New York Amsterdam News — 1963-10-05

1963 9 pages ✓ Indexed
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t • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS’ Sat., Oct. 5, 1963 —Demotion (ConMniiPd From Page One) thus far, nearly all have bean Ne­ groes. Lest thatf a half-a-dozen are white, thia newspaper has learned. Harding told this newspaper. He has been ordered to appear be­ fore the Commission on Monday, Oct. 7, for a hearing. Attorney 25 Demoted or Dropped Paul Zuber is handling Hartings A spokesman for the Civil Service Commission said that the defense. The Amsterdam News learned 15 persons who were appointed or promoted because of the exam grading irregularities have either been demoted or dropped from the city posts.. that of some 44 city employees whose names have been involved -Ignored (Continued from page One) The Commission launched its investigations last year after City Investigations C omni ii loner Louis Kaplan's office disclosed tampering with personnel records to bring about unmerited advance. i«air4iment- bu1 was no such tain- reported UardlIU S . . °“ 3 case early this week, rhe dtodwureg Jed to the * * , u his home late Friday night, set­ ting $5,000 bond. Earlier a Queens . . . grand jury had refused to indict 1 heJT1* *nd th:rr celebrated homicide charge. Melendez attorney, Horatio res( Alfred Nisbitt, a Negro Quinnones, obtained the release ^jachine operator in the De­ order from Judge Dickens and partnient of Personnel, who has went to the Bronx s Youth House, s|nce been indicted and faces but Frank Sawchuck, an adminis trative assistant, refused to re­ lease the youth. trial this fall in Supreme Court A hearing on Nisbitt is scheduled’ Oct. 10. MR. PRESIDENT — Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, former Gov­ ernor - General of Nigeria was sworq in as the first President of the Republic of Nigeria Wednesday during colorful ceremonies at the La­ gos Race Course. In taking his oath of office, the towering American-educated Ibo called upon his countrymen to ad­ here to the ideals of parlia­ mentary law and individual freegem. It was threa years ago/ November 15, on his birthday, that he became the second black African Governor- Genltral on the African con­ tinent, at the same Race Course sped. When Quinnones called Judge Dickens, Sawchuck. again refus­ ed, and told the jurist that he would have to come to Youth House and show some identifica­ tion before he would release the youth. Harding, who was dropped in pay from $11,254 to $8,903 as a result of the demotion, had been appointed a Lieutenant on Oct. 2, I960. The Amsterdam News learned from highly authoritative sour­ ces that the alleged irregularity Although Melendez's family and over his exam being improper- Quinnones indicated they felt that race was involved. Judge Dick- traded was over a mere three ens said. ”1 don't think they re- P01"15- and he would have been fused to release the vouth be- aPPO‘nted nine months later in the normal course of events if the irregularity had not existed. cause I'm Negro. I'ye never been refused before, an<J the aid said he did not know me. Normally they get a call first from the courts on such order , and he apparently considered this from different channels and want­ ed to be sure’of himself ” The day after Sawchuck refus­ ed, however, his superiors called Judge Dickens and Melendez was released. £ & i.’S I% •s .*» -s ■* , * 4- 1 ' Powell Preaches Boycott support behind the campaign of a Christmas boycott, which has al­ ready received the endorsement of several leaders. Meanwhile Mr. Baldwin, whose name has been used as promoting a national rent strike, issued a statement clarifying a statement he made on Sept. 22 during which lie asked what would happen if Rep Adam Clayton Powell •»-|teilallt, H.rt^m-rtoppod paying nounced this week that he will i rent for a month, of Christmas shopping to help speed the fight for full civil his! Baldwin, through his lawyers, repeat on Sunday, Oct. 6. sermon from last Sunday during said he was not launched a pro- which t? called for a boycott | gram for immediate acttoB^ as- serting that such rent stoppage is an individual decision. Powell had indicated earlier he would meet with Baldwin to discuss the subject. f " "BRIGHTON'S rights now. Powell told the Amsterdam News he had decided to repeat the sermon because less than 900 of the church’s 10,000 members were on hand last Sunday during the heavy downpour. — I I I I I I I I I I I I I I The sermon, "Santa Clase vs Jesus Christ,” was delivered by Powell as he urged his Harlem parishioners not to buy Christ­ mas presents because such a boy cott would hit the white mer­ chants Vin their pocketbooks where it hurts.” Terming Santa Claus ‘‘a white man's invention,” Powell said. ' We should say that Christmas ut a day that we are going to put Santa Claus aside, whites and blacks, and say that this is a day we are going to give to the study of Jesus. Sees “Gimmick” I "In Latin America they don't ( celebrate Christmas by giving presents. Santa Claus is only cele­ brated in Anglo-Saxon churches, where it was invented as a com­ mercial gimmick,” Powell de­ clared. Powell also told the Amster- dm News tht he would meet dam News that he would meet with author James Baldwin Sun­ day after services to discuss fur­ ther how to mobilize nationwide OCTOBER SALE • YOUR CHOICF* 4/5 Quarts A.B.C. BRANDS 1. Bonded Kentucky Bourbon Whiskey 100 Proof 2. Imported 100% Scotch 3. Imported Canadian Whiskey HAVING A PASTY? Soo Our Counter Specials! BRIGHTON LIQUOR & WINE CORP. 136 LENOX AVINUE* At West 116th St. Subway EN 1 84M j * ■ CATTLE PRODDER - Mrs. Ted Thompson, right, examines a “cow prodder" used by south­ ern bigots against Negro dem­ onstrators in the South. Prodder has seven batteries which builds up terrific amount of electrical current released through two terminals shown at end. They have actually dent Non-Violent Coordinating been used to kill hogs. This cow prodder which was wrest­ ed from the hands of a bigot Committee. The party, which is to be held between 5:30 and 9 PM is being held at 2 East in Americus Georgia will be displayed tomorrow, Friday October 4) at a benefit cock­ tail party in behalf of the Stu- 63rd Street and the public is invited. The youth in the pic­ ture is Gerald Gilbert, son of Photographer * James Gilbert. Quits Victory Mutual After Office Closes year is a direct result,” he said. The company closed down its New York offices earlier this year after they were stopped from writing new business in New York State by the State Insur­ ance Department. -Gregory (Continued from page One) as sha’s in jail,” Gregory said Wednesday as he prepared to w ind up his one-week appearance at the Apollo Theatre. The Chicago comedian, who has been jailed in Mississippi and Alabama and in his own home town for his civil rights activities, said he has been in touch with the Justice Depart meet since his wife's arrest last w eek with six other Negroes in Selma. First Time Mrs. Gregory left for Alabama a week ago last Thursday with­ out her husband to be arrested the following day for the first time in the South. She was jail­ ed earlier this year with Dick In a Chicago protest demonstra tion. jail earlier this year. He called to the guard. "Say, can I use the phone’” The guard inquired, "What for?” "To call my wife,” Gregory replied. The guard shot back: “When King is here he calls up everybody in the world. Sure, go ahead. He's no better nigger than you!” Gregory said he is sure his wife is worried about being away from their two children, Michele 4, and Lynne 2, but he felt that her sacrifice is .worth it if Ala­ bama is to be made safe for other little girls to live in. In Chicago, Gregory's sisters in-law Sadie and Ida Smith are looking after the children. —Ford Won't (Continued from page One) Gregory said he was invited to Alabama by the Student Non­ in this agency because there are violent Coordinating Committee very few in engineering. I would (SNCC) last week, but because not put our division chiefs under of a bad cold and high degree any kind of situation where they fever, besides ius commitment would begin to think in regard at the Apollo, he cancelled out t0 ty,e color of the employees be- the trip. His wife then decid- cause we do not want to stir ed to go alone despite her preg- this thing up," Ford said, nant condition. I The 71-year-old Commissioner, Only recently the couple at- one of the few Negroes living in tended the funeral of the four the exclusive Jamaica Estates girls killed in the Sunday church* section of Queens, said he felt his , agency was free of any discrimi- bombing in Birmingham. Gregory said he was told by j nation, and the making of such the Justice Department Wedaes day that his wife is holding up very' well and is being “well treated." Asked if he has been able to talk with his wife by phone from New York, Gregory recalled his I a head count might inject ra cial feelings. Meanwhile the Amsterdam News learned that the Mayor's office would receive the reports from the other agencies that have complied with CCHR some- A Message to a Man about to Buy Scotch A Civil Service spokesman said that the persons involved included four police sergeants who were dropped to patrolmen, five firemen, four of whom were dropped and one who was not ap­ pointed. four correction officers, one who was dropped and three never appointed, and eight court attendants, seven who were drop­ ped and one who had not been Leaders of the Federation of Negro Civil Service Organiza­ tions and other Negro civil service groups have met with Kaplan on what they felt was anti-Negro in­ sinuations in the probe thus far. At Monday's hearing Harding, one of the first Negroes to com­ mand a detective squad who had been assigned to the W. 68th St., station until last week, could be cleared of any wrongdoing or could be dismissed. If cleared, he would be ordered restored to his Lieutenant’s rank as of the date when his passing exam mark cycle was reached in the promo­ tion listings. -School (Continued From Page One) uity of lessons two days, before their teacher was switched. After parents of the children lodged complaints with the Am­ sterdam News, this newspaper put three questions to Mrs. Fink- ler. These questions are: Does the Board feel that the children in this math class suffered be­ cause of this arrangement? Would the Board allow this ar­ rangement in any other school? and Does the Board approve of this practice? Mrs. Finkler said: "I don't know details at the school, but I believe that Miss Cohen felt that the children In the math class would have suf­ fered less by having two substi­ tute teachers who know math rather than have a substitute who is not a math teacher." Mrs. Finkler, who has served as principal of the all-Negro IS 136 in Harlem and the all­ egro JHS 258 in Bedford-Stuyve- mt, Brooklyn, made her state- ent despite the fact that the Board Education announced that for e first time in recent memory, e school system has enough achers. Declaring that "I am now very far removed from the operations of the company and totally ig­ norant of its activities,” Dr. Er­ rol A. Thompson, well-known Har­ lem physician, announced that he has resigned as a board mem­ ber and vice president of the Victory Mutual Life Insurance Company. Sharply criticizing the com­ pany's failure to keep a New York office to service its policy­ holders in this area. Dr. Thomp­ son said, that with the company having its entire operations in Chicago “I am no longer in a position to protect the New York policyholdess, who are more than half of the company's older pol­ icyholders." Dr. Thompson, who has been with the company since the late 1920's, and on the board for more than 10 years, said, that as a result, “I am a director in name of only, and my usefulness to the policyholder and the company is non-existant." Letter to Board In his letter to the board last week Dr. Thompson said: “Through the years I have serv­ ed this company with honesty and integrity. I have never re­ frained from expressing an opin­ ion or following a course when I was convinced that my action was for the company and its policyholders. Of course, I have not always been right, my views have not always prevailed, and when theyj did not, through the years I have never failed to support and pro­ mote the majority decision. "It is unfortunate that the New York policyholders have been so much abused in the course -Pullman NOW Dr. Errol Thompson events. I feel that in recent months, failure to provide a col­ lecting agency in New York In an exposed location was very shortsighted. The increase i n lapses and surrenders in the past GLEN ROSSIE WlStetdiBW) !