New York Amsterdam News — 1963-00-00979
1963
1 pages
✓ Indexed
« • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Nor. 16, 1963
uneral Home
Carrie Blackwell plt*b WBS
l» rernc,,n
Cemetery, following preparation
Carrie Blackwell. 69. of 1465 at Uaity Funeral Home. 2352 8th
Madison Ave., who died recent- Ave, and services at the Friend
ly in her home, was buried in ship Baptist Church. Rev. Hun-
her native Virginia after prepar- son Green officiated the rites,
ation of the body and shipment She is survived by her hus-
to the South by Unify Funeral band, three sisters, in addition
Home, 2352 8th Ave.
to her parents.
She is survived by a brother u
,
and two sisters in Philadelphia. Henry Astwood
.
Naomi Jenkins
ftr itoory s
Astwood, who died six weeks
Naomi Sharpe Jenkins, of 330 after birth in Harlem Hospital,
E. 156th St., who died recently were held recently at Unity
in Bellevue Hospital, was buried Funeral Chapel, 2352 8th Ave.,
in Long Island National Ceme- followed by burial in Frederick
tery, Farmingdale, N.Y., follow- Douglass Cemetery, Staten Is-
ing services at Unity Funeral land. Besides his parents who
Chapel. 2352 8th Ave, officated reside at 60 E. 119th St, four
by Rev. Joseph D. Maxwell. brothers, a sister and his grand-
A native of High Point. N.C, father survive,
,
she is survived by her husband. M
a daughter, two brothers, sister Monique omitn
and other relatives.
I Services for Monique Smith.
Willi* RoMborough who d“hrecM,iy “ ““.T ,0'
3 six months, were held at Unity
Willie Roseborough, 63, of 1133 Funeral Chapel. 2352 8th Ave,
St. Lawrence Ave, who died re- followed by burial in Rosehill
cently in Kings County Hospital, Cemetery. Linden, N.J.
was buried in Ferncliff Cemetery. Besides her parents, who live
Hartsdale, N.Y., following ser- at. 26 W. 129th SLu she is sur-
vices at Unity Funeral Chapel, vived by a brother, grandpar-
2352 8th Ave, officiated by Rev. ents, uncles and aunts.
Remaining true to his espoused i
principle of enthusiastically i
reaching out to Negroes — I
granting them preferential treat
ment it has been labeled — I
Whitney M. Young Jr. of the ’
National Urban League told the 1
Christian church it could take i
the initiative in integration by i
taking the following steps:
1. Actively welcoming and
reaching out to Negroes, with
out leaving them to invite them
selves to become members of
wholly white churches.
2. Take a pronounced stand
against discrimination and bias
and urge its members to take
similar positions.
3. Help Negro children to re
ceive equal educational oppor-
unities in church-sponsored
schools and, through church in
fluence and persuasion, in oublic
educational institutions.
4. Grant equal opportunities to
Negroes — including Negro doc
tors and professionals — in
church-supported hospitals.
5. Support the established civil
rights organizations in addition
to supporting their own church-
created civil rights groups.
MOMENT FOR SMILES — Dr.
Rafael Gamso, standing, ad
ministrator at Harlem Houpi-
tai has just make a brief joke
during serious discussion of
why Harlem needs a new
Mount Morris Park Hospital.
Occasion was meeting of the
campaign committee for the
new hospital. From left: Bi
shop Winslow A. Beckles of
the Mt. Morris Park Hospital
Board of Governors; Ralph W.
Parsons, chairman of the
Board; Dr. Gamso, Dr.' Errol
Thompson, secretary of the
hospital Medical Board and
Mrs. Alida Daly, supervisor of
nurses at Harlem Hospital.
(McAdams Photo)
Baptist
Chided On
Prayers
Bethel Dines Friday
At Belmont Plaza
Form « good habit and read
the Amsterdam News w every
week!
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RHEUMATISM, ARTHRITIS. NEURITIS
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Reach Out
"You have out reach out to the
Negro and say ‘I want you’,”
the NUL executive director de
clared. "You have to meet us
75 or 80 per cent of the way."
