The Freeman
Saturday, September 25, 1915
Indianapolis, Indiana
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INDIANAPOLIS
SEP 25 1915
PUBLIC LIBRARY
THE FREEMAN
A NATIONAL
ILLUSTRATED COLORED NEWSPAPER
GROWING INFLUENCE OF THE FREEMAN
Major R. R. Jackson and Cary B. Lewis to Attend Dedication of Pythian Temple at Louisville, Ky.
CELEBRATES ANNIVERSARY AT OGDEN PARK!
Chicago Music Lovers are Ready for the Big Musicale to be Given at Quinn Chapel A. M. E. Church Next Monday Night—J. Hackley Smiley III—Saved Concert at St. Mark's Episcopal Church—T. H. Crump a Successful Singer—Cel. John R. Marshall in the Limelight—A Horrible Murder.
The Freeman Is the peer of Negro Journals, circulating in every State and Territory in the United States, an accomplishment which can not be claimed by any other Negro publication. Send us your subscription at once.
VOL. XXVIII.
NUMBER 39
GROWING INFLUENCE
Major R. R. Jackson and Car-
cation of Pythian Ter-
CELEBRATES ANNIVERS
Chicago Music Lovers are Ready for
Chapel A. M. E. Church Next Mond-
Concert at St. Mark's Episcopal Chu-
Col. John R. Marshall in the Limeli
(By Cary B. Lewis.)
Freeman Bureau, 3000 South State St.
Phone, Douglass 8058, Automatic
75-233.
CHICAGO, Ill., Sept. 22.—During the past month there has been a big great increase in the sales of the Freeman brand in the city of Chicago. This has been due to the fact that The Freeman has "cover" the Elders Convention, the National Baptist convention, the U. B. F's meeting and all the other various conferences. Visitors of prominence who have come to the "Windy City" have found their visits to the Freeman to instantiate this Mr. L. W. Heard, who sells the Freeman at the corner of 25th and State Street, thus making any other paper. He says the accuracy of the baseball page, the trussiness of its news and state news, from all sections and interesting topics on stage life, make it invaluable to people in America. The coming week there will be a full account of the dedication of the new 15th and 15th wedding anniversary on Wednesday evening of this week at Oden Park. It was the biggest of Chicago's most prominent people accepted invitations and attended. By request there were no presents, and the men were their wedding anniversary Mrs. Avendorf made a challenge for the pulpit for the 15th inches deep and she worked on it at $100.00 and took Mrs. Avendorf three months to make it. The chievement was made of an expensive piece of fabric that inches deep and she worked on it for three months every day except Sunday.
J. Hockley Smiley Ill.
Mr. J. Hockley Smiley, 5422 Dearborn street, managing editor of the Chicago Defender, has been ill for several weeks, an inability to illicit his desk. The company regrets the illness of Mr. Smiley, for he has gained a national reputation for so successfully plating the famous journal of the west. It is hopeful that the new edition of the craft that he will be seen soon guiding the destiny of the Chicago Defender.
T. H. Crump Successful Singer
Sacred Concert at St. Mark's:
All Chiengo Ready for the Big Music
Culture
The grand opera artist, Anita Patti Brown, the famous cantatrice of this city, Holly Hayes, with a octopile of assists artist, accompanies, lady ushers and patrons, are ready for the big musical event on Monday night, September 27, at 8 o'clock, at Quinn Chapel A.M. E. church. This will be the first grand musical of the season. Madame Brown has not appeared at a musical in this city for some time and the Chicago people and music lovers are
Mnjor R. R, Jackson and Cary B. Lewis
Going to Louisville, Ky.
Major R. R. Jackson, Major General of the Uniform Rank, Knights of Pythias of the World, Major of the First Battalion, 8th Regiment, Major of the Illinois Half Century Commission appointed by Gov. Dunne, State of Illinois, member of the Illinois Legislature. Third Disp. of the Illinois Department of Fraternal Printing plant, orator and statesman, has been invited to speak on Sunday, September 28th, at the dedication of the Illinois Temple,ville, Ky. He will be accounted by Cary B. Lewis. It will be re-
MAL B. JACKSON
MAJ. R. R. JACKSON
membered by the people of Louisville, Ky., that it was Major Jackson who came to city some eight years ago and caused Col. Henry Watterson of the Louisville Courier Journal, to take a brighter tour of the city that was commented upon by all the race papers in the country. All the leading Egyptian journalists, theodidian and great preparations are being made to entertain the visitors. Dr. J. A. C. Lattimore, news editor, for the newspaper, News and others have arranged an itinerary for the Major that will keep him in Louisville until Monday for the family. His mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. Plummer Lewis, and there will represent the Chicago Defender, of which he is assoc. with the Napoleon Papuan Freeman, on whose staff he has been for the past eight years.
Mr. J. B. Calimene In the City.
Mr. J. B. Callmese, Wyzata, Minn., is in the city on business. He is stopping with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Speedy, 35 West 22nd street. On last Saturday he met with a dinner and several friends of Mr. and Ms. Speedy were present.
Miss Martha Bailey Here.
Miss Martha Bailey, Flint, Mich., was in the city last week on business. She was the guest for a few days of her visit to Bailey, who accompanied her to her home.
A. Horrible Murder.
The Freeman correspondent seldom takes stock in murders, but the one last Saturday was one of the worst in Negro criminality, especially in this city. According to report, 11:30 o'clock late Friday night, EW Winey yield Wm. Brown, 3276 Dearborn street 50 cents to move a trunk from a flat
building at $385 State street to a vacant block some few hundred away. Brooke says he took the trunk to the left of the building, then walked Saturday morning at 11 o'clock some boys climbed on a bill board which was attached to their perch on top of the fence saw a freshly dug hole near the fence. A spade and a shovel lay near the top of the fence. Protruding about two inches above the top of the hole was a trunk.
Body in the Trunk.
The boys called their older brothers and dragged the trunk from its resting place. With the aid of the spade they tied the trunk to the wall, trailed tray filled with handkerchiefs, towels and one or two letters. Below this was another tray containing a few photographs, one of a man and another of a woman. The boys raised the second tray and it lay a stiffened, bent body of Mrs Bragg. The head and neck was bent against the end of the trunk. The trunk was rolled up and drawn up toward the face. The boys dropped the trunk and took to the police man Walter Johnson and told him of their find. He summoned the patrol from the Stanton avenue station anduty coroner Gillispie gave orders to remove the body to King's undertakingation was made and found that the woman's neck was cut from ear to ear, a wound from a hammer. Hun- brown was found and he viewed the trunk. He said it was the same trunk Brown was found and he viewed the stairs. It was a midnight burial right in the heart of the "black belt." Brown was taken in custody and now the offender claimed is a railroad man. No cause has yet been determined for the mur-
Big Politicians at Springfield, III.
All the big politicians journeyed to Springfield, III., this week to attend a meeting with the Republican meeting. Booms will be made for Mr. Lowden for Governor and Hon. William Hale Thompson for member of the Association of Republican Commitees among the State from the Second Ward were Hon. Louis B. Anderson, Assistant Corporation Counsel, Counsel and Major R. J. Jackson, member of the Illinois Legislature and Editor S. B. Turner, member of the Illinois Legislature.
Col. John R. Marshall In Limelight.
Col. John R. Marshall, formerly col. constitutional Guard, is the only man of the race who applied to take part in the citizens' military maneuvers at Camp Carson, congressmen, editors writers business men of this city are there this week to participate in military United States military officers, Col.
H.
Marshall is one of the most experienced military men in the country and it is important to him that he be much to the occasion. He will be there several weeks and reports are that his wisdom and knowledge is being eagerly sought.
S. Coleridge Taylor Club Oct. 10.
The S. Coleridge Taylor Club will present the first lecture concert will be Sunday, Oct. 10 at 3:30 p. m. at Institutional church, Rev. A. J. Carey. Richard T. Greener, seven years U. S. Consul at Tladivostok, Russia, will be at Tladivostok, Russia, will be a silver attendant at the door.
Mrs. Pearl Young, 2642 Wabash avenue, and Mrs. Nonie Glimore, 2342 Wabash avenue, will leave soon for Niagara Falls and Buffalo, New York.
Rev. A. J. Carey at Conference.
The Rev. A. J. Carey who is a candidate for Bishop on the A. M. E. bench will attend the annual conference. Reports have reached here that Rev. Carey has met that his announcement in the Freeman last week have made him many friends who will be delegates to the annual conference is made that the growing west is entitled to a delegate on the bench that Dr. Carey is the best available limber in this section of the country.
VISIT SILVER CITY, SITUATED AT 14TH AND SENATE AVENUE.
The members and friends will hold their biennial entertainment at "Silver City." Fourteenth and Senat e avenue, September 29 to October 16. Every possible care is being taken to make
INDIANAPOLIS, IND., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1915
this city inviting and interesting, and to do this the committee is laboring to create a new go-y-go-go center, tractions, and that kind that will appeal to the old as well as the young, and that go-y-go-go wheels, dollars and music of music and dolls. In fact, it will be a great misfortune for you not to come and help Jones Tabernacle Zion church in their attempt to raise some funds for the church October 18-29, in a mock general conference. This is hoped to be one of the greatest rallies ever held in the country, and is designed to help us out, therefore each member and friend is urged to attend, neither may fall. Each presiding old district is asked to report $25, and that makes it imperative that each member and the district pay at least $5 aple.
Thanking you in advance for your support, we are your COMMITTEE
BLUE GRASS CAPITAL.
A. & M. Fair a Great Success—Chicago Quartette Made a Big Hit Along With the People's Band of Ohio—Mrs. Ida Joyce Jackson, a Former Kentuckian, Spoke in Chicago—Russell High School and Chandler Normal Opening.
Mrs. Ida Joyce Jackson, wife of the first president of the Kentucky Norfolk State fort, was the choice of the Buck-Eye State of Ohio, to deliver the principal address at the Chicago exposition. Mrs. Jackson was the guest for former Mr. Jackson, who is among the young orators that can charm her hearers. Professor and Mrs. Jackson were the guests of his address. Mr. Jackson is a prominent business man of this city, and has the respect of both white and black students with the beginning of the scholastic years of previous openings. Supervisor W. H. Fouse is doing some commendable work for every student in educational standpoint. Success to this year's work. The Chandler Normal School will offer the first Morning. Professor Working is putting every effort to make this the greatest opening of the school, will tell you more about it next week. Brown & Spencer Stock Company, with thirty people, scored a triumph in the latest songs and dances. They are playing vaudeville and winning their way to the front. "Hot Foo," a unique work rolling barrels, etc. Manager Jones Brown, 319 Carroll street, announced that the company would play and make a trip through West Virginia. Messrs. Bush Hunter, B. W. P. Allen, left for Oberlin College to assume their Mr. William Hallard left for Howard University to assume his studies. The Lexington Weekly News, issued a notice for the State Baptist Association.
SUPREME CHANCELLOR, S. W.
GREENE, RETURNS.
Big Rally Report at Union Bethel.
(By Jno. H. Williams)
NEW ORLEANS, La. September 25, 1915. The supreme supreme of K. of P., has returned to his official duties from the supreme session, recently held in Columbus, O. way of an extended tour of the United States. He expresses profound gratitude for the courtesy extended him by all. Wilmar F. Branch is doing good business handling The Freeman. Payne Memorial A. M. E. church, held their third quarterly conference recently which was very interesting. Ralph B. Watson, Mr. C. M. Watson and Mr. C. H. Drick, of Los Angeles, Cal., were in the city at the time. Mr. Zilin M. E. church has a progressive Sunday school. Miss Gertrude, superintendent; Rev. J. O. Brown, pastor. E. Deioie, number one usher at the Terminal station, is doing an excellent news business as a side line matter. E. Charles Thornhill, recently back from Chicago, where he attended the National Medical convention, congratulates his co-workers of the Windsor City Hospital. Rev H. Butler, pastor of St. Mark Baptist church, gave sacrament on last Sunday after a strong sermon. R. O. Nelson of Harbor City, La., recommends The Freeman in highest terms.
Mrs. G. B. Brown, wife of Rev. G. B. return from her trip in Texas, 1908.
Mrs. Agnes Oncion is improving nicely at the hospital. The Valley Social and Aid club gave a tour of the club rooms on Monday evening, the 21st, for the benefit of their relief fund, which was a boasting success. Victor Govanni, a music director, and Bantile Brown; music directors, Jacob Hernandez, Jessie Fletcher. Oscar Williams, Jno. Fields, P. Jones et al. Mrs. H. Calloux, of Alabama; the student is seriously indisposed at her home. Mrs. D. G. York, of Mobile, Al., Mr. George J. Palma, of Hazelhurst, Miss. Mr. V. L. Polk, of Ft. Worth, Texas.
Mr. J. Richardson of Dequincy, La.
were at the Chicago Hotel.
Rev Calvin S. Stanley, pastor of Tewksbury, which was indisposed recently at his residence, master Percy Davis, of the 210 Camp street, is doing excellent business business. Roberts, of 1829 N. Roman street, has the Freeman on sale at his barber shop.
The recent bazaar held at St. Peter's
University was quite a success.
Rev. G. B. Billops.
R. G. B. Billops.
The rally just closed at Union Bethel reported over $600.00 and it is still
Trinity M. E. church will hold their bazaar from October 11th to 18th. Rev. Calvin S. Stanley, pastor. Rev. St. James of Houston, Texas, was in the city visiting relatives, after which she visited other relatives in Gibson, La., en route home. The Afro-American Civic League had late Dr. Alfred M. Greene, who died in Washington, D. C., April 6th. Services were held at St. Peter A. M. E. church September 14th. Grass presents! Music by St. Peter choir; introductory by Pastor G. B. Bellops; opening hymn by Rev. J. B. Bell; prayer by Rev. G. B. Brown; music by Rev. G. B. Brown; chronology by Hon. J. M. Pierce; address by Rev. D. F. Taylor; solo by Miss Luela Farrell; address by H. H. Hum; paper by Rev. Martha Page; address by E. D. Simmons; address by M. R. Dixon; benediction by Rev. Calv. S. Stanley.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
(By Walter Thompson.)
Mr. Chas. Bush, of Washington, D.C. and Miss Lina Smith, of Chicago, were quietly married at St. Paul's University, where they celebrated ceremony being performed by Father Brewin. They will make this their future home. Mrs. Cottman, James McCormick, and John Jointer is somewhat indisposed. ___ Anyone wishing the Indianapolis Freeman can get it at any time by calling Mass. Babe Lovings has returned from quite an extended tour through Michigan, Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky. He says the most interesting is the opinion. Mrs. Delia Keen has returned home. She has been spending the past month visiting various summer camps. She has returned to Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel, who have been visiting Mrs. Culpher, of this city, have returned to their hometown of Tom Battles, who has been on the sick list, is able to be out again.
DISCHARGED NEGRO PORTER-
BRAKEMEN OF PENNSYLVANIA
LINES ASK JUDGMENTS.
CHEYENNE, WYO.
Mrs. Paul Moore has returned to Lincoln, Neb. after a long sojourn with her husband, J. E. Smith entertained at a beautiful breakfast for Mrs. Moore. Her list included the young woman, W. J. Christaw and P. C. Crutchfield, of Kansas. Miss V. Gasken entertained the younger set at a theater party for Mrs. Moore. Miss Lillian Jefferson entertained at a dinner Tuesday. Colo. Mrs. Christaw pleasant drive was enjoyed in the Jefferson touring car. Miss Lucy Smith is up from Denver, Colo., the house guest of Miss S. K. Thestie. She came to attend the Robinson-Washington nupital event. She entertained in honor of Miss Smith at a dinner Sunday. Covers were laid for Mrs. Pryor, her mother, Miss Smith and Thistle, her sister, Miss Smith and E. Smith, Mr. Charles Tolson opened his lovely home for Miss Smith at a tea. The appointments were well received and a pleasure was enjoyed by all. Mrs. J. S. Smith entertained at a preschool in honor of Miss Smith. There was a full force to eat of the dainties and wish Mrs. Robinson best of luck. The decorations were beautiful and everywhere profusion could be seen.
