The Colored American
Saturday, September 15, 1900
Washington, D.C.
Page text (machine-generated)
The COLORED American
Library of Congress
A NATIONAL NEGRO NEWSPAPER
WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1900.
THE SCHOOL
the president.
It has been already intimated that the Hait farm school, of which the republic is the outgrowth, is one of the most interesting institutions at or near the national capital. To substantiate the truth of this no better evidence can
J.C.
be offered than that given by Rev. Dr. J. E. Rankin, president of Howard University, who in part said: "A very original and very unique effort to help his race is a recent one of W. H. H. Hart, professor in the law department and teacher of agriculture of Howard University. Mr. Hart came up from Alabama, a bare-footed, ragged boy, without friend or helper, and entered the normal department of Howard University. He worked his way through all the departments, graduating with honor finally in the law school, where
NEGRO BOYS' JUNIOR REPUBLIC.
Within the Hart Farm School. A Most Valuable Institution of Washington, D. C., Founded by Prof. Hart of Howard University—Teaches the Science of Farming and the Art of Government. Correspondence of The Republican.
Washington D. C., Friday August 24, There has just been a sarted hear this city a unique institution, a "Junior Republic" for colored boys between the ages of 9 and 16 years. This republic is modeled to certain extent on the lines of the Henry George Junior Republic at Freeville, N. Y., but the constitution has been framed with the view of meeting the conditions of those boys for whose benefit the republic is specially intended. The republic is the outgrowth of the Hart farm school, which in a very short time has become a great institution, and is doing fine work for the rising generation of colored boys of the national capital.
The constitution of the new republic guarantees to each one of its citizens full equality with all others, such as to vote at every election of officers; the right to secure and retain employment at the rate of wages justified by his skill and efficiency; to purchase all common necessities of life at reasonable cost; to acquire and own personal property free from liability of seizure and deprivation, except for debt and taxes; to hold a seat in the General Assembly of citizens, to express his views freely concerning all proposed laws for the government of the people of the republic, and to vote for or against the adoption of all such laws, the right to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience, and with other citizens peaceably to assemble and petition the government for the redress of grievances, and that none of those rights shall be abridged to any citizen except for violation of law.
Great stress is laid on the organic law upon the fact that it is the indispensable duty of every citizen to support for election of the various offices under the republic only such citizens as will discharge all the duties of such offices in a fair, just and impartial manner; that every citizen should do all in his power to hold every public officer responsible for the faithful discharge of every official duty without regard to party or personal friendship for any one. It is further declared that the object in forming the republic is the desire of the citizens to learn by actual experience, under proper guidance, what are the rights, privileges and duties, of citizen ship in the great republic, the United States of America; how those rights and privileges may be exercised and enjoyed in an orderly and manly manner, and how these duties may be charged with honor to themselves, and for the best interest of the greater republic of which they will be parts when they shall have reached the age and status of men. The government of the republic is of three departments, legislative, executive and judicial. The executive authority of the republic is vested in a president and chief of police who are elected by a majority of the votes of all the citizens, and police officers, to be appointed by the consent of
PROF. W. H. H HART.
(Continued on ninth page.)
TEACHER AND PUPILS, HART FARM SCHOOL
ed that
the re
of the
or near
tantiate
nce can
Café
THE CAFE
THE SCHOOL ROOM.
ev. Dr. Howard A very to help H. H. Department Howard up from and boy, entered Howard through with, where
THE MILITARY HOSPITAL
A
THE SCHOOL BUILDINGS.
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Tammany and the Negro. BY JOHN E. BRUCE.
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2
"A prosperous iniquity"says Jeremy Taylor "is the most unprofitable condition in the world." The South has put a premium upon political iniquity and while to outward appearance is prosperous, it is the most unprofitable investment it has ever made. Political intolerance is the curse of the South and wherever it exists North or South capital and enterprise fear to enter.
"The first object of human society,' said W. H. Seward, "is safety;" and Alexander Hamilton declared that Justice is the end of government. It is the end of civil society. Because of the political intolerance of the white South, Northern capital has kept out of it. Because of the lawless tendency of its people Northern immigration has not drifted that way in great numbers.
Benjamin R. Tillman of South Carolina, one of the political friends and advisers of William Jennings Bryan, and hence a democrat of national importance, has done and said more to injure the national prosperity of the South, than any man of that section, living or dead. Tillman is a nearer approach to the infamous Titus Oates for villainy and mendacity and low cunning than any other living democrat in the South and therefore is a dangerously bad man to sustain such intimate personal and political relations with the democratic candidate for the Presidency who does not now (although he is familiar with the code of political ethics which govern and control the utterances and the acts of man), repudiate them as being out of harmony with the high moral political code to which he has consecrated his life and his talents as an elocutionist, and poser.
The Spanish proverb "Tell me the company you keep and I'll tell you who you are," establishes the identity of William Jennings Bryan's democracy, as the following citations from numerous speeches of his friend Tillman, made in open Senate, will attest. On Feb. 26th, 1900, he said: "South Carolina has disfranchised all of the colored race that it could under the XIII, X1V and XV amendments. We have done our level best; we have scratched our heads to find how we could eliminate the last one of them." This would seem to indicate that the South Carolina Democrats are A1 Imperialists and that "government by consent" is part of their political creed. On page 2253, of the Record, Mr. Tillman is quoted as saying: "We have a governing race, just as you would have in Massachusetts if you had 750,000 Negroes and only 500,000 whites. And on page 2848: "We had 125,000 Negroes of voting age and 100,000 whites." And on page 2849; "We stuffed ballot boxes We shot them. We are not ashamed of it," and again on same page: We called a constitutional convention and we eliminated as I said all of the colored people whom we could."
On page 2261 of the Record, he said: "We have 114,000 registered voters" and on the following page: "I say 97 per cent of the white vote is Democratic." This is a most excellent showing and must be very gratifying to Mr. Bryan in that, by it he is assured of the solid Democratic vote of the Palmetto State, and that it will not be necessary for him to stir up the "pure minds" of the
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. C.
faithful in that or in any other Southern State, who are even now ready and able to furnish him with the figures to prove the solidarity of the Southern Democratic vote. Perhaps Mr. Bryan does not wish to offend his Southern friends and admirers by objecting to their methods of procedure in piling up Democratic majorities in the manner described by his friend Tillman. But an honest man would scorn to profit by such bare faced fraud as that to which the unspeakable Tillman confesses with malicious and brazen effrontery.
Should Mr. Bryan have the misfortune to be elected President of the United States, does any one assume that his friend Tillman's influence will not influence? A man who publicly contesses to the crime of aiding and abetting in the suppression of the will of 750,000 suffragans because they happen to be black, and because of his belief that minorities should govern, would not be likely to be ignored by the beneficiary of his crime?
There are 6,077,169 unrepresented Negro voters in the eleven Southern States, many thousands of them have already been disfranchised, and there are reasonable grounds for the belief that the South Carolina plan which has been so minutely described by Mr. Bryan's friend Tillman, will soon be in good working order in every one of these eleven States. When it does become operative, popular elections in the South will have become greater farces than they now are. And yet Mr. Lincoln once said; "No man has a right to govern another without his consent."
And Mr. Bryan is very solicitous indeed on the subject of the government of the Philippines in face of the fact that a condition which does not exist in those Islands, does exist in every Southern State in the Union, where every inhabitant is, or is supposed to be the political equal of every other inhabitant. Yet more than 6000,000 of these inhabitants are arbitrarily hindered from exercising their Constitutional rights. The Government of the Philippines has not yet passed beyond the experimental stage. The local governments of the eleven Southern States referred to, were reconstructed after the war of the Rebellion, and have been in existence for more than a quarter of a century, and they are not the kind of governments which Mr. Bryan and some Northern Democrats profess to want to see established in those Islands. Since "charity begins at home," and "performance is better than promise," eleven States really deriving their just power from the consent of the governed would be an infinitely better object lesson to the Philipinos and all others than the eleven close Democratic political corporations which are exercising all the power at their command to demonstrate that Krateo—to rule, and Demos—the people, means the rule of white people, even though they are in many instances in a hopeless minority in some of these broken down Southern States. Democracy at the South is a misnomer. Its proper appellation is Demonocracy, and this is warranted by its bloody record and its lawless attitude wherever it has power, shotguns and hemp. It is of a truth a Demonocracy of unclean spirits, who love evil because their deeds are evil.
The Rev, W. H. Brooks, a learned and popular divine of New York City has been looking for the cause of the recent race riots in that city and appears to have found it as will be seen by the following bill of particulars. Tammany Hall can nub out the ugly facts here recorded:
He charges (1) that innocent men were assaulted; (2) that police officers were the main offenders; (3) that the tough colored element were not troubled; (4) that respectable colored women who appealed for protection were cursed and threatened; (5) that police officers kicked opened the doors of business men, and mercilessly clubbed the occupants; (6) that men and women were cruelly beaten while getting in and out of patrol wagons on their way to police stations; (7) that some were beaten there and others who applied for protection were turned away after being cursed and threatened; (8) that women and children quietly sitting in their rooms were shot at; (9) that men who had sought protection in saloons were driven out by these same officers into the arms of the mob; (10) the guilty white men were protected and innocent colored ones were cruelly outraged by officers; (11) that men and women were taken from their beds to the stations in a nude condition; (12) that officers turned thieves and stole. A medical student in his third year course who has saved nearly $100 had his door forced, his closet broken open and every dollar taken. Rev. Brooks boldly makes these charges and says he is ready to substantiate them by witnesses.
Dr. Brooks is a responsible man and if, as he says, he is prepared to make good his charges, it is Tammany's next move. They cannot be dismissed with a sneer, or with the usual insulting rejoiner of New York's democratic police officials; "You are one of them smart niggers, you are too damned smart." These charges wont make democratic votes.
The intemperance of the temperance agitation was never more manifest than it is shown to be, by the leaders of the movement to invoke the aid of the Almighty for the defeat of President McKinley by the endless chain system of prayer. The sentimentalists in American politics are the real extremists. "They would enslave the land to make the ocean free" as Phillips said of Bonaparte 1st, "and want only power to enslave both."
The temperance question is one of those questions which no amount of agitation or legislation can settle on the lines on which these good, but misguided guardians of public morals, could wish to see it settled. There are other questions of vastly more importance to be settled and the prayers of these good people who seem to have a speaking acquaintance with the Almighty if offered in behalf of outraged citizens who have been robbed of their civil and constitutional rights in the South, might possibly avail.
Perhaps the next move will be an appeal to the throne of Grace for the defeat of McKinley by the same system on behalf of the Vegetarian because he eats meat and doesn't object to others doing so when they can get it. "What fools these mortals be." JOHN E. BRUCE.
The wonderful Face Bleach has been introduced in Washington and is offered to the public at a special rate. The two dollar packages can now be had for one dollar by calling at Kopp's Drug Store, 7th and Florida avenue.
Mr. L. L. Lee, a prominent citizen and business man of Atlanta, Ga., passed through the city last week enroute to Philadelphia. Mr. Lee met a number of warm friends while in Washington and was treated to a nice stag winding up with a wagonette drive Sunday evening by Messrs. Aldridge Lewis, William E. Muse, McKenzie Scott and E. E. Cooper.
The
Smith Premier Typewriter
received the greatest number of points for superiority at the
Par is Exposition
and was awarded the diploma of the
GRAND PRIX
for its superiority of construction and efficiency at the highest rating of the Jury. This Grand Prix was won by the Smith Premier in competition with twenty other typewriters on exhibition.
519 11th Street, Northwest, WASHINGTON, D. C.
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The National Colored Teachers Bureau
Washington, D. C., is prepared to furnish CAPABLE TEACHERS of every branch of instruction and DESIRABLE SCHOOLS in all parts of the country. REGISTRATION FREE but applicants must be fully competent to teach or possess the ability to learn how to teach. NO SCHOOL—NO PAY
6 per cent of the first year's salary will be charged those for whom positions are secureded, payable Dec. 1, 1900. The Demand exceed the Supply for suitable teachers during the past year, hence our liberal inducements.
Send for registration blank briefly stating your full qualifications and enclose ten two cent stamps for postage.
Address
James G. Clayton, M. D.
459 O St. N. W. Secretary.
NOW READY FOR BUSINESS. GRAY'S CAFE, Odd Fellows Hall, No. 1606 M Street, N. W. Cafe Open From 7 a. m. to 11 p. m. Meals a la
Odd Fellows Hall, No. 1606 M Street, N. on From 7 a. m. to 11 p. m. Meal
Odd Fellows Hall, No. 1606 M Street, N. W.
Cafe Open From 7 a. m. to 11 p. m. Meals a la Carte.
Regular Breakfast from 7 to 10 a. m.
" Dinner from 4 to 7 p. m.
Sunday Dinner from 2 to 4 p. m.
Ice Cream and Ices Constantly on Hand.
Flavors for Sunday, Vanilla, Peach, Strawberry, Chocolate, Lemon Ice
Fine Catering a Specialty.
Soliciting the patronage of our friends and the public generally, we are Very respectfully,
Ice Cream and Ices Constantly on Hand. For Sunday, Vanilla, Peach, Strawberry, Chocolate Fine Catering a Special ing the patronage of our friends and the public Very respectfully,
Ice Cream and Ices Constantly on Hand. Flavors for Sunday, Vanilla, Peach, Strawberry, Chocolate, Lemon Ice Fine Catering a Specialty. Soliciting the patronage of our friends and the public generally, we are Very respectfully, GRAY & BRC., PROPRIETORS.
=HART
The Grandest of all
THE ORIGINAL A
Matchless and Positively Une
Knotty, Stubbo
HARTONA will make the hair
one box of HARTONA will show in
bald and thin places. HARTONA
Hair, and all Scalp Diseases. Reme
hair remedy on the market, because
allow your hair and face to be ru
cheap to catch the ignorant and u
over 50,000 people in every State in
be used all the time, as it straighter
and the hair stays and grows natu
On box of HARTONA can be used
improves children's hair just the s
if you are not perfectly satisfied.
HARTONA
grandest of all Preparations for
THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY HARTONA
and Positively Unequalled for Straightening
Knotty, Stubborn, Harsh, Curly Hair.
HARTONA will make the hair grow long, soft, and straight. HARTONA will show immediate results. Makes the hair places. HARTONA cures Dandruff, Baldness, Foam Scalp Diseases. Remember, that HARTONA is the on the market, because it is the best. Price, $1.00 hair and face to be ruined by dangerous chemicals with the ignorant and uneducated classes. HARTONA people in every State in the Union. HARTONA do the time, as it straightens the hair and gives it fresh, stays and grows naturally straight after the use. HARTONA can be used by every one in the family. Children's hair just the same as adults. Money possi- t perfectly satisfied.
=HARTONA=
THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY HARTONA. Matchless and Positively Unequalled for Straightening all Kinky, Knotty, Stubborn, Harsh, Curly Hair.
HARTONA will make the hair grow long, soft, and straight. The use of one box of HARTONA will show immediate results. Makes the hair grow on bald and thin places. HARTONA cures Dandruff, Baldness, Falling Out of the Hair, and all Scalp Diseases. Remember, that HARTONA is the highest-priced hair remedy on the market, because it is the best. Price, $1.00 a box. Don't allow your hair and face to be ruined by dangerous chemicals that are sold cheap to catch the ignorant and uneducated classes. HARTONA is used by over 50,000 people in every State in the Union. HARTONA does not have to be used all the time, as it straightens the hair and gives it fresh life and lustre, and the hair stays and grows naturally straight after the use of HARTONA. On box of HARTONA can be used by every one in the family. Benefits and improves children's hair just the same as adults. Money positively refunded if you are not perfectly satisfied.
HARTONA FACE WASH
will gradually turn the skin of a blu will turn the skin of a mulatto pe WASH will not lighten the skin it remains soft and bright without co does the work. It is your duty to l delighted patrons send us testimon States. HARTONA FACE WASH in Black-Heads, Freckles, and all Blen shade of skin on neck, face, and hand with each bottle. HARTONA FACE to any part of the United States Remember, your money is positively fied and delighted with the Hartona
y turn the skin of a black person five or six shades of skin of a mulatto person perfectly white. HA not lighten the skin in spots, but all over ever and bright without continual use of the Face Wash. It is your duty to look as beautiful as possible.rons send us testimonials every year from all of HARTONA FACE WASH will remove Wrinkles, Dark Freckles, and all Blemishes of the Skin. You can on neck, face, and hands to any shade you wish. tle. HARTONA FACE WASH is perfectly harm of the United States on receipt of price-$1.00 our money is positively refunded if you are not aated with the Hartona Remedies.
will gradually turn the skin of a black person five or six shades lighter, and will turn the skin of a mulatto person perfectly white. HARTONA FACE WASH will not lighten the skin in spots, but all over evenly. The skin remains soft and bright without continual use of the Face Wash. One bottle does the work. It is your duty to look as beautiful as possible. Thousands of delighted patrons send us testimonials every year from all over the United States. HARTONA FACE WASH will remove Wrinkles, Dark Spots, Pimples, Black-Heads, Freckles, and all Blemishes of the Skin. You can regulate the shade of skin on neck, face, and hands to any shade you wish. Full directions with each bottle. HARTONA FACE WASH is perfectly harmless, and is sent to any part of the United States on receipt of price—$1.00 per bottle. Remember, your money is positively refunded if you are not absolutely satisfied and delighted with the Hartona Remedies.
HARTONA NO-SMELL
will remove all smells and bad odors chafed limbs, etc. HARTONA NO-8 ing from disagreeable odors caused Sent anywhere on receipt of price—5
all smells and bad odors of the body. Cures sore agetc. HARTONA NO-SMELL is a God-send to all agreeable odors caused by perspiration of the feet on receipt of price----50c. a package. All orders to-
will remove all smells and bad odors of the body. Cures sore and aching feet, chafed limbs, etc. HARTONA NO-SMELL is a God-send to all persons suffering from disagreeable odors caused by perspiration of the feet, arm-pits, etc. Sent anywhere on receipt of price—50c. a package.
To introduce our remedies in this cut out and mail to us this Coupon. HARTONA HAIR STRAIGHTEN, HARTONA FACE WASH, worth $ SMELL, worth 50c. The entire lot securely sealed, so that no one can te Coupon. Order goods now, as this Write your name and address plainly. Order, Express, or enclosed in a Regi
HARTONA REA
Since our remedies in this city, we will send to all per- mail to us this Coupon and ONE DOLLAR, three HAIR STRAIGHTENER, worth $3.00; two lace- PACE WASH, worth $2.00; one package of HA- hsh 50c. The entire lot of remedies, worth $5.50, and so that no one can tell contents, for ONE DOLL- or goods now, as this grand offer will last but a sh- ne and address plainly. Money can be sent by Post- or enclosed in a Registered Letter.
To introduce our remedies in this city, we will send to all persons who will cut out and mail to us this Coupon and ONE DOLLAR, three large boxes of HARTONA HAIR STRAIGHTENER, worth $3.00; two large bottles of HARTONA FACE WASH, worth $2.00; one package of HARTONA NO-SMELL, worth 50c. The entire lot of remedies, worth $5.50, will be sent securely sealed, so that no one can tell contents, for ONE DOLLAR and this Coupon. Order goods now, as this grand offer will last but a short time only. Write your name and address plainly. Money can be sent by Post-Office Money Order, Express, or enclosed in a Registered Letter.
HARTONA REMEDY COMPANY.
909 E. Main Street, RICHMOND, VA.
GENTLEMEN:—I enclose you ONE DOLLAR, for which selling goods at once—
Three Large Boxes HARTONA HAIR STRAIGHTENER, wo
Two Large Bottles HARTONA FACE WASH, - wo
One Package HARTONA NO-SMELL, - wo
My Name is___
House No.___, Street___
City___, County___, State___
AGENTS WANTED IN EVERY TOWN IN AMERICA. OUR GOODS S
EN:—I enclose you ONE DOLLAR, for which send
at once—
Large Boxes HARTONA HAIR STRAIGHTENER, work
Large Bottles HARTONA FACE WASH, - work
Large HARTONA NO-SMELL, - work
No._____, Street_____
_____, County_____, State_____
GOOD IN EVERY TOWN IN AMERICA. OUR GOODS SELL
GENTLEMEN:I enclose you ONE DOLLAR, for which send me the following goods at once
Three Large Boxes HARTONA HAIR STRAIGHTENER, worth $3.00
Two Large Bottles HARTONA FACE WASH, worth $2.00
One Package HARTONA NO-SMELL, worth .50
AGENTS WANTED IN EVERY TOWN IN AMERICA. OUR GOODS SELL ON SIGHT.
JOHNSON & WILLIAMS,
Publishing House,
1201 R Street, Northwest,
WASHINGTON, D C.
An Excellent Paper.
Cadez, N. C., Sept., 5, 1900 — Dear
Editor: You will please find inclosed
money order for one dollar and a half
payment of my subscription to your
excellent paper which is truly a para-
gon of the race. Yours truly,
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Address all orders to—
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. O.
l. No. 1606 M Street, N. W.
11 p. m. Meals a la Carte.
Ice Constantly on Hand. Peach, Strawberry, Chocolate, Lemon Ice Bring a Specialty. Our friends and the public generally, we respectfully,
HARTONA=
All Preparations for the Hair
AND ONLY HARTONA.
Unequalled for Straightening all Kinky
born, Harsh, Curly Hair.
hair grow long, soft, and straight. The use of
immediate results. Makes the hair grow o
A cures Dandruff, Baldness, Falling Out of the
member, that HARTONA is the highest-priced
use it is the best. Price, $1.00 a box. Don
quired by dangerous chemicals that are so
uneducated classes. HARTONA is used by
in the Union. HARTONA does not have the
enss the hair and gives it fresh life and lustre
naturally straight after the use of HARTONA
and by every one in the family. Benefits and
same as adults. Money positively refunded.
a black person five or six shades lighter, and a person perfectly white. HARTONA FACE in spots, but all over evenly. The skin continual use of the Face Wash. One bottle look as beautiful as possible. Thousands of conials every year from all over the United I will remove Wrinkles, Dark Spots, Pimples, emishes of the Skin. You can regulate the hands to any shade you wish. Full directions CE WASH is perfectly harmless, and is senses on receipt of price-$1.00 per bottle very refunded if you are not absolutely satisfa Remedies.
of the body. Cures sore and aching feet. SMELL is a God-send to all persons suffered by perspiration of the feet, arm-pits, etc. 50c. a package.
HARTONA REMEDY COMPANY.
909 E. Main St., RICHMOND, VA.
this city, we will send to all persons who will
own and ONE DOLLAR, three large boxes of
NER, worth $3.00; two large bottles of
$2.00; one package of HARTONA NO-
lot of remedies, worth $5.50, will be sent
tell contents, for ONE DOLLAR and this
is grand offer will last but a short time only.
y. Money can be sent by Post-Office Money
registered Letter.
EMEDY COMPANY.
ONE DOLLAR, for which send me the fol-
A HAIR STRAIGHTENER, worth $3.00
A FACE WASH, - worth $2.00
A MELL, - worth .50
reet
nty_____, State_____
IN AMERICA. OUR GOODS SELL ON SIGHT.
An Excellent Paper.
Cadez, N. C., Sept., 5, 1900 —Dear Editor: You will please find inclosed money order for one dollar and a half, payment of my subscription to your excellent paper which is truly a paragon of the race. Yours truly, JOHN H. BATTLE.
To Revive to the Union League.
Editor The Colored American:I have been so much enthused and encouraged by the splendid showing made at the recent Boston Convention of of Colored Business Men that I think it would be a grand idea to revive the Union League and get up a complete directory of all the business enterprises tradesmen, artisans, dentists, lawyers, physicians, etc., together with a compendium of all the churches, lodges and other organizations of the colored people of the District of Columbia. In other words I think that a permanent record should be made of our professional, industrial, commercial and organized statue in the National capital, at the close of the 19th century. Such a record would be of incalculable value to future generation as a basis for determining the future growth of the race. The agitation which it will develop will also be of great advantage to the colored business men, as it will direct attention to them.
Let me hear from any one who approves of this idea through the column of The Colored American or by private letter. ANDRE W F. HILYER. 2352 6 street n. w.
Rev. Taylor in Richmond,
Rev. J. Anderson Taylor, the pastor of Shiloh Baptist church, left last Tuesday morning for Richmond, Va., to attend the National Baptist Convention which met in that city last Wednesday and will continue for two weeks. As is known this Convention is composed of the leading Baptist ministers of the United States and its annual sessions is an occasion for the recognition of those of the Baptist denomination and for the planning of new work. As is the custom with Shiloh, it raised a bandsome purse and sent its pastor to the Convention as becomes them. Dr. Taylor will preach the doctrinal sermon, which is considered one of the highest honors to be bestowed at these Conventions.
Mt. Zion's 36th Anniversary.
The 36th anniversary of the Zion Baptist church of South Washington, of which Rev. W, J. Howard is pastor, is being celebrated. The festivities began September 9th and will last until the 16th inst. These seven days will be spent by the members and friends of
HORNE EW.
REV. W. J. HOWARD the church in joy and gladness, and Rev. Howard who is so beloved and esteemed by his church is the recipient of an overflow of attention and expressions of good will by all. The membership of Zion Baptist church is nearly 2,500 and each and every member is contributing his share to make the celebration of the anniversary as successful and as popular as it can be made.
A most interesting program will be carried out tomorrow, Sunday 16th, and the public is cordially invited to be present at every session. The following program will be rendered:
6 a. m., Sunrise prayer meeting led by Brother John W. Branson. 9 a. m. Sunday School, Wm, D. Jarvis, Sup'tt 11 a. m., sermon by Rev. J. C. Dent, pastor of Mt. Morlah Baptist church 8 p. m., sermon by Rev. A. B. Hamm, pastor of Mt. Airy Baptist church. 9 p. m., Junior Endeavor, Alex. S. Howard, Superintendent. 6 p. m., Senior Endeavor, James Smiler, President. 7.30 p. m., Praise meeting by Rev. J. I. Loving, pastor of Enon Baptist church. The choirs are asked to accompany their pastors. All members and friends are asked to be present. Ministers of the Union are especially asked with all other ministers to be present.
CHARLES FISCHER
SURGICAL & ORTHOPEDICAL Instruments and Trusses. 623 SEVENTH STREET, NOTHWEST Opposite Patent Office WASHINGTON. D. C.
Cures Weak Men Free Insures Love and Happiness
How any man may quickly cure him self after years of suffering from sexual weakness, lost vitality, varicocle, etc. and enlarge small weak organs to full size and vigor. Simply send your name and address to Dr. L. W. Knapp, 1811 Hull Bldg., Detroit, Mich., and he will gladly send the free receipt with full directions so that any man may easily cure himself at home. This is certainly a most generous offer and the following extracts taken from his daily mail show how men write him.
"DearSir:—Please accept my sincere thanks for yours of recent date. I have given your treatment a thorough test and the benefit has been extraordinary. It has completely braced me up. I am just as vigorous as when a boy and you cannot realize how happy I am."
"Dear Sir:—Yours was received and I had no trouble in making use of the receipt as directed, and after a few days use can truthfully say it is a boon to weak men. I am greatly improved in size, strength and vigor."
"Dear Sir:—Your method worked beautifully. Results were exactly what I needed. Strength and vigor have completely returned and enlargement is entirely satisfactory."
All correspondence is strictly confidential, mailed in plain sealed envelope. The receipt is free for the asking and he wants every man to have it.
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AT OLD MONTICELLO, .
The Susy Afro Americans at the Thriving
Borgh ot Virginia—Notes and Reflec-
tions of the Social ,Mirror.
| of Mrs, Alice Scott ene of the leading
dressmakers of the city, a sewmg
school was organized. It has now
reached an enrollment of 105 pupils.
The use of the rooms in the Jefferson
publi: school building has been granted
and great interest is manifested among
teachers and pupils. The sehool is
under the management of the follow:
ing very efficient officers and teachers
whose services are rendered free of
charge, all of whom are experienced in
needie work. some of whom are gradu‘
atesof Hartshorn College, Hampton
Institute and other sehools of note:
Mrs. Alice Scott, president; Mrs. Alice
Mivor, vice president; Miss Lottie D.
Lewis, Secretary; Miss Cora P. Brown,
assistant secretary; Mrs, A. F, Angel,
treasurer. Teachers—Mesdames Ellen
Irving, Nannie Wayland, Mary O.
Kelser, Johu Coles, P. Y. Wyatt, Liz-
zie Williams; Misses Annie Bryavt,
Iva R. Cotes, Jennie Wright, Rosa
Howard, Julia Wyatt. Friday after-
noon of each week is the day selected
for the meeting of the school. The
tuneral of Robert Thomas, son of Mr.
George Thomas took place from the
Virst Baptist church, Wednesday at 3
o'clock. Rey. R. O. Quarles, officiating.
At5 o’clock of the same day the funeral
of Miss Bessie Smith took place from
the First Baptisé church, Rev. RB. C.
(juarles, pastor, officiating. She bad
been in poor health for some time. On
Thursday of last week Mrs. Phillip
Daniel gave a farewell party in honor
of her little niece, Sadie Sampson who
left Friday for Washington where she
will resume her studies in the public
schools. Qaite a number of Jittle folks
were present and enjoyed themselves |
immensely. The tables were beautifully
set with some of the choicest delectables
ofthe season, Rev. and Mrs, W. J.
Hackett of Covington, Va., were in the
city last week the guest of Mr, and Mrs.
lh. Kelser on N. 6th street. Mr, W. D.
Jones of Richmond, Va stopped over
last week en route home from” White
Sulphur Springs, Mr. Walter Duvall of
Philadelphia, has been visiting his
brother, Mr, Granville Duvall on Com-
merce street. Rev and Mrs, W. M.
Moss of Danville, Va. were in tbe city
Jasb week en route home from Louisa
County. Rev. C. W. Hill attended the
M E Conference at Brownsburg, Va.
this week. Mr. Emmett Hogers of
Washington is in the city. Mr. and
Mrs. Carles Leitch who were called to
the city on account of the illness of his
sister lett this week for Washington,
D.C., Mr. U. H. Jones, superintendent
eastern division, United Aid and In-
surauce Co. of Richmond, Va. isin the
city, Mr B. A, Baker of the Royal Bene-
lit Society went to Washington last
week. Misses Ellen Trent and Clara
Parley left for their homes in Rich-
mond last week after a pleasant stay in
our city. Miss Bertha Haghes of Man-
chester in company with Mise Bettie
Lewis of Scottsville visited Mrs. J. P.
Kdmonds on Belmont last week. Miss
Maud Lewis of Sootteville is visiting
ler sister, Mrs, J. P Edmonds on Bel
mout, Mrs, Fairfax Taylor after 8
mouths stay in the city, visitiug rela
a ea aac
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WAPFHINGTON 6.6
ington is visiting at the home of his
father, Mr. Gorge Coles on Dice street
this week. Mr. John Taylor visited
Orange, Washington and Petersburg
last week. Mr J W. Whipps was called
home from Atlantic City last week on
account of the illness of his wite who
is now improving. Mr. George Reeves
stopped over this week en reute to
Washington from Healmg Springs.
Among those who have returned from
the mountains are: Messrs, W. Oo,
Lewis, W. F. Brown, 8. B. Jackson,
Philip Daniel, Albert Brooks, from the
White Sulphur, Beujamin Chapman,
headwatter and R. E. Wood from the
Healing Springs, Charles Preston from
Nimrod Hall. Rey. C. N. Harris has
Teturned home after an extensive visit
to Richmond and Manchester. Miss
Lottie Wallace left last week for her
home in Petersbnrg, Va. The Ameri-
can can be had at Pollard and Nobles
barber shop. MonTICELLO.
A First Class Business Getter.
Mr. Edward E. Oooper, Washington,
D. C., Dear Sir:—Pleass accept my
thanks for the order received through
you. We wish to state that your paper
brings us orders from nearly every state
in the U.S , and also from Cuba and
Mexico The results are splendid and
we consider the columns of your paper
one of oub best investments. Again
thanking you, we are with best wishes
Youra very truly, *
Hartona REMEDY Co.
Riehmond, Va.
Dr. Lofton’s’ Outing.
Dr. W. 8. Lofton, the leading Afro-
American dentist in the city, has been
spending a few weeks in the wilds ot
Minnesota, the guest of his old friend,
Lawyer Frederick L. McGhee. He had
a most delightful trip and reached
home the other evening where he will
renew business at his old stand on ““M’’
street, Northwest. He was accompa-
nied by Dr. Robert Ridgley.
Beautiful, soft hair comes to every
womaa who uses our Queen Pomade.
It invigorates the scalp and makes the
bair soft and pliable, and cleans the
scalp of dandruff and itching. Makes
the hair grow and prevents it from
turning gray. An elegantly perfumed
bair dressing for men or women.
Price large bottle 25 cents. Drop a post-
al card for city order delivered free.
Sent anywhere by mail on receipt of
price and 5 cents extra to pay postage.
Stamps or silver accepted. Cardozo’s
Pharmacy, 1201 R atreet, Washington,
D.C. Telepbone 24815. For sale also
at Harris’ Drug Store, 3rd and F streets
southwest.
ee ag oe
Prominent Colored Men,
Agents wanted to sell ‘One Hundred
Distinguished Leadere,” a beautiful
book containing one hundred portraite
and sketches of the leading colored
men in the United States. Price 26
cents percopy. Send stamps or post
office mongy order to
Charles Alexander,
Tuskegee Institute,
Tuskegee, Ala.
St. Ainn’s Academy
810 8th Street Southeast.
Under the direction of the Oblate Sis-
ters of Providence. For young ladies
and children of color. For prospectus
address Sr. M. Cecilia Xavier, O. P.
Superior, Re-opens Sept. 10th.
ee
a Bie
ar HOTEL
Fe we sy ‘
Vmaa ST eh
frestove © WOODLAWN
oh 3 aU LEN.
" fie ne 4 rt ir ——
Lal! ls een ey ee a nq .
PERE rer eer; mone pe
NE pete neon aR aan re
ga ees 1 awnside. N.J.
This Hotel is sitaated on au elevation which furnishes one witha magaifi:
cent view for tea miles. At the base of whieh is a wideskeet of water giving
ample opportunity to those fond of sailing or fishiug.
WOODLAWN TERRACE.
is on the Whitehorse Pike, seven miles fromm Camden. 25 trains stop at Lawa-
side dally. ‘Phe service at the Hotel is strictly first class. Tbe Bed Rooms are
large and alry with all modern coaveniences. The Hotel ie three stories high,
35 feet front and ‘s surrounded with a beautiful law1 aed wide gravel walks,
6 For terme, addrass MRS. CHAS. SMITH, Snow Hill, N. J.
2@ Will open Friday, June 1, 1900. ;
ALEXANDRIA, VA.
pies Se es a erie
I@r-TSE ELITE—6248 Washington
street: Alexandria, Va., Ice cream, con-
feetionery, soda water and milk shakes,
all flayers. Lanches and sandwiches.
ool, exclusive, up to date. The only
fizst class pleasure resort in the eity
When in Alexandria call on us. Opens
Mey 15th. W. F. Hammond, pro.
prietor. ‘
—___ Ee
ATLANTIC CITY.
FITZGERALD'S
AUDITORIUM,
Open all the year. Suitable for conventtons
recepitons, baliz, concerts and theatrical
entertainments, Gholce wines, Mquors and
cigars. Attached the finest bililard toom in
the elty. The auditoriam Oate attached is
strictly first class. Special attention given
collation parties, weddings. recepticns. ete.
