New York Amsterdam News — 1963-11-16

1963 14 pages ✓ Indexed
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12 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Nov. 16, 1963 mw? WORDS FOR A WAY OF LIFE . . . "There U ao greater immorality - Than to occupy a place you cannot fill.’’ —Napoleon ■! INTERNATIONAL SET . . . Owen Carter, who be- ■ longs to Dr. S. J. Is busy aiding that group that plans tours and visits for the wives of staff mem- I bers of the various delegations to the UN here . . . rj As of last Tuesday, the great Josephine Baker will probably have to change her parody on “Two loves have I, my own country and Paree” to “Three loves have I” to Include England. She was pre­ sented to Queen Elizabeth II, the Queen Mother and Princess Margaret — all THREE of ’em — “at Buck­ ingham Palace, yet! She becomes the first Negro artist to be invited to the palace in a non-perform­ ing capacity. And speaking of “top society”—there’s \ none top-er! Great day in the morning! . . . LAND OF ROMANCE . . . Odds are 50 50 on the George Jackson-Ann Rafra merger! She’s beautiful, He is charming and brainy ... \ Charles Rangel, in the words of Robert Frost, j has “many promises to keep and miles to go before I sleep” which probably includes going way, way up in the world of government. If he is lucky enough to have Alma Carter say “I do”, he will indeed be a J lucky, lucky man. She has a way with people and ■ much civic savvy! . . . And lovely, lovely Idelle Dixon has not “set the date” with Mike Hedley yet. When Idelle, when? ... Margurite Belafonte says she has “set no date” for changing her name as yet and is loving the I BA job she is doing with ILGWU ... Has brilliant Vivian Dreer, HS teacher in Yon- Pa kers, been ‘“spoken for” by Nicholas Pobbi Asare of fas Ghana and staffer of UNICEF? Umm-mm-mi ... en; Comment about the very charming and talented be lady’s relation to a top popular singer (the gold an record type) has some folks wondering when and ~ where the divorce from the wife took place? CONVERSATION PIECE . . . From Harlem to the Battery folks are talking about the exciting dancing of Mary Hinkson with the Martha Graham dancers. Folks are talking about interracial marriages. I,am most intrigued by what they think about the Charlayne Hunter-Walter Stovall marriage; the coming marriage of Gail Jones and Sidney-Lumet, & et al. Want a secret? They are saying in Harlem I “Who cares!” Now there! . . . —I’m thrilled by the compliments coming to “my 9 wonderful one—George” over the improvement in the use of Negroes in TV! He always says “Thanks. I But we’ve got such a long way to go”. I agree, but there IS A DIFFERENCE since George Fowler (Com­ missioner to you) had the vision to start a program | of “improving the image of the Negro on TV”, and got Governor Rockefeller to request a “leave of | absence from the National Broadcasting Company” of “my George” to do the technical aspects of the I program. So, orchids to the three of them; congrats I to those who have gotten jobs: a “thank you” from j us John Q. Public, who were sick of seeing a lily- j white screen (except for entertainment, singing and j dancing); and most of all whoever wants to get on— I go and apply for anything you are qualified for— 1 either on, or behind the screen. That means you c housewives, too, who want to play those giveaway s games; children’s shows; page boys—just name your — spot—be qualified and go and apply! ... t Folks still chuckling about that “mysterious 1 shot” in that luxury type apartment building. ’Tis T said it wasn’t a mystery at all. A hardworking guy J came home to go to bed—and sleep. After being kept awake for hours by the noise in an apartment h. near enough to keep him awake—he just got up and fired into the ceiling of the hall. Tis rumored that " the party guests fled like hundred yard dash track a stars about five minutes after the shot and he had no * difficulty getting to sleep after that! So who needs 5 o tranquilizers? ... Heap much talk about the trend started a few f years ago in women’s national organizations to “set t aside sections of the constitution" bv a vote of the group assembled. I hope Joyce Austin has set the ' record straight on this once and for all. If the consti- s tution or any part of it can he “set aside” for one ( purpose it can be set aside for any purpose. Either , there is a constitution; or you don’t have one. And God < forbid that—say Ross Barnett and his group could set1 aside the constituiton (or any part of it) of the US! Heavens to Betsy! Amend a constitution—yes! “Set it aside*’—Heaven forbid! FASCINATING QUESTIONS ... If Governor Nelson Rockefeller gets all the votes of those who are di­ vorced and those who wish they had the guts to get, one, would he win? . 1 SCENE AND HEARD ... Twas such fun seeing and and chatting with Pegga Hawkins, wife of Congressman Augustas Hawkins, first Negro congressman from California, at the dinner party at Frank’s Restaurant given by Ann Hedgeman last Saturday night. Hadn’t seen Pegga since that dinner at the White House in February. With her was Almeta Spencer of Chicago who reminded me of a speech I made at her church in Chicago a few years ago?The doll! She even remem­ bered what I said! (And all the time I thought people didn’t listen to speeches!) Got a chance to chat with the other guests, whom I see much too seldom, who were Atty Rath WMtehead Whaley, Atty. Cora T. Walker, who has gone into the shoe repairing business (yep, you read right!); Louise Fisher Morris just back from a trip around the world and that enchanting writer Evelya C. Haynes who had also just returned from a European trip with her Cameron. And this was nil part of an exciting week for Ann. She and Merritt celebrated their 30th wedding anniversary, too! Con­ grats, as you start on your second 30 years . . . f' * ■ - M. Om 'V4'.J9 . JB stated further: “As respon­ sible youth of today, we must larch in schools—to prepare our- *lves for the future—to qualify tad apply—we must march In hr homes and understand and * aspect the ambitions, struggles. I Sayers and plhns of our parents; i «d we most march in our com- ) nhnlty to be aware and coa- i caned over the problems and ijciditions that exist there, and ' tolcontribute our time, energy I ant talents of their solution.” I ’ke luncheon ended with the traltlonal “Festival of Lights”. ■ Mob than 100 women who have t wolfed in the organisation par- liveh life that would be worthy of thir gifts. Thl Invocation was given by t the ». C L. Warren, minister . of thlst. Marks Church and the - benetfetlon was by the Rev. Earl 1 B. Mure,,minister of St Pauls i. Baptid Church. (See George Palmer’s tribute on Page 18) 1 • I The Minlsnlk spirit pervaded , the ballroom of the Waldorf ] Astoria Hotel last Saturday as 1 some 1.500 guests paid tribute ’ to Mrs Alberta T. Line, knows ’ lovingly to thousands of Harlem , citizens as "Ma Kline”. The event was the annual , luncheon by the Minisink Women’ , Association at which Mrs. Kline was the guest of honor for her ”40 years of service to the com­ munity throughout the New York City Mission Society” and she ; was given the "Rector’s Cross” presented by Rev. M. Moran Weston who called her a “lamp lighter” from the proverb “ ‘Tis better to light a candle than to curse the darkness.” The special salutation was by Mrs. Dorothy D. Brooks from the community. Mrs. Brooks gave a brief history of Mrs Kline’s 40 years and presented her with a check for 81.300 towards the Alberta T. Kline Cottage and guest House, to be erected at Camp-Miftisink for use by future camp directors. In addition a gift of 12 shares of AT&T. Stock was presented to this fund by an “anonymous friend” who wrote: “We have long wanted to show our deep and humble respect for a person who has done much for us— who has awakened and broadened our minds and pushed us toward being more responsible persons.” A bouquet of American Beauty roses was presented from the girls’ and boys’ clubs in the program today. Mrs. Louise Fisher Morris is chairman of the current Mini­ sink Drive. Mrs. Oretha Brooks, director of community relations for the Manhattan Borough Pres­ ident. Greetings and remarks were brought by Mrs. Henry Designers lov. 15—CONCERT; Adele Addison; Town Hall; Grace dresses. Miss Page left, i s shown with the winners Who ape, from left, Miss Ruby Bailey, who won first prize as "Eve and the Apple” (includ­ ing the snake, made and de­ signed by her); Miss Rowena Mays who won a tie prize with Mrs. Josie Fundora directly behind her for the “most beau­ tiful” head dresses (Mrs. Mays won a wig-headrees) and Mrs. Page Burgie won first prize for the “most authentic” with an Indian sari. (Gilbert Photo) Miss Page Presents Bal De Tete Miss Linda Page presented her annual fashion show at the New York Hilton Hotel last Sunday evening for a distinguished aud­ ience. The event was a Bal De Tete. Prizes were given for the “most authentic” headdress which was won by Mrs. Page Burgie, Who wore an Indian sari costume; for the “most unique" hat which was won by Miss Ruby Bailey for her portrayal of "Eve and the Apple” which was complete with snake and there was a tie tot the “most beautiful” headdress by Mrs. Rowena Mays, who wore a beautifully arranged wig, and Mrs. Josie Fundora. The panel of judges Included Irving Burgle, producer and com­ poser of "Ballad for Bimahire”; Miss Diahann Carroll, Broadway actress now appearing at the Royal Box; Mrs. Gerri Major; Mrs. Peri Cousins Harper, Ed­ ward Pasternak and Hal Jack- Stewart, all of New York, are shown on board the ship that took them on an Auturrt#tcruise down to Nassau in the Bahama Islands. and Ann Lockwood, who were ( with the first “freedom rKers” ( in the South. Mrs. Grayr/ the ' president, introduced the dais ] guests, who were Mrs. Cora Walk- ’ er, William Neal, Rev. H. H. 1 Mariner and Mrs. Elaine Corley son. The fashions presented designs by Charrisse Hilton, Jackie Sumpter, Cleo Sims, Fannie Braithwaite and Miss Page. Models included Misses Monica Hilton, Fanny Mills. Mildred Lindsay, June Coles, Deloris Dan­ iels and Mrs. Mays. i The committee assisting Miss ' Page included Mrs. Mayme Bar- . lowe, assistant coordinator; Mrs. : Alicia Smith was general efaair- . man, assisted by Misses and , Mesdames Alma Carter, Harlene . Parker, Dolores Wright, Kathy Daniels, Pearl Bates and Clara Wells. , The event was a benefit for [women United for Civic Action of which Mrs. Thomasina Nor­ ford is president. More Data Gaesta *• And Joseph Honores, Jr., Rw. H. C. Sells. Mrs. Addle grown Mrs. Lucille Miley. Mrs. Helen Kelly, Mrs. Norma, Wright, George Tipton, Mrs. J4ae Tindall, Mrs WUma Metcalf. Mrs. Dora L. Jones, Mrs. George Lewis and Mrs. Rose Smalls. Music was furnished by Archie Matthews. The mistress of cere­ monies was Mrs. Lucille Milev Other officers are Mrs. Georgia i Lewis. 1st vice president; Mrs. ■ Rose Smalls, 2nd vice president; James Meredith, the first Ne­ gro to graduate from the Univer­ sity of Mississippi spoke at the , luncheon given last Sunday by - the Key Women, New York City , Branch at the New York Hilton ‘ Hotel in honor of the Key Wom­ en Founder and Prestocit, Mrs. Bertha Harris. Mr. Meredith spoke about ‘ many of his experiences while at- . tending the University of Missis­ sippi. He also praised Mrs, Har- 1 irfs and Key Women for helping to prevent Juvenile delinquency. Citations were given Mrs. jHar- ' rls from all branches of Key Women. - Citations were given to persons for their ten years of support to Key Women, including? Rev. Dr, David N. Lieorish. As­ sociate minister of Abyssinian Baptls, Chferch: Mrs. Mae Har­ ris, Beauty Culture and Mrs. "Choo Choo” Rosenthel. wife ef Big Joe of Happiness Exchange. Mrs. Meredith Cited SM A citation was also given to Mrs June Meredith for her brav­ ery ar.d "support behind the scene” while her husband was a student at the University of Mis­ sissippi. Opens Season The Utility Club Inc. met at the home of its president, Mrs. Louise Fisher Morris, who has Just returned home from a trip around the world last Monday. The meeting wae the first meeting of the 1963-64 season, and the members surprised Mrs Morris with 29 roses for her 29 years of leadership as presi­ dent. The Officers of the Utility Club for 1963-84 are mesdames Louise F. Morris, president and Marilyn Holcomb, 1st vice president; Viv­ ian Warnick, 2nd vice president; Carol Price, recording secre­ tary; Edith Banks, ass’t record- ing secretary; Doris Holmes, fi­ nancial secretary; Gladys Ford, ass’t financial secretary; Lucille Gaines, treasurer; Johnne Mae Joyner, ass’t treasurer; Gertrude Williams, corresponding secre­ tary; Willett Pennington, parlia­ mentarian; Clara Dinkins, custo­ dian; Alpine Daniels, chaplain. Rosa Lesley, publicity director and lelia Kinkle, ass’t publicity director, RECTOR’S AWARD - Mrs. Al­ berta T. Kline, left is shown receiving the “Rector’s Award” from Rev. M. Moran Weston, pastor of St. Philip’s Church, as Miss Gladys Thorne looks on approving. Mrs. Kline re­ ceived the atard for 40 years of service t the community through the Kew York City Mission SoclX. PEPSI-COLA PRES? THE W£EK’5> CALENDAR OF FFEi fov. 14—DINNER: Waldorf Astoria; Chriskm Women’s Retreat lov. 14—THEATER: Ballad for Bimahire; Mafeir Theater; benefit Camp Mlnisink. fov. 15—DINNER DANCE; Americana Hotel; Urican Cul­ tural Group, Inc. , Congregational Church. lov. 15—RECITAL; Tony Lawrence; Cahnegt Recital Hall; Christ Community Church Recrealon benefit. Nov. 15—DANCE; Audubon; 12 Beavers Rod nd Gun Club. Vov. 15—DAJicE; Audubon; Blue Moon Soc il Club. Mov. 15—DANCE; Renaissance; Church of the Resurrec­ tion. Mov. 15—DANCE; Savoy Manor; The Computers Nov. 15—DANCE; Savoy Manor; Spain Socl^ Club. Nov. 15—DANCE; Dawn Casino; Unique 8ocl Nov. 15—DANCE; Park Terrace; Fellows, L Nov. 15—BALL; Rockland Palace; Women’s lzens Committee benefit of Vocat and Workshop Center, Inc. Nov. 15—LUNCHEON; Statler Hilton Hotel; Rho Sorority. Nov. 15— DEBS BAIL,; Riverside Plaza Ho' Motor Vehicle Club, Inc. iterboro Clt- al Guidance Nov. 15—DANCE; Mayfair Ballroom; Electric Chapter No. 17, O.E.8. Nov. 15—DANCE; Henry Hudson Hotel; Cofeordla Club. Nov. 15—DANCE; Audubon; British Oulana B^evolent So­ ciety. Nov. 15—DANCE; Renaissance; Claude Greed Nov. 15—DANCE; Audubon; Hylight Social Cl#). Nov. 16—DANCE; Savoy Manor; Ritz Club. J Nov. 15—DANCE; Savoy Manor; Americ Islanda Society. Inc. Nov. 15—DANCE; Hunt’s Point Palace; Amjsro Latino Lodge. Nov. 15—DANCE; Hunt’s Point Palace; Chit Clat Club. Nov. 16—DANCE; Dawn Casino; Five Fifths R<jial Club. Nov. 16—AWARD RECEPTION; Carnegie Endoignent Cen­ ter; Omega Psi Phi. Nov. 17—DANCE-8HOW; Riverside Plaza Hotb; Tobago Emergency Hurrlcan Relief Committee Nov. 17—DOLL DANCE; 200 W. 00 Street, Landft ment; benefit Mental Health Clinic, Hir pi tai. Nov. 17—PARTY-BAZAAR; 220 Central Park Ski 3A; benefit Caribbean Federation Tar Health of N.Y., Inc. Nov. 17—DANCE; Audubon; Lady Calloway M« Nov. 17—DANCE: Savoy Manor; Victoria United > evolent Society, Inc. Nov. 18—MONDAY NIGHT CAMP FUND PARTY; Lounge; N.Y. Amsterdam News. Nov. 18-Dec. 13—ART EXHIBIT. Twentieth Century West Gallery: West Coast Artists, t Nov. 15—FASHION SHOW; Americana Hotel; international Ladles Oarment Workers Union FUNDS FOR CIVIL RIGHTS— Mrs Wilma Metcalf, chairman of the educational committee of the Hudson Civic Association, Inc., ia show* presenting a check to Rufus Smith of the NAACP Legal and Defense Fund as Mrs. Beatrice J, Gray, pre­ sident of the group, looks on after the luncheon given by the Association at the Biltmore Ho­ tel last Saturday. Among those who paid tribute to Mrs. Harris were Miss Eliza­ beth Beine. director of Child Wel­ fare of New York City Depart­ ment of Welfare; Mrs Eileen Pinckney. New York City Depart­ ment of Welfare. Division of Fos­ ter Home Care: Vernon Daniels. Clifton Clones, both of Protestant Welfare Agenciea; Preston Wil­ cox, assistant professor of coclol- Also Mrs. Audrey Delany, ex­ ecutive director of Riverdale; Mrs. Muriel Jenkins, acting su­ pervisor of Hudson State Training School; Mrs. Erss Poston,.coord­ inator Youth Division for New York State Department: Marsha and Mrs. Luke Moore of Washing, ton, who accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Meredith for the occasion. another big event: 1 the mw tall Pepti j 1 /» the 16 02. bottle , i Serve more, save morel ________ Material for thil space it compiled by the IX Amsterdam Newt. The Amsterdam News is responsible for til innouncemenh herein. ogy, Columbia University, and Mrs. Jessica Behagan, Assistant to Commissioner of Correction. Nov. 10—PARTY; Well’s Restaurant; NYC Branch, NAACP. And hen’s ,------------- - 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 --- •*». * Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Nov. 16, 1963 Atlantic To Record Stars On Apollo Stage Saturday Beginning Friday, November ophone and his rocking band 15, the Apollo Theatre presents will be oa hand. Also Doris Troy for a number of years. They are Just as entertaining visually for an entire week Ben E. King, who was catapulted to fame this as they are vocally. The Coasters, and The Atlantic iyear with her recording of "Just Caravan of Stars, comprising One Look" and her current hit what is probably the greatest "What'cha Gonna Do About It", array of recording stars ever Doris has come a long way £n on one stage at the same since she began her career in show business as an usherette Ben E. King and The Coasters right here at the Apollo Theatre e headline the star-studded show, a short time ago. but that's only the beginning i The Falcons have been one of King Curtis, his soultwisting sax-the most popular vocal groups Two great soul singers will be seen for the first time any­ where in New York on the Apollo stage with Ben E. King and The Coasters. They are Rufus Thom­ as, whose recordings of "Walk­ ing the Dog" and "The Dog" have given everyone a new dance step, and Otis Redding, known by all music fans for his in­ comparable rendition of "These Arms of Mine" and his latest recording "Pain in My Heart." To handle the master of cere­ monies chores for this caravan of recording greats will be the inimitable King Coleman. On the night of November 16, Atlantic Records is bringing its recording equipment and entire staff to reconi this show. A long playing album containing the music recorded that night will be released by Atlantic. THE COASTERS Sattin In Alfred Drake Role In ELT’s “Kismet” Equity Library Theatre's first a classical score to the legitim­ musical offering of the season ate theatre by translating it into Music Hall Has Holiday Spectacle The Thanksgiving season and its festive board will be the theme of the new stage spectacle opening at Radio City Music Hall on Thursday. November 14. Produced by Leon Leonidoff and entitled “High Spirits,” the spectacle will accompany the new romantic screen comedy, ”T h e Wheeler Dealers" starring Lee Remick and James Garner. The traditional Thanksgiving Day dinner will be highlighted in theatrical fashion in a scene featuring the Ballet Company with Helen Wood. The Rockettes, vocalists Nancy Leighton and Alan Cole, violinist Maria Neg- lia and the Niemen Brothers in an acrobatic act. are also fea­ tured in the holiday show for which James Stewart Morcom designed the settings and Frank Spencer the costumes. Opening the show, the Sym­ phony Orchestra under the direc­ tion of Raymond Paige will play "Viennese Rhapsody," an arrang- ment by Rayburn Wright of mu­ sic by Franz Von Suppe. Earlier Sat. Show For uIn White America KING CURTIS BEN E. KING will be "Kismet" which opens Saturday, November 16 at the Master Theatre. Lonnie Sattin, singing star of night clubs, thea­ tre, TV and recordings will ap­ pear in the role of Hajj, first created on Broadway by Alfred Drake. When "Kismet” was originally presentetT’-at the Ziegfeld Thea­ tre in 1953 critics remarked that Robert Wright and George For­ rest had done it again. It was nine years earlier, with "Song of Norway," that this team brought On Local Screens RUFUS THOMAS Morningside the musical comedy idiom. The music is adapted from Al­ exander Borodin’s "Prince Igor” and the score includes such hits as "Stranger In Paradise," "And Thu Is My Beloved," and “Bau­ bles. Bangles and Beads." The book by Charles Lederer and Lu­ ther Davis is based on Edward Knoblock’s play, "Kismet” and an early film of the same name boasted Marlene Dietrich and the late Ronald Colman as its stars. I Action of the play takes place in ancient Baghdad. The E.L.T. production was directed by Pau' Barry and has a cast of 28 sing­ ers and dancers to tell the tale of “Kismet" which means fate. The show will tour Brooklyn and the Bronx oh Dec. 6 and 7 under the aegis of the New York State Council on the Arts. "In White America,” off Broadway's newest hit, has chan­ ged the time of its late Saturday night performance at the Sheri­ dan Square Playhouse from 10:30 to 10 p.m. TJie 7 p.m. perfor­ mance will be given as usual. The two Sunday performances remain at 3 and 8:40 p.m. The Judith Rutherford Mare- chael production of Martin B. Dubermans play won rave re­ views from all but one Metropoli­ tan paper and the weekly maga­ zines (Cue and the h{ew Yorker* aad to the critics! kudos. All of the cast — Gloria Fos­ ter, Claudette Nevins. James Greene, Michael O’Sullivan. Mos­ es Gunn. Fred Pinkard and Billy Faier - won praise as did direc­ tor Harold - Stone. I OTIS REDDING DORIS TROY Works On New Play William Hairston, whose "Walk in Darkness," was re­ cently launched at the Green­ wich News Theatre, has two new plays in the works. Be­ sides the recently announced “Swan Song of the 11th Dawn" he is finishing a new play called "Black Moses." based on the life of Marcus Garvey, the man who advocated that the Negroes return to thejr native Africa. Garvey’s philosophy predated the current Black Maslims and put him at loggerheads with the NAACP and the Urban League. "Swan Song of the 11th Dawn." concerns itself with a mother jealous of her “Cabin In The Sky” To Be Revived The Morningside Theatre, 116 St. & 8th Ave., presents Friday, Nov. 15, "It Started In Naples" also "Black Horse Canyon". Saturday, Nov. 16, “Yellow Mountain" plus “Birdraan of Al­ catraz" and “Cry Baby Killer”, a chapter and 3 color cartoons. Sunday, Monday, Nov. 17, 18, “Wives and Lovers” also “The Maniac" and “Walk The Proud &d"- Roosevelt The Roosevelt Theatre, Wed­ nesday through. Saturday, Nov­ ember 13 to 16, will feature Jack Lemon, Shirley Mac Laine in "Irma La Douce” plus “The Killing." Sunday through Tuesday, Nov­ ember 17 to 19, Henry SUva and Sammy Davis Jr. In “Johnny Cool" plus "Inside the Mafia " Join ’’Thistle Philip Proctor and Larry Swanson both alumni of the long running musical hit ."The Sound of Music” have joined the How­ ard Da Silva production of "Thistle in My Bed" opening No­ vember 19 at the Gramercv Arts Theatre. 27th St. and Ler'.ngton Ave. Gudrun Powers, a new American playwright is the au­ thor of the English farce which deals with cradles, coffins, gen­ ial cuckcldrv and the mummers, dancers and bawdiness of the English country side of a cen­ tury ago. What’s On TV? Singer-organist Earl Grant is guest on the Ed Sullivan Show, on CBS-TV, Sunday, Nov. 17 at 8 p.m. THURSDAY. Nov. 14 — Dan­ cer-choreographer Katherine Dun­ ham on Joe Franklin's Memory Lane, WOR (9>, 11:90 p.m. THURSDAY. Nov. 14 - John Bubbles on the "Tonight" show, NBC. 11:15 p m. ' FRIDAY, Nov. 15 — Frederick O'Neal in "The Patriots" on the "Hallmark Hall of Fame"; NBC, 9.90 p.m. SATURDAY, Nov. 15 - "Eye of the Fight for Health" follows a Queens expectant mother as she goes through the routine at a pre-natal clinic, with Mike Wal­ lace; CBS. 1:90 p.m. To be re- broadcast on Sunday, Nov. 17 at 1 p.m. SATURDAY, Nov. 17 — Mer­ cedes Ellington dances with the June Taylor Dancers on the Jack­ ie Gleason Show, CBS. 7:90 p.m. SATURDAY, Nov. 15 — Leon Bibb on "Hootenanny", ABC. 7:30 p.m. SATURDAY. Nov. 16 — John Bubbles on the Jerry Lewis Show, ABC, 9:30 p.m. SATURDAY. Nov. 16 — Jazz Scene. USA - "Firehouse Five Plus Two ”. WOR (9). 10:15 p.m SATURDAY, Nov. 16 — "Show­ time at the Apollo" with Willie Bryant emcee. Nat "King" Cole. Duke Ellington and others, WPTX (M). 11:30 p.m. SUNDAY, Nov. 17 — Jackie Robinson moderates interfaith panel discussing “The Switch Point" on ”Talk Back", WOR (9>, 9:30 a.m. SUNDAY. Nov. 17 — Point of View - “The Role of the Family in the Racial Crisis”, third ep­ isode in a four-part series, WOR (9), 11 a.m. SUNDAY. Nov. 17 — Godfrey Cambridge appears on "Tail Tales”, CBS. 4 p.m. SUNDAY. Nov. 17 — "The Har­ lem Globetrotters in Londor” on CBS Sports Spectacular, 5 p m. SUNDAY, Nov. 17 — Ted Mack's Amateur Hour. CBS. 5:90 pm SUNDAY, fco*. 17 - "Music of Africa” with Fela Sowande of Nigeria as host. WNDT (IS). 