On Tuesday morning at the residence of her parents, Ruth Robinson became the bride of Mr. Elmer Washington. The spacious home was a bower of beautiful pines and a draped in smilies and palms and plants made one think it was a garden of Eden. Promptly at 6:30 Miss K. S. Thikti sang a wedding song of Coleridge Taylor's Hiwata. Then the sweet strains of Mendelssohn was softly played on the piano. The bride entered on the arm of the groom and they tow their places in a lovely room, where they saw vision of loveliness as she took her vows. Rev. James Washington, of Denver, performed the ceremony, using the instruments he carried the ceremony the bride threw her bouquet to the future brides, and it was caught by his steward. Then bid the bride God speed. Mrs. Washington was raised in this city and has hosted many of Western University. The groom is a rising young minister of the Colorado conference.
of the Mrs. P. C. Crutchfield and son are visitors from Kansas.
iting him. Jack Leonard has returned from the fair at the coast.
PRICE FIVE CENTS.
SINGLE COPY—SIX MONTHS, 85c; ONE YEAR, $1.50.
CLAIMOFS68,000,000FORSLAVELABOR
Attorney Jones Files Suit for Negroes who Produced Cotton in Southern Field from 1859 to 1868
SHOULD CASE GO TO COURTS OR TO CONGRESS?
This is the Leading Question Propounded by Able Counsellors at the Capital—Heirs Seek to Dissolve Donovan Liberian Fund—Negroes no Longer Migrating to West Africa—Public Schools Open, Assistant Superintendent Bruce Absent—School Board at Odds over Colored Cadets in G. A. R. Service.
(By R. W. Thompson.)
WASHINGTON, D. C., Sept. 22.—Skilled lawyers in this vicinity are exempt from the proposition advanced by a coterie of legal lights from the South and elsewhere that that the colored people who produced the cotton that was marketed between 1859 and 1868 in the South were not produced. The $68,702,309.93 realized from the sale of said cotton and can secure their rights in the Court of the District of Columbia against the Secretary of the Treasury. All presumed to be custodian of the money.
In pursuance of this idea, Attorney Cornellus J. Jones, of Memphis, Tennessee, filed a suit in the Supreme Court of the United States in preparing to present the claims of former slaves or their heirs for a property owned by them, arrived from the cotton alleged to have been produced by their unrequited lance. The court ordered that the money, said to be held in the custody of the Secretary of the Treasury, All persons interested are asked to furnish the money and the $175 or expenses to Lawyer Jones' office in Memphis, Tennessee. If the labor of the attorneys of the movement ask that the heirs and descendants of such persons send the money to theOUNDATION of the money in question.
The national mind, in its present
state, is willing to willing to
take anything for granted.
Dissolution of the Donovan Liberian Trust, Demanded.
Have the Negroes of the United States lost all desire to migrate to the South, and longer a demand on the part of American Negroes to find homes, in the West African Republic, the heirs or Mrs. Negroes of the Negroes of the Circuit Court of Baltimore a petition to have declared null and void a trust to the Negroes of the Circuit Court of Baltimore the purpose of assisting colored people to go to Liberia and to stimulate educational work among the Negroes administered all these years by the American Colonization Society, which has its headquarters in this city. The Negroes of the Negroes has expended only about $20,000 of the income from the Donovan fund in 17 years, and has from have amounted to more than $40,000. The office expenses have been quite heavy, but with all that a surplus has been made to the society that indicates, according to the claims of the Donovan heirs-at-large, which the trust was created. Since Negroes do not wish to go to Liberia, the petitioners ask that the trust be furnished to be distributed among Mrs. Donovan's residuary legates and their descendants, officials of the American Colonization Society and Rev. Ernest Lyon, of Baltimore, Liberia's consular agent in this city, and the resolution of the Donovan trust. The matter is now before the courts.
The Board of Education and Colored High School, Cuddes.
At the first meeting of the Board of Education for the new school term, a task was assigned to use of the high school cadets in connection with service as aids to the commission of the veterans coming to the National Encampment of the G. A. R. Sentiment service. In the request of the committees for the cadets, but in the course of the debate, the commission included the cadets of the colored high schools. He regarded their participation as matter in view of the fact that hundreds of colored veterans would be here, and service such as only colored boys, familiar with local conditions, could render a service to the veterans to have started a row, and caused the
The Frie man As an advert medium is uneq by any Negro Newspaper, going into the homes of a class of thrifty, money-spending Afro-Americans not reached by any other Journal. Mr. Advertiser, take the hint and try us.
CE FIVE CENTS.
MONTHS, 85c; ONE YEAR, $1.50.
GOO FOR SLAVE LABOR
for Negroes who Produced
field from 1859 to 1868
CURTS OR TO CONGRESS?
led by Able Counsellors at the Capital—
berian Fund—Negroes no Lenger Migrats
Open, Assistant Superintendent Bruce
Colored Cadets in G. A. R. Service.
Board, already at odds on the Dr. Lucy E. Moten issue, to again divide into two groups, one insisted on Dr. Childs that the colored boys be given an equal opportunity with the whites in the G. A. R. committee, the question on the ground that the committees had asked only for whites, and the question on the ground that the committees were solved at this time. The whole matter was finally referred to Supt. E. L. Thurston for such action as seemed appropriate to the premises. Mr. Thurston has not yet indicated his attitude on the subject, the superintendent on all problems affecting the race, it is believed he will respond in favor of the utilization of the colored branch of the G. A. R. committee. The Lee-Terrell committee is satisfied all members to assist all members a chance to solve the problem on right lines, and the incident will doublestress with the issuance of a writ of permission for the members to assist to assist the colored committee.
Public Schools Open for New Term.
The regular opening of the public schools took place on the 20th, with a large attendance. Before the end of school year, the rollment in the colored divisions will approximate 15,000. Assistant Superintendent Roscoe Campbell will resume his duties. It is expected that the Board of Education will name some one to lead the school system at least. Prof. W. S. Montgomery Hershaw, Hugh M. Browne and N. B. Marshall are among those considered as successors Bruce, but wise ones are not the intention of the Board to show its hand at this juncture. This is interpreted as the school system's office, has a good show as acting assistant superintendent, the final decision to be held in abeyance probably will be taken. The complications set in—and this is likely as anything else under the sun—Supt. E. L. Thurston will continue to manage the color scheme with white school as he has been doing for the past several months. The situation will be "ticklish" as it is determined by Congress to take with reference to the local school embroght.
The News in a Nut Shell.
Attorney Thomas L. Jones, accompanied by his wife, is in Toronto, Canada, on a health-seeking mission, leading criminal lawyer in this section of the country, has been ill for several months with a disease due largely to overwork, and has been advised to remain in the North for several weeks for rest and recuperation. Jones was particularly Toronto and vicinity, having visited the Canadian city a number of times and delivered some notable adresses there. He being strongly urged to remain with our British cousins indefinitely.
Capt. H. J. Hordan, a political and business magnate of Kansas City, Mo., spent a few days here last week, and was shown the stage by Bibion J. Bibion Wilson, of the Eagle. Capt. Jordan was the dinner and luncheon and the guest of a number of Washington's leading professional companies and recognized acquaintances with a host of old friends. Capt Jordan is no stranger here, having served long and capable in the reception and recognition next year and is confident that the "City on Seven Hills" will also have the pleasure of enter into the Fifth annual session of the National Negro Business League, for which elaborate preparations are already under way.
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ECHOES FROM THE BUSINESS LEAGUE
Side-Lights on and the Aftermath of the Most Successful, Unique and Historical Session of the Afro-American's Chamber of Commerce.
By R. W. Thompson.
Washington City led with a delegation of twenty-five.
Boston is aptly described as "The City of Inspiration."
A E. Manning says Indianapolis will ask for the League again in 1817.
Boston has 300 business places conducted by colored men and women.
The meeting place for 1915 was not named by the convention—but Kansas City "has hopes."
Every comparison between "fifteen years ago and now" found the odds in favor of the League.
The "social side" though brilliant, was not permitted to interfere with the business side of the convention.
Dr. Summon A. Furniss one of the "regulars," was missed. Had to attend another meeting in the Middle West.
The Boy Scouts did yeoman service in assisting the housing committee. They were picturesque in khaki uniforms.
A poem by Rev. J. H Matthias, entitled "The People" featured on several occasions where speaking was the order of the hour.
Not a word was said by any delegate about "hard times." It was a gathering of prosperous and farsighted business forces.
M. W. Turner held up the banner for Turner up the state. He served on the committee on credentials and spoke interestingly on several questions.
The delegates were pleasantly received at the registering station, the Campbell and Martin, who carry on a real estate syndicate at 121 Kendall street, in the heart of the colored business section.
The banquet at Convention Hall Friday evening was a "thing of beauty." The caterer, James H. Madison. The picture presented at the tables, with all in evening dress, was one not soon forgotten.
The Boston Reliance, Miner F. Hamilton manager, notices the occasion by getting a special illustrated edition, containing much informing matter and running the cuts every prominent business factor in the
The cars on the trolley ride stopped reverently when the spot was reached American blood in the Revolutionary War. A circle in the granite blocks marks the hallowed ground upon which this dark-hued martyr fell.
Mrs. Joseph St. Pierre Ruffin, one of Belfast's most prominent presented at the first session at Convention Hall and given a seat on the platform—the first time such a disruption to understate rather than overstate being the rule. The fantasies of the crowd were big results from nothing, formerly essayed by some, was beautifully lacking at this meeting.
The splendid light and admirable ventilation of Convention Hall made the business in hand. Friday's session continued from 9:30 a.m. m. until 5 p. m., and few persons, if any, left m. except a short time for lunch.
No one could go astray as to the program of each day, for the details of each day, for the details of each session by Joseph W. Powell, the less chairman of the public committee. Mr. Powell was "on the job" from revelille to taps, and was a veritable "bureau of information." Rev. John E. White, of Atlanta, got a good start in his opening with "Mr. Chairman, Brothers and Sisters." This from a Southern Caucasian "brought down the house, and generous and high-secret selections." He gave a white heat of enthusiasm throughout. Rev. Archibald H. Grimke, president of the Washington branch of the N. A.
WELL SIGN CAP
Resolved
that a year
do BIND
& GEMD L
JO BILL &
DAY
MEM, I'VE MADE
A NEW YEARS RESOLVE
D'YOU WANT T' SIGN
FER A CRUISE T'
CHINA?
PUT'ER
THERE CAP
THERE'S
A BREEZE
COMIN'
WOULD
YOU LISTE
TO THAT?
I. “Speakin' o' swearin' off brings me back to Capt'in Soakum 'a the good ship 'Dancin' Sally.' You see we ened our voyage on New Year's Day, an' owin' to th' shameful treatment o' th' skippin, Bill an' me had decided t' skoot. But wot you 'spouse that same old capt'in done but invite us into th' cabin—his own cabin, mind you—an' show us a resolution he'd writ up.”
YOU'LL COME BACK THREE HOURS LATE
I TOLD YOU SO
FOR THE CAPTIN
DON'T FERGIT YOUR RESOLUTION CAP
4. “Bill an' me 'us so upset an' taken aback 'at we didn't stand th' ghost o' a show, besides th' skipper 'us a powerful man when riled up an' th' way he misused us an' hauled us about th' deck 'us sompin' shameful an' terrific.”
4. “Bill an' me 'us so upset an' taken aback 'at we didn't stand th' ghost o' a show, besides th' skipper 'us a powerful man when riled up an' th' way he misused us an' hauled us about th' deck 'us sompin' shameful an' terrific.”
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A. C. P., dropped 'in on Friday morning, and was greeted with a salvo of fire now living for the most part in the nation's capital, and is a staunch advocate of the civil and political rights of the race.
Among the ladies of the official party, who gave zest to the many people of Washington, Mrs. Emmett J. Scott, Mrs. John A. Kenney, all of Tuskegee University, Mrs. D. H. C. Scott, Montgomery, Miss; Mrs. D. H. C. Scott, Montgomery, Ala.; Mrs. A. L. DeMond, Charleston, S. C., and Mrs. Charles H. Brooks, of Philadelphia.
Dr. Washington and took part in each of the notable functions and sessions of the convention. In addition to the trolley ride and the Unity Club reception, the "Wizard" team took the first ball to the pitcher. He was on the refreshing boat ride on the Bosnian harbor, and later on took in the clambate at Readville Driving Club Park.
The immense charts on the walls of Convention Hall, showing the representations and what might yet be done in these same pursuits, were studied with care and many of the facts were taken into account. We have future reference. Rev. L. G. J. Gordan photos of them made for the Chicago exposition, so valuable did the consider them.
The resolutions, offered by a committee headed by Mr. Gordan, were adopted without conflict. When an objection was made to the mayor's address, the Governor and mayor for their "addresses," the fact was remembered that the mayor made no address. By manifold agreement the wording was changed to "guided gentlemen for "courtesies extended," and all was well.
A. Eichelburger & Company attracted favorable attention by reason of having on hand everywhere the cigars manufactured especially for B.B. League season as a compliment to the race's peerless leader. At the banquet committee at the Hotel Melbourne, the Eichelburger, presented Dr. Washington with a box of the cigars named "Bob." He accepted the token with thanks.
The Eureka Co-Operative Bank, incorporated under the laws of Massachusetts, instituted that came in for interest institutions that came in for interest amination. David E. Crawford, the energetic secretary, gave a graphic account of the bank is conducted, and told of the habits of thrift and home-ownership that the institution had engendered by making classes of "The Hub." Samuel M. Merchant is president of the bank.
The singing of the Hampton Institute Quartet is interpolated in the interpolations of the convention series—and they never seemed to tire of the melodies that touch the soul of "Couldn't Hear Nobody Pray." "Steal Away," "I Want to Be Ready," and "Do You Want the Lord Told Me To死," were some of the lections rendered. The well-pleased audience saw to it that the boys got several good dinners in recognition of their beautiful "playing on the vocal harp."
The reception at the handsome $10,000 Unity Club, 228 West Canton street, 900 Fifth Avenue, the finest affairs of the week. The parors and rear garden were crowded during the two hours allotted to the bracing all kinds of sandwiches, Boston baked beans with brown bread, the bracing all kinds of sandwiches, is social and beneficial and numbers among its members the best young men of Boston. The president is John B. Hancock, who through was presented individually to to Dr. and Mrs. Washington and the staff of the Business League.
The trolley ride was delightful, Seven carloads of enthusiastic sightseers were carried all over the history of the city to see, with their own eyes, such memorable spots as the Boston City Hall, the state house, the famous Boston Museum and the place where he fell.
THE FREEMAN. AN ILLUSTRATED COLORED NEWSPAPER.
---
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. . .
TH CAPTIN'S A GREAT MAN BILL
I'll keep on TH' LOOKOUT
THEY US FOOLISH YOU ON PAPERS
THREE CHEERS FOR TH' CAP'N
FOR THE CAPTIN
2. "Sink us for a pair o' fools 'f we didn't take him at his word an' sign papers there an' then for another cruise. Me an' Bill felt so good an' the next day bein' New Year's an' in port, wot does we do but get 'shore leave and come back 'ith a cargo o' hansome presets for th' skipper."
FROM SHORE LEAVE
WILL YOU GET BELOW!
5. “Bill an' me both tried t' remind him o' his resolution, but that warnn't no chance to get a word in edge-ways with the capt'n, an' we felt actually relieved when he kicked us into th' hold an' clapped down th' hatch."
5. “Bill an' me both tried t' remind him o' his resolution, but that warnn't no chance to get a word in edge-ways with the capt'n, an' we felt actually relieved when he kicked us into th' hold an' clapped down th' hatch."
The "live wire" of the week was W. Alexander Johnson, the youthful, charismatic, and well-known No. 1. He is a "hail fellow, well met," a born organizer of men, and fits into his job as snugly as a lady's glove, and as a "hail fellow," and the "hear great," and gave everybody the "cheery smile" and the "glad hand." He was an owner of a school where he drew the difference between night and day—just worked all the time, and at anything his hands would meet at night—and the first one we would greet the next morning on the school bus. He and the country is destined to help more of him. Mrs Mary L. Johnson, his estimable "help-meet," is also affable and a beauty culture school on Tremont street and does a gilt-edge business. Her address on the practical side of the business is most scholarly presentations heard during the great session.
The "thriller" of the welcome addresses was that delivered Wednesday at the Attorney-General of the United States. His eulogium on the relation of the two men to the race and invitation to journey with him through an allegorical jauteur to the world-wide conflicts, in which the darker peoples of the earth give earthly guidance to their sittened an oratorical gem "of the purest ray serene. A rich vein of humor and wit, the man who converted the grace and the gay into a delicious intellectual salad that satisfied every appetite. Mr. Lewis met it and mastered it. He was warmly congratulated by all. It was a great success, and many great speeches, but in none did he hit the mark more squarely than on this eventful morning. It was a hard adversity. It was one that will live.
