The opening session of the As­ sembly in the Mayflower Hotel, was addressed by these speak­ ers: Senator Thomas H. Kuehel of California, Seanate Minority Leader: Roy Wilkins. Executive NAACP Secretary and Whitney M. Young, Jr., ACSW, Executive Director, National Urban League and serond vice-president of NASW hiving all the trouble. And they are the ones giving out with the loudest groans. fore than 350 representat ves •r 105 PP-WP Affiliates In 33 lairs and the District o! Colum­ bia attended the four-day meet- ■ng. Amative Singer was guest artist. The program is sponsor­ ed by toe International Commit- Ice in Defense of Africa. hangs h's vi ws r.'d st»d price might The mistress of ceremonies be Mrs. Viola Payne, first hls own two feet through a use vice president of the Eastern of geranium-touched fragrance, Baptist Association of Brooklyn as Nina Ricci’s L’Air du Temps, land Long Island. Leontyne Watts, the Pent'ioiMf of peace at any (Continued from Page 13) man on hand suddenly made like a rattlesnake and every toil in the outfit stdyed down from then on. tUhink about this whenever I hear pseudo-liberal groan after figura- Jy being shot by a Negro civil rights which has been set up to cofrer the field of fire in civil rights, ffegroes have reached a stage in bat­ tle ’where their guns have been ce­ mented in to shoot down anything cross­ ing the field of fire of civil rights. And when a pseudo-liberal (one of the “but not next door boys,”/ if you please) starts across that field with his toil bobbing in the air in an anti civil righto move, the only thing that can Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- n / • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Dec. 7, 1963 If you have an 8 x 10' picture of yourself hanging around the house, you have all it takes to enter the 1964 Miss Beaux Arts Contest. PLUS A ONE-YEAR MODELING CONTRACT 7 OTHER FINALISTS WILL WIN $500 EACH 3- ou are 21 years of age by January 1, i4, you are eligible to enter the 1964 s Beaux Arts Contest. No professional deUng experience is required. The ndf will receive $5,000 plus a one- r nfodeling contract. Seven other fi- A >r League Guild, 14 East 48th Street, New d York 17, New York. All entries must be f. postmarked nolaterthan December 16, J- 1963. All photos submitted become the ts property of The National Urban League in Guild. Decision of the judges is -final. The Schaefer Breweriet et New York end Albany, N.V.; Cleveland. Ohio; and Baltimore. Md. Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com