6:90 p.m. MONDAY, Nov. It - Cicoty Tyson, Melvin Stewart, Albert Henderson, George C. Scott, on "East Side-West Side". CBS, 10 p.m. MONDAY. Nov. 1« - Leslie Uggams on "Sing Along With Mitch", 10 p.m. TUESDAY, Nov. 19 - the Tod­ dy Wilson Trio on the "Bell Telephone Hour", NBC, 10 p.m. WEDNESDAY, Nov. 90 - Ossie Davis appears as Frederick Doug­ lass in "A Season of War”, on ••Chronicle”. CBS, 7:90 p.m. WEDNSEDAY, Nov. 20 — Earle Hyman in "The Whistling Shrimp" oo "Espionage", NBC, 9 p.m. 6th Week For “Lilies Ralph Nelson's “Lillies of the Field,” starring Sidney Poitier, started its sixth week at the Mu way Hill Theatre on Tuesday. The critically-acclaimed motion picture, story of an itinerant former G.I., who encounters and helps five European nuns build a chapel in the Arizona desert, is a United Artists release. "Lilies of the Field." which Nelson produced and directed as a Rainbow production, won four awards at the Berlin Film Festi­ val. including the Best Actor "Silver Bear" for Poitier. James Poe wrote the screen­ play. Lilia Skala and Stanley A<*ams are also toplined in the cast which includes Lisa Mann. Isa Crino, Francesca Jarvis, Basie, Getz In Concert Count Basie and his Band, the Stan Getz Quartet and vocal nt Jimmy Rushing will be heard in concert on Thanksgiving eve, Wednesday. Nov. 27 at Philhar­ monic Hall at 8:30 p.m. K A F Productions, which sponsored the “Jazz In the Gar­ den” last summer is procuring this show. 17-day round trip conomy excursion fires aftetiva until December 15, For information on special I island-hopping priviiages an r and for reservations, contact travel agent, any BOAC offici in New York, ull MU 7-1600 BRITISH WEST INDIAN BROADWAY'S NEWEST — After an opening tryout in Bos­ ton and other cities, the new Broadway play. "One Flew Over the Cupk'3 j Nest" opened Wednesday at the Cart Theatre, starring Kirk Douglass and Joan Tetzel Shown here, from left: Joan Tetzel, Leonard Warren, Lincoln Kilpatrick and Astrid Wilsrud. the cast included Ethel Waters, .Todd Duncan, Rex Ingram and Kgtherine Dunham. The new stage production of ‘‘Cabin*’ will be along the lines of the original conception, that Ta, it will be a musical Thntasy, rather than the realism of the movie version. No cast has been announced yet. A FESTIVE WEEK BEGIN FRIDAY NOV. 15» tcotu-cg as long as you re up get me a Grant’ Get the Scotch that everyone is getting op for. Choice and cheriihed. Imported from Scotland aftei eight long years. Try Grant’s 8 at your favorite bar. Aad you’ll see why every minute of waiting wai worth it Then, get a Fifth at your local store, *7.19. Abo available b a Tenth, Traveler’s Size, ’3.75. g-vear-eU WcwW Scrfck Wlmlty. 86 p-I. laiported to tkc UAeJ Statot fraa ScotlamJ by Aoatoi, Nickels A Cc., New Ycrk atMAsuw.»<ubacK.b«. noi{\i\csioi SET FOR FILM — Comic- mimic George Kirby has signed to appear aa the edu­ cated native African In ‘Mr. Moses", a film which will star Robert Mitchum and will be­ gin shooting on Jan. 3 in Af­ rica. It will mark his drama­ tic bow. HOST OOM NFAP VOUO M O (VI F IN COMEDY — Rockne Tark- ington. fast-rising young Holly­ wood actor, la caught in an in­ formal “wardrobe check" pose on the set of "Soldier In The Rain", tha new Blake Ed­ wards comedy In which he is featured. Jackie Gleason, Steve McQueen. Tuesday Weld and Tom Postom star in the Allied Artists release which opens at the Palace Theatre on Nov. 27. t Jt«N Sf,f’G inaiiYjsxfX SToe TH aoAT ano cxt on... JAZZ BOAT’ ‘35R? ■■■ V"’ I ..a.. MMMfi'OlD DARK HOUSE' COASTER G CURTIS DORIS THE FALCONS RUFUS THOMAS OTIS READING DYNAMIC KING COLEMAN SAT. MIDNIGHT SHOW « f : a ♦ A tl 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 --- 20 • N Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Nov. 16, 1963 I Club '63 OHic.n .Club *63 met last week at the home of Mrs. Elveta White at which time new officers were elected and Installed. Mrs. Novella Bright was elect­ ed president; Mrs. Gloria Har­ ris, vice president; Mrs. Elveta White, secretary, and Mrs. Moni­ ca Boob was elected treasurer. gray* AMSTt* PERFECT NATURAL WHITE RICE! RNt* Ed Smalls in Harkness Pavi­ lion . . . Liquor store owner Harry Anderson and his beauty, Eloise, celebrated their second anniversary party in the Motel on the Mountain. Jackie Amos. Teddy Butler. Dr. Mark Parks and his bride. Ray. Vitna Tandys, Ernie Hill and his bride-to-be Ardath Hairston, were there . . . Dentists Albert Joseph and Charles Robinson plagued by robberies. . . Betty Stokes refuses to tell who injured her right thigh . . . James Cannon has a fractured leg. . . Manslaughter charge against Naomi Chandler was dis­ missed. . . Slim Jackson has switched to Showman's. . Althea Gibson may be sponsored by sporting goods firm as a pro golfer. . . Johnny Swalef Green, manager of Le Cupid on, is in a mountain of trouble. . . Fonder detective Benny Page is getting fst. . . Bobbie Thomas is held in the death of John Lee Storey who was having a fight with her mother, Matilda, and Louis Hall is being sought in connection with the death of his step-father, Douus Smith. . . Shapely Frank Tillman has difficulty staying out of trouble . .. Phil Black, who is getting ready for his Thanks­ giving extravaganza, has a part n the film, "Fawn-broker”. . . James E. Newby, the funeral Mrs. Phyllis Cook prepares a bedtime snack for Kimberly-eggnog made with Carnation (her own recipe is below). "The children love cocoa made with Carnation, too-it's so creamy. And Carnation is the only milk they drink." Even when you add an equal amount of water. Carnation is richer than sweet, whole milk.* •USDA. Handbook #«. “CompotUionol Food».“ recipe: CARNATION HIGH-PROTEIN EGGNOG (Makti 1 large glattful) 1 egg 1 heaping teaspoon sugar 1 small can (% cup) chiliad undiluted CARNATION EVAPORATED MILK ’A cup cold water Nutmeg Vanilla Separate egg white from yolk. Beat yolk and sugar with rotary beater until light. Add water to Carnation, then add to egg yolk mix­ ture. Beet well. Chill. Beat egg white until fluffy. Beat well into mix­ ture. Add a drop of vanilla flavor­ ing if desired. Pour into large glass, and sprin­ kle with nutmeg. tVAFORSTtO Edward B. Cook, production director at Radio Station WAOK, entertains his son Edward, Jr., 1%. and daughter Kimberly, 3*4. at his turntable. Both children started on formulas made with Carnation, world's leader for infant feeding. Popular Atlanta disc jockey presents his "Small Combo" They started on Carnatipn, stayed on Carnation... the milk with extra Vitamin D for strong bones, sound teeth and steady growth. How does a law student become a radio star? Edward Cook did it with a dynamic personality and an urge to entertain that just wouldn’t go away. As a pre-law student at Fisk Univer­ sity, he also concentrated on dramatics. Both Mr. and Mrs. Cook are active in little theater groups. Mrs. Cook, a 1957 graduate of Louisville General Hospital School of Nursing, is an amateur artist-and an artist in the kitchen as well. When the Cooks enter­ tain small groups at dinner, there is always a homemade cake, a frozen dessert, or a fabulous pie. “Carnation makes such a heavenly cream pie filling,” Mrs. Cook volun­ teers, “and such a tender cake. Best of all, it whips beautifully for home­ made ice cream and frozen desserts!” director, said he will organize a block by block political as«ocia- tion. , . Jack Black and James Walker, two young golfers, w.nged to California to play golf . . . Herman DuBois’ oldest son. -7 *L who is making a career in the Air Force got married and Michael, his youngest, is now an suistant teacher at Howard Church Speaker Leonard Faust of the Co-Or­ dinating Community Service told youths at Concord Baptist Church that staying or dropping out of school either subtracts or adds to their individual pay envelope, . . . Smalls’ John DeVeux proud of his son, Guy, a sophombre at Temple U. who was Initiated into Alpha Sigma Psi. . . , Jessie Sterling in Mt. Siniai Hospital ... Ed Mitchell at Jocks. . . Apollo’s ticket-taker Joe Green said ex-boxer James Brown could have filled Madison Square Garden if it was on 125th Doc Hyman telling -everyone he has a town house in Easti Orange. N.J. . . Granville Lee, young exponent of jazz, and his quintet has a jazz session at the Baby Grand every Sunday afternoon . . . Chess is catching on like a stimulating liquid at the Bird Cage. . . Bobby Sams is trying to collect royal­ ties from song be has written which he will turn over to charity . . . Prestine Matthews could not explain that cab ride that brought her home late and she needed first aid after conversing with Fred Farley. . . Sir Robert Harvell has Red Randolph smil­ ing broadly. Harvell has the sounds. . . Ernest Clark, who lost au eye will always remember the Golden Glass bar. . . Gloria Prince and Henry “Brother” Turner no longer thinking alike. . . Ex- Boxer Bobby Williams will pre­ sent his wife, Lee, and her smart frocks at the Prelude next month. . . Det. Sgt. Robert Wilson now assigned to the W. 123rd St. station. Reuben Patton is hunting bear in Vancouver. B.C. with Holly Jones and Dr. William Hill. Negro Insurers Step Up Drive This Month Slain Officer Russell Norris, who was mur­ dered, was a Korean Vet who won the Purple Heart and Silver Star. He was also secretary of the Court Officers Association. . . lit. Lloyd Sealy is back from the FBI school. . . Former bar manager Ann Shortons arrest shocked friends . . . Bishop Jolly says the Browns will top the Giants in the end. . . Joanne Scott suffered bullet wounds in the thigh, abdomen and index finger but Carey Winfield refuses to discuss it. . . Leon Parker and'Freddie Robinson found out that that Thomas Brockington doesn't like the jack - handle treatment . . Leigh Whipper said the tickets to the Boys of Yesteryear dance on Jan. 3 are now on sale Receipts are turned over to the Biddy and Popey Baseball teams sponsored by the organization . . % Singing Blue­ bells, according to Bernard Mon­ tague, have dates in Japan, Copa Sand Peppermiift Lounge. Beef Up Your Meals! HOR\& HABDART Fresh Beef Stiw Goulash........... Taste-leaser From Our Freezer! HOR\& H AKDART Famous For Fabulous Flavor! COANUT CUSTARD PIE Plenty of Country-Fresh Eggs. Plenty of Fresh Whole Milk. Plenty of Philippine Cpcoanut. Plenty delicious to eatl Take home this great delicocy, fresh from the oven, today! _ Xwe Work for Mot/itr Free chest X-rays will be available fot anyone 15 years of age and over from 11:30 a.m. to 6:30 y.m. at the following lo­ cations and on the following days this week and next: Thursday, Nov. 14 - Eighth Ave. & 133rd Street J Wednesday, Nov. 20 Eighth Ave. & 122nd Street. Thursday, Nov. 21 - Lenox These free chest X-rays are of- Ave. & 128th Street, fered under Joint sponsorship of the New York City Department of Health and the New York Tu­ berculosis and Health Associa­ tion Volunteers are needed to help out at, the X-ray bus. Anyone able to spare a few hours of time should call Miss Marjorie Costa, field representative for the project, at AC 2-7360. PO Sets Xmas Mail Deadline To ensure delivery by Dee. 25. Christmas parcels to friends and relatives in Europe and South and Central America should have been mailed not later than No­ vember 10; and packages intend­ ed for the Armed Forces Over­ seas, by November 20, Postmas­ ter of New York Robert K. Chrls- tenberry reminded the mailing public thia week. Holiday gift parcels will con­ tinue to be accepted at all sta­ tions of the New York Post Of­ fice after the deadline dates, but delivery of such psrcels by Christ­ mas cannot be assured. Salvation Army Installs Friday The Salvation Army will Install Lt.-Colonel William E. Chamber- lain as Director of The Salvation Army Operations is Metropoli­ tan New York in a ceremony to be held at 7:41 p.m., Friday, Nov. 15, In the Centennial Mem­ orial Temple, 120 W. 14th St. 1 FROM SONGS TO MILK — hack Supermarket, 3825 Broad- Robert Bulger, center, manager way, lodes over the well-stocked of the dairy department of Bo- store with Paul Dooley, left, Bohack Hires Former Singer As Dairy Manager Former concert artist Robert and raised in Jersey City during Bulger, newly appointed mana- the regime of the late Mayor ger of the dairy department of Frank Hague, Bulger is a bari- the Bohack Supermarket, 3825 tone who has been singing since 1932. He is married to the first Broadway, was speaking. ”1 had to study the dairy pro- vice-president of the United ducts the same way I studied Parents Association, Mrs. Lucille music and words during my ca- Bulger, with whom he lives at reer. I had te learn the various 509 W. 156th St. The couple have cheeses, eggs, butters, pastries two sons Neil and Kent, and breads. I had no idea there were so many varieties.” he re- A graduate fce N y ve“®d' J u. t. of Music and the N.Y. Theatre My task was eased with the Wlng Bulger has appeared ,n E009!”,t*?n' .« number of concerts throughout ,n ( onrerts . and Walter Pajak, right, assist­ ant manager and manager re­ spectively. Bulger who has ap­ peared ha concerts throughout the United States, Canada and South America said the grocery business is fascinating. (Mal- iory Photo) Baked sloW from kneaded dough Silvercup Satisfies a Man the United States and Canada with the Leonard De Paur and Continental Aires groups. “Working in the store has its rewards”,. Bulger said. “I am able to see my family every day and I get a pleasure from meet­ ing and talking with the custo­ mers. I spend a lot of time cut­ ting and wrapping various chees­ es end refurbishing the dairy bins. Every morning fresh loaves of bread replace the old loaves. We strive to give our customers service and top grade merchan­ dise”, Bulger said. HAWAIIAN PUNCH KLEENEXtissues 400'z VERMONT MAID SYRUP . Beech Ntf 1. Coffee | Gulden's Mustard -oz. 12c Jumbo 35c l-OZ. 19c Yellow 15c College Inn TOMATO JUKE COCKTAIL 26-oz. OTF*- Heinz Baby Food Strained ksr moR Junior ALPO DOG FOOD 14’/i A A HEINZ KETCHUP Vieaao Sausage 4-oz. con 2S« Sliced Beef glass 41< IBTOIl Kretchmer Wheat Germ 12-OX. Art. LESTOH. Set Up Consumer Confab For Low Income Families Concerned ever the growing number of complaints of exploitation and price differential in low Income arena, the City Commiaalan on Human Rights is calling a city- wide conference on problems of consumers in low-income and minority neighborhoods on Saturday, Nov. 23, at the Ethical Culture Society, 2 W. «4th St. Madison S. Jones, CCHR executive director, said tha conference wUl take up the special problems of low in­ come oommunitioa, Including charges of undesirable prac­ tices in supermarkets, and will discuss present city and state legislation for the protection of consumers. Mrs. Valerio Levy, consultant on consumer relations with CCHR, said that while leading experts in the field of consumer relations will speak on panels during the day-long conference, the majority of people participating will ba local community residents and leaders in low-in­ terne minority communities. An unusual feature of the conference, Mrs. Levy ex­ plained, is that executives of some of the major food chains which have been accused of undesirable practices, will bo attending the conference. *’ Among the persons scheduled to speak are Council­ man Robert A. Low, Assemblyman Mark T. Southall, Dr. Persia Campbell, of Queens College; L. Joseph Overton, executive secretary of the Negro American Labor Council; Rev. Richard A. Hildebrand, NAACP branch president; and others. James Farmer To Get Award The Omega Psi’Pkl Frataraify is holding its annual Achievement Award and reception, Saturday. Nov. 16 at 8 £ m. at the Carnegie iKndowment Foundation, 46th St and First Ave. James Farmer, director of CORE, will be honored as the [outstanding citizen of the year. N Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Nov. IB, 1—3 • »1 CORE Benefit In Bronx Sun The members of Bronx CORE will hold a benefit cocktail party ember on Sunday, Nov. 17 at 4:30 p.m., in Goodson's Town Cnbaret. 754 B. 163th St., at Boston Road, to raise funds to aid Sarah Cotlins, the Birmingham, Ala., girl who has become blind since the church bombings there in Sept- gators of the stage neat will be pres- td Herbert Callen- of Bronx CORE. every'page af this issue ®f The Amsterdam News. Cheek aad see —every week. Out every Thurs- DIO HE ASK FOR martin's Ba-s I YEAR OLD? MANAGER AT WORK - Al­ fred Johnson, right, manager of Garden Market, a Daitch Shop- well store, 309 W. 125th ••St., helps his aides sort, mark and stock merchandise. Left to right: Mrs. Helen Coleman, Raymond Pietri and Johnson. Johnson was recently appointed manager of the store. (Mallory Photo) New Mgr. At Daitch Shopwell pride In the appearance ef his plays with a-softball team, store and spends a great deal ofj "For recreation I play Will time walking around the huge my children. Of course the fam market checking the shelves. I fly goes to the movies aad look Born In Harlem Hospital, John- at television, but ruy pleasure son now lives in New Rochelle comes when I play with tb at 29 Rochelle Pl., with his wife, kids,” Johnson said. Phyllis, and three children. Leu- wjtfa tbe I)aBc ora, Yolanda and \erontca. shopwell organization, for sowm time and I enjoy this kind - Johnson, who attended PS 186 work. The company has six start and Chelsea High School, is a in the Harlem area and upgrad baseball fan and every summer men according to their ability, in New RocheHe on Sundays he Johnson said. Plays Softball wo Martin's 8 the | light-ntellow | Milder whiskies make It tight. Unger aging makes it mellow. IIENKO SCOTCH WHIBW, Ml PROOF, MPORTEO BY McKESSOH A “I enjoy people. 1 like work­ ing with my fellow employees and I have had a wonderful as­ sociation with the Daitch Shop- well organization,” said Harlem- borp -Alfred Johnson, manager of the spacious Garden Market which is located in the old Post Office building at 309 W. 125th Johnson, who was appointed manager of the store a month ago, Is conscientious about his duties and, according to an em­ ployee, there is nothing too small for him to do. Johnson takes YWCA Meet To Examine Negro Jobs employ Negroes, and a notation on the card read. "Exec’s are mainly from Loalsiaxma.” The company, which has no Negroes among its 300 employees has agreed to notify all super­ visory personnel that it win have a non-discriminatory policy and rt will broaden Its base for re­ cruitment of future employees. The State Commission for Hu­ man Rights baa agreed to take a continuing interest in the com­ pany's hiring policy, and will make a compliance review in six months. Don’t let other cola claims fool you. Compare when you shop. You’ll see that Pepsi-Coia continues to be youf^^jjea^J^iHwP^-heH quarjs^ for instance, give you an extra serving in every single bottle. Ounce for ounce, penny for penny, Pepsi is still your best quality-cola buy ’ . Fw r. ”w Bar Association Renames Riven Civil Court Justice Francis E. Rivers was the only Negro law­ yer appointed as chairman of a committee of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York as he was reappointed to head the Association's Committee on Civil Rights Under Law for 1963-64. Among members of the commit­ tee appointed with Justice Riv­ ers were NAACP general counsel Robert L. Carter and Federal Customs Judge Scovel Richard­ son. Other Negro lawyers named to committees Included Bruce M. Wright and Judge Hsne M. Bol­ in, BUI of Rights Committee. Hope Stevens, Foreign Law; (Richard L. Baltimore, Grievan ces; Samuel R. Pierce, Judiciary and Study of Commitment Pro­ cedures; Joseph E. Dyer, Medical Jurisprudence; and Judge Rivers also to the Committee on Post- Admission Legal Education. Dr. Vaughn C. Mason was one WITH PEPSI MEN - Carole Joao Crawford (fourth from left) is shown here during a stopover at Pepsi-Cola Com­ pany world headquarters in NYC on her way to the "Miss World" title in London. From left: Leslie Wilson, vice con­ sul for Jamaica; Mrs. Edna Crawford, Carole’s mother; Harvey C. Russell, vice pres­ ident, Pepsi Cola; and Peter K. Warren, president of Pepsi-cola International, Ltd. Oik of Miss Crawford’s sponsors was the local Pepsi-Coia bottler in Jam­ aica. "The Negro and the Job Mar­ ket" will be the subject of the regular Upper Manhattan Branch YWCA "Dialogue” series on Wednesday. Nov. 20, at 8 p.m. at the Young Women’s Christian Association, 361 W, 125th St. Richard Clarke of the Hallmark Employment Agency will be the guest speaker. The following week, November 27, a pre-Thanksgiving party is scheduled. "Dialogue and Do­ ing." the program for the even­ ing. will include dancing, music and refreshments. Agreement In Hiring Case The Ethyl Corp., a national gas and oil company whose ex­ ecutives are mainly from Louis­ iana, has become the 22nd com­ pany to sign a conciliation agree­ ment with the Civil Rights Bu­ reau of the Attorney General's office to advise their employ­ ment agencies to avoid making Job referrals to the company on the basis of race. The company, which has offices at 100 Park Ave., is the 22nd company which had formerly used Office Temporaries. Inc , In hiring help, and the concili­ ation agreamfst Is a result of a complaint filed by the Attorney General's office la their continu­ ing investigation of bias prac­ tices of the office employees •genqr. The Attorney Generals laves- ' tigation showed that Office Temp- orariea. Inc., had Job order cards in its files Indicating that the Ethyl Corp, did not wish to BARGAINS IN UNCLAIMED FURNITURE FOR AU PARTS OF THE HOME PRIVATE SALES EVERY DAY BEDROOM, LIVING ROOM, KITCHEN SETS, LAMPS, COFFEE, END TABLES, TV'S, ODD BEDS, DRESSERS, CHAIRS, RUGS. UNIVERSITY MOVING & STORAGE CO. W*fcw«* MSM Sil WmI IMA stml, MXC (Ret. Amttardem and Audubon Avaz.) lOW OATES FOR STORAGE A MOVING — FURNITURE BOUGHT KLEENEX R 37c KLEENEX TABLE NAPKINS 2 for 47c lAOLlDAF mawaiiam punch « 39c Hawaiian golden PUNCH UPTON CHICKEN HOOOLE SOUP MIX 2 Fockogos of 2 Envelopes S7C Ranaat Powder BORDEN’S STARLAC Instant Naw Fwt Milk a Quart committee on Joint - Medical-Le­ gal activities. I of several doctors named to the STORES Gulden’s Mustard SPKT MOWN OZ. 1A. 0/00 UPTON Fto-THR*! TEA BAGS of 48s PLANTERS COCKTAIL PEANUTS 7-oz. eon. 13'A-oz. CCe WILSON’S CORNED BEEF 12-oz. tin 49c ROTTED BEEF S’/a-oz. tin 2 for 25c 5’/2- tin 17c LESTCML PINE SC1NT LESTOIL PINE SCENT /< 1 KtTOIl ItSTOII PINE SCENT /I 1 KSTOIl Regular BOTTLED BY PEPSI-COLA METROPOLITAN BOTTLING COMPANY', INC., 46-00 5th STREET, LONG ISLAND CITY, NEW YORK, UNDER. APPOINTMENT FROM I22 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Nov. 16, 1963 Held On Kidnap, Assault Counts Hands-me Leonard Brown, 25. Joan Nelson, of 212 W. 82nd St., charged with kidnapping and as- and assaulting Christine Morgan, aault, is being held in 1500 bail same address. for a hearing In Criminal Court Judge Herman Weinkrants par- oled him on the kidnaping charge Nov. 23. . Brown, who lives at 141 W. and held him in 1500 bail on 73rd St., is accused of taking the assault charges. Mrs. Nelson the 23-months-old daughter of told the court they are friends. CORE Supports Boycott The Congress on Racial Equal­ ity (CORE) has called upon its chapters throughout the nation to launch Christmas boycotts against retail stores that refuse to hire Negro employees la their special holiday hiring, a spokes­ man disclosed this week. The possible boycotts were re­ vealed this week as James Farmer, CORE national direc­ tor. announced that CORE will launch a boycott against Los Angeles stores that practice dis­ crimination. and the Syracuse, N.Y., chapter announced that stores there that refuse to hire Negroes among their holiday season extra employees would be boycotted. Jet Aircraft Mechanic Finally Gets Right Jot Whe" »t was not what he wanted—n« dij- what he was trained for. Force Talks To Passenger what In June, 1962, Collins picked v lessed a passenger in his cab who ask< as a him about himself. The story i his frustrating experience can Negro out- When the passenger alighti most ft*0™ bis cab. he handed Collii c . a card and said: "Come by n • office on your day off.” WArlr Collins did and as a result now happily working as an e short glne mechanic for Grumman ai in Bethpag lie in craft . Long Island. New York, tnen The passenger jn Collins’ ci as a was Hobart Taylor, Jr., exec D. C.