The banquet given by the Boston Business League Tuesday night at the University of Pennsylvania, the custers and executive committee of the National League was attended by 100 men and 100 women, pronounced by those who have followed the League for many years to the University of Pennsylvania, kind yet experienced. The menu embraced every substantial, as well as every delicacy, known to the gastroenterologist, the face R. J. Royster, proprietor of the Melbourne, Clarence G. Matthews, and Clarence G. Matthews, Attorney, was toastmaster and acquitted himself with credit. His introduction to the profession and his rose to the heights in presenting his sometime preceptor, Dr. Washington. Mr. Matthews said he was the most successful of the number of schools, but the one which gave him more pride than all of the rest put together, he said. The keege Institute. Witty talks were made by Dr. Washington, and co-founded by Col. Johnson, Watkins, Hoyt, Harris, Banks, Royster Kennedy Courtney and others.
from buying desirable farm lands had no deterrent effect on him. He could not anyone and he was able to pay for from anyone, white or black, who desired to sell.
A solid speech—one that told of a business that strikes close to the family, heartsthistone—was the manager of the North Carolina Mutual and Provident Association, with headquarters at Durham, North Carolina. The financial financier of Durham, is president of the association. Mr. Spaulding is also vice-president as well as manager, and Dr. A. M. Moore, whose standing as a financial officer has retained and treasurer. The corporation was organized in 1899. The first year's business amounted to $440. Steady growth has increased, until today, just closing its 16th year, its business totals $444, for the year. The company operates in three states and gives employment to over 700 persons in the offices and in Selda. Its most valuable asset, as Mr. Spaulding has said, is mensense working capital, its long list of policy holders and big deposits with the National Association of Insurance. The evidence of the public that the company values most. This is fundamental and the N. C. Mutual and Provident Association, made a marked impression on Mr. Spaulding's speech and answered many pertinent questions about his company and the insurance business in general and made a marked impression on Mr. Spaulding's association and of Mr. Spaulding and the Gibraltar-like forces that have made them top-otchers in the business of protecting mankind against the rainy that are here to come some time in every life.
(To Be Continued.)
CURRY INSTITUTE
URBANA, Ohio—The Curry Normal and Industrial Institute will open its twenty-seventh year September 28. The school will cap to the full capacity of the school. The new theological department will open with a strong faculty of ministries, including theological schools of the country. Rev. E. G. Arnold, pastor of the school, will lead a divinity school. Miss Helen Coleman, of Oberlin College, will head the normal; Miss Viola Hall, of Johnstown, Aa; gave industrial class H. Jones, Bavaria, of Oberlin; the mira Streets, Washington, D. C., the music. The fall festival will be held in the new building, Central Hall. Dr. T. W. Burton, one of the leading Negro physicians of Springfield, O., sent a large wheel bell for the new building. He has been lecturer of anatomy and physiology for several years at Curry. The Institute Extension Department will open with communities within a radius of twenty-five miles of Urbana. Farmers' meetings, boys' conferences, and lecture courses will be conducted for the general public by the Institute Extension
Curry is doing her part to give a
along the literary and industrial lines.
It needs the support of the general
to finance the way. Let us all help.
CINCINNATI, O., NEWS NOTES.
Species: Goldie Teemah.
Miss Goldie has a friend of 517 David street, entertained a few friends Tuesday night in honor of Miss Ethel Gussie Williams, the beloved guest for the last month. She will leave in ten days to take up her duties as a school teacher. Those present were Miss Ethel Gussie Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Goldie Bowen, Mr. William Barton and the writer. Everybody enjoyed Mrs. Barton, of North Vernon, Ind., mother of William Barton, member of the Lions Club, in the city of the her daughter, Mrs. James Prince, of Park avenue, W. H.
**Miss Goldie Teemah.**
The Knights of the Phyllas of this city are making preparation to entertain the grand lodge members in the near future. Everybody is now getting ready to attend the charity ball, October 28. All you society gents get ready for it. Calls Miss Bessie Lewis, of West Fifth street, is on the sick list.
Miss Williams has closed the Phoenix.
Specialist J. C. Horton, The Freeman.
was recently re-elected president of the Oklahoma State Federation of Negro Woman's Clubs. Mrs. Horton is widely known for her successful work in esthetics, a library for the colored people of her city.
Just think of it! How easy you can make times pick up if you advertise in The Freeman.
M. E. H.
MADAM C. J. WALKER
President of the Madam C. J. Walker M'f'g
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Get In on the Jitney Watch Purchase!
Buys you one of Carl Rost 20 Year gold filled Watches with a 15 Jewel movement. Begin at once as the club is limited. 5c, 10, 15c and so on for 20 weeks and you are the possessor of a fine watch and have not missed the money.
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These cuts show one year's growth of my hair and we have testimonies from many ladies claiming a greater growth on their heads.
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YEAR'S RESOLUTIONS.
HAPPY
NEW YEAR
CAPIN
FOR THE
CAPIN
SOLUTIONS FOR THE CAPTIN
HAPPY
NEW YEAR
CAP'IN
FOR THE
CAP'IN
FOR THE
CAP'IN
SOME
PRESENTS
CAP
I DON'T WANT
HIM T' TURN
THAT SEARCH
LIGHT ON ME
3. "You'd a thought same as me an' Bill that them presents 'ud a touched his heart, but some men'at go to sea haven't got any, an' us bein' a short spell over due made matters worse when th' skipper fixed his glass on us an' see th' packages, I never see a man get so versed."
THERE'S
THREE
MONTHS
O'THIS
WILL
BREAD AND WATER
FER MESS TODAY
MATES
SAY COOKIE,
CAN'T YOU SEND
DOWN A GLIMP?
6. "In all my experience, boy an' man, afore th' most, I don't reckole any harsher treatment on shipboard than wot we got in them same three months, an' as Bill says, an' so do I: never take no stock in these New Year's resolves, an' you can lay to that, my lad." International Cartoon Co. N. V 340
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Trial Treatment
Make all Money Orders payable to Mme. C.
Agents Wanted. Write for terms.
Hey Watch Purchase
5c Increase
Year gold filled Watches with a
as the club is limited. 5c, 10, 15
the possessor of a fine watch an
L. ROST
Minisot Street
k in the middle of the block
ARDIMAN'S
Power and Beautifier
[Image of a woman with long hair, facing left, in profile view].
3 Months Supply for 50c.
Price. We pay all postage. Address al
Hardiman
COLUMBUS, OHIO
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hot comb or straightener needed
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Everywhere
TIONS.
RHODES-HALL
We Cut the Price on Everything Every Day.
S S. S., $1.00 Bottle.....67c $1.00 Beef Wine Iron.....48c
Pitchers' Castoria.....19c 25c Eagle Milk.....15c, 2 for 25c
Fletchers' Castoria.....23c 25c Talcum Powder 15c, 2 for 25c
Syrup Pepsin (Caldwell's).....39c Wine of Cardui.....74c
DeWitt's Kidney Pills.....39c Bell's Pine T Honey.....19c
All $1.00 Preparations 74c All 50c Preparations 39c
All 25c Preparations 19c
A New $1500 Soda Fountain, Finest in the City has been installed
For Freeman Readers
Clip this Coupon out—Present it at Our Fountain with 5c and a
friend and its good for 2 Sodas or Sundaes. Good till Sept. 20th.
A Modern Electrically Equipped Plaining Mill Quality and Prompt Service Old Phone, Woodruff, 280; New Phone, 6176
LA CREOLE
SELF HEATING COMB
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The great French perfume, winner of highest international awards. Each drop as sweet and fragrant as the living Lilac blossom. A celebrated connoisseur said: "I don't see how you can sell such a remarkable perfume for 75 cents a bottle"—and remember each bottle contains 6 oz.—it is wonderful value. Try it. Ask your dealer today for ED. PINAUD'S LILAC. For 10 cents our American offices will send you a testing bottle. Write today. PARFUMERIE ED. PINAUD. Dept M ED. PINAUD Bldg., New York
INSURE IN A HOME COMPANY
Health and Accident Insurance
(INCORPORATED)
Price 308-313 Majestic Bld., Indiana,
State Health and Accident Policy on week-
day company —The Freeman.
Hotel Craw-
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S FLOWER S
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Home Office 308-313 Majestic Bld., Indianapolis, Ind. Issues an up to-date Health and Accident Policy on weekly payments. We guarantee this company -The Freeman.
The best place in the city to get what you want, just when you want it. Private dining rooms for parties and banquets. We stand second to none.
Knows what you want, and has it fresh for you Everyday of the Year at prices most reasonable
QUALITY FRESHNESS ARRANGEMENT
HILL FLORAL CO. 225 N. PENN, ST. Both Phones 319
C. C. THOMAS, MGR.
THE ORIGINAL h-Brown Fa
wn Face
High-Brown Face Powder
IS MADE ONLY BY
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CHICAGO
BEWARE OF INJURY
Public: There are IMITATIONS of
as "Brown Face Powder," "Light-
BROWN FACE POWDER was origi-
nated States Patent Office, and it is the fi-
t-class articles are imitated. The vow
ours is of a superior quality.
You buy a face powder for "HIGH B
on the box, you have been impos-
sured to our original HIGH-BROW
YOUR COMPLEXION.
See That Our Name Is
THE OVERTON-HYDE
on-Hygienic
The Overton-Hygienic Mfg. Co.
RE OF INJURIOUS IMITATIONS of our HIGH-BROWN powder," "Light-Brown," and since DER was originated by us, and it is the first and only fact itated. The very fact that my quality. for "HIGH BROWN" that he been imposed upon, for you I HIGH-BROWN, and one tION.
Our Name Is on Every Box
CON-HYGIENE
BEWARE OF INJURIOUS IMITATIONS
To the Public: There are IMITATIONS of our HIGH-BROWN FACE POWDER on the market, sold as "Brown Face Powder," "Light-Brown," and similar names.
HIGH-BROWN FACE POWDER was originated by us. We have the name copyrighted in the United States Patent Office, and it is the first and only face powder ever made especially for our people.
Only first-class articles are imitated. The very fact that many imitate our products is proof in itself that ours is of a superior quality.
When you buy a face powder for "HIGH BROWN" that has not the name OVERTON-HYGIENIC on the box, you have been imposed upon, for you have bought an IMITATION that is INFERIOR to our original HIGH-BROWN, and one that is liable to cause LASTING INJURY TO YOUR COMPLEXION.
See That Our Name Is on Every Box You Buy.
THE OVERTON-HYGIENIC MFG. CO.
DEPT. 27, CHICAGO, ILL.
CCTURERS of RO-ZOL FACE BLEACH MADE, PERFUMES and AGENTS WANTED-W
ACE BLEACH, AIDA OVE
RFUMES and Other Toilet
VANTED—WRITE FOR TEEN
Also Manufacturers of RO-ZOL FACE BLEACH, AIDA OVERTON WALKER HAIR PO MADE, PERFUMES and Other Toilet Articles. AGENTS WANTED—WRITE FOR TERMS
CHICAGO
THE FREEMAN, AN ILLUSTRATED COLORED NEWSPAPER
Short Flights
By R W. Thompson.
Recipe for Making Friends.
If you're making friends here's a recipe
That I've always found turned the trick
A dash of smiles and a lovely eye
Mixed in with a habit of standing by
When a chap's in trouble, or in disgrace
With a veil of sympathy on your
face;
And a cheery word, and a glad warm
grip;
At the end when the foot's in a way
to slip;
O this is a mixture of odds and ends
That goes to the making of lasting
friends;
The kind of friends that when once
are warranted never to crack nor
fade.
Georgia offers a fruitful field for missionary work.
Dr. Booker T. Washington is to make a tour of Kentucky.
The National Negro Business League "got there with both feet" at Boston.
"Mashing" is now unlawful in New York but the awful practice will cease, of course.
Ira T. Bryan will be an interesting figure at the next general conference of the A. M. E. church.
Prof. C. H. Moore, national organizer, thinks mighty well of Roanoke, Va., as a center of business activity among colored people.
Contiguous districts for bishops and the establishment of Episcopal residences will be big issues at the Zion conference at Louisville next May.
There was no evidence at Columbus that Gen. Joseph L. Jones lost any of his titles when he was robbed of that case at a New York hotel last year.
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Chicago has done its best to redeem the reputation of the Negro as an exposition promoter—that is, some of the promoters were on the level, and really exhibit that was a credit to the race.
Captive critics of Booker T. Washington are wasting their time. Let them do as well along their own line of thought before they venture to find fault with the work of the "Tuskegee Wizard."
No one is surprised that the jury found that, too, Frank came to his despair, the man of parties known, "etc. Twas ever thus when jury and lyncher have been brought into business relations.
The emancipation exposition at Chicago seems to be a real show—a shining example of the progress of the race in fifty years of freedom and largely becoming the Negro from the roaring frenzy pulled off at Richmond by one Jackson.
Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Cleveland, St. Louis, Jacksonville, Kansas City, Birmingham and Kaleigh are cities of the Midwest. They are also the trained the National Negro Business League. Let their magnates get busy. The inspiration such an organization brings to a town is worth many times the money expended.
It is funny how a fellow who "can't life up to the people who are alive" is at the figure, manages to survive on $40 per month when he is reduced to such remuneration. Wouldn't a business manager be paid $75 per month and save at least $25, investing the surplus in a growing business enterprise that would eventually yield a comfortable income?
The colored people of the country have no love for the jitney bus promoters and are glad when the streetcars are up to the regulations governing common carriers or be forced out of business. The jitney is invariably a jimmy car, permitted to thrive. The day of the jitney will be short and deservedly so.
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Mrs. Grace R. Moreland, widow of the late Dr. John F. Moreland, who died in 2013, is the faculty of the A. M. E. Zion church, has donated 1,000 for a "John F. Mortland Chapel," and is the formation of his sons, and then will be perpetuated in the education of deserving students in Livingston College, the premier school of the Zion denomination. Some papers advise that grafters be informed if they are ignorant about the grafters want. To
The presentations at the Columbus encampment of the K. of P. were embalmed in a large silver preme Chancellor S. W. Green was given a solid gold jewel, an insignia of his office. Supreme Worthy Counselor Calanthe, was presented with a solid silver cup, the gift of the Alabama delegation honored H. C. Bryant, Jr. grandson of the Supreme Worthy Counselor, with a diamond ring.
Why not a larger representation of Negro workers in the shoe and knitting factories of New England and in the textile industry of vanilla? It is settled that thousands of colored workers are to leave the south for the next few years must find places in the gainful occupations of the north. Why not start an aggressive campaign to recruit men and women in the great factories of the north?
The Newport News (Va.) Star, one of the best-edited papers in the country, is a professor at time in urging a larger degree of reliability in employees in colored business establishments. The young man or woman should be as scrupulous in the matters of the work as in the morning, keeping as steadily on the job and laboring at all times in the interests of the business. The teacher, over the white man, can reliably and reliable help the crying need of the Negro business man.
Gov. Capper of Kansas, is a prohibitionist from his heart. He has laid down a regulation that no man who drinks can secure or hold a government office in Kansas. The law of Kansas. The governor's order calls for the resignation of any employee if he takes a drink at his own home or stays in Kansas City, just out of town. William Allen White to ask "What's the matter with Kansas?" What has effervescent Nick Chiles to say show?
The sensible southern farmer will not again depend solely on cotton, war or no war. Gen. J. S. Carr, of North Carolina, will look up to as a 'guide, counselor and friend,' says his state will produce this year, besides a fine cotton crop, a cottonseed oil, and gifted products. He says he expects to raise 4,000 bushels of wheat on less than 200 acres, and that others will do as well. He says the south will be the colored farmer of the south, who should greater need of ready money than General Carr does.
The startling news has gone forward that the Philadelphia General Conference of the A. M. E. church may not make any new bishops. This is not the case, and take notice. Not only would such a decision bring consternation to those who wish to be bishops, but to those who wish to be bishops in places vacated by the men promoted. The economists seek to save $30,000 in salaries and claim that the church can get along for four years with the staff of bishops. Is this heresy, or not?
Rev. W. H. Jernigan, pastor of Mt. Carmel Baptist church, Washington, D. C., has issued an unique circular, suggestive toon, that right-thinking people should lay aside bundles of "favorite excuses" marked the death, "domestic cares," business care, "sickness," pride, etc., and come to the House of God on Sunday, where, he says, everyone will find "rest" under happy, and encouraging circumstances. One and should be widely circulated by those who think a "day of rest" means idling at home or engaging in some unworthy pursuit.