>»•*»<* in further comments, Mrs Inkier said: "This is the same all the way *ound. Nobody gives approval a situation like this, not even principal. I would suspect that 1st Cohen under the clrcum- ances didn't have much choice, eacbers are always absent and eir positions have to be filled A principal must do whatever i or she can and make the best rrangement. A principal is often iced with a day-to-day chokee, m sure her choice as a princi- si was the best one. She has te authority is use her discre- on in filling temporary jobs i the school." HERE’S THE STAFF THAT WILL SERVE YOU AT MORNINGSIDE Al LERNER Assistant Secretary Branch Manager (Continued From Page One) special Emergency Board to hear the dispute in August and it has held hearings in Chicago and Washington, concluding its hear­ ings Friday in Washington. The Board will go to California later this week for conferences after which it will write its recommen­ dations and submit them to Pres­ ident Kennedy in early October Mr.*Randolph said he was hope­ ful the Board would agree with the Brotherhood's demands, but if not, there would be a general strike of the union’s members. VISITING — Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, whose realm is one of the oldest in the world, was welcomed to Washington Tesday by Presi­ dent and Mrs. John F. Kenne­ dy. After being special guest at a round of Washington state affairs, he arrives in New York City Thursday, where he will be honored during another round of official salutes here. BEAUTY FAIR by Claire HAS SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER for OCTOBER and NOVEMBER on complete repair, cleaning & restyling of your old far ■■ little (Haw Hair added where BANNY FERNANDEZ Assistant ■■ • < t. Close to You" and Helpful, too! Have you been In to see our modern, new banking quar­ ters at the corner of 125th Street and Eighth Avenue? Our new quarters are eye-pleasing... designed with your comfort and convenience in mind. But that’s not all... you'll find the same neighborly wel­ come each time you come in... from people who take a special interest in helping you-with all your banking needs. Best thing to do is stop in for a visit. See what we mean when we say you have every good reason to bank at Manufacturers Hanover Trust, the bank that’s close to you...and helpful, too. REGULAR BANKING HOURS- 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday — Friday 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Monday Evenings PERSONAL LOAN HOURS — 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday - Friday 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Monday Evenings ADMINISTRATOR - Adam C. Powell, pastor of the Abyssin­ ian Baptist Church, cleared up statements About Rev. David N. Llcorish taking over, which he termed an error. Powell said that he had assigned Rev. Llc­ orish to administrative work of the church, and that he, Pow­ ell, Is still pastor. HAIR WEAVE 4 raws ood op Waek ood sat — 620 When in New York, visit Claire . . . every type of- Hair Dressing is done by Claire's competent staff of 15 stylists. For prompt attention, COME IN, WITH OR WITHOUT APPOINTMENT . . . MONDAY THRU SATURDAY Enjoy our Air Conditioned Salon BEAUTY FAIR by Claire m msi 145 it» Near St. Nicholas Ave. AB 4-3414 ii MANUFACTURERS n HANOVER TRUST Corner of 125th St. and Eighth Ave. z 1K3 SAFETY DUAL CONTROL CARS AUTOMATIC. STANDARD SHIFT SPORT CARS ANO TRUCKS SMALL FOREIGN WI FUMISM CM FOR ROM TUT A FREE trial lesson in a new automatic or standard shift car. All cars equipped with dual controls. A FREE 60 page booklet 0 giving complete kiitruc- L tions on how to drive. 145 W. 14th St (Bit. 6th t 7th AytiJ CHtlsu 2-7547 J 61 E. Mth St. f k (Bet Lai. 6 3rd Am J LEbigti 4-0695 a I L \ 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. ¥. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat,.Oct. 5, 1963 Week ly News «= Un it y Funeral Home ? M06 8300 2 3 52 8th AVI N.Y 27 N V •J Herbert Washington Herbert C. Washington, 34, of 440 E. 136th St,, who died re­ cently in Mt. Morris Park Hos­ pital was buried in Ferncliff Cemetery, Hartsdale, N.Y. fol­ lowing services at Unity Funeral Chapel, 2352 8th Ave. A native of New Orleans, he Is survivtd by his wife, his par­ ents, in addition to a daughter, four brothers and two sisters. Florence Scott Florence Scott. 49, of 93 Henry St, who died recently in Beek- man Downtown Hospital, was buried in Detroit Mich., follow­ ing preparation and shipment of the body by Unity Funeral Home, 2352 8th Ave. ' A native of St. Louis, Mo., she leaves a son, a daughter and a sister. Baby Bertha Barclay Baby Bertha Yvette Barclay, who died the day following her birth on Sept. 19 In Babies Hos- Tension Relaxes At Prison / State Correction Commissioner Paul D. McGinnis told The Am c.erdam News Tuesday that ten­ sion had relaxed at the Great Meadow Correctional Institution in Comstock, N.Y^but added that he couldn't forecast whether it w'ould remain "pretty quiet.” "We hope it will, though,” he said, adding that officials at the medium security prison of 1,400 inmates were still questioning scores of prisoners to determine who was responsible for the racial brawl between whites and Ne­ groes Sunday pital, was buried in Rosehill Cem­ etery, Linden, N.J. Prayer aer vices were held at Unity Funeral Chapel. 2352 3th Ave. In addition to her parents who reside at 2407 Seventh Ave., the baby is survived by a grand mother, two uncles, three aunts and other relatives. Joe LaCour Buried In Boston The body of Joseph B. LaCour, considered the dean of Negro ad­ vertising executives, was burled in Mt. Hope Cemetery, Boston, ss„ Saturday after funeral here Friday morning at a mid- town funeral home. A pioneer and trail - blazer along New York's famed Madi­ son Ave., Mr. LaCour died last Tuesday In St. Clare's Hospital a short illness. He was 85 Hoy Wilkins. NAACP executive secretary, and leading newspa- officials and advertising ex­ ecutives led the mourners at fu­ neral services at the Campbell Funeral Home. Slst St. and Mad­ ison Ave., Friday morning. Former general manager of As­ sociated Publishers, Inc., and In­ terstate United Newspapers, Inc., Mr. LaCour had been responsible in helping to channel millions of dollars to Negro newspapers throughout the country, and was widely sought as a contributor and consultant to major publica­ tions on the Negro market. Began With Call A native of Des Moines, Iowa, he was educated in the public schools of Omaha, Nebraska, and later attended Howard Universi fy, receiving his bachelor's de­ gree from the University of Neb­ raska. He began his newspaper career with the Kansas City Call, work . The dob-swinging fight, which;. .. caused injury to five guards and ?? 18 prisoners, started on the basketball and handball courts ot the prison, the commissioner said. He said the Negro prisoners wanted to show support for their race outside of prison. Youag Men The commissioner said the pris­ on, whose inmates are mostly young men in their 20s, is "fully integrated” inside, but said Ne­ gro and white inmates generally gravitated to their own groups on the outside. “There is nothing we can do to stop Hist,” he said. He said that outside of posting additional correction officers stronger measures to prevent a simfiar outburst have not been taken, but be indicated they might If a current probe’s findings makes It necessary. The outbreak Sunday involved nearly 850 inmates who were routed 20 minutes later by guards who used teargas. ager, where in this capacity he had hired Mr. Wilkins on the newspaper’s editorial staff. He later had worked with the Afro- American before establishing As­ sociated Publishers in 1944. As general manager of Asso­ ciated Publishers end later with Interstate he had represented the largest single group of Negro newspapers In the country, retir­ ing in recent years and serving as a part - time consultant on the rapidly growing Negro mar­ ket. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Fay P. LaCour; his mother, Mrs. Rose LaCour, of Omaha; a nephew, Louis B. LaCour, and other relatives. He resided at 21- 41 34th Ave., Long Island City. Purpose Abide in thy purpose as 1b laws which h were impious to trans­ gress. — Epictetus. Bowery B!:. Employee Is Organist Albert G. Hubbard, 41, was em­ ployed by The Bowery Savings Bank some 12 years ago as a re­ sult of a reference from the Ur­ ban League of New York. Born in New Rochelle. A| spent two years In serious study of the Piano and Music Theory at the Brooklyn Conservatory of Music after graduation from the New Rochelle Public School system. While on the Job at The Bowery he has continued his education by taking courses at the Ameri­ can Institute of Banking and by studying IBM operations and pro­ gramming at the Electronic Com­ puter Programming Institute. Al’s position at The Bowery In­ volves the responsibility for main­ taining vital records. He is also Involved in research. Off-the-job, music is an Impor­ tant factor and Joy in Mr. Hub­ bard's life. He serves as an or-f ganist at the St. John’s Baptist Church on 152nd Street. Manhat­ tan. In his leisure time he loves to play Bach and Handel on the piano in his bachelor apartment Ex-Atlantic City Detective Dies CORE Ups 3, Adds Two To Its Staff Stepping up its activities on the national and local levels. James Farmer, CORE national director, announced several . promotions and additions to the national staff this week. Richard Haley was named as associate national director while Gordon Carey was elevated to assistant to the national direc­ tor and Norman Hill as program director. Three new field secretaries hir­ ed to work in New York, Ten­ nessee. and Louisiana were Issac Reynolds, John Schaffer and Win­ ston Lockett. BREAK THE “PAIN BARRIER’ WITH you feel headach*, matk-lika pains or headachoa due to tension dropping a “PAIN BAR­ RIER* between you and what you are doing, break thru that "PAIN BARRIER* . . . FAST . . . with “BC”. Tbo prescription-type “BC* preparation ineludea aeveral well- known pain-r«lievera to (ire you multiple raiiaf-fivinf action; realty fast relief from pain. (farts wwfciap ie adnvfas keeps vwtmp far hoars doOSMf I ha Pvno-Sire Pockooee and , Site Botilee. Court Rejects Appeal On "Miss" Title MONTGOMERY. Ala. — The court refused to address the de­ fendant as "Miss” during a hear !ng last June when Mary Hamil ton was arrested for participat ing in a racial demonstration lr Gadsden. AT FUNERAL SERVICES - Mrs. Joseph LaCour, at right, widow of advertising executive Joseph LaCour who died last week, is comforted by members of the family after funeral serv­ ices Friday. L. to R. are Ber­ nard LaCour, nephew of Mr. LaCour; Mrs. Maxine Dobbs, sister of Mrs. LaCour; and Mrs. LaCour. <Dummett Photo* Doctor In St. Louis ST. LOUIS. Mo. — Funeral services were held here Satur­ day for Dr. Edward B. Williams, 46. director of internal medicine at the Homer G. Phillips Hos­ pital, who was stricken with a heart ailment and died here last Wednesday as he was about to attend a hospital staff meeting ternist, Dr. Williams was a grad­ uate of Meharry Medical College and was a former Air Fore ma­ jor. He is survived by his widow, the former Miss Jae-neline Brown of New Y'ork, and a daughter, Lisa, 4. Form a good habit and read the Amsterdam News — Every A leading cardiologist and in-1 week! ATLANTIC CITY. N.J. - St. Clair Hiawatha, 73, former At­ lantic City detective, was buried Wednesday following a Requiem Mass in St. Monica's R. C. Church here. Hiawatha, who lived at 207 No. Penn Ave., died in the Veterans Hospital in Vineland. N.J., Saturday morning. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Margaret Hiawatha and his step-son Bernie Cresswell, pub­ licist for Ballantine Beer In New And the defendant refused U answer questions i unless she wai given this simple courtesy^ This week her appeal 'against a contempt of court charge was denied by the Alabama Supreme Court which ruled that even though witnesses are often ad dressed by titles,- "a person’s name is acceptable under thr law.” Miss Hamilton, a Negro, lives in Lebanon, Tenn. HEADS NATIONAL GROUP - Ira S. Robbins, vice chairman of the New York City Housing Authority, was elected this week as president of the 5,000-mem- ber National Association of Housing and Redevelopment Of­ ficials at its biennial conference In Denver, Colo., Wednesday. He has been a member of the organization composed of bous­ ing, urban renewal and code en­ forcement officials, for 29 years. a Life Little self-denials, like honest­ ies, little passing words of sym­ pathy, little nameless acts of kindness, little silent victories over favorite temptation - these are the threads of gold which, when woven together, gleam out so brightly In that pattern of life that God approves. — Farrar. i vid ends Unituy ^runera ^nc. ome 2352 8tk ^4ue. lew york 27, Heuj y„rl, 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 teas directed. , Thanking you kindly, MRS. ESTHER V. JONES on savmgs on deposit less than one year on deposit for four consecutive quarters prior to dividend period Your savings deposits made in The Bowery on or before October 14, 1963 will earn quarterly dividends at the anticipated increased rate of 4% yearly from October 1, 1963, assuming The Bowery, the Nation’s largest mutual savings bank, is a safe, convenient place to keep your savings working for you. It pays quarterly dividends on all balances of $5 or more-and has paid dividends every favorable earnings continue. year for 129 years. The Bowery anticipates continuing the current quarterly dividend rate of 4%% yearly on savings in the Bank one year or longer. Open your account with any amount up to $15,000, or $30,000 in a joint or trust account Come in... telephone OXford 7-1414... or send coupon. BOWERY SAVINGS BANK A MUTUAL INSTITUTION CHARTSRSD 1SS4 Funeral Home, Inc. 2352-4-6 Eighth Ave. A» 126th S». N.w York 27, N.Y. 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WLBASB CHICK--------- -- - > D Enclosed Is a check for J_. to □ Please mall me full information open a Savings Account in my name, on how I can open a Savings Account -and make deposits and withdrawals Please mail me my bankbook. -by mail. MAMS. TEsnssr •TRBST ADORBBS. CITY. -SONS. Mowbor Vtdsral Dopaali tasaraaoa Cor*oeatlaa AN-248 I I I I I I 4, A 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 --- 8 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Oct. 5, 1963 Miss Alkins Is Given In Marriage By Father II Miss Priscilla C. Alkins, daugh-1Hall, Edward ter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wiggles- Hendrickson, worth of Flushing, was married A. Thompsoi IGSSOn. recently to Erskine C. Waithe of Eugene Wait E. Elmhurst, at Our Lady of William Wait! Bonita Smith, Victory Church where the Rev. Walter Salter . William Smith, Janies McCabe performed the Oetdvc Jones, thur Lewis, J cently to Frany. double ring ceremony. at the Centen- The bride was given in mar- Church in Mt. riage by her father. Mrs. Fure- hkhmm ~ \ - tlie Rev. C. L lise Mouchette was matron of ed the double honor The Bridesmaids were Misses Phyltss Wong, Elsa Reyes. uncle of the Lillie Jackson and Kathereen ■ a, Ga.. gave the Dunmore. ge. Mrs Ronald William Waithe was best mar. I d on of honor The for his brother The ushers were e Misses Carolyn Edward Babb. Quintin Roberts, t.ta Young. Rev- Dennis Perkins. Vincent Johnson Audrey Calhoun and Josiyn Rogers. § Music From Montreal n Music was provided by Mist n' Jeanne Donawa cousin of the bride and Hereditt The bride's gown sheath of peau-dc-soie long bo- le dice was of imported lace, hand er beaded with seed pearls and cry id stals. The peau le de-soie. was also a cape, with HHH9M >r- long tight sleeves. The bride’s crown was tiara of seed pearls ie with four l.i\or- it line nylon ne the Garden Kt ception r The garden recepti n was heh .,t the home of tin' brufe's par HhBB£| ’> ents Stephanie and Earl Wiggles HHHHH "' worth i former \msterdani co HHHHH '' workers and former 'owners oi HBg9H| Club Zambezi in Flushing. The bride is a graduate of St t,r Johns School of Nursing and at- le tended Hunter College. She a ty i nurse at the Lefferts Genera1 “• Hospital. I TAKE TH The groom, son of Mrs. Emo- William Gai gene Waithe and the late Erskine as they wet I Waithe of E. Elmhurst, attend at the St. ■ ed New York University and Long Church whe S Island University and is a chem- I ist at the Kings County Hospital. A/Ty. T, . ± _ The Reception for some 200 I guests was given at the home of _ _ _ I the bride’s parents. After a honey- \A/ I moon to the Poconos, the couple ’ ’ | are residing in Brooklyn. Many Guests Among the guests were Messrs ... Miss Klvd daughter of J . land Mesdames Lee Alston, Maho.“^y.of I Frank Applewaite. Edward Babb, ma™. ln £ ■ Cyril Bailey, Edwin Belisle, Hugh 10 , 1 Bowen, Claude Bovelle, Jr., Sid- 7 I ney Burnett, Dr. & Mrs. Wallace St Mlchaels v 0. Busby, Samuel Carter, Tho- Rpv Geor | mas Copeland, James Cumber- formed the | batch, Claude Cummings. Mac honey gave H Davies, Herbert Dunmore, Earl marriage. M I Duval, H. L. Federman, Rudolph was matron Elder, Clifford Fields, Robert Johnson of Cl Forde, William Forde and James The bride ' cade suit an Graves. Also Winston Gibbons, Lester! rehid corsa Goulbourne, Luther Gray, Hugh The bride »“rs?‘ , as she became Franklin Chesson, Jr. recently at the Centennial AME Zion Church in Mt. Vernon in rites per­ formed by the Rev. C. L. Wil­ (Bill Carter Photo) cox. §SS$$S:<;: Sal i W<S:- iXvKil&S BRIDAL PORTRAIT - The for­ mer Miss Joyce Bonita Smith is shown in her bridal portrait Miss Jarboro, Manager Former singer Caterlna J arboro I is now a manager and regional director for Eve Nelson Cosmet­ ics products with SO Negro and white representatives under her. Her representatives include teachers, secretaries, IBM work­ ers, telephone operators, house­ wives, and the handicapped and such ethnic groups as Italians, Puerto Ricans, Negroes and Jews. Miss Jarboro products include perfume, bath oil, lipsticks, pow­ der, face creams, nail enamels, rouges, eye sticks, shampoos, hair sprays, children’s toiletries, room refresheners, bras, foundation garments and men’s products. Introductory Offer ONE WEEK ONLY HAIR WEAVING 50% OFF . HUMAN HAIR ‘.WEAVER HAIRDOS - $5.00 E&S BEAUTY SHOP worth. Pearl Taylor, Marlon Howell. Kulh Lanipkm, Albee, tine McLean, Marjorie McNeil. Also Lottie Norvtlle, Camilla Capdevillc, Marte Carter, Mazio j Clarke, Frank Diaz, Goldie Don­ awa, Rita Anderson, Luclne Bunce, Gladys Burnett, Eva Smith, Carl Carmichael, Lavinia Brown and Eufaula Seals. And Messrs. Marcus Corbin. Stanley Donawa, Frank Wiggles- worth, Malcolm Williams, Den­ nis Phillips, Owen E. Lewis, 1 John Russell, Reece Parker and I Dr. Tracy Parks.' FOR YOU ONLY THE BEST IN QUALITY CLASSES by Dorothea Towles v Charm & Modeling CALL NOW Rl 9-4764 FOR APPOINTMENTS NEW CLASSES FORMING FOR OCT. REASONABLE RATES DON'T DELAY REGISTER TODAY! BECOME INDEPENDENT LEARN BEAUTY CULTURE A "DEPRESSION PROOF" BUSINESS ------------- ---------- REGISTER NOW! Small Down Payment — Balance Weekly ATTEND DAY OR EVENING CLASS APEX BEAUTY SCHOOL The School with the High Prestige 200 W. 135th (7th Ave.) AU 3-9702 Approved by U.S. Government lor Foreign Students Boardman officiated. The Bride is th’e former Miss Klyda Grace Mahoney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Mahoney. FIRST DANCE - Mr. and Mrs. Erskine C. Waithe are shown taking the first dance at their wedding reception given at the home of the bride in Flushing. The bride is the former Miss Priscilla C. Alkins. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wiggles- worth. Omegas Meet At • Que Clubhouse ! Zeta Psi chapter of the Omega 1 Psi Phi fraternity met recently h at it’s clubhouse, 533 W. 147 St.. popularly known as the ‘‘Que House.” Earl Ragin is president of the chapter. The new officers who have been ■ installed for the year, in addition; (to Mr. Ragin, are Lucius Durden,! J vice president; Richard Carey,j secretary; Warren S. Marsh,; (treasurer; chaplain; Earl Ful­ cher, project chairman; Richard; If. Woodard, chapter editor; An-1 jthony Valentine; dean of pledgees; Ernest Bostic, Jr; social chair­ man; Clifford Michael; correspond ding secretary and Leslie B. Farr l’/2 CARAT ! r $500 VALUE MATCHES DIAMOND RINGS I tlto to U/aaItIw 7^. J $12 Down—SI Waskly 12 genuine diamond* for value and &ea.uty. 14-K white or yellow gold. lima, enlarged. Total weighu SEE SPECIAL IN OUR WINDOWS New Vark’i Larg.it Diamond Display COMPARE VALUES wt.w. STORE LOCATED AT 128 WEST 125 STREET ” At teen in VOGUE, HARPER’S BAZAAR, GLAMOUR A HOLIDAY FASHION WALKING Human Hair Wigs! PRIVATE AND PERSONALIZED SERVICE BY EXPERTS TO ASSIST YOU z ___ JjV* J ^se ° ^’one Martin slip on and off method capturing high fashion and popular hair styles that will make you the center of attraction. Diane Martin Fashion Wigs f h S led tF OS h I O cJ 1 W CHARGE IT THROUGH OUR CREDIT DEPARTMENT you MAY HAVE YOUR FASHION WIC IMMEDIATELY ANO TAKE 1 YEAR TO PAY CAN’T COME TO US, THEN WE LL COME TO YOU. OUR OUTSIDE DEMONSTRATORS WILL GLADLY DEMON­ STRATE SAMPLES OF OUR COLORS, HAIR GOODS, AND STYLED FASHION WIGS IN YOUR HOME. JUST CALL AND MAKE AN APPOINTMENT. NO OBLIGATION OR CHARGE OF ANY KIND. S& FREE HOME DEMONSTRATIONS Sow All Welcome. No Obligations. • IN NEW JERSEY 622 - 2215 Be Our Guests. * IN NEW YORK AREA JA 6-3985 „ 9 9 $ f^Yoam Word * I wife* *“*• walltoNa stocked heel, of ooursel Ito s to JAOOE and ft’s full of fashion-rightness at « OMDfart-rffhtness. Note its smart square throat Available in Block or Brown Alligator. (AH. Sirvs to 11 — AA to CC AFTER SIX • Popular man about town, Jimmia Hall, and staffer at Harlem’t famed Red Rooster la shown modeling what some men wear for af­ ter-six occasions in N. Y. at the recent fashion show pre­ sented by the Les Prud hom­ ines Club, of which he is a member. (Gilbert Photo) DIANE MARTIN FASHION WIGS IN NEW YORK IN BROOKLYN IN JAMAICA NEWARK, N. J 106 MARKET ST. (OPPOSITE BAMBERGER STORE) 201 622-2215 5 f 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 --- 12 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Oct 5, 1963 THOM A SIM VO«Wip 2 WORDS FOR A WAY OF LI FA . . . “Since lift U brie/, we need to make it bright, Then keep the old King's motto well in sight And let it’s meaning permeate each day ‘Whatever comet, This, too, will pass away" " . —Author Unknown t a J* INTERNATIONAL SET . . . It was H. E. and Mme. M. Sort Coulibaly, Ambassador to the^ United Nations from m Mali, Africa, who gave a charming reception in honor of the independence of that country at the United Na- , tions last Monday. Such a charming couple — and she M, wears such elegant clothes — African style done in •s the French manner and of course French is spoken. Oui! Oui! The Rill Andersons (Beth) telling folks they “en- e joyed Rome; loved Florence” and they also saw nep­ hew, Gerald Williams, former New Yorker'now doing a novel in France and becoming more French by the School ^principal Adele Timpson of PS 100 liked most the ‘‘outer islands of our 50th state, Hawaii” . . . .- SCENE AND HEARD ... The Philip Reeds (Major) had such fun visiting Norfolk, Va., and especially visit- « tog with her mother, Mrs. Sarah Lomax, who came 3 back with them to “see little ole New York City ...” Henrietta West of Hollis, L.I., back from the beauti­ cians meeting in Chicago with news from Inez King of . Detroit. Henrietta was one of the guest teachers for Z the beauticians ... ( Ellen Tarry working on a sequel to her “Third L Door” and a tome on James Weldon Johnson for high schoolers 57 . Edith Davis Cherry, attendance teacher with the » NYC Board of Education, vacationed out where the West used to begin — California and on to Hawaii . . . The Reginald Hawkinses of Washington, D.C. (she is the former New Yorker, Josephine Washington, who was with the United Negro College Fund) visited with the Fred McCoys in E. Orange recently. Rath V. Washington (Atty.) referee for the Work­ man’s Compensation Board and her sister Bernice Johnson got-away-from-you-all (me, too) by resting at Sharon Springs, N.Y. . . . HAUT ET BON FASHION . . . When the National Ur­ ban League Guild presents the annual Ebony Fashion Show at the New York Hilton Oct. 6 it will be the most! . lavish since the first one in 1958 and will be personally directed by “Ten Best Dressed Women” lister, Eunice Johnson, of Chicago. The 200 garments by Parisian, *Italian, American and a number of Negro designers, will come into town in a custom-made bus for the 2- ‘ act-7-scene show. I’ll bet you that when the 10 female ’ and two male models go down the runway it will be FALL AND WINTER POR­ TRAIT — That was the title of the fashion show presented last Sunday evening at Smalls’ Paradise by one of the newer clubs, Les Prudhommes. Shown in some scenes from the event are, from left, members of the club — A1 Reede, Rai Dawood, Rudel, president of the group; .Jimmie Hall, Ernest Flore, Da­ vid L. Ford, Cecil Knight, John Pelt, Jimmie Holmes, and Eu­ gene Cowan. In the next photo is Mrs. Doris Jones who ac­ cepted flowers