-. tlve vice chairman of The Pr« ident’s Committee on Equal Ei ns to ployment Opportunity, which h I, but been charged by President K< Folks who like te save in a BIG way — on a regular basis — make it a practice to shop at A&P. You’ll know why when you see the store- wide values at A&P. Another thing you’ll like is the idea of building your menus around A&P’s extra-thrifty weekend specials. And to make your savings complete — at A&P you can save Plead Stamps and get to choose from a wide, wide variety of fine gifts. This week — join the BIG savers ... shop A&P! D«Ucioti« Choeol Tomato Cocktail Nestis's Qsik Beednat Coffee Safaris C«Hm "«*> Berdan's lastont Caff se *- Hanfcays Chaaalato Syrup Ricfcardsos CM Hints Plaators Cocktail Paaniib Nastla Chacalata Nanais 2c aff label AnMIrS URRFpRI nalH Liptoa’s Chicken Noodle Soup CaroliRa Rica' * Lartea’o Vegetal Wessea Oil Falo TX Braaulao Maraal Tailat Tbouo Laaadrv Rlaach w*twa ANCaUrs Hold on cs A&P Strawberries “ " Potato Morsels Chas Kiag CIm, few, Chua Kiag Chow Mela Birds Eja Broca Peas Pafataat Baraaa rwiawiww iFwianB Brooaoll Spears “! Baby Lima Baaas ? Haliaa Braaa Beaas Crisco Shortening Pwro With 4« off l«b«l Salvo Detergent Tablets 2 lbs. 14 piq.of oz. pig. 24 t«bl«h Joy Liquid Detergent For Washing Dizhaz Dash Detergent Far airtamatie wathars Spic&Span Comet Cleanser Wi*h Chi«rin«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 --- * kSfeMf*—«ww*e**^l,|d4IUW'dSU< >i - - w ~j .mt <a*uxyw -^, <<0Bii.ifl|g- Scientists Find No Evidence To Back "Inferiority" Claims Book Forum these big engines." WASHINGTON. D C. - The at- used to challenge a principle Welfare noted that under the U.S. Rousseau’s "Confessions" will be Use subject of a book discus­ sion on Monday, November IB, N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Nov. 16, 1963 a 23 at 7:30 p.m., at The New York all Library events the dlscusi Public Library’s George Bruce Is open to the public free Branch. BIB W. 125th St. As with charge. said Taylor. “He had done work on Super Constellations and F- 100s in the Air Force and had received 140 hours instruction in maintenance on B-47a as a flight line mechanic. And he had com­ pleted an aircraft mechanic Jet engine course. "Yet, because of his ancestry, he was denied equal access to the kind of Job he was qualified for." Taylor notified several aircraft companies engaged in the Com­ mittee's cooperative program. Plans for Progress," of the av ailabiiity of Collins and outlined his training. HOBART TAYLOR. JR. In short order, Collins had three job offers. is handling. Ultimately, this w<l! lead to work on installation cf Company officials said Collins is a better-than-average employee and his wort could lead to a Job as a supervisor or foreman and, if he supplements his ex­ perience with further academic work, could lead to a Job as a field representative in the serv­ ice department. "It is not the Job of the Pres­ ident's Committee to place in­ dividual workers and we don’t normally do it," Mr. Taylor said. "But this young man had unique qualifications that matched open­ ings in several companies. They Just had to be matched up some ledy with opening up opportunity n American industry to all Am- ricans, regardless of race, creed, olor or national origin. Best Opportunity (way "He elected to take the one at Grumman, despite the fact it involved a long move, because of the opportunity it offered," He's Qualified Mr. Taylor said. "This young man provided jerfect case history of the kind >f discrimination and insensitive- less we encounter in our work, "He is currently uncrating and building jet engine assemblies^ and is receiving on-the-job train­ ing with respect to the engine he HE'S COMING December 1st WATCH NOV. 23 rd. EDITION. empt to use scientific evidence fundamental to our political sys­ o challenge Negro civil rights waa scored in a report published n the Journal Science. Taking note of published state­ ments on the supposed "biologi­ cal inferiority" of Negroes, a committee of the American As­ sociation for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) said: The "alleged evidence is being tem, and to Influence the outcome of the present crisis in the rota­ tions between racial groups in the United States, These allega­ tions confront the scientific com­ munity with an unavoidable chal­ lenge ...” Ne Evidence The AAAS Committee on Sci­ ence in the Promotion of Human U.S. Agents Seize 4 Four Harlemites who failed to purchase a federal gambling stamp are being held in a total of 14.000 bail for action by a Federal Grand Jury. Thoihas Spivey, 28, of 317 W. 130th St.; Canute Ferrin, 39. of 19 W.: 107th St.; William C. Adams, 36, of 200 W. 119th St., and Otis Reese, 36. of 358 W. 123rd St., were arrested last Wednesday by treasury agents in an apartment at 306 W. 120th St, and in a store across the street at 301 W. 120th St. Police also seized thousands of policy clips and B2.5OO in cash. The four men were arraigned before Commissioner Earle N. Bishop in Federal Court Constitution "all citizens are to be regarded as equally entitled to the benefits of citizenship." The committee adds, “We know of no scientific evidence which can challenge this axiomatic poli­ tical principle. The use of pur­ ported ‘scientific evidence’ to justify non-compliance with the Constitution debases both science and the human conscience." In the report, special attention is directed to attacks, using pur­ ported scientific evidence, on the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court deci­ sion on school segregation. The question before the Court was "whether separate school facili­ ties inherently lead to inequality of treatment^-’ the comm itee notes. The only scientific evidence in­ troduced in the Court’s written decision dealt "solely with the social and psychological effects of school segregation on Negro children," explains the commit­ tee. Therefore, the committee concludes, purported scientific evidence of the inferiority of the Negro "is quite irrelevant to the issue" decided by the* Court. No Evaluatioa The report also concludes that "an objective scientific evalua­ tion of inter-racial differences in our society, which imposes signi­ ficant limitations on social be­ havior on the basis of race, is almost impossible to'achieve." As with previous reports of the committee, the AAAS board of directors approved publication of this report as a contribution to the discussion of an important issue. This is done in accordance with Association policy, and with­ out passing judgment on the views expressed. Housing Forum Sat Saturday Congressman Leonard Farb- eonferer stein (D., 19th),. will exchange wm be views with Oliver Leeds, chair- w , man of Brooklyn CORE and staff „ “ members of District 65 and the Kretchn Amalgamated Clothing Workers the Har Union at the Metropolitan Council The j on Housing's Fifth annual confer- subject ence, Saturday, Nov. 16 at the housing McBurney YMCA, 215 W. 23rd within t "how tc St. Other panelists at the all-day ing." Teachers TEACHER’S SCOTCH Is bottled only In Scotland f/?e flavour is unmistakable •“TtACMER 1 SohS-C* Blended Scotch Whitky/M proof/Schiehelm & Ce„ New York M%MAWAVA».WAWA V.Ve* ENJOY "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY Golden Cream Style JUICE N IAT0 PASTE T MIX ED or CHUNK Fancy—Domestic P Grade A—Oer Finest Qiallty 888888888888888:88888 he line ■ DAIRY let 14 fl. ez. cant 1 lb. 1 ez. cant 6 ez. 10 ez. pkgs. 3 4 4 2 in. 4% ez. can 888 PO’ BUYS! SLICED AMERICAN MEL-O-BIT MM Pasteurized Process Cheese Store Cheese Imported Italian Romano Victory Cream Cheese Mild Cheddar Cheese Kratt Cheez-Whiz A&P Grated Cheese Folly-0 Ricotta Cheese Danish Bine Cheese Cottage Cheese Old F.thionad N. Y. $f.N Ch.dd.r Finart Qu.'ity b. 75,; Me J “ 27* CQ g I ot S Ik Wiiaomia Longhorn Stylo F.rteurizod trocaii i* PARMESAN— lot. ROMANO Raart akakar Quality coat. *'k1J5 Imported Pinnacle Brand I lb. J ^0 2 lb. 45* Pattauriiad cut eua •;w.v HOUSE (£« tfa/tf DRY MILK ••w.v LB. 6 Vi oz. ’ACKAGE 89 Colonna '.w.w>Wa'.wm) BREADCRUMBS ,otS>EC 25* Radi-Mix Flavored pkg. sa GRATED CHEESE 4 aa. Imparted Parmesan jar I. Blue Cheer Detergent '^32c Dahydratad ’/< 01 « pk4. 10* ’ * Tide Detergent Far the Family Wath and Dithas Trend Detergent Far Dithoi and Fine Fabrica Twin Pack Banded Together 3*. ifc wye •*- pkg.WX at. pkg. J / ■ 2 'X*39<j Orleans Dag Food Heraemeet, Meat By-Praducta and Banaiaaa Beef 2 - 45* A&P-Grade A 2 1 lb. ez. cans PPLE KERS Unsweetened NABISCO Salted er Unsalted « nmi SOFTENER coat 51 H gal. 1 lb. pbf. 1 pint 8 az. battle pt 1 ez. bet. 5. Off Label . I CRESTMONT % pi. Choice of 10 Flavoro CNt- 88: ESS: YOU NEVER PAY MORE AT A*P* *A&P’s advertised price is a fair, low price for the fine quality offered. We guaran­ tee that we will not offer for sale the same brand or item under a different name at a higher price at A&P. Such practices are deceptive and not in the public interest. BONELESS ROASTS -8$ ■ » • BRISKET Top Round Steak Top Sirloin Steak short cut-OVEN-READY ONE PRIDE ONLY! Straight Cats : Ground Beef Sure Boof gB Freshly Ground . Ground Chuck ; Chuck Fillet "Super-Right" Beef Shoulder Steak Bon. 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Mum Preserve* 2 t ♦ '£>** Bleeded Syrup 2 Pumpkin He Spice ’>6 Stuffed Queen Olive* Avocado Pears Spray Set IMS QtfAT ATLANTIC A PAQRC TEA^jg; l^arkets AMIRKA'S MPlNDABlt FOOD MIRCHANT SINCE 13S*> Freduer. and Afeahais Fire, Crisp ueb Mushrooms Sssw WWts i. 1 Pascal Celery 5s Green Peppers Criss lb. ------- Quick Fresee Sea Food!- 3 2 Oyster Stw Flousfer Flllst Haddssk Disssr Brmdsd Osd mist ^2, Howard JohoMR Fried 61mm L* Field Ripened Pumg 1, blended with select spices, gob light crust. More Jane Parker Bakery Values! Crane lead Maehl Geld Square Cake ~*45c Cinnamon Rolls S’9 “35* Glamour Bread Supplement w25‘ Oatmeal Cookies £l.X39c fresk-gromd River jev can't grt ta a eu! *MIU0W° EIGHT O'CLOCK 3*LS. BAG . .. ■■ 1J I e 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., Nov. 16, 1963 Federation Gala '■O,° lation and dub work. The "Gala” | waj in Auditor^ of Feder- Handicapped men and women ation's main building at 211 W. affiliated with Federation of the'1** *___ Handicapped's Group Work and _ Recreation Program and their Porento1 Lov« . . guests attended the Gala last When parents spoil the children Saturday evening which formally; it is the egotism of parental love, opened the fall season of recre- —Carlyle. Still the same low price same fine quality Skills Bank Recruits Negroes In All Categories-North, South, East, West The National Urban League this week Initiated Its “na­ tional skills bank” in a major step to recruit qualified Negroes fcr employment In all categories. Four regional centers, established In Atlanta, Chicago, Los Angeles and Washington will work with the headquart­ ers in New York, providing lists of qualified young men and women whose skills will be available to employers In com­ merce and Industry throughout the country. Mahlon T. Puryear, director of the project, said a quart­ er of a million throw-aways will be circulated In churches, restaurants, and “wherever Negroes congregate”, asking them to register their skills. 65 Cities The skills registration campaign will be carried out In R3 cities where the Urban League operates, as well as In other non-Urban communities, Puryear said. He said employers will be asked to make “realistic job requests”. This means that If an employer wants a man in aerod; navies he should not specify that the applicant have a Ph. b. ’degree and 20 years experience to be considered qualified for the position. Puryear explained. Certain recruitment problems In the South were dis­ cussed by the Skills Bank officers during a press conference at the Urban League offices at 14 W. 48th St. Puryear said mast Southern colleges do not maintain placement pro­ grams, but Indicated that with the Increasing trend to­ ward a revision of hiring policies, “Negro schools will have to take another look at employment”. Puryear asserted It is not always true when prospective employers claim they could not find a qualified applicant for a Southern colleges.’’ certain job Reservoir of 3,000 “Do not go to the South and say you qualified Negroes, but say you could not Negroes. They just do not want to work In the North,” said the Skills Bank director. Under the program just initiated by the League, it Is hoped that a reservoir of upward of 3,000 highly qualified workers will be readily available for future employment. In addition to craftsmen and technicians, these will include clerical and related workers, professional ad semi-profes­ sional persons; candidates for apprenticeship and similar trgOTfTnc programs and candidates for on-the-job and other management-sponsored training activities. - A field representative of the bank, assigned to Washing­ ton, will provide a direct liaison with Federal officials who have the responsibility for employment and fair employ­ ment Implementation, according to the project director. The Rockefeller Brothers Fund aided the creation of the skills bank with a grant of >100,000. . Assisting Puryear in tt^e New Ydrfc office will be Adolph Holmes. The four regional, or field representatives, are Her­ man W. Sweatt, Atlanta, Oa., James E. Johnson, Washing­ ton, D.C., W. Hampton McKinney III, Chicago, 111. and Den­ nis D. Nelson. Hollywood, Calif. Two aides In the New York office are Mrs. Ruth Allen King, administrative assistant, and Mrs. Betty Ford, secre­ ___ tary. W1NTE Funded Weis*** SKILLS FOR SALE — Director Mahlon T. Puryear, center, of the National Urban League’s newly created “National Skills Bank"' which is looking for Negroes with skills for sale, holds conference with key mem­ bers of the bank's staff. Left t» right: Herman M. Sweatt, Aid representative, Atlanta; Mrs. Betty Ford, secretary NUL, Dennis D. Nelson, Cal­ ifornia; Adolph Holmes, assist­ ant director; Mr. Puryear; Mrs. Ruth Allen King, administra­ tive assistant; W. Hampton Mc­ Kinney III, Chicago representa­ tive, and James E. John­ son, Washington representative. (Gilbert Photo Next week it could Jo Meets 2 Queens Princess Queen Elizabeth H, the Queen < Mother and the Princess Mar- , garet received Josephine Baker, i the internationally celebrated singer, privately at the Court of i St. James, on Tuesday at Buck- . Ingham Palace, London. It mark- - ed the first time a Negro ar­ tist has been so honored in a non-performing capacity. Miss Baker, who at 60. re­ cently scored a phenomenal tri-; umph at New York's Car negie Hall when she appeared, after an absence of twelve years, in a gala Civil Rights benefit concert to a standing - room * only audience. • According to Henri Ghent, Miss Baker's press representative in the U. S., extensive negotiations are underway to launch her on a national tour this winter. Langston Hughes Book Raising Education Funds Drawings At Hgts. Branch Drawings and paintings on Af­ rican themes are currently on iv'ew in the Washington Heights Branch cf The New York Public library, 1000 St. Nicholas Av- ienue. All cf the items exhibited are the work of Elton Fax, illustrator, muralist, and author. A recent book by Mr. Fax entitled “West African Vignettes,” records the author - artist’s observations of a trip to Africa. The free exhibition will remain on view through December 1, and can be seen by the public Mondays through Thursdays un­ til 9 p m., and until 6 p.m. on Fridays. • Sandy Townsend 58 W. 119th St.. Apt. 5E Henrietta Marshall 49 W. 117 Street Gertie Euvell 128 W. 117th St Announcement was made by Herschel Alt, executive vice-Pres- ident of the. Jewish Board of Guardians, of the appointment of Herbert H. Rummel as Associate Director of Administrative Serv­ ices for the agency. There’s something for YOU on every page of this tssoe of The Amsterdam News. Check and see —every week. Out every Thurs- LOW PRICES Ella Kroupe 584 Bainbridge St BOOKER Ti DAUGHTER -=* Mrs. Portia Washington Pitt_*C man, daughter of the famour edueator, is flanked by Lu<3a; Hawkins, soprano, and Lt. Rob­ ert Lyons of Red Shield Critter. Salvation Army, at reoent monthly birthday celebration• held.at the Center. 224 W. lMth St. (Gilbert Photo). ----------------------------------- 51 ranged for them by Brigadier B. Barton McIntyre, executive director of the center. The next event slated at the Center will be the annual bazaar on Dec. 6-7 featuring art-craft by members of the Center. , VV TO THE V’SJI Headquarters far Da-H-YaarseH Materials. Free Advice aad Idem ♦o Purchasers of: Plywood. Peaboard, Wall Tile, Glue, Windows, boars, Cornice Material, Bed Beards, Formica, Mouldings, Nails, Ceiling Tile. LUMBEB CUT TO SIZE WEST LUMBER CO 126 STREET A MOBNINGSIDE AVE. N. Y. C MO 2-4220 1 Free Delivery Reasonable Prices Sugar Cured Hams & Bacon Finest Pork and Pure Lard Now YoAur FINAST STORES Your Taste Con Tell The Difference ... If It's ENGELHORN'S EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER with Instant Chlorine Bleach FOOD STORES IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD Beech-Nut Coffee No-Key Cm 65 CHICKEN NOODLE UPTON SOUP MIXES Tomofo Vegetable AteuJ from AJAX All Purpose Liquid Cleanei with AMMONIA SUPERFINE PEAS A CARROTS 3-oz. con 2 for 23c IUCKIVC HAS NEW HEAVY DUTY FORMULA Clton CRor Through-Thqt's A FAB WASH SUPER COOLA CAN SODAS 3/25c fat PALMOLIVE PALMOLIVE I OCTAGON Beauty Creams ! pwvwwwwwwwv" AUNl)RY SOAP wh,,°while Beauty Creams - Beauty Cleans Beauty Cleans vntfhSSkx™-* 10c s Moses Walker, Jr. 509 18th St. Marie Starks 306 W. Kinney St You can be a PAYDAY Winner, The contest is still running. Listen to Pet Milk Showcase for details Start cooking with a golden spoon ... Start cooking with PET. 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 --- 28 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Nov. 16, 1963 LIFE MEMBERS — Leslie B. Metropolitan Realty Associates Kahn and Murray I. Zarin of are shown presenting a $500 check for a life membership in the NAACP to Earl G. Graves, 3rd from left, a member of the board of directors of the Brook­ lyn braach NAACP, and Helena Emory, "Miss Brooklyn NAACP, 1963.’’ (Merritt Photo! I Dinner Honors 10 Who Fought Malverne Bias - - ' A dinner to honor ten school desegregation pe­ titioners in Malverne, L. I. was the occasion for a , plea for Negro unity and preparedness to meet oij- eoming civil rights battles. The dinner wan held by the ' Lakeview, L.I., NAACP, at the court against the order and its I Valley Stream Park Ian. Valley judgement la awaited. Among the stream Thursday, Nov. 7, Pria- children who petitioned' were: j etp«l speaker. Attorney J awn Janaie McCray. Alien McCray. 'Sandifer, warned there waa a Brian Merrday, Patricia Mitchell, Vote tough fight ahead and that Ne- Clifford Hayes and Claudia groes could not depend on whites Trent. Ito carry the ball for them. Generation Mr. Sandifer noted that one of Above all, asserted Sandifer, the children had passed through NAACP State Conference Legal grade to junior high school, and Redress chairman, "we have to told his audience they must not get out and vote and let these let another generation of children people know we have a voice.” pass through school with inferior Everyone was needed to Join the educational opportunities, fight for equal rights, be added. One of the boys had said ba Two years ago last June the wanted to be a doctor, but to be Lakeview NAACP filed a suit able to achieve his ambition be i before State Education Commis- would have to get better educa- sioner Dr. James E. Allen, JrJtion than what the segregated in behalf of ten children attending schools afforded, it was observed. Woodfield Road School, Malverne. Another speaker was Miss June In June this year Dr. Allen or- Shagaloff, education assistant at dered Malverne school district the national NAACP office. Din- 12 to implement the Princeton ner chairman was Mrs. Odessa Mitchell with Mrs. Lucie Parker Plan. But a segregationist group, as co-chairman. President of the T.A.P. of Malverne and Lynbrook Lakeview NAACP is Floyd H. appealed to the Albany supreme Hazel. NAACP — Labor Awards: Brooklyn NAACP made four awards to labor unions at its 3rd Annual Better Relations labor award dinner, at the Ho­ tel Bossert, Nov. 7. First place Cleaver Wielder Cleaves To Life winner was the Board of Edu­ cation Local 372. State. County and Municipal Employees. AFL • CIO. Seen, left to right are: Goodman Kerstein, pres­ ent president; Harry Gray, or­ ganizer and first president; Warren Bunn, Brooklyn NAA­ CP president. Mrs. Lucille Rose secretary and Thomas Fauntle- roy, chairman of the labor and industry committee of the NAACP, JU8TEB1NI bed by other officers at Sutter Ave. and Watkins St., some four blocks away. The others not J&B rare scotch whisky S I ^niesmopBihcost VlofWs apart in quality A burglary suspect who alleg­ edly attacked a suddenly-arriv­ ed policeman with a meat clea­ ver was, repotted still in criti- caL'gootjition at Kings County Hospital this week where two of the cop's bullets were removed from his stomach. Patrolman Andrew Frsggetta. 34, of the Liberty Ave. station, was attracted to Jhe Reitman Public Market. 46 Beimon Ave., near Osborn St., by the curious sight of a dozen desert pies neat­ ly lined up on the sidewalk out­ side the market’s smashed door — which had been Just recently boarded up following an earlier burglery attempt. Fragetta entered the darkened premises with flashlight and drawn gun. Perceiving nothing in the darkness he ordered who­ ever was present to "come on out.” At that moment, according to police, a figure sprang from the shadows toward the cop wield­ ing a meat cleaver. Fragetta fir­ ed twice hitting the man in the stomach. The suspect, identified as Charles Mason, 24, of 41 Ma­ son Ave., Bklyn., continued past the cop, however, and was nab­ NCCJ Stages Institute The Fourth Annual Institute on "Rearing Children Of Good Will” I is being planned by the Women’s Division of the Queens Region of the National Conference of Christ­ ians and Jews, it was announced by Mrs. Count (Catherine) Basie ! of St. Albans, chairman. The one- I day institute will be held on Tues- I day, November 26 at the Top of the Fair Restaurant 9:00 A.M. ' to 2:45 P.M. Mrs. Basie stated that the in­ stitute is inteoded to involve members of PTAs, PAs, mothers’, clubs, community councils, wom­ en's organizations, educational end i religious institutions, civic groups' and men and women who are! Interested in and responsible for the guidance and direction of | children. She further added thatl thia project is “a one day learn­ ing experience in how we might best immunize our children! against the prejudice and bigotry which too often contaminate our I society". The theme of the 19631 Institute will be "Tools and Tech­ niques for Rearing Children ofj , Good Will in the Home, School and Community ’ The program will feature a keynote presentation by Dr. Mir- . lam M Reinhart of Bridgewater! , State College, Bridgewater. Mass. Dr. Reinhart was Director of the NCCJ National Institute on Rear­ ing Children of Good Will held , in July at Radnor. Pa. u hoof sums scotqi wsisit • mt n MOVING AND STORAGE, INC WAREHOUSE FACILITIES - PACKING - CRATING • SNIPPING Jamaica * Trinidad - Barbados - Bahamas i Following Dr. Reinhart's pres- . entgtion a panel of high school , students will give their reactions , to the keynote address and the I Institute theme. The students ere . officers of the Queens Regional 44 46 Rockaway Ave. IN 2-2708 - 9 SL 6-9505 - 6 AT OUR NEW CARPET DEPARTMENTS FABULOUS BROADLOOM BUYS RAYON VISCOSE RUGS- eem Tweed colors «< opprox. 9x12 li MOSAIC X’ 39 ASBESTOS Tile 7c Vinyl linoleum 66c linoleum RUGS,,,2 3 al Church heads the Hempstead I Neighbors* Committee. The group I Rev. St Clair charged, was mak- I ing restrictive covenants and gen- I tlemen’s agreements for the pur- I pose of keeping Negroes and I other minorities out of their res- I identlal ares. “The committee’s charges of 1 block • busting and panic selling 1 against the local real estate brok­ ers is nothing more than a farce and a smoke screen,” the Negro | pastor stated. —y-------------- j “Their real motives and Inten­ tions are to keep Negroes from moving into the community and to restrict, contain and fence In­ to certain sections, those already living in the village,” said Rev. St. Clair, who earlier made the charges from the pulpit of his I church. I Denying the charges Rev. Ran- j goon told the Amsterdam News | 3 ROOMS KCOCATM HWHTUK Piece Group 3 rooms complete 2.50 weekly ncluding bedroom, living room, dinette, mattress & box spring,' lamps, tables, 9x12 rug, bed ^tis^ros, jiliows, etc., etc., etc. I Tuesday, that the apparent dis- agreement must be due to misun- 1 derstanding. His group was com­ mitted to integration and not a segregated community, he said, i He pointed out that the Com- .mittee wanted equal opportunity “ for an and not the creation of ghettos. His church was 80 per ’ cent white and 20 per cent Negro jhe noted, while Rev. St. Clair's ROCHDALE RALLY — A ral­ ly in support of the Rochdale Village, Queens, demonstra- atration group has been billed for Sunday Nov. 17 at St. Al­ /church was segregated. “Oct concern is not to make Hempstead a segregated com- I muuity,” Rev. Rangoon saM. ("With the new housing laws non- I. whites should be trying to get in- E to other white areas to make the C whole of Long Island integrated, instead of causing pockets of aeg- hregation.” i Housing Is “the first line” of integration, the white pastor not­ ed. There are many opportunities .for non - whites In other areas I which they can integrate, instead . of creating new ghettos. , Irving Rappaport, manager of the Forth Avenue Realty Corp- I oration of Soufh Franklin St., ItHempstead, said the charge of Ijblock - busting was not true. He I) had asked Rev. Rangoon to in- I vite him and other brokers to the I) Committee’s meetings and mem- Ijbership but had not been asked Ito join, Rappaport said. HERBERT EVANS Consumer Frauds Talk bans Plaza, Linden Blvd. and 190th St. Here principals of the rally look over the program. Left to right: Merle Stewart, Mrs. Gladys Harrington of Man­ hattan CORE, Hal Jackson, the Dr. Jive aof WWRL and Her­ man Ferguson, chairman of the Rochdale Movement. (Gill Photo) EvansSpeaks At Concord Mayor OK's Park Land The Unity Democratic Club will been the traditional happ offer a program on Consumer ing grounds for all of the Frauds, consisting of six bi- ?d “sharpies” and “fast- monthly sessions designed to "fast-buck boys” with hig supply residents of Brooklyn's merchandise to sell on 17th Assembly District, where the The first step in warning club is located, with a knowledge tie against these char act of the bais principles and under- inform them. We intend. standing of everyday law and business practices. The sessions will commence in the letter part of November. 