It is pleasant to note that Speaker Champ Clark, by firmness and rare courage, prevented a mob at Bowling Green man charged with killing a white farmer in a pitchfork fight. Mr. Clark halted the mob in its mad career, plead guilty, and so convinced the gang that he was right that they dispersed. The colored people of the country have allowed his for his breadth of vision as a statesman and as a friend of American fair play. They will admire him all the more from now on, in view of his gallant victory and order at his Bowling Green home.
THE CHURCH OF THE NATIONAL SCHOOL OF CHRISTIANITY
THIRD BAPTIST CHURCH
Youngstown, Ohio
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***
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by difficulties. He enjoys the fullest confidence of the right-thinking people of both races. *
Dr. Jasper Tapper Phillips, one of Nashville's leading physicians, after a visit to Montgomery, Ala., speaks in the most optimistic tone of the progress that is being made by the race in Nashville in capital. He voiced his observations in an document and thoughtful address at the Williams Chapel C. M. E. church in that city, where his itinerary included Birmingham, Ala., and Baptist Sunday School Congress and, in association with Dr. W. P. Landers, performed a number of delicate surgical procedures. Dr. Phillips is a "live wire" at Nashville in the movement for civic advancement or racial uplift is complete without him.
An exchange says the men who "misconduct" the affairs of the Gallilean estate, certainly were adepts at covering tracks and finger-prints effectively, and goes on to state that "the circuit was most rigid scrutiny, returned a verdict that it is utterly impossible to find and analyze the $4,000 or more which the bank wished to disappear somewhere and somehow during the life of the bank of Gallilea it seems. As fisherman it seems, the Gallilean它 celebrated "Izaak Walton" look like a selling plater. Some colored bank-ware no better than some white bankers.
Indianapolis is to have a first-class hotel for the accommodation of colorful guests, with investment, containing eighty-five rooms with thoroughly modern appointments, including elevator service, Chicago hotel, and a fully-equipped Brown, adding to the fairly-adequate equipment of the town. At Philadelphi, the hotel is known as the Roadside, Boston sits out well to the front with the Melbourne, conducted by J. R. Rossetter, the manager, much-needed $100,000 colored hostelry in Harlem. The Age, New York News, reports, and keep this matter constantly before the moneyed men of Colored New York.
Rev. L. G. Jordan, corresponding secretary of the Baptist Foreign Mission at the session of the National Baptist Convention in Chicago. His campaign years ago to be waged along particularly expressive hearts heartily endorsed by the convention. One thousand tons of foodstuff have been sent in recent months to Baptist hospitals in other states is making a strenuous effort to duplicate the order for workers in other fields. Dr. Jordan is the showing at the convention of charts indicating the present status of the community and the industrial arena and showing the scope of its operations may be enlarged.
It is said that the leading candidates for the Zion bishopric, Drs. J. S. Jackson and G. C. Clement, are pledged to the plan of contiguous districts and to the plan of congenial neighborhoods, though both have beautiful homes among congenial neighbors, their friends say they are prepared to move to whatever the conference sets plan for an epiphany in Louis, Louisville, Chicago, Birmingham, Houston, Texas, and other strategic points are asking for a resident bishop, of the successful aspirants for the bench to find as pleasant a home in the cities mentioned as they now enlist a bishop should live among the people of the district over which he presides.
REV. WM. O. HARPER.
The Third Baptist church was indeed fortunate in securing the services ministers in this part of the best known ministers in this part of the best known ministers in this part of the best pastors of Ohio. He came to Youngstown just after the flood from Dayton, Ohio, ten years. Since he has been here, the membership has increased from 110 to 368. Rev. Harper is a man of wide experience, a hard work since he was nine years of
[Name]
are, beginning in 1877. He was born in Virginia and attended school at N.C. University of Ohio and Bluefield, W. Va. He has pastored some prominent churches, Winchester, Ky., and Dayton, Ohio. He is very much sought in various parts of the country, and is a vital, a line of work to which he seems especially adapted. Rev. Harper is one of his most important pastors at Baptist Convention, where he figured conspicuously in many important and fundamental changes. He has painted a beautiful home in Garrett street.
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4
§ NATIONAL ILLUSTRATED
aaetran,
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
eo eee
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA.
“Samco mae;
pels enna
‘Bho Mouth aang Canada Baste
an a sea tea Han
olf a a a a
ae ren hae ioenee e
weepiess Gaertn
ene
ee ee
ere eo eae
sean enter ae
ioe moeecores Sere aca
sterner bese
Bog sani (omer at Gane
beans Siege ts ae
sei
Entered at the postoiiice at Indistapolis,
Soe
Zoe
GEORGE L. KNOX,
read eee
ELWOOD C. KNOX,
esl es
"All matter should be addressed to
THE FREEMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY,
TNARAPOLAS, LANA,
New Phous 2880.
—————
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1915.
Wading beautifully into winter at
this writing. Not knee deep as yet,
to use poet Riley’s expression, but
the progress is interestingly percept-
ible,
At the rate the allies are using
money they will lick up a billion in a
jiffy. Why not respend some of the
money they are putting out? Who
gets the money?
‘The A. M. E. conference, which
held forth at Bethel church, this city,
last week, was one of interest. ‘The
new appointments have been made,
and from all accounts were gener-
ally satisfactory.
‘The Freeman's exposition number
will be an effort to include the repre-
sentative of the race, whether of
men or affairs. It will come from
the press during the holidays. It
will be an addition to the festival of
commemoration for achievement dur-
ing the past fifty years of our exist-
ence as a freed people.
‘The latest note from “Germany is
that strict orders have Deen. giyen
to submarine commanders to let fin-
ers pass unattacked when in doubt.
‘The object is to run no risks of
making mistakes. If the program is
lived up to much of the present un-
pleasantness between the two coun-
tring ‘will Wisenpest.
‘The Chicago exposition closed in
a blaze of glory. The Windy City
has a way of doing big things. And
that is not buncombe. Chicago is a
‘Negro haven, From early youth the
ambitious Negroes have that city in
mind as a place of residence, or at
least, to visit. It means the gather-
ing of a wide-awake energetic mass
that other cities, logically, can not
have.
Big’ burgoo feast for the Republic-
an clans was pulled off at the State
Fair Grounds last Wednesday. Ken-
tucky burgoo fs a soup of distinc-
tion, and which has for some reason
become associated with _ political
gatherings, especially when there are
to be high resolves. Leading poll-
ticlans of the state, from governors
down, enjoyed the ‘outing. Speech-
making and hand-shaking on the part
of the candidates were a part of the
program.
Mr, Bryan is against making more
efficient the army and navy. This is
in accord with his peace program.
‘Most of us are for peace. We may
never again have use for a large
army, but who knows anything about
it? Mr, Bryan's views concerning
such matters have no particular
value. His influence, of course, can
greatly obstruct the plan of military
efficiency. The only guide in such
matters is past and present history,
together with the trend of the
present-day thoughts of men.
Many political workers of this
community are having some fine re
views of the business during the
present trial of Mayor Bell and oth:
ers for election frauds. ‘There are
some politicians who will not see
their own reflections as the trial
progresses, but we don’t think that
it is the rule. We have in mind the
hustlers about the polls. It's a rare
one, indeed, if he fails to find any
fof the evidence brought out as some
part of his own experiences. In the
language of Ingersoll, the past, rises
before them like a dream. And then
again, after Col, Henry Watterson,
we imagine they have it, “Let the
galled jade wince, we thank God
that our withers are unwrung.
WHO GETS THE MONEY?
‘There is an old saying that the mill
will never grind the grain with the
water that has passed. But in theory
it does that very thing in view of
the ever recurring rains with the
‘ocean as the one great source. Vast
sums of money are required to main.
tain armies in the fields as can be
seen at this time when the great
‘Buropean governments seem to be at
their wits end to provide the neces.
sary funds. Other countries have
had the same dificulty, the Anancial
stringency, when it appeared that
the vast sums so generously poured
into the channels of circulation were
lost forever. ‘The ery always has
been for more money by warring gov.
ernments, One feels to ask the ques:
tion, who gets the money?
‘The vast amounts spent in main.
taining armies, it seems, should find
its way readily back to the govern:
ment to be used over and over again,
But the fact seems to be that a com:
paratively few men reap the enor
mous benefits of war in a money
sense. Poor Tommy Atkins saves
but small amount if he has. the
oportunity to spend it. And if some
of the soldiers save largely the
money is generally forwarded to the
home to care for those they leave be
hind them, consequently it finds its
way again into circulation, and im
mediately.
‘So the conclusion’ must be that the
big business concerns are the bene
ficlarfes of great wars. In the pres
ent war this is so notably true that
the British government has found it
necessary to excessively tax large
business interests, especialy _ those
that manufacture munitions of war,
‘This excessive taxation seems dras
tic, and of course, unusual, but, nev-
ertheless, its logical thing to do in
view of the immense sums that the
government is spending with those
concerns. very great war in civ-
flized countries creates a crop of new
very rich men who win through the
distress of their governments. We
are not aware of an instance where
those that reaped so largely were re-
quired to do more thah others by way
of government support.
Heretofore general taxation has
helped in raising funds for war pur-
poses, in our own country and pre-
sumably elsewhere. ‘This so-called
equal distribution of the burden,
while manifestly fair was another in-
stance where fair was false. The
poor man has always complained that
he bore the burden of taxation. And
in a way this is true. In the case of
war this is particularly true, even if
the comparative few only’ reap the
vast war profits.
If the British government carries
out its scheme of making the big
concerns disgorge @ part of their
large profits it will be no more than
the beantiful thing of equity although
not lodged in governmental princt-
ples. There is no way of ascertain.
ing the views of the management of
those concerns, but it stands to rea-
son that they know that they are
draining the country of its resources.
consequently could not reasonably
complain of injustice when compelled
to help the government maintain it-
self in a struggle on account of
which they benefit so largely.
‘The soldier in the field, after all
is the man. He gives his all—more
than money—his life. Nor is this the
end of it. He sacrifices his family;
his children are scattered to the
winds, A miserly pension follows,
it is true, but it merely suffices to
stay hunger, if that. The British
government has hit on a proper
method of getting back some of the
millions it is so generously sending
into circulation.
GILES B. JACKSON VINDICATED.
It is now being said that Giles B.
Jackson, manager of the late lament-
ed exposition at Richmond, Va.,
made a brilliant coup when he was
haled up before an_ investigating
committee anent the affairs of said
exposition, It is being said that he
was able to show good and faithful
accounts of his transactions, and
fa splendid balance to the tune of
$16,000. And this is heralded forth
a5 his vindication.
"True enough, ‘some publications
suspected irregularity in Mr, Jack
son's finances, but ‘The Freeman
made no such intimation. It charged
‘gross mismanagement, and which de
feated the success of the exposition.
‘That's the thing to talk to, and not
correct accounts and splendid bal-
ances, Had he spent some of his
$16,000 perhaps, the show would have
made good, answering its great pur
pose, and which was not to see how
many dollars could be turned over at
the last asoouming: | a
ie said specifically that
mz jackion borned ‘hs, publication
durjng the preparation for the expo:
sitlogy He loaded it heavily with
matter concerning it, and which,
more than ‘likely, was not done
gratis He sald that, the publication
was here to stay, floated it from the
mast, as ifhe half suspected that
the: respectability of its birth was
quegttoned---
‘We are pleased to know that his
accgumts were? found to be regular
and that the old carry-all of sun.
dries were fot necessary to bolste:
up things, that fs, if this was not
necessary. But that is beside the
questjon. ‘The exposition should not
have made the miserably poor show
ing.,, It was the thing in which to
havé Been most interested—the suc
cess of the undertaking,
Tnithe mame of the race it is well
that there was no defalcation. ‘The
failure was a signal disgrace—a na
tional disgrace, as little as we may
charge had been added. The splendi¢
success of the Chicago exposition wa:
necessary to neutralize that blight
to offset it, and with a surplusage o}
good, or else the race would stand
charged today with a stupidity that i
searcely Jess thar criminal.
We thank Mr. Jackson for manag
ing to keep out of the toils, and
which required the least of his et
forts, His failure to make the ex
position go remains as rank as ever.
Tegardless of the funds he returned
to the coffers of the state.
JOHN MILHOLLAND.
An enthusiastic admirer of John
Milholland, sociologist, sent to this
office a few days ago a recent issue
of The Bulletin, an inguential weekly
publication of San Francisco contain-
ing an article from the pen of Mr.
Milholland on the Negro question
which covers the entire front page
of that journal: ‘The admirer asked
us to give our view of the article.
We find it impossible to review the
contribution with anything like the
satisfactory way we are led to be
Heve the gentleman expects.
‘The article is not only lengthy for
the kind, it brings in much matter
which answers the object of the
writer, we will say, but which is not
such as we think proper for com-
ment in this paper. For instance
Mr, Milholland deals largely in Bib-
Heal matter, insisting that democ-
racy was first suggested by a black
man, the object being to show in-
gratitude for the present status of
the Negroes in this country. One
can see that that is not a question
for argument since it is a conclusion
caught up of Biblical narrative.
Mr. Milholland rushes down the
records of men Who have been quoted
as the author of the present day de-
moeraty, likean abstract of titles
‘man, uniil. ke reaches the ‘great first
cause.” He cites Thomas, Jefferson,
‘Thomas ‘Paine, the Magna Charta of
‘King John, Hampton and ‘Cromwell,
Mirabeau, "Danton, Rousseau, Aris-
totle, Plato, Pericles and Moses, end-
ing with Jethro, the Ethiopean priest
of Michian, the fatherinlaw of
Moses. He says:
“Jethro saw the foundations of the
Amprlean Republic, and every effort to-
ward democracy that the world has
Seen. throughout the intervening
years,
All of this is told interestingly and
to a purpose, but as we intimated it
is beyond the seope of ordinary news-
paper discussion. By ingenious art
gument he shows that Jethro start-
ed the democratic ball a rolling. He
quotes Hberally from the Bible in
support of his views, after which he
said:
‘There you have the genesis of every
democracy that the world has seen,
here you have the Kerm of one of
the great ideas that ‘have influenced
the human race. And you've got to
trace it right back to that old Ethio-
plan priest whose daughter Moses took
Unto himself as wife.
It is not our business to call at-
tention to Mr. Milholland’s argument
owing to his views, They are as
THE FREEMAN, AN ILLUSTRATED COLORED NEWSPAPER.
likely to be right as those of other
men, If he sees democracy’s seed
sown by Jethro, the Ethiopian, it s
in kind with many notions gotien of
the Bible, and which are now great
principles of organizations. The va-
rious churches owe their origin to
the varied views of men concerning
what the Bible says.
Mr. Milholland after quitting his
Biblical discourse discuses the race
question much as it is discussed by
other thinkers, both white and col-
ored. He makes this very sage ob-
servation:
“these joyous people, who inherit Joy
at birth, that which we only get when
sitting “on the starboard side of a
cream lay-out or a tuttl frutu. "This
Stark’ Tapley. quality in ‘the colored
Face is overwhelming, If it were not,
Slavery, and the aftermath of slavery,
through which they are now passing,
would have made them misanthropes,
or anarchists, of in some form enemies
of ‘established society. What other
face would put up. with what ‘they
have suffered and stil. remain good
citizens, and loyal to the government
that refuses to protect thelr lives and
thelr property?”
What the writer says has been said
in various ways and at various times
by most every observing thoughtful
Negro and also by many white men.
‘The quality of joy is inherent in the
‘race, and has been its salvation. It
was so judiciously placed that it
seems as if the result of Heaven's
reflection or deliberation, the butt-
ress against the rushing avalanche
of destruction. Time, opportunity
and the resultant transformation are
playing their part in striking out this
erstwhile saving quality. That is to
say, the Negroes are rapidly assum-
ing their whole responsibility in the
world, practically free and untram-
melled, meaning the absence of the
extra imposition of men, by way of
enslavement, that soul Killing condi-
tion which sets up its insigna of of-
fice in the physiognomy of mankind.
In other words, slavery brutalizes
soul and body, and hence the coun-
teractant with which our people are
s0 largely endowed was the saving
necessity.