B, @. Fitzgerald, proprietor. 30 and 32 North
Kentueky avenue, Atlantic Uity. N. J.
THE NEW HOUSE
DEBERITY COTTAGE
81 N. Obio Ave., Atlantic City, N. J
Broells any intheelty. All modern im:
Prevements. Two squares trom the Reading
Railroad depot. Two squares from the
beach I kindly thank my old as well as new
patrens fer their liberal patronage ara hope
for a continuance of the game. Mrs,J F.
Debity, proprietress.
THE AUB HOTEL
CHOICE WINES,
LIQUORS,
AND CIGARS,
J. C. SMALLWOOD,
Proprietor.
15 N. lllinois Ave., Atlantic City, N. J.
MANHATTAN INN.
17 NORTH MICHIGAN AVENUE,
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. |
THOMAS COLE,
Proprietor.
Choice wines, Liquors and Cigars.
CHOICE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS
HAKRIS’ HOTEL
GEORGE H HARRIS, PROPRIETOR,
1189 Baltic Avenue,
Atlantic City, N. J.
Meals Served at all Hours.
HOLEL HENDERSON—120 N Mis.
siseiopi ave., Atlantic City, N. J., two
equares from Reading depot; three
minutes walk to Bathing Beach. Spec
ial rates for families and permanent
bearders, The hotel has been newly
papeted and has 82 neatly fitted up
sleeping rooms. Terme mod>rate. Ea
ropean and American plan.
STACY I. HENDEKSON, Prop.
’
At Keene's Shoe Store
908 G Street, Northwest.
2000 prs Ladies’ $2.50, $3 00, $3.50
and $4,00 Oxford ‘I'ies to go at $1.95.
1000 prs Men’s Shoes, all styles,
sizes and widths, made to sell
fer $5.00, $6.00 and $7.00;
for a few days te go at $2.85,
5
WANTED HELP.
WANTED —An active young man as
collector. Must be well acquainted
with the city. Married man preferred.
_ An energetic colored woman who un-
derstands canvassing can secure per-
msuent employment with good pav b:
addressing “Benevolence” care 459 6
st n. w.
WANTED—By family of two, 2 un*
furnished rooms or would take half of a
house. Northwest section preferred.
Address ‘‘D,”” Colored American office.
WANTED-ACTIVE MAN OF GOOD CHAR
acter to deltver and collect in the District of
Columbia, for old established manufacturing
wholesale house. $900 8 year, sure pa, Hon-
esty more than experience required. Our
refererce, any bank 1p any city. Enclose
self-addressed stamped envelope, Manutac:
turers, Third Floor, 334 Dearborn3t , Chicago.
NOTICE.
All members of the National Cooper:
ative Investment Association are here‘
by notified that there will bea meeting
on the 18th of Sept. at £212 Champlain
avenue. nD. w. By order of Robt. Hol:
idsy, President, G. R. Rhone, Acting
Secretary. 2t
R: TDANS
Wanted—a caseof bad health that RT-P-A"N © “ill
not benefit. One gives relief. No matter it’s
the matter, one willdo you good. A cure + illre-
sult if directions are followed. ‘They banish pain,
Induce sleep, prolong life. ‘Sold at all drug stores,
ten for five cents. Be sure to get the genuine.
Don't be fooled by substitutes. Ten samples and a
thousand testimonials will be mailed to any ad-
dress for five cents, forwarded to the Ripans
Chemical Company, No. 1 Spreer &".. New York:
t 27
t Prof.G.F. THEEL,M.D. oa
St., Philadelphia, Px, Ein deutscher Arzt. Gua. 4
t rantteesto cure PRIVATE DISEASES, EXCESSES4
ABUSES, BLOOD POISON, NERVOUS DEBILITY.4
LOST MANHOOD. VARICOCELE & STRICTURE
. (nocutting).tndevelopments, Shrunken Organs
Peete naire eneceay
‘Send for hook “Truth” exposing medien! & eleetrieal fraud
6 THe
‘ATEST DISCOVERY
FOR MAKING
on. int CURLY Haig 5,
wate FS ——
ae) ae
Wye’ Mpls SS \,
(Naas) ae. an
1 <9 Gf iN
Se, le i)
CN
Wy RS \
teas are* VPP
TRAIGHTINE is no experiment, int a thor
ougly reliable preparation,’ It hag been
successfully used by thousands in all
Giunsof tha country, We have bundreds of
letters speaking in the highest terms of its
merit, and every mail brings us fresh testi-
monials, Straightine is a highly perfumed
Pomade: st not only Stralghtens the Halr,
¢ removes Dandruff, Keeps the Hair from
Falling Out, cures Itching, Irritating Scalp
Discases, giving a rich, long and luxurious
head of hair—so much’to bedesired. Guar-|
anteed perfectly harmless. Price, 25 Cents
acan atall drug stores, or sant by mail to
any address on receipt of 30 Cents in stamps
or silver, , Address, NELSON M’F'G CO.,
Richmond, Va. 49-Big Toney for Agents.
Writefor Terms. s
6
GOTHAM NOTES
COLORED AMERICAN
DIONYSIUS III
The selection of Mr. Charles W. Anderson as committeeman at large by the state committee of New York will give very general satisfaction to the rank and file of the colored voters of the Empire State. Mr Anderson is eminently qualified for the duties of this position and we are sure that under his direction the interests of the Negroes of the state will not suffer.
The unanimity with which the white republicans of New York got together at Saratoga during the recent convention there to nominate a governor and state officers is an object lesson to colored men in the party in the state who have a weakness for cut throat politics and whose inordinate ambition and transparent incompetency as leaders are the true reasons why the New York Negro makes no substantial progress in state politics, added to these is jealousy and the New York Negro is not altogether alone, there are others. If they have read the papers they will have seen how the white republicans of the state stoop to conquer and if they have any political sense worth using they will imitate the methods of the white republicans at Saratoga and get together this fall. The Hon. Timothy L. Woodruff who has the unprecedented honor of being nominated for a third term as Lieutenant Governor of New York is as fine a gentleman, and as thorough republican as ever lived. Like General Grant he remembers his friends and will go out of his way to do them a favor. He will be a three times winner.
That sterling republican the Hon. John T McDonough secretary of state of New York was re-nominated by acclamation to succeed himself. Mr. McDonough will be held in grateful remembrance by the Negroes of this state and of the country for his bold, vigorous and masterful excoriation of the South at Elmira some time since, which excited so much favorable comment by the press. Mr. McDonough still believes that the danger to the republic is not past while the rights of any citizen are denied by force or fraud or arbitrary legislation. And Mr. McDonough is right. Pretty soon the war of rebellion will have to be fought over again. If this thing keeps up.
Senator John Raines of the 42d district is responsible for the following paragraphs in the splendid platform adopted by the republicans of New York at Saratoga, September 4th:
"But, conscious of the weakness of relying on the theories that have been exploded and of ignoring facts that are self evident, the democrats are undertaking to push into conspicuous position before the people an issue which they describe and stigmatize by the word 'imperialism.'
In this course they are characteristically dishonest; first, because there is
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. C.
nameless solo's which would have been much more enjoyable if she had taken the precaution to oil her vocal tubes before perpetrating them. Mr. Polly Ace wont make a bloomin success reciting Shakespeare until he has studied Shakespeare and elocution or elocution and Shakespeare. Look out for another Ira Aldridge. He's coming down the plike. BRUCE GRIT.
Since adventuring into Egypt in quest of the raw material of which fiction is made, Mr. Gilbert Parker's Canadian fields have been lying fallow. He returns to them, however, with new vigor, and even fuller power; and the serial which he has just completed finds him at the highest dramatic level to which he has yet attained.
The Lane that Had No Turning is remarkable for its honest strength, thorough originality, and absorbing interest. The scene of the story is Pontiac (whither Valmond came), and the period the middle fifties. The leading characters are Madelinette, a famous singer, and her husband, Seignior of Pontiac, for whom she dares all and risks all. The story gains interest as it progresses and concludes with a striking and wholly unexpected finale.
The Lane that Had No Turning will begin in The Saturday Evening Post for September 29, and run through five number.
The Negro Exhibit at the Paris Exhibition-
"The Academy," the leading literary paper in England, speaks most enthusiastically of the Book exhibit by Negro authors at Paris, and pays a high tribute to Mr. Daniel Murray of Washington Library of Congress, for the thoroughness in which he did the work on the eleven hundred titles represented. The notice is a very flattering one, one third of a column is devoted to it. Mr. Murray has added fully three hundred additional titles, to the number mentioned above.
The fact that fourteen hundred titles all of them identified as representing books or pamphlets by Afro-American authors have been found, speaks volumes for the progress of the race and reflects equal credit on Mr. Murray by whose untiring energy and knowledge of the fountains of literature, such a marvelous exhibit is possible.
That the Afro-American is rising cannot be doubted by the most Negro hating pessimist, when The Academy the leading book authority in the literary world, designs to accord him the mead of praise in its columns, as it does in its issue of August 18th, 1900.
no sentiment in the United States that deserves to be called 'imperialism,' and, second, because the democrats do not come with clean hands into a discussion of popular sovereignty and the 'consent of the governed.'
Neither in the Philippines nor elsewhere will the cause of human liberty look for its champion to a party whose only hope of obtaining power lies in the suppression of human rights, and in an organized conspiracy to nullify the guarantees with which the constitution endeavors to surround the citizen. From thousands of poling places in this election, in which the democratic party is so much concerned about the 'consent of the governed,' the Negro citizen will be excluded by laws so contrived as to keep out the Negro republican while admitting the white democrat, though both present themselves with similar qualifications except as to color. The party which will not allow the constitution to follow the flag through the Carolinas, through Mississippi, and Texas has no occasion to distress itself about the Constitution's journey 4000 miles across the ocean."
The democratic spouters should commit this to memory, it is worth remembering because it is as exact as a problem in mathematics.
Boss Croker, the brains of Tammany Hall in a confab with Captain Jackson of the Belle Meade Stock Farm about the latters recent interview which was not flattering to Bryan, said with a great show of anger "the man who votes for McKinley, votes for murder. This imperialism which means the shooting down of Negroes in the Philippine Islands is nothing less than murder," That's all rot said Captain Jackson and he banged his fist on a chair. Mr. Croker walked away and said no more
What would Mr. Croker call his white democratic brethren of the South, who also shoot down Negroes? What name would he apply to the Tammany terriers in brass buttons who club Negroes into insensibility in New York right under his pug nose? Who told Mr Croker that the Philip pines are Negroes any how? And what does he or his party care for the Negroes?
The census of 1890 shows that the foreign population of New York City was 639943, against a native population of 875,358, and in the administration of the cities affairs the Irish are on top. Those that have not won aldermanie honors are either on the police force as private-, captains or station keepers. The Tammany police force belong in this category. They have been on top of New York Negroes recently with their night sticks and handled the latter as expertly as though they were twirling the shilalah at Donnybrook fair. There is only about 400000 Irish left on the "could sod." The other part of its population has moved to this country.
It is enough to make a horse laugh hoarsely to read about Mr. Croker protesting against the shooting down of Negroes in the Philippine Islands especially when no Negroes have been shot down. Is Mr. Croker joking or just funing?
Mr. Edgards L. Palacious whew! what name and Mme Berry, "The Black Melba" agonized a few in the pulpit of the A. M. E. Zion church at Saratoga on the 4th instant in the presence of a patient and long suffering "awjence." The gentleman with the palatial name undertook to "excite" selections from Shakespeare—the closet scene from Hamlet and Tom Taylor's "Fools Revenge".
The lady rendered or tried to some
The Lane That Had No Turning.
COME & JOIN!
THE NATIONAL CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA.
ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA.
10 Departments Incorporated in One
Viz: Provision, Fuel, Banking, Insurance, Publishing, Education, Purchasing, Manufacturing, Employment and Contracting.
CAPITAL $100,000. Shares $10 to $100, payable $1.00 monthly. Admission fee $1.00.
OBJECT-Buy and borrow of ourselves. All kinds of societies and clubs can join. NO PASSWORD, GRIPS or SIGNS. Agents and organizers wanted. alary, commission and territory given THIS ASSOCIATION buys properties for members and gives long time to pay for it. Saves them 10 to 25 per cent. on house rent, fuel, provissions and dry goods bill. Loans them money when in need at small interest. Gives them $2 to $10 week when sick (women paid for all complaints). Furnishes doctor and medicine free. Gives $30 to $450 at death; also $100 to $500 if living 10 years. Secures all kinds of EMPLOYMENT for them FREE at any place.
Incorporated 1896. Organized since then 384 branches and purchased over $50,000 worth of real estate. Mention this paper. Dr. E. PARKER READ, Founder and Pres. Miss J. PARKER SHIELDS. Secretary. Rev. ALEXANDER H. NEWTON, Treasurer. LAWYER M. LUTHER NICHOLAS, Solicitor. If interested in this Associationwrite to Home Office, 514 South 122b street, Philade
Q
V
DO YOU NEED MONEY?
We will lend any amount from $10 up. On Household Furniture.
planos, horses, wagons, carriages, or personal property of any kind, without removal from your possession. Loans can be carried as long as desired, and payments can be made at any time to suit the convenience of the of the borrower. We are the only properly organized loan company in the city. If you appreciate low rates, courteous treatment, and attention to your interests, you will call on us. Offices private and easily reached. Loans made in any part of the city. Need delay. Open from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m.
SECURITY LOAN COMPANY
Room 1, Warder Building;
Corner 9th and F sts. n. w.
Money $50,000 Money
To loan on furniture, planos, ac., without
removal or publicity and the day you ask
for it. We will loan any amount making
time and payments to suit, giving one month
or one year as you desire, and at rates that
you can afford to pay. If you now have a loan
with any other company and desire more
money, give us a call. Will as cheerfully
make a $10 loan as $100, and no charge or
expense if loan is not made. Always ready
to give information regarding rates and methods to secure a loan. We are the oldest loan company in the city, and will give you honest treatment. All business strictly confidential.
Private offices.
Washington Mortgage Loan Co.,
610 F Street. N. W.
Money to Loan
ON FURNITURE, PIANOS, ETC.
If you are in need of money, we desire to inform you of our new method. We can secure you a loan on an easy monthly payment plan, at less cost than before, and below the rate of any other company in the city. You can pay in full at any time after loan is secured, and it will only cost you for such time as you have had the money. Our business is strictly private, and all applications are treated confidentially. If you have a loan with any other concern, you can secure a loan through us to pay it and get more money if desired. It will pay you to call and see us before going elsewhere. We are ready at any and all times during office hours to give information concerning our business methods, and you will receive courteous treatment.
CAPITAL
LOAN GUARANTEE CO
602 F ST. N. W
Capital Savings Bank-
609 F St. N. W., Washington, D. C.
Capital $50,000.
Hon. Jno. R. Lynch, President.
L. C. Bailey, Treasurer.
J. A. Johnson, Secretary.
D. B. McCary, Cashier.
Directors:
Jno. R. Lynch, Dr. W. S. Lofton,
Whitefield McKinlay, J C. Bailey,
Robt. H. Terrell, W. S. Montgomery,
Wyatt Archer, John A. Pierre, Henry
E. Baker, James Storum, J. A.
Johnson, Dr. A. W. Tancil, Howard
H Williams.
Deposits received from 10 cents upward. Interest allowed on $5.00 and above. Collections meet with prompt attention. A general exchange and banking business done.
Bank open from 9 a. m. to 4:30pm.
The National Safe Deposit, Savings and Trust Company.
Corner 15th St. and New York Ave.
Capital: One Million Dollars.
Pavs interest on deposits.
Rents Sates insides 'urglar-proof Vaults.
Acts as administrator, executor, trustee, &c.
W. H. FISHER
:.Dyer and Cleaner.:
709 9th St. n. w.
407 14th St. n w. Telephone 152.
---
OUTRAGES IN TEXAS.
The Work of Carnage and Extermination Goes on.
Calvert, Texas, Special—A war of extermination of the colored citizens seems to be in progress in Grimes county, near Navasota, Texas. Colored refugees from that county report blood-curdling murders of men and women in that county during the last few weeks. A lady refugee says that there seems to be a secret organization engaged at the bloody work, with the secret approval of the constituted (?) authorities of that county who repress the publication of such crimes altogether or see that the truth is not told.
This reminds us of some such murders we have known to have occurred in this and adjoining counties, which, so far as we have been able to find out, have never been seen in public print, although in some cases a mock trial has been gone through to reassure the murderers that no "white man" can ever be legally punished in Texas for crimes committed "against the peace and dignity of the state" in cases wherein only Negroes are plaintiffs.
The reading and thoughtful colored citizens of this community are much alarmed by the proscribing, murdering and disfranchising tendencies of Southern sentiment—for even white men who have interests here worth preserving feel compelled, by circumstances, to lend their approval to these outrages of all that makes life worth living Still there is evidently an undercurrent of unrest running through the life of colored society that presages a final up heaval that shall shake this social fabric from centre to circumference. All the great race journals and mind moulders of the country are laid under tribute to this great scare crow, "the race problem."
We gladly note that The Colored American is one great journal in which the varied people find full and free expression. Its newsy columns are weekly searched end to end for a remedy for the growing uneasiness that racks the thoughtful Negro brain. Race emigration, race colonozation, race concentration of capital, migration to foreign lands and education of this or that kind and degree are all, perhaps, wise and worthy suggestions of some of our wise and worthy leaders. But which and how many of them are really practical? Poverty and ignorance still interpose themselves between us and the attainment of any of our ideals. Can the poverty of the masses be overcome, under either present circumstances or that to which we are tending? Industrial education is possible, even under present circumstances, to most of our ambitious young people. Let us then cease to criticise and hasten to adopt Booker T. Washington's idea—the easiest, the best, the quickest way out of our poverty—and, let us remember too, that the "God of Nations" invites us into daily council with Him. Let us all meet with Him one day. Who will name the day? C. C. Platt
Calvert, Texas.
A REMARKABLE MAN.
Mr. Booker T. Washington's distinguishing characteristic is the so called common sense, which is really so uncommon. His speech at the closing meeting of the Afro-American Conference should be read not only by every Negro, but by every white man in the country. It is a speech with a thought in every sentence.—Indianapolis Journal.
This is high praise indeed, but it is deserved. Mr. Washington has those
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. C.
qualities of leadership that are so rare that they come to but one or two men in a century. These qualities are repose of character, reserve, unfailing self respect and innate dignity. Added to these native wisdom and the faculty of saying and doing the right thing in the right way. Men of this kind never "slop over," never make bad breaks, never say foolish things and always do wise ones. These rare traits make Mr. Washington invaluable to his race as a leader and adviser and they also make him one of the most notable and valuable men of the age in which he lives. - Indianapolis World.
A PROMINENT GEORGIAN.
Mr. Lucius L. Lee, Atlanta's Leading Undertaker and Business Man a Visitor at the Nation's Capitol—His Prominence as an Oda Lellow,
Mr. Lucius L. Lee, a leading business man of Atlanta, Ga., the most prominent and successful undertaker of that city, and by all odds the most prominent and influential Odd Fellow in the State of Georgia, spent a few days in this city last week. He is a member of the B. M. C., with headquarters at Philadelphia and is at pres-
J. H.
MR. LUCIUS L. LEE.
ent acting as Deputy Grand Master. For more than thirty years Mr. Lee has been the leading spirit in Odd Fellowship in the entire South and has devoted much of his time and his means to strengthen the Order and to advance its interests. Mr. Lee has been a delegate to every B. M. C., meeting held in this country for the last twenty.four years, and an introduction of him is hardly necessary to any of the strong men of the Order. He is being urged by his many friends to make the race for Deputy Grand Master. And he has consented to make the race which means that he will be elected.
No man stands higher in Odd Fellow circles than L. L, Lee. No one member of the Order has contributed more to its success than has Mr. Lee. He is known from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico. An enthusiastic Odd Fellow, one who has studies the intricasies as well as the beauties of the Order, one has been an active and energetic worker, one who has sat in judgment in the paying of the obligations of the Order and one who has never been found in the wrong in any decision he has made, he is by all odds the strongest, the best and the most logical candidate for the place. The concensus of opinion among the District Odd Fellows is that his election will be unanimous. Mr. Aldrick C. Lewis of this city who is a candidate for Director, Mr. Will L. Houston and other influential members of the District branch are all favorable to Mr. Lee and it looks as though he
would receive the solid support of the District. He is one of the most successful Afro-Americans in the Gate City. He began business some thirty-three years ago when there were few openings for colored men in the South. By perseverance, by industry, and by an indomitable will he has built up a small fortune and has reared an interesting family and is recognized throughout the State of Georgia and the South as an acknowledged leader of his people. The Order can make no mistake by electing Mr. Lee to the position to which he aspires.
Messrs. Harry Parker and John H. Berry of this city were guests of the Citizen's Republican Club of Philadelphia last week.
Mr. R. W. Green who has spent the summer at Atlantic City, N. J. is back with Messrs. Moore and Prioleau where he will spend the fall and winter. Mr. Green is a fixture at the Sparta Cafe.
The wonderful Face Bleach has been introduced in Washington and is offered to the public at a special rate. The two dollar packages can now be had for one dollar by calling at Ogram's Drug Store, corner Pennsylvania avenue and 18th street.
SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS.
ROOMS FOR RENT.
Two Large Rooms to rent—furnished or unfurnished 419 Q street, N.W. 2t
FOR RENT—Furnished or unfurnished rooms, with or without board. 407 Warner street, northwest, between 4th and 5th, Q and R.
FURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT.—Two single rooms in private family, with table board, lady or gentleman. Modern improve ments, near two lines of cars, north west section, apply Mrs. J. A., The Colored American office
AGENTS WANTED.
Enclose 2c stamp for reply, and we will send particulars telling how you can make from $75 to $150 per month, and also be presented with a fine Gold Watch. Address.
SCOTT REMEDY CO.,
Box 570, Louisville, Ky.
Cora E. Dorsey and Christine Dorsey Typewriting, Copying and Stenographic work satisfactorily performed at reasonable rates by the Misses Dorsey, Room 8, Le Droit Building Corner 8th and F street northwest.
WONDERFUL DISCOVERY Curly Hair Made Straight By
1
THE ORIGINAL—COPRINTED.
This wonderful hair pomade is the only safe preparation in the world that makes kinky hair straight as shown above. It nourishes the scalp, prevents the hair from falling out and makes it grow. Sold over 40 years by thousands. Testimonials by thousands. Request it was the first preparation ever sold for straightening kinky hair. Beware of imitations. Get the Original Ozonized Ox Marrow, as the genuine never fails to keep the hair pliable and beautiful. A toilet necessity for ladies and gentlemen. Elegantly perfumed. The great advantage of this wonderful pomade is that by its use you can straighten your own hair at home. Owing to its superior and lasting quality it is the most economical. It is not possible for anybody to produce a preparation equal to it. Full descriptions with every bottle sold. Only 40 cents. Sold by dealers $1.40 Postal or Express Money Order for 3 bottles, express paid. Write your name and address plainly to
OZONIZED OX MARROW CO., 76 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Ill.
7
Consumers Brewing Company
Brews the purest Beer on the Washington Market. The highest chemical authority in the district of Columbia, after an analysis just finished of all the different beers on the market, gives this as his verdict. Don't be fooled by jealousy, envy, or prejudice, on either or all of which is based our opposition. We have the most modern plant. We brew from sterilized water and choice hops and malt. We have one of the most skillful brewmasters in the county. Visit our plant and insist on us proving our assertions. We will be glad to show all. ABE KING.
Sec'y and Treas,
E. L. JORDAN,
Pres and Gen'l Mgr.
SPARTA Pool and Billiard Rooms, 1206 Pennsylvania Avenue, n. w.
This large, spacious and well-situated pleasure establishment has had added to it a new room in the third story for pool and billiards, where those who do not care to play in the larger apartments can have a degree of privacy not to be obtained elsewhere. This new room is handsomely furnished and lighted by electric lights. The atmosphere is cooled by electric fans. You are cordially invited to make inspection of these pool and billard parlors You will receive a hearty welcome at any time. Ask for SAMUEL A. TYLER, Manager.
Chris. Xander's QUALITY HOUSE.
909 7th St. N.W.
Established 36 years ago. The largest wholesale stock in town of the most exquisite, faultless wines and distillates (in all 240 kinds,) at Chris. Xander's moderate prices no others can compete in quality and purity with any of his goods. His liquors are absolutely free from fusel poison.
(No branch houses.) Phone 1405
Phone 1425.
...C. H. NAUGHTON...
LIQUORS AND SEGARS
FINE WINES. Harper & Wilson a specialty. 1926 Fourteenth Street, Northwest
James F. Keenan
Rectifier and Wholesale Liquor Dealer.
Elegant Club Whiskey a Specialty.
Importer of Five Wines, Brandies
Gins, Etc
462 Pennsylvania Avenue, N. W.
FRED. H. HABLE.
RAILROAD TICKET BROKER. Member of the American Ticket Brokers' Association. Cut rates to all points. Call on us and we will save you from $1 to $5. Office in National Hotel Lobby, Washington, D.C.
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ra
RET AAT APET eeTrrtat WiAkoTeeT.
essa ei ih AEE a SESE SSIS mm Oa Rs EDT. RES SSS ce RRR ETN 7 SY ee aoe eo on ea aes eS
8
ee
The Colored American
Published by THE COLORED AMERICAN Pub-
Nsbing Company.
ee
A NATIONAL NEGRO NEWSPAPER
Pubushed every Saturday at 459 C St. N. W
Washington, D. C.
fe oad SE Spee
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
One year - : $2.00
Six months - - 1.10
Three months = : 60
INVABIABLY IN ADVANCE.
Subscriptions may ve sent by postofice
money order, express or by registered letter.
All communications for publication should
be accompanied with the name of the writer—
not necessarily for pubjication, but as a guar-
ante e of good faith.
We solicit news, contributions, opinion
and Im fact, all matters affecting the race.
‘We will not pay for matter, however, uniess
it is ordered by us. All matter intended for
pubifcation must reach this office by Wednes-
@ay of each Week to insure insertion in the
current issue
Be Agents are wanted everywoere, Send
or .nstructions,
ADVERTISING RATES.
Reading notices 50 cents per line, Display
advertisements, $2 per square incn per Inser-
tion. Discounts made on large contracts,
—— @t the Post-office as second-class
matter.
All letters, communications, and business
maiters should be addressed to
TRE COLORED AMERICAN,
EDWARD E. COOPER, Manacer
459 C Steeet Northwest.
WASHINGTON, D. C.
eee
SATURDAY CEPTEYWRERI7 1000
THE AFRO-AMERICAN COUNCIL.
There can be nothing but words of
praise and commerdation for the dig:
sified and conservative manner in
which the Afre-American Couneil did
the work of its annual meeting recently
held in Indianapolis, It was by tar
the best’ meeting that the orgsnization
has held since its creation in Rochester,
New York several years ago. In rep:
resentation it was surprisingly large
when one tskes into consideration the
fact that itis no lopger a brand new
scheme with all the attraction that
novelty commands. In the intellectual
make-up of those who participated in
the proceedings, it was a great im:
provement over its other annual ses:
sions. It was singularly free from the
nonsensical, rabid and extremely radi-
eal tone and expression of so many
conventions which have been he d by
colored men in years gone by. In
short the gathering was all that every
thoughtful colored man wanted it to be
and its address to the country is au
able, sensible and conservative dogu-
ment, stating the case of the Negro as
it should be stated in a calm, dignified
and manly way.
Nothing that was done by the con:
vention commends it more to the
judgement of thoughtful men more
than its refusal to be turned into a
politically partisan gathering. Any
such step would have been fatal and
would have given the National Coun-
cila set back trom which, perhaps, it
would never have recovered. It would
have been the cause for driving away
from future meetings many useful men
who do not wish to jotn in political
wrangles outside of politieal cenven-
tions. Furthermere, any political
expression given out by such a body
as the Afro-American Council can win
no votes for any party because the
Council would forteit the respect of all
honest men because by going into pol-
itics it would be dishonest by violating
one of its cardinal principles and its er
ganic law. We have no doubt that
like all Jarge bodies of colored men,
the representatives who met at Indian-
apelis were Republicans in the propor-
tion of ten to one, yet it would have
been exceedingly poor policy in these
men to have forced any partisan polit
ical expression from the Convention
that would have driven avay the men
who did not agree with them in poli-
tics There are good men in all par
ties and the Negro needs all of his
strong forces just at this time to get
together and fight together for the
things upon which his very existence
epeude—iiberiy and the pursuit of
happiness.
_ The Celored American congratu:
lates the Council on its good work and
its President on his address. We hepe
‘that the Council will not get into poli’
‘tics as long as there is 0 much other
| important work for it to do. Let the
'men who compose these annual meet.
| ings have their political pow wows at
home before they come to the meeting:
of the Council, or after they return tc
|their respective States when the work
lof the Council is finished. Let th
| Council be kept as a common grounc
| where all our men of character, intel
lect and high purpose may meet anc
discuss the Negro’s welfare regardles
of political affiations.
Talk about business. Here it ts for
you. The American Eagle, an influ
entual Atro-American newspaper of
St. Louis, Mo., remarks!
“As a business proposition you sheuld
vote the democratic ticket,”
In another celumn in this issue of
The Colored American an abbreviated
aceount 1s given of the Annual Session
ot the Grand United Order of True
Reformers which met at the headquar-
ters in Richmond, Va, at their hall.
The history of this Order is wonderful
indeed. To read of the great progress
it has made in the last twenty years
creates doubt ip the minds of those who
are not members of the Order, who are
not acquainted with the internal work-
inge of the Order and who do not know
of its great achievements and accom-
plishments, The President and Grand
Worthy Master, Rev, William L. Tay:
lor, in delivering bis opening address
covered the work of one year and min:
imized it toa ten minute statement.
since the last annual session of the
Order an increase of 226 new Foun:
tains, ot 126 Rosebuds, 462 E Class
members, 670 B Class members and a
total increase of the Fountain member:
ship of more than 15.000 was shown.
The True Reformers is by all odds the
strongest financially and the most suc:
ceestully operated concern of the race.
Tt is conducted on a strictly business
basis, and a visit te the headquarters
will show that all business is tranacted
on strictly banking principles. Its reo:
ord is one which not only ite members
but the entire race should be proud of
Score one more for the Grand United
Order of True Reformers.
Bishop Henry M. Turner, the senior
bishop of the A. M. E. Church, is
getting a large share of public atten.
tion at this time. The bishop is a big
brainy man and has always occupied
seet in the middle of the stage He
has for thirty-eight years stood for the
race, first, lastand all the time. He
was a fearless champion for the Negro
when some of his critics were in their
swadling elothes The Colored Amer.
ican believes that when the great and
good bishop is ready he will give the
reasons for the faith that is within
him,
The Colored Citizen is a new jour-
nalistic bark, issued at Memphis,
Tenn. Itis now an interesting sheet,
but a trifle heavy at the mast head,
Hope for the Negro.
you are fully competent to give a reason [or |
every hose you have touching the future of |
the American Negro. and i ceriainly appre:
ciate your roseate haven for the Negro’s fu-
ture in America. and now, having read and |
re-read so ueh from an or timistie view, all |
of which 1 respect, 1 desire through the co's |
urns of your able journal and from your fer |
tile brain, a statement of facts, upon which
you base your hores of the Negro’s future in
America. Iam certain that such would be
interesting and instructive, and will do much
goo in the fleld of doubt and tear.
I am respectfully yours, -
R. H. Buwry.
Monongahela City, Pa.
| The above communication fully ex-
plains itself, We tip our hat in ac-
Enowledgement of the complimentary
reference to our efforts in behalf of the
race. Weare happiest when fighting
the battles of our race, The editorial
columns of The Colored American sim
to state the case of the race, not as an
optimist, but fairly, giving a reason for
the faith within us.
The questions being addressed to us
from all se¢'ions of the country by our
subecribers and readers, unmistakably
demonstrate the fact that our people
are thinking along right lines. Intel-
ligent thinking leads to intelligent ac-
tion. We can only give the outlines of
the fact upon which we base our hopes
for the Negro’s future in America.
In the first place, a race like an indi-
vidual, is more contented and therefore
capable of larger results in its home
than elsewhere, especially when it bas
done its full shere in the establishment
of thehome. The Negro was brougbt
to America very soon sfter the white
man secured & foothold and established
bimself here, against the consent of the
aborigines. The Negro was brought
here against his own consent. The red
man lias never fully accepted the while
man’s civilization, although the white
men took possession of him and bis
country. The black n an has fully ac-
cepted the white men’s civilization,
and has proyen himse!f as patriotic and
as devoted to the welfare of America
a3 the veriest white man here. The
| Negro’s blocd has freely tiowed upon
‘the field of every battle waged for the
| freedom, union and honor of this coun:
try, Why then should we not believe
that the Negro has a brilliant future in
jee He is a part and parcel of
| the body politic, nolens, volens.
| Granted that many rights heretofore
accorded us in certain sections are now
,bemg withdrawn or deuied; granted,
‘that in c-rtain other places heretofore
regarded as citles of refuge, we are being
‘emittep, as it were, in the houses of our
friend: granted, that many a former
frend to us has joined the great major’
ity, or is at least dead to us, yet not
withstanding ali tbis, the future for ua
in America is brigh‘er than anywhere
else, fur the reason that here character,
brair, pluck, enterprise, eccomplsb-
ments are achievements respected and
honored when possessed by a colored
man relatively a3 much as when pos-
seated by ® man of any other race or
nationality.
We must expect great things for out
race in this country, and prepsre our-
selves for theirenjoyment. ‘he white
man who berates us should remember
that if the United States currency he
uine signatare of a colored man, i: js g
worthlezs counterfeit; he should re.
member that every stamp that he uses
to torward his mail throughout tj
country is issued by a colored man: he
should remember that every real estat,
deed recorded in the nation’s capital js
recorded by acolored man; he shoulg
remember that the most iodigenoys
and loyal citizen in this country is g
colored man.
A glance at the opinion page of the
average American newspaper aly;
these times would induce an intellizent
foreigner to believe that the chief ocoy-
— of Americans is politics. This
too, notwithstandmg cur great prog:
‘ress and achievements in science ¢ x.
‘merce, industry, etc,
We point with pride to the Hart
Farm School as indicating the capacity
of one great teacher to lift the youth
of the race out of unfavorable environ.
ments and to plaee them in the up-
ward path to a life of usefulness, inde-
penderce and dignity.
__ Here is an institution originated and
developed in our midst which promises
unlimited power for social progress
and for the developrent of human
character and capacity from the least
promising and most hopeless and help.
less element of our community lite
All this has heen done 80 modestly, so
bravely, so effectively and with suc!
anes to allthat is manly and
worthy as to make it seem more like
the growth of ages with unlimited re-
sources of men and means than the
creation of eve individual, within less
than three years, unaided and alene
No one can read the articies in this
issue upon this unique institution
without perceiving that a new star o!
hope and help of the first magnitude
bas risen for the negleeted children ot
our peeple who dwell in cities, and
which furnishes a living illustration of
Vietor Hugo's saying—“That whoever
an a school, cloaes a prison.”
Miss Lewis at the Thurber Conservatory
Miss Addie Lewis, daughter of Prof.