for her mother Mrs. Millicent Taylor who Is the mother of the club. (Gilbert Photos) Mrs. Mays Presents Show At Americana Men's Club Presents Fashions Les Prudhommes presented the first fashion show called “A Portrait of Fall and Winter 1963” at Small's Paradise last Sunday. Rudel Is presedent. Felix Reddick emceed the five- scene show which Included lounge wear, accent on leather, day time fashion and after six wear. The male models Included club members Ernest Floore, David L. Ford, Jimmie Hall. Cecil Knight and Rudel. Other models included Misses Helen Credle, Joyce Gaines, Reggie Gartrene Rienne and Tracy Silas. Music by Members Rai Darwood and Cecil Knight, members of the group, provided the music. Mr. Ford and Mr. Hall directed the production. Designers Included Mrs. Milli­ cent Taylor who is “mother of the club” and was pi esented flow­ ers which were accepted by her daughter. Other designers includ­ ed Wesley Tann, John Lee, Earl Lovell. Shirley Jordan and John Douglass. Doris Jones was hos­ tess. Les Prudhommes, (which means “wise men” for those of us who don’t know French) mem­ bership comprises Rai Darwood, Ernest Flore, David Ford, Jim­ mie Hall, Cecil Knight, A1 Reede, Rudel. John Pelt, Eugene Cowan Jr. and Jimmie Holmes. To Aid Artists The club seeks to find and did undiscovered artists among it’s purposes. Among the guests attending the packed event were Messra aad Mesdames Dan Frailer, Thomas Jones, Jack Johnson. Arthur Wright, Robert Briscoe, David Ford. Frank Douglass, Walter Douglass. Mose Goodwin, Archie McCall, Rose Myers and James Jones. Many Ladies Ladies included Misses and Mesdames Gloria Campbell, S4r- ah Jordan, Bert Ross. Jean Tgy- lor, Esther McCall, Jean DePass, Edna James, Etta Moore, Susie Gamble. Lola Jones, Marie Good­ win, Lillian Smith. Alma Paige. Fannie Pennington. Lucille Cain and Helen Daniel. Men Included Charles Ham­ mock, Eliot Wescat, Albin Strong, Bobby Anderson, James Harris, Bernard Wilson, Calvin Ramsey, Eric Barnes, Jimmie Adu, Linto Bennett. Blair McNeil and Teddy Butt. Jean Crawford, Lenxie Felicia, Benelle Giles, Limey Perry Green, guest model. Susan Jer- deao, Sarah Jordan, Carol Mack, Candace Martin, Flo Sawyer, Fel­ icia Thomas and Elaine D. Payne. That “conversation piece” which pretty Melinda Hughes modeled at “Star Dust”, the 13th ’ anniversary hat show by Rowena I Mays at the Americana Hotel, i drew applause from an audience I of over one thousand spectators. Escorts Too The hat was a replica of the Escorts included Harold Allen, Americana Hotel, complete with Garland Allen, Henry Brown, Ira doors, windows (through which the lights shined), terraces and Bishop, Archie Elliott, Milton i Hood, Andrew Jones, Farnley shrubbery. The presentation of “Stardust” Jordon, John Mack and Joseph was the back drop for the show- Mays. Mr. and Mrs. John Doug- ing of Mrs. Mays’ fall and winter las were honored guests, hats. Wendy Waller, Bernice Ed- On behalf of Mrs. Mays, Mrs wards and Juanita Waller sang. Alice B Arrington, executive di- Trov Walker, emcee introduced rector of the YWCA, presented Lorraine Murray and Roberta B. a check of $100 for the NAACP Hubert who were narrators. Mrs. ; to Miss Peggy Dickerson of the Flo Sawyer presented Mrs. Mays I NAACP staff. a pink cake which was made in the shape of a hat. Charming Models Models included Barbara Allen. /-« w» VIIT Lois Bell, guest model, Sterne SOCIClI Dancing ClCISSGS At IW Brown, Frankye Cabbagestalk, Juanila Chavers, Jean Davis, At the request ot interested Pre-teenagers should find this Evelyn Gardner,’ Joy Holland parents, the Young Women s 1 - an opportunity to acquire know- I Marion Holmon. Mav Howard. Christian Association has sched- Melinda Hughes. Joy Marshall and Gladys Sweeney. dancing for girls and boys, ages with Val Escott as in- Potse which will give them a Other participants in t ° " structor, at Central Branch, 610 wholesome self-confidence when ledge of rhythm, dancing tech­ nique and accompanying social were Gene Witt, male model, . Lexington Avenue and West Side Branch, 840 Eighth Avenue. w..* —4-,. they enter the complex and often confusing teens. Mr. Escott, an Internationally recognized authority on ballroom dancing, has taught teenagers and adults at the YWCA for more than 10 years. P< the a geeg habit Jacy DeSooza, Terri Springer and Judy .Pace who will WIGS ARR *,IN” , , get the loudest whistles from the male audience! HERE AND THERE . . . Betty Terry of high fashion house, Pauline Triger, coordinated the NAFAD fashion show at its recent national convention and loved it. . . — Mrs. Ruth Sawyer, left is shown with some of the inte­ grated models who will partici­ pate in the Wig Fashion Show- .. to be presented at the Playboy Club Oct. 20 by the Sherry Beauty Center at 120 W. 125th Street. Shown, from left, front; Lori Brombach Carol Leverett, Elaine Daniel, Jean Kennedy. Rear: Imogene Robinson, Dan­ ielle Mags, Barbara Cooper, Rosemary Gregory. Eldria Dias and Marie Holmes. Cecil Brock vacationed in Los Angeles . . . Ann Wiles gave a party at Sag Harbor for Barbara Jones, Angeline Costa and the George Bates of Blue­ field, W. Virginia ... Ollie Porter, Cleo Daniels and Lillian Tynes went across the Pacific to hula-hula land — Honolulu — for a look-see . . . As quiet as it’s kept — and it’s kept pretty quiet — we’ve got a real big plus on the educated side. Doctor­ ates geting to be the thing rather than the exception. Off hand, we can think of several ladies in which brains go hand in glove with beauty. We have Dr. Jeanne Noble, ; Dr. Anna Arnold Hedgeman, Dr. Marie Daly, and the queenly Dr. Gladys Graham. Still on education ,Long Island’s Carole Green of Les Demoiselles busily prepping for entrance to Hof- ftra U., to which she has a scholarship for study to the drama. Carole had the lead to her high school (Jamaica Hi) play at graduation. A first. Herb Evans, Vice Chairman, Housing and Rede- Mayor Robert F. Wagner is- 1 sued a proclamation declaring "One Hundred Days for Wilt- ! wyck” at a reception at Gracie i Mansion for friends of the inter­ racial treatment center last Wed­ nesday. Receiving the official document was Judge Justine Wise Polier, president of the Board of Direc­ tors of Wiltwyck School. Other distinguished guests present for the ceremonies were James R, Dumpson, commissioner of Wel-‘ fare; Mrs. Edward Dudley, wife of the Manhattan borouugh presi­ dent; Miss A. Bernice Quimby, executive director of the Federa­ tion of Protestant Welfare Agen­ cies; Harvey Russell, vice presi­ dent of Pepsi Cola; Rev. George B. Ford; Mrs. Marshall Field MISS HURST Aids School velopment Board reminiscing with high school class- and Miss Fannie Hurst. mate, Chicagoan Bernadine Washington. She used the trip east for annual buying for a Chicago Department friends for the School will be con- rp Writ Vine ducted by the agency and its sup- IO Mr. YVaiKlIlS store, for which she is principal buyer. Porters to raise $1,000. each day: ’ National Democratic Committee s able Ethel Payne _ ll00 000 t0 make possible Miss Patricia Carol Marsh, back in New York to aid to the voter registration drive. an expanded program of service daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Law- I rence J. Cormier of Hollis, Long more MiSS Marsh Wed to children and families • We believe you’ll find Ethel is “real people.” , l, .5 _ . _ ... 1 , Mayor Requests Aid making the proclamation, Island, became the bride of Mel­ vin Watkins, son of Mr. and Mrs. ! The Robert Slades Wed At Mt. Pleasants Church Mbs Ruby Lee Bellemy, daugh- George Williams provided the ter of Mr. and Mrs. James Bel- nuptial music, lemy of Tarboro, N.C. was mar- The bride wore a white French ried to PFC Robert Slade at the lace aafi satin gown with full . . skirt. Her veil of tulle and lace ... , ,jara o, p(.art. Mt. Pleasant Baptist Church In .. . _ New York City last Saturday an(j sequins. Her bouquet was of where the Rev. C. B. George of- white roses. ficiated at the double ring cere- The bride is a graduate of the Conetoe School and is a phar- mony. The bride was given In mar- maceutical assistant with the Iriage by Gaston Dozier. Miss Ruth Davis Pharmaceutical Corp. Dozier was maid of honor. The Th« groom, son of Mr. and Mrs. bridesmaids were Misses Inez William Slade, is a graduate of Edwards, Geraldine Mitchell, fhe Conetoe School and is with Helen Pettaway and Ernestine )he US Army, stationed currently Wilkins. Brenda Faye Dozier was at Fort Campbell. flower girl. The Reception for some 350 William Ray Slade, brother of guests was given at the Hunt’s the groom, was best man. Eric Point Palace Pink Room. Lewis was ring bearer. Ushers The couple will live In Washlng- were Robert Jones, Henry Grant J ton, D.C. Mayor Wagner urged all citi- pjttmon Watkins of Youngstown, 1 zens to lend increased interest and support to the Wiltwyck ohi0, last Sunday" „ . , School,” which, he said, “has The double ring ceremony was pioneered in serving New York performed by Father Finnerty City’s most disturbed and depriv- in St- Pascal Bay Ion Roman ed children and their families for Catholic Church. more than a quarter of a century. The two attendants of the A highlight of the campaign bride were Vera Williams and will be an all-day Seminar on Oc- Carol Ray. Bernard Boone serv- tober 23, designed to introduce e(j as best man for the groom friends of the School to its pro-and Kevin O’Shea and David gram and staff. Howell were ushers. Pet Milk Will Air Showcase Following the ceremony a re­ ception was held at Linden Man­ or in St. Albans after which the young couple left on a honey­ moon lor Canada. When ladies meet, fashion is Mrs. Watkins, a June graduate inevitably a topic for conversa- of Syracuse University is pre- tlon. This was the case when pared to teach. Mr. Watkins, a recently Mrs. Elsie Archer, fash- graduate of the 1962 Class of Ion consultant, and Louise Pro- Colgate University is at present i thro of the Public Relations De- employed in the government 1 partment. Pet Milk Company, service while planning further ! met recently in Los Angeles, Cal- graduate study. J ifornia. The newlyweds will make their The result was a thoroughly home in Flushing. ; womanly talk-fest on fall fashion “ ------- ----------------------- Your Best Feature? be heard on the “Pet Milk q j«ve rea(j M many beauty Showcase radio program—an ar(jc|es that tell us to ‘'aecentu- ____ Interview series scheduled three ate your feature •• just how THE GROOM SALUTES — an^ Mrs. Robert Earl times weekly on radio stations can j determine exactly what IS In 31 "major cities across Slade are shown on their wed- country my “best feature"? the THE WEDDING DAY - aad Mrs. Robert J. Cannot Mr. day. The bride is the termer are Mlu Linda Page, popular mil­ recent wedding liner designer of St. Albans. The host on'the “Showcase”, aeries, Sid McCoy, dubbed the only your mouth or your eyes, Elsie Archer and Louise Protlfro for these are the two "live” fea- shovr "strictly for the girls." jtures, the colorful, movable parts A. Your best feature can be of your countenance. They mir­ ror your emotions, and they tell other persons the kind of person YOU are.. PEPSI-COLA PRESENTS THE WEEK’S CALENDAR OF EVENTS Oct. 4—DANCE; Savoy Manor; NYC Soft Ball League. Oct. 4—DANCE; Savoy Manor; The Continental Club. Oct. 4—DANCE; Audubon Ballroom; Wenkroy Social Club. Oct. 4—DANCE; Audubon; Royal Deluxe Social Club. Oct. 4—FASHION SHOW: Margaret Jackson; Hotel Astor; Oct. 4—DANCE; Dawn Casino; Catholic War Veterana. Oct. 4—DANCE; Renaissance; Old Acquaintance Club of New York. Oct. 5—DANCE; Manhattan Center; 369th Veterans As­ sociation. Oct. 5—DANCE; Renaissance; Harlem Labor Union, Inc. Oct. 5—DANCE; Dawn Casino; Les Dames Social Club. Oct. 5—DANCE; Hotel Theresa; Sociable 9, Inc. Oct. 5—DANCE-FESTIVAL; Commodore Hotel; Haitian and Co-Arts Association, Inc. Oct. 5—CONCERT; Carnegie Hall; Oandhl Society lor Human Rights, Inc. Oct. 5—FISH FRY; Oalllvanters Clubhouse; Talladega Alumni Association of N.Y. Oct. 8—DANCE; Savoy Manor; Wllllamsbridge Oold Club. Oct. 6—DANCE; Celebrity Club; Bronx NAACP Youth Council. Oct. 6—FLOWER SHOW; Prince Hall Masonic Temple (Mt. Vernon); George Washington Carver Oar- den Club. , Oct. 6—EBONY FASHION FAIR; New York Hilton Hotel; National Urban League Ouild. Oct. 6—MU8ICAL COFFEE HOUR; Fraternal Club­ house; Ladles of Distinction, Inc. Oct. ft-FASHION SHOW; Audubon; J & L Taylors •Models. Oct. 8—DANCE; Dawn Casino; Les Couples Club. Oct. 11—BEAUTY CONTEST; Sheraton Atlantic Hotel; N.Y. Photographers Guild. Oct. 11—DANCE! Essex House; Club Les Modernettes. Oct. 11—DANCE; Renaissance; Page Six Club. Oct. 11—DANCE; Savoy Manor; 8t. Andrews’Church. ' Oct. 11—DANCE; Audubon; Empire Lodge. Oct. 11—DANCE; Audubon; Imperial Girls Club. Oct. 11—DANCE; Dawn Casino; Les Dames Social Club. ' Oct. 12—DANCE; Club 845; Acacia Lodge No. 14. Oct. 12—LUNCHEON; New York Hilton Hotel; Northslde Center for Child Development. Oct. 12—DANCE; Dawn Casino; Top Hats Social Club And here’s another big event: the /lew tall Pepsi in the 16 02. bottle Serve more, eave morel Material for this space is compiled by the N.Y. Amsterdam Newt, s The Amsterdam News is responsible for all announcements herein. ding day where he posed tor the photographer in a "salute to his new “top sergeant” his bride. Mrs. Slade was the for­ mer Miss Ruby Lee Bellemy,. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Bellemy of the Bronx. (Bill Carter Photo) 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 --- 2 Neiv Artists At Met Opera Two new artists appear and three regulars return to the Met­ ropolitan Opera this season which <>pens Monday, Oct. 14 with Ver­ di’s “Aida”. Katliecine Dunham debuts as the choreographer for “Aida"| and incorporated in the ballet will be an Ethiopian Chieftain; performed by Khemfoia Tol Pa- du Singing artists at the Met this season are Junetta Jones, so­ prano making her debut and re­ turning sopranos Mattiwilda Dobbs and Leontyne Price and tenor George Shirley. LIGHTER THAN LIGHT—Lin- nette Phillips, proprietor of Lin- nette’s Bar at 714 St. Nicholas Ave., treats customers to Vat 6§ GOLD to convince them that this milder, drier Scotch is lighter than a feather. Shown exhibiting smiles of pleasure on each side of her, are Gene Phillips and Elaine Anthony, as the bartender, Marion Jet- ter, keeps pouring. (Photo by McAdams) Jk'. 18 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Oct 5, 1963 L by Geoiase palme By CHARLES T. (Chuck) WILLIAMS Vice President, Schenley Distillers Company George Palmer has given me his column to help me express my thanks to the many wonderful people who have helped me over the years. When I first came into the industry in 1951, 1 was green and uninformed as "far as the whiskey business was concerned. My task was made easier by the con­ siderate people in the community who gave me so much understanding and genuine help. For instance, there was no program that they considered too outlandish or too zany and, as a result, were always ready to cooperate with me. One of my first promotions for Schenley Reserve in the community was the yellow foot­ prints that were pasted leading into re­ tail package stores. Some retailers were a little skeptical but they went along with me and, as it turned out, it proved to be one of the most effec­ tive traffic stoppers in the area. ( Then there was the time we arranged for retailers to use live turkeys in their windows during the month of November. This was a real crowd stopper. It was so successful that it was instrumental in my being awarded the President’s Cup in 1952 for “outstanding sales achievement.” Chuck WUliams People Showed Interest If the people in this community had not taken an active itterest in my work, I am sure that events would not have turned out so fortunate for me. I am happy to say that I found this keen interest demon­ strated time and again not only in this area but inj other locales throughout the country. It is this sort of cooperation that has made it possible for me to arrive at my present position. One of the most frequent questions asked me dur­ ing interviews on radio, television and other news media is this: ‘Have you found that being a Negro has been a de­ triment to your progres in the company?” 4-Part Drama On Race Starts Sunday Morning- , A cast of six actors and a questions of the characters dur- panel of four experts will take part in “The Issue: A Play With Comment,” four-part experimen­ tal drama by Craig Gilbert, which will be presented on “Look Up and Live” oo four successive Sundays beginning Oct. 6 (10:30- 11 ajn., EDT) and continuing on Oct. 13, 20 and 27 on the CBS Television Network. The drama depicts the con­ trasting reactions of several per­ sons to the complex racial ques­ tion. The scene is a medium- sized United States city whose mayor calls a bi-racial meeting In an effort to solve the in­ tegration problem. The play is in the form of a rehearsal attended by the author and the panel of experts, all of whom make comments and ask ing the course of the action o In Cast Robert Earle Jones has the role of Roscoe, a successful Ne­ gro businessman; Ellen Holly plays his daughter, Eadie; Earle Hyman portrays her husband, Ben, a young college graduate who is the leader of integration demonstrations in the city; Rae Allen plays Mavis, a liberal white woman who is the community’s cultyral leader; Lonny Chapman has the role of Ralph, a con­ servative white man who owns the largest department store in the city, and Herbert Nelson plays the mayor. The panel of experts includes: the Rev. James Carroll Moore, associate director of the Office of Information for the National Performing Arts Center Expands Clark Center for the Perform­ ing Arts will ha\e an expanded program in theatre arts when fall classes begin this week. The Center's headquarters are at the West Side Young Women’s Chris­ tian Association, 51st Street and 8th Avenue. Clark Center has been known for the past three years for its classes in dance, and as the home of the Alvin Ailey Dance Theatre. Council of Churches; the Rev. Robert A. Raines, pastor of the First Methodist Cr.urch, German­ town, Pa.; the Rev. Will D. Campbell, director of the Fel­ lowship of Southern Churchmen, and Dorothy Cotton, director of Education for the .Southern Chris­ tian Leadership Conference. SUMMER IS OVER. BUT THE MEMORY LINGERS — As the above picture shows, these ldren from Mt. Morris Chil- Ccntcr to board a bus for a day’s out­ ing, with all expenses paid from the Monday Night Camp Fund. Summer fun is just a memory now. College Choirs Oct. Schedule Musical settings of various texts drawn from Genesis, Chapter I, w ill be sung by the choirs of four members of the United Negro College Fund to open the October series of the ABC Radio Net­ work’s “Negro College Choirs” broadcasts. In the New- York City area, the programs are broadcast over WABC Sundays, 7-7:25 a m. Time To Register Throughout the South Negroes are facing death in attempts to get their names on the registra- ion books, but in New Y’ork hun­ dreds of thousands of persons pay little attention to this basic right. Don’t be a slacker, go to your neighborhood polling place and register from Tuesday, Oct. 8 through Friday. Oct. 11, between 5 30 and 10 30 p m., or on Satur­ day. Oct. 12, from 7am until 10:30 p m. Oct. lege Oct. 20 - Philander Smith Col- 27 - Fisk University. ON UPTOWN SCENE — Mary Lou Williams, top jazz pianist, began an engagement with her trio of conversation in jazz at Wells Garden Supper Club on 7th Avenue, Tuesday night. Books The love of which requires tion, apology, Langford. The schedule: books is a love Oct. 6 - Lane College, Philander neither justifica- Smith College, Saint Augustine's nor defence. — Benedict College. Oct. 13 - Tuskegee Institute. My answer is that I started as a local salesman in 1951 and went to various other positions all up the lad­ der, in the company. I feel that in a decent, well man­ aged company like Schenley, loyalty and hard work are the determining factors for promotions. Untapped Talent There is a vast reservoir of untapped talent in our community that can be of tremendous help in to­ day’s business world. Many of our men and women are hard working and talented who need only the op­ portunity to show what they can do. Many astute bus­ inessmen are beginning to realize this. It won’t be long before many of our men and women will be given this opportunity to serve. Once that opportunity comes, I am sure that everyone will profit by it. In my new responsibilities as a vice president for Schenley Distillers Company, I hope to develop new concepts in merchandising and sales promotion and I am looking forward to broadening our organization structure to help increase the sales of the many fine products which Schenley offers the public. M»EMM’$HllSEtUN6| ‘ SCOTCH WHISKY’ SCOTLAND’S BEST Distilleries Producec u I hope that shall continue our warm, friendly relationship that we have developed over the years and that my friends and others In the community will con­ tinue to show their friendliness through the continued use of the products marketed by Schenley. Folk Dancers Featured In Dance Festival The Young Folk Dancers of East River Drive (Grand Street), will end the season with a fes­ tival to be held Friday, Oct. from 7 to 11 p.m. in the East River Drive Amphitheatre. Children will exhibit dances learned during the summer under direction of Blanche Bernstein, organizer and instructor of chil­ dren’s group. They will also par­ ticipate In the Story of Chassi- dism performed by Blanche and Elizabeth The Oct. 4 program, sponsored in cooperation with the Depart­ ment of Parks, Recreation Di­ vision, will feature guest per­ formers Alonso Castro and Ma­ ria Arushan, a professional dance team who will perform Spanish dances. > , Dance Group Accepting Applicants The Junior Division of New Dance Group Studio, a non-profit organization at 254 W. 47th St., is registering children and teen agers now for Its 1983-A4 season of classes in ballet and modern dance. For information and brochure listing complete schedule of class­ es and tuition rates, please phone Circle 5-8327 between the hours of 3 and 8 p.m. In Revival la Clark Cantor YWCA Real dent Drama Company is ing “The Ghost Sonata”, a viral of Strindberg's famoaB ex pretslonisdc one-act play on Oct 7-9 at 8 30 p.m. at the West Side YWCA, M0 Eighth Ave., at 51st St. PARTY TIME AT THE IN THE HEART OF HARLEM 209 W. 125th St. M0 2-4362 VISIT OUR SPACIOUS and LUXURIOUS RESTAURANT AND COCKTAIL LOUNGE DELICIOUS LUNCHEONS AND DINNERS SERVED DAILY FEATURING NIGHTLY FOR YOUR LISTENING PLEASURE CURLIE HAMNER AND HIS ALL STAR BAND % $ LEN FONG RESTAURANT 3533 BROADWAY NEAR WEST 145 ST. NEW YORK 31, N. Y. - AU 1 7270 authentic Cantonese Cuisine and good American Food SPECIAL FACILITIES FOR SOCIAL OCCASIONS BANQUETS • RECEPTIONS • DINNERS Cocktail Lounge and Air Conditioning Orders Prepared To Take Out 521 CLUB Franklin Ave. and Fulton St., B'lyn ST 3-8374 Dance ta the Music of Jimmy Oliver and the Soul Twisters Ladies Nite Every Wad. — Audience Participation Shows Open 7 p.m. to 3 a.m., Floor Shows Every Night Friday — Saturday — Sunday laReuge A Bey — Afro-Caban Dancers Indra Exotic Fire Oancers — Sister Rosetta Smith, Seng Stylist The Sensational HAROLD DUMONTE Dynamic Yeeaf Sang Stylist SONNY LEE Formerly with Porgy 4 Bass, Sang Dance A Comic M.C. VANILLA WAFER THE EXOTIC ONE Hal Singer and Hit All Stars Johnny Taylor at the Organ Chinese Amer. Cuisine Free Adin. Never a Caver Cant. Music A Ent. 319 West 125th St. Res: UN 4-6481 - 8880 BIG WILTS Smalls Paradise Currently appearing in THE PARISIAN ROOM GLORIA TROY SONG STYLIST SANDMAN HOWARD M.C. and COMIC LUCIUS LAWTON, rhythm a blues TOMMY JOHNSON, TRIO JERRY FREEMAN, ORCH. THREE SHOWS 10:30 - 12:30 Cr 2:30 A.M. For Res: AU 6-8619 - AU 6-8620 7th Avenue and 135th St., N.Y.C » W mr to mumsi^s®is wmiiTOMT XAAVAf STEAK ERENDA'S /W HOUSE Ctnglete Imibeae* - Diaaer • Ale Carte 154th It. A 7th Ave. AD 4-9734 222 W. 116th St., N.Y. 26 UN 4 9213 ARROZ CON POLLO 0 PAELLA VALENCIANA Open IE Naan to 1 A.M. — Friday A Saturday Open Cain 1 A.M. RESTAURANT 8 BAR Amsterdam Ave. at 158th St. "INSOUCIANTLY YOURS" WA 3-9749 GOLD BRICK INN HARLEM'S NEWEST AND MOST DISTINCTIVE RESTAURANT ANO BAR CHINESE-AMERICAN DINING ROOM AMSTERDAM AVL at 157th ST. AU 3-8792 "SAVE WHILE YOU RAVE" 'S WEST INDIAN RESTAURANT— |2525 71b Aw. bet. 146th A 147th Sts. N.Y.C TOP CLUB >54 WEST 12S STREET Rl 9 5200 “VISIT OUR COMFORTABLE LOVt'sEAT LOUNGE" Now Available For Receptions, Cocktail Parties, Meeting Room, at Attractive Rates MADRID BAR & GRILL 1902 7th Avenue near 116th Street NOTEO FOR OUR UN 4-9348 DELICIOUS STEAKS, CHOPS CHICKEN and RICE DINNERS SERVED OAn.T At Bar — NOEMA ELLISON. LCCT PONTE AND BBOTKER BRAXTON HOT MEAT PATTIES — FISH CAKES TEMPTING MEALS — OPEN DAILY Catering for ell Oc<ast*..