‘The writer's intent was not in this
Girection—a strict sociological treat-
ment of the Negro race. He, how-
ever, let fall many expressions which
readily suggest enlargement. He
had in mind the denial of Negro sut-
frage, the free participation in that
democracy, which, as he says, one of
their kind'had the forsight to see as
the best government for man in gen
eral.
‘When he says that another people
than the Negroes under the circum-
stances would have soured on civil-
ization, becoming anarchists in. the
worst sense, attempting the destruc-
tion of the’ thing to which they
gained no admission, the observa
tion may or may not be compliment.
ary to the race. Perhaps the idea of
unrest Is not to be encouraged even
by naming it. It is apparent that a
sort of soul unrest is on in the Ne-
gro race and which naturally follows
education and enlightenment.
Slavery, the Civil War, are reced-
ing from old memories; the new ones
know nothing of those things, think-
ing of them as traditions and of which
they had no part. It means that the
new Negro will be mighty impatient
with his narrow conditions until they
greatly increase. He needs no en-
couragement in view of the steady
growth in one way or the other. His
harrow ways are increasing in spite
of the noise and bluster in order to
Keep up the show of the old order of
things. The Negroes, without doubt,
are marching into the newness of
light. In the twilight now, but ere
Jong, its full flood of noon will en
compass when suffrage and the rest
of it will be theirs as they are other
men. Of course there are dangers
ahead. They must prove worthy o!
their hope and prospects, or they wil
turn will-o'-the-wisps.
We said in the beginning that
there was no way to properly com:
ment on Mr. Milholland’s article. We
have spoken to it in part, enlarging
on what he had to say rather than
commenting. ‘The article is a splen-
did contribution of loyalty to the
whole people and to the genius of our
government whose fundamental prin-
ciples are to see one man as an-
other before the law and institutions,
so far as it concerns race, color ot
previous condition of servitude.
RUBE FOSTER WINS TWO GAMES
AT SCORLINGS PARK LAST
SUNDAY.
Champion Ball Players Team Win
From the Chicago Giants and the St.
Louis Giants, Whitworth Refusing
Hit From Chicago Giants—Sprudels
Coming Next Sunday—Foster and
ysHis Team to Leave About October
21 for the West.
(By Cary B. Lewis.)
CHICAGO, IL, September | 20.—
“Rube” Foster, minager of the Ameri-
can Giants, pulled off a double header
on last Sunday et Achorling’s park and
it was a big dar for the fans, | ‘The
fans were givra an opportunity to
shout themselves hoarse for Mr. Whit-
Worth climbed into fame. by pitening
4 no-hit no-run game against the Chi-
€ago Giants with Dixon in the box
Had not Mr. Lloyd fumbled a ball off
Jackson's easy’ bounder in the fifth in-
ning It would have been an errorless
game for the celebrated Giants, who
fre playing some wonderful ball’ prior
{> thelr leave for the West which’ will
be ‘about October 12. “Mr, Whitworth
was in great form. His nerve. was
Steady" and had. good control of ‘the
pill, "A pass, one or two issued by
Whitworth and @ sacrifice put the men
at second and third, the only time any
passed first base. Tt was three hits
in a row in the third which gave the
Giants two runs and put them in the
Jead. ‘They made another score in. the
sixth and elghth. ‘The outfield, includ-
ing Mr. Gans, Mr. McNair and Mr. Hil,
did some great work with palm going
to "Ganzy,” who seemed ‘to have a
great deal of pep. The St. Louis Giants
Started in for the second halt but the
home team had a rally and brought
in six scores, one in the second another
In the third, Crawford. was on the
mound for the American Giants and
Struck out six men and pitched @ shut
out, game.
‘The series will continue until Thurs-
Gas eine or ane eats
AM. GIANTS. R HO AE
Barber, Ib —------ 1 115 0" 6
Francia, 2b-------- 9 9 1 5 0
Hilvofs cece OL 8
Toydae 8k 8
MeNair, rf == 0 1 9 0 0
Gaui -—es 0 2 8 8
Bman2b2---—-- 6 6 1 2 0
Tones, @ we 8 1 OT 8 8
Wiworth,p------- 1 0 0 5 0
Totals ---------- 4 6 27 15 1
CHICAGO GTS. R. H. 0. A. E,
Jennings, 2b ------ 6 6 6 1 6
Winston, If > 09 9 3 0 0
Buckner ffl. 9 0 1 0 0
Jackson, #8 2 0 0 2 5 96
3.Green,e == 0 09 6 3 90
Giarkeon, ©----- 0 0 6 8 0
W. Green, 3b-2---- 0 0 1 3 0
Stthers, 1b —----- 9 0 10 0 0
Dixon, p.--------=- 0 0 0 3
Totals _-------- 0 0 24 15 0
ipsa SERRE Soe a ee ee
Chicago Giants _-_0 0 000 0 0 0 0-0
Struck out—By Whitworth, 7 by
Dixon, 3, “Bases on balls—Of Whit
worth, 2; off Dixon, 7% Umpire—
Gooekel, ‘Pime—1:48.
SECOND GAME.
Am, Giants -—---6 11000 %—8 82
Sty Louls Giants--0 0 00,0 0 00.2 4
ouble plays—Crawford to Lloya;
Lioyd to Barber. Struck out—By
Crawford, 6; by Williams, 1. Umpire—
Goeekel. ‘Pimen1:08.
Fans Voting Every Sunday.
The managememnt of Schorling’s
park are asking the fans to vote every
Eunday ‘until. the season, closes on the
Guestion of calling the came at three
Sicloeke every Sunday oF. 3:30 o'clock,
Sis. Foster and Mr. Schorling ask that
every. person who. is present at the
park’ to take a card and sign. thelr
Rame and address and vote on. the
fupstion. Ladies are asked to) vote
Sprudets Next Sunday.
‘The Sprudels of West Baden, Ind.,
one of the best teams In this section
‘of the country will play Sunday. Seats
on sale Saturday and Sunday.
A. B. Cs GIVE WHITEHOUSE SE-
VERE BEATING; WINM2 to0,
COLUMBUS, Ind, September 19—
‘The A. B. Cs’ of Indianapolis, defeated
the focal team here Fecently “by. the
Score of 12 to 0, ‘The visitors Jumped
ail over the delivery of Whitehouse,
the ‘former’ Federal” League. piteher.
‘The attendance was latwe and the col
orea ‘players were given @ cordial re-
Sption,. Seore:
R Bos 21001512012 44
Gortmbus 220 00000000—0 68
Batteries—Johnson and Powell;
‘Whitehouse and. Anderson.
BLOOMINGTON, ILL.
Chguttenrs Mank Giante—Star Colored
‘Team Winn Sunday by Seore of 10 to
Barri obadl ren lg’ Dering
The Chauffeurs Athletic and Theatri-
cal club team and Lexy Campbell's
Giants. staged an exciting baseball
game Sunday afternoon at the south
Side ball park, the former winning by
‘score of 10 to 0.. The feature of the
Game was the work of Stevenson, the
Stellar twirler of the Chauffeurs, “who
Struck out fifteen men and held the
Giants fo only one hit.
‘The Chaufleurs displayed some rapid
work in Melding, and thelr stick work
was all that could be desired.
“he Chautreurs’ will play the Peoria
————————————
BENDY AND GRETCHEN BURNS
At the Crown Garden, Indianapolis,
Having Unbounded Success.
Burns & Burns are at this play-
house for the first time. They brought
something entirely new by way of fun,
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SANDY BURNS.
whlch caught the audience from the Sandy in particu
ween cere Aly comedy fevunlaue makeup as x come
We Thnstattys Guid Taroll Gulot an inves up torthe expecta
Maiity "etme inhe laas's straight ts hie “atrliingly ent
sietbly, SUT laine in Got expreasions He, singi texas To
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GRETCHEN BURNS.
that fairly equalied the comedy. She eat and chicken stun
can well. be called an actress the ‘suaience. “thelr
They enter singing “Moun, Swing W. Benton Overstreet
Low. a Dlantive song, sung in quiet, ceases
west tones, accompanied by gravetul “The team ix one o
See Spey earntna tue tendenes thie piey nowae,
: a)
Ladies’ Velvet
Beaver, Velour and
Felt Hats
Made in the New Shapes
George H. Muller
HAT RENOVATOR
Phone, Main, 6179 26-28 Kentucky Ave.
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JACOBS’ PHARMACY, Atlanta, Ga.
Whitens Dark and Sallow Skin. For Pim-
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REFUSE IMITATIONS
Insist on the original and be sure it is made by Jacobs’
Pharmacy, as the wonderful results of this prepara-
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‘You can make good pay. Write for terms,
giving references
team at the south side park Sunday
afternoon at 3 o'clock.
‘The following is the score by in-
nings of last Sunday's game.
CA. T. C.30040201 % 10120
Giants --0.00000000—0 18
‘The Woman's Sewing Circle of the
A.M, E. chureb has been conducting
@ fair st the chureh, Mrs. Amanda
Smith, assisted by some of the most
active and influential women of the
Face In the city, as been In charge
and very pleasing results have been ob-
fained from the ettort.
‘On Sunday afternoon the committee
on anti-diserimination and equal rights
Wht conduct the educational session,
‘The program will open. sharply at
Grelock and promises to be one of the
best ever rendered by the Legion. Be-
sides select local talent of the race a
prominent business man of the white
Paes will take part and deliver’ the
principal address of the afternoon. All
Are invited to attend.
‘Mr. Dave Stevenson who has been
sick for the past few weeks, is improv-
ing slowly.
‘Mr, Horace Smith spent two days in
Chicago last week visiting his friends,
SILAS GREEN IN KENTUCKY.
“Silas Green, from New Orleans,” a
musical. comedy in two. acts, carrying
forty-five people, twelve head Shetland
Polnes, 274-foot’ new all steel cars, is
fast hitting across the state of Kentucky
{nd will soon hit in to the good old state
of Georgia. ‘This is the largest colored
Show. on the road. ‘The advance "is
handled by Max C. Elliott, the famous
‘wildeat agent, enown to all house man-
agers in the “Middle” West.
| HAPPY JOHN GOODLOVE and J. J.
JONES WITH DIXIELAND
MINSTRELS.
Dixieland Minstrels show still doing
fine playing Pennsylvania. We are re=
hearsing a new show for the, Sunny
South, “The Forgotten Woman.” Cast:
Misses Carrie McCraw, Marie Booker,
Bland Bagaway, Mae’ James, Johnie
Booker, Sankle’ Gardner, Hoy” Gibson.
Mr. J. 8. Oppico, our manager, Is work-
ing hard to make the show a success.
Joseph. H. James would like to. hear
irom Geo. Smith and Eldridge Collins.
to soften down towards the end of
the ‘number as if meant it as an {l-
lustration of some idea. It was nice
work, and was accordingly received.
‘The ‘singing. of Miss “Burns was a
continuation of the” gentility with
Whleh the work Started, Her yolee
is simple and childlike, and doubtless
the cause of the touching quality. She
sings "My Heart Has Learned to Love
Sandy ts particularly happy in. his
makeup as a comedian and he lives
up to the expectation he creates. by
his “strikingly entertaining comedy.
He sings “Texas Tommy.”
‘Phey' close with thelr well-known
cat and chicken stunts, which screams
the ‘audience, ‘Their finale is one of
W. Benton Overstreet’s latest song suc-
‘The team is one of the best seen at
this play house,
A WISE MAN’S POLICY
Savings Consistently Brings
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The Indiana Trust Co,
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The Pompei
CAFE BEAUTIFUL
20 & 22 E. 3ist St., Chicago, Hlinois
Entirely Re-Decorated. High Class Entertainers
Henry Lyons Props. Jack Crawford
Phone Douglas 6134 ‘Telephone Orders Given
Geo. M. Porter, Ph. G.
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STAGE GOSSIP
J.B. DAVIDSON
STAGE NOTES.
Jake Hellens, of Hellens & Austin,
is now running the Star Theater,
of Pittsburgh, Pa., with much success.
Grice & Grice at the Kastel Theater,
Dothan, where they are completed
their new piano act and it a good one.
Ray Nichols, the little singer, is lyrically
the San Francisco Hospital,
where she is undergoing a serious operation.
Bonnle & Semoura, Baby Seals, Geo.
Lewis and McNell & McNell are at the
New Queen Theater, Birmingham, Ala,
this week.
Thomas A. Brooks and Sliding Wats-
ter, the Co., are at the Gayetey
Theater, Montreal, with Empire,
Albany, to follow.
The team of Norris & Roosevelt, after
a tour through Canada, are now tak-
ing a much needed rest will be
Savannah, Ga., in number.
Such singers as Josephina Tobias,
Bryd should be in a grand opera com-
pany. They are rich in the essentials.
Our people are not living up to their
Freddie Pratt, trombonist, sends special regards to Walter H. Childs, Little Market, my can't you write? Best wishes. T. H. Dumas, don't kill the turkey. Write me.
W. Benton Overstreet, writer of "The Grocery Man," "My Place of Bizness" and other song numbers from Chicago next week to demonstrate some of his latest numbers which he expects to have on the market this fall.
Mr. P. F. Henderson, late of the Honeywell company, married the stork came around last Friday morning and left an eight-pound baby girl, which has brought much delight and happiness. He sends of the profession.
J. B. Norton, the old reliable stage manager of the A. G. Allen's Minstrels, is now located at 2634 Lawrence street, Dallas, and will be seen around Burr's Burmese and Burns, Boyd & Boyd. Hello Tommy Parker. All write; something good for you. Regards to Alexander Toliver
The old South Laernd Sextette is still meeting with success in Ohio, having the same success in the state of Maine, and two personal names. Madame Landor, soprano and reader; Joseph St. Tuten, bass; contralto soloist; Les B. Deppe, dramatic baritone; Prof. Woise, second tenor and accompanist; Andere, tenor and accompanist. They send their friends to their friends.
GREENVILLE. N. C.
Mr. Pete Porter's Ciar of Dixie Players opened the house for a two-week run. The company was a decided winner. "What we want—real productions," Mr. Chas Olden and Miss May Olden were quits to their dialogue and singles. In their West were a success in their new piano act. Mrs. Odesser Shaffer was compelled to respond to several onstage performances, during the Dollar Bill, the king be of all buzzers stops the show. The theatre is under the management of the music director. Bea is looking just the shows the people want. Mr. Knox, the Freeman ought to be on sale here.
NEW YORK CITY
Mrs. Tim Moore Indisposed.
THE DRAKE AND WALKER COM
PANY WELCOMED.
A swell function was given by the Palm Wave Lodge of Elks No. 112, of St. Louis, Mo., on Thursday evening, September 16, in honor of the famous jazz pianist, jazzayers, and lightful evening. All members and friends were present. After the performance at the Booker Washington Museum, the jazzayers waited the company. There they met the hall crowded awaiting them. Every one was greeted with glad hands. The music was beautifully decorated with the band's instrument-piece orchestra delivered sweet strains of music for those who danced. Supper was served by waiters and consisted of a variety of appetizers. Tille Griffen, of the ladies' department, and Mr. Willie Winn, of the gentlemen's department. The Elks is the judge to join. We stand by you while you live, sick or dead.
THE DOUGLASS THEATRE
(By H: Woodard.)
This week's bill at the Douglas Theatre Macon, Ga., September 21, will be headed with all big headliners. Daniels & Daniels, better known as Sally Daniels,
Stanley Bowser," funny, and everybody knows it. Mice & Muck, those dancing wonders, stand at the top of their prowess in their particular line. Miss Mabel Davenport, the Ozzer is her third engagement here. Miss Davenport has a sweet disposition and is well liked by Maconites. Mr. Aaron Gates, who has not played
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this house in some time but is well known to the majority of Macon people. Mr. Gates has some new jokes and good numbers, which he uses nicely. Mr. Daniels and the other members of his stock company will entertain in theaters and at a Domar's Honor." Mr. Daniels is one of the best producers in the country. The management of this popular place amusements is his alert to give his patrons the best that can be bought in the moving picture world. Monday, "The Romance Elaine" is one of the greatest pictures in the day, a special Western, in two thrilling reels. Space will not allow the mentioning of each day's program, but there are stirring dramas and funny sketches. Tuesday, "The Diamond From the Sky."
RICHMOND, VA., THEATRICAL NEWS.
(By Thomas Melton.)
The fastest and breezest show of the season came to the Hippodrome on Saturday. The hippodrome was the team of Davis & Elmore, the best all-round fun makers that have ever played the house Billy Ewing in the Hill. He was something out of the ordinary. Mrs. Jennie Taylor and Picks proved to be a box-office attraction. *Star* Theatre. Monkey Johnson. Stock Company is having much success.