1963, and will be held at the club's headquarters, 1108 Bergen Street, on a week- day evening starting at 6:30 p.m. Exact dates will be announced later. Au outstanding group of prac­ ticing attorneys, from all parts of Brooklyn, has been recruited to conduct the program. These at­ torneys have volunteered thetr time, money, knowledge and ex­ perience on a non • partisan bas­ is. Gilbert A. Bond will act as chairman. A statement issued by Mr. Bond on behalf of all participating lawyers, noted that ‘‘neighbor­ hoods occupied predominantly by Negroes and Puerto Ricans have minutes This will be followed by a question and answer period from the audience. Each session win have a moderator The public Is invited. Admis­ sion is free. The followtag attorneys wll! Lecture on these subjects: Conditional Sales Contracts (Buying a ear or TV set), Gilbert A. Bond; Door-to-Door Salesmen (Tricks, Gimmicks and Frauds), Ray Williams; Judgments and Garnishments, Leo Darzy; What you can expect in Court. Quentin Vaughan; Mortgages. George D. Brooks; Business Sense and War ranties, Stanley Leyden. tions. Business Enterprises, Com­ munications and PubBc Relations, Unions, Civil Service Job Op­ portunities, Science and Techni­ cal Positions and the Vocational Trades. Participating in each workshop will be Negrops who have attained prominence In the specific fields being considered. The Clinic will outline to the youths of Bedford-Stuyvesant the job opportunities available in an effort to encourage them to com­ plete their education and qualify for these positions. Sluggish- Catching Cold? Doctors prescribe the citrus fruit laxative CITRATE OF MAGNESIA xftx. Fast Refief of oven mouittncf CHRISTMAS TOURS Kingston - Trinidad Barbados DECEMBER 14-21 BOOK NOW To insure Your Christmas With Your Relatives ST 3-43M ST 3-4338 Alabama Court nunT 1X10 111 Ruling Favors Dad's Death N&aro Minister A ’7^r-°w *»«***« iwwgiu fWlllliaiOl ROUght by Brooklyn police this MONTGOMERY - The con- ^1 rtahblnf of victlon of the Rev. James S. h ’ s P|jl?ther dunng “ fam‘ Phifer on charges of blocking . „ . . „ last week by the Alabama Court hassle *" of Appeals hours Sun- day w th Donus Smith, 58, at The court ruled that evidence Smith a apartment at 52 Pulaski was not sufficient to convict the minister who was fined 1100 and During the scuffle, police quot- senteaced to 180 days to Jail af- witnesses as saying, the older ter Ms arrest on April 4, 1»2 man pulled a pair of scissors and The Rev. Phifer was arrested Hail retaliated, taking up a knife along with the Rev. Fred Shut- aod stabbing him in the cheat, tlesworth with whom he waa talk- Detective Charles DiPiazza of ing during the boycott of down- the Gates Ave. station is assign- town stores. cd to the Investigation. on which several apartment build­ ings are now under construction The maps establish Bay side and Ocean front park areas, sep­ arated by Rockaway Point Boul­ evard and lying within the ter­ ritory bounded/ roughly, by Beach 184th Street, Bayside Drive, Rockaway Inlet (Jamaica Ray), Beach 201st Street, the Atlantic Ocean and Fort Tilden. ADMISSION met Brooklyn's Biggest BAZAAR Sponsored by the JEWISH CHRONIC DISEASE HOSPITAL hot. Bodford 6 Rogers Ave. wearing opporol • toys • furniture • groceries e household I electrical appliance* rtrt VALUABLE rtrt UU PRIZES UU c 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 --- Ac® M • N. 1. AitlbiEKDAM NE*V3, Sat., Nov. 16, 1963 1 1 5 HY 3-8200 Weekly News Brooklyn / nit\ l uiicnil llomeZ 1 1406 Pitkin Ave Evelyn Wilson .Evelyn Wilson, 49. of ll-A Rad-the Rev O S Wilkinson, minis- de Place, Bklyn, died recently ter of the Institutional Baptist in Brooklyn State Hospital. Her Church. remains were shipped for burial! Miss Wilson is survived by a 3o,her native Virginia following* sister. Mi's Elsie Faison, a step. father, E. Morgan, and brother- j rites at Unity Parkway Chapel. I 1406 Pitkin Ave., conducted by in law, William Faison. Margaret Valentine Margaret Valentine, 1035 Hal-19 grandchildren, a brother. John- I aey St., Bklyn., a native of Pri-nie Lee, and three sisters, Mat- •vrtburg, Va., died recently in SlPtie Wilkerson, Virginia Brown and John's Episcopal Hospital at the Rose Lester. age of 47. j The remains were transported She is survived by her hus-;to burial in Petersburg, Va., aft- band, William Valentine, two er services at Unity Parkway sons, William Jr. and Roy; and Chapel, 1406 Pitkin Ave., conduct- * twe daughters. Rose Wynn and ed by the Rev. C. Jordan, Beu- Gloria Butler. Also surviving pre lah Gospel Tabernacle, Bklyn. 4k Dr. Kennedy Does 1-Man Reading At B'klyn Col. .In Gershwin AudMorippi, Brooklyn College, Dr. James S. Kennedy, presented by the In­ terpretative Readera* Workshop and the Department of Speech and Theater, did a special read­ ing. a 'one-man interpretation* of Othello. Oct. 90. A near-capa­ city audience witnessed this unique program and applauded enthusiastically at the comple­ tion of the program. Already Dr. Kennedy has been asked to re­ peat the program in the Gersh­ win Auditorium nt a date to- bo announced This particular kind of program had never been presented in 'the metropolitan New York area. • MORE SUPPORT — For the Jamaica NAACP and Long Is­ land CORE is shown with con­ tribution being presented by the Triboro Civil. Rights Com­ mittee members, 1-r, Hexton Harden, Joseph Livingston, Na- ACP, education committee chairman; Joel Manuel, chair­ man TCRC, Connie Carr, exec, secy. L.I. CORE, George Barkley, Ed Harding. Contribu­ tion was made during TCRS's first benefit dance and show Nov. 3. at the St. Albans Ph DR. KENNEDY In Brooklyn Symposium In Puerto Rico News Of Churches The diverse and interesting ‘-'background of Dr. Kennedy serves as proof of the stimula- . ting experience that lies ahead for all those persons who missed this first presentation of Othello but who plan to attend the next performance. During the beat poetry and Jazz phase of four years ago. the Kennedy-Edwards duo with their act. 'Poetry and Jazz', ap­ peared throughout the East and West Coast. Canada, and Mex ico. This act used modern poetry as well as Shakespeare with a Jazx background. For the past five years Dr. Kennedy has maintained his own professional troop — The Scott Kennedy Play­ ers — a grou|> dedicated to the improvisational theater. Kennedy h>« studied theater and perform ed'ta the United States as well a| abroad. He has also been coach for singltg stars who have worked on Broad-, emjr, the movies, television, ppera He is also noted as eOmposer, actor and director. J-Or Kennedy is a member of the Speech and Theater Depart- ttbt of Brooklyn College and is <be Director of The Interprets five Readers' Workshop The symposium is a privately sponsored convocation of experts television industry at the second Inter - American Symposium m Puerto Rice Nov. 9-14. ____ St Philip s St. Philip’s P.E. Church an- rual bazaar which opened Wed­ nesday features a concert, Thurs Nov. 14 at 8 p.m. In the Parish is representing the United States group 15 CruMder • GmW' in various fields of thought—art. literature, drama, sociology and political science,-^among others. Eustace Harewood chairman Concert artists appearing in­ clude. Mrs. Lucia Hawkins, ly- Mre. Enid Hinds, srpose is to foster a cloaer ric soprano tanding among the West- Hemisphere's leaden of mezzo soprano and Emanuel Ma tin, bass baritone. "" »] thought. Among the delegates from the United States, in addition io Yates, are Lillian Heilman, Rbd- man Rockefeller, James Baldwin, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Gore Vidal, and Edward Albee Friday Nov. 15, the “Autumn Roy ale” will he spiced with homecooked dinners available, 6- 10 p.m., general selling, 8-11 p.m. and young peoples' dance. 8 a m. to 1 a m. Saturday events include general selling. 6-11 pun. Young Pastor Inherited A Discordant Church By SIMON ANEKWE The pastor of Ebenerer Baptist Church of Flush­ ing, the second oldest Negro church in Queens, is a young man just about the age of Christ at crucifixion. Rev. Timothy P. Mitchell was bora In Queens in 1990. the year hia father began to pastor Eben- oser. an offahoot of Brooklyn's Concord Baptist Church now 93 years old. He has been pastor only two years but has shown a deep personal belief In the gos­ pel message and an equally deep commitment to the ministry One oi six children of Rev Concord within the congrega tion. In his two years the mem­ bership leaped from 500 to 700. Rev. Mitchell was asked to what he ascribed thia increase He began with evident reluc­ tance. The rise in numbers, •xplaioed, was probably due to the emphasis on evaggelical preaching which impressed thou present with the need for person­ al commitment to Jesus Christ James. B. Mitchell, pastor of that church from 1990 to 1947, the younger man went to Hart ford Seminary. Conn, after fin­ ishing Flushing High School and Queans College. “I think it is beenue people feel when you’re sincere. When he believes what he preachs, means what he says, the peo­ ple feel the guy is for real”, Rev. Mitchell uid. Other elements in Ebenezer. where he received bap- the luccesa formula were dis In 1957 he was ordained at tism and his call to the minis­ try. Officiating was his predeces­ sor. Rev. V. W. Clanton But he went back to Hartford to pastor Hopewell Baptist Church. It was his first charge and he brought to it ail the warmth, idealism and optimism of a young minister. The church was all Negro, situated In a col­ ony of immigrants from south west Georgia. There he came up against the realities of life, discovering, as he put it. that "many times In American culture, the Christan is a moral man in an tmnroral society, so he has to be as wise as a serpent.” When he left Hopewell, Rev. Mitchell was giv en the key of the city of Hart­ ford His next charge was Ebenezer, assumed in 1961. He met a con gregation where the chord of har­ mony had been broken and the physical edifice stood badly in need of renovation. In two months the church was entirely renovated. Now he is In the midst of a building program to renew the structure, expand the sanctuary and add Christian education facilities. He had. Concord of course. restored ceraed He put emphasis on Christian ministry, keyed the curriculum of the Sunday school to some re­ quirements of secular schools and spiced the Christian education week program Spiritual Beyond the spiritual and in­ tellectual appeals of his minis­ try, there was his concern for material needs of people. This involved real life situations. Children have been sent to summer camp with the church paying their way. There la help for those sick or in trouble. And he has involve! not only him­ self but his church through the Benevolent Fund Society. A militant fighter for civil rights. Rev. Mitchell was one of 7$ ministers who rallied around Rev. Martin Luther King and got arrested and jailed in Albany, Ga., the summer of 1962. Last summer he was arrested at the Rochdale Village demonstrations in Queens. He had "commuted dally from Flushing to Jamaica” to Join the Rochdale pickets because, he stated, “There was not enough Baptist representation at the demonstrations.” The defeat of Rev. Robert D. Sherard - in Last week’s Queens race for councilman-at- large, said Rev, Mite bed. has made him decide to involve him­ self further and work with others for Negro unity in Queens. Free We have got to be free.” he so "we must think col­ ored. We enn no longer depend on the paternalistic treatment of the whites: we must assume the stance of manhood and' the re­ sponsibility that goes with It.'* In 1957 Rev. Mitchell married the former Judith Lawrence of Corona whom he met at Queens College A nurse by profession. is now a "very helpful" housewife Their children are Magdalena 5, and Timothy Em- 4. CHARLES VAUGHAN Charles Vaughan Is Dead Charles H. Vaughan, Brooklyn- Long Island, realtor, builder and insurance broker for more than 30 years, died recently at his home In Brooklyn. He remains were buried in Cypress Hills Cemetery after services at the Nazareoe Congregational Church. Mr. Vaughan, born in Brook­ lyn January 4, 1905, served dur­ ing World War II as a deputy commissioner of the Office of Price Administration. During the 1930's he organised an evening secretarial school. Mr. Vaughn, a member of the Long Island Home Builders* Institute, was a graduate of New York University with a degree in accounting. He was also a mem­ ber of the Bedford Stuyvesant Real Estate Board, the Brook­ lyn Insurance Brokers Associa­ tion and the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity. He is survived by his widow. Margaret, a brother Albert, and two nieces. Norma Jackson and Doris Vaughan. Medical Record Librarians Meet Dwight Dixon, formerly of Ja­ maica. West Indies, who Is now a medical record librarian at the Jewish Chronic Disease Hospital in Brooklyn, was among the many medical record specialists sponsored conference of their col­ leagues In Chicago recently. The medical records pursuit was pointed to as a rspMty ex­ panding one which offers oppor- nities to young men and wo­ men with clerical while baby contest is on Sunday, at 3 p.m. Siloam Bedford - Stuyvesant's Siloam Presbyterian Church and the Un­ ion Presbyterian Church of Bay- ridge will have a pulpit ex­ change Sunday Nov. 17. Rev. Mil­ ton A. Galamison is pastor of Siloam and Rev. George C. Boo- Dell, Union's. Members of both churches dis­ cussed common problems and goals Oct. 22, and will exchange visits in December. Bereaa Berean Baptist Church, 1641 Bergen St. celebrated Its 113th anniversary Oct. 27 - Nov. 3 cap­ ping' ’it with church family night program, Nov. 4. The church will be guests at Bethllte B.C. men’s day Nov. 17. Rev. Hylton James is Berean pastor. Council The first of Brooklyn Protes­ tant Council's three "Seminars Tor Adult Leaders of Youth” was billed for Thursday Nov. 14. at the Division offices. 30 Third Ave. Subsequent seminars will be held Jan. 16 and April 16. Blshwick It was a "Great Day of Metho­ dist Singing*' at 4 p.m. last Sun­ day at Busbwick Avenue Metho­ dist Church, Brooklyn, where the pastor. Rev. Charles W. Lee preached on "The inner life” at morning worship. The Fall Assembly of the Queens Federation of Churches will be held Monday Nov. 18 at the First Presbyterian Church of EastWilliamsburgh In Ridgewood, 62-85 90th Place, at 8 p.m. The church is celebrating its 100th anniversary and the ecu­ menical meeting will be part of the observance. The Rev. Gor­ don C. Gravenor, pastor, will * lead the opening warship service and bring a message. The as­ sembly wfl] also be the Federa­ tion's annual meeting. Fellowship The Baptist Ministers Fellow­ ship of Queens. Nassau and Suf­ folk counties observed the 100th anniversary of the signing of he Emancipation Proclamation. Nov. 13, The program held at Amity Baptist Church, had Rev. Vernon Johns cipal speaker. Rev. James R Moore, pastor of AJRKy, b Fel lowshlp president. Alien The Progresrive Circle Club of Allen AM E Church, 106-41 1«0th 3t„ Jamaica, held Its anniver­ sary service Sunday Nov. 10 at 11 a m. with the pastor. Rev. Emmer Henri Booker preach­ ing. On Friday Nov. 15. the Com­ munity Circle Club of the church honors Miss Helen E. Jackson with an appreciation dinner for long and faithful service as club secretary. Mrs. Ida Phillip is president Bethany Bethany Baptist Church, 116- 47 W 157th St.. Jamaica. Is in the process of calling a minister to replace the late Rev. A. TB. Bingham. The Gospel Chorus of the church held its anniversary program Nov. 10 at 8 p.m. Presi­ dent la Mrs. Erma Smith. TV on the Mink? —check your Yellow Pages and call a tele­ vision repairman. ® New York Telephone FOR BETTER LIVING — Ew­ art Guinier, centre, chairman of the Jamaica Corrdtnating Council, congratulates P. Fred Meschutt. personnel chief of the N. Y. Telephone Co. who In his address on "Education - Jobs and Better Community Living”, asserted his company's y's no-bias Job policy Occasion waf the Council's 2nd annual conference on "Better Commu­ nity Living” held recently. Oth­ ers are. 1-r Mrs. Minnie Pal- more, Mrs. Mas Hatch, rice chairman and William H. Totes. Queens Urban League director and conference coor­ dinator. (Gill Photo) BROOKLYN SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE EVELYN IAYT0N, Director No High School Diploma Necessary BAY CLASSES 10 nun. to 5 nj EVDNNG CLASSES 7 pun- to II 1190 St. Jehns Msce, Brooklyn 13, N. Y. PR 8-5748 Brooklyn-L. I Church Services YOUR GUIDE TO BAPTIST BETHEL BAPTIST CHURCH ■ l«W teraaL Braekl,* IT. N. T. 1b la Worship and ga sot t* Saro” W. J. BALL. FwWr THIS SUNDAY 8:44 A M. - REV. P. T. PRt DEN • M A.M. - CHI NCH SCHOOL ties a.m. - service rev. w. /. hall T:M P.M. - EVENING SO VICK EVERY THIRD SUNDAY. HOLY COMMUNION Candle Ltfht Service A Altar Prajvr PL HOLY TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH R. t. A a, Mi o. a. THIS SUNDAY Bar. T. R. 4-44 A.M 14:44 A M 444 PJt -B.T.U. FTaaMM Ave ST. JOHN'S IAPT1ST CHUICH SL fWanr Barataea AraJ N. Y. aad Fi r. THIS SUNDAY AJd.—SUNDAY 11:41 A.M. -SUNDAY _____ WEDNESDAY, I Sa PM— PRAYER “ 7 P M - ROLY OOMMUMMM. 1ST SUNDAY BAPTIST = CORNERSTONE BAPTIST CHURCH Lewie Avene tea THE REVEREND SANDY V. BAT THIS SUNDAY MENS DAY 4:44 A M. - SUNDAY SCHOOL Ui44 AJd. — MORNING WORSHIP • 00 P.M. - BAPTIST TRAINING UNION PRESBYTERIAN SILOAM PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH B Mar*, Am. ____ RBY. BSL MILTON A. M. r. THIS SUNDAY 4:44 A.M -WORSHIP SERVICE 4:44 AM-YOUNG ADULTS CKURCR SCHOOL ta.aa A M —CHURCH SCHOOL 1114 A.M —WORSHIP SERVICE METHODIST NEWMAN MEMORIAL METHODIST CHURCH R. Y. Strart (Near Thron,) REV. HENRY M. DBAS. PASTOR THIS SUNDAY “MYTM ARD REAUTY IN OUR PATTR TOOAY" U:S4 A M. — MORN1NO WORSHIP. REV. DMAS 4:44 P.M. — MEN'S STEWARD'S - PRR TRANRROIV1NO TRA FIRST A.M.E. ZION CHURCH N. O. C4 THIS SUNDAY 4:44 A M.—SUNDAY SCHOOL 14 44 A M.—JUNIOR CHURCH li d# A M —MORNING WORSHIT 1:S4 P.M—EXTRNDOT SUNDAY SCHOOL 4:44 P M—EVENING WORSHIP In time of need, come to Unity Parkway Chapel, where you can get expert. funeral direction and every modem facility at a budget to suit every purse. Brooklyn Funeral Hornet •—---- -FT Hyacinth 3-8200 * 1406 PITKIN AVENUE * * at Eastern Parkway & Ralph Avenue BROOKLYN, N. Y. "Your Loved Ones Deserve The Best" 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 --- W estchester Wandering By CHESTER WEST Back From Calif. Grant Reynolds Jusf returned from a GOP Jaunt to California . . . Sorry to hear about the ill­ ness of Mrs. Oscar Graves . . . The Robinson Twins’ Mae is on the Board of the Westchester Co­ ordinating Committee for Justice Now . . . The Women’s Civic Club of Nepperhan honored their founder. Mrs. Cora Ross, for 35 years of service and 7 other girls; Mrs. Lucille Whitney, Mrs. Lu­ cille Yeldell, Mrs. Marie Fields, Mrs. Helen Howell, Mrs. Elwilda Hageman, Mrs. Maude Cooke, and Mrs. Evelina Bookman at Steve Philips' Restaurant. Mrs. Bessie Harden Payne, pre­ sident of Empire State Federa­ tion of Women's Clubs was the guest speaker . . . Yonkers' first Negro engineer in city government, the late Ar­ thur Giddings, certainly has left some go - getters to preserve the family name. Schoolteacher Cur­ tis spearheads a new Yonkers chapter of CORE, Arthur is tak­ ing a rest from real estate and has opened “A.T.’s", a restau­ rant and bar in Nepperhan, and fireman George is treasurer of the Yonkers Fair Housing Com­ mittee. Dad must be proud . . . Don’t miss the White Plains Student Aid Society. Inc., 30th Anniversary banquet, Noy. 21st at Scarsdale's Holiday Inn. Guest speaker is Mrs. Marie Stewart, Aast. to N.Y. Welfare Comm. James Dumpson. President is Mrs. James Gibaon and Mrs. Ma­ mie Haynes is chairman of the affair . . . We mentioned the Westchester Committee for Justice Now but did you know about their latest project? They're sending cloth­ ing to the Students Non-violent Coordinating Committee and have started a fund - raising drive to provide a car for SNCC workers in their voter registra­ tion activities in Mississippi. Is it an armored car? . . . By-the-way, they’re asking you to donate trad­ ing stamps, too, for the cause . .. Clinical social worker Hunter B. Watson was named “Em­ ployee of the Year" at the Annu­ al Employees Awards Day Prog­ ram of the Franklin Delano Roos­ evelt Veterans Administration Hospital at Montrose . . . Nurse JoAnn Futrell can make her pa­ tients forget their aches and pains. She won a trophy in Miss Photogenic Beauty Contest recent­ ly and is one of Dorothea Towles' Charm School grads . . . Linda Bullock gave a party for her twin brothers, Terry and Jerry Smythe. Joe Murphy, Fran­ kie Hurd, Curtis Rowe, Johnny Brickhouse, Fay Booker, Patricia Holder and another set of twins,, Len and Glenn Robinson were among the Junior High Schoolers helping with the fun ... New pastor at Mr. Lebanon Baptist Church, Peekskill, is Rev. L. N. « Yarber ... Dem. Committeeman Percy Peterson is looking for some 'qualified' people . . . Rev. G. F. Wiggins is one of the Peekskill strategists seeking to integrate the local Volunteer Fire Depart­ ment . 32e N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Nov. 16, 1963 Cl umS ^narhfi ueeftJ ance 1 ■V * 1 TV f Ihl , I. ? ' 'v oF,' I1 it n * c, lb N- . ___ & It was an evening to be re­ membered when the New York chapier of Chums. Inc. enter­ tained their many guests at their Anneal Scholarship Dance at the Hillside House in Queens Villagf, Long Island. During the evening the annual presentation to the United Negro College Fund was made by the Chapter President, Mrs. Gloria Brown of New Rochelle. N. Y„ to the representative from the United Negro College Fund. Mrs. Bynum. This group of business and professional women from all of the boroughs of New York City, Nassau and Westchester Counties, has endeavored, since their initial installation in this area, to promote better social, civic, and cultural relations with­ in the general community. They have contributed to many worthy NKW YORK CHAPTER OF CHUMS — Following are the members shown above of the N. Y. Chapter of Chums Inc., who entertained in Queens re­ cently: Front Row: Josephine Maxwell, Elizabeth Mack, Ruth Hemphill, Gloria Brown, Mar­ tha Copeland, Constance Win- ters, Adelaide Sniekis. Second Row: Hattie Lewis. Ida Will­ iams, Lorraine Johnson, Marie Perrault, Mary Countee and Josephine Allen. Bel I etone Trio Play On Sunday Puppet Shows At Salisbury Pk Deputy Public Works Commis­ sioner Henry A. Rigali has an­ nounced the inauguration of a series of puppet shows at Salis­ bury Park beginning Saturday, November 16. The schedule calls for three performances each Sat­ urday and Sunday in the red frame building adjoining the His, torical Museum. The puppet stage to be used was originally con­ structed for the Public Works exhibit at the 1963 Long Island Fair. No admission fee will be charged but reserved seat tick­ ets must be obtained in advance due to the limited seating cap­ acity of 50. The shows will be directed by Jacqueline Haywood, a Parks Recreation Leader who toured for ten years with the Magic Lamp Puppet Theater. She will be assisted by other Recreation personnel. Created for boys and girls in the 5 to 12 age group, the series will present “visits” A graduate of the school of to foreign lands beginning with Performing Arts she has just France. Present plans call for completed a two and a half years each show to run four weeks full Scholarship at the Guiltmant before the next country is pre- Organ School. She is organist at sented. Wayside Baptist Church and also Saturday shows will begin at at the Greater St. Johns Com- 10:00 a.m., 2:00 p.m. and 4:00 munity Church. She has been p.m.; Sunday shows at 1;45.p.m., heard both as Pianist and Or-3:15 p.m. and 4:45^.dTPer- ganist in Churches throughout the formances last about forty-five Metropolitan area. minutes. SONIA AROVA Ballet Scores At Academy len Hughes, Cleveland Vaughn. Elba Peterson, Gladys Lord. Lou­ ise Lawrence, Theresa Bowling, Barbara Bubbens. Dolores Wil­ lis, Josephine West. Jennie Tay­ lor, Carrie Killingham, Lillian Benton, Edna Cox, Hasel Moore, LaVerne Thornton, Margaret Peace, Katie Perry, Sharon Redd, Katherine Goode, Hugo Heydorn, Carrie Thomas. Rose Henry,'Constance Fairchild, Ka- thaline Santa Crus, Trudy Park­ er, Ruth Boyd. Messrs: Jeff Hazel, Horace Lang, Floyd King, Cyril Harvey, John West, Jacob Johnson, Frank Green, Clifford Ferguson, Tom Brown, Phil Gordan. Brie Thomp­ son, Mike Hedley, Cyril Forde, Emanuel R. Naka, William Com­ mack, Frank Coke, Clarence Hol­ ly, Henry Jones. Melvin King, Clyde McNeil, Sinclair Turbee, Howard Wesley. William Wynne, Lawrence L. Copeland. James Lawson, Lawrence Brown, Ver­ non Williams, Timothy Barker, Earl Hill, Charles Brinkley, Clar­ ence Griffith, Mack Duff. Lem­ uel Bullock, Frank Lewis. Messrs, and Mesdames: Reu­ ben Bradford, Louis Hughs, George Hughs, Everett Hunt, Clarence Hall, Clifford Brown, Thomas Jackson, Vernon Black, Leonard Craine, Oliver Palmer, George Howard, Edward Can­ non, John Bettis, James Adams, Earl Howell, Austin Sabers, Gar­ ry Mahon, Winston Kerr, Ru­ dolph Armstrong, Winston Lynn, John Rucker, Harold Cbeatum, Ivan Cameron, Otis Palmer, Fred Davis, Frank De Poauletti, James Smith, Luther Mimms, Wiley Lewis, Royal Banks, Wil­ liam Razier, Theodore Hart, Phil­ ip Rooks, John Richardson. Mi­ chael Di Scinco, Charles Cope­ land, Charles Richardson, Wor­ thington Patterson, Samuel Mit­ chell, Kenneth Teeter. Bill Brad­ ley. George Crome, Edward Car­ rington, Chester Boone, James Casey, George Calloway, A. C. Casey, Rudolph Powell. Thomas Leach, Lee Williams, Leroy Kel- lam, Kay Nesbitt, Archer Drew, Donald Redd, Robert Starks. Lor­ enzo Buck, Eugene Dickerson, Leo Carmaglon, James Gallo­ way, Rudy Kennah, William Fri­ erson. Allan Titley, Walter Vaughn. James Wilson, Lynn Reid and Leon Shields; Lt. Colonel &- Mrs. Bingham. Scholarships Are Awarded r.age au ballet' very Th« McDonough - Victory Block Association announced two schol- Grebel found himself in a«hip awards at is second an- but had an off day in ni»al scholarship dance held Fri- »” where he was hesi-may Oct. », at Our Lady of slow and somewhat Victory Church Hall, Throop Ave. npo with the orchestra, and McDonough St. one to the unidentified The association comprises res- ho fell. idents of McDonough St. between -------------------------- Throop and Sumner Avenues. One award went to Wingate High J• OS II60as School sophomore, Judy Anne nroo rAiirl SlTI6 VmOUiT A C\ld6S <?roup ing education Edwards, Jr., of 409 Goode, 16. of 197 McDonough st„ Brooklyn. She plans to use the money to further her nurs- Award ae Ave., has been elect- Recipient of the second award lent of the Association w*n be a member or the graduat- issistants and Law Sec- ing class of Our Lady of Victory to Justices of the Su- School determined after tests at ►urt of the State of New the school. No member of the class lives on the block. wards is the first Negro Present at the occasion was Austin lected to this position Henry, president of the Bedford- story of the association. Stuyvesant Neighborhood Council, dwards is a member made up of block associations in ?tor of the board of the the community. This was the ■k County Lawyer's As- second series of awards by the , He has been secretary block association since it was re­ past seven years to suscitated last year under the Court Justice Henry leadership of Miss Veronica de penberg. Freitas, president. Nat Cooper’s Cooper Cold curi 1103 Fulton St. Setting Lotion MA 24331 ST 9-9734 Bring This Ad Far FREE Jar of Hair Conditioner A BEAUTIFUL HEAD OF HAIR Hatr Wear la w»avta« a We’re standing on our heads to bring yon true imported Canadian whisky. «liOI CANADIAN WHISKY • A BtENO • SO WOOF • IMP BOTTIED BY CANADA HOUSE BOTH ING CO.. BAITIMORE ANOTHER GREAT PRODUCT WLIB Wise POTATO CHIPS . ARE... POTATO CHIPS AT THEIR. BEST! W. Yeates, Program Director look oi* S a 111 e Smith was hostess for the evening. Soror Umolu spoke at her work In Nigeria and her needs to con­ tinue her work there. Almira Coursey is publicity director for the local chapter. BON VOYAGE. DEAR MARY Sorors of Delta Alpha Zeta Chapter. Zeta Phi Beta Sorof- lty, Inc. gathered at residence of Basileus Sadie Smith to say Bon Voyage to Mary Helen Harden Umolu now residing in Nigeria. Soror Unulo is seen chatting with Louise Batsoh, National Director of African Project while National Founder Fannie Pettie Watts, Joanna Ransom, former Basileus of lo­ cal chapter and the Chairman of Executive Committee, Sallie Smith. Basileus and Beatrice Concert Due For Home For Aged A gospel concert, the proceeds of which will go to the Home For Aged Colored People. 