J. Henry Lewis is visiting ber uncle in
New York City, and while there she is
taking a epecial course in piano techni-
que at the Nations! Coneervatory of
Music; and her instructor reports very
promising results. Mies Lewis will re-
turn to Washington about October 1,
and form a limited class for piano in-
struction,
Mrs. Lavender formerly Miss Emma
Johnson of 2439 P atreet n. w , has re
turned from a month’s visit to her
husband at Uiontown Pa, where the
latter isemployed. While at Union
‘town Mr. and Mis Lavender were
| pleasantly entertained as the guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Phil. Jobnson, 23 Grant
‘street that city.
One of the most active delegates w!
attended the late National Negro Bus'-
ness Leage which met in Bosten, Ma=s.,
was Dr. James E. Shepard of Raleigh,
| N.C., Mr. Shepard is one of the best
‘known youpg men of that State. and
was Chief Clerk under Recorder 11. l’
‘Cheatham during Mr. Chesthsm’s fir=t
yearas Recorder of Deeds. The Dov-
for is now at his cld home in Raleigh
where he is doing hereulean services
for the party. His speech before the
National Negro Business League a!
Boston wes one of the most poin'ed
and effective of any delivered Dr.
Shepard will take part in the present
Campaign and will make some speeciit®
in the north and east.
Negro Boys' Junior Republic.
(Continued from first page )
he has now been professor some ten years or more. He is an enthusiast in his devotion to his alma mater, to whose call he is always ready to respond. It was in his study of the subject of the university extension that his present project began to take shape. He saw hundreds of colored boys, 8 to 18 years of age, in the streets of Washington. They were idle, unemployed, likely to become criminals. What could Howard University do for them? The trustees saw no way in which they could reach the difficulty. Meantime Mr Hart, whose anxiety was urgent, laid the subject before the board of children's guardians, especially be fore the superintendent of charities of the District of Columbia, offering his farm and his services to them, as they had been offered to the university. Here he was successful."
Mr. Hart's farm is down on the Maryland shore of the Potomac, some 12 miles below Washington City. Side by side with this farm is one owned by William M. Evarts, to whom Mr. Hart was three years private secretary Of this second farm, making in all a tract of land extending a mile up and down the river and a mile and a half into the state of Maryland. Mr. Hart secured from Mr. Evarts a gratuitous grant so long as used for the purpose then contemplated. There were but two dwellings on the place; one which had been used by the farmer and the other an elegant cabin used by Mr. Evarts and household for summer outings. In this latter the school was opened in 1897. Mr Hart has solicited money enough since to erect a wooden structure, two stories high, which is used for school room and sleeping room.
Mr. Hart has great fondness for horses and cattle, of which he has several notable representatives on the farm. The pupils are superintended by Robert J. Evans, a graduate of Hampton Institute, who has four or more assistants. Among the pupils is a Korean; also a Porto Rican, who followed the United States troops home from that island to Cleveland, Ohio, and there met President Rankin. There are now 42 boys on the farm. All of them are happy, healthy, and well, and easily governed. Indeed, the personality of Mr. Hart seems to act as a restraining influence. To show this, last Christmae, Mr. Hart gave them a holiday, to be spent in Washington, the understanding being that they should report at the steamboat dock at a given hour. At the time specified all were there.
For $185 per year, which is appropriated by Congress, Mr. Hart boards and clothes them and gives them instructions in agriculture, blacksmithing and wheelwrighting. This is less than it costs to care for the inmates of the reform school. Hundreds of thousands of dollars are contributed by the benevolent for other branches of education and sociological work. Here is a branch that combines both. It prevents criminality; it cures it. It is well worth solid encouragement. Mr. Hart needs gifts of money, clothing, books, new buildings and a cheering word from all God's people who are anxious to hear the word, "Inasmuch as ye did unto the least of one of these ye did unto me."
Mr. H. B. Macfarland, one of the commissioners of the District of Columbia, who takes a great interest in the enterprise, said of the Hart farm school: "The boys live in an unpretentious frame building of generous proportions, 60 feet by about 50 feet wide, and two stories high. The first floor contains the school room a large, comfortable and homey apartment-a dining room, pantry and two large bed rooms -one of them used as a hospital for the sick, but as seldom has an occupant, sickness being almost unknown, it is ordinarily used as a bed room. The second floor, which is light and airy, is filled with iron beds and cots, one for each boy, and each kept scrupulously neat and clean. A huge stove used for burning wood heats it in winter, while in summer it is ventilated by a generous number of windows. The school-room and dining-room have a genuine touch of comfort about them, the influence and genual warmth of which will send an after-glow through all the future life of these otherwise homeless lads. There is a chicken yard, and an incubator, that especially attracts some of the boys, and their love for the little fluffy
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D.
yellow fellows that race about the hen coops to the old mother hen's clucks, shows plainly that these boys, in favorable environment, are not different from other boys. There are 18 or 20 cows and calves and many horses and colts—among them some thoroughbreds—as well as pigs and sheep, to which the boys are much attached. Feeding time when the cattle stand longingly about the barnyard, craning their necks toward the stable door, with a merry faced set of youngsters in their midst, is a picture of rural simplicity that can but uplift them above their unfortunate inheritance of race and condition. There is a genuine homey corner, where a long deal table does service for childish elbows when study time comes. On the walls are pictures of eminent men and battle scenes of colored soldiers wearing the blue and fighting under the starry flag. A handsome opossum skin, the result of the boys' first hunt, is tacked against the jamb. There are huge split-bottomed rockers, and a great yawning fireplace, with room for an old-fashioned backlog, that burns from Sunday morning until Saturday night at the proper season, diffusing its mellow glow throughout the room.
While every effort is made to yield the influence and cultivate the appreciation of genuine home life, there is a strict routine laid down for each day, and only sickness prevents its being carried out. At 5 a.m. the boys are up, and each dresses, washes and turns his bed for airing. A specified number of them, those best adapted to it, then assist in getting breakfast, which is ready at 6 o'clock. After breakfast details of boys in regular assignments perform the dining-room and dormitory work, while others enjoy an hour of recreation. At 7 30 the regular morning military drill takes place, and then they go to the school room for two hours' study and recitation. After that all but the sick and those assigned to special duty about the house, yard and outbuildings go to the fields. At 12 the great farm bell calls them all in, and dinner is served, a few of the boys waiting on the others. This is followed by an hour of rest and recreation, and then half the boys return to the school room and the detail of the other half go to the fields. Supper comes at 5 90, and that over they rest and play until 7 o'clock, when Mr. Evans, the superintendent, calls them into the evening assembly for an informal talk and religious exercises and music. At 8 30 they all go up stairs to their clean beds. The Sundays are spent with simple religious exercises, reading, talking and quiet intercourse. All possible work is avoided on that day.
In all the work of house and farm the boys help perform the duties, enter them freely and willingly, and appreciate the plaudit of 'well done.' It is wonderful to observe the aptitude which these children of the gutter show for special kinds of work, and the marvelous way in which they respond to the affection and example and instruction of their teachers, all of which is new to their former experiences. The house boy is not a at loss in the fields, and vice versa. An effort is made as far as possible to give to each boy the duties for which he is best adapted. Just now they are laying in wood for the winter nights, when, instead of slinking up cold, dark alleys, they start a roaring fire in the great open mouthed fireplace and pop corn raised by their own industry, and crack nuts gathered in idle moments, listen to stories sing songs and talk until turning in time. Visions of pumpkin pie make their mouths water as they gather in the golden fruit; and in the cornfields, where they watch with wonder—understanding for the first time—the oncoming crop from the time of the flesh turned earth, until the corn stands shocked ready for husking; the thought of great squares of hot cornbread quickens their appreciation of their summer toil.
These boys are not put down in a place filled with modern machinery and modern implements, but as Prof. Harn says, the boy is taught to make use of the resources at his command, to do what he will be called upon to do in actual farm life. He learns to make a slowpoint out of a horseshoe. Our resources are limited and we do the best we can with the resources on hand. The training fits the boy admirably for the life of the farmer. He is not spoiled by luxurious living. Such a man will place himself in a position where he cannot be spared, and he is bound to
BOTH PRONOUNCED INCURABLE.
Pe-ru-na Made Them Strong and Happy.
Women everywhere are writing Dr. Hartman concerning the ailments peculiar to their sex. The two following letters, published by the consent of the writers are specimens. No wonder these ladies are enthusiastic. They had been sick a long time. Their cure was unexpected. The first one, Mrs. King, of North Carolina, writes: "I was afflicted for twenty years and did not know what ailed me. My husband employed three doctors, but they did me no good. I took different kinds of medicine, all to no effect. In 1895 a friend told me I had catarrh. I had a bad cough and running at the nose all the time. I was advised
Mrs. M. M. King, Waterloo, N. C.
to try Pe-ru-na and I took four bottles. I am now well of the catarrh. I believe Pe-ru-na saved my life. The doctors and all others failed. I can recommend your Pe-ru-na to all my friends. It is the best medicine in the world. You
succeed. And after the great Negro philanthropist has laid an imperishable bridge over crime, when these outcasts have been taught the beauty of a useful, conscientious life—they cannot live on and on at the farm school—What then?
Just as rapidly as their training fits them for it, the duration of which will vary according to the individual needs and capacities of the boys, they will be taken from the Hart farm school and placed in homes in the north and west, that have been investigated and approved by the board of children's guardians of the District of Columbia. Prof Hart has given his lands, his buildings, his farming implements, all of his equipments, and, best of all, his talents and his admirable discipline free. The amount allowed for each boy per capita is too small. It is not enough. Prof Hart must and does meet the difference out of his own pocket. The land is there-700 acres of it - and on its generous proportions 1000 boys could be trained as easily as 50
Improvements and facilities are needed. The work is a gigantic one. Congress will give food and raiment, but no more, because the District of Columbia is no longer an agricultural area, and the site of the school is necesarily outside of the District limits. The rest must be provided by Prof. Hart and those charitable and benevolent people all over the land who approve and appreciate his great work. More suitable buildings and more extensive equipments for shops and shelter are urgently needed. The work is not only a refuge and and a relief for the neglected colored boy, and to that extent it is racial; it is also a sociological and educational one in purpose and effect. It adds to the moral and productive forces of society at the same time that it redeems human life and develops human character; it also solves the great municipal problem of giving the submerged city waif a fair start in life.
Mrs. Daniel H. Mason and her charming and accomplished daughter Miss Bertie, returned this week from an extensive and pleasant tour covering Niagara Falls, Syracuse, Rochester, Philadelphia, New York, and other places. They report a most delightful trip.
9
may use my name whenever you please."—Mrs. M. M. King.
Mary F. Bartholomew, of St. Francisville, Ill., says: "About twelve years ago I was afflicted with female trouble (pelvic catarrh.) I doctored with several skillful physicians, but kept getting worse until I became bedfast. I remained in this condition about two years, under the attendance of four physicians.
"I concluded I would write Dr. Hartman for advice. I owe my life to Dr. Hartman and Pe-ru-na. My friends and neighbors never expected to see me well again. I am now able to assist with my household duties. I think my recovery
is a surprise to every one who knew me. My appetite was so poor I could eat scarcely anything; but I can eat any and everything now without pain. I cannot recommend your medicines enough."
A.
Catarrh is the
bane of womankind. Nearly every case of so called female complaint is due to catarrh of the pelvic organs. A woman free from catarrh is generally a well woman. Catarrh of the pelvic organs makes more women miserable than all other diseases combined. For Dr. Hartman's latest book on female diseases, address The Pe-ru-na Medicine Company, Columbus, Ohio. Sent free for a short time.
Orange Blossoms.
Cards are out announcing the nuptials of Mr. David Wilborn, the well known newspaper man and soldier-correspondent of Springfield, O., to Miss Mary E. Bulkley at Charleston, S. C. Thursday September 20th. Mr. and Mrs. Wilborn will be at home to their friends after October 5th.
A Valuable Face.
The Washington Colored American of September 1sts devotes the whole of its front page to a likeness of Booker T. Washington. There's no reading on the page, but then Washington's face is worth a great deal, for he is the unmistakened emblem of great accomplishments.—Dallas Express.
Our Schools and Colleges.
Those who will have books to buy cannot do better than to visit Mr. John H. Wills, 506 Eleventh st., n. w., who can give best qualities in school and college books, new or second hand. If you do not live in this city send for list and prices. Mr. Wills has also a large collection of Negro literature.
Here is An Opportunity.
An colored man who wants to prepare himself for the Christian ministry can do so by entering the Phelps Hall Bible Training School connected with the Tuskegee Institute.
Worthy and earnest students who want to prepare for the ministry or other Christian work and have no funds will be given an opportunity to work their way through in a way that need not interfere with studies.]
For further information, address,
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON,
Tuskegee, Ala.
10
PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA.
[A tribute to Bishop A. Walters. Inspired by the reading of his address, delivered before the National Afro-American Council held at Indianapolis, Ind., Aug. 28 31,1909.]
THE TROJAN.
From the home, from the heart of this nation
What echo of great joy will now resound!
From within comes the Black man's salvation.
Not rocked in a cradle of splendor,
Through infancy, early manhood, or youth,
But a stranger to freedom, a defender,
A lover of righteousness and truth.
Now, exalted in the name of just heaven,
Over a church, o'er a nation, o'e- man,
That the rights of freemen might be given,
For these, the gallant Walters will stand.
Having the ear, the heart of a nation,
In America, across the dark sea,
To the Council he bears information,
"Agitation" is expected of thee.
Shall we stand as the slave at the galley
Submissively hoping for a quiet end,
While the toil of our hands 'rich the valley,
And not for our God's rights contend?
Would the slave from his thraldom dare ven.
Or captive return to native shore, [ture,
No matter how severe be the censure, [blow-
He who would be free must strike the first
Remember we are not slaves by nature,
But born for nobler, loftier end,
Though the purpose of God be not mature,
To its progress all our aid may lend.
Up from the flesh pots of the conqueror
Tear off this bitter thraldom like men:
Strike as our fathers—salented heroes
For our liberty, for justice contend
What if caste, prejudice is increasing.
And our fetters are now more tightly drawn!
Shall we still lie here supinely weeping?
Strike now, men, or our last chance will be
gone!
Hail to this Council of inspiration,
For ur daunted manhood, for equal rights,
A product—the black man's own creation
Led by such as Walters, as Arnett, White.
Midst outrage, opposition and labor,
As a rage let us struggle for the right,
Thus educate the hearts of our neighbor
Our oppressor, yea our brother in white.
J. Francis Lee, A. B., Lancaster, S. C., Box
51, pastor Mt. Zion A. M. E. Zion church.
A Successful Georgian.
Dr. E. E. Green, one of the leading physicians and druggists of Macon, Ga., was in the city this week paying a visit to his brother-in-law, Hon. George H. White of North Carolina. Dr. Green is a native of Wilmington, N. G., but for the past fourteen years has practiced medicine successfully in Georgia. He is an excellent example of the possibilities of young men who equip themselves for the duties of life and who enter their profession with a determination to succeed. Dr. Green has a most interesting family of four children, the oldest a son who will enter Howard University Medical School this fall. He is a leading taxpayer and a prominent citizen of Macon and speaks most hopefully of the prospects for the Afro-American in Georgia.
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. C.
"BIG BOW"
J. P. KERR,
The Indian Medicine Man Cures all Diseasesor no Charge. Call or Write.
Dr. L. G. Hayden, General Manager,
Office hours 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily.
Miss Harriet A. Gibbs,
Miss Harriet A. Gibbs,
Graduate of Oberlin Conservatory of Music, and late of Boston.
VOICE CULTURE, PIANO, ORGAN, HARMONY AND COUNTERPOINT. STUDIO: 14 N ST., N. W.
GREAT RACE BOOKS.
It is a fact that J. T. Haley & Co. 346 Court Square Nashville, Tenn. are the most extensive Race Book publishers in the United States. They are our friends and are giving employment to hundreds of men and women of the race. They publish the AFROAMERICAN ENCYCLOPAEDIA COLLEGE OF LIFE, UNCLE TOMS CABIN, SPARK LING GEMS, LAMP OF WISDOM, etc. These books sell at sight. Agents are having a harvest. Write Quick for terms and Territory
BUSH'S CAFE
Is now open. It contains all that is up to-date. A high line of Liquors, the choicest Cigars and an appetizing Free Lunch with a glass of Beer. You must make a visit to get an idea of the place. GEORGE BUSH, PROP., 701 4th Street, Opp. Pension Office.
THE M'KINLEY HOUSE.
489 Missouri Ave., Near 6th St. First-class accommodations for all. An up to date Hotel for colored people. Rooms neatly furnished, linens clean, and prices within reach of all. Meals and Lunches served at all hours. THE PORTER HOUSE CAFE, 103 6th St., N. W.
Wines, Liquors and Cigars -A full line of the choicest liquors, the best brands of cigars and the coolest beer in Washington. Messrs. B.T. Fields and John T. Lewis mixologists. MRS. M. S. BROWN & CO. Proprietors.
If so, call and see the Indian Herb Medicine Man, 620 North Eutaw Street, Baltimore, Md. I cure all diseases that are known to man or beast or no charge, no matter what your disease or sickness or affliction may be, and restore you to perfect health. Millions of people, the best and leading ones in the United States and Europe, will testify that I am the most wonderful healer of all complaints in the world. I use nothing but herbs, roots, barks, gums, balsams, seeds, berries, flowers and plants, made into teas. I have cured thousands that the most skillful physicians and the best hospital physicians in America and Europe had given up to die, and said there was no cure for them.
I cure the following diseases: Heart Disease, Consumption, Blood, Kidney, Bladder, Stricture, Piles in any form, Vertigo, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Lung, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Constipation, Rheumatism in any form, Pains and Aches of any kind, Colds, Bronchial troubles, Sores, Skin Diseases, all itching sensations, all Female Complaints, La Grippe or Pneumonia, Ulcers, Carbuncles, Boils, Cancer, the worst form, without the use of knife or instruments, Eczema, Pimples on face and body, Diabetes of Kidneys or Bright's Disease of the Kidneys. I cure any disease, no matter of what nature.
Medicine sent to any address by express. For full particulars send 2 cent stamp for answer.
J. P. KERR, THE INDIAN HERB MEDICINE MAN,
620 N. EUTAW ST. BALTIMORE, MD.
None genuine unless bought at 620 North Eutaw Street. Beware of imitators, as we have many.
FINE WINES Liquors of all kinds.
OLD WHISKIES Choice Cigars.
AND BRANDIES.
Philadelphia House,
M. F. CARROLL, Prop. Restaurant and Saloon, 348 Pennsylvania Avenue, N W. Washington, D. C. Meals to Order. Everything First Class Billiard and Pool Parlors Attached.
HO SEL DOUGLASS.
220 B. N., AD 235 PA. AVE. N. W
EUROPEAN PLAN.
First-class in every particular.
MRS. DOLLY C. JONES,
Proprietress.
Washington, D. O.
Robert H. Key
FINE WINES, LIQUORS,
CIGARS, ETC.
Ladies' Dining Room.
Meals at all Hours
443 First Street Southwest.
Gray & Costley
Wines, Liquors and Cigars
Laules and Gentlemen's Dining Room upstairs. The best of service guaranteed.
1313 E Street N. W.
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Fritz Reuter's
HOTEL : AND : RESTAURANT
451, 453, 455, 457 Penn. Ave.
202, 208 & 210 41 St. N. W
Washington, D. C.
The Woodson House
First class, newly furnished and decorated, unsurpassed cuisine, convenient to all cars. One half square from Pennsylvania Depot. 467 Missouri Avenue. HENRY WOODSON, PROPRIETOR. GASKINS & GAINES.
Academy Restaurant
[just around the corner]
320 8th Street, N. W.
Opposite Kanns'.
All leading brands of wine liquors and cigars, imported and domestic. Ladies and Gentlemen's Cafe Upstairs.
D. T. GIBBONS.
WHOLESALE MANUFACTURING RETA CONFECTIONER 523 41 Street, Southwest, WASHINGTON, D. C. Wedding Cakes Made and Parties Furnished at Short Notice. Ice Cream All The Year
Langston House
479 Mo. Ave. near 6th St. n. w.
Smoking and Reading Rooms; also home
for strangers. Meals served at all hours.
Menu a la Carte at popular prices. Call and
be convinced,
Joshua N Anderson.
I. J. Edwards. Props.
W. M. DRURY'S
RESTAURANT 1100 20th St., corner L. N. W. Washington, D. C.
HOTELCLYDE 475 MISSOURI AVE. NW.
First-Class Accomodations For
Ladies and Gentlemen.
Hot and Cold Baths.
MRS. ALICE E. HALL,
Proprietress.
MOORE & PRIOLEAU
- Sparta Buffet and Cafe -
1216 Pa. Ave. Washington, D.C.
Fine wines, liquors and cigars Hot Free Lunch Every Day Ladies will receive special attention in Dining Room upstairs.
SOUTHERN HOTEL,
Good board, steam heat and electric bells, Home comfort, moderate prices. 311 Pa. Ave., nw. Washington, D. G. Fine wines, liquors, cigars and tobacco.
Jack M Ryan, Proprietor
SILENCE BROS.,
Wines Liquors and Cigars,
A Noonday Lunch from 11 30 to 2 p.m.
430 EIGHTH ST., N. W.,
WASHINGTON, D. C.
---
The Voice of the Colored Press.
Our fathers brought forth upon this continent a new nation conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.—A, Lincoln.
W. A. Pledger has accepted the request of the Republican National Committee to speak five weeks in the West and East He is good wherever you send him or put him to doing.
Prof. Booker T. Washington is the cynosure of all eyes these days Foreign nations will hereafter pay homage to this brilliant Negro genius. His many good deeds will live long after he has passed away -The Independent (Texas)
The other fellows were evidently in a hurry to send out the report that The National Negro Press Association refused to endorse the McKinley administration. Five-sixths of the editors present signed a pretty warm set of resolutions. The Association is, as it should be, non partisan organization. The Plaindealer, (Kans.)
It has always been a puzzle to us to know how people could have the cheek to send articles to newspapers with their names inserted when they don't contribute one cent to the support of the paper. They will sit down and write an article which it will cost the paper several cents to set it up and think they are conferring a favor.—The Norfolk (Va.) Recorder.
John D. Rockefeller gave Spellman Seminary $180 000 for the further training of our girls. The race can never be too grateful to such men who live to bless their day and generation. Mr. Rockefeller is not waiting to die to help the unfortunate, but he is helping to streng hen character by throwing around it the strong arms of education while he lived.—The Southern Voice, (Alabama.)
What party is trying and disfranchis ing the Negro throughout the southern states? What party is the agent for the repeal of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendents? What party is hold ing "white primaries," taxing the Negro without representation and saying "Eliminate the Negro from politics?" The Democratic party, of course! Then how can you support such a party. Atlanta Republican, (Ga)
The colored youth should not neglect his literary education no more than he should his industrial education. We need educated farmers and we need educated soldiers, teachers, dairymen, hucksters, teamsters and cooks. The house servant of today is expected to have some education. The more you have the better servant you make. Do not scorn labor, if you cannot get the kind of work you prefer do some kind until chance gives you what you want The Independent.
No conscientious colored voter can vote the democratic ticket. The republican party gave us all the liberty we have enjoyed. It gave us more than freedom; it gave us the right to vote, the right to help make laws and the right to help to enforce them. The republican party will and does make its promises good. It was Mr. Bryan's party which steadfastly opposed the passage of the Fifteenth Amendment. Mr. Bryan canvassed the state of Kentucky in the interest of the Goebel law which disfranchised all the republicans, both
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. C.
white and black.—The Dayton (Ohio) Star.
WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT, MAN?
In his editorial on the Business Men's League, which met recently, in Boston, Brother E. E. Cooper used the following words:
"The personel of the delegates attracted attention. The politician, the calamity howler and walking delegates were conspicious by their absence. These were new men come from "the land of Egypt"
We thought this language very unjust to T. Tnomas Fortune whom we thought was not present, but in looking over the proceedings, we saw that Brother Cooper had been elected one of the permanent secretaries and that Mr. Fortune had been present and read a paper "The Afro-American Publisher" We therefore conclude that the country is safe and resume our usual equilibrium. The Progress (Ark.)
YOU ARE IN ERROR.
One of the greatest farces ever perpe- trated upon the Negroes of this country was the Afro-American Council which was held at Indianapolis week before last. It reminded one of a fourth rate political owl meeting. Bishop Walters was openly accused of having sold out to the democratic party for pocket change. Prominent Negroes were ejected from the hall, etc., Hoodlumism, at times, reigned supremely. The Guide is opposed to political bishops and be- lieve they should only be allowed to preside over their different conferences. When a bishop goes dragging around through the country, playing politics, he loses the respect of decent people.— The Texas Guide.
Let the Negro get together for his own good, and the members of his race and he will amount to more. He would be of more benefit to himself and race, if he was not given over to prejudice, hate to see the members of his race in a prosperous condition. Matters not what avocation in life the black man follows or what plea he makes to the dominant races, there is always some begrudgeful black scoundrel saying something or is working against his interest, when he would as a race man work for the members of his race. The Negro needs self-reliance and unity of forces to amount to anything in the history of this great country. Enterprises, industrial education and the securing of land and homes is very good, but he needs unity and a closer reliance and then he can solve the Negro problem that confronts him more easier than with all the other things presented to him.—Kansas City Observer.
The Sparta Rod and Guns Club's Outing*
The Sparta Rod and Gun Club, one of the most popular of its kind in the District, will take its annual outing of ten days next week. It will make its headquarters at Colton's Point, Md., and the game and fish within a radius of ten miles of that burgh will have to keep their eyes open if they keep out of the way of the hooks and shots of this famous club. Those who will take part in the outing are Messrs. A J. Booker, Edward C Allen, Will Wilkinson, Wm. Curry, Harry Cardoza, Drs. W. A. Warfield and George Cardoza and Mr. Clinton Burke. Mr. John Prioleau of Moore and Prioleau's will accompany the club as its guest.
AN ALL STAR CONCERT.
A grand star concert will be given at the John Wesley church, Connecticut avenue between L and M streets, Friday evening, September 21st, 1900, under the auspices of the Bishop Walter's Club. On this occasion great pleasure will be taken to present the leading talent of the District. The following named singers and speakers will participate: The Amphion Glee Club, Prof. J. T. Layton. Mr. Winston Payne, Miss Chanie Pattersou, Mrs. Lula Joy Brooks, Miss Mattie R Bowen, Miss Ottie M. Brooks, Prof. J. Henry Lewis, musical director; Prof. Wm. Braxton, pianist. Every one who wishes to spend an evening of pleasure should not miss this opportunity of a rare treat. Committee of arrangements: Mrs. S I Orme, president; Miss Marie Brown, secretary; Mrs. M. R. Wright, treasurer. Rev. B. J. Boiding, pastor. Admission 25 cents. tf.
Mrs. W. T. Menard and daughters, and Miss Bessie K. Thompson and James M. Kinloch left for Jacksonville, Fla.. last Tuesday.
NOTICE
MISS IDA PRETER, of Paris, Mo.,
writes the following: I have been using
the Original OZONIZED OX MARROW
for two months only and I am well pleased
with it. I was so bald that I was ashamed
of myself, to-day I have a thick growth of
hair all over my head three inches long.
When I am asked by people what I am do-
ing for my hair that it is grown so beauti-
fully I tell them it is the original Ozonized
Ox Marrow that did the work.
Ozonized Ox Marrow (copyrighted)
also makes curly or kinky hair straight.
smooth and pliable Prevents failing out and
breaking off. The genuine never disappoints.
Warranted harmless. Only 50 cents. Sold by
dealers. If your dealer cannot supply you we
will send you express paid one bottle for 65
cents or three for $1.40. Write your name
and address plainly to the OZONIZED OX
MARROW CO., 80 Wabash Ave., Chicago
BLACK SKIN REMOVER.
COPYRIGHTED.
BEFORE.
AFTER.
A WONDERFUL FACE BLEACH.
HAIR STRAIGHTENER. One LARGE JAR thrown in, enough to make any one person's hair grow long and straight.
A WONDERFUL FACE BLEACH.
A PEACH-LIKE complexion obtained if used as directed. Will turn the skin of a black or brown person four or five shades lighter, and a mulatto person perfectly white. In forty-eight hours a shade or two lighter will be noticeable. It does not turn the skin in spots but bleaches out white. One box of this preparation is all that is required if used as directed, the skin remaining beautiful without continual use. Will remove wrinkles, freckles, dark spots, pimples and black-heads, smallpox pits, tan and liver spots without harm to the skin. When you get the color you wish, stop using the preparation. The directions and preparation will be sent to any person for $1.00, or send Post-Office Money Order, Express Money Order, Registered Letter, or we will send it C.O.D. Packed so that no one will know contents except receiver.
THOS. B. CRANE,
122½ W. Broad St., Richmond, Va.
Geo. W. Wise
Furnishing Undertaker
PRACTICAL EMBALMER
2900 M street. Georgetown, D. C.
Telephone call. 103-63.
Lewis Biegers,
INSURANCE AGENT.
111 North Clinton, St., East Orange, N. J.
SICK, ACCIDENT, AND DEATH BENEFIT,
PAID PROMPTLY.
National Benefit Association, Capital Savings Bank Building, Washington, D. C.
11
KATIE KING
Born Clairvoyant & Card Reader
Tells about business, Removes Spells and Evil Influences, Reunites the Separated and Gives Luck to all. Cures Piles and Drunkenness. 1228 25th st. n, w. Washington D.C. No letters answered unless accompanied by stamp.
W. H BUTLER, PAINTS OILS
GLASS, &c.,
609 C STREET, N.W.
Springtime is on, and your house will need touching up. We have just what you want.
W. H. BUTLER, 609 C St., N. W.
ILLUSTRATIONS
CUIS MADE OF ANY-
THING, BY ANY PROCESS.
FINE WORK AT LOW PRICES.
THE
Maurice Joyce Engraving
Company.
EVENING STAR BUILDING, WASHINGTON, D.C.
R·I·P·A·N·S
The modern standard Family Medicine: Cures the common every-day ills of humanity.
ONE
TR.DE
REPACKS
LABULES
MARK
NOTICE!
REYNOLDS & REYNOLDS.
1210 U STREET, N. W.
Architects for College Buildings,
Churches, Chapels, Theatres, City
and Suburban Residences from $300
up. Prospectuses furnished to intending
home-seekers.
THE COLORED AMERIUIW, WASHINGTON, B. 6.
eee ss set tke at eg ee be . s
12
DINAH KREADING DOUGH.
I have seen full many a sight
Born of day or drawn by night;
Sunlight on a silver stream,
Golden lilies ali a-dream,
Lotty mountains, bold and proud,
Veiled beneath the lacelikecloud,
But no loyely sight I know
Equals Dinah kneading dougb.
Brown arms buried elbow deep
Their domestic rhythm keep,
As with steady sweep they go
Through the gently ytelding dough’
Maids may vaunt their finer charms--
aught to me like Dinah’s arms,
Gig)s may draw, or paint, or sew---
love Dinah kneadiug dough:
Eyes of jet and teeth of pearl,
Hair, some say, too tight a-curl,
Bat the dainty maid I deem
Very near rerfection’s dream,
Swift she works and only flings
Meaglance, the least of things,
and I wonder, does she know
That my heart isin the dough?
PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR.
THE NEGRO’S CASE IN EQUITY.
A North Carolinian Wants a Square
Deal—A Literary Revival - Notes,
aE SS OL a fee RN pe gee ee arg ie henge ee
Sentinel in ite issue of August 30th,
publishes an interesting article signed
“Pp.” which is headed “‘The White Re
ligious Press of the State.” The obser:
vations which "'P.” makes are all very
good in their way, and is indeed a flat.
tering commentary upon the awaken °
ing sense of justice of some few white
men, but the underlying suggestion is
to my mind a very dangerousone The
idea which obtains all through it is, that
the two factions of white men settle be:
tween themselves the disposition whieh
shall be made of the Negro, and depends
upon the ‘‘good” white element to
bring about a sort of millennium, Now
I would not like to shake the childlike
confidence whieh “P.”’ evinces as to the
ability of the ‘‘good whites’’ to bring
this state of affair about, but it ie evi-
dent that ‘‘P.” has not reckoned upon
the faet that their solicitations for the
Negro—the white man is a white man
the world over. He is the same in
New York as in New Orleans; thesame
in Akron,Ohio, asin Wilmington, N.C.
* * 7 *
Another peculiar source of comfort
which “P.” derives from the present
situation is that ‘in time the whites
will suffer as much as the Negro.”
Now what we want to do is, mot tocon’
sole ourselves with the thought that
through us some one is to be made to
suffer, but rather bend our individual
efforts toward bringing about a condi
tion under which no one or class will
suffer. ‘“P.” states further that the
race issue isa dead one. Well, I don’t
think so, Just as long as the Negro ie
fmposed upon—just so long wiil the
Tace be an issue—for say and do what
you will there are some MEN in the Ne
gre race, who will not brook the intol:
erant treatment of the whites and will
resent it whenever or wherever shown.
No, the Negro must not submit his
ease to the white religious press or the
white any other kind of press—he has
@ press of his own and he must have ¢
hand io the settlement of his own cas:
in equity.
. * * *
A number of young ladies and gen
tlemen banded themselves together re
cently and formed a iiterary and musi
cal society with a view of studying th
eompositions of the masters in litera
ture aud music. The first public meet
ing was held on Sundsy, Aug. x6ih, a
the Davie St. Presbyterian church. Th
meeting was a very good one and th
society bids fair to be a success. Mis
Senrietta Mebry, Miss Carrie Mabry
Mr. Spencer and Jobn T. Haskins are
the officers. The society meets each
Friday evening.
* * * *
I see by the newspapers that recently
a Colored Business Men’s League held
& meeting in Boston. Wonder what
for?
* * * *
A number of copies of The Colored
American bave reached the hands ot
the people of Raleigh and great mter’
eat isshown in the reading at the top
of the 16th page.
* $ * *
Raleigh is devoting its time to the
coming Colored State Fair and the
Baptist Convention, both of which
Meet 10 this city during September.
The boys are already having their
suits cleaned and pressed. I believe
that’s about all,
HASKINS,
University Park Temple Re-opened for the
Season.
The opening services of University
Park Temple on last Sunday were very
interesting throughout¢he day. Inthe
morning the church was filled to over’
flowing to welcome the pastor, Rev.
Sterling N. Brown, backed to his pul:
pit from his sammer vacation. Rev.
Brown preached a most iastructive ser-
mon and made a talk on church work
in general which was highly appreci
ated by the members and friends of
Park Temple. The well Known and
now famous choir with its quota of
splendid singers was out in full force
and under the direction of Mr. Walter
B. Hayson, its efficient leader. In the
evening the services were made es*
pecially interesting by an address de*
livered by Prof. R bert H. Terrell,
principal of the High School and one
of the organizers of the church. Mr.
Terrell’s subject was ‘A United Front”
and in it he gave especial emphasis to
the necessity of union in all church
effort Hespoke of the great and use:
ful work that University Park Temple
had been doing during ita existence for
the young people of the locality in
which it is situated. He told of the
splendid efforts of the pastor and con:
Sregation of Park Temple in making
the ene of the most prominent in this
city. Mr. Terreli’s address was highly
interestiag and greatly appreciated.
University Park Temple has nearly 200
members, a wonderful growth in so
Shorta time. On next Thursday night
the congregation will give a reception
atthe church complimentary to Rev.
Sterling Brown, the pastor. The public
is invited.