< Bos. AU 3-9766 Res. TO 2*6184 GOLDEN Grill ES: 145th St. Nicholas Avs. VATST. Trap. MEET TOCR FRIENDS AT THE BAR-B-Q PARTY EVERY NITE STEAKS • CHOPS & CHICKEN PICK N EAT from ear OUT DOOR PIT Old Fashioned Eatin ALL YOU CAN EAT ONLY $2.00 per person . . . Bring the whole family and have a ball, fating starts at 4 p.m. stops at 2 a.m. LOTUS VILLAGE CLUB CAFE (We also specialize in your favorite drink) 795 E. 161 Street (East ef Prospect Ave.) SAM KITS LANGFORD, Prop. MO 9-9796 ANNOUNCING GRAND OPENING Young's Lounge - Restaurant Bar fir Grill 33-81 GREAT NECK RD., NORTH AMITYVILLE, LL Friday & Saturday, October 18 and 19 ENTERTAINMENT DURING EVENINGS - SOUVENIRS WERE FAMOUS FOR ABSOLUTELY NOTHING! Bet still deing business at the SELBRA'S MIDWAY LOUNGE 415 W. lJSIh Stmt UN Hilt To Serve Yoo, Beatrice, Sonja, Roberta, Lonnie A Leroy LA FAMILLE 2017 5th Avenue SA 2-9806 Uptown's newest most elegant Supper Club & Cocktail Lounge — luncheon served daily FEATURING NITELY Mary Lou Williams 4 Trie Famous hi Jozx WELLS UPSTAIRS ROOM la Cocktail lounge HERMAN FOSTER'S TRIO Starring the Persennlity JOAN SHAW , 2249 7th Ave., N.Y. 21, N.Y. AU 3-8244-8197 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., Oct 5, 1963 Seventh and St. Nicholas Aven ues, must be eliminated be fore the new public school be tween Seventh and Eighth Aven ues opens. Dope addicts make their hop purchases daily fronj the man with the brown paper bag and dice games are con­ tinuous. Wine bottles and gar­ bage litter the doorways... Conditions on 126th St., between but Speedy Pugh and Ben "Cig- arette” Kornegay said the Yan­ kees will wrap it up in Jive... Percy Blackwell won’t take any more pictures and his friend, Ebenezer Anthony, was unable to take a picture of the funeral. A camera was the cause...Bar­ tender Clarence Thompson said a gunman forced him to hand over $150 the other night . Alfred Nesblt's forgery trial ready. Wonder why the Sanitation De­ Alex Prempeh was the master partment doesn't enforce alter- of ceremonies at the Pan-Afri- nate-side-of-the-street parking in Harlem?...Thomas Spring, wholcan Nationalist rally at 125th St returned from Sehna, Ala., Sun- and Seventh Ave. Saturday. A- day night told friends that thejmong the speakers were Hulan whites down there make the Cosa Jack, Attorney Hope Stevens and Nostra look like kid gang stuff. Lewis A. Michaux . . Joseph Ca- Spring returned to Alabama Sun- pell, in Polyclinic Hospital . Bois- day night ..James Lawson said.terous crowds on Seventh Ave. he will have a private audience between 123rd and 124th Streets with Emperor Haile Selassie. forced women and men to walk Cynthia Turner’s twins. Roger in the street or walk on the and Randell. trapped a huge rati sidewalk opposite them Clyde in a cage in their 276 W. 119th Brunson was kayoed by a hit and run driver on Seventh Ave Saturday night. Curt Jackson said the Mississippi authorities are Just picking on Cleve Me Dowell... Ruth Guzman is back on Lenox Ave. mixing and-serving St. apartment. The students said the rat ate their pet bird, then ate rat poison. Attention 28th Precinct Police: There was a crap game Saturday night on 125th St., between Seventh and Eighth Avenues, near the Apollo Theater, and theatergoers looked disgustedly at the players. Alberto Egon writes that be is entertaining in Puerto Rico after Panama stint...Elsie Blow birth- dayed.That Apollo Theater film on television Saturday night was not coming from the theater... The Hartford Guardians will have Deputy Police Comm. Law- rence Pierce as guest speaker Monday at Hartford Statler Ho­ tel...Laverne Baker's girl Fri­ day. Shirley Cliett, can wail on spirituals. Wesley Woods is fighting for his life after falling six stories... Photog Austin Hansen is recup­ erating in his Bronx home after a major operation...Allen Robin­ son and Joe Christian should con­ centrate on stock car racing after (that spectacular performance { Friday night at 123rd St. and Seventh Ave...Julius Keith's blue poodle. Duke, attracted a lot of attention Friday night . Malcolm X and 20 bus loads of Muslims motored to Philadelphia to hear cia" her*- w« ‘hc Elijah Muhammad Sunday. £ stage an exhibit at the X^rth I Eastern Dental Association Con- vention in Swampscott, Mas? . . Leonard McGinty McGowan, Larine Allen. Ellen Glover and and Howard Jacksorf picked the*her sister, Una, won't forget that Dodgers to topple die Yankees ride with Ozell Gales.Marie Alvin Taylor, a dental techni- To Puerto Rico Series Picks Library In Antigua Result Of Harlemite S* John’s, capital of Antigua, an stand of the former British West Indies, has a population of 64.000, or one - thirteenth the size of Harlem. Library la St. John’s houses 7,000 books, practically all of which either are new or books donated by Americans over the years. But only two libraries serve its knowledge - crazed populace. One is a public library; the other Is private. The private library is the result of a sort of one - man Marshall Plan, set into operation tev-ral years ago by an American citiz en who remembered his boy­ hood's hunger for books. 7,000 Books He Is Clement Silston, a Har­ lem realtor of 428 W. 100th St. who returned recently from the island where he made a check on his unoffical Marshall Plan-pro­ duct, the Silston Library. Most of the books, which In­ clude text books on numerous subjects, as well as other fiction and fiction works, were giyen to Silston in answer to h's appeal for books to help build the library that was dedicated on Aug. 25, 1960. Some of the books were once on the shelves of the library of The Amsterdam News’ editorial office but were turned over to the un official Marshall Plan director when newsmen learned of Sils ton's plan to send them to the is­ land to Help its youth satisfy their hunger for education. The $100,000 two - story Silston Silston, who said the books are being “well used’’ by St. John's youths and adults, have been an average of 1,000 books a year to his former home city He said he has cases of books sow at his W. 160th St. home to send later this year to the libra­ ry, but hopes he will continue to get more books from private don ors who have no further use for their own collection and would rather invest it in the education of Antigua's youngsters than throw them out for the junk man SCEF Adds 2 Workers NEW ORLEANS. La. — Two noted civil-rights workers have been added to the staff of the Southern Conference Educational Fund (SCEF), an integrationlst group with its main offices here. One is Miss Ella J. Baker. Atlanta, former director of bran­ ches for NAACP and formerly executive director of the South­ ern Christian Leadership Confer­ ence (SCLCL She will be based in Atlanta. The other is John R. Salter. Jr., Jackson, Miss., who had a leading role in picketing and dem onstrations ip that city last winter and spring. He was beat­ en and arrested several times. Salter will maintain an office in Raleigh, N. C„ where he and his wife and Infant daughter now live. He and Carl Braden, who has been with SCEF six years will be field organizers. LA Muslim Speaks Here Muslim Minister John Shabazz of Los Angeles, California will be the guest speaker at Muham­ mad’s Mosque No. 7, this Sunday, October 6, 102 W. 116th St. at 2 p.m. He will also speak in Brook­ lyn at Muhammad's Mosque, 120 Madison, at 8 p.m. Sunday night. - Minister Shabazz will give a de­ tail repoft on the case in Los Angles where seven Muslims were shot down by police and then charged with the crime. Prudence Prudence is that virtue by which was discern what is proper to be done under the various cir­ cumstances of time and place. — Milton. Thomas, who is pregnant tells friends she is trying to under­ stand her husband Willie, but her bruises rebel... "Down Dere" was the theme of the production staged by the Copaaetics Monday night...Linda Brown said George Valdes and Richard Monroe were unfair... Herb Segar is missing from his familiar haunts. Ramon Diaz said his household will do with­ out Xmas gifts this year. STEAK USDA CHOICE ONE PRICE ONLY! SMOKED - No. 1 GRADE Beef Tongue »49< NEW I A REAL TASTE TREAT I Finust Bucon lb. 59- USDA CHOICE-SHORT RIBS USDA CHOICE-CHUCK CUT Beef Flanken »• 59. California Steaks >45< USDA CHOICE DELICIOUS FULL FLAVOR ______ Ground Chuck »69 Park's Sausage »49> BONELESS-USDA CHOICE USDA CHOICE Stewing Beef ■ 69' Shoulder Steak »89« <32> EXTRA GREEN STAMPS wMt perckeee ef • SMOKED BONELESS BUTT EXTRA GREEN STAMPS with purehaM of 1 pound HONOR MAID POLISH SAUSAGE First National Stores ROUNDER FIILH * 59« MEDIUM SHRIMP ‘99' Finast^ CHECK THESE LOW PRICES ... SAVE CASH and STAMPS! HOSPITAL FUND LEADERS — Arthur G. Boardman, Jr., United Hospital Fund campaign general chairman and Mrs. Frederick H. Amendola, chair­ man of the Women’s Division discuss this year’s drive for $3,000,000 at the Fund’s Open­ ing Dinner, Monday night at the Plaza Hotel. Guest speaker was J. Douglas Colman, president of Blue Cross. Dorothy Donegan entertained the more than 600 volunteers and hospital repre­ sentatives attending the dinner. Harlem's Mount Morris Park Hospital is a member hospital and will benefit from campaign. Add 2 Specialists, Promote 1 At League To meet demand of program expansion in community services. Whitney M. Young, Jr., exe­ cutive director of the National the addition of two specialists to the staff and the promotion of another. The additions to the staff are: Charles E. Eason, to the newly- created NUL post of associate director for program, with duties centering largely on providing in­ creased service to the League's 65 affiliates across the nation. Mr. Eason, formerly associa­ ted with the League, was Bor ough Community Coordinator for the New York City Youth Board Mrs. Whaley Mrs. Betti Scott Whaley be­ comes NUL associate director for administration, replacing Ray. mond R. Brown, executive direc tor of the Akron Urban League, who has returned to his respan sibilities there. He was organiz­ er and administrator of the NUL facility for leadership devi ment. personnel recruitment, training and referral. Mrs. Whaley, also possessing an extensive Urban League back­ ground, was connected previous­ ly with the New York City Youth Board and a consultant on Youth Work for the Mayor’s Commit­ tee on Youth. Mr. Jehaara Reginald A. Johnson, NUL as­ sociate director for housing, has been assigned to administrative |, duties previously discharged by Alexander J. Allen, associate ex ecutivc director for administra­ tion, now on leave. Mr. Johnson, with more than 30 years of UL service, succes­ sively held executive posts in St. Louis, Atlanta. Pittsburgh and Washington, D. C., before being assigned to the National office. Announce Test For Careen Mail Handlers An examination for career sub­ stitute mail handlers for em­ ployment In the five boroughs of New York has been announced by Bernard Katz,'executive sec­ retary, Board of U. S. Civil Serv­ ice Examiners, N. Y. Post Office. There.is no residence require­ ment for employment at these post offices, but certification to fill vacancies will be made first of the highest eligibles an the register who actually reside in either of the five boroughs. Mini­ mum age limit is 18. Substitute mail handlers start at $2.10 an hour and reach $2 89 an hour through annual in­ creases. Ten percent additional it paid for night work. Application forms may be ob­ tained from the Board of U. S Civil Service Examiners, General Post Office, Room 3506, 33rd St near 9th Ave. MACAROON, SUGAR, ICED SPICE or MACAROON Mom's Cookies 4 An. ’»$! FINAST - ORANGE Marmalade 10Jar29< FINAST- MEDIUM Stuffed Olives "£59« FINAST- TENDER Sweet Peas 4,t1.n69< UPTON TEA BAGS WT POTATOES ’°Ta’un^,n 2 £.39* More Timely Reminders MIRACLE MARGARINE cSSTe. ‘-39' SEGO LIQUID OUT FOOD 10,1. 4T«p«A *|,15 KRAFT MIRACLE MARGARINE >» - 33' 87' ',r 54' CODE 10 — 47‘ RICE PROVENCE 59' BETTY CROCKER i *• I* 35c SANDWICH SPREAD 2 ^“ 45' APPLE SAUCE 5^55' WILD BIRD SEED 2£49< SUNFLOWER SEED ”2469' KOTEX SANITARY NAPKINS RICE WITH VAUNCIANA SAUCI ar R1CI MILANFM BITTY CROCKIR OtfNDAU PARK FINAST FINAST lOFT'l killllllltltllMIIIttllUIIIIIIIH McIntosh apples II. S. No. 1 2%" & Up Ik. Ng SWEET POTATOES TOKAY GRAPES BRUSSELS SPROUTS PtfMlir Ftvtrfti 3" 25' 2-29' lirteaPrttk tel- 29 Film Rri • > M EXTRA S*H STAMPS with purchase of 2-pair box LADY LENOX NYLONS NO COUPON NEEDED________________ Dairy Department Special EXTRA S«H STAMPS WITH PURCHASE OF 1 QUART CARTON Brookside BUTTERMILK at all Naw York itorai axcapl Pearl Rivar, Naw City $ Middlatawa ________________ NO COUPON NEEDED ________ ACTION Dry Peach 1 lb. 6 oz. Tf P_ 11 ox. 75c X39* pkg. AJAX pkQ. Floor & Wall Cleaner with Ammonia 3lb<OI 93‘ £29‘ TREND DRY DETERGENT 12’/t oz. size 39c TREND LIQUID Twin Pack PA. 12 oz. tize SWEETHEART SOAP Buy 3 - Get 1 for 1 cent 4 S 32c 1 Finast jn First National Stores 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 --- ■ M • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Oct 5, 1963 Vote Out Men Who Voted For Mixed Pool . STATESVILLE. N.C. — Six . -fnembers of the City Council who '".had decided to desegregate public .