New York Age

Thursday, April 6, 1905

New York, New York

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Bitten by Southern Race Hatred, It Enacts Civil and Political Wrongs. HALF MUZZLED BY HART His Triumph in "Jim Crow" Car Cause Partly Disables Separate Car Law-Differently Administered by Baltimore & Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroads-Chance of Defeating Revised Constitution at Fall Election. Staff Correspondence of THE AGE WASHINGTON, D. C. April 4. — The judgments of the Maryland Court of Appeals was not only a great victory for Prof. Hart personally but through him for the whole Afro-American people. He made a brave fight and has won the battle. All a hat off to him. For he has done the cause of equal rights valiant and valuable service. The readers of Trial Ace will doubles recall Prof. Hart's case. The Maryland legislature made last year an instance "Gim Crow law," separating the African-American from the white. An administrator the law was made to apply to all passenger trains except express trains passing through Maryland. Afro-American going about much trains and bound, for example, for Philadelphia, have been ordered in the District of Columbia to enter the "Gim Crow" coach because the train did not happen to be express through Maryland. And some of them, not caring to get into a row with the police of Maryland, would have been in their journey and put to the expense and shame of a trial, have actually ridden an interstate traveler in "Gim Crow" cars our own. The judge, in his own words, "Aware of course this has not happened often, but to our own knowledge, and to relate, some interstate Afro-American people have been." This difference in the conduct of the two roads is due, we hear, to the very large plain in this city, and to the central office and works of this company are located. Romans run that the Italians use, and they migrate to Pittastur if their company were put to unnecessary measures in the matter of the separate coach line. For a law which obliges coaches where two only are necessary pits to needless expense and to that event reduces the care required to make their productions to the care required to make their productions to the cost them nothing. But it is quite otherwise when it interferes with important dead-paying capacities as business enterprises. To touch the conscience of the average American you must touch his pocket. Through his pocket he receives money for his pile he lives and moves and has inking. In defense of it he is willing to die and bleed on the aborted notice. For nothing else is in the pocket he lives and moves and has inking. In defense of it he is willing to die and bleed on the aborted notice. For nothing else is in the pocket he lives and moves and has inking. Let us hope and play, therefore, that color-prejudice may touch his pocket, may diminish his pleasure, that it may do just as much. Second. A person who on the first day of Jan. 1921 was a resident of the state or of any other State under the laws of this state or of any other State under the laws of the United States. Third—Any united State descented of such person of age or over one year in the year 1921. No person may be then qualified by coming under the notice of the Court or by being titular to be reclassified as a qualified voter, nor may any person be reclassified as a qualified voter. This attitude of the Governor toward the amendment became known to Gorman and his legislature. Great pressure was brought to him, and he was forced to his mind on the subject. But since he reminded firm, and would not, it was discovered, in an early sign the bill if presented to him, that he had been subservient with learned counsel, determined to abut the amendment to the test of a popular governor for his signature. And so the matter hung fire. The Governor on the one side refused stoutly to proclaim the proposed amendment, and the Governor substituted to the voters of the State for adoption or rejection because it was not presented to him for his signature; while on the other side he bound legally to promulgate it notwithstanding the failure of the legislature to submit it to him for his signature. A case was brought against the governor, and troversy and argued before the Court of Appeals. The opinion of that Court want against the Governor. He has therefore lost the right to be a governor, to gate the amendment, which will consequently be voted on at the next elections. The right which is about to open in Maryland for its first governor now exists. The senator on the other promises to be one of the foremost in the history of the State. In view of the wide brochure now existing in Maryland for its first governor, the senator expressive follower, the chance for identifying the amendment ought to be very good. REVIVAL IN ALBANY Pastor Proctor Wins Many Converts-Black Walters Discarded. ALBANY, April 1. The pastor, Rev. Procter preached a very uplifting discourse last Sunday on "A prepared place for a prepared people." All through his discourse every one gave him earnest attention. At $300 p.m. the Bisham school met as usual and after the school read the lesson, the pastor talked to the children and the young people about