Our Women Aotive,
The Golored American gives an ec:
eount of the industrial organization
known as the Order of the Galilean
Fishesmea. It was incorporated in 1878
and eombines industrial and bencficiary
features which mect the needs of the
race. The order owns land in Virginia
and Alabama, and has several coopera
tive institutions. Mrs. Maggie W. Btew
ard, formerly a teacher in one of the
high schools of Wilmington, N, C., but
now living in Bristol, Tenn., is associ
ated with her busband in furthering
the interests of the Order and is the
editor of its organ, The Ship, She has
secured 5,000 sabseribers for this be
sides collecting thousands of dollars
for the Fishermen plantations from the
Negro race, which she believes should
be self supporting. She has delivered
over @ hundred free lectures in the in-
terests of the Order since March 1,—
Woman’s Tribune,
> a
| ORGANIZED January ji, 1881.
a : . -
Offices 604, 606 and 608 N. 2nd St, - = Richmone, Ya,
Whe Strongest Financial Organisation the Negre Has Produced in fhis Coos:ry,
‘Read and learn for yourself what it bas done and how to become a memb: 7
SUBORDINATE FOUNTAINS.
Bubordinat , Fountains are composed of males and females, sound im health anc wind,
and of geod soral character.
Convent}} ns.—When joining the Order through Conventions, persons are taken |» from
14 to 50 ri iE et age; hee ‘fining the Fountain by application persoas are taken from
14 to 60 complete.
Jotun Beneait Fees.—Brom \ to @ years of age, $4.60; at 56, 85.10; at &°, 55.90;
at 60, $6.
Death fraetn a7 and $125. Sould aewvh occur within the first year, $75; after the
first year, $125 will be paid to the heirs, assigns er tegal representatives
ict ij Inedte.—From $6 to $0 per month, paid weekly.
Month ¥ Dues are 85 or 50 centr ~e wonth. Taxes are 80 cents annually, ~\1 semi.
amnually, January ahd July. The ou :eat monthly dues secure the highest weesiy sick
beneats.
Life krembership -Ten snz er of Bank Stock, costing each member $5 a share, mg»
sald member a life member. After paying dues and owning the stock one yeir, he
fruits of the stock wil pay thr member's dves, and leave a handsome little bailar vach
year. Just calculate—mcathly jues, 50 cents per month, and taxes 80 cents [.r year,
amount to $6.80, and a dividend on ten shares of stock at 20 per cent on the dolar, or $i
per share, amoentes to $10 annually, which will pay the member’s dues, §6.80, 2:0 leave
a balance of ee Bheuid the dues be 85 cents per month, and 80 cents taxes p-r year,
the monthly ané taxes will amount to $5 per year. The dividend of $10 would pay
the monthly dues aud taxes, and leave a balance of $5.
Additional Bercfite of Life Membership.—Should adverse circumstances befall a mem.
ber, said member ses take his ten shares of stock and Fountain policy, and secure « loan
from §1 to aye will enable said member to tide over the misfortune, pay up the
loan, redeem his policy and stock, and go on his way rejoicing.
2, ROSEBUD FOUNTAIN (For the Children.)
Rosebud Fountains are composed for children, male aud te
male, from 8 to 14 years of age.
ae er Benefit Fees, $1.50; paid spot cash or by lastal-
ments.
Death Benefits.—$24.50 and Poe Should death occur
within the frst year, $24.50; after the first year $37 will be paid
to the pareats or So
Bick Benefits.—From $1.50 to $4.00 per month pald weekly;
50 cents, 7 cents and $1 per week, bid oar - The highest
monthly dues purchase the highest weekly sick Srenctta
Monthly Dues and Taxes.—The monthly dues are 10 cents,
15 cents. or 26 cents, respectively, just as the Fountain may
-es, 10 cents annually, peld semiannually, January
ne child fs allowed tec purchase’ five shares of Rank
+ makes his policy -eupporting, with a balance
\
HE REGALLA.
Phis Desir ja that is worn by the members ef the Order. For
style and prive
4, CLASSES,
Band Bi hip, male and female, and secure life and death
benefits. i
|B Class Poll
| -LASS B SABLE.
NE Se aie a eee
Joining Value of nual Palé
Ages. Fee. Certificate, test Quarterly.
14 to 2B Yeare.......ccccccccccccccccccces $2 50 $200 00 4 75 $1 20
WB to BG ea4rs.......sceserececerecsseeece 275 200 00 475 120
B5 to 45 FOars......ccececccccececscescees BOO 200 00 570 14
45 to BO earm.......sscceecceereveccccees BD 140 00 6 6S 1 64
BO to DS years.........ssecccceerecooccses 825 115 00 6 6 i 6¢
BS to 6D years........ccecececcceceemmeree 8 50 90 0G T 60 120
GO to G5 Years........ceccereeeercenrarens 8 50 65 00 7 180
‘Class Policies are as follows:
CLASS EB TABLE.
Joining Value of Annual Pald
Ages. Fee. Certiacate. Dues. Quarterly.
14 tO 25 years........sccceecceseccerecees 85 00 $500 00 §9 50 $2 40
25 to B5 Years.........ccceereccscccccccee 5 25 500 00 9 50 tenes
BB to 4B years.........ceeeeeeeeeeececeee 5 BO 500 00 10 40 optee
Bote ne fine ee cree 575 450 00 11 40 2
GO to BS Yeare.........ccccccececceccccoce 5 7S oO 11 40 23
BS years (Complete)......cecseceseecceces 600 00 11 00 2%
‘The ages are reckoned from the last birthday.
Remember that the apeltcent is benefited as soon as his policy 1s Issued.
The annual dues of elther of the above named Classes may be divided into quarterly
payments of three months & payable the Ist of January, Ale July, and October.
The balance of anpual Lee to the credit of each member after paylng et
| senses will go to the purchase of Bank Stock for sald member. ‘
If dues are paid efnually in advanee, the member gets 5 per cent drawback In cash,
md his full proportion ef annual dues. a the latter mode of papaient each member Is
nade his own collector, thereby making the membership indépendent of the agent, and
elt-sapporting, and the member receiving the percentage that would be paid to the ageat
£0 0
You will readily see that the members of elther one of these classes are only required
to meet once or feur times a year, while the Fountains and Rosebuds meet twice a month.
Life nefits.The members of B Class are allowed to purchase 15 shares of Bank
Stac ~a two shares for each year of their membership. Fhe atock ylelds dividend
of | per eent, er ome doliar per share. Should misfortune befall them on thelr pathway
eeite nee may teke their vk certificates and policies, and secure a loan after 2 give®
perio. ime.
Members of Class B ean purenase 25 shares of Bank Stock, and two shares fr eack
ear of their membership; likewise, they may take their policies and certificates f Baok
and secure a loan after apres Period of time. You will readily see that th: mem
berstip, Im either ene of these Classes, like the Fountains and the Rosebuds, benedts the
vaember im bealth, as weil as his family in death.
Fe geen reve cen ep ereiriss oerenen? war Bonen
from 10 cents and upwards. Special attention is given te the collection of notes 2 (rata
Ta 1683 this wat tae only ‘bank in Richmond wales continued: to payreurns= cy 10 (3
depositers during the financial stringency, while the other banks were using sri).
6. REAL ESTATE OF THE U.0.T R.
This Department manages and contrels the property of the ization. It w ont
of the necessity of having offlees and buildings Is which to carryon the pusiies. of fhe
organization, and te furafsh halls for the Suberdinate Ledges. Bulldiacs now 2;
farms, 8; dwellings, 2; hotels, 1; with a fee almple value of $104,000. Bulldings !-2sed, 18
7. THE REFORMER, the Organ of the Order.
The Reformer is the Beacon-Light, the Head-Light, the General Messexye: si the
Generel Agent ef the Brotherhood. It Is a live eae, with a elrenlatior of 6,008.
Kis oe its opts comme witb all ite Cr ge
Bend 83) Whe Reformer thes,
Sinn Tes naving & acst-etass fob Gagestascee, nd makers ores TE Oe sect
og
vet deat) 0
E ae
SS a GS 3
The Savings Bank of the G. F. U. O. T. RB
1888. Its capital stock Is §100,000. It comm«
1889. The amount of business to March 1, 1
stock of this bank Is sold to the membership |
buds, B and BH clarses, and pays a dividend of
lar. Persons can deposit their moneys on time
pays 4 per cent interest on all time deposits.
Be pe SS eg ier ea ent tena Rael, temp
IT IS SAID
That the hot weather is doing over time.
That the concert and entertainment season is on.
That "King Rastus" made a decided hit at the Bijou Theatre this week.
That a number of recent appointees in the Census Office will be dropped.
That Dr. W. A. Warfield will not visit Atlantic City any more this season.
That Col. Bill Murrell is not throwing any bouquet at Editor Chase these days.
That E. L. Thornton is still dreaming of being editor of a great race newspaper.
That L. W. Pullies has been reinstated to his old position in the Pension Office.
That Detective Henry Lacey is adding new laurels to his already brilliant record.
That the theatres of Washington are not catering for colored patronage this season.
That Maryland, Indiana, Illinois and Kentucky are still in the list of doubtful States.
That Prof. John T. Layton will be the next Director of Music for the colored schools.
That Major Sylvester, Chief of Police, is giving a square deal to his colored subordinates.
That merit will win every time and that color cuts but little figure in business matters.
That Harry Smith of the Cleveland Gazette is after Mr. John P. Green with a sharp stick.
That Mr. Andrew F. Hilyer will soon issue another edition of the Union League Directory.
That Mr. Robert T. Douglas is one of the most successful young business men in the District.
That a first-class boat owned and operated by colored men will float on the Potomac next summer.
That colored men who engage in business and do not attend to it need not expect to succeed.
That Prof. Jesse Lawson will invest a few hundred dollars in a certain Washington newspaper.
That Col. Perry H. Carson is sawing wood and drawing his "per diem" from the District government.
That Prof. Kelly Miller will set a pace as President of the Bethel Literary and Historical Society.
That Dr. A. M. Curtis of Freedmen's Hospital is making a great record for the institution and for himself.
That Dr. Edward Williston is building up a large and lucrative practice by his strict attention to business.
That the Indiana colored papers had their inning during the session of the National Afro-American Council.
That Col. J. M. Ryan holds the record for the largest number of fish caught up the Potomac this summer.
That The Colored American maintains its position at the head of the class of all Afro-American newspapers. That a number of colored lawyers of the District bar are doing a good business and have healthy bank accounts. That a commotion occurred in the Treasury Department and in Sixth Auditor's Office when the order was given out to the man who "handles the dough" not to pay except on the first and fifteenth of each month.
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. C.
That the colored newspapers of West Virginia are either independent or are openly supporting the Democratic ticket.
That H. Y. Arnett of the Recorder's Office is one of the most painstaking and conscientious young men around that office.
That a great many District people who spent money at the late Philadelphia Convention are still clamoring to get it back.
That some wealthy colored men of the District prefer to let their property stand idle rather than rent it to men of their own race.
That a number of wedding are on the taple, and that a number of young ladies will resign their positions as school teachers.
That unless a number of young men who are connected with the city post office mend their way they will be asked to resign.
That John E. Bruce is doing the most efficient work of any Afro American connected with the Republican National Committee.
That you must take a grain of salt with a statement from local politicians that they have been "invited" to take part in the campaign.
That Thomas J. Calloway will have his balloon punctured by the colored press when he returns to this country from the Paris Exposition.
That a number of colored comps will be dropped from the Government Printing Office for incompetency and for taking too much leave.
That Prof. Robert H. Terrell of the High School is preparing to send a few more young men to Exeter preparatory to going to Harvard College.
That at least two race newspapers were subsidized to give full reports of the meeting of the late National Afro-American Council at Indianapolis, Ind.
That the Colored Advisory members of the Republican National Committee are not throwing any business to colored newspapers, with two exceptions.
That the agitation which The Colored started for Afro-Americans to patronize race enterprises has increased the business of the Capital Savings Bank.
That editor R. C. O. Benjamin of Kentucky is making money out of "Tallow Dick" who is accused of killing the late Governor-elect Goebel of Kentucky.
That a number of colored men contemplate going in business for them selves to corral a few of the many thousand dollars spent by colored people with white merchants.
That the army of Washingtonians who went to the summer resorts to work during the heated term are telling their friends what a delightful time they had at such and such a hotel.
Obituary
William R. Turner of Atlanta, Ga. died Friday, Sept. 7, 1900, at the residence of his friend, Mr. Matthew M. Taylor. Funeral exercises were held Sunday, Sept. 9, at 2 p. m., Metropolitan A. M. E. Zion church, D street s.e. The Young Men's Protective League turned out in a body. The floral tributes from Lieut. Blish, Employees of Army and Navy Club, Misses Woodfin, The Ladies Improvement Club, Miss Rhoda Stuart, and Miss Alice Parker were beautiful and highly appreciated by his friends. Interment at Harmony cemetery.
Has it Ever Occurred to You?
That the Barber Shop at the corner of 6th and Missouri avenue, northwest, is the neatest, coolest and most up to-date in the city? Work done in first-class style by first class artists. Come once and you will come again. All brands of imported and domestic cigars and tobacco BARBERS: Bud Harris, of Kentucky, Peter Walsh, of Washington, D. C. Wilber Richards, E. L. Payne, of Washington, D. C. Port
Mme Turner's Great French System
W. M. HILL, Prop., 101 6th St., N. W., Opp. 6th St. Depot.
Gives a Wonderful
And Beautiful Complexion.
Prices Reduced Until September 29th.
Now is your chance to get rid of your Liver Spots, Freckles, and all Blemishes, in 8 or 10 days. Mystic Face Bleach and accompanying Soap 75 Cents. If not found at your druggist's send to
MME. M. C. TURNER,
1312 Carondelet Street, New Orleans, La.
and received great applause. Rev. J. C. Dent is the pastor of the church and he was happy at the size of the collection.
Lewis Belt of Martinsburg, W. Va., a well-known and respected colored citizen, of this city, died at his home here July 5 of stomach trouble, age fifty five years. He was a slave belonging to the late Hector Bell of Winchester, Va., and acted as valet to his master. After the war he came to this city, and had conducted a barber shop here for twenty-five years. He was an ardent democrat and the leading colored citizen of the city. He leaves a small fortune to his widow. He had no children.
A few more business firms like Mme. Turner's will solve the race problem. While in New Orleans this summer, I stopped at a house where there was a child with a very sore head, it was covered with one solid scab and was awful to look at but in a weeks time the childs head was to all appearance perfectly well to my surprise. I asked what cured it and was told they used Mme. Turner's skin and scalp soap with hot water and that it worked like a charm. So I went down to 1312 Carondelet street and bought a cake for my face which was fairly knotty with bumps and black heads. I had spent several dollars for different preparations, but they failed every time, but after using Mme. Turner's skin and scalp soap for a few days, every bump and black head was gone, so I consider that was the best 25 cents ever spent. I also heard that this soap was used in some of hospitals there. So I say again such merit as that will go far towards solving the race problem.
41 Clarkson street. New York.
Mr. William A. Dinquid paid a flying trip to Philadelphia last week to witness the marriage of his step daughter, Miss Ida A. Webster to Mr. James B. Williams of Philadelphia who is a law student at Lincoln University.
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The Emancipation Celebration.
Dayton, Ohio, Special—Emancipation day in Dayton will be celebrated with a picnic and entertainment at Frog Island Park. A cake walk will be given between 10 couples for a prize between 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. The merry-go-round and the live headed man will be in attendance. The committee of arrangements consist of Charles White, Albert Ferguson, James Johnson, James Hoskins, William Logau, J. H. Guinea. Jack Haskell manager and J. C. Burnette cashier. Dayton can boast of having the finest barber shop in the state. It is owned by Mr. Jeff Roberts and managed by Mr. W. A. Johnson. Mr. Editor Dayton can also boast of having the finest Negro saloon in the state. It is owned by Mr. M. C. Moore and managed by Mr. Jeff Roberts. As far as politics is concerned Dayton is behind the times. We have no one holding positions as clerks. We have a few janitors and two police on the force. I am told that a young man of find education made a fight for a clerkship and would have received the appointment if it had not been for the people of his own race fighting him. The Ohio campaign opened in glory at Youngstown last Saturday. Senator Foraker sounded the key note and declares that McKinley's administration the paramount issue. History of the past four years was reviewed by him. Depew, Hanna and Schurman were present.
ROUNDER.
Corner Stone Laying.
The corner stone of Mount Moriah church on 2nd street between M and N streets, s. w., was relaid last Thursday afternoon, September 6th, by the Grand Lodge of Masons under the direction of Grand Master, Robert H. Terrell. The exercises were of a very interesting character and beautifully carried out. The Grand Master was assisted by John P. Turner, Acting Deputy Grand Master, Wm. H. Myers, Grand Secretary, Lewis H. Wayne, Grand Treasurer, J. F. N. Wilkinson, Grand Chaplain and J. T. Beason, Grand Architect. W. R. Laws was the Grand Orator and delivered a splendid address in every way
13
Wilber Richards, Porter.
Prominent Negro Democrat Dead.
A BUSINESS WOMAN.
Madame Turners Wonderful Soap.
THE MUSEUM OF THE WORLD
HOWARD UNIVERSITY,
Washington, D. C.
TEN distinct departments, under one hundred competent professors and instructors—Theological, Medical, Legal, College, Pedagogical, Preparatory, English, Agriculture, Industrial, and Musical. For information address— Rev. J, E, RANKIN, D. D., LL. D., President, Geo. H, SAFORD, Secretary.
...THE...
Georgia State Industrial College Open to Both Sexes.
The fall term beginning October 3rd, 1900, the Georgia State Industrial College will receive both young men and young women as boarders. The entire expenses for board, washing, fuel and lights will be only $5.10 per month. The location and surroundings are healthful and elevating. A first-class opportunity for young men and women to obtain a good literary and industrial education. The trades of Blacksmithing, Wheelwrighting, Carpentry, Painting., Bricklaying and Shoemaking will be taught the boys and the arts of Sewing and Cooking will be taught the girls. Boarding space is limited and those who wish to come must apply early. Respectfully, R. R. WRIGHT, Pres't. College, Ga.
Avery College Trades School
ALLEGHENY, PA.
A Practical, Literary and Industrial Trade School for Colored Boys and Girls, Carpentry, Bricklaying, Plastering, Painting and Interior Decorations. Tailoring, Dress, making, Millinery. Voice Culture and Piano Porte. Literary Departent from Primary to Normal Course. Job Work Solicited and Profits given to the Students. Catalogues now ready. Address,
Allegheny, Pa.
Howard University,
WASHINGTON, D. C.
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT,
INCLUDING
Medical, Dental and
Pharmacetic Colleges
Thirty-third Session (1900-1901) will begin
October 1st, 1900 and continue seven (7)
months.
Tuition fee in Medical and Dental Colleges,
each $80. Pharmacetic College, $70.
All students must register before October
12, 1900.
For catalogue or further information apply to
F. J. SHADD, M. D., Secretary.
901 R St, N, W., Washington D. C.
A RARE OPPORTUNITY
For Young Men Desiring to Enter
the Ministry.
The Phelps's Hall Bible Training School conducted in connection with the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute offers exceptional opportunities for young men who wish to prepare for the Christian ministry. A special building known as the Phelp's Hall Bible Training school, is set apart for this department of the work. It contains a chapel library, reading room, office, three recitation rooms and forty sleeping rooms. The teaching is wholly undemonial, the purpose being to help all denominations and not to antagonize any. The cost of board is $8 per month and students are given a chance to work out a portion of this, leaving, as a rule, but five or six dollars to pay in cash. A few who have no money are given an opportunity to work out all of their expenses. Lack of means need debar none. The teaching in this department is free. The next school term begins September 11. Further information may be had by addressing Booker T. Washington, Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, Tuskegee, Alabama.
---
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. C.
City Paragraphs.
Miss Hattie McIntosh is visiting relatives in Orange, Va.
Mesdames Rosa Sprague and Anna Charite have returned from a delightful trip to Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Rochester and Cedar Creek.
Misses Daisy and Lavinia Wylie have returned to the city after a very pleasant stay on the Jersey coast. Both are very much pleased with their trip.
Mr. Samuel Williams has returned from Rockbridge, Va., where he spent the heated term. Mr. Samuel Jones gives a most flattering account of the trip.
The marriage of Miss Elizabeth Tolson of 1223 C street, s. e. to Mr. James E. Hall will take place Tuesday the 18 inst. at St. Cyprian church, at 5 o'clock p. m.
Mr. R. E. Rincher of 1807 I street, n. w. is back from a trip to Richmond, Va. Durham and Hillsboro, N. C. He attended the Y. M. C. A. convention in Richmond.
Miss Ida McGwin of 2245 12th street, n.w., has returned much refreshed from her trip to the North where she has been spending her vacation. Her brother is in New York now and is the guest of the Clarendon House.
Mr. W. W. Orme, formerly the leading tenor of the Amphion Glee Club, but who for a number of years has been with Isham's Octoroons is in the city with that troupe this week. Mr. Orme is popular with all Washingtohians.
Miss Dolly Crockett, of 1404 12th street who has spent the summer in Winchester, Va., has gone to visit her mother at Port Smith, Va. She will return October 1st to enter the Normal Department of Howard University. The wonderful Face Bleach has been introduced in Washington and is offered to the public at a special rate. The two dollar packages can now be had for one dollar by calling at Drew's Drug Store, Connecticut avenue and L street.
Mr. Wm. E. L. Sanford of the Post Office Department has more than his share of hard luck. He spent two weeks in his home in Raleigh during the campaign and had only returned when he received the sad tidings of his mother's death. He made the second trip but is now at his desk again.
Mr. William F. Evans, spent Friday in Alexandria. In the afternoon in company with Miss Sethia E. Walker he visited Miss Anna E. Gorman, at the residence of Mrs. Frank J. Corbett, (wife of the late city postmaster,) and was very highly entertained. Miss Gorman is one of the white citizens of Alexandria.
Judge J. B. Raymond of Altoona, Pa., was in the city a few days last week visiting his family and friends. His wife and interesting little family have spent the summer at Arundel-on-the-bay and with her parents and sisters, the Georges, in this city. Judge Raymond is looking as chipper as ever, wears large flashy ciamonds and looks as prosperous as a New York broker
Mr. Edward T. Harris, the noted baritone singer and a popular Washington boy, is in the city this week with the Isham's "King Rastus." This is Mr. Harris' 5th season and he attributes his success and his musical attainments to the early and thorough training which he received from Prof. John T. Layton. Mr. Harris is one of the most popular young men who have gone out from Washington.
A. H.
Gives the names of dead and living frinds tells who and when you will marry also of business journeys lawsuits, absent friends health or anything you wish to know, no matter what it is. He can call up your spirit friends and show them to you. Can make them rap all around the room. He asks no questions don't ask you to write names or him. Don't try to pump you in any way, tell you right off. He is thoroughly insured by leading spiritualists everywhere, received from them a gold medal and special license to practice his wonderful powers; credentialis no one else can show can give the thousands of references to both white and colored patrons Twenty-five years' practice—seven in brooklyn—will show you that he can do all he of. Can tell what business is best for you and where, how to win speedy marriage with the one you love. How to be successful in all your doings in short what is best to do. He will succeed when all others fall. Positive satistication or no pay. Call and see. You will find it luck to consult this Christian gentleman. He has a medicine that will cure drunkenness; can be given patients not knowing it. Thousands through him are now
RICH HAPPY AND SUCCESSFUL
with all their undertakings, while those w o neglect his advice are still laboring again, poverty. Through his perfect knowledge chemistry he can impart to you a secret that will overcome your enemies and win you friends. His aid and advice has often been solicited; the result has always been the securing of speedy and happy marriages and all your wishes. In love affairs he never fails. He has the secret of winning the affections of the opposite sex.
It is the curse of Spiritualism that in all large cities there are a class of men and women who claim powers they do not possess. They have neither gifts, credentials, nor references. Surely the colored people are not so wanting in sense as to throw their time and money away on such. Dr. Shea refers to the Hon. Charles Miller, capitalist, 2481 Atlantic avenue; the Hon. William Denmore, architect and builder, 47 Cleveland avenue, and Mr. Arthur Sewell, ship builder South Brooklyn. All have known him for the past ten years. He gives a free test of his power to all. The doctor has practiced five years in New Orleans, St. Louis, Memphis and Louisville, understands thoroughly the diseases, spells or influences the race is subject to. He has now and always had large patronage from them
PLEASE READ THE FOLLOWING:
Brooklyn, August, 15, 1891-This letter is to certify that I came to New York from Albany. I was a stranger in a strange city, out of work and out of money. I had no luck in anything I undertook. What to do I did not know. A friend advised me to go and see Dr. Shea. I did. He told me the cause of my troubles; he took me in and treated me as a brother. Through him I got a good position that very week. I had been to others, they took my money and did me no good. I bless the day I first met Dr. Shea. I would advise all in bad luck, sick or in trouble to go to him at once.
Sincerely, Albert Ayers, 2937 Atlantic Avenue.
Have You Got a JOB?
ARE YOU EARNING BIG MONEY?
IF NOT, THEN YOU SHOULD WRITE AT ONCE TO--
HARTONA REMEDY CO..
909 E. Main Street, RICHMOND, VA. We want lady or gentlemen Agents in every town in the United States. You can earn big money if you will work for us even in your spare time. Write to us to-day. This may be the chance of your life. This offer is open to ladies or gentlemen-white or colored.
Oh, Ladies! Stop and consider. Do you know that my celebrated Imperial Whitener will positively brighten black skin making it almost white. Mulatto or light skin persons can bleach the skin entirely white. One bottle is all that is required to complete the treatment, and the use does not have to be kept up. My Imperial Whitener cannot fail. It is harmless in every respect, and I will pay $100 to any one proving to the contrary. The effect is seen at once. By the use of improved machinery I have managed to make it at a price within the reach of all. I have been selling it at $6.00 a bottle. Recently I reduced it to $2.00, but now, to introduce it at once, I will send a bottle, prepaid, to any one who will send me $0c. Remember. I guarantee every bottle, and I will send back the money if you are not satisfied in every way. Don't delay, but send $0c at once to
BILAS GATHRIGHT,
411 N. Porter Street, Bedford, Massachusetts, U.S.
Brooklyn, August 15, 1891—This letter is to certify that my husband had gone away and had been absent two years I mourned for him night and day. I gave him up as dead. Hearing of the wonderful things Dr. Shea was doing I resolved to consult him. He told me that my husband was alive and well and where he was; told me he would come home and when. To my joy all of it came true. He is home now, came back like one from the dead, I also wish to say that this month I lost $250. I am a poor woman and I was almost insane. I went to Dr. Shea and he told me I would find my money and to my intense joy I find it as he told me. I thank God there is a man so gifted in our midst, that can help people and tell them what to do. Mrs. Mary Miller,
A SENSATION IN BROOKLYN—MINISTER'S STATEMENT
I wish to state that one of my parishioners was sick and in trouble for a long time, Mrs. Brown, 37 Gay street. No one seemed to understand her case. She had several doctors but none of them seemed to know what was the matter. None could do her any good. It was my duty as her pastor to call and see her. Hearing of the wonderful work being done by Dr. Shea the last few years, I thought I would call and see him myself. I found him a sympathetic gentleman. He gave me a wonderful test of his powers, told me to send him a lock o. patient's hair, which I did by her daughter. He told at once what was the matter, and in a short time cured her sound and well. Her family had seemingly been under a cloud. Now all is changed. All are well and prosperous. I can truly and heartily recommend Dr. Shea, to all those in sickness or distress of any kind. Rev. William Johnson, pastor Lebanon church, Brooklyn. Dr. Shea can show thousands such as the above.
has been carefully educated in the Homeopathic and Electric Schools of Medicine. His success is wonderful in curing paralysis Rheumatism, Asthma, Sore Eyes, Tumors Cancers, Constipation, Ague, Gypsiesia Tape Worms, Liver Conplaints, Deafness Catarrh, Dropsy, Pies, Nervous Debility, Heart Diseases, Consumption, Liseases of Women and Children, Fits, Kidney Disease and strange mysterious diseases which others don't understand. All diseases, no matter what they be. Nothing but honorable treatment. He can and will honestly tell you if you can be cured. Has all new remedies and new success. Has an ample experience in public hospital and private clinics. No trifling with human life. Call at once. Do not delay. Diplomats hang in parloris. Is a registered physician. A new remedy to rheumatism just discovered, not a liniment. Hopeless cases and those that others can not cure solicited to call. Rat folks thin, the childless made parents. All letters must contain $1.00, two stamps, age, lock of hair. Charges for medical treatment only. Closed Sundays. Mention this paper.
651 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
MAKYELOUS
MEDIUM
Mrs. Mary Miller,
South Jaffna, N.J.
DR SHEA
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. O.
ence, and possessing the confidence of the colored race, we have met with grand success, which has excited the cupidity of the unprincipled, who, to get your money, are putting on the market vile nostrums, injurious to the hair and skin, and dangerous to health and life. Be warned; don't send your money to get only in return a mass of lard and tallow and animal fats, that injure your hair and cause it to fall out, destroy its growth, and cause you to become bald. Deal with a legitimate firm, who will treat you fairly and give you value for your money. We do solemnly swear that our remedies are true to all we claim for them; that they do not contain any animal fat or injurious drugs, and we will return the money for every case of dissatisfaction. We refer to Metropolitan Bank, Richmond, Va., or to the editor of this paper. The word OZONO and the cuts shown in this advertisement are registered as our trade-mark in U. S. Patent Office. Any infringement will be promptly prosecuted.
OZONO positively straightens Knotty, Knappy, Kinky, Stubborn, Harsh, Refractory Hair. No injurious hot irons are necessary to produce this effect. OZONO does the work alone, and the use does not have to be kept up after the hair becomes stright, and washing the hair hastens the treatment, doing it good in every way. Cures Dandruff, Baldness, and all itching, running, scaly, humiliating Scalp Diseases; causes the hair to grow long and straight, soft, fine, and beautiful as an April morning. Price, 50c. a box; 4 boxes does the work. OZONO cannot fail. Read our grand offer: Cut out this advertisement and send to us with $1.00, and we will send you immediately four boxes of OZONO: one bottle of ELECTRICAL SKIN REFINER, which makes rough skin soft and brightens up black.
skin several shades; also one bottle of SKIN FOOD, which removes Wrinkles, Freckles, Moth Patches, Tan, Liver Spots, Small-Pox Pits, Birthmarks, &c. It makes the aged look young, and the young look younger. We will also, to show our liberality, include a package of ANTI-ODOR, which removes all smells and odors arising from the human body—such as feet, arm-pits, &c.; cures Sore Throat and Mouth, Womb Diseases, Sore and Frosted Feet, &c. This grand combination, worth $3.50, we will send you on receipt of One Dollar, to introduce honest goods. Parties sending us $3.00 will receive four lots. Register your letters.
AGENTS WANTED.
BOSTON CHEMICAL COMPANY,
310 E.BROAD ST., RICHMOND, VA.
BE WARNED. By honest methods and is to-day the only gen-
City Paragraphs.
Mr. Joseph Douglass, violinist, is concerting in Pittsburg this week.
Mrs. A. O. Talbot and daughter are at the Keen Cottage, Atlantic City.
Rev. Sterling N. Brown will speak next Sunday at Park Temple on "The Public Schools."
Mr. Benj. Washington is in Boston. He has been ill and confined to his room for over a week.
Mr. Willie Heward, son of Rev. W. Howard, will prepare for Hovard College at Exeter Academy.
Mrs. Delilah A. Jones has been very ill for several weeks at the residence of her son, Mr. A. L. Jones at Rockville, Md.
Mrs. M. S. Brown, proprietress of the McKinley House and the Porters' Cafe, was a little indisposed the early part of the week.
Hon. J. W. Lyons, Register of the Treasury has taken the residence at 1417 Corcoran st., n. w. Mr. Lyons is spending this week in the south.
The Star Concert at John Wesley church Friday evening September 21 will present our best talent and the occasion will doubtless bring out a large attendnace.
Master Paul Dessaline Scott, son of Dr. and Mrs. E. D. Scott, of 903 9 n.e., left the city Friday 14. for Cambridge, Mass., to attend school under the classic shades of old Harvard.
Misses Annie and Bertha Howard returned home last Thursday after enjoying an extremely pleasant vacation spent in Virginia, Philadelphia, Niagara Falls and Canada.
Mr. Edward Furbush, Secretary to the United States Haitien Legation, is spending a few days at Berkley Springs West Virginia, with his relative, Mr. D. B. Meeser of the Pension Office. Miss Genevieve and Zeta Rose, graduates of the last class of the Normal School, have returned from a delightful vacation spent with relatives of Miss Rose 'mid the green fields of Virginia
Mr. F. N. Nesbit of Memphis, Tennessee, is in the city a delegate to the Laborers' International Convention. He is a plasterer by trade and is the only colored delegate to the Convention.
There will be a grand entertainment given at Antioch Baptist church, New York, on Sept. 27, at which time Miss Juliette N. Sparcques will favor the public with a solo, for the second time in that city.
WANTED-ACTIVEMAN OF GOOD CHARACTER to deliver and collect in the District of Columbia, for old established manufacturing wholesale house. $900 a year, sure pay. Honesty more than experience required. Our reference, any bank in any city, Enclose self addressed stamped envelope. Manufacturers, Third Floor, 334 Dearborn St. Chicago.
Mrs. Thomas Rucker who has spent a delightful summer at Old Point Comfort, Va., and Atlantic City. N. J., has returned home for the winter. She will be at home, 1622 Corcoran st., to her friends after 15th. The weekly report of the Health Department is an interesting document this week. It shows that forty four colored people died in the District Columbia, twenty-seven were born and twelve couples were married.
Hon. John H. Ruffin, U. S. Consul to Ascuncion, Paraguay, is in the city. He has just completed a journey of three months, coming by the way of the Continent, stopping at the Paris Exposition, England, Scotland and other points of interest. Mr. Ruffin has made a most excellent record and will return to his post of duty after the autumnal election
An item appeared recently in the last issue of The Colored American telling about the trip of Mr. Z P. Moore, of J. H. Winslow's Undertaking Establishment, spending his vacation and taking in many points at the summer resorts, and of the principle points along the Hudson river An omission was made that his wife. Mrs. Anua L. Moore, (nee Harrison,) accompanied him on this trip.
Rev. W. J. White, D. D., the veteran editor of the Georgia Baptist, Augusta, Ga., is in Richmond this week attending the annual meeting of the National Baptist Convention. At the close of the session, Dr. White will come over to Washington and circulate among his many friends for a few days. Possibly no man of the race has labored so long and consistently for the upbuilding and welfare of the people as has Dr. White, and he enjoys the esteem and consideration of all classes in a marked degree. While here, Dr White will be the guest of his son, L. H. White, Esq., of the Census office, at 1415 Corcoran St., N. W.
fair dealings, together with the fact that OZONO uine Hair Grower and Hair Straightener in existrace, we have met with grand success, which has your money, are putting on the market vile nostrum
ur New Stock Arriving By the Carload.
Our New Stock
Is Arriving By the Carload.
It's the finest, the largest, and the most complete stock we have ever owned. Every dollar's worth of it has been carefully selected—and will be sold with our personal guarantee for durability. Parlor, Bedroom, and Dining-room Furniture, Crockery, and Housefurnishings, can be bought here on credit—for less money than in any cash store. We make no ex-
the accommodation of weekly or monthly payments. Big refrigerators, Mattings, Sideboards, Baby Carriages, etc.
tra charge for the accommodation of weekly or monthly payments. Big bargains in Refrigerators, Mattings, Sideboards, Baby Carriages, etc.