1095 St. Johns Place, Brooklyn, will be held Saturday, Nov. 16, at 1:30 p.m., at the Washington Temple in Brooklyn. The concert, being held by the United Negro Foundation, will feature The Washington Temple Choir. • with Madame Ernestine Washington, the Tones of Joy. the Echerettes of Brooklyn and the Singing Echoes. A message: will be delivered by the Rev. F. D. Wnshingtoh Mr. Earl Hol­ land is director of the United Negro Foundation, a new group ia the area. CONTESTANTS MEET SARA Evadne Hodge, Theresa Wil- Phillips, with Sara Lou at the LOU — Famous nodel Sara «>n. Marilyn Henry. Angela back.__________ Lou Harris Carter, now living ....... — r« ■ ■ ........ 1 St. Albans House of Beauty iia-n M.rrua awa. at. ais«m. Li. n.v. TELEPHONE (N. 6-9486 "PEPPY" YOU MUST CALL MA 2-6299 in British Guiana, met these contestants for “Miss Democ- rscy" wbo win be presented by the "Help Guiana Commit- t«’ at a dance to be held Dee. a in Brooklyn. They are: Barbara Johnson, Pamela Ricks, Marsha Walker, Mary Dignified Service Mario Hurd Owens Paul B. Hamslay Emilio E. Owens SLocum ^111 DORA’S Fashion Style Beauty Salon • Hl Fashion Wigs to order • Latest In Hair Coloring • Relaxing Cold Setting rs Rvans Pron rrop CALL HO S-9335 201-08 HolliS Ave. Hollis, L.I., N.Y. Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- M • N. Y AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Nov. 16, 1963 AG M's Tull is Humiliates A&T: Throws 4 TDs, Scores 1, Kicks 2 Pts In the second quarter, Tullis passed 35-yards to Robert Hayes, the "world’s fastest human," for a 12-0 halftime lead. The Rattlers sewed up the game in the third quarter with three touchdowns and two extra points. Tullis passed 20-yards to Oats for the first TD to climax a 64-ysrd drive. Tullis then flip- Reports Pro Football Gives Negro Best Break twn each in first and second Professional football has given j •riods and exploded for three- the Negro athlete more opportun- ore in the third stanza to hand ity than any other sport, Ebony e Aggies their second defeat magazine reports in a special ; roundup in its November issue. ] Tullis completed eight pass?* There are nou „ eveB 1M Ne. , a row. SPORTS T" Cassius Seeks Stay From Army Cassius Clay who promised to separate the heavyweight crown from the head of champion Charles "Sonay" Liston when they meet is seeking a stay from his draft board in Louis­ ville. Ky, which has placed the talking Clay on its eligible list. Clay. who will be 22 in Jan­ uary. said Uncle Sam will he the loser if he Is drafted since the contest is expected to draw between six and eight million dollars. Liston, in the meantime, has been quiet—apparently satis­ fied that Clay’s talking will in­ crease the gate receipts. Clay appears on the Jack Park show on Friday. Wr~^'NBC-TV. Liston, at this time, in favored to retain his crown by a knockout but Clay who is taller than Liston • and may be bigger when they I fight, la being given an outside ? chance since the young man also - packs a punch. Waive Gaiters DENVER — Former grid Giant Bob Gaiters, a halfback, has been placed on waivers by the Denver Broncos of the Ameri­ can Football League. Gaiters also played with the San Fran­ cisco 49'ers in the National Foot­ ball League. • ' lobbie LgcicIs baU Lea«ue-out 01 *toU1 of 5181 kvwwiw JBAj Wilt'S active players. gro players in the National Foot- Many of the league’s stars to- day — such as Jimmy Brown of :he Cleveland Browns — are Ne- ^VerQQe Tops 1 " ’roes Ebony reports. As recent- Oscar Robertson of the Cin- ly as 15 years ago the Negro was nnati Royals continues as the barred from pro football. J dividual NBA scoring leader Ebony recounts that when the ' ith 333 points in 13 games and late Tony Morabito. owner of the 25.6 average, while H.lt Francisco 49ers signed full- i hamberlain of San Frnnciaco back Joe Perry in 1948 a rival ads the league in averages owner asked why he had signed i ith 30.6 tallies each time out a Negro Just Perry ram. , nine contests. bled 63 yards with a pitchout and Robertson has. played in 3 Morablto wryly remarked: “Any lines and during the past week •ored 29 points in each of three °UM?r ques"°“s Questions’” ' imes to taka up some of the oring slack loot by the Royals There are also 46 Negroes in ith the departure of Jack Twy- «be three-year old, 6 - team ,an whohnT been benched 3 American Football League. Ebo- ** “ AFL broken hand. ny notes. In the two leagues there Among the league’s scoring are St Negro linemen; 41 offens- aders the New York Knicks ive halfbacks, 33 defensive half- re represented by Lonnie Chap- backs and 16 fullbacks. Conspic- rll with a M.6 average and uously lacking, says Ebony, is a shnny Green who has a 14.7 Negro quarterback. rerage. Sandy Stevens was the best bet --------------------------————;—- to make the grade a few years WBIVIWIVIVVWYV?S back Elbony recalls. After gain- ing All - American honors at Min- MAHIiaV MOV IB nesota. Stevens was drafted by the Browns, but eventually wound bjjr i Wt W° wherp he also had hls share of up in 11,6 Canadian troubles. _--- ----------- — Here’s a rundown by teams in la NFL Vt Gorilla MONSOON Green Bay Packers, 7 Negroes; York Giants. 5 Negroes, in- KHtar K0WAUK1 w E. CARPOfTIER tfM> nfl: essntkw APOLLO vs KlomSka I P. MORALES ** KAN8AROOS eluding such standouts as Roos- —wSSLiSSEpp evelt Brown and Erich Barnes; Detroit Lions. 5 Negroes, includ­ ing Dick (Night Train) Lane: Pittsburgh Steelers, 4 Negroes, with Big Daddy Lipscomb’s shocking death leaving a gaping hole in the Steeler’s defensive line this year. 4 FAMOUS Mi METS 4 UlttS: sue, 2, s, 4, « tsute ChiMna wMw 14 nW 6UY TICKETS EARLY1 MADISON SO. GARDEN Also. Chicago Bears have 8 Ne­ groes. including such standouts MOST VALUABLE FAMILY — Elston Howard, a most depend­ able Yankee, and his family are In a Jubilant mood after learn- ing that "Daddy” won the Am- in her father’s lap. The How- erican League's Most Valuable ards are now living in • spac- Player Award. Left to right: ious house in Teaneck, N.J., Mrs. Arlene Howard. Cheryl, which he had built to his spec- Elston Jr., and Karen sitting ifications. (Gilbert Photo) letters and phone calls and he • has tried to answer everyone. He is that way. MVP's Wife Tells How It All Feels "I’m looking forward to a big year for him next season which will be his tenth with the Yankees. Yes. Time flies. He is the fifteenth Yankee to win the MVP. Mickey Mantle. Yogi Ber­ ra and Joe DiMaggio won it three 80 times each. I believe, so Elstcn they will wait until after he has has his work cut out for him,” completed the dinner circuit. He Mrs. Howard said, looking ahead received a number of telegrams, to future years. “I got the plum.” “A broad smile coupled with that boyish look and Elston was In seventh heaven when he re­ ceived the news that he won the Most Valuable Player Award of the American League,” said Mrs. Ariene Howard, his lovely wife. NEW GIANT — Lane Howell is a reserve offensive and defens­ ive tackle for the New York Giants. The 255 . pound, 6-4 Giant is a rookie from Gram- Wing. University. He's big, fast and strong. (Gilbert Photo) “I know I will be some sort of a widow for a while since Elston will be making the dinner circuit: with some television and radio programs but I am happy for, him,” she added. 1 k IB ■ ft I ||V J 4' wF "The girls were not over en­ thusiastic since they don't grasp the meaning of the prize but Elston Jr. had been looking forward to it All during the World Series he talked about his father winning the MVP." Boyish Spirit “Elston still has that boyish spirit about baseball. He still gets excited before the games. It is sometimes hard to believe that he is 6-2 and. weighs 205 pounds, watching him play with his two daughters, Cheryl, 5, and Karen, “The night we learned that El- ston won the MVP, we had spaghetti and meat sauce for dinner and everyone ate well. The excitement did not bother their appetites. “We have been in our new home, which was built to our specifications, two weeks now but it will be another three months before we get everything straight­ ened out,” continued the happy Mrs. Howard. Must Wait For Him “There are some things that Three Important reasons why it is one of the world’s truly great whiskies 1. It has the lightness of Scotch 2. The smooth satisfaction of Bourbon 3. No other whisky in the world tastes quite like it How litftt is Canadian Club? FACT: /fa the lightest —I whisky in the world! $6.55 4/5 Qti M.15 pint b3| Bottled in Canada •• NOT REALLY HAPPY - Ted Dean (35), offensive back and Nate Ramsey, (24), defensive back, of the Philadelphia Ea­ gles aren't really happy at all as they watch their team take a 42-14 blitz from the New York Giants last Sunday at the Stadium. First place Giants now face tbe last place San NOV. 23rd EDITION Francisco 49ers this Sunday "The Best In The House” in 87 Lands Trotters On TV Sun The Harlem Globetrotters, combining their basketball tal­ ents and court clowning, meet a team of Prince Philip’s Lord’s Taverners in a charity basket­ ball game filmed in London this week, on “CBS Sports Spectacu­ lar" Sunday, Nov. 17, on the CBS Television Network (5:00 - 5:30 p.m., EST). The Taverners are a sporta and social group made up of British stage and television personalities. , Prince Philip, patron of the unit, participates by serving champagne to the Globetrotters and tea to the Taverners during a comic rest period at halftime. Hope springs eternal in the human breast; Man never is, but always to be blest. — Pope. The Los Angeles Rams lead all teams in the NFL with 12 Ne­ gro players. Including star defens­ ive tackle Lamar Lundy. • In AFL In the AFL the Kansas City Chiefs carry 6 Negro players; Houston Oilers Just one, half­ back Charles Frazier. Denver Brbncos carry 8; Boston Patriots carry 5; San Diego Chargers car­ ry 8; Buffalo Bills carry 7 Ne­ groes; Oakland Raiders carry 5 and the New York Jets carry 6. Md. State Clobbers Del. State DOVER, Del. — Playing under a clear, windy sky, Delaware State dropped a 37-0 decision to Maryland State in tbe annual gridiron classic between the two Eastern Shore colleges. The first quarter was scoreless. Maryland State came to life In the second quarter wnen Full­ back Sedric Suggs of Rocky Mount, N. C., took a screen pass from Quarterback Clyde Thomas of Uniontown. Pa., and went 44 yards to score. Tackle James Privott from Fentress. Va.. kick­ ed the PAT to put Maryland State ahead 7-0 at the half. In the third period. Maryland State garnered another TD when Halfback Emerson Boozer of Au­ gusta. Ga., took a punt and went 55 yards around left end for a TD. The kick for the conversion failed, and Maryland State led 13-0 at the end of the third quar- 24 Pointe s Maryland State put the game out of reach in the final quarter as they scored 24 points. Half­ back Jimmie Strong of Atlanta went back to punt for DSC, but a low pass from center resulted in him being downed on his own 6 where MSC took over on downs. Suggs promptly ran off of right tackle for a TD. Clyde Thomas ran tha conversion to make the score 31-0. Halfback Hector Pagan front New York City Joined the scoring parade as he intercepted a pass thrown by DSC’s Alver Dupee of Fieldale, Va., and scampered 30 yards to score. Tbe attempted conversion, failed and MSC led 27-0. Later Lineman Earl Divers of Baltimore downed End Ira Bat- The last TD came on the screen pass as Suggs once more took a short throw from Thomas, found blocking, and ran 26 yards to score. Clyde Thomas took an aerial from end Robert Satchell to run the final score to 37-6, MSC. YMCA Church Bowling The surprising Church of The Master team continued their winning ways by downing the Walker Jets by a score of 2-1, last Saturday evening at the Crown Lanes. The Convent Tor­ nadoes defeated the Salem Mets by a score of 2-1. The Walker Royals defeated Mother Zion by a scor? of 3-6. Sam America had a high game I of 169, Henry Sales rolled a 174 and Jerry Cunningham a 161. Fran America topped the ladies with a 154 high game. Joyce Sessome had a 146 and Delore Dixon a Ml. Team Standings: Walker Guns Walker Jets Church of t Walker Roy Convent Toi Convent Tr« Salem Meta Mother Zion calls for _ ' * Budweiscr. Enjoy the King of Been! BIC hours a day serving you 4 A Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- 38 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Nov. 16, 1963 Stadium Team Top Bowlers Small School Players In NFL On Screens ' Outstanding National Football League players who came from small colleges will be spotlighted in action films on “Pro Football Kickoff," 15-minute broadcast | which precedes the NFL games on regional networks of the CBS Television Network Sunday, Nov. 117. Featured will be Andy RobJV tellf. New York Giants, from Arnold College: Timmy Brown, Philadelphia Eagles, fom Balt [state; Elijah Pitts, Green Bay Packers, from Philander Smith. J. D. Smith. San Francisco 49ers, from North Carolina A & T; 'Jackie Smith, St. Louis Cardi­ nals, from Northwest Louisiana; John Farrington. Chicago Bea.s from Prairie View College, and Johnny Morris, also of the Bears, from Santa Barbara (a division of the University of California^ The Stadium Lanes bowling team took two games from the Bowman Auto Insurance five to maintain the Strand Major League championship. A total of four bowlers kayoed the pins for 600 or better series. Guy Reafero tallied a 649 with games of 203, 236 and 210. Ronnie Shelly followed with a 624 series which includes a 234 game. Marty Bowman rattled the woods for a 618 series and Mike Basone reg­ istered a 607 three game total. Charles Richardson led the bowlers in the Empire City Mixed League at St. Albans Bowl with a 638 three game total. Richard­ son started off with a 205 game then tallied 220 and finished with a 213. Mary Tongue and Alice Hicks topped the women with games of 226 and 223 respectively. The Gothamites maintained their lead in the loop by taking three games. Following are the Monocos, Allen Plumbing and Gems. The Garden The kiss of the sun for pardon. The song of the birds for mirth. You are nearer God’s heart in a garden UPTOWN AUTO PREVIEW - plre Lincoln Mercuty stores Than anywhere else on earth. Sales representatives of Em- who staged first uptown auto AUTO INSURANC ANY AUTO • ANY DRIVER • FASTEST FS1 4 PLATES • 1 DAY SERVICE BEST FOR DRIVERS UNDER 2S OR OVER 65 • LEARNERS 4 BEGINNERS OUR SPECIALTY Small Deposit • Pay Monthly • Yew Credit's OX, Ne Investigations • Contact Us Now Alhambra) MO 6-87B8 show at Dawn Casino for pri­ vate preyiew of 1964 Lincoln, Mercury and Comet. L. to R: Walter Douglas, Daniel E. Brown, executive sales repre­ sentative, Miles Gordon and Robert Bruce of the Broadway and First Ave. branches. More than 100 came to see the sleek, new jobs during the Tuesday evening exhibit. (Gilbert Photo* Dies In Fire George N. Russell, 70, died of smoke poisoning in his eighth floor apartment in the St. Nicho­ las Houses, 230 W. 131st St., dur ing a fire Saturday. He was identified by his wife Bertha. INSTANT CREDIT! OUR LOWEST PRICES! Now Showing the All-Now on Special Inroductory Deals That Will Save You Hundreds! FINAL SACRIFICE CLEARANCE! _ T eerier Kills J, Wounds I A teenage Bronxite who believed tvo men were' gunning for him is being held without bail in connection with the death of one and the shooting of another for actirn by the Grand Jury. Maiyln Ward. 19. of 1415 Steb­ bins we., is charged with the death cf 33-year-dld Hemeregildo Ortiz wto lived at 1411 Stebbins Ave., ant the shooting of Carlos Alverez, Jr., 19, of 1379 Bristow St., all of the Broox who supports his two younger sisters with whom- he lived by woiking two Jobs, told police the twdmen lad threatened him repeatedy. Friday night, Ward told polite, they said they were going to birn him. He armed himself for any eventu­ ality. Chased H|m Ward told polict when he re­ turned home from work Friday night the two met chased him with a bat and pips, During the chase, police said, tftiz suffered a fatal bullet in hk heart and Alverez is confined o Fordham Hospital in serious cmdition with bullet wounds in hh stomach. Detective Sgt. Etwin Pico, detectives Dominic Cojie and A1 Hughes, arrested Ward Saturday night and recovered the gun which they believe was used in the fight. A. To Make Miami Track Team MIAMI — Sprinter Ray Bar­ ry. 23, will make the varsity track squad of University of Miami, according tTcoach Bill Downes. The youth will not be eligible until next year because of Southeastern Conference elig­ ibility rules. Barry attended Mi­ ami Dade Junior College for the past two years. The rule days: “No person other than a member of a fresh­ man team or graduate of a junior college shall participate in inter • collegiate athletics at an institution until after the expiration of 12 months from the date of his matriculation.’’ Delaware St. Upsets Montclair Harlem Doctor To Speak At Nyack Meeting Dr. Lonnie MacDooald. chief, Community Psychiatry Division of Harlem Hospital, will be the principal speaker at the Church Women of Nyack meeting at 8 p.m. Nov. 18 at the First Baptist Church of Nyack on North Broad­ way. His topic will be "Growth of the Person—More Than a Mortar and Bricks Understanding." In addition to his hospital dut­ ies, Dr. MacDonald serves as psychiatrist for the narcotics oem- mittee of the East Harlem Prot­ estant parish. The meeting ar­ rangements were made by Mrs. Harry M. Barnes, chairman of Christian Social Relations. First Baptist Church of Nyack. CLIFTON, N. J. — Delaware State College upset Monclair State College 20 - 12 in a night »ame played in the rain here Saturday. DSC led throughout the game as Coach Moore's Hornets dom­ inated much of the game. Mont­ clair had beaten East Strouds­ burg State (Pa.). Southern Con­ necticut State, Central Connecti­ cut and Upsala in succession which placed them in the role of the favorite. Their only losses had been to Ithaca and King’s College (Pa.). There’s no better habit to form than to start reading the Amster­ dam News every week. Oat every Thursday. Banks Held In Contempt CHICAGO — Ernie Banks. Chicago Cub first baseman, has been ordered to appear in Super­ ior Court Nov. 20 to show cause why he should not be held in contempt. The order followed a petition filed by his ex-wife, Mrs. Mollye Banks. The petition said Banks, in addition to making a cash settlement of >31,000, the baseball star was to place in escrow a >30.000 life insurance policy. The petition alleged that Banks failed to deposit the policy and that it now has lapsed. AUTHORIZED BUICK DEALER 3510 WfcBS ER AVE. at 210 St. Cor.Gun Hill Rd OL 4-7200 Open 9 to 9 BENNETT “BUICK Be Rrst to See... First to Drive the Seesetioeely Beaetifel New CTT BUICK ho, a very »pe- »peol for metorlsta who knew key wont, knew the price they to poy, and tniiif upon the ?e in cewrtesv end service, tee the tabu leu a display of tedele...yee’ll etervel et the I innovations end engineering :ee. Yen'll marvel, tee, et SAVE HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS ON OUR REMAINING STOCK OF BRAND NEW 1963 BUICKS First Come...First Servedl Always a Fine Choice of USED CARS et Fantastically tow Prices) Authorized Buick Dealer BENNETT©BUICK 16.5th $t. A Breedwey . SW 5-0780 THE PRICE IS RIGHT 1964 XZZZQZS71964 ALWAYS LESS at Be"iamin "We’re easy to reach from all Boroughs and L. I. B'way & 135th Strst AU 6-7600 ALL ‘64 MODELS NOW ON DISPLAY MORE REASONS YOU’LL LIKE DOING BUSINESS WITH US HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR YOUR TRADE-IN IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 1964 GRAND PRIX SP(RTS COUPE PONTIACS AND TEMPESTS Grand Prix tor Immedate Delivery ~ Bonneville Sta Chief “ TRAOI EMM G,onj Prix CoiPe ____ -___ Catalina Large Selecfon Of Other Used Cars 2025 ATLANTIC AVE.BKLYN Cor. Hopk iR»on Awe. USED r CAR SALE OVER 150 GUARANTEED CARS TO CHOOSE FROM—DRASTIC PRICE REDUCTION WH00:i.ES53 '63 FORD '42 THUNDESBWD •b PONTIAC Galaxic 300 4 Dr HT PV"’ $2395 Hardtop, Full Power, Fully Eqpd COTOC Like New Bontk-ille 4Dt HT S?v- list '60 FALCON 4-Dr Deluxe, Automatic, <795 RAH '59 FORD Galaxle Z-Dr HT. FuHy Eqpd GET YOUR NEW 1964 ATACEY! F-85's • Dynamic SB's Super 88'S • 98 s STARFIRES READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Since 1935 3321 B'way < 134th St.) FO 8-0200 CLOSE-OUT BARGAINS UiT TOMS L’F TO 8 TEAM TO PAT ’61 PITM. '63 BUKK Skylark '6OVAUAKT 'SV CNEV. Wafa* '57 CHEV. 4 door '61 FORD Coevort. *62 CHEV. haeaki '61 FORD Wagon 'SV OLDS Convert. 'M RAMBLER Wagon A “Quality Value” late model used car at Cadillac “Quality Value” meat a more comfort, greater performance new car appearance and condibon-at extremely low coat.... CHECK THESE TYPICAL CADILLAC VALUES CONVIRTIBLB SRICIALS OVER STOCKED WITH 1881-1882-1883 CADILLACS Buy one for complete metering comfort ell through the year. Fabuleua Savings. BRONX USED CAR DISPLAY 698 E. FORDHAM RD (Wait ef Se»ftem Blvd) CY S-JOOO PL 1-4) BROADWAY AT Sift STREET Two "V-8’’ engines - 390 ond 427 cubic in. Twe end 4-d®«r hordtopt • with or without Breeiewey rear winde AMM11IB<IMSIl r c u r y me enteeRRt er W if'HP iiwmiTm. eresw cteetF REPAIR -61 CHRYS. N'p't Con $1450 '58 IMP. 4-dr Sedan 995 '62 CHRYS 4-dr. NY'kr 2595 '59 DODGE Sta. Wgn 795 '59 CHRYS. Convertible 1095 '61 RENAULT Gordini 995 '59 CHRYS 4-dr. Sedan 795 '60 IMP 4-dr Crwn HT 1895 '60 DODGE 4-dr. Sedan 895 ,'59 IMP. 2-dr. Hardtop 1289 '60 CHRYS 4-dr. Sed. $1295 '61 OLDS *-dr. Sedan 1695 '61 CHRYS Sd. Air-Con. 1995 '61 DODGE 4-dr. Sedan 1295 '62 FORD Sedan 1675 '60 IMP. LeBaron Sed. 1995 '60 PLY. 4-dr. Sedan 795 '58 CHEVY Impala Conv. 895 '61 SIMCA Sedan 695 '63 IMP. 4-dr. Crown 3949 USED CARS. ATLANTIC A FRANKLIN AVIS. RROOKLYN—ST 3-112* MW CAR SHOWROOM: IMS ATLANTIC AVI. RROORLVN—MA 2-0*00 CLOSEOUT PMCEO BIAND NEW 63 OLDSMOBILES £and Co^ MANHATTAN USED CAR SALES < Broadway at 57th Cl 6-4369 INSTANT CREDIT O.K ,1 >8 £-7318 AU4 36C8 Thsre’e ei better hibit ti form *„ha i ti start reading th ■ Amster- ■ m News every week. Out every "fair dry. 8 DOOR FALCON $195 da. Up to 3 Years to Pay IMMEDIATE DELIVERY HIGHEST PRICE PAID kF OR YOUR TRADE-INJ MANY OTHF.B COMFAEAA.R BABOAIN8-SOME WITH AB CON*. Also Low-Mileaje 1963 Executive Cars TREMENDOUS VALUt - COME SEE TO APPRECIATE M HT , |,1 -M CHRYS Imp 4-Dr HT •« MJ1CH 4-Dt HT, I* Ti W^ ____ .