While Young spoke at the fall
meeting of the Convocation of
Manhattan of the Protestant
Episcopal Diocese of New York
1 at the grounds of the Cathedral
of St. John it was felt his re-
marks were addressed to the
' entire Christian church:
"The church of the past des-
. troyed human conscience by per-
, mitting people to come to R on
Sunday and hear pious plati
tudes and then letting them go
out and discriminate against Ne-
, groes the other six days of the
• week.”
Church Hospitals
( It was felt that he was allud-
. ing to alleged discrimination in
• some church sponsored hospitals
> when he said:
“A church sponsored hospital
Gunmen Nab
$400 In Bar
Two unidentified men armed
with guns held up the Red Top
Bar and Grill at 774 Halsey St.,
at 3 a.m. Tuesday and took $400
from William Bennett, the man
ager, of 1429 St. Marks Ave.,
Bklyn. They escaped in an un
known manner.
an hi* vile. Wilbert Trachey
three children, four sisters and Wilbert Teachey, 43, who died
two brothers. He was a native recently in Morrisania Hospital
was buried in Long Island Na-
of South Carolina.
CttMtwuieto ^npineilo tional Cemetery. Farmingdale,
Latnerme ipringle N Y following services at Unity
Catherine Springle, 67, of 451 Funeral Chapel. 2352 8th Ave,
E. 102nd St, who died recently officiated by Rev. Abner Dun
in Bellevue Hospital, was buried'can.
in Silver Mount Cemetery, Staten A native of North Carolina, he
Island, following services at Un- is survived by his wife. Virginia;
tty Funeral Chapel. 2352 8th Ave. two brothers and four sisters.
£Tthi°5£.D' MarWCU
Vgrnesso Clarke
Surviving relatives include two Vernessa Clarke, of 574 St.
sons, three daughters, several Nicholas Ave, who died recent-
grandchildren, a sister and a iy jn Fordham Hospital, Bronx,
was buried in Long Island
niece.
Arthur King 2,“°rLSTlery’ Farmingriale;
N.Y, following preparation at
Arthur King. 55. of 890 Trinity Unity Funeral Home, 2352 8th
Ave, who died recently hi Kings- Ave, and services at St. James
bridge Veterans Hospital, was Presbyterian Chureh.
buried in Ferncliff Cemetery, She is survived by her husband
Hartsdale, N.Y, following ser- David: mother, father, five aunts,
vices at Unity Funeral Chapel three uncles and other relatives.
9
usiera
ome>
Gentlemen
Your Funeral Home was given
pliments by my friends and office
com
workers
I am grateful and appreciative for
the efficient-like manner the funeral
was directed.
Thanking you kindly,
MRS. ESTHER V. JONES
Unity
Funeral Home, Inc.
■*
w
2352-4-6 Eighth Ave.
A» 126»h St.
H.w York 27, N.Y.
MOnument 6-8300
By MALCOLM NASH
Observances marking the 144th w
anniversary of the parish opened a
Tuesday evening at Bethel AME Ii
Church, 54 W. 132nd St., fre- a
quently called the Mother AME f<
Church in the city because of C
C
its numerical primacy.
The observances will continue o
each night through Friday and
climax at special rites Sunday.
The Rev. Joseph C. Coles Jr.
and the edngregation of Williams n
Institutional CME Church in Har- c
lem joined with the Bethel’s pas- h
tor, the Rev. Richard Allen Hil- s
debrand, and its members Wed- t>
nesday evening-to celebrate the d
s
anniversary.
A. Philip Randolph, the
church’s most distinguished h
member and the nation’s fore- s
most Negro labor leader, and b
Bishop George W. Baber, the h
church’s prelate, will speak Fri- ii
day evening of this week at the e
parish’s dinner at the Belmont
Plaza Hotel. *
y
The annual service of Thanks- t<
giving and Rededication will be
held Thursday evening in the n
church’s sanctuary under t h e 1
t
Rev. Hildebrand.
3.000 Members
The largest African Methodist !
’ Episcopal church in the state I
s by virtue of its present reported I
membership of 3,000, Bethel was
. organized in 1819 on Mott St., in
’ the heart of what is now China-
. town, with about 20 members.
s The founder of the denomina-
4 tion. Bishop Richard Allen, sent
n the Rev. Willlatn Lambert to
. pastor the infant congregation
r which met. In subsequent years,
e in various rooms of the homes
j of the original members.