817-819-821-823 Seventh Street N. W,
Between H and I Streets.
1001 ACTIVE AGENTS WANTED
TO SELL
"The Story of My Life and Work"
BY BOOKER T. WASHINGTON,
Principal of Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute
and the popular leader of the Negro Race.
Published in one large volume of over 400 pages and appropriately illustrated with more than 50 original drawings and photo-engravings; size 6 x 4 inches. Sample copies mailed direct on receipt of price, $1.50, in cloth.
Few books have become so quickly and so immensely popular as Mr. Washington's Autobiography. Prominent men and the public press throughout the country have many words of praise. The following are samples:
"I assure you the book is greatly appreciated."—Wm. McKinley, President of the United States.
"The book is of more than ordinary interest for it possesses a double significance. First, it is a shining example to both the white and black man of what for bearance and perseverance may do. Second, its connection with the race problem."—Philadelphia Record.
more than ordinary interest for it possesses a double significance. ing example to both the white and black man of what for bearance and do. Second, its connection with the race problem."—Philadelphia
FREE TO AGENTS: Send 24c in stamps for mailing and we will forward free our Magnificent Prospectus ions for canvassing. The book is sold only on subscription through ents. Address,
J. L. NICHOLS & CO., Naperville, Ill.
OUTFIT FREE TO AGENTS: Send 2iC in stamps for mailing and we will forward free our Magnificent Prospectus with full instructions for canvassing. The book is sold only on subscription through our authorized agents. Address. J. L. NICHOIS & CO., Naperville, Ill.
J.
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VOL. 8 NO. 24. WASHINGTON, D. C., SA1URDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1900. PRICE FIVE CENTS.
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NEGRO BOYS’? JUNIOR REFUBLIC,
Within the Hart Farm School. A Most
Valuable Institution of Washington, D,
C, Founaed by Prof. Hart of Howard
University—Teaches the Science ot Farm-
ing and the Art ot Government,
Correspor dence of The Republican.
Washington D, U., Friday August 24,
ahere has just been s arled Lear thus
cily sumque WMetiturivn,a “Junior Re-
public” icf coluied boys between the
ages of 0 and 16 years. This republicis
modeleu to aceriain extent on the lines
ol the Henry George Junior Repuvlic
at Freevilie, N. ¥., but the conetitu-
lion bas been framed with the view of
meeting the echaiuons of those boys
tor Whuse bexefit the republic is spec-
lay intended. The repubiic is the out
growth of tue Hart farm school, which
im w very short ume has become a great
instituuon, and is duing five woik tor
Lue rising generation oi colored boys of
the national capital,
The constitution of the new republic
gusraniees to each one o! its citizens fuil
equality Wicd ali urhers, such as 10 vote
f&. every elecuion of cfiivers; che rignt
.o secure and retain tuipioyment at
Lne rate Of Wages justifiea by bis skill
and efliciency; to purchase ali common
eCesbillte Ul ule al reasonable Cost; to
acquire and Own persuLai propery iree
inc isability @f seizure sna depriva-
tion, except for debt and taxes; to hold
a seul am the Geneal Assembly Of citi-
zeus, lo OXpress bis Views freely con
cermibg aut proposed laws for the gov
ernment of tbe people of the repubiic,
and to vote for ur agaist the adupulep
ofall such Jaws, the might to worship
God according to the aictates of his
vw conscience, and with other Citi*
vens peaceably to assemble and petition
vhe government for the redress of griev
ances, ana that none of those rights
shail ve abridged vo any citizen except
for violation of law.
Gueat stress 1s 1a.d or the organic law
upon the fact that 1t 18 Une Indispensa
we Quy of every eltizen to support for
clectiom of the Vasiuue offices under the
Iepuvlic only such ciliZeus a8 WH dis
chaige al Ge dusies of sueh offices 1p
& fa, just and Impardal MmaDLer; Lbal
every Citizen shuuld d¢ ail ip bis power
lo hold every pubic officer respousible
ler Ube faituiul aischasge of every offi-
cial Guiy without regard to party of
persunal friendship for any Ole. itis
iurther deelared that the objectim form
lug the repubile Is the desire of theciti
zeus LO tcarp by actual experience,
under proper guidance, whet are the
nights, privileges aud auties, of citizen”
sip sa the great repabile, tbe Unued
Staves of America; bow those rights
and priviueges may be exercised and
enjuyed in an orderty and manly man
Ler, and bow these duties may be dis‘
charged with honor to themselves, a0
fur the bestinterest of the greater re
pubue of which they will be parts when
wey Shall bave peacbed the age and
status of men. The government of the
iepuvilc is of three @epartments, legis
lauve, execuuve ana jagicial, dhe
executive authority of toe republic i
Vested In @ presidentand chief of police
who are elected py a majority of the
Votes of all Uke citizens, aud police offi
cers, to be appointed by the sonsent of
tue presiauent.
It bas been already intiwated that
the Hait farm echool, of which the re
public isthe outgrowth, is one of the
most interesting institutions at or near
the national capital. To substantiate
the truth of this vo better evidence can
hi
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PROF. W. H.H HART.
be offered than that given by Rev. Dr.
J. E. Rankm, president of Howard
University, whoin part said: “A very
wrigival and very unique effort to help
nis race is arecent one of W. H. H.
Hart, professor in the law department
and teacber of agriculture of Howard
University. Mr. Hart ceme up from
Alabama, a bare-footed, ragged boy,
without friend or helper, and entered
the normal department of Howard
University. He worked his way tbroagh
all the departments, graduating with
nonor finally in the law school, where
——<<—<—<——— —— ——__——
@Continued en ninth page.)
‘EACH ER AND PUPILS, HART FAR SUHOOL
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: - TBE SCHOOL BUILDINGS.
Tammany and the Negro.
By Joan E. Bruce.
dition in the world.” The South bas
put a premium upon political iniquity
and while to outward sppearance is
Prosperous, it is the most unprofitable
investment it hasever made. Political
intolerance is the curse of the South
and wherever it exists North or South
capital and enterprise fear to enter.
“The first object of human society,’
said W. H. Seward, ‘‘is safety;” and Al
exander Hamilton declared that Jus
tlee is the end of government. It is
the end of ciyil society. Becaure of the
political intolerance of the white South,
Northern capital has kept out of it.
Because of the lawless tendency of its
people Northern immigration has not
drifted that way in great numbers.
Benjamin R. Tillman of South Caro-
lina, one of the political friends and
advisers of William Jennings Bryan
and hence a demccrat of national im-
portance, has done and said more to
injure the national prosperity of the
South, than any man of that section,
living or dead. Tillman is a nearer
approach to the infamous Titus Oates
for villainy and mendacity and low
cunning than any other living demo-
crat in the South and therefore isa
dangerously bad man to sustain such
intimate personal and political rela-
tions with the democratic candidate
for the Presidency who does not now
(although he is familiar with the code
of political ethics which govern and
control the utterances and the acts of
man), repudiate them as being out of
harmony with the high moral political
code to which he has consecrated bis
life and his talents as an elocutionist,
and poser,
The Spanish proverb “Tell me the
eompany you keep and I'iI tell you who
you are,” establishes the identity of
William Jennings Bryan’s democracy,
as the following citations from numer-
ous speeches of his friend Tillman,
made in open Senate, will attest. On
Feb. 26th, 1900, he said: ‘'South Caro
lina has disfranchised a! of the colored
race that it could under the XIII, X1V
and XV amendments, We have done
ous level best; we bave scratched our
heads to find how we could eliminate
the last one of them.” This would
seem to indieate that the South Caro-
Hina Democrats are Al Imperialists and
tbat “government by consent’’ js part
of their political creed. On page 2253,
of the Record, Mr, ‘Tillman is quoted as
saying: “We have a governing race,
just as you would bave in Massachu-
setts if you bad 750,000 Negroes and
only 500,000 whites, Andon page 2848:
"We had 125 000 Negroes of voting age
and 100,000 whites.’”? And on page
2849; ‘‘We stufled ballot boxes We
shot them. We are not ashamed of it,”’
and again on same page: We called a
constitutional convention and we elim.
inated as I said all of the colored people
whom we could,’
On page 2261 of the Recosd, he said:
‘We have 114,000 registered voters”
and on the following page: “I say 97
per cent of the white vote is Democrat-
ie.”
This is a most excellent showing and
moust be very gratifying to Mr. Bryan
oe ile tA I i a
2
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. C.
able to furnish bim with the figures to
prove the solidarity of the Southern
Democratic vote. Perhaps Mr. Bryan
does not wizh to vuffend his Southern
friends and admirers by objecting to
their methods of pro:sedurein piling up
Democratic majorities in the manner
described by his friend Tillman. Bat
an honest man weuld scorn to profit by
such bare faced fraud as that to which
the unspeakable Tillman confesses with
malicious and brazen effrontery
Should Mr. Bryan hséve the misfor-
tune to be elected President of the
United States, does any one assume
that his friend Tillman’s influence will
not influence? A man who publicly
consesses to the crime of aiding and
abetting in the suppression of the will
of 750,000 suffragans beeause they hap-
pen to be black, and because of his be-
lief that minorities should govern, would
not be likely to be ignored by the ber-
eficiary of his crime?
There are 6,077,169 uvrepresented Ne-
gro voters in the eleven Southern
States, mapy thousands of them have
already been disfranchised, and there
are reasonable grounds for the belief
that the South Csrolina plan which
has been so minutely described by Mr.
Bryan’s frieud Tillman, will soon be in
good working order in every one of
these eleven States. when it does be-
come operative, popular elections in
the South wili have beccme greater
farces than they pow are. And yet Mr.
Lincoln once said; “No man has a
right to govern anotber without hiscon.
sent.”
And Mr. Bryan is yery solicitous in-
deed on the subject of the government
of the Philippines in face of the fact
that a condition which does not exist
im those Islands, dces exist in every
Southern State in the Union, where
every inhabitant is, or is supposed to
be the political equal of every other
inhabitent. Yet more than 6 000,000 of
these irhabitants are arbitrarily bin:
dered from exercising their Constitu-
tional rights. The Government of the
Philippines bas not yet passed beyond
the experimental stage. The local gov-
ernments of the eleven Southern States
referred to, were reconstructed after
the war of the Rebellion, and have been
in existence for more than a quarter of
a century, and they are not the kind of
governments which Mr. Bryan and
some Northern Democrats profets to
want to see established in those Islands.
Since ‘charity begins at home,’ and
“performance is better than promise,”
eleven States really deriving their just
power from the consent of the govern-
ed would be an infinitely better object
lesson to the Philipinos and all others
than the eleven close Democratic polit-
ical corporations which are exercising
all the power at their command to dem:
onstrate that Krateo—to rale, and De-
mos—the people, means the rule of
white people, even though they are in
many instances in a hopeless minority
in come of these broken down Southern
States. Democracy at the South isa
| misnomer. Its proper appellation is
| Demenocracy, and this is warrantea by
its bloody record and its lawless atti-
eat. ee EME ee en ne es
pears to have found 1t as will be seen
by the following bill of particulars.
Tammany Hall can nub out the ugly
tacis here recorded:
He charges (1) that innocent men
were assaulted; (2) that police officers
were the main offenders; (3) that the
tough colored element were not trou-
bled; (4) that respectable colored wom-
en who appealed for protection were
cursed and threatened; (5) that police
officers kicked opened the doors of
business men, and mercilessly clubbed
the occupants; (6) that men and women
were cruelly beaten while getting in
and out of patrol wagons on their way
to police statione; (7) that some were
beaten there and others who applied
for protection were turned away after
being cussed and threatened; (8) tbat
women and children quietly sitting in
their rooms were shot at; (9) that men
who had sought protection in saloons
were driven out by these same officers
into the arms of the mob; (10) the
guilty white men were protected and
innocent colored ones were cruelly
outreged by officers; (11) that men and
women were taken from their beds to
the stations in a nude condition; (12)
that officers turned thievee and stole.
A medical student in bis third year
course who has saved nearly 2100 bad
his door forced, his closet broken open
and every dollar taken. Rey. Brooks
boldly makes these charges and says he
is ready to substantiate them by wit-
nesses.
Dr. Brocks is a responsible man and
if, as he saye, be is prepared to make
good his charges, itis Tammany’s next
move. They cannot be dismirsed with
@ sneer, or with the usual insulting re-
joiner of New York’s democratic police
officials; ‘You are one of them smart
niggers, you are too damned smart.’’
These charges wont make democratic
votes.
The intemperance of the temperance
agitation was never more manifest than
itis shown to be, by the leaders of the
movement to invoke the aid of the Al-
mighty for the defeat of President Mc-
Kinley by the endless chain system of
prayer. The centimentalists in Amer-
ican politics are the real extremists.
“They would enslave the land to make
the ocean free’’ as Phillips said of Bona-
parte Ist, “and want only power to eu-
slave both.”’
‘The temperance question is one of
those questions which no amount of
agitation or legislation can settle on
the lines on which these good, but mis-
guided guardians of public morals,
could wish to see it settled. There are
other questions of vastly more import-
ance to be settled and the prayers of
these gocd people who seem to have a
speaking acquaintance with the Al-
mighty if offered in behalf of outraged
citizens who have been robbed of their
elvil and constitutional rights in the
South, might possibly avail.
Perhaps the next move will be an
appeal to the throne of Grace for the
defeat of McKinley by the same sys-
tem on behalfof the Vegetarian because
he eats meat and doesa’t object to oth=
SS doing so when they can get it
The wonderful Face Bleach has been
introduced in Washington and is ofter
ed to the public at a special rate. The
two dollar packages can now be had for
one dollar by calling at Kopp’s Drug
Store, 7th and Florida avenue.
Mr. L. L. Lee,a prominent citizen
and business man of Atlanta, Ga., passed
through the city last week enroute to
Philadelphia. Mr. Lee meta number
of warm friends while in Washington
and was treated to a nice stag winding
up with a wagonette drive Sunday even.
ing by Messrs. Aldridge Lewis, Wy).
liam E. Muse, McKenzie Scott and §
E. Cooper.
Smith Prem
.
Typewriter
4
received the greatest number of points
for superiority at the
2 t ry 242
Par is Exposition
and was awarded the diploma of the
for its superiority of construction and
efficiency at the highest rating ef the
Jury. This Grand Prix was won by
the Smith Premier in competition
with twenty other typewriters on ex-
hibition.
519 11th Street, Northwest,
Wasurineton, D. C.
Se a 7 Le SC tSt=—
r : ‘
> The National }
: ‘
> Colored Geach-
> ‘
> ec i
, ers Bureal—y
, oF
> Washington, D. C., isprepared |
4 to furnish
- CAPABLE TEACHERS |
—————_—————
. of every branch of instruction |
: and —
- DESIRABLE SCHOOLS |
. in all parts of the country. |
; REGISTRATION FREE |
but applicants must be fully
, competent to teach or possess |
’ the ability to learn how to teach.
; NO SCHOOL—NO PAY |
———$
> 6 per cent of the first year’s ;
. salary willbecharged those
> for whom positions are;
» secureded, payable Dec. 1,
> 1900. The Demand ex- |
: ceed the Supply for suita-
ble teachers during the.
> past year, hence our liber-
; al indueements.
> Send for registration blank brief;
. ly stating your full qualifications
» and enclose ten two cent stamps
. for postage.
Address ;
- James G. Clayton, M.D.
469 O St. NW. Secretary: |
?
THE TWENTIETH MILE.
Six Hundred Delegates Representing Twen-
ty-Six States And The Districi of Col-
umbia Meet in Richmond—The Great
Record of The True Reformers—Grand
Master Taylor’s Masterly Speech—
Notes,
Richmond, Va., Spectal.- The Twen:
tieth Annual session of the Grand
Fountain United Order of True Reform:
ers was held here last week, at True
Reformer’s Hall. The large suditort.
um was artistically decorated. ‘The
national colors, bunting, potted plants,
palms and other evergreens being so
beautitully arrayed and blended as to
give a most picturesque appearance to
the hall. The recent improvements to
the building in which three large win-
dows have been opened onthe north
eS
{BA Es
| fae 3)
La tie.
Jay OT
SIS, 5 Be Ov
NG \ \ PG 1B
GAN VR 'a
7S NUING AA Al!
XG S WAN A\_— 7 |
REV. W1LLIAM L, TAYLOR,
President the True Seformers Bank’
side make the hall quite plessant de-
spite the large attendance at each ses-
sion, The stage was arrauzed with an
eye to beauty, on either side of which
were life siz» portraits of the late Rey.
William W. Browne and President
Rev. W. L. Taylor. Portraits of differ-
ent members of the Board of Directors
were suspended from the galleries,
while in the southwest corner @ mam-
moth frame containing the privcipal
offices of the Grand Fountain aud its
large oflice force This group was got-
ten out by Mr. J, C. Farley, of the Jef-
ferson Fine art Gallery, colored.
Before the opening of the session the
hall presented au animated appearance;
the hundreds of delegates present re-
newing old acquaintances and forming
new ones, showed the fraternal feeling
existing everywhere. It goes without
saying that in numbers, the present
was about the largest in the history of
the Brotherhood. There were fully ¢ix
huudred delegates in attendance, these
came from twenty three etates and the
District of Columbia.
The best homes in Richmond were
thrown open to the delegates and on
all sides general satisfaction expressed
as to the accommodations and general
hospitality received. As in numbers
80 In intellect, general appearance, and
in all those essentials that go to make
up a representative body, the delega-
tion as a whole was @ most excellent
one.
The deliberations were of a most har-
monious nature, everything being con-
ducted with that decorum and order
that characterize True Reformer gath-
erings everywhere. The personnel of
the Grand Fountain is every thing that
could be desired, embracing as it does
men and women in every walk and sta-
tion in life. Side by side on the stage,
on the different committees, in debate
and in council are to be found the hor’
ny-handed sons of toil who earn their
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WABSHINGTOR, D. 6.
(Uclans, mercharts and business men
‘in every avenue of live.
- The annual gathering of the Grand
Fountain has a most enervating influ
ence upon the people of Richmond aud
vicinity, and not upon them alone, but
upon the large delegations that come
from the different sections of the coun-
try. The unity of action of the dele’
gates, their general tendency to do on-
ly that which will redound to the good
of the Brotherhood and the general
wealth of the race stamps its impress
everywhere,
The success of our Banking and In-
surance departments. our Vid Foiks
Home, Mercantile and Industrial de-
partments and our success in journal
ism demonstrate to the world what by
concentration and co operation Negro
pluck and energy can accomplish. The
race is greatly benefitted in the eyes of
the commercial and financial world as
a result of the great work being done
by the Brotherhood.
Promptly at ten o’clock a, m. Tues-
day morning, Rev, W. L. Taylor, G. W.
Master, amidst great applaure, ascend-
ed the stage, and rapped the vast as-
semblage to order. The roll of Grand
Officers was called, then the roll of
General Officers,
Occupying seats on the stage were
the Grand and General Officers minis-
ters and official stenographers,
Devotional exercises were conducted
by the Grand Worthy Chaplain, Rev.
Richard Wells. It is a source of pleas:
ure to the Grand Fountain to have
Chaplain Wells with them thissession
as last session he was in feeble bealtb
and unable to be present. The Rever-
end gentleman appears to be muchim™
proved in health
Grand Worthy Master ‘I’aylor then in
a most felicitous and eloquent manner
delivered an opening addiess, The ad:
dress was an exhaustive one and dealt
with the work accomplisbed by the
Brotherhood since tie last annual ses-
sion, which shows an increase of 226
new Fountains, 126 Rosebuds, 462 E
Class members, 670 B Class members,
and a total increase in the fountain
membership of more than 15,000.
As the Grand Worthy Master told step
by step of the progress of the Order,
his eloquent words were received with
vociferous applause. In his remarks
he disclaimed any inteutioh cf aspiring
toa life tenure of office, but said as long
as he served the Brotherhood 8s faith’
fully as he had served them and they
were eatisfied with his work and de:
sired to retain bis services, he felt 1t his
duty to answer to their call. He fur:
ther stated that he started to Boston to
be present at the first meeting of the
Afro American Business Association,
put was taken ill and acting upon thr
advice of bis physician returned home
0 a8 to be able, with God’s help to be
present at this session.
At the conclusion of his address there
was tremendous applause,
The committee on credentials, which
was divided into eight sections was
then appointed and the morning ses-
3ion then adjourned. The afternoon
session was devoted to the receiv'ng ot
Virginia Union University.
Vala splice 5. Ricimond
BO Ei as Theological
College, pei aap eae ee
Be Se ce = Seminal)
i MAGNIFICENT BUILDINGS OF GRANITE.
New Equipment, Fine Library, Electric Light, Steani Heat.
Commanding Location on Border of Richmond.
Large Faculty of Enthusiastic and Able Professors.
Lectures by Distinguished Scholars, Educators and Preachers.
SOLLEGE DEPARTMENT, Of High Grade, Modern, Broad, Thorough, with
many Electives. Courses leading to Degrees of Bachelor of Arts,
Bachelor of Science, aud Bachelor of Literature.
THEOLOGICAL DEPARTIIENT, Baptist, Conservative, Scholarly, with many
electives; with Hebrew and Greek Courses leading to Degree of Bach-
elor of Divinity, and English courses leading to Degree of Bachelor of
Theology; Ministers’ Course for those who.with little previous educa-
tion, desire to fit themselves for the ministry.
ACADEMY DEPARTIENT, Thorough and attractive, including College Pre-
paratory Course; General Courses adapted to fit young men for useful,
wise and noble living; and Normal Course to fit students for teaching.
INDUSTRIAL DEPARTMENT, For manual training in wood and iron work
and use of tools and machinery.
Unequalled advantages for pursuing literary along with theological studies,
fraining in manners, habits and character receive special attention. @
Entrance examination and classification of new students Tuesday, Oct. 2,
8:45 a.m, Term begins Wednesday, Oct. 3, at 8:45 a.m. Catalogue and
further information on application to THE PRESIDENT,
P Richmond, Va,
GaRTe — —
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AN
and thanked the Reformers of Rich:
mond for the hearty welcome extended
vo the visitors.
V ce Grand Worthy Master, Rev. E.
T. Anderson presided at the night ses
sion, Devotionad exercises were con:
ducted by G. W. Chaplain Wells More
anon.
Mr. Joseph Jackson, bheadwaiter at
the B and O Hotel, has gone to spend
a week at Atlantic City, taking his son
Freddie,
vayland
College,
=
(ee To Rey
a . B ren” Art
oes Maj
2 ’ cS ajdl §
oa =(enent
rf 5 Yi ae
qe p= y an
Ye) CMs
So MAJORS 5
| j CEMENT
NT,
3
ihnond
Tiological
Seminary
ee ee ae te PAE ee ee a ee
Now READY FOR BUSINESS.
GRAYS CAFE,
Odd Fellows Hali, No. 16:6 M Street, N. W.
> Cafe Open From 7 a. m. to 11 p.m Meals a la Carte.
> a
; Regular Breakfest from 7 to 10 a. m.
< Dinner from 4to 7 p.m.
Sunday Dinner from 2 to 4p. m.
Ice Cream and Ices Constantly on Hand.
Flavors for Sunday, Vanilla, Peach, Strawberry, Chocelate, Lemon Ice
2 ee
Fine Catering a Specialty.
Soliciting the patronage of eur friends and the public generally, we ;
are Very respectfully, ‘
GRAY & BRU., FROPRIETORS. ;
a I eR ee ae eR Pee OA
5 sae
s 4
The Grandest of all Preparations for the Hair!
THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY HARTONA.
Matchless and Positively Unequalied for Straightening all Kinky,
Knotty, Stubborn, Harsh, Curly Hair.
HARTONA will make the hair grow long, soft, and straight. The use of
one box of HARTONA will show immediate results. Makes the hair grow on
bald and thin places. HARTONA cures Dandruff, Baldness, Falling Out of the
Hair, and all Scalp Diseases. Remember, that HARTONA is the highest-priced
hair remedy on the market, because it is the best. Price, $1.00 a box. Don’t
allow your hair and face to be ruined by dangerous chemicals that are sold
cheap to catch the ignorant and uneducated classes. HARTONA is used by
over 50,000 people in every State in the Union. HARTONA does not have to
be used all the time, as it straightens the hair and gives it fresh life and lustre,
and the hair stays and grows naturally straight after the use of HARTONA.
On box of HARTONA can be used by every one in the family. Benefits and
improves children’s hair just the same as adults. Money positively refunded
if you are not perfectly satisfied.
Sa
HARTONA FACE. WASH
will gradually turn the skin of a black person five or six shad
will turn the skin of a mulatto person perfectly white. HA
WASH will not lighten the skin in spots, but all over eve1
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does the work. Itis your duty to look as beautiful as possible.
delighted patrons send us testimonials every year from all o
States. HARTONA FACE WASH will icine Weiikion, Dark
Black-Heads, Freckles, and all Blemishes of the Skin. You ca
shade of skin on neck, face, and hands to any shade you wish.
with each bottle. HARTONA FACE WASH is perfectly harm]
to any part of the United States on receipt of price—$1.0
Remember, your money is positively refunded if you are not a
fied and delighted with the Hartona Remedies.
will gradually turn the skin of a black person five or six shades lighter, and
will turn the skin ef a mulatto person perfectly white. HARTONA FACE
WASH will not lighten the skin in spots, but all over evenly. The skin
remains soft and bright without continual use of the Face Wash. One bottle
does the work. Itis your duty to look as beautiful as possible. Thousands of
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with each bottle. HARTONA FACE WASH is perfectly harmless, and is sent
to any part of the United States on receipt of price—$1.00 per bottle.
Remember, your money is positively refunded if you are not absolutely satis-
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%
HARTONA NO-SMELL
will remove all smells and bad odors of the body. Cures sore and aching feet,
chafed limbs, etc. HARTONA NO-SMELL is a God-send to all persons suffer-
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Sent anywhere on receipt of price—50c. a package.
ee am om ee
ONO Kee SARE Wheg SUAVE IN Is Ve
To introduce our remedies in this city, we will send to all persons who will
cut out and mail to us this Coupon and ONE DOLLAR, three large boxes of
HARTONA HAIR STRAIGHTENER, worth $3.00; two large bottles of
HARTONA FACE WASH, worth $2.00; one package of HARTONA NO-
SMELL, worth 50c. The entire lot of remedies, worth $5.50, will be sent
securely sealed, so that no one can tell contents, for ONE DOLLAR and this
Coupon. Order goods now, as this grand offer will last but a short time only.
Write your name and address plainly. Money can be sent by Post-Office Money
Order, Express, or enclosed in a Registered Detter:
; HARTONA REMEDY COMPANY, |}
909 E. Main Street, RICHMOND, VA.
GentieMEN :—I enclose you ONE DOLLAR, for which send me the fol-
lowing goods at once—
Three Large Boxes HARTONA HAIR STRAIGHTENER, worth $3.00
Two Large Bottles HARTONA FACE WASH, - worth $2.00 |
One Package HARTONA NO-SMELL, - - worth .50
My Name is.
House No. » Street.
2 City. - , County. , State ,
SI reread
AGENTS WANTED IN EVERY TOWN IN AMERICA. OUR GOODS SELL ON SIGHT.
eee eee
JOHNSON & WILLIAMS, An Excellent Paper,
Cadez, N. C., Rept., 5, 1900 —Dear
Editor: You will please find inel
Publishing House, money pater for cae Gilise cra, a hee
payment of my stubscription ti
ee See Oren veet, excellent caper whieh is roly = pane
WASHINGTON, D O. | fon of the race. Yours tray, Qs
Jdoum FRann:c a
4
THF COTORFED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. UO.
An Excellent Paper,
Cadez, N. C., Rept., 5, 1900 —Dear
e Editor: You will please find inelosed
, money oicer for one dclisr and a half,
Payment of my +ubscription to your
excellent paper which is truly a para:
«| Zon of the race. Yours tray, Qj»
Joun H. BartTiz§
a a 5 ir ec
To Revive to the Union League.
Editor The Colored American:—I
have been so much enthused and en*
couraged by the splendid showing raade
at the recent Boston Convention of
of Colored Business Men that I think
it would be a grand idea te revive the
Union League and get up a complete
directory of all the business enterprises
tradesmen, artisans, dentists, lawyers,
physicians, etc., together with @ com-
pendium of all the churches, lodges
and other organizetions of the colored
people of the District of Columbia, In
other words I think that a permanent
record should be made of our profes-
sional, industrial, commercial and or:
gavized statue in the National capital,
at the close of the 19th century. Such
a record would be of incaleulable value
to future generation as a basis for de
termining the future growth of the
race. The agitation which it will de
velop will alco be of great advantage to
the colored business men, as it will di-
jrect attention to them.
| Let me hear from apy one who ap-
proves of this idea through tbe column-
of The Colored American or by private
letter. ANDRE # F. HILYER.
2352 6 street n. w.
Rey. Taylor in Richmond,
Rev. J. Anderson Taylor, the pastor
of Shiloh Baptist church, left fast Tues‘
day morning for Richmond, Va., to at-
tend the National Baptist Convention
which met in that city last Wednes-
day and will continue for two weeks.
As is known this Convention is com-
posed of the leading Baptist ministers
of the United States and its annual ses:
sions is an occasion for the reeognition
of those of the Baptist denomination
and for the planning of new work. As
is the custom witb Shilob, it raised a
bandsome purse and sent its pastor to
the Convention as becomes them. Dr.
‘Taylor will preach the doctrinal ser-
mon, which is considered one of the
highest honors to be bestowed at these
Conventions.
Mt. Zion’s 36th Anniversary.
The 36th anniversary of the Zion
Baptist church of South Washingion,
of which Rev, W, J. Howard is pastor,
is being celebrated. ‘he festivities be-
gan September 9th and will last until
the 16th inst. These seven days will be
spent by the members and friends of
~~“
We .
AQ. > ‘ee
SEIS
Zz) Uhh {7 KE
REY. W.). HOWARD
the cbureh in joy and gladness, sud
Rev. Howard who ts so beloved and
esteemed by his church is the recipient
of an overflow of attention and expres-
sions of good will by all. The mem-
bership of Zion Baptist church ts near-
ly 2,500 and each and every member is
contributing his share to make the cele
bration of the anniversary as success-
ful and as popular as it ean be made,
A most interesting program Will be
carried out tcmonow, Surday 1g)
and the public is cordially inyii¢q ., te
present at every session. ‘iby follow
ing pregram will be rendered
6a. m., Punsiee prayer mie & id
by Brother John W. Branson, 94 n,
Sunday School, Wm, D. Jarvis, sy:
ll a, m,, sermon by Rey. J.C Dent,
pastor of Mt. Moriah Baptis; churep,
8 p. m., sermon by Rev A. 8. Homm
pastor of Mt. Airy Baptist churen, 5
p. m., Junior Endeavor, Alex Ss, How
ard, Superintendent. 6 p. m., Seni
Endeavor, James Smiler, President,
7.30 p. m., Praise meeting by Rey xq
I. Loving, pastor of Enon Baptix
ehurch. The choirs are asked to go.
compsny their pastors, Al! mombey
and friends are asked to be presen,
Ministers of the Union are especially
asked with all ot her ministers to tg
present.
CHARLES FISCHER
a= 1
——— Manufacturer and dealer in
SURGICAL & ORTHOPEDIVaA
Instrumente and Trusses,
628 SEVENTH STREET, NozTAy gst
Opposite Patent Oftice
WASHINGTON, D. 0
Cures
Weak Men
Free
Insures Love and Happiness
How any man may quickly cure him
self after years of suffering from sexual
weakness, lost vitality, varicocle,etc.and
enlarge small weak organs to {ull siz
and vigor. Simply send your name
and address to Dr. L. W.Knapp, 111
Hull Bldg., Detroit, Mich., and he will
gladly send the free receipt y ith full di-
rections so that any man may easily
cure himself at home. This 1s certain-
ly a most generous offer and the follow:
ing extracts taken from his daily mail
show how men write him. .
| “DearSir:—Pleaseaecept my sinceré
thanks for yours of recent date. | have
given your treatment a thoroug) test and
the benefit has been extraordinary.
hascompletely braced me up. | am just
as vigorous as when a boy and you cal:
not realize how happy I am.”
“Dear Sir;—Yours was received and
[ had no trouble in making use of the
receipt as directed, and after « {ew
days use can truthfully say it is 2 boo
to weak men. I am greatly improved 8
size, strength and vigor.”
“Dear Sir:—Your method worked
beautifully. Results were exactly wat
I needed. Strength and vigor have
completely returned and enlargement
is entirely satisfactory.”
All eorrespondence is strictly com
fidenvial, mailed in plain sealed e-
yelope. The receipt is free for the ask-
ing and he wants every man te hove it
AT OLD MONTICELLO,
The Susy Afro Americans at the Thriving
Burgh of Virginta—Notes and Reflec-
tions of the Social Mirror.
of Mrs. Alice Scott one of the leading
dressmakers of the city, a sewmg
schoo] was organized. It has now
reached an enrollment of 105 pupils.
The use of the rooms in the Jefferson
public school building has been granted
and great interest 1s manifested among
teachers and pupils, The school is
under the mapagement of the follow:
ing very efficient officers and teachers
whose services are rendered free of
charge, all of whom are experienced in
needle work, some of whom are gradu:
atesof Hartshorn College, Hampton
Institute and other sehools of note:
Mrs, Alice Scott, president; Mrs. Alice
Minor, vice president; Miss Lottie D.
Lewis, secretary; Miss Cora P. Brown,
assistant secretary; Mrs, A. F. Angel,
treasurer. Teachers—Mesdames Ellen
Irving, Nannie Wayland, Mary O.
Kelser, Joho Coles, P. Y. Wyatt, Liz-
zie Williams; Misses Annie Bryant,
iva R. Cotes, Jenaie Wright, Rosa
Howard, Julia Wyatt. Friday after-
noon of each week is the day selected
for the meeting of the school. The
funeral of Robert Thomas, son of Mr.
George Thomas took place from the
Virst Baptist church, Wednesday at 3
o'clock. Rev. R. O. Quarles, officiating.
At5 o’clock of the same day tbe funeral
of Miss Bessie Smith took place from
the First Baptist church, Rev. RB. C.
(juarles, pastor, officiating. She had
been in poor health for some time. On
Thursday of last week Mrs. Phillip
Daniel gave a farewell party in honor
of her little niece, Sadie Sampson who
left Friday for Washington where she
will resume her studies in the public
schools. Quite a number of Jittle folks
were present and enjoyed themselves
immensely. The tables were beautifully
set wit some of the choicest delectables
ofthe season, Kev. and Mrs. W. J.
Hackett of Covington, Va., were in the
city last week the guestof Mr, and Mrs.
K. Kelser on N. 6th street. Mr, W. D.
Jones of Richmond, Va stopped over
last week en route home from” White
Sulphur Springs, Mr. Walter Duvall of
Philadelphia, has been visiting his
brother, Mr, Granville Duvall on Com-
merce street. Rev and Mrs, W. M.
Moss of Danville, Va. were in the city
Jasob week en route home froma Louisa
County. Rev. C. W. Hill attended the
M E Conference at Brownsburg, Va.
this week. Mr. Emmett Rogers of
Washington ig in the city. Mr. and
Mrs. Carles Leitch who were called to
the city on account of the illness of his
sister lett this week for Washington,
D.C., Mr. O. H, Jones, superintendent
eastern division, United Aid and In-
surance Co. of Richmond, Va. isin the
city. Mr B. A. Baker of the Royal Bene.
lit Society went to Washington last
week, Misses Ellen Trent and Clara
Parley left for their homes in Rich-
mond last week after a pleasant stay in
our city. Miss Bertha Hughes of Man-
chester in company with Miss Bettie
Lewis of Scottsville visited Mrs. J. P.