NOTES FROM J. C. O'BRIEN'S
FAMOUS GEORGIA MINSTRELS
Everything continues good with the J. C. O'Brien shows. We are still in Virginia with North Carolina to follow next week.
We had the pleasure of meeting Mrs. Rebecca Redmond, Miss Bessie Oliver Ben Stevens and Mr. William Fisher in Petersburg, and were tendered a very enjoyable whist party by the ladies, which everyone had to leave, as our triumph was announced. The band had the pleasure of taking a ten-mile auto ride to DuPont, the mill town where most of the workmen are employed making powder and high explosives, to play a concert, which was enjoyed by thousands. The mill town is preparing to take a trip to Norfolk to meet the Tolliver Smart Set Company.
Everyone sends regards to The Freeman and Mr.
MULE AND JEANETTE BRAD
FORD STILL PACKING THEM
IN AT THE STAR, PITTS-
BURGH, PA.
Pace & Simmons' Big City Minstrels with twenty people opened at Vernon Pa. Monday and went big, these boys had 30 people, two of them 30 people, but they deserve it, because they have been striving hard. We wish they were striving hard. Sandifer & Shall are at the Harris week of the 20th, going fine. Jake Hellens, manager of the Star Wars would like to hear from all friends. Martin & Motley, week of 27th, with ten people. Mule Bradford and Jennette the second week. I guess that ain't hard. Lest ye forget, Mule Bradford's "Lonesome Blues" and the "Jackson's Band" music will be on sale at the Office October 11th, for 17 cents in stamps for two numbers that are worth $10. So do get them before they are worn out.
THE CINCINNATI NEWS BUREAU
Photo: J. C. BURKE
(Geil, S. M. Brown.)
The Lincoln.
As usual and expected, large crowds turned out to see another good edition of the theater. The opening act was Elnora Wilson, of the former team of Wilson and the other band, and she made good, but we must have to shake and turn over our stuff else the people are going to become as pictures are fast becoming so popular that if they don't bring new songs and new ideas they will be eliminated entirely. Allen & Morton came on to close the bill. They are both well known, having a fair vehicle got over nicely.
The Pekin.
This theater still is making good with pictures. The feature this week will make the fans crowd the doors.
Denth Takes “Pork Chops” Band
Frank Polk, probably the best-known colored musician in Cincinnati, died on Monday morning, after a long illness. He was about fifty years old and gained fame as the leader and bass viol player of the “Pork Chops” band. Polk lived on Sixth, near Cincinnati, and was a heart disease. Polk’s organization of musicians was in constant demand. Mr. Polk was born in Richmond, Indiana, and grew up in Cincinnati, playing the different resorts until his nickname, “Pork Chops,” was hung on to him, to be carried through college. Polk was white and black; in fact, there is not a city official or a family of good standing in this city that has not been named. Mr. Polk’s Pork Chops band. He was associated once with J. Leubrie Hill as a partner. Mr. Polk’s entertainers. Frank’s disposition was be pleasant to every one he met. He had no known enemies and was always smiling. He was known as a smile. He will be missed by many. He will be buried from Kelly Bros. undertaking a memorial service from $8 until Friday morning.
Mr. Ollie Dempsey, the theatrical man of Lincoln, owner of the Pekin Baden springs Wednesday. Mr. Tom Gales, stage manager of Reed's Vaudeville Show, with his encomium of the show's days. They go to Falmouth, Ky. Tommy McIntosh, the musical director, is seeing the city the first time, and he will be there for the show. Jones, of the Four Tar Babies, joined him for a few weeks. The entire Tar Babies Company goes to South America with them. There was an old-time cakewalk exhibition given by the Linn Street Carnival Saturday night, staging twenty couples. Jack Mayfield was a worker and promote Clair Price. It was grand spectacle. The closing concert of the Lacontie concert of the Lacontie show was the best of the year. This is another one of promoter Clair Price's enterprises. Miss Cora Thornton denies the rumor that she was married to Arthur Jackson.
Miss Belle Smedley is visiting relatives in Columbus, Ohio. Casey Jones, Charles Griess's crack son, is preparing now for his winter tour in vaudeville, as the baseball season will soon close. He is a veteran bandmaster, here on business, states he will leave with his band for New York soon.
THE FREEMAN IN CINCINNATI, O
The Freeman is on sale at Ben Hall
parlor, and at the Pinkie theater.
THE FREEMAN, AN ILLUSTRATED COLORED NEWSPAPER
Chicago Weekly Review
Chicago Weekly Review
By Sylvester Russell.
Black Pattl at the Grand Theater—Biggest Drawing Card in the His-
To add to the occasion, a massive horseshoe of roses was a gift from a box party as a tribute to the singer. Nearly twenty years ago B. F. Keith
SISSIERETTA JONES, Original Black Pattl.
Stewart Closes at the Pekin.
Harrison Stewart closed his engagement and night's performance owing to dissension in the company. A few vaudeville acts go on now between the pictures, and the performer is tired as manager. Sam Alston was manager of the wrestling match on last Friday week which was interesting. He was pealed. LeRoy Bird did not show up.
The Motion Picture Houses.
The States—The Soul of a Woman
Saturday, 25th. Feature Day, 26th.
The Soul of a Woman
AndyLewis's Secret, 25th, and William
Farnum, in The Flunder, 26th.
The Fountain—Who Pays, 25th, and The Deal in Souls, 26th.
The Atlas-Diamond (15th chapter),
Saturday, 25th, and Ella Hall, in
Boston.
Washington - Extenued serial picture runs of Saturdays and Sundays
continue and new features, also.
Widow's Will drew well last Sunday. All
widow's wills are sold at the library.
Stage Notes and Stroll News.
The Ten Black Hussars were at the Milda Theater last week, on the Western Vaudeville time.
George Wood, late of New York City, is now in Chicago, looking better than ever, and is seen day after day on Twenty-second street.
Moore B. Boswick, comedy musicians, have arrived in the city. They are the pioneers of the stage of Old Virginia and the original stick dance in their act.
Richard B. Harrison, the reciter, after a tour of Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa and Illinois, has arrived home to his family and was greeted on the Stroll by his friends.
George Cooper, late of Cooper & Robinson, and Chris Smith, the composer, was invited to the recital week, and it is reported that they did a nice, classy act. Cooper & Smith are on the United time.
Mayor William Hale Thompson said some good things about the colored people of this country in his address the postposition last Wednesday week. Governor Dunne spoke on the closing night.
S. H. Dudley, who arrived from Des Moines, Iowa, last Monday week, where he was a guest at the Empress on Halsted street, Chicago. He has signed for 17 weeks over the Fantasies time.
As we go to press, the Grand Theater co-owner, Mr. Dudley, will appear at the Pampelite camp, one of the most handsome places in the city, the Black Theater.
Patti, whose mother is ill, has declined all invitations to social functions, and with her maid, remains in seclusion.
The Shattuck Quartet, Frazier, Carter, Douglas and William, have just arrived from Pittsburgh, Pa. They have been invited to theihuahuaca engagements. They will leave immediately for Connervsille, Ill.
Harry Long and wife, Mattea Francis, have closed with Terry's Uncle Tom's Cabin. Mrs. Long, who has played Topsy for several seasons for the University, has been seen in a sketch with her husband in vaudeville the coming season.
Frank Challis, the English manager of trained horses, and his co-worker, John Hedge, and assistants, Arthur Young and Henry Young, also Dan Pompei and the Elite. They were at the Avenue Theater last week.
---
Excerpts from Verdi's opera Aida will be given at Quinn Chapel church, fourth-fourth street, Monday evening, Sept. 20th. The stars will be Mme. Anita Patti Brown and Roland W. Hayes, of Boston. The occasion will therefore be notable. . . .
Tom Brown and Billy Johnson present the closing week at the Exposition where took well. Negro soldiers rescued a white captive from the Indians, China, during the war from 1850 to the Present, with forty people. Charles H. Moore, Benny Jones, Connellly, Gladis Fisher, Justin McKinney, John McKinney, Hawksworth, known as Kid Falcon, led the walk. James A. Lillard was Tom Lemonier, musical composer and director, and James White, pianist.
Messrs. H. W. Lyons and J. W. Crawford, the new white proprietors of an idea that a floral offering would be made of respect for the most noted singer of colored race, so they ordered a horseshoe for a gentlemen were present in a special box, which was sent up to Black Patti at the Grand for her opening performance. The gentlemen were present in a special box, guests were Will Thomas, Harry Long and wife, Mattie Francis, the famous custom house service, Sylvester Russell, Jack Smith of Ten Dark Knights, and Colonel Lambert Lee, a white business man, a friend of the party.
The cabarets of the week prospered owing to the close of the Exposition, and the large multitude of people on State Street Saturday and Sunday nights. Teenan new place was full. The La Verda hotel, a new multi-use building, lams' States billiard parlor and the Solace had fine patronage, and the Mineral Springs also. The Belmont and lamps' States block, are growing popular. The Elite retains its popularity, and Dunn & Fifty-first streets. State and Fifty-first streets. Will The Romania, has been made the manager of the Pompell for Lyons and Corinne Bowen, the entertainers are Ship Rass, pianist; George D. Wright, Will Minor and Corinne Bowen, formerly of the Guilders. The Panama had good patronage, and the De Luxe, which has added a star hotel and billiard room upstairs, their former successful efforts.
The Bob Russell & Billy Owens stock company, which has been playing at the Monogram, had star people in the cast, the actress, and the actor, pany qualify in point of legitimacy or completeness. It will be impossible to me to review the plays this week, owing to the lack of important matter presented, but I do expect at a later date, for an example of the imperfection and lack of study of the characters, when an older actor goes back. Miss Lyhian Brown was the one star of the company who showed superior art in the plays, and I regret to state that the drawback with the Monogram theaters is caused by the ignorant desire of the manager to just not just reason. This is a hindrance to the success of the actors. The effort to keep the critic away from the house is a commercial reason and one in particular, because these columns later on. Not for personal reasons. I have no personal reason to the interest of the ladies, colored race, and the number in proportion more than the white ladies, in Chicago.
Chicago's Late Colored Trunk Mystery Murder.
The body of the woman that was found in a trunk that had been driven into an open top above Thirty-sixth place, or above Thirty-sixth place, on children at play, before it was interred Friday, September 17. was discovered by Mrs. Bragg, who is Mrs. Minnie Bragg. The found body was beaten with a razor and throat cut. William Brown, a local expressman, who had been in the trunk, moved the trunk, and he is librarian. He is veilence, E. W. Bragg, who hired the expressman, and who is said to be the husband of the murdered woman, has been found in the trunk. Bragg and his wife were found in the trunk. It is believed that Bragg had taken his steps back to cover the body, but fled and had not been caught as we went to press. Bragg, who is said to be the owner of the banker and real estate agent, upon investigation is said to be Binga's decorator. Mrs. Bragg, according to Binga, is the Ark, but is known in Kansas City, Mo., where her sister for some unexplained reason desired to move the body. No motive for the crime is yet unearthed.
SEEING MILLER BROS.' 101 RANCH
PROF. L. LEEKER AND
HIS RANCH.
As usual in the city, thousands of persons gathered along the main street on the morning of September 11 to see a man in a suit, Bros. Ranch. Rare because it breathes deep with historical America, and of which we never see, were young we were excited by the story trail of the red men. Middle age and old age scarcely serve to make such a difference. The cowboy, the American Cossack, that picturesque addition to the country's life, has made a hit, and who, when he was excited, won a place in the affections of all the people if not in history? He still holds his own in the picture shows all over the country. Then looking of seeing him in real life—that's the time! Of course, real life is glamour. Glamour is good to its good to the original now and then. Indians or cowboys in life could not interest us every day. Let them come as they do, now and then, and we
Then think of the cowboy girl, that requisite femininity, that is the one in cestacy. Women and the saddle have always been a most unique combination, and reserve, rather than otherwise—a sort of aristocracy, and to which only a few are invited. To that in itself is a romance. But use these things, the riders in all possible positions, and its worth a day's journey to
The Sideshow, The Features—Prof. L.
K. Belkowski, Band, the Minstrels.
Baker's Band
I said at another time that the show management be the very thankful for colored people. They are certainly loyal to the sideshows. This occasion was not apparent to others. Our race was out in force. We were under the management of
The levitation woman was there, rushing still the wonder of our curious minded throngs. How she does it gets clean past us all.
Homer Herrick is what might be called a sideshow stock juggler. He does not paint. He has hundreds we have all seen. The men are necessities—must be kept in stock.
Henry Gunther, who is beautifully done all over in ink, does tattooing for a small consideration. The sign reads "paint. Roosevelt spelling could as well as without payin'." He gets his, however.
Amelia, the tall German girl, strikes one as he enters and, as much for her beauty as for her height, 7 feet 2 inches, weight 225 pounds. In fact, one forgets that he is going to her very wholesome appearance.
Miss Sylva has the snakes water repellants are the subject, without doubt some of the finest specimens seen in captivity. She fondles them as if they were alive, and they have a sense at all, they must love her. If snakes can be beautiful, then these are.
Notes.
The show has recently returned from the New England states.
Prof. L. K. Baker sends regards to Prof. R. R. Pope, Jas. Woolcales and Harris and Eason.
Elwood C. Knox and Billy Lewis, of the Freeman, appreciated courtesies shown them by Prof. Baker and his men.
Prof. Baker and a bunch of his men called on the Freeman office September 14, during in the sights of the city. They were delighted to meet Slidney Kirkpatrick.
G. V. Connors still wears the smile that won't come off. He says the side-show of which he is manager has some class, and he is correct. He has just spent some time at his home.
AT THE CROWN
GARDEN THEATRE
Burns and Burns, the Filipino Girls,
the Saxophone Girls, Sarah
Brynds, Byrds.
NEW QUEEN THEATRE, BIRMING
HAM, ALA.
George Lewis, of the team of Lewis & Lewis, is still producing the shows that have been released. The result is capacity business each night. The vaudeville is always up to the standards of the big bill is: McGaar & 'tansell, in melody singing and talking; Rosie Groves, that funny comedian; George Lewis, the comedian; George Lewis—well, seven weeks, going on eight. Hello Perren. Buckner. All of a sudden, a send best wishes to everybody. Wry.
(By Coleman Minor.)
Permell & Holden. in their second
wife's hand. They always make good.
they always make good. the fourth week
Smith & Smith, in the fourth week,
keeps 'em laughing.
Mr. Minor staged a little musical comedy of his own, featuring Ruby Minor, "The Arrival of the Queen." It was well received and brought many praise. Chas. Anderson, the great singer, is singing Coleman L. Minors' Weary Way. Weary Way is one of the people you are the author of it. You know who I mean.
Regards to Anderson & Austin and the freeman staff.
LETTER LIST.
Gentiemen's List.
Lewis, Walter.
Liemmons, Eddie
Lee, Love
Lieber, L.
Lee, John
Anderson, Geo. B. Lewis. Walter.
Allen, Arthur. Llemmons, Eddie
Adams, John
Austin, Cuba,
Burton, Earl.
Benbow, W. M.
Banks, Clifford
Clifford
Brown, Herman
Cox, Dickie
F. Cade,
C Robert,
Clark, Harry
Day, Frank
Wiggs, Jack
Wilkins, Source
Wilson, Tyler
Wallburg, James.
Charles.
Wallburg, J. H.
Watts, J. A.
Williams, Law-
Elliott E. Foy
Golphin, Joe T.
Harris, Boyd
Hunter, Ed.W. E.
Jones, Bennie
Kennedy, W. Goff
Kennedy, W. Goff
Ladies' List
Akero, Hattie
Blarls, Ethel.
Beth, Ethel.
Bob, Hattie M.
Burt, Mhb. Eric
Childs, Mace
Carter, Ethel.
Carter, Ethel B.
Dek, Lekw
Edwards, Geo
Estella
Fairfax, Mable H.
Freeman, Sue
Watts. Ethel.
Watson. Ruth.
White Gonzala.
Watts. Ms. Es-
Hill Sisters
Josephine
Jones, in V.
Jones, Sallie
Jones, Miss
Lazee, Miss Pe-
Williams, Bessie L.
Walton, Helen.
Washington, Miss
Lillian.
trona
Lockhart. Ada.
Leggs, Miss Tres-
gle.
Idle Hour Theatre!