While the details of its fledg-
s ling years are lost in the mists
of time, the toddling parish mer
ged in 1835 with a society known
as the Asbury Church and in
later years moved to 2nd SL
Moves Uptown
In 1894, a more mature parish
of 75, the church moved to 25th
St. and 19 years later to its
present site at W. 132nd St.,
east of Lenox Ave. and opposite
of the Lenox Terrace Apart-
; ments.
Its present pastor, the Rev.
I Hildebrand, came in 1950 to im
print his special personality and
ability as his 28 or 29 other
i predecessors had done, on the
' institution which, even then, was
i making its mark on the com-
] mun lty
Interpreters
Sought For
Escort Duty
Want to tour the country with
i foreign dignitaries?
If so, the U.§. State Depart-'
meat may have a job for you asj
an escort - interpreter.
Escort - interpreters accom-,
pany foreign leaders on their tra
vels ia this country under the
i various exchange and technical
assistance programs. Candidates
must have broad educational
backgrounds and be fluent in
English and in at least one of
the following languages:
French, Spanish, Italian, Por-'
tuguese, German, Finnish. Ru
manian. Russian, Chinese, Japan
ese, Indonesian, Siamese (Thai),
Arabic, Bulgarian. Persian. Pol-
itti, Turkish. Afghan Persian,
Am baric. Greek, Malay and Ser
bo-Croatian.
Salaries range from $19 to $84
a day plus free transportation
and an allowance ranging from!
$16-420 a day to cover hotels,
meals and other expenses.
Application forma may be ob-
. Ltained from the U.S. Department
of State, Division of Language
Services, Room 2212, Washing
ton, D.C. Deadline for submitting
I completed applications Is Novem-
ber 25, 1903 Candidates who are
selected will be Interviewed and
I tested in December at the Pro-
, fersional Placement Center of the
(New York State Employment
| Service in New York City,
Your Loved Ones Deserve The Best"
Preaching
Dr. Clark
Rejects
Bussing
Dr. Kenneth B. Clark has
charged that the academic qual
ity of education in segregated
school attended by Negro and
Puerto Rican youngsters are
woefully Inferior.
Speaking Sunday before t h e
New York Chapter of the Am
erican Jewish Committee at the
Hotel Plaza, Dr. Clark, profes
sor of psychology at the City of
New York, declared that New
York City schools were “pro
ducing functional illiterates."
He asserted that “the evidence
adds up to a pattern of criminal
neglect, educational inefficiency
and a major social disgrace hav
ing all of the ingredients of a
future political crisis."
Dr. Clark said he regarded the
school integration issue as sec
ondary to thia issue of imporved
education for Negro and white
children in American society.
In Disagreement
SPEAKING OUT — Dr. Ken- out against inferior education
neth B. Clark, center, speaks in New York City as guest
In Harlem
Dr. Clark disagreed with
school officials who seek to cover
the inefficiency of the teaching
system by offering explanations
“such as ‘cultural deprivation’,
‘poor homes’ and ‘community
problems’ ”, He contended that
the tendency to blame the chil-|
dren and their parents is the
“contemporary Version of the
earlier argument that Negroes
are biologically or innately in
ferior.”
He also rejected the bussing of
white or Negro students to
schools which are now “clearly!
and woefully inferior,” and
termed the method in approach
ing the problem as “unrealistic.”
As a realistic approach. Dr.
Clark recommended the up-grad
ing of the quality of education
in the schools now attended by
predominantly Negro students..
This, he said, is the “first and1
unavoidable step in realistic in-'
tegration of the schools.” •
There’s something for YOU on
every page of this issue of The
Amsterdam News. Check and see
—every week. Out evejy Thurs-
speaker at luncheon of Ameri
can Jewish Committee at Ho
tel Plaza. Left to right: M. J.
Kleinfeld, chairman, Dr. Clark,
and Mervin Riseman, presi
dent of N. Y. Chapter AJC.
(Mallory Photo*
Standards Deliberately
Kept Low In Schools??
By MRS. JOSEPHINE JONES I.Q. scores showed a steady de- L/WnGrS 1601
cline. By the time the pupil .