Edmonds on Belmont last week. Mise
Maud Lewis of Scottsville is visiting
her sister, Mrs. J. P Edmonds on Bel
mont, Mrs, Fairfax Taylor after 8
onthe stay in the eity, visitiug rela
THE COLORED AMERICAN. WAPFHINGTON 5S
ington is visitingat the home of his
father, Mr. Gorge Coles on Dice Street
this week. Mr. John Taylor visited
Orange, Washington and Petersburg
last week. Mr J W. Whipps was called
home from Atlantic City last week on
account of the illuess of his wite who
is now improving. Mr. George Reeves
stopped over this week en reute to
Washington from Healing Springs.
Among those who have returned from
tne mountaias are: Messrs, W. oO,
Lewis, W. F.Brown, 8. B. Jackson,
Philip Daniel, Albert Brooks, from the
White Sulphur, Bsujamin Chapman,
headwatter and R. E. Wood from the
Healing Springs, Charles Preston from
Nimrod Hall. Rey. C. N. Harris has
returned home after an extensive visit
to Richmond and Manchester. Miss
Lottie Wallace left last week for her
home in Petersburg, Va The Ameri-
can Can be had at Pollard and Noble’s
barber shop. MONTICELLO.
A First Class Business Cetter.
Mr. Edward E. Cooper, Washington,
D. C., Dear Sir:—Piease accept my
thanks for the order received through
you. We wish to state that your paper
brings us orders from nearly every state
in the U.S , and also from Cuba and
Mexico The results are splendid and
we consider the coluuns of your paper
one of ous best investments. Again
thanking you, we are with best wishes
Youra very truly, =
Hantrona RemMevy Co.
Riehmond, Va.
Dr. Loften’s’ Outing.
Dr. W. 8. Lofton, the leading Afro-
American dentist in the city, has been
spending a few weeks in the wilds ot
Minnesota, the guest of his old friend,
Lawyer Frederick L. McGhee. He had
a most delightful trip and reached
home the other evening where he will
renew business at his old stand on “M”’
street, Northwest. He was accompa-
nied by Dr. Robert Ridgley.
Beautiful, soft hair comes to every
womaa who uses our Queen Pomade.
It invigorates the scalp and makes the
bair soft and pliable, and oleans the
scalp of dandruff and itching. Makes
the hair grow and prevents it from
turning gray. An elegantly perfumed
bair dressing for men or women.
Price large bottle 25 cents. Drop a post-
al card for city order delivered free.
Sent anywhere by mail on receipt of
price and 5 cents extra to pay postage.
Stamps or silver accepted. Cardozo’s
Pharmacy, 1201 R atreet, Washington,
D.C. Telephone 24815. For sale also
at Harris’ Drug Store, 3rd and F streets
southwest.
ie
Prominent Colored Men.
Agents wanted to sell “One Hundred
Distinguished Leaders,” a beeutiful
book containing one hundred portraite
and sketches of the leading colored
men in the United States. Puice 26
cents percopy. Send stamvs or post
office mongy order to
Charles Alexander,
Tuskegee Institute,
Tuskegee, Ala,
St. Ainn’s Academy
310 8th Street Southeast.
Under the direction of the Oblate Sis-
ters of Providence. For young ladies
and children of color. For prospectus
address Sr. M. Cecilia Xavier, O. P.
Superior, Re-opens Sept, 10th.
-SUMMER R*SORTS.
a RS SS) ee ea eee ee
at A =,
7a % ass HOTEL
aa Caress La
E if esekS fe WOOCDLAWN
het aie ACE
La alEnEN) eon i ae i hy .
ee aa rae | Nee eee
SR EA ee eg =
—— as Lawnside. N.J.
This Hotel is sitaated on an elevation which furnishes one with a magaifi-
cent view for tea miles. At the base of whieh is a wideskeet of water giving
ample opportunity to those fond of sailing or fishing.
WOODLAWN TERRACE.
is on the Whitehorse Pike, seven miles froua Camden. 25 trains stop at Lawa-
side dally. The service at the Hotel is strictly first class. Ibe Bed Rooms are
large and airy with all modern conveniences. The Hotel is three stories high,
35 feet front and ‘a surrounded with a beantiful lawn amd wide gravel walks.
© For terms, addrass MRS. CHAS, SMITH, Snow Hill, N. J.
8@ Will open Friday, June 1, 1900.
s@r-TaE ELITH—6248 Washington
stseet: Alexandria, Va., Ice cream, con-
feeticnory, sode water and miik shakes,
all layers. Lanches and sandwishes.
Oool, exclusive, up to date. The only
first class pleasure resort in the eity
When in Alexandria call on us. Opens
Msy 15th. W. F. Hammond, pro.
prietor.
AUDITORIUM,
Open all the year. Suitable for conventtons
recepiions, ball, concerts and theatrical
entertainments. Qhoice wines. Nqnors and
cigars. Attached the finest billiard reem in
the elty. The auditorium Oafe attached is
strictly first class, Special attention given
collation parties, weddings. recepticns. ete.
B, G. Fitzgerald, proprietor, 30 9nd 32 North
Kentucky avenue, Atlantic City, N. J.
81 N. Obio Ave., Atlantic Oity, N. J
Excells any intheeity. All modern im-
rrevements. Two squares trom the Reading
Railroad depot. Two squates from the
beach [ kiné\y thank my old as well as new
patrens fer thatr Hberal patronage ard hope
fer a continuance of the same. Mra,J F.
Debity, proprietress.
THE SUB HOTEL
CHOICE WINES,
LIQUORS,
AND CIGARS,
J. C. SMALLWOOD,
Proprietor.
15 N. Mlinois Ave., Atlantic City, N. J.
MANHATTAN INN.
17 NORTH MICHIGAN AVENUE,
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.
THOMAS COLE,
Proprietor.
Choice wines, Liquors and Cigars.
CHOICE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS
HAKRIS’ HOTEL
GEORGE H HARRIS, PROPRIETOR,
1139 Baltic Avenue,
Atlantic City, N. J.
Meals Served at all Hours,
HOLEL HENDERSON—12 N Mis-
sissiopi ave., Atlantic City, N. J., two
equares from Reading depot; three
miputes walk to Bathing Beach. Speco
jal rates for families and permanent
bearders, The hotel has been newty
papered and has 32 neatly fitted up
sleeping rooms. Terms mod-rate. Ea
ropean and American plan.
STACY I. HENDERSON, Prop.
7 ’ |
At Keene's Shoe Store
903 G Street, Northwest.
2000 prs Ladies’ $2.50, $3 00, $3.50
and $4,00 Oxford ‘lies to go at $1.95.
1000 prs Men’s Shoes, all styles,
sizes and widths, made to sell
fer $5.00, $6.00 and $7.00;
for a few days te go at $2.85,
SSPE NA
ALEXANDRIA, VA.
ATLANTIO CITY.
FITZGERALD'S
THE NEW HOUSE
DBERITY COTTAGE.
WANTED —An active young man as
collector. Must be well acquainted
with the city. Married man preferred.
An energetic colored woman who un-
derstands canvassing can secure per-
mauent employment with good pav gi
addressing “Benevolence’’ care 459
st nu. w.
WANTED—By family of two, 2 un
furnished rooms or would take half of a
houss. Northwest section preferred.
Address ‘‘D,”” Colored American office.
WANTED-—ACTIVE MAN OF GOOD CHAR
acter to deliver and collect in the District of
Columbia, for old established manufacturing
wholesale house. $900 8 year, sure pa .Hon-
esty more than experience required. Our
reference, any bank 1p any city. Enclose
self-addressed stamped envelope, Manutac:
‘turers, Third Floor, 334 Dearborn St , Chicago.
All members of the National Cooper:
ative Investment Association are here*
by notified that there will bea meeting
on the 18th of Sept. at £212 Champlain
avenue, p. w. By order of Robt. Hol
idsy, President, G. R. Rhone, Acting
Recretary 2t
R LDANS
‘Wanted—a caseof bad health that RI-P-A-N © iI
not benefit. One gives relief. No matter © iut’s
the matter, one willdo you good. Acure » ill re-
sult if directions are followed. ‘They banish pain,
induce sleep, prolong life. Soid at all drug etores,
ten for five cents. Be sure to get the genuine.
Don’t be fooled by substitutes. Ten samples and a
thousand teetimonials will be mailed to any ad-
dress for five cents. forwarded to the Ripans
Chemical Company, No. 19 Spreee ©", New York
Oe ee an bee
F Py Prol..F.THEELM.D. 92244
St., Philadelphia, Pa, Bin deutscher Arat. Gua. 4
r raitiees tocure PRIVATE DISEASES, EXCESSES 4
ABUSES, BLOOD POISON, NERVOUS DEBILITY.
re LOST MANHOOD. VARICOCELE & STRICTURE
3h yearspractical & SycarshospitatenperienceinGermany’
[Send for hook =Teuth*exposing medienl 4 electeleal fraud
per er arene ane wi nre, «1
G THe
‘ATEST DISCOVERY
€OR MAKING
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SSS YT a ON
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Re ae
TRAICHTINE is no experiment, unt a thor
ougly reliable preparation. It has been
Successfully used by thousands in all
fiuus of the country: We have bundreds of
letters speaking in’the highest terms of its
merit, aud every mail brings us fresh testi-
monials. Straightine 1s 9 highly perfumed
pomade$ it not ouly Straightens the Hair,
but removes Dandruff, Keeps the Hair from
Falling Out, cures Itching, Irritating Scalp}
Diseases, giving a rich, long and luxurious
head of hair—so much'to bedesired. Guar=
anteed perfectly harmless. Price, 25 Cents
acan atall drug stores, or sont by mail to
any address on receipt of 30 Cents in stamps
or silver, « Address, NELSON M’F'G CO.,
Richmond, Va. #e-Big [Money for Agents.
Write for Terms. e
5
WANTED HELP.
NOTICE.
6
GOTHAM NOTES
COLORED AMERICAN
DIONYSIUS III
The selection of Mr. Charles W. Anderson as committeeman at large by the state committee of New York will give very general satisfaction to the rank and file of the colored voters of the Empire State. Mr Anderson is eminently qualified for the duties of this position and we are sure that under his direction the interests of the Negroes of the state will not suffer.
The unanimity with which the white republicans of New York got together at Saratoga during the recent convention there to nominate a governor and state officers is an object lesson to colored men in the party in the state who have a weakness for cut throat politics and whose inordinate ambition and transparent incompetency as leaders are the true reasons why the New York Negro makes no substantial progress in state politics, added to these is jealousy and the New York Negro is not altogether alone, there are others. If they have read the papers they will have seen how the white republicans of the state stoop to conquer and if they have any political sense worth using they will imitate the methods of the white republicans at Saratoga and get together this fall. The Hon. Timothy L. Woodruff who has the unprecedented honor of being nominated for a third term as Lieutenant Governor of New York is as fine a gentleman, and as thorough republican as ever lived. Like General Grant he remembers his friends and will go out of his way to do them a favor. He will be a three times winner.
That sterling republican the Hon. John T McDonough secretary of state of New York was re-nominated by acclamation to succeed himself. Mr. McDonough will be held in grateful remembrance by the Negroes of this state and of the country for his bold, vigorous and masterful excoriation of the South at Elmira some time since, which excited so much favorable comment by the press. Mr. McDonough still believes that the danger to the republic is not past while the rights of any citizen are denied by force or fraud or arbitrary legislation. And Mr. McDonough is right. Pretty soon the war of rebellion will have to be fought over again. If this thing keeps up.
Senator John Raines of the 42d district is responsible for the following paragraphs in the splendid platform adopted by the republicans of New York at Saratoga, September 4th: "But, conscious of the weakness of relying on the theories that have been exploded and of ignoring facts that are self evident, the democrats are undertaking to push into conspicuous position before the people an issue which they describe and stigmatize by the word 'imperialism.' In this course they are characteristically dishonest; first, because there is
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. C.
nameless solo's which would have been much more enjoyable if she had taken the precaution to oil her vocal tubes before perpetrating them. Mr. Polly Ace wont make a bloomin success reciting Shakespeare until he has studied Shakespeare and elocution or elocution and Shakespeare. Look out for another Ira Aldridge. He's coming down the plike. BRUCE GRIT.
Since adventuring into Egypt in quest of the raw material of which fiction is made, Mr. Gilbert Parker's Canadian fields have been lying fallow. He returns to them, however, with new vigor, and even fuller power; and the serial which he has just completed finds him at the highest dramatic level to which he has yet attained.
The Lane that Had No Turning is remarkable for its honest strength, thorough originality, and absorbing interest. The scene of the story is Pontiac (whither Valmond came), and the period the middle fifties. The leading characters are Madelinette, a famous singer, and her husband, Seignior of Pontiac, for whom she dares all and risks all. The story gains interest as it progresses and concludes with a striking and wholly unexpected finale.
The Lane that Had No Turning will begin in The Saturday Evening Post for September 29, and run through five number.
"The Academy," the leading literary paper in England, speaks most enthusiastically of the Book exhibit by Negro authors at Paris, and pays a high tribute to Mr. Daniel Murray of Washington Library of Congress, for the thoroughness in which he did the work on the eleven hundred titles represented. The notice is a very flattering one, one third of a column is devoted to it. Mr. Murray has added fully three hundred additional titles, to the number mentioned above.
The fact that fourteen hundred titles all of them identified as representing books or pamphlets by Afro-American authors have been found, speaks volumes for the progress of the race and reflects equal credit on Mr. Murray by whose untiring energy and knowledge of the fountains of literature, such a marvelous exhibit is possible.
That the Afro-American is rising cannot be doubted by the most Negro hating pessimist, when The Academy the leading book authority in the literary world, designs to accord him the mead of praise in its columns, as it does in its issue of August 18th, 1900.
no sentiment in the United States that deserves to be called 'imperialism,' and, second, because the democrats do not come with clean hands into a dsicussion of popular sovereignty and the 'consent of the governed.'
Neither in the Philippines nor elsewhere will the cause of human liberty look for its champion to a party whose only hope of obtaining power lies in the suppression of human rights, and in an organized conspiracy to nullify the guarantees with which the constitution endeavors to surround the citizen. From thousands of poling places in this election, in which the democratic party is so much concerned about the 'consent of the governed,' the Negro citizen will be excluded by laws so contrived as to keep out the Negro republican while admitting the white democrat, though both present themselves with similar qualifications except as to color. The party which will not allow the constitution to follow the flag through the Carolinas, through Mississippi, and Texas has no occasion to distress itself about the Constitution's journey 4000 miles across the ocean."
The democratic spouters should commit this to memory, it is worth remembering because it is as exact as a problem in mathematics.
Boss Croker, the brains of Tammany Hall in a confab with Captain Jackson of the Belle Meade Stock Farm about the latters recent interview which was not flattering to Bryan, said with a great show of anger "the man who votes for McKinley, votes for murder. This imperialism which means the shooting down of Negroes in the Philippine Islands is nothing less than murder," That's all rot said Captain Jackson and he banged his fist on a chair. Mr. Croker walked away and said no more
What would Mr. Croker call his white democratic brethren of the South, who also shoot down Negroes? What name would he apply to the Tammany terriers in brass buttons who club Negroes into insensibility in New York right under his pug nose? Who told Mr Croker that the Phillipines are Negroes any now? And what does he or his party care for the Negroes?
The census of 1890 shows that the foreign population of New York City was 639943, against a native population of 875,858, and in the administration of the cities affairs the Irish are on top. Those that have not won aldermanie honors are either on the police force as private-, captains or station keepers. The Tammany police force belong in this category. They have been on top of New York Negroes recently with their night sticks and handled the latter as expertly as though they were twirling the shilalah at Donnybrook fair. There is only about 4000-000 Irish left on the "could sod." The other part of its population has moved to this country.
It is enough to make a horse laugh hoarsely to read about Mr. Croker protesting against the shooting down of Negroes in the Philippine Islands especially when no Negroes have been shot down. Is Mr. Croker joking or just funing?
Mr. Edgards L. Palacious whew! what name and Mme Berry, "The Black Melba" agonized a few in the pulpit of the A. M. E. Zion church at Saratoga on the 4th instant in the presence of a patient and long suffering "awjence." The gentleman with the palatial name undertook to "excite" selections from Shakespeare—the closet scene from Hamlet and Tom Taylor's "Fools Revenge."
The lady rendered or tried to some
The Lane That Had No Turning.
The Negro Exhibit at the Paris Exhibition
COME & JOIN!
THE NATIONAL CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA.
10 Departments Incorporated in One
Vlz.: Provision, Fuel, Banking, Insurance, Publishing, Education, Purchasing, Manufacturing, Employment and Contracting,
CAPITAL $100,000. Shares $10 to $100, pava-
$1.00 monthly. Admission fee $1.00.
OBJECT—Buy and borrow of ourselves. All kinds of societies and clubs can join. NO PASSWORDS, GRIPS or SIGNS. Agents and organizers wanted. alary, commission and territory given THIS ASSOCIATION buys properties for members and gives long time to pay for it. Saves them 10 to 25 per cent. on house rent, fuel, provisions and dry goods bill. Loans them money when in need at small interest. Gives them $2 to $10 week when sick (women paid for all complaints). Furnishes doctor and medicine free. Gives $30 to $450 at death; also $100 to $500 if living 10 years. Secures all kinds of EMPLOYMENT for them FREE at any place Incorporated 1895. Organized since then 384 branches and pur chased over $50,000 worth of real estate. Mention this paper. Dr. E. PARKER READ, Founder and Pres. Miss J. PARKER SHIELDS. Secretary. Rev. ALEXANDER H. NEWTON, Treasurer. LAWYER M. LUTHER NICHOLAS, Solicitor.
If interested in this Association write to Home Office, 514 South 12th street, New York.
If interested in this Associationwrite to Home Office, 514 South 122h street, Phillade
H
FINANCIAL.
DO YOU NEED MONEY?
pianos, horses, wagons, carriages, or personal property of any kind, without removal from your possession. Loans can be carried as long as desired, and payments can be made at any time to suit the convenience of the of the borrower. We are the only properly organized loan company in the city. If you appreciate low rates, courteous treatment, and attention to your interests, you will call on us. Offices private and easily reached. Loans made in any part of the city. No delay. Open from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m.
SECURITY LOAN COMPANY
Room 1, Warder Building,
Corner 9th and F sts. n. w.
To loan on furniture, pianos, &c., without removal or publicity and the day you ask for it. We will loan any amount making time and payments to suit, giving one month or one year as you desire, and at rates that you can afford to pay. If you now have a loan with any other company and desire more money, give us a call. Will as cheerfully make a $10 loan as $100, and no charge or expense if loan is not made. Always ready to give information regarding rates and methods to secure a loan. We are the oldest loan company in the city, and will give you honest treatment. All business strictly confidential. Private offices.
Washington Mortgage Loan Co.,
610 F Street, N. W.
Money to Loan
ON FURNITURE, PIANOS, ETC.
If you are in need of money, we desire to inform you of our new method. We can secure you a loan on an easy monthly payment plan, at less cost than before, and below the rate of any other company in the city. You can pay in full at any time after loan is secured, and it will only cost you for such time as you have had the money. Our business is strictly private, and all applications are treated confidentially. If you have a loan with any other concern, you can secure a loan through us to pay it and get more money if desired. It will pay you to call and see us before going elsewhere. We are ready at any and all times during office hours to give information concerning our business methods, and you will receive courteous treatment.
CAPITAL
LOAN GUARANTEE CO
602 F ST. N. W
Capital Savings
-Bank-
609 F St. N. W., Washington, D. C.
Capital $50,000.
Hon. Jno. R. Lynch, President.
L. C. Bailey, Treasurer.
J. A. Johnson, Secretary.
D. B. McCary, Cashier.
Directors:
Jno. R. Lynch, Dr. W. S. Lofton,
Whitefield McKinlay, J C. Bailey,
Robt. H. Terrell, W. S. Montgomery,
Wyatt Archer, John A. Pierre, Henry
E. Baker, James Storum, J. A.
Johnson, Dr. A. W. Tancil, Howard
H Williams.
Deposits received from 10 cents upward. Interest allowed on $5,00 and above. Collections meet with prompt attention. A general exchange and banking business done. Bank open from 9 a. m. to 4:30pm.
The National Safe Deposit, Savings and Trust Company.
Corner 15th St. and New York Ave.
Capital: One Million Dollars.
Pavs interest on deposits.
Rents Sates insides 'urglar-proof Vaults.
Acts as administrator, executor, trustee, &c.
W. H. FISHER
::Dyer and Cleaner.:
709 9th St. n. w.
407 14th St. n w. Telephone 152.
---
OUTRAGES IN TEXAS.
The Work of Carnage and Extermination Goes on.
Calvert, Texas, Special-A war of extermination of the colored citizens seems to be in progress in Grimes county, near Navasota, Texas. Colored refugees from that county report blood-curdling murders of men and women in that county during the last few weeks. A lady refugee says that there seems to be a secret organization engaged at the bloody work, with the secret approval of the constituted(?) authorities of that county who repress the publication of such crimes altogether or see that the truth is not told.
This reminds us of some such murders we have known to have occurred in this and adjoining counties, which, so far as we have been able to find out, have never been seen in public print, although in some cases a mock trial has been gone through to reassure the murderers that no "white man" can ever be legally punished in Texas for crimes committed 'against the peace and dignity of the state" in cases wherein only Negroes are plaintiffs.
The reading and thoughtful colored citizens of this community are much alarmed by the proscribing, murdering and disfranchising tendencies of Southern sentiment—for even white men who have interests here worth preserving feel compelled, by circumstances, to lend their approval to these outrages of all that makes life worth living Still there is evidently an undercurrent of unrest running through the life of colored society that presages a final up heaval that shall shake this social fabric from centre to circumference. All the great race journals and mind moulders of the country are laid under tribute to this great scare crow, "the race problem."
We gladly note that The Colored American is one great journal in which the varied people find full and free expression. Its newsy columns are weekly searched end to end for a remedy for the growing uneasiness that racks the thoughtful Negro brain. Race emigration, race colonozation, race concentration of capital, migration to foreign lands and education of this or that kind and degree are all, perhaps, wise and worthy suggestions of some of our wise and worthy leaders. But which and how many of them are really practical? Poverty and ignorance still interpose themselves between us and the attainment of any of our ideals. Can the poverty of the masses be overcome, under either present circumstances or that to which we are tending? Industrial education is possible, even under present circumstances, to most of our ambitious young people. Let us then cease to criticise and hasten to adopt Booker T. Washington's idea—the easiest, the best, the quickest way out of our poverty—and, let us remember too, that the "God of Nations" invites us in to daily council with Him. Let us all meet with Him one day. Who will name the day? C. C. Platt
Calvert. Texas.
A REMARKABLE MAN.
Mr. Booker T. Washington's distinguishing characteristic is the so called common sense, which is really so uncommon. His speech at the closing meeting of the Afro-American Conference should be read not only by every Negro, but by every white man in the country. It is a speech with a thought in every sentence.—Indianapolis Journal.
This is high praise indeed, but it is deserved. Mr. Washington has those
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. C.
qualities of leadership that are so rare that they come to but one or two men in a century. These qualities are repose of character, reserve, unfailing self respect and innate dignity. Added to these native wisdom and the faculty of saying and doing the right thing in the right way. Men of this kind never "slop over," never make bad breaks, never say foolish things and always do wise ones. These rare traits make Mr. Washington invaluable to his race as a leader and adviser and they also make him one of the most notable and valuable men of the age in which he lives. - Indianapolis World.
A PROMINENT GEORGIAN.
Mr. Lucius L. Lee, Atlanta's Leading Undertaker and Business Man a Visitor at the Nation's Capitol—His Prominence as an Oda Lellow,
Mr. Lucius L. Lee, a leading business man of Atlanta, Ga., the most prominent and successful undertaker of that city, and by all odds the most prominent and influential Odd Fellow in the State of Georgia, spent a few days in this city last week. He is a member of the B M.C., with headquarters at Philadelphia and is at pres-
J.
MR. LUCIUS L. LEE.
ent acting as Deputy Grand Master. For more than thirty years Mr. Lee has been the leading spirit in Odd Fellowship in the entire South and has devoted much of his time and his means to strengthen the Order and to advance its interests. Mr. Lee has been a delegate to every B. M. C., meeting held in this country for the last twenty.four years, and an introduction of him is hardly necessary to any of the strong men of the Order. He is being urged by his many friends to make the race for Deputy Grand Master. And he has consented to make the race which means that he will be elected.
No man stands higher in Odd Fellow circles than L. L. Lee. No one member of the Order has contributed more to its success than has Mr. Lee. He is known from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico. An enthusiastic Odd Fellow, one who has studies the intricasies as well as the beauties of the Order, one has been an active and energetic worker, one who has sat in judgment in the paying of the obligations of the Order and one who has never been found in the wrong in any decision he has made. he is by all odds the strongest, the best and the most logical candidate for the place. The concensus of opinion among the District Odd Fellows is that his election will be unanimous. Mr. Aldrick C. Lewis of this city who is a candidate for Director, Mr. Will L. Houston and other influential members of the District branch are all favorable to Mr. Lee and it looks as though he
would receive the solid support of the District. He is one of the most successful Afro-Americans in the Gate City. He began business some thirty-three years ago when there were few openings for colored men in the South. By perseverance, by industry, and by an indomitable will he has built up a small fortune and has reared an interesting family and is recognized throughout the State of Georgia and the South as an acknowledged leader of his people. The Order can make no mistake by electing Mr. Lee to the position to which he aspires.
Messrs. Harry Parker and John H. Berry of this city were guests of the Citizen's Republican Club of Philadelphia last week.
Mr. R. W. Green who has spent the summer at Atlantic City, N. J. is back with Messrs. Moore and Prioleau where he will spend the fall and winter. Mr. Green is a fixture at the Sparta Cafe.
The wonderful Face Bleach has been introduced in Washington and is offered to the public at a special rate. The two dollar packages can now be had for one dollar by calling at Ogram's Drug Store, corner Pennsylvania avenue and 18th street.
SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS.
ROOMS FOR RENT.
Two Large Rooms to rent—furnished or unfurnished 419 Q street, N.W. 2t
FOR RENT—Furnished or unfurnished rooms, with or without board. 407 Warner street, northwest, between 4th and 5th, Q and R.
FURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT.—Two single rooms in private family, with table board, lady or gentleman. Modern improve ments, near two lines of cars, north west section, apply Mrs. J. A., The Colored American office
AGENTS WANTED.
Enclose 2c stamp for reply, and we will send particulars telling how you can make from $75 to $150 per month, and also be presented with a fine Gold Watch. Address.
SCOTT REMEDY CO.
Box 570, Louisville, Ky.
Cora E. Dorsey and Christine Dorsey Typewriting, Copying and Steno graphic work satisfactorily performed at reasonable rates by the Misses Dorsey, Room 8, Le Droit Building Corner 8th and F street northwest.
WONDERFUL DISCOVERY
Curly Hair Made Straight By
TAKEN FROM LIFE:
BEFORE AND AFTER TREATMENT.
OZONIZED OX MARROW
THE ORIGINAL—COPYRIGHTED.
This wonderful hair pomade is the only safe preparation in the world that makes kinky hair straight as shown above. It nourishes the scalp, prevents the hair from falling out and makes it grow. Sold over 40 years and used by thousands, Warranted harmless. Testimonials by free on request, straightening kinky hair. Beware of imitations. Get the Original Ozonized Ox Marrow, as the genuine never fails to keep the hair pliable and beautiful. A toilet necessity for ladies and gentlemen. Elegantly perfumed. The great advantage of this wonderful pomade is that by its use you can straighten your own hair to the highest quality it is the most economical. It is not possible for anybody to produce a preparation equal to it. Full directions with every bottle. Only 50 cents. Sold by dealers or send us $1.40 Postal or Express Money Order for 3 bottles, express paid. Write your name and address plainly to
OZONIZED OX MARROW CO., 76 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Ill.
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7
Consumers Brewing Company
Brews the purest Beer on the Washington Market. The highest chemical authority in the district of Columbia, after an analysis just finished of all the different beers on the market, gives this as his verdict. Don't be fooled by jealousy, envy, or prejudice, on either or all of which is based our opposition. We have the most modern plant. We brew from sterilized water and choice hops and malt. We have one of the most skillful brewmasters in the county. Visit our plant and insist on us proving our assertions. We will be glad to show all. ABE KING.
Sec'y and Treas,
E. L. JORDAN,
Pres and Gen'l Mgr.
SPARTA Pool and Billiard Rooms, 1206 Pennsylvania Avenue, n. w.
This large, spacious and well-situated pleasure establishment has had added to it a new room in the third story for pool and billiards, where those who do not care to play in the larger apartments can have a degree of privacy not to be obtained elsewhere. This new room is handsomely furnished and lighted by electric lights. The atmosphere is cooled by electric fans. You are cordially invited to make inspection of these pool and billiard parlors. You will receive a hearty welcome at any time. Ask for SAMUEL A. TYLER, Manager.
Chris. Xander's QUALITY HOUSE.
909 7th St. N.W.
Established 36 years ago. The largest wholesale stock in town of the most exquisite, faultless wines and distillates (in all 240 kinds,) at Chris. Xander's moderate prices no others can compete in quality and purity with any of his goods. His liquors are absolutely free from fusel poison.
(No branch houses.)
Phone 1425.
...C. H. NAUGHTON...
LIQUORS AND SEGARS
Harper & Wilson a specialty. 1926 Fourteenth Street, Northwest
James F. Keenan
Rectifier and Wholesale
Liquor Dealer.
Elegant Club Whiskey a Specialty.
Importer of Five Wines, Brandies
Gins, Etc
462 Pennsylvania Avenue, N. W.
FRED. H. HABLE,
RAILROAD TICKET BROKER. Member of the American Ticket Brokers' Association. Cut rates
Call on us and we will save you from $1 to $5. Office in National Hotel Lobby, Washington, D.C.
8
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A NATIONAL NEGRO NEWSPAPER Published every Saturday at 459 C St. N. W Washington, D. C.
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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1900.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN COUNCIL.
There can be nothing but words of praise and commendation for the dignified and conservative manner in which the Afro-American Council did the work of its annual meeting recently held in Indianapolis. It was by far the best meeting that the organization has held since its creation in Rochester, New York several years ago. In representation it was surprisingly large when one takes into consideration the fact that it is no longer a brand new scheme with all the attraction that novelty commands. In the intellectual make-up of those who participated in the proceedings, it was a great improvement over its other annual sessions. It was singularly free from the nonsensical, rabid and extremely radical tone and expression of so many conventions which have been held by colored men in years gone by. In short the gathering was all that every thoughtful colored man wanted it to be and its address to the country is amable, sensible and conservative document, stating the case of the Negro as it should be stated in a calm, dignified and manly way.
Nothing that was done by the convention commends it more to the judgement of thoughtful men more than its refusal to be turned into a politically partisan gathering. Any such step would have been fatal and would have given the National Council a set back from which, perhaps, it would never have recovered. It would have been the cause for driving away from future meetings many useful men who do not wish to join in political wrangles outside of political conventions. Furthermore, any political expression given out by such a body as the Afro-American Council can win no votes for any party because the Council would forfeit the respect of all honest men because by going into politics it would be dishonest by violating one of its cardinal principles and its organic law. We have no doubt that
---
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D.
like all large bodies of colored men, the representatives who met at Indianapolis were Republicans in the proportion of ten to one, yet it would have been exceedingly poor policy in these men to have forced any partisan political expression from the Convention that would have driven away the men who did not agree with them in politics There are good men in all parties and the Negro needs all of his strong forces just at this time to get together and fight together for the things upon which his very existence depends—liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
The Colored American congratulates the Council on its good work and its President on his address. We hope that the Council will not get into politics as long as there is so much other important work for it to do. Let the men who compose these annual meetings have their political pow wows at home before they come to the meetings of the Council, or after they return to their respective States when the work of the Council is finished. Let the Council be kept as a common ground where all our men of character, intellect and high purpose may meet and discuss the Negro's welfare regardless of political affiliations.
Talk about business. Here it ts for you. The American Eagle, an influential Afro-American newspaper of St. Louis, Mo., remarks: "As a business proposition you should vote the democratic ticket."
In another column in this issue of The Colored American an abbreviated account is given of the Annual Session of the Grand United Order of True Reformers which met at the headquarters in Richmond, Va., at their hall. The history of this Order is wonderful indeed. To read of the great progress it has made in the last twenty years creates doubt in the minds of those who are not members of the Order, who are not acquainted with the internal workings of the Order and who do not know of its great achievements and accomplishments. The President and Grand Worthy Master, Rev, William L. Taylor, in delivering his opening address covered the work of one year and minimized it to a ten minute statement. Since the last annual session of the Order an increase of 226 new Fountains, of 126 Rosebuds, 462 E Class members, 670 B Class members and a total increase of the Fountain membership of more than 15,000 was shown. The True Reformers is by all odds the strongest financially and the most successfully operated concern of the race. It is conducted on a strictly business basis, and a visit to the headquarters will show that all business is tranacted on strictly banking principles. Its record is one which not only its members but the entire race should be proud of Score one more for the Grand United Order of True Reformers.
Bishop Henry M. Turner, the senior bishop of the A. M. E. Church, is getting a large share of public attention at this time. The bishop is a big brainy man and has always occupied a seat in the middle of the stage He has for thirty-eight years stood for the race, first, last and all the time. He was a fearless champion for the Negro when some of his critics were in their swadling clothes The Colored American believes that when the great and good bishop is ready he will give the reasons for the faith that is within him,
The Colored Citizen is a new journalistic bark, issued at Memphis, Tenn. It is now an interesting sheet, but a trifle heavy at the mast head.
Hope for the Negro.
Editor Colored American:--I I heartily endorse the course of your valuable journal on all race matters, that is touching the real state of affairs, and enjoy your timely and sensible editorials on all questions. I believe you are fully competent to give a reason for every hope you have touching the future of the American Negro, and I certainly appreciate your roseate haven for the Negro's future in America. And now, having read and re-read so much from an or timistie view, all of which I respect, I desire through the columns of your able journal and from your fertile brain, a statement of facts, upon which you base your hopes of the Negro's future in America. I am certain that such would be interesting and instructive, and will do much good in the field of doubt and fear.
I am respectfully yours,
R. H. BUMRY.
Monongahela City, Pa. The above communication fully explains itself. We tip our hat in acknowledgement of the complimentary reference to our efforts in behalf of the race. We are happiest when fighting the battles of our race. The editorial columns of The Colored American aim to state the case of the race, not as an optimist, but fairly, giving a reason for the faith within us.
The questions being addressed to us from all sections of the country by our subscribers and readers, unmistakably demonstrate the fact that our people are thinking along right lines. Intelligent thinking leads to intelligent action. We can only give the outlines of the fact upon which we base our hopes for the Negro's future in America.