Acts that can make good write or wire immediately.
Band Actors Wanted
Lecture tba, alto, baritone and cornet to strengthen band already of nine pieces. Those only of good moral habit and double stage given preference. To work opera houses all winter. State all and lowest salary in first letter. This is one show where colored people get loyal treatment. The Great Spiegel, Farrell, Penna.
Wanted, for The Star Theatre!
2409 Elm Street, Dallas, Texas
Booking good stock companies, vaudeville performers and road shows. No act too large, but must be good singers and outcercs. Send mail to J. B. Norton, Manager and Booking Agent.
(INCORPORATED)
Louis Speevack, Mgr. 1230 W. Walnut St, Louisville, Kentucky
Good Acts Write.
The Royal Theatre
Wants to hear from, all good, first class acts. Can use three acts.
Also single acts. Write or wire the manager.
...NOTICE PERFORMERS...
...NOTICE PERFORMERS...
Write Mrs. Tim Owsley and state all in first letter. Give Hotel Address. If you have contracts for this house let me know early as I will not place tickets unless act is known. If your salary is too high I will save you some inconvenience. Address all mail to Mrs. Tim Owsley, Crown Garden Theatre, Indianapolis, Ind.
Moving Picture Supplies!
All Kinds of Machines, New and Used Everything to complete a Moving Picture Theatre.
Park Theatre, Dallas, Tex. WANTS
Performers in all lines, stock and vaudeville people. Write or wire. Will send tickets.
Wants to hear from Verney Massey and Frank Perryman at once, and any other good novelty act. Can place trombone and one cornet, also one good team. Tickets? Yes, anywhere in the U. S. to reliable people. Address all letters and wires to permanent address and they will be forwarded to show how in Mississippi.
WANTED!
Opens Oct. 4th. First class vaudeville acts, each act four weeks booking in Ft. Worth, jump 70 cents. Play small stock company of seven people. Will send ticket to any act or good stock company anywhere. No money advanced. Wanted, good piano player, sight reader, arranger and chorus director. Salary sure. Address
Mrs. D. H. Young, the hair culturist, is now working in conjunction with Miss Maud Jones, at 124 West 135th street. Call when in the city.
ROUTE
Silas Green & Company, Prof Eph Williams, owner—New Albany, Ind, September 27; Irvington, 28, 29; Owensville, 28, 29; Kelley's Dixie Cotton Pickers, T. P. Kelley, Manager—Quincy, Mich, September 27; Litchfield, 28; Concord, 28; Homewood, 17; Tekonsha, October 1; Under City, 2.
Leon W. Marshall's Happy Days in Dixieland Company—Las Vegas, N. M, September 27 to October 2.
Prof. Baker's Company, with 101 Ralph Quincy, 28, September 27; Brookfield, 28, September 27; Leavenworth, 30; Garnett, October 1; Tulsa, Okla, 2.
Prof. A. A. Wright & Company, with Starks & Sind—Murreezos, Tena, September 27; Carthage, 29; Cookville, 30; Harriman, October 1; Morristown, 2.
Prof. The Magician & Company—Georgeons, September 27 to 30; Keelville, 29.
Prof. Wolfscales' Company, with Barnum & Bailey Show—Charleston, W. Va, September 27; Huntington, 28; Keelville, 29; Greenville, October 1; Anderson, 29.
Prof. James A. Harris & Company, with GellarM Bros. Shows—Nowata.
Idle Hour
Burton & St.
Petersburg
Acts that can make good t
The Star
JAKE HEL
1417 Wylie Aven
Can Break Your Jump East or
Band Actor
The Great Spiegel Me
Desires tuba, also baritone and cornet to star
of good moral habits and double stage given
State oil and lowest salary in first letter. This
ment. The Great Spiegel, Farrell, Penna
Wanted, for Th
2409 Elm Street
Booking good stock companies, vaudevi
too large, but must be good singers and
Manager and Booking Agent.
Olivette
(INCORP
Louis Speevack, Mgr.
1230 W.
Good Act
The Royal
J. H. GOLD
91 Decatur St
Wants to hear from all good, fin
Also single acts. Writ
...NOTICE PE
Acts and Stor
That wish to play the CROWN
Write Mrs. Tim Owsley and state
dress. If you have contracts for
will not place tickets unless act is
I will save you some inconvenience
Owsley, Crown Garden T
Moving Picture
All Kinds of Machines, New
complete a Moving
Moving Pic
For $30, we supply the material to
size, 12x14. Dope to finish A
Foster Moving I
The Grand Th
3110 State Street
Park Theatre
WANT
Performers in all lines, st
Write or wire.
Chintz & Ella L
Park Theatre,
F. S. WO
Rabbit Food
Wants to hear from Verney Massey
any other good novelty act. Can
one good team. Tickets? Yes,
people. Address all letters and w
will be forwarded to show now in T.
F. S. WO
721 W. North St..
WANT
For Mamouth The
Opens Oct. 4th, First class
booking in Ft. Worth, jump 70 co
seven people. Will send ticket
anywhere. No money advanced.
reader, arranger and chorus direct
Edward
Mamouth Theatre,
5
Okla, September 27; Wagoner, 28; Miami, 28; Rogers, Ark, 35; Payetteville, October 1; Tahlequah, Okla, 2; Eugene Clark & Company, with William Baskin, Oakland, September 27; Henderson, 38; Littleton, 29; Frankfort, Va, 30; Suffolk, October 1; Petersburg, 28.
Huntington's Minstrels—New Augusta, Ark, September 27; Baud Kane, September 27; Des Arcs, 30; Brinkley, October 1; Forest City, 2.
Wm. H. Kibble's "Uncle Tom's Log Cabin" Company—Fairmont, W. Va., Augusta, Ark, September 27; Zenesville, 29; McConnellsville, 30; Marietta, 29; Parkersburg, W. Va., October 2.
The Real Quartet, J. Louis Johnson, Manager—Salt Lake City, Utah, week of September 27.
Georgia Colored Strollers, Upton Williams, Manager—Pt. Worth, Texas, Colored.
J. C. Miles & Company, with Jones Bros.' Shows—Marion, Kan, September 28; Ashland, 29; Medicine Lodge, 30; Shatuck, Okla, October 1; Canadian, Tex, 2.
JAMES L. WILLIAMS
Trombapist, B. & O.
Sober, relatable, married: wife's a good singing and dancing choir girl. Reasonable salary tickets. Resident twits. Pete Wei they is Florida Blossoms any more. Now open for job that pays salary and lodging and James L. Willerley, 600 34 Avenue Birmingham, Ala.
Our Theatre!
Shippen, Prop.
Burg, Virginia
Write or wire immediately.
Our Theatre!
LENS, Mgr.
Buee, Pittsburg, Pa.
West. Acts Write or Wire.
Ours Wanted
Medicine Company No. 1
Longtenge bond already of nine pieces. Those only
preference. To work opera houses all winter.
Is one show where colored people get loyal treat-
ment.
Our Star Theatre!
Det, Dallas, Texas
Mule performers and road shows. No act
and carcars. Send mail to J. B. Norton.
Theatre
(DORATED)
Walnut St., Louisville, Kentucky
Acts Write.
Real Theatre
STEIN, Mgr.
L., Atlanta, Ga.
First class acts. Can use three acts.
ate or wire the manager.
PERFORMERS...
Stock Companies
THEATRE, Indianapolis, Indiana
Call in first letter. Give Hotel Ad-
this house let me know early as I
known. If your salary is too high.
Address all mail to Mrs. Tim
Theatre, Indianapolis, Ind.
Picture Supplies!
New and Used Everything to
Picture Theatre.
Picture Screen
Build a seamless curtain, standard
good screen is half of the picture.
Picture Supplies
Theatre Building
Chicago, Illinois
Dallas, Tex.
RENTS
Stock and vaudeville people.
Will send tickets.
B. Moore, Mgrs.
Dallas, Texas
DOLCOTT'S
Hot Minstrels
By and Frank Perryman at once, and
place trombone and one cornet, also
anywhere in the U. S. to reliable
direts to permanent address and they
Mississippi.
DOLCOTT
Jackson, Mich.
TED!
theatre, Dallas, Tex.
vaudeville acts, each act four weeks
ents. Play small stock company of
to any act or good stock company
Wanted, good piano player, sight
or. Salary sure. Address
D. Lee
Dallas, Texas
---
Three specially priced arrivals are bulleted for Saturday's selling as follows:
At $1.49 the set, blue scalloped edge luncheon sets consisting of six round 6-inch doilies, six 10 inch *doilies* and a 24-inch centerpiece.
At $2.39 are 13 piece sets of tan colored linea with embroidered edge, in brown, white and blue. There are 12 doilies, six each of 6-inch and 10 inch sizes, and a 24-inch centerpiece.
Colored edge napkins with a design embroidered in the corner, are offered in 13 inch size—five nev patterns from which to select at $3.25 a dozen.
—Second floor.
Mrs. Lucy Edmund, of 803 Paca street, is ill at her home.
C. R. Richardson, of Richmond, Ind., was visiting in this city last week.
Dr. Willis, of Chicago, was the guest of Wm. E. Scott, the artist, Wednesday.
Miss Emma Adams, of Princeton, Indiana, was visiting in this city last week.
James F. Wilson and wife, of St. Paul, Minn., were in the city visiting relatives.
R. E. Morton, of Atlanta, Ga., passed through the city en route to French Lick, Ind.
Mrs. Eva Johnston, of The Freeman, will spend Sunday with her aunt in Louisville, Ky.
Mrs. Daisy Brantford is very sick at his home in West Eleventh street.
Mrs. Maggie Hunter, of 321 Elsworth street, is visiting friends and relatives in Madison, Ind.
Mr. and Mrs. John Farr have returned to city life, spending the summer in northern Michigan.
O. Mrs. Anna B. Porter, of Cincinnati, Mrs. Anna B. Porter, of Cincinnati, guest of Mr. and Mrs. Hermann Davis, the next meeting of the American Beauty Embroidery Club will be with Mrs. Dorena Edwards, 1810 North Senate avenue.
O. W. F. Anderson, of Lafayette, Infant Sun. School in the city visiting friends and relatives and attending the annual conference.
O. Mrs. M. E. Dent, of Springfield, O. came Thursday of last week for a week's visit with her daughter, Mrs. Lummons, in North Californian street.
O. Mr. E. Harris, of Pittsburg, Pa. is visiting his sister, Mrs. Crutchford, Fayette street, for an indefinite visit. Harris is a mail clerk of Pittsburg.
There was a musical and reception given by St. Margaret's Guild of St. Phillip's church, Friday evening, at St. Margaret's Gerry, 626 North California street.
O. Mrs. Estell Davis, of Cincinnati, O. who has been spending some time along the Pacific Coast, is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Emmet Kiger, in North Street. She returned to her home Sunday.
Miss Edna A. Scott was the hostess for Mrs. Mabelle Harrison, of Chicago, at 6 o'clock dinner. Thursday evening, she and the guest of the Dept. Embroidery Club, of which Miss Scott is instructor.
R Everett Anderson, who has been an avid writer while Pope's barber shop has resigned and gone to Conniversley, Ind., where he accepted a position with his wife at Garrison's Cafe.
In addition to his position, of Charleston, Ind., was the guest of honor in an automobile party last Sunday morning, given by Mr. George Simmons, of Charleston, Mrs. Maud Nically, Mrs. Miss Lenna Smith.
A few reliable refined and popular young men, including commission proposition, Affords amusement. Work in spare time. Give name and address and I explain. Address G, care The Freeman.
A. M. E. APPOINTMENTS FOR THE YEAR ARE ANNOUNCED
Vincennes to Be Next Meeting Place
—Centennial General Conference
Delegates Appointed.
The following appointments for the
next year were made last Monday, by
Bishop John A. McCarthy, at Bethel church; Indianapolis
District—J. L. Craven, presiding
Levinson Hats!
$2
New Fall Hats are Here
Coming in by the hundreds every day. Every new style that's correct. We are the "Style Starters." Bring in your head and
TWO BONES.
We send any Hat by Parcel Post. Open Saturday Evenings.
LEVINSON
THREE STORES
37 M. Penn. St. 41 S. Ill. Mkt. & Ill. St.
Delegates chosen to represent the conference at Philadelphia next year are D. P. Roberts and J. L. Craven, of Indianapolis, and J. Q. Wallace, of Richmond. Vincentnes was selected as the next meeting place of the confer-
IN MEMORIAM.
Rev. Chas. Hunter, presiding elder of the A. M. E. church, died one year ago today, September 26, 1914. He was a life member of the church, and in the hearts of those whose lives were touched by his. He is not dead, the one we mourn in the deep and still hearts of those who were lost where ours may be tomorrow.—His Widow, Son and Daughter.
MARRIAGE ANNOUNCEMENT.
Special to The Freeman
and Mrs. L. H.
Shaughter announce the marriage of
their youngest daughter, Miss Josephine
Pollis, on Wednesday, at 3:30 p. m., at
their home, 509 East Thirty-fourth
place. The ceremony was performed
only by the Rev. H. Harris. The
bride and groom will be at home.
to their many friends the week of Octo-
ber 11. East Thirty-fourth place,
Chicago, IL.
moll
Scalp Specialist
Madame Hunter has spent six years in the study of the scalp, and is interested in the beauty of our hair. She has beautiful hair. She has a wonderful preparation known as the Superior Hair Feed It removes dandruff, stops falling hair and itching scalp, keeps the scalp in a healthy condition; grows the hair in a healthy manner.
Treatments by Mail
Madame Hunter will give you treatment history of your scalp and she will help you, no matter how short and stubborn. She will help you to determine if necessary, as scalp varies in condition, same as the human system. Write Mme. Hunter's Superior Hair Food. 500 Mme. Hunter's Superior Hair Tonic. 500 Mme. Hunter's Superior Scalp Clean 500
Mme. Hunter's Superior Temple 25c
Grower
All preparations manufactured by
Madame L. Hunter. Agents wanted.
Write for terms. 754 Center street.
New phone 5093. Indianapolis, Ind.
LODGES GOING TO LOUISVILLE,
KV
Will Visit Jeffersonville and New Albany, Ind.
Jonathan Camp No. 2. K of F. left over the Pennsylvania railroad Sunday, September 9, for a visit to Louisville, to visit a friend for a visit to New Albany, Ind., and Louisville, Ky., accompanied by the U. B. of F. military band. We visited the village by a committee from the lodge of that city and a special escort of the Knights of Friendship from Louisville. To a church, where every one was served with a dinner long to be remembered by us all, after dinner a meeting was held. A large crowd came was delivered by Brother James Smith of Jeffersonville. The responses were from George G. Wilks and N. K. C. Gen. Henry R. Ferguson. After the meeting a line was formed and we marched about a town where large crowd was waiting our arrival, and we had a great meeting at that place and we marched to B. B. Alexander, S. G. M., and the responses by Gen. Wilks, Maj. Gen. Eilowens and Gen. Henry R. Ferguson. For three hours we marched to the hall, Ninth and Magazine streets, and were met there by hundreds of Knights of Friendship, and we marched to the camp No. 2 and our band. We feel that our trip to the Falls Cities did much to create a love of Let me add a word. Every man of our race in this great state of Indiana ought to become a national grand lodge will meet in Indianapolis, and the people of our state will have a chance to see and meet the greatest men of our race in this country.
GEN, HENRY R. BENGUSON.
2217 Arsenia Ave.
Arsenia R. Ave.
BEHEL A. M. E. CHURCH,
CHAMPAIGN, ILL
The pastor, Rev. H. W. Jameson, preached on "Missions of the Christian Church" in the morning. A musical performance by the choir. At $ p. m. the fifty-second anniversary of the church was celebrated with a jubilee service. New Bethel M. E. church. The organ is as near a pipe organ as you can purchase and is giving splendid service. Now Bethel M. E. church will somewhat compete with the choir, which is one of the best in Springfield district. . . Mr. Robert Taylor was the pastor of the Wright street, for several days. President Curry and wife, of Curry School, Urbana, Ohio, were the guests of the Wright street. . . Mr. C. A. Jones, of New Orleans, La, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. James Jones, 128 East Eighth Street, in Champaign on Monday and Tuesday. Mr. Shepard was en route from Chicago to Peoria. Miss Mirey Moss was married in Peoria. Mr. George Gowens, a farmer who lives
THE FREEMAN. AN ILLUSTRATED COLORED NEWSPAPER.
near Watske, Ill. Mrs. Gowens will remain in Chicago ahead, then will return home. -- The University of Illinois opened Monday, September 20, with the largest student body in the history of the University. -- Champaign High School opened September 7, with about 700 students, about thirty of whom were colored. The Obama High School has four colleges, three seniors and one freshman.