(Third in a Series)
*
(EDITOR’S NOTE: A veteran reaches junior high school, his U/tmA I ACC
educator with 23 years of teach- I.Q. rating is so low that he is 110111“ LUgO
ing experience to her credit, pushed into a vocational school
Harlem school teacher, Mrs. or a very slow class in high
Josephine Jones, takes a look school. Obviously the child had “Many small home owners art
at Harlem schools and Harlem the ability, but through the years living in constant fear of losing
school children in this third art- had never been challenged. This their property because of tht
condition very definitely points changing concept in the build-
ide of her series.)
By GEORGE TODD
in checking rumors that the to the school and the type of ing code.”
This was the opinion expressed
standards were deliberately kept supervision.
low in Harlem, and that Negro
by the owner of a brownstone
Wholly Inadequate
pupils were educated for labor, Now let ug tflke look at house on West 13tod St which i.
it was necessary to Ulk to teach- * vocational
rts just one of oyer 45 dhers in uu
;ers. In speaking with a number have indicated a , num. block extending to 131st St. be
of Negro teachers from various .
*nde level,, to Junior Ugh and d,rec(ed Xtte voc,a<mM Mr,. Evelyn Thorn., who h
elementary schools in Harlem,
President of the 131-132 Stree
a number of teachers stated that nrns?ram« ar_ nrrf spared to in block association has long beet
efforts to raise instructional lev- Xily madequ^ s^ murt in the forefront °f 3 C3mpaigI
T£™urS’ of stud^are to get 0,6 hottria< agencies l<
els were discouraged by the
stringent reg
principals.
h v tween 7th and 8th Aves.
,>5. study are relax
, ry’
. .h
Books were not allowed in many the
and
below standards, that most of
„„
ulations on privately ownec
homes.
teacher She contend! that iall brown
classrooms, even though they t - h ,
were unused, lying in the stock- Th*
rooms. The pupils were not per-
♦>««•«, stones should not be in the sami
mitted to advance in accordance a°d mUtoal dSltorf the JXr category wlth multiple dwellings
5_ __
with their ability. There were a’*
instances where teachers were C0SenCe in the teacher
a“d ** ShOUld
v ““d^TbSitoTTw^
reprimanded for helping Negro on
boys make special high schools. This condition certainly does not
The reason that was given was. iend itself to wholesome learning tota :a AccordlPf to the b
the boys would be above the „^cIS to prmSTtlte Ss Pre!±nt> * br°*nstoae “ d‘
level of their environment andn£ PrPPa
the pupil. 2£nEL which Rented i,
pup“s ^bed as a three-story wit
LT-S'e t„ thJ
part
would not be able to communi-
Vivian
ndinefed uw-htiiv 8
j ea soc y.
,__ .
Useless Meets
basement, is usually occupy b:
the owner and his family. Som
Tbe teachers continued to re- renting is done because of risin
vejfl a few the reasons why cost, she said. Not more tha
Afraid to Speak
education in the Harlem schools four families live in these sma
Conscientious Negro teachers, has been so very inadequate, homes, Mrs. Thomas explainer
most of whom were kept as sub- Independent thinking and creattv- “More recently under a ne
stttutes for many yean, were lty in teaching is strictly dis- sanitary code, we are told I
reticent to speak out. They did couraged. The emphasis is not put in additional bathroom fi
not have tenure, and could not upon the acquisition of knowledge, cilities. The fact that you /ent c
afford to risk the principal's but upon the formulation of an a weekly basis, you have no fixe
displeasure. However, it was very extensive lesson plan.
income. Sometimes a tenai
significant, that upon examine- This lesson plan must be slavish- owes three or four weeks rec
tion of the cumulative records ly adhered to according to a and you can’t collect it after h
of pupil’s attending or transfer- time schedule. Much time which Is gone leaving no forwarding
ring from schools in Harlem, could be used for individual help address ’’ Mrs. Thomas said,
there were found innumerable for the pupils is w*asted in mean- She said her organization be
cases of pupUs with normal or ingless conferences, pre-observa- lieves in rehabilitation, but tha
high Intelligence Quotient scores tion conferences, post observa- #uch rehabilitation should be bas
on the Non Verbal Intelligence tion conferences, and innumber- ed on s realistic approach. Whih
Test given in the early Primary able conferences which in many sbe agrees that much improve
ment is needed in Harlem, shi
Grades.
pointed out that the bousing a
cases are pflintless.