-awimming pools here were voted <out of office in a recall election. • * Their successors now want to '♦hold a referendum on whether -'to go back to segregation of the '♦city’s pools^buth Hugh Mitchell. • elections chairman, contended ' 'that the balloting was legal and - .there would be no recount. The -state attorney general had stated • 'that such an election would be -Illegal. •* The defeated council said it will stand pat on its desegrega tion decision even though support ing the new group on other Is­ sues". NAACP state president Kelly Alexander said the election would result in "direct action” by Ne­ groes in their fight for desegrega­ tion of public facilities. Fund Raisers Rev James H Robinson, pres­ ident of "Operation-Crossroads Africa," will be one of the speak­ ers on the future of American philanthrophy at the first nation­ al day-long conference of the National Society of Fund Raisers on Thursday. Oct. 10. at the Mo­ tel on the Mountain, Suffern, N.Y. Construction Guidelinelssued On Apprentices Q°hrJo WASHINGTON — Apprentice­ ship programs of construction unions throughout the nation are to be advised to include a non­ discrimination clause in their agreements, If they do not al­ ready have such statements. The advice was contained in a guideline issued Monday by the Construction Industry Joint Con­ ference’s equal employment op­ portunity committee in support of a more general antibias plan adopted by the committee last Aug. 9 in response to stringent new standards issued July 26 by th« Labor Department. The conference includes leading national contractors’ groups and the 18 national unions affiliated with the AFL-CIO’s Building and Construction Trades Department NO POWER However, the conference has no power to enforce adoption of the new guidelines by the local apprenticeship comm it tees throughout the nation. But affiliate groups are expec­ ted to urge adoption by their junior groups. Prof. John T. Dunlop, con­ ference chairman, said that the conferees felt confident that joint apprenticeship committees that adopted the recommendations would be in compliance- with the Labor Department's antibias bgp. The construction industry has asserted the government stand­ ards were not workable, but the Labor Department has not yet taken steps to enforce the carry­ ing out of its-directives. An of­ ficial of the department said it would do so soon. The conference's , guidelines call for the reviewal of Joint apprenticeship programs by their committees to ensure that the Nnfinnc only standard of selection are Tree 1X0110110 the qualifications of the applicant, LONDON — Zanzibar, the la- ' determined by objective stan-'|land off the coast o£ A{r,ca dards, such as age, educational join oQier free nations ability.. physical fitness and of Afrlca on Dec 10 the Colonial achievement and aptitude tests. Office announced last week. fitness One of the youths was accused also an islaiKl Zanzibar, and Its twin, Pemba, currently Five Youths Arrested In Rights March F.LIZAZBETH N. J. One of several orderly marches here tn protest discrimination ended in the arrest of five youths who, police charged, hurled rocks and insults at them Monday night. of carrying a knife. The arrested youths were Ham mie Bracie, 23. of 634 New Point Road, the youth accused of pos­ sessing a knife; Marshall Brown, 20, of 639 Livingston St., charged with interfering with police; and three boys between the ages of 13 and 17, each of whom was accused of Interfering with po­ lice and stoning a police car. ruled by a sultan, under British protectorship, will become the 17th member of the British Com-!Asian population. . ignt West Indies Freight & Passenger Service SHIPPING . CRATING To All Parts of the West Indies We Prepare Bills of Lading, Custom House Declaration!, and All Necessary Functions. FOR FIRST CLASS SERVICE SEE US_ EAST £ TK 14313 — TR « 3tM>2 Wh STREET Near First Arenas New Tnrk ». N T. Days Only J. MYRON. M«r. monwealth. The sultan will head the new nation as its constitution­ al monarch. r Kenya, on the east coast of Africa, south of Ethiopia, achieves its independence from Brit ish rule on Dec. 12, becomii^ the last British dependency to attain autonomy. All three, Zanzibar, Pemba and Kenya have considerable Euro­ pean and Asian populations. East Indians comprising the bulk of the latter. In the first two an Arab population dominates the EXCITING, WEEK LONG THRIFT EVENT! yWeVAW.W.W. FOR THE WEEKEND COFFEE SALE! RICH AND FULL-BODIED VIGOROUS AND WINEY A&P Managers’ Week has a threefold purpose. First, to honor our Store Managers with a week- long, storewide sale of their own. Second, to express special appreciation to our customers. And third, to renew our famous pledge of service to the public. The minute you walk into your A&P, you’ll lee every department loaded with the values* you like best — all selected by the Managers themselves. And you’ll enjoy extra thrift on those quality-famous A&P Exclusives: Jane Parker Baked Foods, Ann Page Fine Foods and freshly-ground A&P Coffee. So, come in during this very special week. Our friendly people will make you feel right at home. You’lllike the clean, fully-stocked and easy-to- shop-store. You’ll reap a windfall of savings on our Managers’ choice of values, too! I-LB. BAG-ONLY tcoHM; ONLY cnounof COFfSl w Don’t miss this big Managers’ Week Special on flavor- famou* AcJ? r-.We-bean Coffee! Never ground in a factory ...you see this coffee custom-ground for your coffeemaker right in the store...the only way to give you big, fresh, wonderful COFFEE MILL FLAVOR...fresh-fround Savor you carlt Ret in a can/ Enjoy it...and save/ EXTRA GOOD... EXTRA THRIFTY VALUES Jane Parker Baked Foods JANE PARKER THIS WEEK SAVE 10c FIRST OF THE SEASON Why wait for a holiday to enjoy this traditional favorite? Surprise the whole family tonight with Jane Parker’s Pumpkin Pie. You’ll love its rich custard-y filling! JANE PARKER YOUR CHOICE I GOLDEN, SUGARED or CINNAMON DANISH NUT RING Whole Wheat Bread “ CREAMY SMOOTH (12-OZ. JAR) CREAMY SMOOTH or KRUNCHY Also: SULTANA BRAND SMALL MORE ANN PAGE VALUES! MATCH SALE! Your Choice peanUj, Preserves 12-OZ, JAR Gerber’s Baby Cereal Swift’s Meets for Babies Heinz Vinegar Rultmon Lemon Juice R.condltut.d pw«7t eMrtfiQf All Tobacco Products and Alcoholic Beverage* exempt from Plaid Stamp Offer. A Prices slightly higher in Connecticut in compliance with mark-up lew, THE GREAT ATtANTIC & PACIFIC TEA COMPANY, INC. uper Markets AMERICA S DEPENDABLE FOOD MERCHANT SINCE 1859 Prices effective through Saturday, Oct. 5th in Super Markets and Self- Service stores only In Metropolitan N. Y. - N. J. areas, all Long Island A Westchester County. EXCLUDING CONNECTIGUT. 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 --- M • W. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS; Sat., Oct. 5, 1963 _i« ii J i_ — — BROOKLYN’S MODERN FUNERAL HOME BROOKLYN UNITY FUNERAL HOME Formerly Unity Parkway Chapel 1406 Pitkin Avenue (at Eastern Parkway & Ralph Avenue) REASONS WHY, IN TIME OF NEED YOU SHOULD LET BROOKLYN UNITY SERVE YOU. _ « 1. Beautiful building ’ erected espec­ ially for Funeral operations. 2. Large display easket salon on prem­ ises, prices for complete funeral start at $200. 3. Large Chapel with church pews. s 4. Entire building centrally, air con­ ditioned. 5. All Reposing rooms complete priv- ■ acy. ■■ '' ’ « . , ' , jit. * 6. Sympathetic courteous Funeral Di­ rectors to serve you day or night. Brooklyn Unity Funeral Home 1406 Pitkin Avenue at Eastern Parkway HYacinth 3-8200 'YOUR LOVED ONES DESERVE THE BEST" X z ,3 $ IS 1 / * ?! P- READ EVERY WEEK "Your community newspaper’’ Your Favorite Columnists Martin Luther King Roy Wilkins Jackie Robinson James L. Hicks Jessie Walker Dave Hepburn Thomasina Norford James L. Booker Daphine Sheppard Gertrude Wilson Poppy Cannon Les Mathews Dr. Thomas Patrick Perdita Duncan George Palmer Alicia Smith ALL THE NEWS WITH COMMUNITY VIEWS Local Offices .'2340 8th Avenue, New York 261 West 126th Street, New York l» i 1251 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn, New York All News Stands Out Every Thursday Still 15 cents 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 --- .» 3 < t )) ♦. «FTf ■V '* to JU’.* -4» TV " •!** t « — 50 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Oct. 5, 1963 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS I For Sak ’ Queens Far Sak I Queeas-Far Sak OanAAStc F am QmIa QktSSAIR*. _ Kav CaIa Queeat Far Sak Queens—For Sale RENT sms ERBaBBHA Fall Specials | Queens Vil. $16,9901 I BRICK ONE FAMILY DB-I ■TACBED. 7.LARGE ROOMS’ 149x100 LANDSCAPED PLOT. I GARAGE. OIL HEAT. [G.l. No Cash Dn FHA $300 DOWN | Laurelton $17,9901 I BRICK * STUCCO BUNG A-, I/?W. ONE YEAR OLD.I I MODERN KITCHEN AND I I BATH. GARAGE. OIL HEAT.I INEAR SHOPPING * TRANS-1 PORTAT1ON. 1 I G.l. No Cash DnJ FHA $500 DOWN | St. Albans $17,490| I’ONE FAMILY. 4 BED-! ROOMS. DETACHED. MOD-| , ERN KITCHEN * BATH.. | GARAGE. OIL HEAT. NEAR | .SHOPPING * TRANSPORTA-■ I TON. I G.l. No Cash Dnl I FHA $450 DOWN ’ I AGATE RLTY i 159-11 Hillside Ave.. ■ Jamaica. N.Y. Open 7 Pays a Week 9 AM to 9 PM Plenty ol Parkins Space J JA 3-4521 BARGAIN HUNTERS HOLLIS brick * rooms. 317.499 Colonial. 3 bed- very JAMAICA money ■ make legal 3 family. GI no ' cash. 9 rma. CAS mod- , ern npto: anti gas taea only 316400 REDECORATED Drear 1 bedroom*. largo 7 room borne. FHA approve mtge. 3459 cash. Vacant I , CAMBRIA HEIGHTS Eng­ lish Tudor brick, pins Bn: |-|--------\ refrig. gar. 3 tafi| I baths. 322J00. Many Others. AU Prices TROJAN - 159-21 Hillside Avenue, AX 1-0100 | I LAURELTON ESTATES $11,990 DETACHED DUTCH MANSION 7 huge rooms, ultra modern' | eat4a kitchen. IVb colored I 'tOe bathe 3 master tad-1 ns. profess.,rally finished, nnent, garage. Coantz’yf k garden. beautifully tarn No Cosh Gl's $890 DOWN OTHERS iJaxmon Realty | 16942 Hillside Ave. Jamaica, N.Y. AX 1-7400 i NO CREDIT CHECK TAKE OVER *82.10 MONTHLY MORTGAGE $1500 Cash Needed Move Right-in AGENT 0L 8-4646 JAMAICA PARK SOUTH 1 FAMILY RANCH BRICK A SHINGLE • Rooms. 2 bedrooms. 10 years oM beautiful condition, loads of extras GI No Down Payment. FHA 3730 COTE REALTY 118-09 Sutphin Blvri. Jamaica JA 9-5003 Br. ALBANS — 1 family. 7 rooms. 4 bedrooms. 36x100 plot. 1 car gar age. 817,509. CALL MR SOWERS no 5-«r» ST. ALBAN* J FAMILY. 6 ROOMS. FINISHED BASEMENT. OH. HEAT. GARAGE. MOVE IN — IN 30 DAYS NO CLCMNO FEES 3730 DOWN TO ALL COTE REALTY _ Btvd. Jamal BRAND NEW Solid Brick RANCHES in beautiful JAMAICA, Queens 3 Minutes to 6-8 Ave. Subways These exquisite ranches feature luxuriously gleaming kitchen and colored tile bathroom with formica table top. Full basement with extra entrance to rear landscaped yard. s1OOCash«°GI's NO CLOSING EXPENSES... NO ESCROW! NOT ONE CENT MORE FOR YOU TO PAY! Full Price $15/990. Located near schools, shopping, and churches. See Model at 108-27 Fern Place DIRECTIONS: Jamaica Ava^ te 177th Street, right turn an 177th Street te 106th Ava^ thaa right aa 106th Ave. 3 blecke te Fen Pkce, thee left an Fen Piece te medal heme. 167-10 HILLSIDE AVE JAMAICA Open Daily, Set. A Sea. Free Parking AMES 018- 4000 LARGEST BUILDER OF NEW HOMES ABCO DOLLAR FOR BEST VALUE FOR A LARGE FAMILY 5BDRMS 10 RM MANSION with GARAGE -IN HOLLIS PROPER Immediate Occupancy NEAR SCHOOLS. SHOPPING. TRANSIT $300 CASH CONTRACT TO ALL ON A LIFETIME INCOME ... MIO LIVE RENT FREE Pet ached LEGAL 2-FAMILY 4M» RM MASTER APT. Hi RM RENTAL APT. PLUS PRODUCING APT. NO CASH (J, pee ow CONTRACT RANCHES e COLONIALS .2*3 FAMILY INCOME PRODUCING HOMES AVAILABLE. ALSO FHA AND GI FORECLOSURES. , _________ ______ 168-22 HILLS I DI AVE., JAMAICA At 169 St. Suhway Sta. Open 7 Day* a Weak OL-7-7900 NO CASH DOWN TOGIs HOLLIS 7Vz ROOMS ’ 2 Rtrth3-20' livkg Reeot —4 Bedreewit, Londicoped. MONTHLY TO BANK! SPFLD GDNS 2-FAMILY 5*5 loom Apertmeiits Available an TMe-SOxlOO Grounds — Garage — Oil Heating System. SMALL DOWN PAYMENT TO NON GIs BUTTERLY & GREEN JA 6-6300 166-25 HILLSIDE AVE. JAMAICA, N.Y. Avail. Opes 7 Days A Week MUST SELL CAMBRIA HEIGHTS Brick Front Cape Cod, 5 bedrooms, large plot oversize garage, patio, bar-be-quo | A extras Vacant soon, only 822.490 $2,100 down. FHA Approved H A H JA 3-5300.________ SACRIFICE I SPRINGFIELD GARDENS 13 large rooms. 3 kitchen.. 