___fW M FOBD 4-Dr HT. Eqpd -dr HT/Cey _______1 ft CAD c,wr’ r- rwt. - ne. Atr-Cd_______ M * HT A reef__ lit "n K K 4 Dr "T F<”M| •e. HT ____ Rtt " 0,05 •» < . -».ien St, TreeWyn (Cer. f rand Ave ) h Avo. 6 bwov to Wash union Avo. Station AUTO PAINTING JAMAICA AUTOMOTIVE REFINISHING CO., INC. P.T AUTOS END OF SEASON CLEARANCE SALE! NARRY HAU. 1963 CADDY 1963 OLDS 1961 CHEVY 1960 CADDY 1961 FORD Galaxy only PEH TAYLOR $4395—$295 S2995—$199 n.. $1595—$99 $2295— $1495— Processed Immediately . 1900 CONIT ISLAND AVE. IMMEDIATE DELVERY e« '63's end 'M'» W » A « 0 4 R) Bl J II Vi I llUJtt z 1$ 5-4800 Hau oios ■ I r vI ■ i f i j r . Yetr first CiH jTZ'iu.'FilB A A ktter USED cars *63 Rambler 4-dr. ‘w" AT-RI PS-Backet Seat* $2095 CON 2-dr|e4.U9t B. 47} 8.Cleat. Lg, 1295 S 4-d*r.**UV$a4.UVS Manhattan Surpriae Birthday Mrs. Shirley Johnnon nf. 15^5 B. New York Ave., the sishr of Amsterdam Newa courier Billy Rlsbrook, was “queen for a Ay" recently when her parents, Mr. and Mrt. Milton Rlsbrook. treat­ ed her to a surprise birthday party at the home of another sister, Mrs. Esther Gordon, at 129 Putnam Ave. 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 --- 42 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Nov. 16, 1963 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS Brooklyn—Unfurnished Brooklyn Unfurnished Brooklyn Unfurnished Brooktya—Unfurnhhod RIVl.NGTON ST. NO FEE OWNER MODERN Elevator Apartments J4* RradhurM Av*.. cor. 154th 1, 2 and 3 Rooms ANDREWS AVE . 2299 (Ford) lt». colored tile beth. Porch * nice back yard wkly, or mthly. AGENT See Supt 107 ST ANNS (Cor E 132) Ultra mudetn. l’i Rme Hollywood kit­ chen 4 Bathrm. Welfare; 998 up See apt. 3d. agent. W 179TH STREET - 3 Room fur­ nished apartment. Excellent neigh­ borhood. Working couple preferred LU 3-7934 OWNER Neatly furntahec apt. 3 rma 4 bath Respectable people pref. CY 2 1688 Owner WilUamsbrtdgt Section a for rent in new homes 1. 4. 3. A I rm apta. I Agent TV 1 2379 3 Rooms. Park Ave. -...... 3 Rooms. Vyge Av*. ___ 4 Rooms. Simpson St. 4 Rooms. E. 182 St. 3 9 IRVING SILVER & SON WE 3 942 E 199 St. Or OWNER 453 E. 138 ST. 2 Room*. 2 Rooms Mod. Free gas 4 elee. mess can- See Supt or OWNER. CY 2-9450 “ 7 M?_____________ OWNER S56 Kssciusk* St„ 2 rm. apt., sunny. e Room 3rd door apart- tkiWrun. Owner. Ml 3-5722. ~ —zr ment. Pacing playground. Large XrrJd *‘u ctoeefs. parquet floor*. electric eiak Convenient tran^qrtation g?*"™1* *U till month Owner. Call MO 3-9143 MIVM> owner, gw MW_________ or BU 21411 3 RM. Apia, neatly tarn. Call Mr. ! teaV~naae_iiae*iv wl,u 0L »•*** or GL M»»- ' 4, 5, 7 RMS. REAS. BRONX Agent. Call Owner. 3 Room Apartment. Furnished 231ST ST., New Home. Modem 5 Room. $150 Runt* Point. Modern 4 Room. $119. DENNIS CY 3-3777 WEST BRONX 3 Rm. apt. Broker 4 Rm. Apartment 233rd St. ( $125 Per Month. Other*. 24 Rooms DA 1-6462. Owner MODERN Efficiency Apt. modern kitchen, full tiled bath, fully furn . MA 4-4138, welfare Owner N1 8-5005. SH RM APT. Newly decorated, re­ spectable middle aged couple pre­ ferred. Security. 105 Decatur St. OWNER These apartment* tion sinks. Hoven. Park Place. are completely new with Irtgidatrea, combine colored tils bath*, ntw parquet floors — on 589 Park PI. Corp. 6 SO. PORTLAND AVE.. Modern Newly renovated 2>a Rooms. tile bath. 3110.00. No security, no fee JA 3-0754. RIVERDALE AVENUE East New York Section. Three room Apartment. Children. 352.90 BROKER PR 1-9727 NEWLY DECORATED 1 4 Hl RM APT AT 198 HANCOCK ST. Reasonable 211 BERGEN ST.. 3 Room*, unfurn­ ished. Working couple preferred Owner Call MA 5-4219. EAST N. Y. — 5 Rms let floor. (Apt. Heri children. ITS. ~ BUSHW1CK — « Rnie. 2nd floor. (Apt. Her) Adulte preferred. $™ BEDFORD STUYYESANT t Km*. Hollywd hath. |iru«. children 412$ PRESIDENT ST (South Bklyn) — 7 rma. Dk bathe. Parlor and kround floor. (129. CROWN ESTATES hickory 3-5590 1034 Lafayette Ave.. Bklyn BROOKLYN. 4 ran apt. newly paint ( 38 SH rme. welfare. 4 rm*. decorated, children. I 38 5 rma. modern, children. *100 6 rme decorated, modern. »1M Other choice apt* available. DUMONT NE 1*3731 121J Fulton St (near Bedford) Apts. Available All Over Brooklyn ri, n r», s% r» Children Welcome UL 7-3400 1192 Fulton St. (nr. Bedford) AJAX REAL ESTATE 55 BROOKLYN Av*. (Pacific) 3H Largs rma and colored tiled mod­ ern bothrm. new gaa range, now refrigerator, plenty cloeet apace This dream apt. must be seen to be appreciated. $115. Apply supt. apt 3 or owner MA 2-9979 GREENE AVE . sue — 9 run* 970 MADISON ST.. 225 - 4 rma, 2 bath* $115. Mannings 1127 Fulton St MA 3-7364 g-RM APT. PUTNAM'AVEN1E „ 4 KM APT. HLANCOCK STREET 3 RM .LPT. Nice neighborhood, near Call transportation. UL 7-3277 ' Mr Andrew < MA 2-6995 Owner Eves and Sat. 3 Rms. 4 Rms. Plenty rms and kitchenettes — Welfare children PR 3-1343 Agent. $80 - 87. $70 • 85 3 MODERN Rms. $55. One flight up Front near transp no com­ mission. 282 Riverdale Av*. — Schlanger Supt apt. 11. 4 RM MODERN APT in Apt house Modern kitchen, modern tiled bath, children, convenient to everything 990 monthly NO FEE OWNER MA 2-8337 DEAN ST . 1280 — Mod baths from S9O-S125 per Plus security. Call; L OWNER Unfurl* a^f- - 7 rms, kitchen and bath. ST 9-6777. Owner. 3 rm. apt., modern, 568.32, welfare, ewner, PR 3-4747 CARROLL $T — Modern Apt Ad preferred $135. Atoo 4 roor BROKER Sogers Ave HY 1-4. Rogers Axe Children _ Spacious 4 im». desirable nesghh 1 Rm. apt. Sterling Pl . n ston Ave., $115 mthlj Cal, Mr Powell DI 4-1323 6. 3. 4 A 3 rm 91* in all arena Broker RR 8-2500 Ul7-4 5 Rm ant. Pacific St , nr Eastern Children Parkway. $115. Cell Mr Powell DI 6-1323 apt. Lewis FL, Neer Herki- St r* Mthly. Children Call Mr Powell DI 6-1323 2 — 4 ROOMS Norfolk Realty 253 Kingston Ave. Corner St. Johns PR 8-9782 LUXURIOUS. Ground floor apt. Near Iransp. $75jOO. 126 Willoughby Ave. See Mrs. Wiggins on Prom- ises or call HY 3-9141. B KLYN AVE. 3 ROOMS •£W APTS. 305-07 Prospect PI., modern 3-rm. opts., oil conveniences, no fee, see super, owner AUVERNE - Hillmeyer Ave. Beau tiful 34 4 Mi m apis. Modern. New section Working people preferred $1109145 per mo. Owner NE 4-0854 call 9-9 a m. 8-9 p.m. 1 to 6 RMS APARTMENTS CROWN HV’GHts FI-ATBUSH WARDEN REALTY CO. IN 7 7300 FULTON ST . 13S2-2VI rm. studio Afit*. from $73. No fee See Supt. Or FL 7-7143. 516 TA 6-1496 Owner modern Owner 763 McDonough St. and 3 Rms. new modern apt*, new tiled baths and shower*, new stoves, sinks. ” refrigerators, vinyl floor covering* throughout, air- condition outlets, quiet apt house, no fees. See supt. Apt. 1C. or phone owner, Fletcher GL 2-8000 3 - 4 - 5 A 6 RM APTS AVAILABLE ROKFR 1485 Fallen 84 MODERN 2>j. CHILDREN M. STEWART 4. 5 A 6 RM APTS BROKER SL 6-3313 NOSTRAND AVE., 488 Modern Building Beautflul newly remodeled ltq, 2. 3 rm apts with corner outside ex •xwure, embossed inlaid floor cov­ ering Sunken tile bath, kitchenette. Iea«e. 2 blocks from 8th Ave. sub way N’ostrand Ave station Owner. Fret qo$ and electricity 3 LARGE RMS i Near transp Owner EV 4-7393 2 ROOM APARTMENT some furniture. Call HY M69S after 8 PM. Owner. X)M Apt, for rent! Private lut. en and bath. $65 Month. Fee. Ask for Callaway — er PR 3-8640 Up-to-date apts., air condi­ tioned convenient to all subs and shopping. Call UL 1-4694 Mr. Ryan. From $100 up. 2 Family lease $150 Concord 1530 St Johns PI. HV 3-8644 PARK PL.. 4 Rm $77. also lH Rms *85. Laura Seals 737 Frank­ lin Av*. 3. 4. 5. 6 ROOM APARTMENTS CHILDREN - WELFARE Srealey Downer Co 877 Nostrand Av PR 2-3400 NEWLY PAINTED 3 A 4 rm apte. MODERN appliances — Large playground — Near shopping. Iransp and school*. 885 Kent Ave. ST 9-4381. supt Apt IP (Owner, Modern apt. 2’i laryg roams. Adults preforrod. Owner. PR 8 0667 RM Art, Quiet locality, near transp. homelike, working people preferred. Owner, evening*. — ST 9-0236 3 ROOM Apt Unfurn Working cou­ ple preferred Cell MA 5-6417 af­ ter 6 p.m. OWNER. STUYvSaNT AVE , 71? Renovat ed l'Y, 3»k Rm. apts. Frigldatre, Stove, tile bath, shower. Work­ ing people preferred. Owner — MODERN l‘.i Rm. apt. private tile bathrm. Neat to Jewish Hospital 375 No fee. Security, Ml Pros­ pect P, Surt apt 6 ST 9 3798 PACIFIC ST . 1M, Nr. Noetrand subwv 21, rm apt. al, modern improvement. $90 a month Clover­ dale 2-0817 OWNER Cu lie preferred., no rental fee St) nt 12 nr call Owner — PH ’5*58. evenings OR 14879 2 RMS, Kitchen, modern bath, al- so furn unit. Crown Height* sec Mon, with references, call Gl. 3-7492 or PR 2-9098 Owner RMS, Bristol St . $56 mo, steam heat, hot water, nr suhwy 4 shopping, clean house. Immed late occupancy Call NI $-9183 OWNER 3>J RM Apt, newly renovated (all dav IN 2-8528, eves NE 8-8289 117 Lefferts Place. Bklyn. Owner ST. MARKS AVE.. Nr Nostrsnd Ave. 2't, Rm< Modern kitchen end bs'h nr Shoorlng and Transp. Call PR 4-8487 Owner ST. MARKS Ave. 3vy 4 large rm* nr transp 4 shopping Call MA 2-8883 Agent. 3 ROOMS EXCELLENT apartment fudNlrt)’' C>ru and secure East New York. $79 08. Superintendent. HY 8-2314. Owner APTS — Decontrolled and control­ led, unfurnished — } and 4 rm*. 120 and 124 Berkley P, speak to Mies Price, aim single rms ST 18818 WELFARE 4 Rooms 5 Rooms 4 Room* 3 Rooms Call Mr CROWN HEIGHTS - Prospect nr. Rncheoter. $ Rooms front. 1 Bights Walk-up apartment house, adult* preferred $104 16 Broker PR 2-4093 RMS. Bergen St . $80 NeA Refrigerator, stove, storm ows. toilet, etc Working pref. Reference* Owner PR 2*3908 RMS. EAST 35 ST . Flatbush 1125 « Rms Sterling St . 3125. t Rms Agenl Midwood St 3138 IN 7-0773 RMS. Rm*. CUftoa Mr. MA TWO 4-RM APTS. Herkimer St. 4 Rm aptt Lexington Av*, wel Mr. Andrew Fare. MA 24995 5 Rm. apt. Herkimer St BARK PLACE 4 ROOMS ULTRA MODERN MR. OTHO PR 8-1004 4 ROOM APT-590 Sumpter St, 4 rm apt 6 RMS WELFARE I I 6 rms, Welfare-$115 6 rmt, Children — $100 I i I Furnished room, 113 weekly Unfurn large room—tit 6 ROOMS. CHILDREN Bradford Ave. < rms St. Mark* Ave, 4 rm* BROKER HY S-8S A WANT AD in MANHATTAN ond tha BRONX in BROOKLYN ond QUEENS UL 7-2500 s. Park P1 is. Prospect PL ■ is. Sterling Pl. is. Prospect Pl. *.'Union St is. Riverdale Av*. ns Sterling St. *. Decatur St. a. Sterling St. a. Union SL ns. Msnle St. GREEN REALTY CO 791 PROSPECT PLACE PR 2-4900 2 AND 3 ROOM APTS UNFURNISHED OWNER GL 3-1157 THROOP AVE , 563. 1V$, 2. 3. 4. Room apt* decorated Immediate occupancy. Welfare. Audrey An­ derson HY 1-8225 3 ROOMS $59. New i ef rigerator, Children. Vermont 4 Sutter Call HY 3-9100 Mr Moor* BROWNSVILLE- Hopkinson near Blake. 3 rooms. 3 flights walk­ up apartment house, modern — $64 71 Broker PR 24093 1-------- 9 BOOM APARTMENT Settled business couple preferred $100 mo SL 8 8628 OWNER 3 Rwims 4 Rooms 5 Room* * RiMxnt |DALTON $ $2 90 S to 00 •loo oo $103 1*1 GL 3-4241 BREVOORT PLACE. Two room apt Children In apt building RROKER PR 14727! Elevated apt RERGF.N ST . 1022. 3 Largo rm apt, newly renovated Modern Im prwvem-u.s, business couples pre ferrru. Security Owner HY 3-7193 FLATBUSH - Hawthorne St.. 3 beautiful large modern rma' In apt house, parquet floors, $89 991 OOI.DBLATT. IN 9-3878 or FI I 5022 ST MARKS PL. '3rd Ave) 3 Nice rooms, 385 Mo. Nr. Transp EAR LINCOLN PL. Modern 2H rm apt. in beautiful apt house Tiled bath, modern faculties, child 385 mthly. NO FEE OWNER ST 9-8882 NEWLY DECORATED 4 $1M per month. C 94 OUMCT STI FLATBUSH 'EAST 23D ST 5 ROOM) 5 RM. UNFUR! 4 RM U1 Children. FI 1-4G89 BAINBRIDGE ST.. 4 Rm* si«|.«aUi Modern Improvement*. GREEN AVE . 4 Rate , sterna Mat ARUNGTON PL.. 14 K« aP*'. ST X"*5 Miller Bran. KOWARD AVKNUB New Street, 3 Room fomla» $100 08 per menth. Adulti red Neer stobwny. Owen GRSfeNE AVK., IBS. vate rms, bath, heat, small working family $80 owner MA 1-0873. $90 OWNER See Supt Apt. X iTj^TTs RM APTS Avofabfc POPULAR REAL ISTAH 2111 7»b AVENUE-MO 4-67M OPPOSITE RRO ALHAMBRA BET 125 A 126 STREETS 3’s Rm. apt All modern cooven- - i3nce* Clem quiet bldg Good » trans?. Low floor Reasonable ’ No fee See Mrs Young, 102 E. ______________ _ _ 124th St ROOM APARTMENT, UNFVR- ISHED. WITH PRIVATE BATH — ' CALL AD 4-0604 OWNER ST Anns Ave.. 845. 2Vi Rms Completely Remodeled New bath rm. $25 Wk ME 5-8973 Owner 2 ROOM APARTMENT Couple preferred Call WY 72026 OWNER Pay own gas 4 electric. $40 weekly JE 9-8777 OWNER - $!M80 88.88 COMPANY Rooms. Booms Rooms Rooms APARTMENTS FOR RENT Call MO 8-9023 4 ROOMS 5 BOOMS 6 ROOMS 3 ROOMS Agent 970 978 Tri $65 2133 7th Ave HIGH CLASS APTS 5 run, Edgecomb vie. $79 3129 3 rms W 183 St $140 3 rms Bwsy A West End - 4 rw W IB St $«» < 4 rms E 164 St . elevator $105 iVi rms, St. Nic'bs Av $124 $ 6S 3 rms W 199 St 314 rms, W. 167 St. $79 3 rms W 164 St 1 99 6 rms, Gr'nd Concourse $130 8 East 125 St LINCOLN Also open Sot. TR 6-4430 YOUR SEARCH IS ENDED 5 Room* Washington Hgts Area. Quiet Neighborhood on Avenne. Nr City College Kitchen has Modem Gas Range. Sink. Tab Combination. Admiral Refrigerator. With Across the Top Freeser. Modem Meta, Dish C. bineta. Modernized Bathrm with Sunkin Tub, Shower. Low , Down Tank. Modem Basin with - Pop-up Waste Respectable working people definitely pref. 388 80 Mthly. Call AU 62513 Bet 3 A 8 P.M. _________________ Broker W 130th St. 7 rm. elev. 994 University Ave. 3 mod rms F*> Glover Bkr. L0 8-1540 5 Rms. Edgecomb Ave. 4 Rms. W. Bronx-167th ! 3 Rms. W. 164th St. 6 Rms. Man. Ave Elev 4 Rms W. 121sl St. Elev. 5 Rms. W. 151st St 5 Rms Wash. Hts 177th 5 Rms. Bradhnrst Ave. 7 Rms W. 141 St. Welfare 4 Childi EN 9-8555 9-7 p.i Also Open Saturc BREVOORT PLACE , 21-3 room apt on the ground floor Newly decorated, 9S5 per month. See Mr* Koonce or call HY 3-0141. Elton Ave. 778, mod l>k. Hollywd ktch. wkly rental. Free gas A elec Owner, see Supt. , RENT CONTROLLED APTS 2 TO 5 ROOMS 1291 Wilkins Ave. KI 2-9858 Brokers — Remodeled floor Children See Super or OWNER J, A U4 RMS Modern, clean bldg. 380 East l«6th St WT 2-465! OWNER After 6 P.M. PARK CHESTER AREA 3 Room apt. Nr shopping A Transp. Work­ ing people pref. Private house. .No fee. OWNER TA 4-7479 BOSTON RD., 1437 — Attractive 2>-i nns. All modern implements $701 “'See supt Apt 2A or Call LO 8-8800 xr.Jfprr BRONX^TTa’ 3 " KM APTS Welfare Call OWNER MI 1-7349 after 7 P.M. 961 KELLY STREET Intervale Ave. station. Lovely Modern J mom apartments. Wel­ fare. n* fee. Sre super. _____ WEST BKONX Beautiful 3 rms. $75 Working people preferred EAST BRONX 2, 3. 4 rms. welfare, children. 2572 Bdway (97 St.) AGENT After 3 PM. MANY APTS. AVAILABLE 3 rms $61 wp; 4 rm$ $87 up. Broker CT 3 4270 J rms — 3*5 4. 3101 — 3. 199 Apartment Center 2239 Grand Concourse _WE 3-0300 HEW UNFUBNUQ1ED Apt* 2 room Studio 985; 3 rooms 3100; 4 room*. 3110; 5 rooms, $135; 6 Rooms$150. TU 2-2223 AGENT 6 rms. Westside Monk. $68 6 rme. New equipment 1119 8 rm*. furn. Manh. 934 58 wkly 3 rm*. Westside Msnh 359 5 rm*. 2nd fir. front 390 5 rms. Uptown Manh. 353 4 rms. Immed. Occpy 383 4 rms W. 139 4 rm*. Weetside Manh 364 4 rms. Westside Manh. Nice. 360 $90 LU 8-4510 MORRIS AVE. 1246 Nr 167tb SI. & Grond Conce ne Modern Three Room Apt. $110 I • 3 ROOM APTS. SUNKEN TUBS TILE BATHS MODERN KITCHEN! OWNER Brook,>n-Furnished 1-2-3 Rooms 2 RM APT. FURN. 4 RM Apr. FURN, MR. ANDREW Putnam Ave. Pulaski St MA 2-6995 947 ST. MARKS AVENUE 3 Room apt 979 Security. Lease. Inquire Supt IB OW1 3 - 6 room opts, available. T'J 1-0900 Laconia Realty MODERN 3 RM ApL New private house. W-W carpeting. Garage op­ tional. Residential. Paulding Ave. Transp. $130 Mo. KI 7-8543. bet. 5-7 p.m. Owner. HUNTS PT — 617 Bryant. 3 Front rm* New range, parquet Coors. Quiet neighborhood. After 5 — AC 2 3520 Owner. 4 ROOMS AND OVER NEWLY RENOVATED 4 Rooms & 3 Rooms $95-5120 See Str-t. In basement. 979 Aldus St., Bronx Owner BRONX — New 3 A 6 Rm. 2939 Tiemana Ave. Corner Ave. oil E. Gunhill Road. OWNER WILLIAMSBR1DGE $135 E. 231 St. 5 rms E. 224 St., 6 rms • $145 Murphy AC 2 8585 SUN.. TU 2 8168 FURN. Lewis PI. $25 wkly Child Call Mr Powell DI 6-1323 Apartment for Rent 29 MacDONOUGH ST. Bet Marcy A Tompkins Aves. J. Pickett CONEY ISLAND 3 rm apts. Welfare. Call Owner. Ml 1-7849 after 7 p.m. FOR RENT; 264 rm nice, all private Working people preferred. Call before 9 a.m. A after 5 p.m. IN 7-0184 OWNER GRAND AVE., 369 1 rm ‘urn apt. Kitchen and bath private OWNER Furn. 2'/i rooms and bath GL 3-7510, awnar HANCOCK STREET 3—1 Vi rm units, $21 weekly. Private Baths Nicely Furnished PR 3-4747 3’5 rms furn or nnfurn Good trans- -ortatton. Cal after 6 p.m. OWNER IN 9 *549 MOHAWK HOTEL - IMIWMTMWN BRtHlKI.l'N NEWIV RENOVATED 1,2, 3 Room Aqt* 1 room from $25 Free gas and electric. Full hotel service. 24 hour at- tended lobby. 379 Washington Ave., Brooklyn MA 2-1900 apt. Working couple pre- Owner 191 Halaey Street NE 8-0878 306 JEROME ST.. (Glenmore Ave.) 3 Large rms. off foyer, modern apt. House Near Iran*. AU 3-8919 Owner. » DEAN ST . 3 and 2 Rm s Furnished apt. private kitchen and bath, adults preferred. Reference, secur­ ity. IN 9-8826 or MA 2-8839 Owner 2W RM .APT. 42 ROGERS AVE.. Nr St. Marks. Call 10 AM to PR 4-1231 8 PM. OWNER JEFFERSON AE.. 237. Modern 2 rm. apt. Bright, clean, lease, se­ curity. Rent $75.00 OWNER — GL 3-9670 PARK SLOPE — 144 Rm. furnished apt. and hall rm. business couple RN 3-0561 Call OWNER Ilk. rms Rodgers Ave.----------- 3 75 3 rms President St.------- ----------3 90 4Vk rms Flatbush _— ------------9110 3 rms Quincy St. ------------------$115 618-A N'ostrand Ave. PAUL IN 7-9485 DEAN ST. 3 and 2 rm. furn apt. Private kitchen and bath, adults pref. References, security, — IN 9-6636, or MA 2-8839 Owner Welfare. Ml 1-7849 Call Owner alter 7 p.m. SO OXFORD ST. — clean, spacious. Newly decorated. Nr. 9th Ave, Subway Downtwn Bklyn Area. Owner HY 3-4339. 1. 2. AND 3 RMS. Nicely decorat­ ed. immediate occupancy. 131 Ralph Ave.. GL 3-2900 Broker 3 RMS, Emoire Blvd $85.. 3 rms St. John* Pl. $85 Apt. Bldg. 4 Rm*. Rutland Rd. $110. AGENT - SL 6-4806. IN 7-0778 3. A 4 ROOM APT . 129 Amboy St. Super in Apt. 7 or call Owner LT. 3-5352 EAST NEW YORK - Attractive 3 Rm. apts. near all transp. busi­ ness persons preferred. PR 1-9233 Owner. ST 3-1317 4 ROOM APTS FURNISHED. Down­ town Bklyn. Call after 5 P.M. UL 5-9793. MA 4-3484 CREW 4 A 5 BEAUTIFUL Large furnished rms Apt building. Convenient Good neighborhood. Security OWNER BU 2-4393 or IN 7-9553 4 RMS, FURN Sterling PI. Adults preferred. Gas A electricity in­ cluded. 92750 weekly. Pinnock Realty „ NE 8-5757 DEAN ST . 492. 2 Furnished apts to let 4 and 7 room* ADULTS PREF OWNER MO 1 4 RM APARTMENT. Furnished. Working adults preferred — OWNER ST 3-6360 Brooklyn— U nf urnishod Lefferts Ave, Crown St. Liberty Ave. Llnroln PI. Park Pl. President St $ 90. $ 68. $ 75. t 95. $120. $123 7-5800 $ 65 $ 95 - Powetl 81. - Park Pl Sterling PL. elevator buil- *120. Decatur St. Buahwick *105 Bradford St. $115. Putnam Av*. Bushtwck $120 Lincofn PL Apt bldg 3125. NE 8-5757 Realty LARGEST SELECTION OF 3 Rms. 3 Rms. RENT CONTROLLED APTS t Rms. 4 Rim. PRESIDENT ST. 2. choice ___ I 89 5 Rms. E PKWY. 2t$, welfare ____ _ ( 75 7 Rms E, N.Y.. 2, ground floor____ 9 70 AGENT LEFFERTS AVE, 3>4, elevator $ 95 STERLING PL. 3. lovely M 8 84 3 Rm* ST MARKS AVE. 3. couple pref 8 83,4 Rm* E. PKWY, 3. couple pref . $ 80 BEVERLY RD. 3. lovely_____ $ 79 STERLING PL. 1. elevator _ .. 9 85 STERLINIG PL. 1. couple pref $ 69 ROCK PKWY, 3Mi, large___ t 90 TAPSCOTT ST. 3. modern __ $ 74, LOTT AVE, 3. welfare i. 9 Tti SHEFFIELD AE. 3. couple pref t 80 PARKSIDE AVE. 4, large ___ 81041 UNION ST, 4. adulte pref____$ 95! BEVERLY RD. 4. children $ 86 ST JOHNS PL. 4. modern ___ 9 941 STRAUSS ST. 4. modem ____ $ 76 E.N.Y., 4. children ______$ 78 NEWPORT ST. 4. we If we . PARK PL. 4. welfare ____ *110! TAPSCOTT ST. 5. large $100 j GOOD REFERENCES REQUIRED HOWARD H. SILVER 135 E 98 St (TUT-Sutter) PR 3 2.300 $ 78 j 3 rm apt. Ocean Avenue. 3102 50 3 rm apt. Eastern Pkivy. *100 2 rm apt. New York Ave. 392 50 J. BUCANAN PR 2-9598 UNEURN MODERN Ard 2'<t rms Private bath A Kitchen religious OWNER home MA 2-6496 450 Grand Concourse. 1. 34, 4 $ 5 See supt in basement. 835' Kelly St 3 rme. 4 rms See supt in basement. 259 E. 125th St. 2tk rooms 250 E. 124th St. 2Ak room* See supt Apt 2-D STURMAN REAL ESTATE 391 East 149tb St. LU 5-4100 5 ROOM APT, bet Willis Ave. A Brown PI 1M St. Excellent condi­ tion. Working ;eoclr pref. MO 5-74A1 AD 418269 Owner T39 KA9T 233 Street 4 room apart­ ment for rent. Call after 6 PM week days, at, day weekend*. i OL 3-1167. Owner. L.dE LI .E YOU OWN YOtiS OWN HOME Move Io the upper Rx '220 St.) BeamUfuI Sec Pvt. entrance. 6-S130 5-3130. 4-3130, J-3106 OL 2-8471 after ? P.M. A all day Sun. Broker APPLY SUPT . 451 E 140. Owner largs 6 room apartment rong, CtU^. . 105 Owner HERKIMER ST., 57 NR. Bedford 1 - 2 beautifully furnished, til* balk*, kitchenette*, gas A electric free. Elevator Rent controlled, Adults pref.. 8th Ave. A Brighton Lines. Agent on premises. MACON ST - 2<ri RMS. Furn apt. Tile bate with tub A shower $25 50 wkly. Nr transp. Businesa couple pref. PR 8-3789. Agent. NEATLY FURN 3 RM APT Heated. Respectable working couple pref. Gas. Ring William’* Bell. ___________ HY 1-9838__________ ONE 3 Rm. apt, Working couple ■preferred. Furn complete, nr A train Call PR 3 2086 OWNER ONE t RM. Apt, share kitchen, One targe furn rm, neatly furn. Nr. 8th Ave. Train, 146th St. Call AU 6-4349 or PR 3-2006 Brown LARGE 1 Rm. apt 1 Furn. rm. ground floor Settled working cou­ ple or single preferred. Refer encev Iiecent neighborhood Rea sonable. Call ST 9-3110 Owner FLATBU! Church Ave. Vic T Rnw. modem, private bath, private entrance, reference, — PR 3 8839. after 9 p.m IN 9-5794 PLENTY APTS CUT FEES 3 rms $55 4 rms S60 4 rms $85 5 rms $85 $105 5 rme, private house $125 $’Y. parquet floors $140 6 rms. children. $120 up Agent. HY $-4310 2 and 3 rm apts from ISO 00 543 Greene Ave., DI 2 3448 OWNER 3 RM. APT., $65 Child — Owner DI 5-4000 88 41 rm* Alabama Ave. 3 rms Park Pl. Apt. house 87.50 3 rms St Marks Ave. Elevator 117 4 ion rms Jerome St., child 4 4 TO rms Greene Av*. t rms Lincoln PL Apt. house 95 3 rms Lincoln PL Adult* pre­ ferred rms Marion SI . 3100 5 3110, 5 rms Modern apt house. Childi 110. 5 rm* Rushwick. Children 1120 4’, rms Sierllag Pl..Chlldi»s 3125i NEWLY Renovated. 2 4 3 rms $85-995 1045 Fall* St. nr Simpson St Station See super in basement. OWNER 6 rms, Westskk Bx 9 rms New equipment 4 rm*. fivn Manh. $34 50 5 rase. Welter*. w_ 3 rme W 147 Ut LINCOLN —-g-y* 8 East 125 St WELFARE 8 CHILDREN AIm mmm Sat. TR 64430 TO PLACE A WANT AD CALL Ri 9-5300 UL 7-2500 813 B. I41BT ST.. 2 4 3 Rm new-| t rnw. w s. ly altered modern apts. Immed ! 4 rm* Welfare Ute ocoupnncy. Nr. shopping 4 4 rm* Nice sectiod trans* WO A UP MO 9-0132 Nd^ l rms .Children 2nd fir fee. quiet resTdental area Carver 3 ROOMS. S110 261 W. 125 St. OWNER 2 rms. Welfare M 78 HOYT STREET - I'-i- $70 mn 2v, - $00 mo. Gat and electric included, Welfare. Near all sub­ way*. See supt. Owner. 2 RMS UNFURNISHED APT. Business couple preferred. WNEB HY 3-1202 good section wkly rent HY 1-4163 ] VERY NICE RMS. Painted, decorated 207 Amboy St. Owner DI 6-7546 92 Penn St. 3 rm apt, unfurn. Working couple nreferred. Owner. Available New!! 7 3. 4, 5 8 rm arts. We'»--e and Children Welcome. Ketieck, 431 3*ri- .U> Ave. HY 8 0659 440 Lexington Avo„ 2 rm ngt. children, owner. HY 1-0543 4 GORGEOUS ELEVATOR ROOMS D-i rm neatly furnished kitchen and bath. Owner HV 30552 SUBLET Unfurnished beautiful apartment. AD 4-7911 Tl 2-1193—Ow«or Modern 2 8 3 room opti. 432 E. 148 St. 530 St. Poals PL 3318 Third Ave. Na fee. WA 6-6000 Owner High class bnlldlng. newly 4 beau ifully decorated. Ready to move in . • ' s ’T’li. . No Fees. ,0*1 Hne Ave . cor E l«5th St or Call FO 8te4hf OWNER A LARGE SELECTION OF FINE WEST 4 EAST BRONX APARTMENTS Went Rronn-4U large . _ 3 West Brau— 4', elevstsr ____ 31 Concourse Vie—4 large _____3 221 Street—4 modern__ _• Concourse Vie—3>k elevator ^ 3 University Vlc-3U larfs _»~S ..S West Bronx—3>$ large _ Tremont Vto— $iy modem ___ 3 143 St. El largo, model* — S Canooerte Vie—(t$ beautfral $ MANY MORE WE 3-1383 72 K. 133 St. 1 KLOK NEW APARTMENT 827 Union Ave. 4 Rooms, to eteve- ter. Incinerator building Must be teen to be sppreclatad 1146 Spec tel Security Measure* 1 black. Proa poet Av*.. IRT Station See Super Or Call GR 1-1455 after 4 30. No Brnkurs Fee Owner 3 $65; 44117; 1$«5; 64120 AU 6-717t AGENT AU 6-7742 I. 2 4 I KM APTS Unfurn 4 Furn TR 5-8723 Children OWNER SPECIALS , 7 rms, 377 50 3 rms, $2? 60 Throe 4 rms., $70 • $63- $71 Kitchenette*, singles, double and Ii.-’ll rms available Agenl HY 5-4.310 Three rm fjrntohed apt. Call after 6 p.m. Owner HY 84131 Bergen St., 2 rm. opt. Nicely decorated and furnished ROTHM CL 22M8 1391 Pttifk It., 2 rm agt, children, owner, IN 7-1794. 440 Lexinfton AvtH 3 rm agt, children, owner, NT 1 0543. WELFARE PREFERRED NO FEE 2»Y -1 rm apt* Newly painted. Nicely furn. Modern CMMren. Itexlngton Ave nr Noetrand Ave. IL J. HUGHES MA 24796 2 RMS KITCHEN AND BATH Newly decorated, furnished. 219 Macon St, Owtn IN NEW YORK CALL Ri 9-5300.. TO PLACE WANT ADS.. IN BROOKLYN CALL UL 7-2500 CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE 5 PM TUESDAY PRECEDING THURSDAY CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE S PJW. TUESDAY PRECEDING THURSDAY Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com --- PAGE BREAK --- 44 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Nov. 16, 1963 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS Brooklyn For Saia Brooklyn For Sale Brooklyn—For Solo Opau S»*4ay$ UL 7-3400 Clinton Hill (3 fam, ell vac) (Garage) Monoy-Mnker (4 font brick) Crown Heights (3 fam, stare) •elid brick, vacancies ell. excellent Inresne. NE 8-3731 (E»e$516PY1-3857) 1215 Fulton St. (near Bedford Ave J OPEN 0:11 AM TO 0 PM. 1 DATS A WEEK INC. BAT. A AJAX REAL ESTATE 1192 Fulton St. (Near Bedford Ave.) UL 7-3400 OMEN WEEKDAYS 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Also Open Saturdays, Snndayi Price by ovor $1,000 Eajay Thanksgiving in year awn hama CALL NOW — CALL NOW METROPOLITAN ■' ,1 2M Peumylvaaia Ave. Bkfyn. Open DI $-7100 DI 5-7100 UL 7-3400 Call Mr. Stainbarg IN 7-7477 777 NOOTRAND AVI. BRICK 2 fam brick, all vacant DUMONT 1215 Fulton 8t <nr Bedfon NE 8-3731 Eves. 516 PY 1-3857 NEAR KINGS HIGHWAY Large 2 family brick. Sami detached. 