During the ensuing years the (To be continued.’
HORN Meet On
Hospital
Services For Lester White
Lester White, 71, whose death
occurred recently as the result
of injuries received in an '"Auto
mobile accident, was buried in
Mt. Olivet Cemetery, Long Is
land.
White was employed as carpen-
ter and general handyman at 9647
and 3657 Broadway, and was a
member of Local 92B Building
Service Employees Union. A na
tive of Colerain, N.C., he resided
at 67 W. 137th St. for many
f
yean.
N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Nov. IS, IMS • 7
Young Adults At Y
Young adults are cordially in
vited to spend their Thursday
afternoons oft at the Upper Man
hattan Young Women's Christian
Association. 961 W. 125th St., for
a social gathering each week at
1 p.m. in the third floor loung^-
to make new friends, develop t
mutual interests and learn ne<>
skills and hobbies.
For additional information, teU
ephone UN 6-3400.
ADVERTISEMENT
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TOM CORYE
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It was about January 1963 when ;
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‘MY BACKACHE,
EAR PAIN &
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DISAPPEARED”
For many years, I had been
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feel better all over. An earache
that I had for a long time even
disappeared. I will always be
grateful to God and my Doctor
of Chiropractic for all they have
done.
LOIS COOK
► *
If you are in the condition I
was in several years ago, you
will want to hear my statement.
While working, I slipped on a
spot of oil on the floor, fell and
sprained my back. As it got
worse, I began to draw to one
side, my neck started pulling,
and my head leaned to one side.
I could not straighten up. As my
condition became more painful,
my legs started getting numb and
I lost all feeling in them. I had
never been in such a fix in all
my life. I was helpless. I
couldn't do anything. 1
For several years I made the
rounds, doctor after doctor. I
FREE LECTURES
Come to our FREE Lectures,
Demonstrations, Movies, Exer
cises every Thursday 7-9 P.M.
HOUSE CALLS
HOUSE CALLS Anywhere,
Anytime!
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Come in TODAY for a FREE
CONSULTATION WITHOUT OB
LIGATION and for IMMEDIATE
RELIEF. Delay is dangerous.
Some patients feel better in one
treatment! Office hours are
Mon.-Fri. 9-9, Sat. 9-1.
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER
OF N.Y C. INC.
126 W 42nd ST.,
TIMES SQ., N.Y. 36. N.Y.
WI 7-8118
CHIROPRACTIC RESEARCH CHART
’’ * -
All itathtic* uted In thi» chart are bated upon studiei reported by The Chiroproctlc Research
foundation of the National Chiropractic Association, the Committee on Research of the International
Chiropractors Association, and Parker Chiropractic Research Foundation. These reports represent
the results obtained under chiropractic care for a large variety of chronic conditions. The vatt
majority of these cases hod also been previously diagnosed and treated by practitioners other
than doctors of Chiropractic.