In the first place, a race like an individual, is more contented and therefore capable of larger results in its home than elsewhere, especially when it has done its full share in the establishment of the home. The Negro was brought to America very soon after the white man secured a foothold and established himself here, against the consent of the aborigines. The Negro was brought here against his own consent. The red man has never fully accepted the white man's civilization, although the white man took possession of him and his country. The black man has fully accepted the white man's civilization, and has proven himself as patriotic and as devoted to the welfare of America as the veriest white man here. The Negro's blood has freely flowed upon the field of every battle waged for the freedom, union and honor of this country. Why then should we not believe that the Negro has a brilliant future in America? He is a part and parcel of the body politic, nolens, volens.
Granted that many rights heretofore accorded us in certain sections are now being withdrawn or denied; granted, that in certain other places heretofore regarded as cities of refuge, we are being smitten, as it were, in the houses of our friends; granted, that many a former friend to us has joined the great majority, or is at least dead to us, yet not withstanding all this, the future for us in America is brighter than anywhere else, for the reason that here character, brain, pluck, enterprise, accomplishments are achievements respected and honored when possessed by a colored man relatively as much as when possessed by a man of any other race or nationality.
We must expect great things for our race in this country, and prepare ourselves for their enjoyment. The white man who berates us should remember that if the United States currency he has in his pocket does not bear the gen
uine signature of a colored man, it is a worthless counterfeit; he should remember that every stamp that he uses to forward his mail throughout this country is issued by a colored man; he should remember that every real estate deed recorded in the nation's capital is recorded by a colored man; he should remember that the most indigenous and loyal citizen in this country is a colored man.
A glance at the opinion page of the average American newspaper about these times would induce an intelligent foreigner to believe that the chief occupation of Americans is politics. This too, notwithstanding our great progress and achievements in science commerce, industry, etc.
We point with pride to the Hart Farm School as indicating the capacity of one great teacher to lift the youth of the race out of unfavorable environments and to place them in the upward path to a life of usefulness, independence and dignity.
Here is an institution originated and developed in our midst which promises unlimited power for social progress and for the development of human character and capacity from the least promising and most hopeless and helpless element of our community life. All this has been done so modestly, so bravely, so effectively and with such devotion to all that is manly and worthy as to make it seem more like the growth of ages with unlimited resources of men and means than the creation of one individual, within less than three years, unaided and alone.
No one can read the articles in this issue upon this unique institution without perceiving that a new star of hope and help of the first magnitude has risen for the neglected children of our people who dwell in cities, and which furnishes a living illustration of Victor Hugo's saying—"That whoever opens a school, closes a prison."
Miss Lewis at the Thurber Conservatory
Miss Addie Lewis, daughter of Prof. J. Henry Lewis is visiting her uncle in New York City, and while there she is taking a special course in piano technique at the National Conservatory of Music; and her instructor reports very promising results. Miss Lewis will return to Washington about October 1, and form a limited class for piano instruction.
Mrs. Lavender formerly Miss Emma Johnson of 2439 P street n. w, has returned from a month's visit to her husband at Uliontown Pa, where the latter is employed. While at Union town Mr. and Mrs Lavender were pleasantly entertained as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Phil. Johnson, 23 Grant street that city.
One of the most active delegates who attended the late National Negro Business Leage which met in Boston, Mass., was Dr. James E. Shepard of Raleigh, N. C., Mr. Shepard is one of the best known young men of that State, and was Chief Clerk under Recorder H. P. Cheatham during Mr. Cheatham's first year as Recorder of Deeds. The Doctor is now at his old home in Raleigh where he is doing herculean services for the party. His speech before the National Negro Business League at Boston was one of the most pointed and effective of any delivered. Dr. Shepard will take part in the present campaign and will make some speeches in the north and east.
10
P.
[A tribute to Bishop A. Walters. Inspired by the reading of his address, delivered before the National Afro-American Council held at Indianapolis, Ind., Aug. 28 31,1909.]
THE TROJAN.
From the home, from the heart of this nation What echo of great joy will now resound! From within comes the Black man's salvation,
Not rocked in a cradle of splendor,
Through infancy, early manhood, or youth,
But a stranger to freedom, a defender,
A lover of righteousness and truth.
Now, exalted in the name of just heaven,
Over a church, o'er a nation, o'er man,
That the rights of freemen might be given,
For these, the gallant Walters will stand.
Having the ear, the heart of a nation,
In America, across the dark sea,
To the Council he bears information,
"Agitation" is expected of thee.
Shall we stand as the slave at the galley
Submissively hoping for a quiet end,
While the toil of our hands 'rich the valley,
And not for our God'given rights contend?
Would the slave from his thraldom dare ven.
Or captive return to native shore, [ture,
No matter how severe be the censure, [blow.
He who would be free must strike the first
Remember we are not slaves by nature,
But born for nobler, loftier end,
Though the purpose of God be not mature,
To its progress all our aid may lend.
Up from the flesh pots of the conqueror
Tear off this bitter thraldom like men:
Strike as our fathers—sainted heroes
For our liberty, for justice contend
What if caste, prejudice is increasing.
And our fetters are now more tightly drawn!
Shall we still lie here supinely weeping?
Strike now, men, or our last chance will be gone!
Hail to this Council of inspiration,
For ur daunted manhood, for equal rights,
A product—the black man's own creation
Led by such as Walters, as Arnett, White.
Midst outrage, opposition and labor,
As a race let us struggle for the right,
Thus educate the hearts of our neighbor
Our oppressor, yea our brother in white.
J. Francis Lee, A. B., Lancaster, S. C., Box
51, pastor Mt. Zion A. M. E. Zion church.
---
A Successful Georgian.
Dr. E. E. Green, one of the leading physicians and druggists of Macon, Ga., was in the city this week paying a visit to his brother-in-law, Hon. George H. White of North Carolina. Dr. Green is a native of Wilmington, N. G., but for the past fourteen years has practiced medicine successfully in Georgia. He is an excellent example of the possibilities of young men who equip themselves for the duties of life and who enter their profession with a determination to succeed. Dr. Green has a most interesting family of four children, the oldest a son who will enter Howard University Medical School this fall. He is a leading taxpayer and a prominent citizen of Macon and speaks most hopefully of the prospects for the Afro-American in Georgia.
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. C.
"BIG BOW"
The Indian Medicine Man Cures all Diseasesor no Charge. Call or Write. Dr. L. G. Havden, General Manager, Office hours 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily.
MissHarriet A. Gibbs.
MissHarriet A. Gibbs.
Graduate of Oberlin Conservatory of Music, and late of Boston.
TEACHER OF MUSIC, VOICE CULTURE, PIANO, ORGAN, HARMONY AND COUNTERPOINT. STUDIO: 14 N ST., N. W.
GREAT RACE BOOKS.
It is a fact that J. T. Haley & Co. 346 Court Square Nashville, Tenn. are the most extensive Race Book publishers in the United States. They are our friends and are giving employment to hundreds of men and women of the race. They publish the AFROAMERICAN ENCYCLOPAEDIA COLLEGE OF LIFE, UNCLE TOMS CABIN, SPARK LING GEMS, LAMP OF WISDOM, etc. These books sell at sight. Agents are having a harvest. Write Quick for terms and Territory
BUSH'S CAFE
Is now open. It contains all that is up to-date. A high line of Liquors, the choicest Cigars and an appetizing Free Lunch with a glass of Beer. You must make a visit to get an idea of the place. GEORGE BUSH, PROP., 701 4th Street, Opp. Pension Office.
THE M'KINLEY HOUSE.
489 M.uri Ave., Near 6th St. First class accommodations for all. An up to date Hotel for colored people. Rooms neatly furnished, linens clean, and prices within reach of all. Meals and Lunches served at all hours. THE PORTER HOUSE CAFE 103 6th St., N. W.
Wines, Liquors and Cigars -A full line of the choicest liquors, the best brands of cigars and the coolest beer in Washington. Messrs. B.T. Fields and John T. Lewis mixologists. MRS. M. S. BROWN & CO. Proprietors.
DO YOU LOVE HEALTH?
If so, call and see the Indian Herb Medicine Man, 620 North Eutaw Street, Baltimore, Md. I cure all diseases that are known to man or beast or no charge, no matter what your disease or sickness or affliction may be, and restore you to perfect health. Millions of people, the best and leading ones in the United States and Europe, will testify that I am the most wonderful healer of all complaints in the world. I use nothing but herbs, roots, barks, gums, balsams, seeds, berries, flowers and plants, made into teas. I have cured thousands that the most skillful physicians and the best hospital physicians in America and Europe had given up to die, and said there was no cure for them.
I cure the following diseases: Heart Disease, Consumption, Blood, Kidney, Bladder, Stricture, Piles in any form, Vertigo, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Lung, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Constipation, Rheumatism in any form, Pains and Aches of any kind, Colds, Bronchial troubles, Sores, Skin Diseases, all itching sensations, all Female Complaints, La Grippe or Pneumonia, Ulcers, Carbuncles, Boils, Cancer, the worst form, without the use of knife or instruments, Eczema, Pimples on face and body, Diabetes of Kidneys or Bright's Disease of the Kidneys. I cure any disease, no matter of what nature. Medicine sent to any address by express. For full particulars send 2 cent stamp for answer.
None genuine unless bought at 620 North Eutaw Street. Beware of imitators, as we have many.
J. P. KERR.
None genuine unless bought a imitators,as we have many.
HOTEL AND RESTAURANTS
FINE WINES
OLD WHISKIES
AND BRANDIES.
Liquors of all kinds.
Choice Cigars.
Philadelphia House,
M. F. CARROLL, Prop. Restaurant and Saloon, 348 Pennsylvania Avenue, N W. Washington, D. C. Meals to Order. Everything First Class. Billiard and Pool Parlors Attached.
BOSEL DOUGLASS.
220 B 10., AD 235 PA. AVE. N. W
EUROPEAN PLAN.
First-class in every particular.
MRS. DOLLY C. JONES,
Proprietress.
Washington, D. U.
Robert H. Key
FINE WINES, LIQUORS,
CIGARS, ETC.
Ladies' Dining Room.
Meals at all Hours
443 First Street Southwest.
Gray & Costley
Laudles and Gentlemen's Dining Room upstairs. The best of service guaranteed. 1313 E Street N. W. WASHINGTON, D. C.
Fritz Reuter's
HOTEL : AND : RESTAURANT
451, 453, 455, 457 Penn. Ave.
202, 208 & 210 41 St. N. W
Washington, D. C.
The Woodson Eouse
First class, newly furnished and decorated, unsurpassed cuisine, convenient to all cars. One half square from Pennsylvania Depot. 467 Missouri Avenue. HENRY WOODSON, PROPRIETOR. GASKINS & GAINES. Academy Restaurant [just around the corner] 320 8th Street, N. W. Opposite Kanns'. All leading brands of wine liquors and cigars, imported and domestic. Ladies and Gentlemen's Cafe Upstairs.
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HOTELS AND RESTAURANTS
D. T. GIBBODS.
WHOLESALE MANUFACTURING RETA
CONFECTIONER
523 41 Street, Southwest,
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Wedding Cakes Made
and Parties Furnished
at Short Notice.
Ice Cream All The
Year
Langston House
479 Mo. Ave. near 6th St. n. w.
Smoking and Reading Rooms; also home
for strangers. Meals served at all hours.
Menu a la Carte at popular prices. Call and
be convinced,
Joshua N Anderson.
I. J. Edwards. Props.
W. M. DRURY'S
RESTAURANT 1100 20th St., corner L. N. W. Washington, D. C.
HOTEL CLYDE
First-Class Accomodations For
Ladies and Gentlemen.
Hot and Cold Baths.
MRS. ALICE E. HALL,
Proprietress.
MOORE & PRIOLEAU
- Sparta Buffet and Cafe -
1216 Pa. Ave. Washington, D.C.
Fine wines, liquors and cigars
Hot Free Lunch Every Day
Ladies will receive special attention in
Dining Room upstairs.
SOUTHERN HOTEL,
Good board, steam heat and electric
bells, Home comfort, moderate
prices. 311 Pa. Ave., nw. Washington,
D. G. Fine wines, liquors,
cigars and tobacco.
Jack M Ryan, Proprietor
Wines Liquors and Cigars,
A Noonday Lunch from 11 30 to 2 p.m.
430 EIGHTH ST., N. W.,
WASHINGTON, D. C.
THE COLORED AMERICAN. WASHINGTON. B. B.
12
DINAH KNEADING DOUGH.
I have seen full many a sight
Born of day or drawn by night;
Sunlight on a silver stream,
Golden lilies all a-dream,
Lofty mountains, bold and proud,
Veiled beneath the lacelike cloud,
But no lovely sight I know
Equals Dinah kneading dough.
Brown arms buried elbow deep
Their domestic rhythm keep,
As with steady sweep they go
Through the gently yielding dough
Maids may vaunt their finer charms---
Naught to me like Dinah's arms,
Girls may draw, or paint, or sew---
I love Dinah kneading dough:
Fyes of jet and teeth of pearl,
Hair, some say, too tight a curl,
But the dainty maid I deem
Very near perfection's dream,
Swift she works and only flings
Me a glance, the least of things,
And I wonder, does she know
That my heart is in the dough?
PAUL: LAURENCE DUNBAR
THE NEGRO'S CASE IN EQUITY.
North Carolinian Wants a Square Deal-A Literary Revival - Notes
Raleigh, N.C., Special.—The Baptist Sentinel in its issue of August 30th, publishes an interesting article signed "P." which is headed "The White Religious Press of the State." The observations which "P." makes are all very good in their way, and is indeed a flattering commentary upon the awakening sense of justice of some few white men, but the underlying suggestion is to my mind a very dangerous one. The idea which obtains all through it is, that the two factions of white men settle between themselves the disposition which shall be made of the Negro, and depends upon the "good" white element to bring about a sort of millennium. Now I would not like to shake the childlike confidence which "P." evinces as to the ability of the "good whites" to bring this state of affair about, but it is evident that "P." has not reckoned upon the fact that their solicitations for the Negro—the white man is a white man the world over. He is the same in New York as in New Orleans; the same in Akron, Ohio, as in Wilmington, N.C.
Another peculiar source of comfort which "P." derives from the present situation is that "in time the whites will suffer as much as the Negro." Now what we want to do is, not to console ourselves with the thought that through us some one is to be made to suffer, but rather bend our individual efforts toward bringing about a condition under which no one or class will suffer. "P." states further that the race issue is a dead one. Well, I don't think so. Just as long as the Negro is imposed upon—just so long will the race be an issue—for say and do what you will there are some MEN in the Negro race, who will not brook the intolerant treatment of the whites and will resent it whenever or wherever shown. No, the Negro must not submit his case to the white religious press or the white any other kind of press—he has a press of his own and he must have a hand in the settlement of his own case in equity.
A number of young ladies and gentlemen banded themselves together recently and formed a literary and musical society with a view of studying the compositions of the masters in literature and music. The first public meeting was held on Sunday, Aug. 26th, at the Davie St. Presbyterian church. The meeting was a very good one and the society bids fair to be a success. Miss Henrietta Mabry, Miss Carrie Mabry.
Mr. Spencer and John T. Haskins are the officers. The society meets each Friday evening.
I see by the newspapers that recently a Colored Business Men's League held a meeting in Boston. Wonder what for?
A number of copies of The Colored American have reached the hands of the people of Raleigh and great interest is shown in the reading at the top of the 16th page.
Raleigh is devoting its time to the coming Colored State Fair and the Baptist Convention, both of which meet in this city during September. The boys are already having their suits cleaned and pressed. I believe that's about all. HASKINS.
University Park Temple Re-opened for the Season.
The opening services of University Park Temple on last Sunday were very interesting throughout the day. In the morning the church was filled to overflowing to welcome the pastor, Rev. Sterling N. Brown, backed to his pulpit from his summer vacation. Rev. Brown preached a most instructive sermon and made a talk on church work in general which was highly appreciated by the members and friends of Park Temple. The well known and now famous choir with its quota of splendid singers was out in full force and under the direction of Mr. Walter B. Hayson, its efficient leader. In the evening the services were made especially interesting by an address delivered by Prof. Robert H. Terrell, principal of the High School and one of the organizers of the church. Mr. Terrell's subject was "A United Front" and in it he gave especial emphasis to the necessity of union in all church effort. He spoke of the great and useful work that University Park Temple had been doing during its existence for the young people of the locality in which it is situated. He told of the splendid efforts of the pastor and congregation of Park Temple in making the one of the most prominent in this city. Mr. Terrell's address was highly interesting and greatly appreciated. University Park Temple has nearly 200 members, a wonderful growth in so short a time. On next Thursday night the congregation will give a reception at the church complimentary to Rev. Sterling Brown, the pastor. The public is invited.
Our Women Active.
The Colored American gives an account of the industrial organization known as the Order of the Galilean Fishermen. It was incorporated in 1878 and combines industrial and beneficiary features which meet the needs of the race. The order owns land in Virginia and Alabama, and has several cooperative institutions. Mrs. Maggie W. Steward, formerly a teacher in one of the high schools of Wilmington, N. C., but now living in Bristol, Tenn., is associated with her husband in furthering the interests of the Order and is the editor of its organ, The Ship. She has secured 5,000 subscribers for this be sides collecting thousands of dollars for the Fishermen plantations from the Negro race, which she believes should be self supporting. She has delivered over a hundred free lectures in the interests of the Order since March 1. Woman's Tribune.
THE GRAND FOUNTAIN. United Order of True Reformers.
ORGANIZED January 1, 1881. Offices 604, 606 and 608 N. 2nd St., - - Richmond, Va. The Strongest Financial Organization the Negro Has Produced in This Country. Read and learn for yourself what it has done and how to become a member. SUBORDINATE FOUNTAINS. Subordinat Fountains are composed of males and females, sound in health and mind, and of good loral character.
Conventions.—When joining the Order through Conventions, persons are taken in from 14 to 50 years of age; when joining the Fountain by application persons are taken from 14 to 60 years of age complete.
Joining or Benefit Fees.—From 14 to 60 years of age, $4.60; at 50, $5.10; at 55, $5.60; at 60, $6.60.
Death benefits.—$75 and $125. Should death occur within the first year, $75; after the first year, $125 will be paid to the heirs, assigns or legal representatives.
Sick benefits.—From $6 to $9 per month, paid weekly.
Monthly Dues are 35 or 50 cents per month. Taxes are 80 cents annually, paid semiannually, January and July. The nearest monthly dues secure the highest weekly sick benefits.
Life membership -Ten snails of Bank Stock, costing each member $5 a share, made said member a life member. After paying dues and owning the stock one year, the fruits of the stock will pay the member's dues, and leave a handsome little balance each year. Just calculate—monthly dues, 50 cents per month, and taxes 80 cents per year, amount to $6.60, and a dividend on ten shares of stock at 20 per cent on the dollar, or $1 per share, amounts to $10 annually, which will pay the member's dues, $6.80, and leave a balance of $3.20. Should the dues be 35 cents per month, and 80 cents taxes per year, the monthly dues and taxes will amount to $5 per year. The dividend of $10 would pay the monthly dues and taxes, and leave a balance of $5.
Additional Benefits of Life Membership.—Should adverse circumstances befall a member, said member may take his ten shares of stock and Fountain policy, and secure a loan from $1 to $88, which will enable said member to tide over the misfortune, pay up the loan, redeem his policy and stock, and go on his way rejoicing.
2. ROSEBUD FOUNTAIN (For the Children.)
Rosebud Fountains are composed for children, male and female, from 8 to 14 years of age.
Joining or Benefit Fees, $1.50; paid spot cash or by installations.
Death Benefits.—$24.50 and $37.00. Should death occur within the first year, $24.50; after the first year $37 will be paid to the parents or guardians.
Sick Benefits.—From $1.50 to $4.00 per month paid weekly; 50 cents, 75 cents and $1 per week, respectively. The highest monthly dues purchase the highest weekly sick benefits.
Monthly Dues and Taxes.—The monthly dues are 10 cents, 15 cents, or 25 cents, respectively, just as the Fountain may es, 10 cents annually, paid semiannually, January he child is allowed to purchase five shares of Bank makes his policy self-supporting, with a balance
HE REGALLA.
Rosebud Fountains are composed for chid male, from 8 to 14 years of age. Joining or Benefit Fees, $1.50; paid spot ments. Death Benefits.—$24.50 and $87.00. Shi within the first year, $24.50; after the first year to the parents or guardians. Sick Benefits.—From $1.50 to $4.00 per m 50 cents, 75 cents and $1 per week, respect monthly dues purchase the highest weekly Monthly Dues and Taxes.—The monthly 15 cents, or 25 cents, respectively, just as es, 10 cents annually, paid ser ne child is allowed to purchase makes his policy self-supporti
Fountains are composed for children, male and female to 14 years of age.
For Benefit Fees, $1.50; paid spot cash or by installment.
Benefits.—$24.50 and $37.00. Should death occur first year, $24.50; after the first year $37 will be paid in fees or guardians.
Benefits.—From $1.50 to $4.00 per month paid weekly, $1 cents and $1 per week, respectively. The highest is purchase the highest weekly sick benefits.
Dues and Taxes.—The monthly dues are 10 cents, 25 cents, respectively, just as the Fountain may pay, 10 cents annually, paid semiannually, January. The child is allowed to purchase five shares of Bank stock, makes his policy self-supporting, with a balance
Rosebud Fountains are composed for children, male and female, from 3 to 14 years of age.
Joining or Benefit Fees, $1.50; paid spot cash or by installments.
Death Benefits.—$24.50 and $37.00. Should death occur within the first year, $24.50; after the first year $37 will be paid to the parents or guardians.
sick Benefits.—From $1.50 to $4.00 per month paid weekly; 50 cents, 75 cents and $1 per week, respectively. The highest monthly dues purchase the highest weekly sick benefits. Monthly Dues and Taxes.—The monthly dues are 10 cents, 15 cents, or 25 cents, respectively, just as the Fountain may .es, 10 cents annually, paid semiannually, January ae child is allowed to purchase five shares of Bank makes his policy self-supporting, with a balance
HE REGALLA.
la that is worn by the members of the Order. For
Ages. Fee.
14 to 25 years..... $2 50
25 to 35 years..... 2 75
35 to 45 years..... 8 00
45 to 50 years..... 8 25
50 to 55 years..... 8 25
55 to 60 years..... 8 50
60 to 65 years..... 8 50
H Class Policies are as follows:
CLASS E TAX
Ages. Johnl.
14 to 25 years..... $5 00
25 to 35 years..... 5 25
35 to 45 years..... 5 50
45 to 50 years..... 5 75
50 to 55 years..... 5 75
55 years (Complete)..... 6 00
les are as follows:
CLASS E TABLE.
Ages. Joining Fee. Value of Certi2cate. A
$5 00 $500 00 1
5 25 500 00 1
5 50 500 00 1
5 75 450 00 1
5 75 400 00 1
6 00 850 00 1
CLASS E TABLE.
Joining Fee. Value of Certificate. Annual Dues. Paid Quarterly.
... $5 00 $500 00 $9 50 $2 40
... 5 25 500 00 9 50 .....
... 5 50 500 00 10 40 .....
... 5 75 450 00 11 40 2 85
... 5 75 400 00 11 40 2 85
... 6 00 850 00 11 00 2 85
first birthday.
Benefited as soon as his policy is issued.
Above named Classes may be divided into quarterly
role the 1st of January, April, July, and October.
According to the credit of each member after paying ex-
stock Stock for said member.
Once the member gets 5 per cent drawback in cash.
1. By the latter mode of payment each member is
using the membership independent of the agent, and
using the percentage that would be paid to the agent
of either one of these classes are only required
for the Fountains and Rosebuds meet twice a month.
Class are allowed to purchase 15 shares of Bank
of their membership. The stock yields a dividend.
2. Should misfortune befall them on their pathway
indicates and policies, and secure a loan after a given
25 shares of Bank Stock, and two shares for each
they may take their policies and certificates of Bank
superl of time. You will readily see that the mem-
like the Fountains and the Rosebuds, benefits the
day in death.
Ages. Joining Fee. Value of Certi2cate. Annual Dues. Paid Quarterly.
14 to 25 years..... $5 00 $500 00 $9 50 $2 40
25 to 85 years..... 5 25 500 00 9 50 .....
85 to 45 years..... 5 50 500 00 10 40 .....
45 to 50 years..... 5 75 450 00 11 40 2 85
50 to 55 years..... 5 75 400 00 11 40 2 85
55 years (Complete)..... 6 00 850 00 11 00 2 85
The ages are reckoned from the last birthday.
Remember that the applicant is benefited as to
the annual dues of either of the above names
payments of three months each, payable the 1st
senses will go to the purchase of Bank Stock for
If dues are paid annually in advance, the mea-
nd and his full proportion of annual dues. By the b
made his own collector, thereby making the mea-
self-supporting, and the member receiving the per-
to collect.
You will readily see that the members of either
to meet once or four times a year, while the Foun-
Life needs.—The members of B Class are a
Stock and two shares for each year of their mea-
of per cent, or one dollar per share. Should m
of life, they may take their stock certificates and
period of time.
Members of Class B can purchase 25 shares o
year of their membership; likewise, they may take
Stock, and secure a loan after a given period of the
borship, in either one of these Classes, like the F
number in health, as well as his family in death.
If the applicant is benefited as soon as his policy is issued of either of the above named Classes may be divested months each, payable the 1st of January, April, June, and annual dues remaining to the credit of each member, the purchase of Bank Stock for said member. And annually in advance, the member gets 5 per cent portion of annual dues. By the latter mode of payment, thereby making the membership independent and the member receiving the percentage that would be by see that the members of either one of these classes incur times a year, while the Fountains and Rosebuds m. The members of B Class are allowed to purchase 2 shares for each year of their membership. The stock one dollar per share. Should misfortune befall them, take their stock certificates and policles, and secure a Class E can purchase 25 shares of Bank Stock, and the membership; likewise, they may take their policles and on a loan after a given period of time. You will readily use of these Classes, like the Fountains and the Rosebuds as well as his family in death.
Remember that the applicant is benefited as soon as his policy is issued.
The annual dues of either of the above named Classes may be divided into quarterly payments of three months each, payable the 1st of January, April, July, and October. The balance of annual dues remaining to the credit of each member after paying expense will go to the purchase of Bank Stock for said member. If due
If dues are paid annually in advance, the member gets 5 per cent drawback in cash, and his full proportion of annual dues. By the latter mode of payment each member is made his own collector, thereby making the membership independent of the agent, and self-supporting, and the member receiving the percentage that would be paid to the agent to collect.
You will readily see that the members of either one of these classes are only required to meet once or four times a year, while the Fountains and Rosebuds meet twice a month. Life benefits. The members of B Class are allowed to purchase 15 shares of Bank Stock and two shares for each year of their membership. The stock yields a dividend of per cent, or one dollar per share. Should misfortune befall them on their pathway of life, they may take their stock certificates and policies, and secure a loan after a given period of time.
Members of Class E can purchase 25 shares of Bank Stock, and two shares for each year of their membership; likewise, they may take their policies and certificates of Bank Stock, and secure a loan after a given period of time. You will readily see that the membership, in either one of these Classes, like the Fountains and the Rosebuds, benefits the member in health, as well as his family in death.
5. THE TRUE REFORMERS' BANK.
The Savings Bank of the G. F, U, O. T. E. was 1888. Its capital stock is $100,000. It commenced 1889. The amount of business to March 1, 1898, is stock of this bank is sold to the membership of the buds, B and E classes, and pays a dividend of 20 p. l. Persons can deposit their moneys on time or pays 4 per cent interest on all time deposits. Monies held subject to the orders of the depositors. Dep upwards. Special attention is given to the collection of the only bank in Richmond which continued to pay the financial stringency, while the other banks were
bank of the G. F. U. O. T. R. was chartered March. stock is $100,000. It commenced business April 3. of business to March 1, 1898, is $3,458,100. The is sold to the membership of the Fountains, Rosees, and pays a dividend of 20 per cent on the dole deposit their moneys on time or demand. The bank interest on all time deposits. Moneys on demand are the orders of the depositors. Deposits are receivedention is given to the collection of notes and drafts. Richmond which continued to pay currency to itsacy, while the other banks were using script.
The Savings Bank of the G. F. U. O. T. R. was chartered March 1888. Its capital stock is $100,000. It commenced business April 3, 1889. The amount of business to March 1, 1898, is $3,458,100. The stock of this bank is sold to the membership of the Fountains, Rose-lar. Persons can deposit their monies on time or demand. The bank pays 4 per cent interest on all time deposits. Moneys on demand are held subject to the orders of the depositors. Deposits are received from 10 cents and upwards. Special attention is given to the collection of notes and drafts. In 1893 this was the only bank in Richmond which continued to pay currency to its depositors during the financial stringency, while the other banks were using same
6. REAL ESTATE OF THE U. O. T. R.
This Department manages and controls the pre of the necessity of having offices and buildings in organization, and to furnish halls for the Subordi farms, 8; dwellings, 2; hotels, 1; with a fee simple
that manages and controls the property of the organiza-
tion having offices and buildings in which to carry on the
the furnish halls for the Subordinate Lodges. Building
1, 2; hotels, 1; with a fee simple value of $104,000. B
controls the property of the organization. It grew out buildings in which to carry on the business of the Subordinate Lodges. Buildings now owned, 12; a fee simple value of $104,000. Buildings leased, 18.
This Department manages and controls the property of the organization. It grew out of the necessity of having offices and buildings in which to carry on the business of the organization, and to furnish halls for the Subordinate Ledges. Buildings now owned, 12; farms, 3; dwellings, 2; hotels, 1; with a fee simple value of $104,000. Buildings leased, 13.
7. THE REFORMER, the Organ of the Order.
The Reformer is the Beacon-Light, the Head-Light, the General Messenger and the General Agent of the Brotherhood. It is a live race journal, with a circulation of 6,000. It is the medium of the Order, and its columns teem with all its doings and achievements. Send for sample copies. It is published weekly in The Reformer Printing Office, Elkmend, Fn., having a first-class job department, and makes a specialty of high-class work.
is the Beacon-Light, the Head-Light, the General
the Brotherhood. It is a live race journal, with a c
of the Order, and its columns teem with all its dolags
option. It is published weekly in The Reformer Pr
a first-class job department, and makes a specialty of
the Head-Light, the General Messenger and the is a live race journal, with a circulation of 6,000 columns teem with all its doings and achievements. Ed weekly in Who Reformer Printing Office, Richmond, and makes a specialty of high-class work
The Reformer is the Beacon-Light, the Head-Light, the General Messenger and the General Agent of the Brotherhood. It is a live race journal, with a circulation of 6,000. It is the medium of the Order, and its columns teem with all its doings and achievements. Send for sample copies. It is published weekly in The Reformer Printing Office, Bishend, Fn, having a first-class job department, and makes a number of high-algae news
This Degur style and pride
4. CLASSES.
B and E
benefits.
B Class Poll
HOLLYWOOD
hip, male and females, and secure life and death
Joining
Fee.
Value of
Certificate.
Annual
Dues.
Paid
Quarterly.
$2 50
$200 00
$4 75
$1 20
2 75
200 00
4 75
1 20
8 00
200 00
5 70
1 43
8 25
140 00
6 65
1 66
8 25
115 00
6 65
1 66
8 50
90 00
7 60
1 90
8 50
65 00
7 60
1 90
That the hot weather is doing over time.
That the concert and entertainment season is on.
That "King Rastus" made a decided hit at the Bijou Theatre this week.
That a number of recent appointees in the Census Office will be dropped.
That Dr. W. A. Warfield will not visit Atlantic City any more this season.
That Col. Bill Murrell is not throwing any bouquet at Editor Chase these days.
That E L. Thornton is still dreaming of being editor of a great race newspaper.
That L. W. Pullies has been reinstated to his old position in the Pension Office.
That Detective Henry Lacey is adding new laurels to his already brilliant record.
That the theatres of Washington are not catering for colored patronage this season.
That Maryland, Indiana, Illinois and Kentucky are still in the list of doubtful States.
That Prof. John T. Layton will be the next Director of Music for the colored schools.
That Major Sylvester, Chief of Police, is giving a square deal to his colored subordinates.
That merit will win every time and that color cuts but little figure in business matters.
That Harry Smith of the Cleveland Gazette is after Mr. John P. Green with a sharp stick.
That Mr. Andrew F. Hilyer will soon issue another edition of the Union League Directory.
That Mr. Robert T. Douglas is one of the most successful young business men in the District.
That a first-class boat owned and operated by colored men will float on the Potomac next summer.
That colored men who engage in business and do not attend to it need not expect to succeed.
That Prof. Jesse Lawson will invest a few hundred dollars in a certain Washington newspaper.
That Col. Perry H. Carson is sawing wood and drawing his "per diem" from the District government.
That Prof. Kelly Miller will set a pace as President of the Bethel Literary and Historical Society.
That Dr. A. M. Curtis of Freedmen's Hospital is making a great record for the institution and for himself.
That Dr. Edward Williston is building up a large and lucrative practice by his strict attention to business.
That the Indiana colored papers had their inning during the session of the National Afro-American Council.
That Col. J. M. Ryan holds the record for the largest number of fish caught up the Potomac this summer. That The Colored American maintains its position at the head of the class of all Afro-American newspapers That a number of colored lawyers of the District bar are doing a good business and have healthy bank accounts.
That a commotion occurred in the Treasury Department and in Sixth Auditor's Office when the order was given out to the man who "handles the dough" not to pay except on the first and fifteenth of each month.
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. C.
That the colored newspapers of West Virginia are either independent or are openly supporting the Democratic ticket.
That H. Y. Arnett of the Recorder's Office is one of the most painstaking and conscientious young men around that office.
That a great many District people who spent money at the late Philadelphia Convention are still clamoring to get it back.
That some wealthy colored men of the District prefer to let their property stand idle rather than rent it to men of their own race.
That a number of wedding are on the taple, and that a number of young ladies will resign their positions as school teachers.
That unless a number of young men who are connected with the city post office mend their way they will be asked to resign.
That John E. Bruce is doing the most efficient work of any Afro American connected with the Republican National Committee.
That you must take a grain of salt with a statement from local politicians that they have been "invited" to take part in the campaign.
That Thomas J. Calloway will have his balloon punctured by the colored press when he returns to this country from the Paris Exposition.
That a number of colored comps will be dropped from the Government Printing Office for incompetency and for taking too much leave.
That Prof. Robert H. Terrell of the High School is preparing to send a few more young men to Exeter preparatory to going to Harvard College.
That at least two race newspapers were subsidized to give full reports of the meeting of the late National Afro-American Council at Indianapolis, Ind.
That the Colored Advisory members of the Republican National Committee are not throwing any business to colored newspapers, with two exceptions. That the agitation which The Colored started for Afro-Americans to patronize race enterprises has increased the business of the Capital Savings Bank. That editor R. C. O. Benjamin of Kentucky is making money out of "Tallow Dick" who is accused of killing the late Governor-elect Goebel of Kentucky.
That a number of colored men contemplate going in business for them selves to corral a few of the many thousand dollars spent by colored people with white merchants.
That the army of Washingtonians who went to the summer resorts to work during the heated term are telling their friends what a delightful time they had at such and such a hotel.
Obituary.
William R. Turner of Atlanta, Ga died Friday, Sept. 7, 1900, at the residence of his friend, Mr. Matthew M Taylor. Funeral exercises were held Sunday, Sept. 9, at 2 p. m., Metropolitan A. M. E. Zion church, D street s.e. The Young Men's Protective League turned out in a body. The floral tributes from Lieut. Blish, Employees of Army and Navy Club, Misses Woodfin, The Ladies Improvement Club, Miss Rhoda Stuart, and Miss Alice Parker were beautiful and highly appreciated by his friends. Interment at Harmony cemetery.