3 batha. land > «l -feet, double garage, load, of income. Price reduced to 520,990. <3000 down FHA Ap­ proved. H A H JA 3-5300. (X1XENS VILLAGE Legal 3 fam- ily, brick front, private apt.; A fin­ ished basement, garage extras. On­ ly tt’JOO GI 3300 done HAH JA 3-5300 I CAMBRIA HEIGHTS Cap* Cod 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms, oil beet, mod­ ern bath, brick fc shingle, 45x100 PW. 1 car garage, 123,000 AGE24T ____________ HO 3-3373_______ SPRINGFIELD GARDENS bungalow, with comer over size plot GI No Cash U1-9W__________________ JA 3-5300 ADDBLEIGH PARK beautiful Col- ttaaL 4 bedrooms, m baths, knotty Pine basement. large landscaped plot, garage, patio, extras. Asking 823.990 GI 3500 down. FHA 32.000 Hn H A H JA 3-5300____________ HOLLIS Legal 2 family, targe plot modem apt*; ^°^* **/*<*• finished basement, sacrifice 819.990 GI No Caah. FHA 3)000 down HAH ____________ JA 3-5300_______ Baisley Pond Park NEW I family. 7 rme. eat-in kitchen, 3 TREMENDOUS tadme, low down payment, beat buy In NY area. Only 3 left at this low price — 317,490 Model 155-46 116 Rd. OL 9-4338. "Q6" to 116 Rd 1V4 blocks to model. Open 12-« pm. wkends or call 516 FL 4-1325 for appointment (Builder.).____________ FANTASTIC VALUE Colonial 3 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 114 baths, garage, finished basement, wood-burning fireplace, patio, re­ frigerator. extras. GL ao cash/ FHA »<X» cash. Agent. AX 1-0749 HOLLIS 116.990 Lovely American Colonial, beautiful tree-lined street. 3 oversiz­ ed bedrooms, formal dining room, beautiful living room, eat-in kit­ chen. large tan basement A gar­ age. Iziada of extras, convenient te everything. This is an exceptionally low priced house for this nelgh- BEST DEAL RE 9-6067 SPRINGFIELD GARDENS LIVE RENT FREE! LEGAL 2-FAMILY 2 Tremendous apartments plus 3-Room Basement Apartment NO CLOSING FEES NO CREDIT CHECK SMALL CASH DOWN MOVE RIGHT IN TAKE OVER HIGH EXISTNG MTG Call Agt. B. HAZEL Ol. 6-2101 WALK TO SUBWAY OX'S NO CASH COLONIAL 8 Tremendous rooms with 4 master bedroom. Eat-In kitchen and: appliance. Muat he wild this Call Agent OL 3-2101 ( VAN WYCK EXPRESSWAY - 1 Family, brick. 6 large nni. Large plot, garage Very clean house Very mod mortgage. NESBITT NE 9-3982 Springfield Gdna Springfield Gardens — 3 tern brick det. — Fta. basement Lkwellyn Gittens LAB-7000 D’mo BAISLEY PARK LEGAL 2-FAMILY It YEABS OLD 3 * Beth down — 30 Bath up Flnlahed basementoil heat- Many extras—large pint-Minimum down payment accepted NO CASH GI'S OL 8-1911 Call AGENT FT ALBANS. 2 tangly. 5 down h ■th. 4 * bath up 46 x 100 plot, ear garage, 37*300 AGENT — HO 5-2275 — 4 Cathedral tataauy everiooklag Mvtugrn Llewellyn Gittens LA 8-7000 | GDM newly Atngled, ahmn- 6, arreena. new heating ' Excellent Cine* la aehoole 6 GI ae 1 fam. I * 4. Brisk O gMugte. Lkwellyn Gittens LA 8-7000 | JA eeooi TO PLACE A WANT AD CALL Ri 9-5300 BO OZONE PARR BRAND HOMES femRy, 6 mis, l’/i botht, ftahl 1 2 family, 6*6 na», 30 yr 5%% te all. LOW DOWN PAYMENT NORMAN HOMES J A 9-9830 AX 1-9053 Broker* Protected MODELS AT 115th AVE. A 133rd ST, SO. OZONE PARK Model Ope* 0«L and Beau tat 3 * 1, ta D» HOUSES Queens For Sole HOUSES Queens For Sato UNBELIEVABLE BEST DEALS READ THIS See For Yourself 1st Floor Apt. Live Rent Free. 2nd Floor Apt. $140 Month. 3 Rooms Basement $100 Month. Total Income $240 Mo. Live Rent Free in One Apt. end Make 3140 60 Every Month Cold Cash After Pay­ ing 399.40 for your Monthly Payment, Home is Solid Brick. In Hollis it has a total of 11 Rooms ‘ $400 DOWN NO CASH G.l. JA 6-7300 Almost New Brick Ranch Take Over Payment of Only *86.50 PER MONTH In Garden Section of Hollis. Modern Kitchen k Bath. Ail Large Rooms. Finishable Dry Basement. Car Port. Low Cash Selling For Only $13,450 ASKING PRICE 0L 9-9200 15910 Hillside Ave Jamaica (at Parsons Blvd) 114-44 Sutphin Blvd. Jamaica Plenty of Parking Space ARCADIA Iopen7day^9to9) $100 CASH TO ALL ONLY $10,500 Monthly Mtg. Poyment 6 Rooms - Colonial - Detached - 3 Bedrooms - Full Basement - Beauti­ ful Tree Lined Street VACANT - MOVE RIGHT IN NEWLIFE 109-35 Farmers Blvd., Hollis, N.Y. Open 7 Days from 9 AM to 8:30 PM SP 6-9600 SACRVKE $11,990 11 must sacrifice my 4 rm. 3 bed- home, due to transfer ofl| Jeb to went coeet. The heuae lei worth 15.5IM). It'a within walking distance from aub.. yet in a fine{ section It also haa garage and oil heat. Will give to first buyer with 5150 caah. If Interested, call myi agent. AX 7-0072. PLEASE READ THIS ■! I HAVE TO SELL I have a lovely 4 bedroom houae| in the most beautiful area of 81, Aihana Large lot. finished baae- ment in Dutch Colonial architec­ ture I am selling for only 810.900 with only 350 cash required ea down payment. Call my Agent now for | a good deni, because I am desper- •tn. I muM sell._______OL 04— One & All $50.67 Mo. Pay. Detached Colonial, 6 large rooms, neat and clean ns a pin. Automatic heat. NO HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL. . READY TO MOVE IN Only 39J00 full price. 5100 down to all. AGENT JA 3-7301 ST. ALBANS — 2 Family. 5 b 4. j Brick tt Stucco 514.500 Call Sharpe Real bargain LA 7-2700 6 FAM $690 CASH ! Walco PR 8-9300. even NE 8-4469 BAYSHORE TRI-LEVEL. 7 RMS. 4 BEDRMS. GARAGE, ST O N E FRONT, 7 YRS YOUNG. TOP CON­ DITION. I $28 A WEEK PAYS ALL 5100 cash to an. JAWITZ (516) 273 6660 ! 1750 Brentwood Rd., Brentwood L.I. ___________________ . NEW HOMES Queens. Nassau A Suffolk County. Large plots 50 x 175, and 75 x 175. I Completely landscaped. Modern kit- irchens and 2 baths In yhur choice nflj colors, in tile and linoleum Ranch or Hi-ranch. 515.000 aud up Call Agent. OL 5-2014. Ask for Mr ___ Jackson. BAISLEY PARK 6 Rm Colonial Finished basement. Garage, large j plot. Legal 2 Family. 5 and A $54 Monthly paymt SPRINGFIELD GARDENS __ L RENT FREE Income Pays All Charges FLAIR REALTY LA *7757 188-40 Liflckn Blvd., St. Albans (corner Farmers Blvd.) "l" fam 5 1> 4. Brick A afilngle. Llewellyn Gittens LA 8-7000 South Ozone Park 134-11 133 AVE. MODERN RANCH Wood panelled basement with * | Brick fireplace. 70" frontage. 519J00 CALL OWNER AX 1-1802 Springfield Gardens — 2 fam. brick det. FJn. basement. Lkwellyn Gittens LAS-7000 St. Albans Vicinity MOVE IN TODAY No Cash G.l. n For You: One Time Only ! S MIN. TO CITY BAISLEY PARK r,JLI PRICE ■ ■ ■ *10,500 ■ $57.99 Mtge Payment Each Mo. 16 rms. 5 bedrms. tall basement. || oil heat. 60 x 100 plot. SEE US REALTY 134-01 Rcckaway Bhd. S Ozone Pk L.I. OL 9-4700 S. ozone Park — 2 fam. 4*4. 5915 take over payment. In need , of minor repairs, Llewellyn Gittens LA 8-7000 Springfield Gdns — One family det 40x100, 7 rms. 4 airy bedrms. De­ luxe eat-in kitchen, with family' size dining rm. New gas besting anil Move right in. Key with ns. Sacrifice 517.500. KAUFMAN LA 7-1101 226-11 Linden Bird Open 9<_ E. ELMHURST 1 FAMILY 2 story brick. 6 rms good condition, garage, bargain buy. 119,- 500. Agent TH 6-7166 St. Albans — 4 bedroom*, den, fin. haaement. Cathedral ceilings; bal­ cony overlooking Bring rm. Llewellyn Gittens LA 8-7000 Hollis $21,500 Detached 2 family 5 rm apt., 3 rm apt. $100 mo. income Beautiful fin. bsmt. A-l condition On lovely landscaped grounds, this detached contemporary American' 2 fam. residence offers 2 spacious apartment*. The smaller 3 rm apt. I* rented at 5100 m*. The main ' 3 rm apt. 1* available consisting of i I a large living room, delightful I modern kitchen, beautiful Ul« bath. ■ 2 Rtacioua bedtaom* plus beautiful finished haaement. Excellent Bay No cash GI $1400 cash non GI Home Specialist 172-32 Jamaica Ave Jamaica AX j-1344 OZONE PARK — 5153M0. 6'k rooma Detached. Stucco and .ghingle. fin­ ished haaement Garage. A-l con­ dition *600 Down Owner Broker FA 2 Lake Front Home Ameicaji Coknial Streamlined Kitchen ADJACENT DINING ROOM B g Pipe & Slipper Living Room Large Bedrooms Sun Perch ■ NO DOWN PAYMENT : E. J. DAVID AV 7 01 1 1 AA Z-2 I I I 159-05 HILLSIDE AVE. JAMAICA, N.Y. (Open Every Day, Including Sat. * Sdn.. 9:39 to 9) ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■I ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ S G.I. SPECIALS ■ B ■ G.l. ONLY If You Are Eligible Come a Running g ■ All Selid Brick Legal 2 Family 5 Up * 3 Down. Garage, TOTAL MORTGAGE PAYMENT PER MONTH $113.86 NO DOWN PAYMENT LOW CLOSING COST ACT FAST BRICK & FIEIDSTONE 5 ONE FAMILY GEM 3 Bedrooms, Finished Basement A Real Fireplace All Stone Garage, Immenae 99 x 100 Landscaped Plot. Tta ■■ _ Cleanest House We've Had In Many a Month. Also NO DOWN PAYMENT LOW CLOSING COST ■ | BOTH HOMES HAVE BEEN VA APPROVED FOR -■ ELIGIBLE VETERANS CALL OWNER OL 8-1770 | SPRINGFIELD Gardens. G I. Spe I dal. Only 514.000 This hottie can , be rented with option to buy. 4M> 1 rooma. tall basement, detached Bungalow. New gaa heal No cash ’ For 0,1. Call agent, JA 0-6209 HUSBAND TRANSFERRED TO WEST COAST It Is of the Utmost urgency to sell j my lovely English Colonial. In West Jamaica. House Is VACANT. Muat I Join my husband In Nevada gacrl- I flee for only »ll^l)0. worth over , *15.000 Call my Agent and obtain thia home for 5180 JA 0 7301 I JACKSON Hgts — 2 family brick. Brand new. I t « Rma. walk to subway 333.500 Agent NE 9 3922 VACANT $59.78 MONTHLY MOVE IN 7 DAYS* Beautiful Home Completely Decorat­ ed, 2 Car Garage. Sp~-*Oua Yard. ONLY 375 DOWN FHA 0.1. NO CASH DOWN. You Must see this to appreciate It. Call Right Away. THIS HOUSE WILL NOT LAST. JA 3-4600 MR. WEEKS 5 BEDROOM HOUSE 317-500 FULL PRK E HO CASH DOWN MR. ANTLEY JA 3-2009 CAMBRIA HEIGHTS Brick Cape Cod. 3 master hedi nwriern pat io kitchen, color, hath, finished basement Thia I tai house situated on a large Carden plot has a 316.300 FH proved mortgag*. 0.1. *9 ao down. EXCI.USIVE WITH JAXMAN REALTY 16-911 Hillside Avenue. Jam AX 1-7400 Cont. on Following Page aad $ave $ave $ave $$$! Bank Foreclosures Repossessed Homes Save Thousands of Dollars Special Sak this Weekend Sat., Oct. 5th * Sun., Oct. 6th For Full Information Call Special Sales Manager Mr Budd AX 1-4020 Sample Listing $98 Mthly Mtge Pay. $97 Mthly Mtge Pay. SO OZONE PK, a magnificent Dutch Coknial with 6 extra large rms, 3 fall size bedrms, charm­ ing dining rm, krge garage, a beautiful finished basement, $98 monthly mort­ gage payment. $75 Mthly Mtge Pay. ATTRACTIVE DUTCH COLONIAL an tree shaded street in de­ lightful Baisley Park. There is a formal dining rm, 3 beauti­ ful bedrms, magni­ ficent gardens and there is NO CASH NEEDED. $75 month­ ly mortgage pay­ ment. $109 Mthly Mtg Pay. CAMBRIA HTS, an­ other one for a krge family with just a little more of a lux­ ury touch, 4 bedrms, dining rm, full base- ment, garage, fast occupancy. $ 1 1 4 monthly mortgage payment. We're real proud of this beauty. $97 Mthly Mtge Pay. $0. OZONE PK, in­ stantly appealing 1 family heme on kve- ly street, 3 bedrms, finished basement. This charming house offers a modern kit­ chen, formal dining rm, cheerful living rm, automatic heat, $105 monthly mort­ SPRINGFIELD GDNS, something your fam­ ily needs — SPACE! This sparkling bun­ galow features 4 luxury size bedrms, large living rm (suit­ able for massive fur­ nishings), modern kitchen, dining rm (or optional deu), semi finished base­ ment and a beauti­ ful hollywood kit­ chen. Yours for $105 monthly mortgage payment. $96 Mthly Mtge Pay. REALLY SQUEEZED FOR ROOM? This home in Baisley Park offers an answer to your prayers. 7’/a rms! 4 magnificent bedrms, formal din­ ing rm, man • size den, set on a lush 40x100 pkt, im­ mediate occupancy. Only $101 monthly mortgage payment. $108 Mthly Mtg Pay. ST. ALBANS, don't wait another minute! Grab your car keys and inspect this cheerful solid brick English Tudor. There are 3 beautiful bed­ rms, futurama kit­ chen, beautiful gar­ den, automatic oil boat. A really nice pkeo te live. Enjoy the restful atmos­ phere and peaceful sedation of country living. $110 monthly gage payment. mortgage payment. No Cash Needed for Vets All Others Very Low Dn Payment Ab If you would like a definite appointment coll SPECIAL SALES MANAGER, Mr. Budd at AX 1-4020 Ho will be happy to furnish you with any more information you might require. Sak this weekend Sat., Oct. 5th & Sun., Oct. 6th. WARRANTY 168-06A Hillside Ave. Jamaica ST. ALBANS VIC. FULL PRICE $10,500 COLONIAL Spacious Rooms Modern Kitchen * Bath Full Basement, Garage, Only $62.93 Monthly Mortgage Payment RICHMOND HILL VIC. . FULL PRICE $15,500 • 2 Family Detached, 2 Separate Apartments Very Largo Rooms, Garage, Only $92.89 MONTHLY MORTGAGE PAYMENT Your Home Is Your Show Place AX 1-1818. HOMES & HOMES 159-07 HILLSIDE AVE., JAMAICA Neer Pereeae Bird. Mallon (Open 7 Daya 3 te 3) IN NEW YORK CALL Ri 9-5300.. TO PLACE WANT ADS .. IN BROOKLYN CALL UL 7-2500 CLASSIFIBt AD DEADLME 5 PJH. TUESDAY PRECEDMG THURSDAY CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE S P.M. 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