McDONALD. PA.
The large number that attended the services yesterday were greatly pleased by the splendid treat which they presented the sermon from our pastor we entered upon the communion services, which seemed to be filled with the Holy Ghost, and again to a soul stirring sermon by our pastor, from the eighth chapter of Acts, sixth verse. The time for closing was short, and the young present. _ The young people of this church met to organize a B. Y. P. U. on last evening. _ The first meeting was held in the church, look bright and prosperous. The officers elected were: President, Miss Mae Lewis; vice-president, Mr. N. U. Edwards; monsieur, Mr. E. Edwards; the young shall be for its success. A lovely party was tendered Mr. Robb. Browning on Friday evening at his home in the city, for a birthday. The evening was spent in games and music. The guests numbered sixty-five. Mr. Browning was the recipient of the monsieur's reasonable hour the guests departed, wishing him many more birthdays. The out-of-guests were Miss Linda and Kemp, of Reissling; Miss Eva Tinsley, of Bellevanne; his sister, Mrs H. Poindexter, of Bellevanne; Mrs Geo. Kemp, of Bellevanne; Mrs Lorenzo Carter was taken to the hospital yesterday on account of injuries received while playing rugby on Saturday. We watched the sermon from Mrs Lorenzo Carter, Miss Eva Tinsley and Mrs. Howard Poindexter, of Bellevanne, are visiting the latter's mother, Mrs Tinsley, of Bellevanne. The Elks leave is preparing to have a grand time at the celebration on the second.
ALBANY, GA.
The Freeman in Albany is somewhat of a god send. Albany is a city of some 15,000, with nothing for a colored man to see of himself in the theatrical world. He is not alone; the world is doing, only when the Freeman agent, Mr. Higgins, is around. Thanks to him. -- It was all smiles for everybody the day before the bill poster, was seen this morning out for a walk after several weeks' sickness. He had to undergo an operation at the Phoebe Hospital, the best of treatment while there. -- There was a battle royal Monday between the Albany Giants and Moultie Stars, in 3, in favor of the Stars. Albany turned out in club house style with the Supreme Circle Junior Band ahead, which is the largest of the clubs. Everybody is looking forth to the Southwest Georgia Negro Fair in November. There will be quite a large number of people attending the fair. So come and get them. -- There will be some business this fall, as the cotton is bringing from 10 to 17 cents a pound, with the cotton being more be some coin for the coming fall. -- We can't see why we have no theatre of our own. Somebody get wise. Although we see the best place to see a whole floor for colored people with all colored help and courteous treatment, there is some seven or eight thousand colored people in the city making up. Come in, the water is fine.
BONHAM. TEXAS.
(By Louise Bennett, Agent.)
Rev. Belles preached at Dodd City, Sunday evening. — Dr. A. H. McRuft, Sunday. — Dr. A. H. McRuft, Sunday. — Quite a number of Bonhamites were in Dodd City to church Sunday. — Remember the meetings Friday and Saturday. — The Old Maids' Convention at the A. M. E. church was a fine occasion at Roxon, Texas, Sunday, at the Christian church. -- Mrs. Estella Jenkins is improving fast and able to get out of trouble. — Mrs. Estella Jenkins is sick for a good while, but is mending now. — Mr. Frank Robinson left Saturn in work. — Mr. Fount Reeves fell and fractured his knee on the compress wharf. — Mrs. Reeves came in from Dallas Sunday. — Mrs. Anna Robinson and children came in from Denison, Saturday, and made a visit to the Bonham school. — The Bonham public school opened Monday with 133 enrollment. Mrs. Cora Robinson is visiting Denison, Saturday, and made a visit to the Bonham school. — Mrs. Jesse Dale is very sick. — Mr. and Mrs. Murphy and Mr. and Mrs. Dejouette attended school to Mr. James Morgan. — Mrs. White will teach music for piano and train to Mr. James Morgan. — Mrs. Kitty Mae Dodd is very sick. — Mr. and Mrs. Johnson gave a six o'clock party for Mr. Frank Robinson and in attendance Misses Robinson Hancock Chapman and Washington at the residence of Mr. See Louen Bennett for the Freeman.
Please pay up or your paper will stop.
Arrived: Mrs. Allie Charice and Miss Laura McFarland from Paris, and other points: Mrs. Wille Mae Metters, of Honey Grove is visiting her guest, visiting Mrs. Lille Mae Stones and others.
BRUNSWICK, GA.
On last Monday an invitation was received in the city to the wedding of one of Brunswick's teachers to Miss Melzetta Unice Childs, Orlando, Fla. Wednesday evening, September 29, 1915, at 8 o'clock in the morning to Miss Melzetta Unice Childs, Orlando, Fla. At home after marriage at 514 Pondier street. Mr. Robinson's friends wish him much luck to hear from Mrs. Rae Wallburg. Write me at once, 1611 Mansfield street. The church is now in the city, and everybody is doing it, why not you—read the Freeman, the race paper, the Freeman, the race paper, the Freeman. He is the agent. -- On last Sunday, September 19, 1932, meeting all the churches in the city were represented at the mass meeting. This meeting is to adopt some plan by which their Sunday schools, not only the girls and boys, but the elder people. After all, the churches in the city were represented at the mass meeting. Shiloh Baptist church raised the largest collection. Let us prepare ourselves, for we know not when the time shall
EMANCIPATION DAY OBSERVED.
Evansville, Ind., September 22—Emancipation Day was observed today by the Negroes, and there were visitors from several towns in southeastern Indiana and western Kentucky. A parade was one of the features of the celebration and the children in the colored schools were disguised. Among the speakers were W. H Perry, of Louisville, KY., and Judge R H. Terrell, of the Washington (D. C. municipal court. CREAM CITY NEWS.
(By H. Jones.)
State fair week was a record breaker for this city. Several race members were employed, ranging from week, but, in the midweek, Dickens of Minneapolis Minn., a race man at the head of a cabaret show, was produced upon the grounds, the S. R. O. sign was in store, and the crowd was cheering with us, the "Birth of a Nation," to educate those who do not know how to hate the race. Mr. Jesse Helton, a comedian, after playing quite a few skits, was sent to left for Chicago. -- Mr. Gee. Wilson, the always smiling mixologist, will be glad to meet all friends and strangers he meets, and will cabaret entertaining here seems to be a thing of the past since the chief ordered all singing to cease where in-toxicating drinks are being sold, but the mayor decision. Mr. Ervin E. Ham-
ilton, an Indianapolis young man, has become very popular in this city. He has cheeky grooves and the seaside vibe, the private jets at the Turf Hotel, 309 Fourth street.
BOWLING GREEN, KY.
One of the most delightful receptions of the season was the "Elite Speeches" from September 9 in compliment to Miss Corrineine Taylor and her house guest, Miss Theresa Vivian Dunn, of Chickasaw, where she chaperones were Messrs. and Mesdames J. Kiah Lewall, Edward Draine, Houssier, and Chas. A. Browning, Wylie C栈 Mrs. Georgia Jones Page. Those who participated in the special were Misses Rachel Price, Arnaïs G. Mahone, Mayne B. Taylor, Eva Smith, Lexington, K. Fruit, General Jacks, Kwok Wooten, Joshua Thompson and Vikir Haskins.
BUSINESS LOCALS
The Freeman in New York City at J. H. Mattox at 57 Ann street.
Woodbine Perfume. Oh, how fragrant, exquisite, enchanting, bewitching. Only at Blodau's Drug Store.
The genuine Carter's Rheumatic Remedy sent by mail on receipt of price, 50 cents (stamps). Has cured others; will cure you. Address R. P. Blodan, drugist, Indianapolis, Ind.
We will pay you $120.00 for sixty days to distribute Negro literature. NICHOLS & CO., Naperville, Ill. Dept. FN.
WANTED—Position by young man as stenographer, who can furnish excellent references as to character and ability to do the work. Willing, painsome. F. R. D. 6, Box 25, Taylor, Tex.
WANTED.
Registered pointer dog, also registered Llewellyn settter between one and two years old in John P. Bryant, care Citizens National Bank, Watertown, South Dakota.
HINDOO SECRETS.
If you are sick, in trouble, or having misfortunes, write, sending your letter, explaining conditions, and I will date, explain conditions, and I will free, providing you enclose 25 cents for my little book of knowledge (Rare and catalogue. Prof. R. D. Wester, Ph.D.)
LOST RELATIVE.
Hein Smith, Box 14, Midland. Ark. he was born in Brother, brother. A boy born in Augusta, Ga. His name is Jerry Smith. If any of his brothers can help this gentleman find his brother the Freeman will thank them. Jerry Smith has two sisters, Lizzie and Bettya.
GREGG & JONES.
Tailors, Cleaners and Pressers Who, Please.
Ladies' work and garments cleaned. We cut them and the same day. Our up-to-date facilities are in turning out work of the latest system. Call us and we will respond to your call. Corner Livecake and Centre hauvaire. Come us. Jones, Dallas, Texas. Sept. 25
WANTED! WANTED! WANTED!
Women and men to start a business of their own. The Star Beauty Formula Booklets will tell you how to make a straighten tighten kinky hair in a short time without the use of hot combs. You can make it yourself for 70 cents per booklet. The straighten tighten kinky hair price is $2.00, besides this wonderful formula. Others such as face bleach, har tonics, face creams, cold creams, and hair extensions. You can complete instructions how to make each article and use them and where to buy them. Instructions on manicure and hair extensions are right. Send $2.00, money order, cash or registered letter for my guarantee formula secret. Address The Star Beauty Formula, Poplar Bluff, Mo., P.O. Box 120
50 GOOD CHRISTIAN HOMES
wanted for 50 homeless colored boys and girls.
He doesn't say, "nasmuch as you have done it unto the least of these, you have done it unto me." And again, "Whosoever shall receive one such little child in my name, receiveth me." Finding Society, 1716 West Chestnut Street, Louisville, Ky.
100 Per Cent. Quality!
incorporated in every article of jewelry we
wear. We are proud to announce in
mind we guarantee every purchase. A great
responsibility lies in the purchasing of a diam-
don or a precious stone. If you fail to
the responsibility is entirely eliminated.
Our word for it insures you against imitation.
J.P.MULLALLY
DIAMOND IMPORTER
28 Monument Place.
Wanted, Teacher & Students Carry In
Urbana, O. is in need of teacher for Piano.
High school graduates who want to go to school
and work to pay a rent, want to help
few more. School opens Sept. 28. Address
President.
PILES Why suffer? Try S. A. R. rem-
ief from warranty, and get instant
piles. $10 a box postpaid. Write at once to
$1.00 A. Co. Dept. I. Aurora, III.
Wanted—Several wide-awake Colored
Agents. Liberal Commission. Postal bring-
ing to W. A. Co. Dept. I. Aurora, II.
Welton St. Denver, Co. Dept. I.
Charles H. Cook
PANTATORIUM
Ladies' and Gentlemen's Garments
Cleaned, Dyed and Pressed.
First Class Work Guaranteed.
184 West New York Street.
REATING DARK
THE MAGIC
ALUMINUM
The Original and only
Shampoo Drier & Hair
Straightener. Price, $1.00
Agents ranted. Write for
Literature.
Selling NEGRO POST CARDS and PICTURES in sheet form, and in our famous Panier Maco stance in xue finished in Malaga and Gold, ready to hang wall. In a day make in spare hours. Don't delay, write today for circuials. For samples of Post Cards send Ee in stamps. The Traditional Advertising Agency, 2146 5th Ave., New York City.
See Huddleston!
Modern Shoe Repair Shop
First class repairing of all kinds done while you wait. New Shoes for Sale.
New Phone 2376 K
609 Indiana Ave., Indianapolis, Ind.
Hadley Bros.,
DRUGGISTS.
781 Indiana Avenue.
Near Bright St.; Indianapolis, Ind
Try our Corn Remover, Syrup,
White Pine and Tar.
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HAAG'S CUT PRICE DRUGS
Closing Out Sale
On used Motorcycles and Bicycles at your price.
Two ply thicker than any other pneumatic tire on the market. There are others that look like it and sell for the same. Why not buy the best?
$3.75 and $4.00
The best goods
For less dough.
That's what makes
Our business grow.
Roberson Cycle Co.
416 Indiana Ave., Indianapolis, Ind.
10,000 GALLONS
LINSEED OIL
STRICTLY PURE
55 cents a gallon, from 1 gallon up, spot cash
f. o. b. our store.
MARION PAINT CO.
358 S. Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind.
DO YOU KNOW
that you can save from 75 to 100 per cent. on all household goods bought of WILLIAM H. BARON desier in new and second hand goods? It is hard to tell. Stock always something on hand that is the very thing you need. Special bargains 5407, married couples. New phone 5407, Inmana avenue. 222 West Worcestern street.
Sick poor or unhappy? If so, send me your
give you a Address, describing your case. I will
absent treatment. I make no charges
but accept free will offerings.
H. J. HOWELL
METAPHYSICIAN
1533 Baltimore Ave. Kansas City, Mo.
Dr. J. H. Ward
Office and Residence 336 Indiana Ave.
New Phone 8605
Office Hours, 1 to 3, 6 to 8 p. m.
Other hours by appointment.
White's Furniture Store!
Cook Sloves at $7.50 Opposite State House
The Fifteenth Annual Session
Teachers or both resides at the
Agricultural and Mechanical College
Greensboro N. C.
will begin June 20, 1914, and continue five
weeks there. A tractive lecture course has been arranged in
which will appear some of the most distinguis-
hual and most instructive of the course.
Board and lodging for the entire session $100.
Tatition $2c per subject unless other arran-
gements have been made. In case accommodations, Send $100 and have room reserved.
For further information write at
gregory B DUDLEY, President, or D.
JORDAN, Director, A. & M. College, Greensboro, N. C.
A SAMPLE OF DIR
Big Cut on Wines and Liquors
27c Tungsten
Haag's Pills Cure Indigesti
HAAG
112 N. PENNSYLVANIA ST.
802 MASSACHUSETTS AVE.
3100 Pine St., St. Louis, Mo.
PORTRAIT
We Employ O
Frames Regilded, Mirrors Resilw
Advertising Purposes.
Lyman
223 East Ohio St.,
SATURDAY MID
No. 10 Pails (9 lbs. net) Pure Lard
Best Sugar Cured Smoked Hams
Fresh Pork Shoulders.....
Smoked Bacon, Heavy.....
Smoked Hog Jowls.....
Compound Lard.....
BILLS & B
341-343 E. V.
The Largest Retail M
Lew S
AUCTION
Merchandise
227-229 N. New Jersey S
GUT PRICE
REFERENCE IN REGULAR AN
RAIT ENLAR
We Employ Our Own Artis
Mirrors Resilvered, Frames to C
ising Purposes. Amateur Kodak F
wman Bro
Ohio St., India
DAY MEAT BAR
(s. net) Pure Lard...
Smoked Hams...
Liders...
Heavy...
els.
S & BOETTO
1343 E. Washington
lgest Retail Meat Market in t
w Sha
AUCTIONEER
chandise Bro
New Jersey St. India
PRICE DRU
REGULAR AND HAAG'S PRE
PORTRAIT ENLARGING!
Frames Regilded, Mirrors Resilvered, Frames to Order, Frames for Advertising Purposes. Amateur Kodak Finishing.
No. 10 Pails (9 lbs. net) Pure Lard.....$1.00
Best Sugar Cured Smoked Hams.....lb. 15c
Fresh Pork Shoulders.....lb. 11c
Smoked Bacon, Heavy.....lb. 16c
Smoked Hog Jowls.....lb. 10c
Compound Lard.....3 lbs. 25c
341-343 E. Washington St.
The Largest Retail Meat Market in the City
Merchandise Broker 227-229 N. New Jersey St. Indianapolis, Ind.
Lamps, 25 or 40 watt, 25
on, Sick Headache, Bilious
G DRUG STO
40 watt, 22c, 5 for $1.00
uche, Billiousness and Consti
G STORES
27 S. ILLINOIS ST.
156 N. ILLINOIS ST.
INDIANAAPOIIS, INDIANA.
8, INDIANA.
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107 W. WASHINGTON ST.
55 VIRGINIA AVENUE