13 roams, 2Vi baths. Finished basement, 2 enr garage. Very fine resi­ dential area. Reasonable price and terms. Agent, EV 4-7265. ROOKLYN A Jamaica vicinity, .Vacant houses 1 or 2 family $300 down. Pay like rent. Sent tor ad­ dresses to Inspect. Reliable JA 6- 6860 1*5-09 Jamaica Av*. Jamaica taming 3 rms. Entire house va­ cant. AU improvements 816.900 Evergreen Associated EV 9-666* Send for a free copy of our listings Inspect yourself. $300 cash down A up. Vacant 1 or 2 family houses Brokers protected. Mr. Franklin. 1*5-09 Jamaica Ave., Jamaica 35. LI VACANT Legal 2 family brownstone, 1* rooms, steam oU. excellent location. Down payment 81 JOS. For inspec­ tion. PR 8-3789 Sydney S. Moehette 1465 Fulton St 3 FAMILY BRICK boose for sale, 7 and 6 rm apt*, with large at-, tic and garage, price $21,500. Hop- kinson Ave. near Sutter. HY 3-7371. GL 24)018, Agent AH vacant, decorated, nil. porch. DUMONT NE 8-3731 Eves 516 PY 1-3837 1215 Fulton St. tnr Bedford) AJAX UL 7-3400 Special 3 FAM BRICK $460 DOWN Lovely 3 family house, 3 charming apts., airy kilcbeus, large balb units, entirely decorated, oil beat mg system, beautiful play yard, att- ur.ted in one of the finest sections tg Brooklyn, quiet residential street, act fast owner must sell at once, easy terms to all. Su WE HAVE HUNDREDS OF HOUSES TO CHOOSE FROM, many with as little as $390 down located In Flat hash. Crown Heights. Park Slope. 3oshwick. You name the area, we have the house. Come in or call AJAX REAL ESTATE 1192 Fulton St. (Near Bedford Ave.) UL 7-3400 OPEN WEEK DAYS 9 A.M. te 9 P.M. Also Open Saturdays, Sundays and Holidays FAMILY Duplex. «>2 A 4ta. AU brich. New, never occupied. Built for the owner Must stand strict investigation PR 3-3349 Owner. 196 E. 17TH ST . 1 family, 2 car garage, used as 2. Plot 55 x M Select Flatbush location. $36488- Sasy terms. 516 FR 4-771* Ask for "SANDY". BEDFORD-STUYVESANT. 3 story A basement, brick and shingle. 2 fam ily, 10 rmi, all vacant. Going at $10J00. Cash $1,000. HERKIMER ST. 3 story brick. 2 family. 10 rms, parquet floors. All vacant. $15,000. Cash 81J00. (Buab- wick section) EVERGREEN AVE. 5 Jam , brick and shingle Vacancy, good Income Centrally located (17J08. Cash »1J6O. CENTRAL AVE (Buehwlck) 6 family brick. 2 vacancies all five rm apt*. Income over $560.00 monthly. $23400 cash and terms easy. GROWN ESTATES Hickory 3-5590 103* Lafayette Ave. _______Bklyn. DOWN Lindon Blvd. I family brick. J kiichsns. 2 bathi. vacant, decorated. 1 mice. » yra.. alt. CaU Mr 9amael KY g-liai 2 FAMILY BRICK t and 5 rma. all vacant, modem hat ebsne. acini modem baths, oil. front porch, quiet street, price $15,500. cash $1500 Ac* fast. PINKIE O. HARRIS IN 7-7*80 777 Nsrtrand Avenue UL 7-3400 Special Agent 2 FAMILY BRICK H rooms, 2Vk baths, oil steam heat, beautiful block. all vacant, lmmed iate occupancy. One fD mortgage SI .800 down. CaU PR 8S400, Mai coim Latte. Jr. E. N. Y. AREA 2 family brick A shingle, newly shingled. Fanny Farmer kitchens, beautiful baths. It beautiful rooms. S990 down. Call PR 8-8140. Mr. Brown ALL DECONTROLLED Legal 3 Family, 1* Rooms, 2 story A Basement. Ultra Modern. Best Sec­ tion in Brooklyn, Owner Can Live Rent Free Cash Down 11.200 Call GL 5-8100 Now. Mr. Flagg Lincoln PI 2 Family, Garage DOWN Charming 2 family, large sun filled .rooms, dsoonuolied. cheerful kilcb “ens. two-tone baths, lovely yard fur children, play basement, completely decorated throughout. excellent lo­ cation. a home buy that will be hard to dup:icale bring ottered at a low. tow price, ft will have everlasting value, owner must sell ''.vniedialely Neer transp , churches and schools WE HAVE HUNDREDS OF HOUSES .O CHOOSE FROM, many with as little as $390 down, located In Elat > lush. Crown Heights, Park Slope. | Bush wick. You name the area, we ; lave Ihc house. Come in or call AJAX REAL ESTATE 1192 Fulton St. (Near Bedford Ave.) UL 7-3400 OPEN WEEK DAYS 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Also Open Saturdays, Sundays and Holidays CROWN HEIGHTS, modern 2 fami­ ly. 2 story and basement brown stone. 12 rms, $3,500 down. Frank N. Brown UL 7-6017 See. PR 8-1218 DUMONT NE 8-3731 Eve*. 516 PY 1 3857 1215 Fulton St. (nr Bedford) E N. Y. — 2 family, 9 rms. brick. •. Oil, brass, front porch - yard, fin­ ished basement. All modern. Neer all conveniences. $l.$00 cash. Cat) ATTORNEY BU 7475*1 Solid brick, all vacant, mod­ em. Call Mr. Jay. NE 6-3732 Eves. 518 PY 1-3857 SPECIAL! 2 Family Brick House, a Few Doors From Historical CORNER STONE BAPTIST CHURCH. 11 Large Rooms. Modem Baths. New Heating Plant. All Vacant. Ready to Move In Only $1,300 Down Call Now GL 5-6100 MR FLAGG Glover Bkr (DIRECT FROM OWNER) 2 Family Ultra Modem. Can Be Purchased lor By A Single Woman Credit, all Vacant and immediate Occupancy, owner Now MR FLAGG GD 5-6100 CROWN HEIGHTS EASTERN PARKWAY 2 FAMILY - 2 STORY A BASEMENT. 3 BATHS ALL VACANT EASY TERMS Mr. Reynolds PR 1-1122 BARGAIN, Pacific St., 2 fam­ ily brick, steam ail, 11 rms., good for G.I., price $13,500, cash $1,500. PR 3-4747 Broker. 2 fam finished basement, $1300 dawn 11 rms newly decorated with large modem Hollywood kitchen which coMistg of wood panel cabinets A ombvnaUon sink, beautiful hard wood floor*, also lets of closet space plus finished basement with built-in bar and recreation rm. tru­ ly a beautiful home. Must sell Own­ er. MA 2-1188 253 PUTNAM AVE,. One the man who cares, renovated $1.1.500. 228 Madison St — 2 rm». 3 balhx. $19,500 family. 13 1076 UNION ST., one family, gas beat, richly renovated, $21,000 Fall commission paul. Mannings 1127 Fulton St . MA 2-73S6 W(X)DBINE STREET. Buahwtck Section, two family. 10 rooms par­ quet floors all vacant BROKER PR 14727. Buy Like Rent INCOME PROPERTIES For sale VACANT 2 FAMILIES $150 down Handyman special. » moi brick, 2 apts. Reduced $6 saj monthly 592 Warren mar 4tr> Ave. suovvay. $500 10 roams. 2 heat. Monthly 2nd St., tBedfor $500 down u. 2 baths, redecor- am plant. Monthly (120. on Ave., off Fulton St. Brownstone brick. I* rooms. 2 family, redecorated, automatic heat. Good money maker rent­ ing. reduced $16,500. Cash $1506 112 Lefferts Pl. off Clasaon Ave. $400 down 9 rooms, 2 ante newly ed Monthly $120 cash. 1*0 son St., off Nostrand Av subway station $350 down Vacant 1 family. 8 Saratoga Ave.. 1 block Fulton St., subway station. All bargain price$ MANY OTHERS NO RENT CONTROLS Reliable Corp. JA 6-6660 OPEN SUN — BROKERS PROTECTED STERLING PLACE ($750 DOWN) 2 Family Brick. Il Rooms, Vacant. Immediate Occupancy Lane Ultra Modem Private Rooms. Good Fi­ nancing OWNER GL S-8100 . LEGAL 2 FAMILY Fully det. 50 X 100, 11 rms, tin ished basement, gar . vacant. 817.- 500 Laura Seale. 737 Franklin Ave ST 3-8010 NO CLOSING FEE Beautiful 3 story, brick. 3 family. 14 rooms, rents from 2 apts. $185 month. 5 room apt for purchaser Alexander ST 3-3700 Evenings: GL *-3723 15 rm, 2 fam, $1400 dawa Beautiful. 2 fam. owner will decorate I to suit, all rms are very large. Lota of closet space, nr good shopping centers A sub. each apt has new modern kitchen w ith florescent lights, combination sinks, parquet floors, storm windows, large basement, etc A very K«1 buy Agent MA 2-Ilf* | BUSHWICK AVE., DOCTOR'S HOME, $1900 DOWN J (am limestone. 1* rms. all va­ cant. nice quiet neighborhood. 3 modern kMcbene A bath, newly ds- rotated with beautiful parquet CA9I $750 Direct from sw»sr, modem semi-de­ tached. parquet floor*. modem tiled baths, cabinet oil banter, braes plumbing, storm windows, all vac­ ant. one mtge atty. $186 mthly oov- eis all oarryin* charges. Owner. _____ ST 94852 DOWN LINDEN BLVD., Vic. 2 FAMILY Tapestry brick, detached. 2 car garage I fully dmerated 2)0.500 Cash Pinnock Realty NE PARK Pl. (Brooklyn Ave. Vici— Modem 1 family bnc*. semi de­ tached. t; bos rma. parquet, a real beany All vacant, only $1200 Cash. Mr. Lee HI 34644. Eve NI 84793 Owner's apaitment no title Fries $25.000 00 Cal be seen by appoint ment only Aifrecht Broker). 2M Graham Ave. at Grand St., Bklys. N.Y. Tel: Slag* 2-3189. Sunday 516. CE 9-3A0 Madieou St. near Franklin 8 fan lly, modem lnprov emente. Pric '...w, easy terms. •aou. ct TJiTa IS FAMILY APT. HOUSE WASHMGTON AVENUE Near Gates, income approx $1 000. direct horn Sow. rtinonir led. principal* on*f- Broker. 1 5-9881 Six Room Apta. Vac Call Owner Direct. MR F1AGG CROWN HEIGHTS. 6 Family AU 4 rma. apte. food con ONE $ Family, excellent con 5 Rm. apts, hex type rma, garage, detached, yard. < oil. comer lot 40x100, RICH •ON RCAL BRATZ 0L < 8 FAMILY. Bedford-Stuyveuor come $6,080. also • fami BM Buahwick HY 1-4163 * DUMONT NE 8-3732 Eve*. 516 PY 1 3857 1215 Fallon* St. (nr Bedfi EAST 98T11 — Brick * Family — Posseaaion * Rms : Semi detach­ ed Oil. Large open porch 823.5WI Friedman PR 1-7291. E. N Y. — 2 Family brick. Oil. Good section. 5'* A «<k rmx. Very reasonable terms arranged. SKOLNIK Ml 5 7008 4 FAMILY HOME and INCOME 5 rm modern apt. vacant, plus $259 mthly rent from other 3 apte Mthly carrying charges for everything l» only $20* Building has 17 rms. brass plumbing, parqne* floorx. modem oil burner, many extra*. Cash $3,- 500 Owner MA 7-6337. strong house with a practically new heating system, leaving town, will aell cheap. Owner. MA 2-1108 UNION ST nr Utica. 2 fam lime­ stone. 11 rma, steam ail, parquet, modern bath, nr transp $3,000 dn. Cyrus. UL 8-7373. FLATBUSH LENOX RD. .1 story, brick. 3 lamily, 15 rooms. 3 modern baths and kitchens, par­ quet floors, all decontrolled. XAvu rent free. $3,500 cash. Alexander ST 3-3700 Evenings: GL 4-3723 family, REAL ESTVTE SL 6 1605 UNION ST., (Crown Heights) Ultra modem 2 family brick. 16 rma. garage, vacant. •1500 Cash Mr. La* HY >4844. Eve NI M793 East Flatbush 2 FAMILY ' try brick, 6Vk A 7Mi rm apte. rood kitchen A modem bath Crown Ht*. Vic., an out­ standing house in an excel­ lent area. DUMONT NE 8-3731 Eves 516 PY 1215 Fulton St (nr Bedford) Coll Mr. Steinberg IN 7-7477 777 NOOTRAND AVE. • ftBAOTirUL Brick house Winthrop AJAX REAL ESTATE 1192 Fulton St. (Near Bedford Ave.) FRA mortgage. $1,900 Dn pymt. Direct front owner PR 1-9031 2A1 FAMILIES Amboy St. nr Pitkin, 5-car gar­ age. (17J0O. Fulton ST. nr Rockaway, $8.500 Strauss St. nr Sutter. $500 dn, I17J00 We have 2 and 3 family for rent NORTH ATLANTIC REALTY 'A' train Io Rockavvhy Ave EV 5-9601 20*3 Fulton St UL 7-3400 OFEN WEEK DAYS 9 A.M. Io 9 P.M. Also Open Skturdayg, Sundays NO MONEY DOWN 2 family brick, vacancy, (closing expenae* necessary) DUMONT NE 8-3731 Evas. 516 PY 1-3867 1315 Fulton Nt (nr Bedford) HEW HOUSE (FIATBUSH) DOUBLE GARAGE j I mtge only, semi-detached, modem tiled baths, brass n'umhing. oil 5 steam, parquet floors. $155 mthly [covers all carrying charge*. Cash $1500. owner MA 2-6337.__________ 2 FAMILY BROWNSTONE 1 3 story and basement, all large rma. 2 modern kitchens. 3 hath*, 2 mod Uem. parquet floor* oil PINKIE O HARRIS IN 778BI 777 Niwtrand Avenue * family house. Eastern Psikway, one 7 rm. (wo 6 rms and one 5 rm apt*. 2 vaeant. 2 decontrolled. $31.- 500. cash $10,006 J. BUCANAN FR 2-9598 INSPECT A COMPARE Fam. Brick. Perfect condition Good section nr. subway Income Mono Cash »I»X) One mortgage Owner OL 24116. TA 7-806*. NI 8-3732 M. lit FT 1* UBERTY AVENUE. East New York section Two family all va- BROKER — -ul PR 14727 NO MONEY DOWN '(Only CtoeiM Coats) modem 2 family brick. 11 mu. hast amo to East Now York hqtlex. Gar Kitchen* A Buy $4,000 1 FAMILY HOUSE. 2 Vacant, heat New boiler*, ronaanabie, low caah Bklyn NE 44009 OWNED NO MONEY DOWN (Only Closing Conte) Modem 2 family brick. 11 Hawthorne St. 3 family. 12 large rma. fully detached, oil heat, beauti­ ful area, low caah. SAINT CR 3 4295 ~ CLINTON HILL SECTION $1500 DOWN 2 fam brown atone. 1 atory A knar ment, 12 rma. unique decoration* with parquet floor*, modem kit­ chen A batit. nr 8th Av* Sub A ahopplng center* Moat sail, own­ er. MA 1-1188 CROWN HGTS — Llncoki Pl and Eastern Pkwy. 2 family brick. 10 rm*. oil steam, vacant. $1608. down PR 8 5060 ownor. HE 8-3732 Evas. 118 PY 1* $2000 DOWN Call Mr. Pep NK 8-37» East Flatbush 4 FAMILY Tapestry brick S/85A rm epta. A l/2Lk rm apt. Msdarn kltnk—u A Amsterdam News RI 9-5300 U L 7-2500 EAST FLATBUSH Modem two family aemt-detarhed tapestry brick. Two beautiful 5 A ( Room apts, plua finished basement, drleewsy, and two ear garage. Cash down $2000. balance FHA. Call agent ST 9-4705. _____________ ____ *1)7 Income, gaa heat, newly de »”*le A outside Move right PARK SLOPE (Near Prospect Prk)! Ultra modem 4 family brick, 6, £ rm apt*, vacant and decontrolled I n-8**o only $1206 Cash. -------------------7-- ■; ■ ■—— (T Mr Lee HY 3-064*. Eve. NI 84793, Lf’al t family, semi detached 2- —--------------- . 1 car garage. $3.l*XI down. Frank N. SACRIFICE. Beautiful 3 family d"w" Mr brick house, parlor floor and base- I ment vacant, parquet floor* IT7 Room*, only >1000 dawn Call Simmons MA 5-0*21 PRESIDENT STREET — 2 Fam­ ily. semi detached. One 4Mi. one $ rm apt. steam oil. garagt. yard Lovely neighborhood, need* out­ side repair. RICHARDSON REAL ESTATE SL 8-1605 UNION XT , ItRra modem I Fam­ ily brick, detached, * and 5 Rm apts. Income $8,000 Priced right Good term*. Mr. Lee HY 248*4. Eve. NI 84793 4 FAMILY Brick. East New York. 17 Rma, on* or more vacancies. Owner occupied $22,500 C*»h 83.500 Pinnock Realty NE $-5757 SACRIFICE . NO MORTGAGE Rocheiter Aoa. -Atlaa $5,000 FULL PRICE CAIX OWNER. PL 7- Ownar M«at Sail I have a beautiful 3 family brick, all vacant, oil. dec­ orated. send detached. Olvs $450 DOWN Nt t-1732 7 family brick, semi detached. 11 rma. 2-car garage. GPa only, no down payment necessary, price $14,500 Frank N Brown UL 7-4017 Sim. FR 8-1218 2 Family, 4 Story Completely decorated, cant. oil. Call Mr. Don. NE 8-3732 Eve*. 516 PY 1-3857 3 Family. 13 Rooms, 2 Story A Rswmcnt, 3 Kitchen* and 3 Bath*. Laid MeaUy with Private Apart mente. for Mother A Daughter, Pine a Complete 5 room Rental Unll. Beautiful Residential Block. Ultra Modem Home, Direct From Own- er $ljno Down Call Now Mr. Flagg GIANT I FAMILY 23 ROOMS Lsgal 2 Family Brick, 2 Car Gar­ age. 22 Large Rooms. 4 Mary, par­ quet Floor*. Mortem Tile Raths. ln- latd linoleum. A Real Potential tor a Buyer who need* room and wants to make Money Direct from Own­ er. $2600 Down. CaR Now Mr Flagg. GL 54100. RARE IN BUSHWICK. 2 Story aad Basement brownstone. 13 large rm*. 3 bath*, beautifully decora* UEARK OPTION — 2 Earn! bridge Si »l«e> ) A *1 E. N Y I decontrolled apt PR 2-3660 Mi lee 11V 3-66*4. “eve NI 84793 cash, easy payments. Nt) MONEY DOWN (Only Closing Costa) modem 2 family brick, 11 rm*. he«t area In East New York owner seeks re*porvsibts people ON EASTERN PARKWAY Ave.) Beautiful 2 familyl and basement brownstone I ultra modem, former 1 home, built on a termed eant easy term* to quai PRESIDENT $T. brick semi-detached. J modern vaeant. invited 2 FAMILY Brownstone, Raths, 16 large rms. Uuwly painted, hrok OWNER GL 2 0127. coGuAraJ? - 7 fs Modem 13 rma all Pinnock Realty PR 4-4757 ’ EAST FLATBUSH AGENT n-ATBUXH — F-AiT WAY — ) dory brick, option, others tor I 2 family brick, send-detached, 2 car garage. 13 rma. mortem hatha and kitchens, parquet floors, finish ed basement $1,501 doom green realty co. 781 Prospect Pl _ PR 1^900 HALSEY $T„ CASH $990 1 family 4 atnry brick. II rms. oil. parquet, vacant OWNER. DWORK. MA 2-SI00 IN NEW YORK CALL Ri 9-5300.. TO PLACE WANT ADS .. IN BROOKLYN CALL UL 7-25 CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE 5 F.M. TUESDAY PRECEDING 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 --- <6 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Nov. 16, 1963 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS <T ALBANS - J Family. brick. 1 oar garaga. * rooms down. 3V» rooma 2nd floor. Gaa boat. Heaven On Earth (24.000 HO 5 2275 *OtUS - Cape Cod. Brick. 1 car carafe. MalW pUt. I k hatf ■let door, I bedrooms 2nd floor. 4 bedrooms la all..Oil beat, wall- to-wall carpeting. Take over hig» mortgage CALL AGENT “ HOLLIS (24,000 1 FAMILY. 5 A BATH DOWN S k BATH UP. FINISHED ATTIC FINISHED BASEMENT. EXTRA KRCHEN k BATH STORMS k SCREENS. VENETIAN BUNDS. AUTOMATIC GAS HEAT. 24 X 140 PLOT BEAUTIFUL LOCATION COTE REALTY U949 SUTPHIN BLVD. JAMAICA JAMAICA - 2 family. 4 down, 3 up semj-finished basement with full bath, oil h.’at 35 x 100 plot. Gia NO CASH DOWN (17000 HO 5-2275 CAIX AGENT. MUST SEE TO BELIEVE FUU DOWN PAYMENT $450 6k NO DOWN PAYMENT 8 Room Ranch $14,990 ■ 5 Extra Large Bedrooms • Master Bath • I Cempuct KHdiea • Formal Dialog team • Lax- I urieus Living Roam • 4 Seasons Sun Perch • Full ■ Ploy Basement • Oil Het Water Heat • Oversized Piet • Springfield Gardens. FULL DOWN PAYMENT $500 ! G.I.'i NO DOWN PAYMENT Let Us Help You Celebrate The Holidays In Your Own HOLLIS ST. ALBANS Genuine Foreclosure I 3 LARGE BEDROOMS ■ SPACIOUS KITCHEN • 6ARA6E 6AS HEAT ONE BLOCK TO ■ SCHOOLS A SNOPPMG ■ 159-11 HHMde Ave.. Jamaica, NY. Open 7 Days a Week 9 AM to I PM Plenty of Parking Space J A 3-4521 VILLAGE $17,990 ALL APPROVED FOR GTs MOVE IN 12 DAYS NO FANCY TALK PRICE $11,500 • room*. 8 bedrooms. IVk baths. 2 with Bar. Beautiful Patio k Many Other Extras. The Paymanli are UNDER 990 per month. You Nond Only S200 for Contract. CALL NOW. DON'T WAIT. Yon can Eat THANKSGIVING TURKEY II Your Own Home. OWNER JA 3-2572 BEAUTIFUL 2 FAMILY BRICK GAS HEAT, G.L APPROVED NO CASH DOWN TO AU EXACTLY AS ADVERTISED AGATE REALTY ALL BRICK OZONE PARK NEWLY DECORATED HOLLIS 71/2 ROOMS SPFLD GDNS 2-FAMILY S A S Reera Amrtaee AR 6-3233 to Gl's $15,490 $130 Cosh No More MOVE IN TODAY 3 Full Apartments VACANT 6.1. AU APPROVED. FINISHED BSMT. • 6AAA6E Thu Beautiful House Centrally Lo­ cat'd Haa 1 Full Apartments. With Modern Kltchena and Bath Pay- ntenu are only 4104.03 Monthly tar the Whole Houoe. You need Only 4130 Down Payments Nat Ona Cent LEGAL 2-FAMILY D-ET-A-C-H-E-D 3 rms k enclosed porch on lit Poor. 4 rma an 2nd floor GARAGE — LOT 25 X 100 AUTOMATIC OIL HEAT PRICE: 817X000 Minimum GI k FHA down payment CORNER MANAGEMENT CORP. US-02 HILLSIDE AVE. 017-9600 bedrooma and la clean and neat aa can be Situated In a 1 fare rone No long bus lines. Only SIM re­ quired lor all. selling for JIUOO aad monthly payment! according In our Agent will only be MB 03. If I nU rant ad. call kirn at: JA 4-7302 $7,990 THAT'S ALL $50 DOWN $47.94 MONTHLY This 4 Room Colonial Within Walking Distance af the Subway. Detached aad Beady far Yon to Move In. The Pnll Price M only <7X44. On Con­ tract 990 Where Can Yon Gat a Batter Deal Than Thia? Year Monthly Payment Is 447.94. My Agent Saya Yen can Be la by THANKSGIVING. MR. DONALD JA 3-2572 TREE TO YOU NEW COLORED TV WHEN YOU BUY THIS HOUSE 2 Family - $22,990 EXTRA ORDINARY SACRIFICE ESTATE MUST SUL $1S0 DOWN Laurelton $17,990 LIVE RENT FREE! 2 LGE (-ROOM APTS. Completely detached — auto­ matic ail heat - MOO CASH G.I.a. NO DOWN PAYMENT! MUST BE SOLD THIS WEEKEND' CALL AGENT. MR. PRENDERGAST 0L 8-21G0 ST. ALBANS 9-ROOM COLONIAL GPS NO DOWN PAYMENT OTHERS 9900 CASH _____ 4-7371 5 BEDRMS — MODERN KITCHEN HOLLYWOOD RATH CAU AGENT OL 1-2100 HOLLIS BEAUTY ST. ALBANS SOLID BRICK LEGAL 2-FAMH.Y LIVE RENT FREE! I LGE APTS — TAKE OVER EXISTING MORTGAGE ) CLOSING FEES • NO CRED1 CHECK1 MOVE RIGHT IN! CALL AGT . R HAZEL 01t-2100 SOLID BRICK Chappelle Gardens, excellent home with large modem opts; oil unit, private driveway, gar­ age and extras. A-1 area, good income. G.I. NO CASH $1,700 Cosh Non GI H & H 173-22 Hillside Avenue. Jamaica JA 3-5300 RD If |f_ QUEENS VILLAGE $23,500 5 BOOMS A BATB 4 ROOMS 4 BATH FINISHED BASEMENT DOUBLE 0ABA6E Modernized Colonial with 50x 100 landscaped plot, many val> uable extras included. 2 mod­ ern opts. A-1 condition, A-1 area, price below market value for quick deal. $3,000 down. Owner has bought another house and must sell this week- JA 3-5300 HEAVY SACRIFIC t>wner now practically giving aW ate apartments k entrances. 4 k bath. 4 k bath, k 3 k bath, beautiful neighborhood. 2 car garage. 49x144 Wanted a Willing Buyer with 994 treed plot, FHA approved. <2X49 rash to purchaae a huge and modem down payment. Call Today! A Mon- I year old Ranch. In St Albana ey-Mabar! The Original k Only lor only (12.790 Unbelievable buy. Licensed Only 49110 per month Plenty af Best D*«l R*n!tv RE 9-6067 valuable extras. Call MR DIAR klOTIf C HVIIVC IN THE EMPIRE STATE! to ttn- ln/2rI,mlt‘<’n HOLLIS 521,500 I-ovely legal I family, gorgeous lit floor aoamnent 2 bedrooms, mod­ em kitchen, ballroom sire living room, wall-to-wall carpeting, fin- lahed basement with bar. uoetalri apt.: } rooms k batk.-O.I. Approved No Down Pavment. The Original k Only licensed Best Deel Reelty RE 9-6067 IN THE EMPIRE STATE' »-■ I , nil ,| J e-_ J- - - ypnngrieia uaraens Doing to California. 3 No Down Payment for OIK Small down for Civilian. NO down payment on these beautl- ul I k 2 family houses L A R REALTY ST 4 9343 HO 9-1940 FLUSHING ” Detached 1 family. 7 iarge rooma, 2 baths Near ev- erything Call owner. SP 4-7795. UT. ALBANO I family detached 4 hedrms. Oar­ age. Oil heat. Priced to sell quick­ ly. 914X90. Small cask Malcolm Realty LAG-2110 300-03 Linden Bhd Rt Alban, BAIHC.ET PARR Ranch. 0 yra old. 2 bedrma. Modern kitchen. Wall oven. Wall to wall carpeting. Beautifully finished base­ ment Oil heat. Large plot, Neer everything 422Mt Malcolm Realty ARVIRNI—/Rackaway Bnocli) 4 family brick and stucco Large apte. furnished, all available, home plus income, one Mock from beauti­ ful beach, bargain 914.M4 Owner. Ufa! tree-lined residential section la located a Floridian Ranch con­ sisting of 4 bedrooms, playroom haaement, 2 car garage, ell beat, and almost a HA1E ACRE of Land, selling for only (13.984 tow monthly payments MR. UFED AX 7-4072 CAMBRIA HEIGHTS $900 I AM FORCED TO SELL MY I Room House W/W Carpeting. Part 9 RMS $115 PER MO. Flelr ReeHy LA R-77S7 Detached Con tern para if American 6 huge roon-i 1Vj baths finished basement Excellent Neighborhood In beautiful Hollis on lotely land .raped grounds There H a large lutnrtons llvlat room, fdl formal dining room, spurious irdrtern kit­ chen. extra lavatory. 2 summons maider bedrooms. luvurtoua tile bathe, gnegeoua finished basement, playroom, garage, oil bed. NO CASH Gi $1000 cosh non G.l. Home Speciellet 173-3'’ Jamaica Ava. AX 1-1344 LOVELY HOMFa nr alt tranap In gractenl Bvtog. In. nnrne Park, tree lined atreet. flntthed attic, playroom with klcben and bar, ocreened-ln patio, large bar-b-q Pit. garage overhead dear ___ 414-AM 4-4924 OWNER E EI.MHtlRAT. 4 rmS»ml attached all brick, fall basement, garaga. for os Unit a* $79 mu. mtge. A SPEND THE WINTER IN ITS WARM, CLEAN ROOMS IN SUBURBAN ST. ALBANS, HOLLIS, QNS VILLAGE, SPRINGFIELD GDNS & CAMBRIA HEIGHTS ★ ★ ★ YOU EARNED YOUR G.l. RIGHTS WHY NOT USE THEM NOW! ★ ★ ★ WE HAVE HELPED THOUSANDS OF OTHER VETERANS — LET US HELP YOU — CALL OR COME TO: 20th CENTURY SALES, INC. 16B-10 Hillside Ave., Jamaica OLympia 8-9000 ST ALBANS 2 Family — 49x100 plot 4 mom apt a — Garage Approved mortgage — Terrific Buy Republic Realty Co 101-11 Hillside Are, FRAME Building. I story. 4 rma. detached, gaa heat Spanish style roof, insulated, storm windows lot » x 100, 413 000. principals only Cali after « p m. OWNER FI 1 5000 ______ ! SPRINGFIELD GARDENS 1 family semi-detached, wall Io walll carpeting. Storm doors k screens. 7 yra old. private owner LA 9-4091 FLUSHING - $18,990 FANTASTIC VALUE Large stucco bungalow, situated on 39*200 landscaped plot, garage, oil heat, king site eat-in-kltehen. wood- burning fireplace. 2 master bed­ rooms. GI or EHA low rath TROJAN AX 1-0100 JA 6-6300 8 ROOMS ONE FARE ZONE FINISHED BASEMENT Immaculate Dutch Colonial la Heart af Teem. Festering 4 Bedrooma. 1H Raths. AB Monthly Paymenta <7194. ALL NO CASH (ii,9M mu met JA 6-7300 UP-14 Hillside Ave. Jamaica BRICK HOLLIS ENGLISH TUDOR GI NO CASH CIV. $500 CASH 415JOO FULL PRICE ARCADIA NO CASH G.l REDUCED TO $13,000 10 Rooms - Both Aportmnts Vocont MODERN KITCHENS & BATHS #1250 ESSEX Toke 8th Ave. "I" Train to Sutphin Blvd. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK LEGAL 2 FAMILY MUD BRICK. 4 ROOMS DOWN AND 4 ROOMS UP. FINISHED BASEMENT FOR ADDITIONAL INCOME TAKE OVER G.l. MORT- GAGE. 1 DAY CREDIT CHECK. THEN MOVE IN. FOR DE TAILS. CALL OWNER OL 4-1770 ALL BRICK OZONE PARK NEWLY DECORATED NEW GAS HEAT, NICE AREA. YARD. GARAGE. CAU FOR DETAAS. LT. REALTY CORP. 017-0090 Amsterdam News _________ ALL $77.31 MONTHLY NO CASH DOWN NEWLY DECORATED 4 Rooma. Finished Basement. Gar­ age. Detached k Vacant, fee Yon Aak for Any More la A House? Cell Now and Move tn Next Week If You Qualify. OWNER JA 3 3421 NO CASH DOWN I WILL PAY AU YOUR CLOSING FEES ON Thia Newlv necorated 4tk Room De­ tached Palace to Years. Waiting only for you fo Move In I Must Sell It thia Week That la why 1 ant JiMt About Giving It Away. Call Immediately Gwnee RF. • 2*40 SPRINGFIELD GDNS Fatwcloaure. 1 family detached, 7 rma. enclosed porch, cash only <3M. Broker. TW 4-9444 Evenings SPECIAL - CORONA — 2 family detached. 4 k 2 large rma. 3 car garage Walk to sub Vary good locatioa Only 414X44. C. EI.MHURST - Builders rlnaeoul Four 2 family. 