Has it Ever Occurred to You?
Has it Ever Occurred to You?
That the Barber Shop at the corner of 6th and Missouri avenue, northwest, is the neatest, coolest and most up to-date in the city? Work done in first-class style by first-class artists. Come once and you will come again. All brands of imported and domestic cigars and tobacco
BARBERS:
Bud Harris, of Kentucky,
Peter Walsh, of Washington, D. C.
E. L. Payne, of Washington, D. C.
Wilber Richards, Porter.
W. M. HILL, Prop., 101 6th St., N. W., Opp. 6th St. Depot.
W. M. HILL, Prop., 101 6th St., N. W., Opp. 6th St. Depot.
Mme Turner's Great French System
Gives a Wonderful
And Beautiful Complexion.
Prices Reduced Until September 29th.
Now is your chance to get rid of your Liver Spots, Freckles, and all Blemishes, in 8 or 10 days. Mystic Face Bleach and accompanying Soap 75 Cents. If not found at your druggist's send to
MME. M. C. TURNER,
1312 Carondelet Street, New Orleans, La.
and received great applause. Rev. J. C. Dent is the pastor of the church and he was happy at the size of the collection.
Lewis Belt of Martinsburg, W. Va., a well-known and respected colored citizen, of this city, died at his home here July 5 of stomach trouble, age fifty five years. He was a slave belonging to the late Hector Bell of Winchester, Va., and acted as valet to his master. After the war he came to this city, and had conducted a barber shop here for twenty-five years. He was an ardent democrat and the leading colored citizen of the city. He leaves a small fortune to his widow. He had no children.
A few more business firms like Mme. Turner's will solve the race problem. While in New Orleans this summer, I stopped at a house where there was a child with a very sore head, it was covered with one solid scab and was awful to look at but in a weeks time the childs head was to all appearance perfectly well to my surprise. I asked what cured it and was told they used Mme. Turner's skin and scalp soap with hot water and that it worked like a charm. So I went down to 1312 Carondelet street and bought a cake for my face which was fairly knotty with bumps and black heads. I had spent several dollars for different preparations, but they failed every time, but after using Mme. Turner's skin and scalp soap for a few days, every bump and black head was gone, so I consider that was the best 25 cents ever spent. I also heard that this soap was used in some of hospitals there. So I say again such merit as that will go far towards solving the race problem.
Mr. William A. Dinquid paid a flying trip to Philadelphia last week to witness the marriage of his step daughter, Miss Ida A. Webster to Mr. James B. Williams of Philadelphia who is a law student at Lincoln University.
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The Emancipation Celebration.
Dayton, Ohio, Special—Emancipation day in Dayton will be celebrated with a picnic and entertainment at Frog Island Park. A cake walk will be given between 10 couples for a prize between 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. The merry-ground and the live headed man will be in attendance. The committee of arrangements consist of Charles White, Albert Ferguson, James Johnson, James Hoskins, William Logau, J. H. Guinea, Jack Haskell manager and J. C. Burnette cashier. Dayton can boast of having the finest barber shop in the state. It is owned by Mr. Jeff Roberts and managed by Mr. W. A. Johnson. Mr. Editor Dayton can also boast of having the finest Negro saloon in the state. It is owned by Mr. M. C. Moore and managed by Mr. Jeff Roberts. As far as politics is concerned Dayton is behind the times. We have no one holding positions as clerks. We have a few janitors and two police on the force. I am told that a young man of find education made a fight for a clerkship and would have received the appointment if it had not been for the people of his own race fighting him. The Ohio campaign opened in glory at Youngstown last Saturday. Senator Foraker sounded the key note and declares that Mc Kinley's administration the paramount issue. History of the past four years was reviewed by him. Depew, Hanna and Schurman were present.
ROUNDER.
Corner Stone Laying.
The corner stone of Mount Moriah church on 2nd street between M and N streets, s. w., was relaid last Thursday afternoon, September 6th, by the Grand Lodge of Masons under the direction of Grand Master, Robert H. Terrell. The exercises were of a very interesting character and beautifully carried out. The Grand Master was assisted by John P. Turner, Acting Deputy Grand Master, Wm. H. Myers, Grand Secretary, Lewis H. Wayne, Grand Treasurer, J. F. N. Wilkinson, Grand Chaplain and J. T. Beason, Grand Architect. W. R. Laws was the Grand Orator and delivered a splendid address in every way
13
Wilber Richards, Porter.
Prominent Negro Democrat Dead.
---
A BUSINESS WOMAN.
Madame Turners Wonderful Soap.
41 Clarkson street. New York.
REISTER
The above portrait is a fine counterfeit presentiment of Porter S. Simpson, editor and proprietor of The Colored Dispatch, published at Colorado Springs Colorado. He was born at Tuscumbia. Ala., December 13 1864, where he resided until he was sixteen years of age, when he went to Memphis, Tenn., and secured employment as a waiter at the Peabody hotel where he remained about seven years. Then he and his brother conducted the first colored confectionary and ice cream parlor in Memphis at 103 Beale street. After running this enterprise about two years Mr. Simpson sold out his interest, started a grocery store on Brunswick avenue, which he he conducted until '92 when the lynching occurred. During the exodus he came to Colorado Springs in company with forty seven young men, and secured employment at the Antlers hotel. Several of the waiters started a newspaper which made its debut November 19 '92, known as the Western Enterprise, Porter S. Simpson was unanimously chosen as its editor, one by one all of the members dropped out except Mr. Simpson who became sole proprietor, later Mr. J. L. Fleming became associated with the Enterprise as partner. On March 1st 1900 Mr. Simpson was appointed as clerk in the County Assessor's office, and disposed of his interests in the Enterprise. Mr. Fleming conducted the Enterprise until August 3rd 1900, when he died. The people of Colorado Springs, both white and colored urged Mr. Simpson to reenter the journalistic field. He started the Colored Dispatch, which paper he now publishes.
He was the first colored editor of El Paso county, and the first colored man of El Paso county ever appointed to a permanent position as clerk in El Paso county, which position he now holds.
How Creelman Lost His Hat Brim.
(From The Saturday Evening Post.)
Homer Davenport, the cartoonist, was an assidious attendant at the Republican National Convention.
"Did I tell you about my father and Creelman?" he said at the close of one of the sessions. "No? Well it was this way: My father had been here with me and I've been busy pointing out to him all those men people read about, so father could feel, when he read his paper, that he was now getting his money's worth.
14
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. U.
"Well, he took them all in and yesterday we ran against James Creelman. I introduced father, and was surprised to see that he took in calmly. Well, each of them seemed to get the idea that the other was a little hard of hearing and they got their heads close and jumped in without any preliminary sparring—this way.
"Well, you know that way of Creelman's when he gets interested—jerks his head up and down as he talks—this way. Well, first thing I saw, the brim of his straw Fedora caught the brim of father's Derby and jammed it down over his face. That almost rattled father, but he straightened his hat and the talk went on. A little more, and an upward jolt caught under the Derby and tilted it clear off, but father caught it on the drop.
"Another man came up just then and father edged away, a little red in the face and breathing a trifle hard.
"I say, Home, who is that man? Knocked my hat off twice!"
"What! Didn't you know? That's James Creelman!"
"Creelman, the correspondent and special commissioner to high nobs?"
"Yes, he's the one."
"Great Scott! And I was talking with Creelman and didn't know it?"
"I told him that was about the size of it, and father didn't say a word. He just pulled his hat down, 'way down over his ears - tight and firm—this way. And then with a determined look on his face, he waded in again."
Davenport paused a few moments, and a far-away look came into his eyes. Then he added:
"Well, Creelman just wore off the brim of that straw Fedora on father's Derby."
A farewell reception was tendered Miss Fannie Jones who has spent sometime in this city as the guest of Mrs. Mamie Laws, 1704 V street The reception was held at the residence of Miss Annie White, 1418 Pierce Place last Tuesday evening. A very eloquent address in behalf of the company was delivered by Mr. Ferdinand Bradley. An excellent supper was served after which a dance took place. Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. Laws, Mr. and Mrs. Williams, Misses Delia Winfield, Fannie Walker, Pinkney, Messrs. Bradley, McKinney, Reeder, Jones and Walker. Miss Jones leaves for North Carolina next week where she will be married on the 26th.
Telephone. 797
THE RAY
MEDICAL INSTITUTE
X Ray in use for exam location and diagnosis. German specialist treat all chronic diseases of man and woman; catarh, theumatism, brain, stomach, hear t,kidney, bladder, hemorrhoids (piles) cured; vitality restored
RUPTURE CURED.
Latest electric discovery; no knife, no junction; no pain. Trusses on trial Private diseases, stricture, impotency, varicocele, hydrocele, syphilitic skin and blood poison cured without mercury. E-special attention given to old and so-called incurable cases treated and cure accomplished. Hours 10 to 12, 2 to 6. Tuesdays and Saturdays till 8 evening.
DR. CZAKRA.
316 6th street and 494 Louisiana avenue, northwest
$1.00 ONLY $1.00
HISTORY of the COLORED SOLDIERS IN THE SPANISH-AMREICAN WAR.
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By EDWARD A. JOHNSON,
Author of the Famous "School
CONTAINS—Pen pictures of the Larimar Juan, El Caney, and around Santiago.—Concannon which knocked over the block bar Berry, the colored soldier who was first to The glowing tribute to McKinley, Miles, R. of Negro Soldiers—General Morgan advocated Gomez, Miss Ciseros, and the Cukar Wor Army—The Negro Poet, Paul Lawrence! outwitted the diplomacy of the Spanish M. Uncle Sam's money—The colored Register money to make it good.
Every Page Brimful of New and Intoe and line engravings of soldier, officer, War, with A FINE PICTURE OF AGUINALD nira, and a brief sketch of the Philippinos a Handsome Picture of General Nemand of all the American Army, who sailed Santiago was "without a parallel in the hir Little," Malled Free.
AGENTS
Big percentage. Send for copy.
E. A. JOE
Corner West and Lenoir Streets,
of the Laring Charges made by Negro Soldiers at San Santiago.—Corporal Brown killed at his post while firing a block house and saved the Rough Riders.—Sergeant was first to raise the American flag on San J. an Hill—Yay, Miles, Roosevelt and many others on the bravery organ advocates Negro officers.—Antonio and Jose Macio, Naval Women Cavalry.—The Negro Paymasters in the Lawrence Jumbar—"Eddie" Savoy, the colored man who Spanish Minister at Washington.—The Negro who sealed Register of the Treasury who has to sign Uncle Sam's New and Interesting Reading, with about fifty half-adder, officers, and scenes of the late Spanish-American AGUINALDO, his headquarters. a Filipino lady of Philippinos and then civilization.
General Nelson A. Miles, the Major General in company, who said the fighting of the colored soldiers around the world." All for $1, "Much in AGENTS WANTED.
Call for copy of book and Agents' terms. Address
A. JOHNSON
Streets, Raleigh, North Carolina.
Author of the Famous "School History of the Negro Race."
CONTAINS—Pen pictures of the Laring Charges made by Negro Soldiers at San Juan, El Caney, and around Santiago.—Corporal Brown killed at his post while firing a cannon which knocked over the block house and saved the Rough Riders.—Sergeant Berry, the colored soldier who was first to raise the American flag on San Jan Hill.—The glowing tribute to McKinley, Miles, Roosevelt, and many others on the bravery of Negro Soldiers—General Morgan advocates Negro officers.—Antonio and Jose Macio, Gomez, Miss Giseros, and the Cutar Women Cavery.—The Negro Paymasters in the Army.—The Negro Poet, Paul Lawrence Junbar.—"Eddie" Kavoy, the colored man who outwitted the diplomacy of the Spanish Minister at Washington.—The Negro who seals Uncle Sam's money.—The colored Register of the Treasury who has to sign Uncle Sam's money to make it good.
Every Page Brimful of New and Interesting Reading, with about fifty halftone and line engravings of soldier, officers, and scenes of the late Spanish-American War, with A FINE PICTURE of AGUINALDO, his headquarters, a Filipino lady of Manila, and a brief sketch of the Phillipinos and their civilization.
Handsome Picture of General Nelson A. Miles, the Major General in command of all the American Army, who said the fighting of the colored soldiers around Santiago was "without a parallel in the history of the world." All for $1, "Much in Little," Mailed Free.
Corner West and Lenoir Streets. Raleigh, North Carolina.
Dr. Julius J. Chilcoat of the Pension office has just returned from a most enjoyable trip up the historic Hudson river. Among the places of interest he visited was the home of the late Col. Robert G. Ingersoll. Dr. Chilcoat is an enthusiastic believer in the teachings of Col. Ingersoll and will give in the near future some of the impressions of his trip through the columns of The Colored American.
DRESSMAKING ACADEMY.
The de Lam Orton Famous French Perfection Tailor System Academy MME J. A. SMALLWOOD, Sole Agent 1513 Madison St. Northwest.
Evenings from 7.30 to 10 o'clock. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays Dressmakers and ladies who wish to do their own dressmaking.
WANTED-To learn the wonderful De Lamorton French Perfection Taylor System, Seamless Basques without one inch of visible seam, in lining or goods, not even on the shoulder. Successful Dressmaking requires as much earnest progressive study as successful work in any of the professions. No detail is too small to be carefully looked after. We teach you to make dresses with or without seam and guarantee perfect fits, and complete your course with a diploma. Pupils can enter at any time.
Summer course begins June 15th.
1
FREE
SCOTT'S MAGIC HAIR
STRAIGHTENER AND GROWER.
Is the recipe of a Celebrated Chemist, and is guaranteed to be absolutely safe and harmless. It is the most wonderful preparation in the world to make kinky, knotty, stubborn, harsh, short and thin hair, long, thick, beautiful, straight, soft, glossy and pliable. It stops hair from falling out, promotes a rapid growth, restores natural color, and gives health to the hair and scalp, by positively curing dandruff and all scalp diseases. This marvelous remedy grows on hair bald heads and thin places. Please try it, and also read some of the testimonials from thousands of persons who are now using it. Price 30 and 55 cents, by mail. Little Hero Pills, 10 and 25 cents, Scotch Mountain Bleach and Beautifier, 30 cents, Scotch Cataruncle Forever, 25 cents, Scotts Cataruncle Cure, (Liquid) 25 cts. Scotts Nasal Cream, (For Carruth) 25 cts. Dr. Marian's Female Tabloids (for Female troubles) 25 cts. Scott's Wonderful Pile Cure, 25 cts. NOTICE! With each order of one or more of any of our remedies, we will send you a free treatment of our Celebrated Little Hero Pills, (for all forms of Kidney, Liver, Stomach and Urinary Diseases), at Drug Stores or sent by MAIL on receipt of price. Stamps accepted. Agents wanted. can make $75 to $150 per month. Write to-day for instructions. Enclose stamps for reply. P. O. BOX 570.
SCOTT REMEDY CO., Louisville, L.y.
MRS. DR. RENNER
on obstetrics; gold medal awarded for the science of obstetrics from the University of Muni ch. Bavaria; treats successfully women complaints and irregularities; private sanitarium for ladies before and during confinement, Office hours from 8 to 9 p.m.
SPECIALIST
Washington, D. C.
THE PALACE
HOWARD UNIVERSITY,
Washington, D. C.
TEN distinct departments, under one hundred competent professors and instructors—Theological, Medical, Legal, College, Pedagogical, Preparatory, English, Agriculture, Industrial, and Musical. For information address—
Rev. J, E, RANKIN, D. D., LL. D., President,
GEO. H, SAFORD, Secretary.
...THE...
Georgia State Industrial College Open to Both Sexes.
The fall term beginning October 3rd, 1900, the Georgia State Industrial College will receive both young men and young women as boarders. The entire expenses for board, washing, fuel and lights will be only $5.00 per month. The location and surroundings are healthful and elevating. A first-class opportunity for young men and women to obtain a good literary and industrial education. The trades of Blacksmithing, Wheelwrighting, Carpentry, Painting., Bricklaying and Shoemaking will be taught the boys and the arts of Sewing and Cooking will be taught the girls. Boarding space is limited and those who wish to come must apply early. Respectfully, R. R. WRIGHT, Pres't. College, Ga.
Avery College Trades School
ALLEGHENY, PA.
A Practical, Literary and Industrial Trade School for Colored Boys and Girls, Carpentry, Bricklaying, Plastering, Painting and Interior Decorations. Tailoring, Dress, making, Millinery. Voice Culture and Piano Porte. Literary Lepartin from Primary to Normal Course. Job Work Solicited and Profits given to the Students. Catalogues now ready. Address,
JOSEPH D. MAHONEY.
Allegheny, Pa.
Howard University,
3. WASHINGTON, D. C.
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT,
INCLUDING
Thirty-third Session (1900-1901) will begin October 1st, 1900 and continue seven (7) months.
Tuition fee in Medical and Dental Colleges, each $80. Pharmacetic College, $70.
All students must register before October 12, 1900.
For catalogue or further information apply to—
F. J. SHADD, M. D., Secretary,
901 R St, N. W., Washington D. C.
A RARE OPPORTUNITY For Young Men Desiring to Enter the Ministry.
The Phelps's Hall Bible Training School, conducted in connection with the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute offers exceptional opportunities for young men who wish to prepare for the Christian ministry. A special building known as the Phelp's Hall Bible Training School, is set apart for this department of the work. It contains a chapel, library, reading room, office, three recitation rooms and forty sleeping rooms. The teaching is wholly undenominational, the purpose being to help all denominations and not to antagonize any. The cost of board is $8 per month and students are given a chance to work out a portion of this, leaving, as a rule, but flye or six dollars to pay in cash. A few who have no money are given an opportunity to work out all of their expenses. Lack of means need debar none. The teaching in this department is free. The next school term begins September 11. Further information may be had by addressing Booker T. Washington, Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, Tuskegee, Alabama.
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THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. C.
City Paragraphs.
Miss Hattie McIntosh is visiting relatives in Orange, Va.
Mesdames Rosa Sprague and Anna Charite have returned from a delightful trip to Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Rochester and Cedar Creek.
Misses Daisy and Lavinia Wylie have returned to the city after a very pleasant stay on the Jersey coast. Both are very much pleased with their trip.
Mr. Samuel Williams has returned from Rockbridge, Va., where he spent the heated term. Mr. Samuel Jones gives a most flattering account of the trip.
The marriage of Miss Elizabeth Tolson of 1223 C street, s. e. to Mr. James E. Hall will take place Tuesday the 18 inst. at St. Cyprian church, at 5 o'clock p. m.
Mr. R. E. Rincher of 1807 I street, n. w. is back from a trip to Richmond, Va. Durham and Hillsboro, N. C. He attended the Y. M. C. A. convention in Richmond.
Miss Ida McGwin of 2245 12th street, n.w., has returned much refreshed from her trip to the North where she has been spending her vacation. Her brother is in New York now and is the guest of the Clarendon House. Mr. W. W. Orme, formerly the leading tenor of the Amphion Glee Club, but who for a number of years has been with Isham's Octooroons is in the city with that troupe this week. Mr. Orme is popular with all Washingtohians.
Miss Dolly Crockett, of 1404 12th street who has spent the summer in Winchester, Va., has gone to visit her mother at Port Smith, Va. She will return October 1st to enter the Normal Department of Howard University. The wonderful Face Bleach has been introduced in Washington and is offered to the public at a special rate. The two dollar packages can now be had for one dollar by calling at Drew's Drug Store, Connecticut avenue and L street.
Mr. Wm. E. L. Sanford of the Post Office Department has more than his share of hard luck. He spent two weeks in his home in Raleigh during the campaign and had only returned when he received the sad tidings of his mother's death. He made the second trip but is now at his desk again.
Mr. William F. Evans, spent Friday in Alexandria. In the afternoon in company with Miss Sethia E. Walker he visited Miss Anna E. Gorman, at the residence of Mrs. Frank J. Corbett, (wife of the late city postmaster,) and was very highly entertained. Miss Gorman is one of the white citizens of Alexandria.
Judge J. B. Raymond of Altoona, Pa., was in the city a few days last week visiting his family and friends. His wife and interesting little family have spent the summer at Arundel-on-the-bay and with her parents and sisters, the Georges, in this city. Judge Raymond is looking as chipper as ever, wears large flashy diamonds and looks as prosperous as a New York broker
Mr. Edward T. Harris, the noted baritone singer and a popular Washington boy, is in the city this week with the Isham's "King Rastus." This is Mr. Harris' 5th season and he attributes his success and his musical attainments to the early and thorough training which he received from Prof. John T. Layton. Mr. Harris is one of the most popular young men who have gone out from Washington.
A. H.
Gives the names of dead and living friends tells who and when you will marry also of business journeys lawsuits, absent friends health or anything you wish to know, no matter what it is. He can call up your spirit friends and show them to you. Can make them rap all around the room. He asks no questions don't ask you to write names or him. Don't try to pump you in any way, out tell you right off. He is thoroughly insured by leading spiritualists everywhere, received from them a gold medal and special license to practice his wonderful powers; credentias no one else can show can give thousands of references to both white and colored patrons Twenty-five years' practice—seven in brooklyn—will show you that he can do all he of. Can tell what business is best for you and where, how to win speedy marriage with the one you love. How to be successful in all your doings in short what is best to do. He will succeed when all others fail. Positive satisfaction or no pay. Call and see. You will find it luck to consult this Christian gentleman. He has a medicine that will cure drunkenness; can be given patients not knowing it. Thousands through him are now
RICH HAPPY AND SUCCESSFUL
with all their undertakings,while those w o neglect his advice are still laboring again, poverty. Through his perfect knowledge chemistry he can impart to you a secret that will overcome your enemies and win you friends. His aid and advice has often been solicited; the result has always been the securing of speedy and happy marriages and all your wishes. In love affairs he never fails. He has the secret of winning the affections of the opposite sex.
It is the curse of Spiritualism that in all large cities there are a class of men and women who claim powers they do not possess. They have neither gifts, credentials, nor references. Surely the colored people are not so wanting in sense as to throw their time and n oneey away on such. Dr. Shea refers to the Hon. Charles Miller, capitalist, 2481 Atlantic avenue; the Hon. William Denmore, architect and builder, 47 Cleveland avenue, and Mr. Arthur Sewell, ship builder South Brooklyn. All have known him for the past ten years. He gives a free test of his power to all. The doctor has practiced five years in New Orleans, St. Louis, Memphis and Louisville, understands thoroughly the diseases, spells or influences the race is subject to. He has now and always had large patronage from them
PLEASE READ THE FOLLOWING;
Broklyn, August, 15, 1891—This letter is to certify that I came to New York from Alba ny. I was a stranger in a strange city, out of work and out of money. I had no luck in anything I undertook. What to do I did not know. A friend advised me to go and see Dr. Shea. I did. He told me the cause of my troubles; he took me in and treated me as a brother. Through him I got a good position that very week. I had been to others, they took my money and did me no good. I bless the day I first met Dr. Shea I would advise all in bad luck, sick or in trouble to go to him at once.
Sincerely, Albert Ayers, 2937 Atlantic Avenue.
Have You Got a JOB?
ARE YOU EARNING BIG MONEY? IF NOT, THEN YOU SHOULD WRITE AT ONCE TO- HARTONA REMEDY CO..
909 E. Main Street, RICHMOND, VA. We want lady or gentlemen Agents in every town in the United States. You can earn big money if you will work for us even in your spare time. Write to us to-day. This may be the chance of your life. This offer is open to ladies or gentlemen—white or colored.
Oh, Ladies! Stop and consider. Do you know that my celebrated Imperial Whitener will positively brighten black skin, making it almost white. Mulatto or light skin persons can bleach the skin entirely white. One bottle is all that is required to complete the treatment, and the use does not have to be kept up. My Imperial Whitener cannot fail. It is harmless in every respect, and I will pay $100 to any one proving to the contrary. The effect is seen at once. By the use of improved machinery I have managed to make it at a price within the reach of all. I have been selling it at $6.00 a bottle. Recently I reduced it to $2.00, but now, to introduce it at once, I will send a bottle, prepaid, to any one who will send me $60. Remember. I guarantee every bottle, and I will send back the money if you are not satisfied in every way. Don't delay, but send $60 at once to BILAS GATHRIGHT,
Brooklyn, August 15, 1891—This letter is to certify that my husband had gone away and had been absent two years. I mourned for him night and day. I gave him up as dead. Hearing of the wonderful things Dr. Shea was doing I resolved to consult him. He told me that my husband was alive and well and where he was; told me he would come home and when. To my joy all of it came true. He is home now, came back like one from the dead. I also wish to say that this month I lost $250. I am a poor woman and I was almost insane. I went to Dr. Shea and he told me I would find my money and to my intense joy I find it as he told me. I thank God there is a man so gifted in our midst, that can help people and tell them what to do.
Mrs. Mary Miller
A SENSATION IN BROOKLYN—MINISTER'S STATEMENT
I wish to state that one of my parishioners was sick and in trouble for a long time, Mrs. Brown, 37 Gay street. No one seemed to understand her case. She had several doctors but none of them seemed to know what was the matter. None could do her any good. It was my duty as her pastor to call and see her. Hearing of the wonderful work being done by Dr. Shea the last few years, I thought I would call and see him myself. I found him a sympathetic gentleman. He gave me a wonderful test of his powers, told me to send him a lock o. patient's hair, which I did by her daughter. He told at once what was the matter, and in a short time cured her sound and weil. Her family had seemingly been under a cloud. Now all is changed. All are well and prosperous. I can truly and heartily recommend Dr. Shea, to all those in sickness or distress of any kind. Rev. William Johnson, pastor Lebanon church, Brooklyn. Dr. Shea can show thousands such as the above.
has been carefully educated in the Homeopathic and Electric Schools of Medicine. His success is wonderful in curing paralysis Kneumatism, Asthma, Sore Eyes, Tumors, Cancers, Constipation, Ague, Ugepsia Tape Worms, Liver Conplaints, Deafness, Catarrh, Dropsy, Pies, Nervous Debility, Heart Diseases, Consumption, Diseases of Women and Children, Fits, Kidney Disease, and strange mysterious diseases which others don't understand. All diseases, no matter what they be. Nothing but honorable treatment, He can and will honestly tell you if you can be cured. Has all new remedies and new success. Has an ample experience in public hospital and private clinics. No training with human life. Call at once. Do not delay. Diplomans hang in parlors. Is a registered physician. A new remedy to rheumatism just discovered, not a liniment. Hopeless cases and those that others can not cure solicited to call. At talks thin, the childless made parents. All letters must contain $1.00, two stamps, age, lock of hair. Charges for medical treatment only. Closed Sundays. Mention this paper.
651 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
15
MAKVELOUS
MEDIUM
Mrs. Mary Miller
Southlake, NJ
DR 8HEA
excited the cupidity of the unprincipled, who, to get your money, are putting on the market vile nostrums, injurious to the hair and skin, and dangerous to health and life. Be warned; don't send your money to get only in return a mass of lard and tallow and animal fats, that injure your hair and cause it to fall out, destroy its growth, and cause you to become bald. Deal with a legitimate firm, who will treat you fairly and give you value for your money. We do solemnly swear that our remedies are true to all we claim for them; that they do not contain any animal fat or injurious drugs, and we will return the money for every case of dissate isfaction. We refer to Metropolitan Bank, Richmond, Va., or to the editor of this paper. The word OZONO and the cuts shown in this advertisement are registered as our trade-mark in U. S. Patent Office. Any infringement will be promptly prosecuted.
OZONO positively straightens Knotty, Knappy, Kinky, Stubborn, Harsh, Refractory Hair. No injurious hot irons are necessary to produce this effect. OZONO does the work alone, and the use does not have to be kept up after the hair becomes strright, and washing the hair hastens the treatment, doing it good in every way. Cures Dandruff, Baldness, and all itching, running, scaly, humiliating Scalp Diseases; causes the hair to grow long and straight, soft, fine, and beautiful as an April morning. Price, 50c. a box; 4 boxes does the work. OZONO cannot fail. Read our grand offer: Cut out this advertisement and send to us with $1.00, and we will send you immediately four boxes of OZONO: one bottle of ELECTRICAL SKIN PRODUCTS.
boxes of OZONO; one bottle of ELECTRICAL SKIN REFINER, which makes rough skin soft and brightens up black skin several shades; also one bottle of SKIN FOOD, which removes Wrinkles, Freckles, Moth Patches, Tan, Liver Spots, Small-Pox Pits. Birthmarks, &c. It makes the aged look young, and the young look younger. We will also, to show our liberality, include a package of ANTI-ODOR, which removes all smells and odors arising from the human body—such as feet, arm-pits, &c.; cures Sore Throat and Mouth, Womb Diseases, Sore and Frosted Feet, &c. This grand combination, worth $3.50, we will send you on receipt of One Dollar, to introduce honest goods. Parties sending us $3.00 will receive four lots. Register your letters.
AGENTS WANTED.
ence, and possessing the confidence of the colored excited the cupidity of the unprincipled, who, to get
City Paragraphs.
Mr. Joseph Douglass, violinist, is concerting in Pittsburg this week.
Mrs. A. O. Talbot and daughter are at the Keen Cottage, Atlantic City.
Rev. Sterling N. Brown will speak next Sunday at Park Temple on "The Public Schools."
Mr. Benj. Washington is in Boston. He has been ill and confined to his room for over a week.
Mr. Willie Heward, son of Rev. W. Howard, will prepare for Hovard College at Exeter Academy.
Mrs. Delilah A. Jones has been very ill for several weeks at the residence of her son, Mr. A. L. Jones at Rockville, Md.
Mrs. M. S. Brown, proprietress of the McKinley House and the Porters' Cafe, was a little indisposed the early part of the week.
Hon. J. W. Lyons, Register of the Treasury has taken the residence at 1417 Corcoran st., n. w. Mr. Lyons is spending this week in the south.
The Star Concert at John Wesley church Friday evening September 21 will present our best talent and the occasion will doubtless bring out a large attendnace.
Master Paul Dessaline Scott, son of Dr. and Mrs. E. D. Scott, of 903 9 n.e., left the city Friday 14. for Cambridge, Mass., to attend school under the classic shades of old Harvard.
Misses Annie and Bertha Howard returned home last Thursday after enjoying an extremely pleasant vacation spent in Virginia, Philadelphia, Niagara Falls and Canada.
Mr. Edward Furbush, Secretary to the United States Haitien Legation, is spending a few days at Berkley Springs West Virginia, with his relative, Mr. D. B. Messer of the Pension Office.
Miss Genevieve and Zeta Ross, graduates of the last class of the Normal School, have returned from a delightful vacation spent with relatives of Miss Ross 'mid the green fields of Virginia
THE COLORED AMERICAN, WASHINGTON, D. O.
BOSTON CHEMICAL COMPANY 310 E.BROAD ST.,RICHMOND,VA.
Mr. F. N. Nesbit of Memphis, Tennessee, is in the city a delegate to the Laborers' International Convention. He is a plasterer by trade and is the only colored delegate to the Convention.
There will be a grand entertainment given at Autioch Baptist church, New York, on Sept. 27, at which time Miss Juliette N. Spareques will favor the public with a solo, for the second time in that city.
WANTED—ACTIVEMAN OF GOOD CHARACTER to deliver and collect in the District of Columbia, for old established manufacturing wholesale house. $900 a year, sure pay. Honesty more than experience required. Our reference, any bank in any city, Enclose self addressed stamped envelope. Manufacturers, Third Floor, 334 Dearborn St. Chicago
Mrs. Thomas Rucker who has spent a delightful summer at Old Point Comfort, Va., and Atlantic City. N. J., has returned home for the winter. She will be at home, 1622 Corcoran st., to her friends after 15th. The weekly report of the Health Department is an interesting document this week. It shows that forty four colored people died in the Dietrict Columbia, twenty-seven were born and twelve couples were married.
Hon. John H. Ruffin, U. S. Consult to Ascunción, Paraguay, is in the city. He has just completed a journey of three months, coming by the way of the Continent, stopping at the Paris Exposition, England, Scotland and other points of interest. Mr. Ruffin has made a most excellent record and will return to his post of duty after the autumnal election
An item appeared recently in the last issue of The Colored American telling about the trip of Mr.-Z P. Moore, of J.H. Winslow's Undertaking Establishment, spending his vacation and taking in many points at the summer resorts, and of the principle points along the Hudson river An omission was made that his wife. Mrs. Anna L. Moore, (nee Harrison,) accompanied him on this trip.
Rev. W. J. White, D. D., the veteran editor of the Georgia Baptist, Augusta, Ga., is in Richmond this week attending the annual meeting of the National Baptist Convention. At the close of the session, Dr. White will come over to Washington and circulate among his many friends for a few days. Possibly no man of the race has labored so long and consistently for the up building and welfare of the people as has Dr. White, and he enjoys the esteem and consideration of all classes in a marked degree. While here, Dr White will be the guest of his son, L. H. White, Esq., of the Census office, at 1415 Corcoran St., N. W.
fair dealings, together with the fact that OZONO uine Hair Grower and Hair Straightener in exist race, we have met with grand success, which has your money, are putting on the market pile next
ur New Stock Arriving By the Carload.
Our New Stock
Is Arriving By the Carload.
It's the finest, the largest, and the most complete stock we have ever owned. Every dollar's worth of it has been carefully selected—and will be sold with our personal guarantee for durability. Parlor, Bedroom, and Dining-room Furniture, Crockery, and Housefurnishings, can be bought here on credit—for less money than in any cash store. We make no ex-
the accommodation of weekly or monthly payments. B
frigerators, Mattings, Sideboards, Baby Carriages, etc.
tra charge for the accommodation of weekly or monthly payments. Big bargains in Refrigerators, Mattings, Sideboards, Baby Carriages, etc.
817-819-821-823 Seventh Street N. W,
Between H and I Streets.
1001 ACTIVE AGENTS WANTED
TO SELL
"The Story of My Life and Work"
BY BOOKER T. WASHINGTON,
Principal of Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute
and the popular leader of the Negro Race.
Published in one large volume of over 400 pages and appropriately illustrated with more than 50 original drawings and photo-engravings; size 6 x $12 inches. Sample copies mailed direct on receipt of price, $1.50 in cloth.
Few books have become so quickly and so immensely popular as Mr. Washington's Autobiography. Prominent men and the public press throughout the country have many words of praise. The following are samples:
"I assure you the book is greatly appreciated."—Wm. McKinley, President of the United States.
"The book is of more than ordinary interest for it possesses a double significance. First, it is a shining example to both the white and black man of what for bearance and perseverance may do. Second, its connection with the race problem." - Philadelphia Record.
more than ordinary interest for it possesses a double significance. example to both the white and black man of what for bearance and do. Second, its connection with the race problem."—Philadelphia
FREE TO AGENTS: Send 24c in stamps for mailing and we will forward free our Magnificent Prospectus ins for canvassing. The book is sold only on subscription through ents. Address,
J. L. NICHOLS & CO., Naperville, Ill.
OUTFIT FREE TO AGENTS: Send 24c in stamps for mailing and we will forward free our Magnificent Prospectus with full instructions for canvassing. The book is sold only on subscription through our authorized agents. Address, J. L. NICHOLS & CO., Naperville, Ill.
J.
Liver will
ing
d
Stock
Carload.
Credit
monthly payments. Big
Baby Carriages, etc.
MAMMOTH CREDIT HOUSE
GENTS WANTED
SELL
My Life and Work"
mps for mailing and we will Magnificent Prospectus only on subscription through LS & CO., Naperville, Ill.