|
Condition
ACNi
ADENOIDS
AllfROY
ARTHRITIS
WeR er
Improved
BSA%
7S.B%
Condition
FOOT DISORDERS
OAll BLADDER TROUBLE
♦*.0% GAS (Flatulence)
90.1%
GASTRITIS
930%
97.3%
90.3%
393%
Wed er 1
i ril P F rt V Wfl
Conditio^ 11
WeH or |
Improved
NAUSEA
NECK DISORDERS
NERVOUS STOMACH
NERVOUSNESS '
NEURALGIA
NEURITIS
OVERWEIGHT (Obesity)
PARALYSIS
PARKINSON'S DISEASE
POLIOMYELITIS
PROSTATE
RECTAL PROLAPSE
RHEUMATISM
x
100 0%
97.4%
94.0%
934%
94.3%
913%
94.0%
900%
70 0%
41.1%
910%
71.5%
917%
70.3%
99.0% r
Address
Phone
RACK DISORDERS
toJ% GOITER
♦SJ%
BACK STRAIN
9S«%
BED WETTING
BBS%
BLINDNESS
94.5%
BREATHINO DlfflCULTY
9S.0%
BURSITIS
BS.0%
CEREBRAL PALSY
CHOREA (St. Vitus Dance) B0 0%
190 0%
COLDS
94 . J %
COLIC
93.1%
COLITIS (Spoetic colon)
91.4%
CONSTIPATION
91.1%
CRAMPS
93.3%
CROSSED EYES
90.7%
DEAFNESS
V3.9%
DIARRHEA
17.3%
73.4%
91.0%
43.0%
90.0%
93.0%
93.7%
94.4%
79 3%
OOUT
93.3%
HAT FEVER
94.3%
HEAOACHES
313%
HERNIA
97.1%
HICCOUOHS
91.1%
HIVES (Urticaria)
314%
HYDROCEPHALUS
93.9% ' RICKETS
INDIGESTION
931%
INSOMNIA
93.3%
JAUNDICE
100 0%
LARYNGITIS
97.0%
LIVER DISORDERS
33.0%
LOCOMOTOR ATAXIA
913%
LUMBAOO
374%
MALARIA
93.3%
MENIER'S DISEASE
84.7%
MENOPAUSE DISORDERS
94.3%
MINSTRUAl DISORDIRS
49 0%
MENTAL DISORDERS
94.0%
MIGRAINE HEADACHES
441%
MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS
MUSCLi INCOORDINATION 191%
100.0%
» DIZZINESS (Vertigo)
EAR DISORDERS
EPILEPSY
IYE DISORDERS
FACIAl N1URALGIA
FALLING HAIR
FATIOUI (Tkednett)
FEVERS
NATURS DISORDERS
100.0%
SACROILIAC DISORDERS
SCALP DISORDERS
SCIATICA
SHELL SHOtK *
,
SINUSITIS
SHINOLIS
SKIN TROUBLE
SLEEPING SICKNESS
SLIPPED DISC
SPINAL CURVATURES
STOMACH DISORDERS
THYROID DISORDERS
ULCIRS
UNDERWEIGHT
WEAKNESS
910%
94.5%
81.1%
95.0%
100 0% j
1
490%
73.1%
94.4%
44.4% L
1
95.7%
95.4%
100 0%
47.0% r
93.7%
Tha problem is
struetios delay at Harlem
Hospital sa Thursday, N«v. 14,
at $ p.m., at the Kennedy
community Ceater, 34 W. 134th
Hugh Marias, chairman of
the recently formed Citizens
Action Conncil which h span-
soring the meeting, said that
recent visits by the Council to
Harlem Hospital showed that
“any further delay In construc
tion will have ■ catastrophic
effect on the already difficult
health situation of toe Harlem
coranuaity.”
’ The Council estimates that it
has bees rooting toe city tax
payers tl.OOO-a-day since last
June when Acting Mayor Paul
Screvsne hatted construction
rfter civil rights demonstra
tions at toe hospital site.
Rev. Harrison
Rally Speaker
The Rev. Dr. Earl L. HarrUon,
minister of the Shiloh Baptist
Church of Washington, D.C. Is
to speak at a Rally for Peace
and Friendship in Carnegie Hall.
New York, on Wednesday even
ing, November 20.
This occasion under auspices
of the National Council of Am
erican-Soviet Friendship is an
annual celebration of the establish
ment of diplomatic relations be
tween the USA and the USSR
and the anniversary of the found
ing of the Soviet Stote. November
7 marks the 46th anniversary of
the Soviet Union and the 30th
anniversary of relations between
the two countries established by
President Franklin D. Roosevelt
in 1933.
FOLLOWED THE PROGRESS OF THIS MAN
THIS MOMENT, THIS "DREAM?"
The march to
by day, week
to everyone;
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MANHATTAN’S MODERN
FUNERAL HOME
Eigbth Avenue
MOnuiuent 6-8300
Reasons why, in time of need
you should let Unity serve you
Beautiful building erected especially for
Funeral operations.
Large display casket salon on premises,
Prices for complete funeral start at 8200.
Large Chapel with theatre seats
Entire building centrally air conditioned.
All reposing rooms complete in privacy.
6. Sympathetic courteous Funeral
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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