4 k I available Reduced prices NeaWtt NE 9 »22 Amsterdam News 90. OZONE PK. 4tfc rma, detach­ ed. full basement, lovely garden, economy special. 110.999, tana da.. 994 mthly pays mtge. ns cloatng faea. Item VL-4. RICHMOND Hill, detached Pi rm Colonial, finished basement, gar- 994. gaa heat, only 4I4JM. 4344 da No Closing feet Item VL-k Corwin Gutleber Realtors 94-12 Liberty Ava. MI 1-1443 l»44 Hillalde Ava. AX 7 1324 WITH SI 00 CASH —________" HOLLIS — $17,990 3 master bedrooms ~zv/le»en kitrhen 10000191 Kite non 2 mod.rn baths yw have a steady Jab and 4100 £. •-5*. '.Xs: .,’X ■?, fini.h.d bai.m.nt i."., A.bwrtlM,!’«"« i" * with large living room, formel r you K. famen ja 4-7241 dining roam, knotty pine eat-in Of J.IS AREA - Brick. 4 Rma. and! It'teh*n' 0,1 unit, landtCOped patio integrated public and pare- plot A go r a go. Excellent buy. I ki/\ Z*kCLI chill schools. tlTJtot Low down Payment ________ OL 4-2749 G.l. NU VAin $800 NON G.l. ----------------------- — fr'UMFiibrrh ten f _ e —------ um. RICHMOND HIU. - 7 Mooena. va- rant, inriumnx tumiiurt, setti* m- late. 43M cash to all Exclaal’. with GOODYEAR. OL 7-4400 ORK CALL Ri 9-5300.. TO PLACE WANT ADS .. IN BROOKLYN CALL UL 7-2500 KT Al.RANS - 2 Family, brick 4 stucco, 9 and 4. MOO down Fall Price 914.300 Sharpe 1> 7 2700 JA 3-5300 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 --- ■9 * 9 9 % 9 * * r 50 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Nov. 16, 1963 He's 101 Years Old *• Bishop Now Believes In Social Security Bv MALCOLM NASH (See Photo on Page 31) Twenty-six years ago Bishop Herbert Welch, then 75 and already one of the most esteemed Meth­ odist churchmen, expressed the opinion that he was “not insympathy with the establishment’* of a Social Security system in 1937. I He felt then that the establ.sh companion as you continue on SCHR Wonts To Hear Mr. Mulhearn By MALCOLM NASH > The State Commission for Human Right* said it will ask Supreme Court this week to direct A high official of Local 28 of the Sheet Metal Wor*^ * to testify before the commission when it r®®ulp5. hearings on Monday on alleged^ race bias ifl tnt union. An aide of Henry Spitz, general counsel of thet commission, told The Amsterdam News Tuesday an application was being drawn which would be submitted to the court to ask it to order-John Mulhearn, recording secretary of the local, to take the stand next week. questions relating to Its policy. If the court rules against tt. Mulhearn will not have to testify. If R does not. then he must take the stand and reply to the In­ quiry. 1 The agency opened its probe under Commiaaionera Bernard Katzen, Francis Giaconne and Ruperto Ruiz last Oct 23 after it found “probable cauae” ln State Attorney General; Louis Lefkowitz* complaint that the union bars non whites (rum train­ ing and membership. • Never Called ; Lefkowitz had cited James Bal­ lard, a Negro of 22, who had applied for .admission to the union's apprenticeship program on March 23. 1962, but had never been called, although applicants who had filed after him asserted- ly had been accepted. He contends Ballard wa< Ig­ nored because of his race. • The union has about 3,000 mem­ bers, all white, and an estihiated 400 apprentices, also all white. Ballard, married, a father and a resident of 41-12 Vernon Blvd., Long Island City, Queens, testi­ fied on several occasions. Last Wednesday Samuel Harris Cohen, counsel for the union, ask­ ed Ballard whether he was a member of the black Muslims. The jobless Ballard, an Air Force veteran, replied that he is a Moslem and that he had attended the church where Mal- collm X is the minister. Cohen was ordered to drop his inquiry when Commissioner Katz­ en; the presiding commissioner? ruled it irrelevant. Parsons To j Back SNCC * * W The Negro Ministers of Brook lyn are sponsoring a mass meet ing Thursday, Nov. 7 at 8 pm at Bethany Baptist Church, h support of thA Student Non-vio lent Coordinating Committee. Bob Moses, an official of SNCC is scheduled as principal spies er. A spokesman for the mini ters said the need to help *• student group wax pressing the March on Washington vgr ment of such a system would your journey, contribute to what he considered (..hristgau, who never person- the great concentration of power ally met the bishop, reportedly sent the greetings in recognition in the federal government. AU an aged woman needed in of Bishop W eleh s being ‘ one the old days, he would often of the oldest and most distin- say, was a black dress and a guished” beneficiaries erf Social rocking chair on the front porch Security in this area to spend her twilight years. Last week Thursday Bishop Welch, who was born In New York’s Greenwicn Village in 1862. observed h.s 101st birthday at 520 W. 110th St. where he lives with the younger of his two daughters, Eleanor Welch. He is a widower. Views Change - Between 1937 and recent years Bishop Welch had changed his views on Social Security. He now feels it is a necessity — there i are not enough rocking chairs and porches, he observed. | A sprightly, white - haired 'churchman, whose eyes are alive On hand to help him mark his ... . j___ „ with youthful curiosity and glee, entry "into another centory of Bisbop Welch faces life at 101 tie were Stanley J. *j'nSiood humor. trict manager Asked whether he hopes he will STARTING LINE-UP — Un­ beaten Thomas Jefferson High School football team has its eyes on the Public School Ath­ letic League championship. Left to right, front: Frank Sarli, A1 Arbietman. Walter Wishka, Ken Kawer, Stu Aaronson, Ivan Keabon, Les Anderson. Back: Barry Reitman, Cary DeAnge- lo, Mike Douglas, Willie Ram­ ey and coach Moe Finkelstein. The team will meet Tilden High School at Tilden, Nov. 28. (Moore Photo). Mulhearn appeared before the commission last Tuesday but re­ fused — at the direction of the union's lawyer — to answer its questions to determine whether the union’s apprenticeship pro­ gram bars Negroes and Puerto Ricans. Most Important The commission considers Mul­ hearn the most important offi­ cer of the local. Actually, the court will rule on whether the agency has the right to ask a union's official It’s “Commissioner Cleve” Now, Please! h I « - Cleveland Robinson, secretary-treasurer of Dis­ trict 65 of the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, was sworn in by Mayor Wagner Tues­ day as a commissioner of the City Commission on Human Rights. Robinson, 46, became the four­ teenth commissioner of the agen­ cy and its fourth Negro, exclu­ sive of Madison S. Jones, the executive director. The position is a non-salaried one. Auto Workers, whose duties and ednstant traveling compelled him to resign as commissioner. As a commissioner, Robinson will, among other things, help shape policy of the commission and sit in on hearings held be­ fore the agency to look into al­ leged or apparent discrimination in other agencies, firms, unions and areas within the city. Stan­ ley Lowell is the chairman of the commission. The other commissioners are Eleanor Clark French, Murray Gross, Dorothy Hart Hirshon. Vincent Lacapria, David H. Lit­ ter, Morris Ploscome, Frederick Richmond, Juan Sanchez, Juan Aviles, Louise Glover, Theolphi- lus Lewis and Lester A. Walton. The last three commissioners are Negroes. ’ - Robinson has been the third He will fill out the term of Brendan Sexton, of the United Order Trial In Evers Slaying Case JACKSON, Miss. — By a 6-3 vote the Mississippi Supreme Court blocked further mental tests for Byron de La Beckwith Tuesday and ordered him to be sent back to jail here to stand trial for the brutal murder of the late NAACP field secretary Medgar Evers. ‘Enough is enough.' Working Plan • He said he had “a little work­ ing plan of four points" that pushed him pass the 100 mark. He ticked them off: “modera­ tion in work when circumstances permit, prohibition of worry, a little play along the way, and trust in God.” More seriously, he thinks the present Ecumenical Council in Rome will produce “good re­ sults,” although it will not pro­ mote “unity in the sense of mer- ger but unity in the sense of a spiritual union.” It's Your Health People Who Like People Are Found InVolunteers You have a lot of people pulling a member of speakers’ bureau, for you when it comes to pro­ to educate their neighbors about tecting your health. There are health. They handle the paper doctors and nurses and hospitals, work when a chest X-ray bus of course, and also health de- comes to their neighborhood. And partments and their staffs and they help in the all important all kinds of different experts In job of raising funds to get things laboratories and pharmaceutical done. firms and government offices in Washington, to mention a few. But did you ever think that are 8 Jot others - not professional health people - who also working hard to keep and your community free This health message from the New York Tuberculosis and Health Association is presented as a public service by this news- Your neighbors, volunteers, do plenty - just because they like people! Why not join them? “Young people are no worse ,are than young people of my day and, in manv reseeds there are bet- from disease? These are people! paper, in many respects, mere are bet- who wofk fQp ^^ng as voL * " he said. Church Mergers On proposals within the United States to discuss the possibility of merging the United Presby­ terian Church, the Protestant Episcopal Church, the United Church of Christ, the Polish Na­ tional Catholic Church arl the Methodist Church, he said- I think there is no working; program for a merger. Union,, not unity, will eventually come.” I unteers, because they believe In it, because they like people. Take the voluntary health or­ ganizations, for instance. There are quite a number of them, but the Christmas Seal association is a good example. It’s been bat­ tling against ‘ tuberculosis and other respiratory diseases for a good many years now - since 1904, in fact. , People In It And the Christmas Seal as­ sociation, like the others of its The bishop has been collectingmostly of Social Security benefits since the p,e who work . and work hard . early 1950s. He has had 5 pas- for tte loVe of it . total assignments during his min- What do they do? a thousand isterial years and served during't^g. , aU of them necessary the later part of his life as a'and useful. They serve on corn- missionary in the Far East. . . , m_lt^e!_to Sagnelli High Man In Bowling John Sagnelli rolled a 939 three- game total on the Strand Lanes to set a new park for the Ripley Bowling* Classic League. Sagnel- li, a member of the loop leader, Continentals, also roled a high game of 279 to erase the previous high game mark of 277 set by Jack Clemente. Sagnelli rolled games of 204, .1279 and 223. Clemente was sec- co_m™“tty ond with a 911 three - game total He is the oldest living grad-! problems. They join on boards uste-of Brooklyn Polytechnic In-1 of directors and make policy, stitute and Wesleyan University They rpan a booth at an eahibit land talk to people - or talk as in Middletown. Conn. and Larry LaSorsa collected 867 to finish in third place. The Con­ tinentals took team honors with 31». The League, one of the largest iallot Is Battle Cry In Miss. JACKSON, Miss. — Strength­ ened by some 82,000 “freedom votes” he received in his can­ didacy for Governor of Missis­ sippi in last week’s election Aar­ on Henry, NAACP state presi­ dent, said he would launch a statewide campaign to register citizens who have been unsuc­ cessful in becoming qualified vot­ ers. The long-range NAACP goal which will be launched next month, will seek to register at least 100,000 Negro voters over the next four years, Henry in dicated. The 82,000 votes were write-in votes for Henry in the election, but did not count as Mississippi does jiot count such votes In U. S. Court Most of the persons who cast votes far Henry were doing so because of the state's registra­ tion requirements which bar most Negroes. These require­ ments are being challenged by the Justice Department in the federal court. Meanwhile Charles Evers, who succeeded his brother, the late Medgar Evers, as NAACP field secretary here, reported that Ne­ groes have been meeting with some quiet gains in recent weeks Since the demonstrations here resentative of the same office Fioresi had with him a let ter j which was sent to the bishop by Victor Christgau. executive director of the Social Security Administration in Washington. It said: “It gives me great pleasure to send yoa birthday greetings and my personal wishes for a happy second century of life. May your path onead be. - <4ene of). . peace and content be your Sues Eastland In Seizure Of SCEF Records WASHINGTON — Is Mississip­ pi's race-baiting Sen. James O. Eastland resorting to Illegal seiz­ ure of records in an attempt to harass leaders and cripple the civil rights fight in the South? This is the question which will be argued in the U S. District Court in Washington next week when Eastland and J. G. Soufr- wine, counsel for the Senate In­ ternal Security Committee, are due to answer to a $500,000 suit which accuses them of conspiring with Louisiana officials to records of the Southern Confer ende Educational Fund, headed by Rev. Fred L. Shuttleworth In the suit filed by New York attorney William L Kunstler. James A. Dombrowski, executive director of the Fund, charges th»t Eastland conspired with Lou­ isiana officials to raid the SCEF offices in New Orleans last Oct. 4 and to arrest Dombrowski and other fund officers illegally as a cover for seizing their files and records. Mission Sunday Pageant Is Huge Boro Success ■" The suit seeks a permanent injunction enjoining Eastland and others from using “in any manner whatsoever any of the various documents, books, records or other objects seized.” and asks the court to have the records returned to the Fund. The suit alleges that many of the seized gnd from documents were sent directly to,wh<> raarched through the streets a,s°- like Eastland. Victory Church last week drew black and white Roman Catholics from all over Brooklyn into the Bed- ford-Stuyvesant church. AU eyes were on'the little boys land There w"e the Intellectual parishes contributions and spiritual ones which enriched ihe church through the 22 mayors of Uganda and those of Nagasaki. The great contribution of Am­ erica people, Fr. Cullen said, dressed in diverse habits of priests, nuns and brothers. There were monsignors also, and bish­ ops integrated loops, has 16 teams. Keeps Lead Jack Clements maintains his leadership in the loop’s average department after seven weeks of bowling with 202.22. His top game Tuesday night members of the New York Jets football team will bowl against four Ripley keglers on the Strand Lanes. The exhi­ bition will be followed by a fash­ ion show. TEAMS Continentals Mohairs Classic Kings Highway The Mission Sunday pageant held at Our Lady oft of the evening was 247. Clerks Hired Several retail stores in Negro neighborhoods have hired clerks and stockboys, the federal gov­ ernment has hired Negro clerks in the Post Office and several other agencies which had em ployed only whites. Presently ne­ gotiations are underway for hir­ ing Negro bus drivers and for the removal of segregated signs in public buildings. AKA Sorors Hold Benefit Thomas Jones, eighth-grader at .was the close relationship that Lord English Our Lady of Victory School was , exists between priest and peo- dressed as Cardinal Laurian pie. The long range challenge, Rugambwa of Tanganyika, East he stated, was sharing the faith, starting with a sound personal Africa. He looked like the taU, study and conversion. thin church dignitary. Plaids Ivy League TEAMS Worsteds fcrge This sharing of the faith, he Quality six Negroes have been added to, -. - - the police force in Jackson and N. I • AiriTlOn eight employed as school guards. While the Negro policemen pa­ trol Negro areas, they are per­ mitted to arrest white persons. In Exercise _ . top official of District 65 for the SNCC ident John past 11 years. He is considered an able, tough and eloquent ’abor leader. prepared a fire - ea foundation funds have nied the group* Mjvig The court held that Circuit Judge Leon Hendrick of Jack- son had exceeded his authority in ordering pre-trial sanity tests, .... for Beckwith on the motion of of thc Au«‘ 28 raar.ch ?» He is also a civil rights lead­ er. He was national chairman „„ . . the state. In announcing the ministers also stated that had re-opened their emplo; center at Bethany Baptist ington and an official of the Negro Americas Labor Council. ^a^amney headed by A. Philip Randolph, the caller of the march,!- - j Jobs for over requisitions _______ Airman First Class Linton A. Matthews, of 300 W. 138th St., is participating in Exercise Big Lift, the joint Department of De­ fense demonstration of U.S. ca­ pability for rapid massive re­ inforcement of NATO forces in ''Europe. An armament mechanic, the 9 tj,e announced Airman Is a member of a com- .V(-ck posite air strike force of the 116 Tactical Air Command aircraft deployed to France and Germany. Little Leaguers Sign In Queens Boys between the ages of 8 and 12 may register In the Central Queens Little League at three points in Queens between 9 a.m. aSd 12 noon on Saturday, Nov. 2 and the following Saturday, Nov The employ nfMBTtffice to-1 through Friday, am. to 5 p m. “We want to come in," the spoke Woman Tai Pierce's Jo! Policewoman Theresa Meichionne. 48, succeeds this pence W. Pierce as deputy commissioner. Boys to be registered should Mrs. Melchionne, a Huntt be accompanied by a parent and lege graduate, will sup in possession of a birth certlf- men and women also the icate. The registration points are ies of the 81 youth pat the St. Albans Congregational signed to the 81 police Church. 172-17 Linden Blvd., P S.jin the city. Mrs. Melchkane to 59. Springfield Blvd. near Mer- the third women to beewne a rick Blvd.; and 187-07 Keeseville deputy commissioner. She Joined Ave. . the force in 1942. W L 20 8 17)4 10)4 17 11 16 12 16 12 16 12 14 14 W L 14 14 15 13 14 14 12)4 15)4 16 12 12 1$ II 17 23 5 Negroes are continuing their Big Lift, which is the largest battle, Evers indicated, not by transoceanic airlift in military history, involves moving 15,000 demonstrations, b’«t through se­ troops of the 2nd Armored Divi­ lective buying against merchants sion to West Germany in a 72 who refuse to hire Negro clerks, hour period. who contribute to the White Ci­ tizens Council, or who refuse to address Negroes as "Mr. or Mrs.” Evers feels tire boycott is nearly 90 per cent effective. Xmas Seal Campaign Starts Fri. ci os/hc ms ONLY Herringbone Styles Cashmere Fulton Street Jets Ask Jews Adopt New Attitude On Marriage full fUf IHSUKA net DOWN Epsilon K Omega Chapter, Al­ pha Kappa Alpha lorority, will present a Fashion Show direct­ ed by Mrs. Lois Alexander. President of NAFADS, at it's benefit luncheon, Saturday. Nov­ ember 9 at The Sheraton-Tenney Inn, Elmhurst, L.I. mission Sunday ended in the tart with personal theme, was to at, example: the practice of simple virtues, at home, work and rec­ reation. There came a troupe dressed in the white and blue stripes of the Swiss Guards who patrol the Vaticaa. And after them came the pope, eleven-year old Greg­ ory Irish, also of the host parish. He was carried aloft in the chair, the way the Pope is car­ ried, by six adult members of the .church. Just like the real pope, he was giving Ms Mess­ ings to crowds on either side. AU the while the twirlers, drummers and other members of the St. Mary’s Wavette and Drill team, provided music and appropriate performances. The proceeds from the lunch­ eon will go to the Prince Ed­ ward County Schools of Farm­ ville, Va„ where, until this year Negro children have been with­ out schools when the public schools were abandoned rather than comply with the Supreme Court Decision on Desegregation. The sorority is closely identified with the movement to furnish help for these children; one of Inside the church the service it's members, Miss Roslyn Ter- .was presided oyer by Msgr. borg was Instrumental In spear James Rogers, dean of the di­ heading the drive for funds which |ocese jn the ^b^nce of the bUh The editorial was a comment- culminated in the tMck Gregory ops who were in Rome for the __ Vatican Council. Officiating was ary on 8 ,u'7^y m?de 2L Benefit last spring, while another Thomas Hagerty assisted by Erich Rosenthal and published soror and the chapter s scholar- Fr. James McCabe, deacon and last Oct. 25 which noted that student. Mrs. Lechen De- Fr. Henry McCloud, sub-deacon marriages between Jews beyond Rev. Fr. William Cullen of St. the third generation and non- Jews 'were increasing and pre­ sented an undermining influence to Judaism. The Jewish Post and Opinion, a weekly publication, called last week upon the Jewish commun­ ity to develop a new at­ titude towards marriage between Jews and non-Jews. Van •pectlvelr, volunteered their ser­ vices as teachers in last sum­ mer's Crash Program Peter Claver preached the ser­ mon. dwelling on the contribution non-Catholics had made to the church. Some were physical, like ... . - altar. before Christ was born. If the figures of Intermarriage Jerusalem iti Illinois or California or New York are not the 42 per cent of Iowa or the 13.1 per cent of ,in vogue in Ethiopia and Egypt our nations capital, they most when Moses sweated ln the Nile certainly are large' enough to Or the stained glass windows, ___ the; Hold Two Who Bolt With Bolt Patrolman Joseph Rogers the Atlantic Ave. station alertly grabbed two young men who were allegedly escaping after snatch­ ing three bolts of cloth from Sub- bt Shoman's tailor shop aS Al- and Herkimer St. Dam bany — warrant careful consideration, said the editorial. The editorial noted that "as long as Jews move freely about of'in our society as they do (and who would want to change this?) there will always be Intermar­ riage.” notwithstanding the desk pounding of those who “demand we do something.” Accept Fact The Jewish weekly said “the * (stigial attitude that anyone who ihtermarries must he ostracized downs for the Robert Monday. touch- T»,e allegedly bolting pair were ’iors. He'identified as Landis Baugh Jf„ « srornd one to thi »"d quarter and two to the third. 23, of 63 Downing St . and Tho- must be revised to accept the mas Overboy Jr.. 26. of 457 Her- fact of intermarriage and«to pre- kimer St. Police, who said the vent the Inalienatlon of the non­ Jewish as well as the Jewish men used physical force in the partner of such unions. caper, booked them on assault and robbery counts., It denounced the Orthodix po- Eagles Meet Falcons Sun. ta #n the Falcons eleven Sun- di morning at Rice Stadium • Pelham section ef the in Bi !. The Eagles, a newly or- g, id team, hare been un- ' on the grkflron so far he teem is show- sition of decades ago which, it noted, still persists In calling foiFa "shiva” period for the son or daughter who marries out of the religion^ Tk* ij said, "is a cruel recourse to barbar­ ism which has proven to be only a slight deterrent.” The Jewish weekly, a spokes­ man said, does not speak for either the Orthodox. Conserva­ tive or Reform Groups of Jud­ aism. but is an Independent news­ paper with a paid weekly circu­ lation of 20,396. African Labor Officials Here WASHINGTON - Five Afri can labor officials have arrived here to study in the U. S. Labor Department under thc supervi sion of Its Bureau of Internation­ al Affairs, It has been disclosed The Africans invited to study by Asst. Labor Secretary George L-P Weaver are Congo Labor Minister Alphonse Nguvulu; Jean-Marie Turnswaku, of the Congo Labor Ministry; Theophile Bonanzin Paolettl. secretary-gen­ eral of the General Ubor Union of Dahomey; Rhodesian Labor Minister Abraham Eliza Abra hamson and Henrison Nicholas Georgestone, secretary-general of the Council of Labor of Sierra Leone. The 57th annual Christmas Seal Campaign of the National Tuber­ culosis Association will be launch­ ed Friday Nov. 15, it was an­ nounced by Peter W. Janss, NTA President. Thousands of volunteer work­ ers in the 2,163 constituent and local affiliates of the National Tuberculosis Association will par­ ticipate in the drive to alert the American people to the menace of tuberculosis and other respira­ tory diseases during the cam­ paign. All media are cooperating In bringing NTA’s campaign to the American People. Special tran­ scribed by outstanding Ameri- available by outstanding Ameri­ can personalities. Burt Lancas­ ter, Commander Scott Carpenter and Ann Landers, nationally known human relations colum­ nist, and 1963 Honorary Christ­ mas Seal chairman, are among those who filmed appeals for the television audience. Frank Sinatra made a movie- trailer. Also available during the 1963 campaign are transcribed radio programs of varying length starring Pat Boone, Count Baste, Nat "King” Cde, Kingston Trio, Julie London, Lester Lanin, Frankie Laina, Johnny Mathis. Paul Anka and Glen Gray. The 1963 official Christmas Seal song. "Pine Cones and Holly Berries,’ from Meredith Willson's musical, “Here’s Love" has been record­ ed by Mitch Miller as a special Columbia Record for national air­ ing. RESERVES YOUR OWN HOME AND HOMESITE NEW HI-RANCHES AND C0I ON PRIME 100x100 PLOTS IN NORTH AMITYVILLE, AMITY TERRACE Ml WYARDAHOH CHICK THIS! ✓ One (1) Yeor Unconditional Warronty ✓ Colored Glass Entry Z Oak Floors Z Red Brick Chimney Z Five Suction Garage Door -l-.-i-.' 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