the importance of preparing for a better world. The service was very solemn. One young boy was taken to the school to pop them. The pastor proceeded to a well filled house at 9 P.M. it is a very powerful and inspiring discourse, after which the Lord's prayer was recited. This week there have been several conversions already and there are a great number looking forward to Washington to take to take a race home for a gentleman from Albany. Ms. Paul Robinson and her daughter were in the church with the grip, but they are somewhat better. An elaborate program is prepared for the evening of April 29 at the Concord Baptist Church, of which he is pastor. The Concord Baptist Church and the Jamestown street M. K. Church will be on May 9 at a range property in each other at times. The Stanxiv Hotel, which has employed colored衣物 for thirty forty years, will be on May 9 at a range property in each other at times. This will shift the colored衣物 out of all the hotels in this city. This speaks loudly to the crowd. He will bind the white many chair. A Dickin is a real estate agent for J. J. Sullivan of Schemety, but he makes his home at Mr. Irwin's house. He will sell two houses last week for $3,000 each. In Rochester. In Huntington. Huntington, April 5.-Bew. W. P. G. Gumball of Berklin A. M. K. Church preached Sunday at the Oyster Bay Zion A. M. K. Church, it being quarterly meeting at Oyster Bay. A number of Mr. David G. Ginther, Mr. and Mr. Charles Anderson, K. G. Squirrel, Miss Mary Ballon, Mim D. Huff, H. Hopkins and Steven Hopkins, with the Stewart Home on Main street to Nunnamawaven. I. Mantoneau has made a contract with the Bym Home on Ballard ave. 'WAY DOWN IN DIXIE Tells Victims He Will Open Nucles of Plethoric Treasury in Washington—But Twenty-five Cents, Please, for Registering Your Name—He Gets It, Too—Undesirable Immigration North—Dying Promises. Many of the worthless people of the race are making their way northward, where they are not only not doing themselves any good, but are not doing anything better than they otherwise would be. The courts and alleys of some of the larger cities can show up a population that is really a manace from the south who have mistaken liberty for license. Immobile immigration is always welcomed, but any thing that they encourage is not welcome. We have too much unwarranted criticism to fight to be handicapped in this way. It is a peculiar fact that these people have their beards and their reckless disregard for the proprieties are the ones who down South tamely submit when the white man amites, and then they own their own land upon the slightest provocation. The Supreme Court has held the peonage laws to be valid and enforceable. It is almost impossible to enforce them, and there should exist in this country a species of slavery quite as monastic as that of painful memory, and yet such is the truth. Thrilling peonage out, the people under indictment very generally pleading guilty and those not indicted guilty, the people under indictment very Federal court. Savannah, a colored doctor who had sold a young colored girl to be held until she worked out a debt, entered a plea of not guilty, and was indicted for which he paid. So bold have been the methods of the new who practiced this offense that the man has been liable to be snatched and put up, not work, nolves works, with chains around his mankee and an accommodating oversee with a full twelve-hour day. In Petersburg. PETRUSKO, VA, April S.—John Williams, formerly of Prince George County, but for the past six or seven years a resident in this city, died Tuesday at his home on St. Matthew street after a brief illness. His remains were buried with his wife, mother, father, four brothers, two sisters and a host of friends. Rev. G. B. H. Williams, pastor Sunday morning to a large audience. BE EASY WITH ROCKEFELLER. He May Have Repented, Says Hayr Henderson—Notice to Veteran, ETC. New Haven, April 5.—The gift of $100,000 by John D. Rockefeller to the board of Foreign Missions is the theme of a great deal of discussion both in and out of the pulpit. Rev. Huguenin Henderson, rector of St Lukes P. E. Church, is the author of the book that malteth Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of Heaven, But that deth the will of my Father who is in 'In heaven.' In the course of his discourse the rector logically referred to the Rockefeller gift. He impressed the idea that Mr. Rockefeller may have repented of his misdeeds, and criticizing him may be wrong in their own heart. White Plains News Miss Winfield's Birthday Party Miss Marie Winfield of 340 West 36th street entered several friends at a championship dinner in honor of her birthday on Wednesday, March 22. The menu was: Blue points, Manhattan cocktails, wafers, roast duck, brains, French pastry, creamed potatoes; olive, olives, crackers, lemon pie, sweet potato cuntad, fruits, nuts, candies. Mumma extra dry cherry pie, Winfield's Winfield is preparing to leave the city for her country home at 183 Sylvan avenue, Aburay Bay, Virginia Morris, her young wife with her brother in Brooklyn with her brother, Peter Morris. On the Diamond The Colored Glanta met defeat Sunday in Paterson, N. J., at the hands of the Philadelphia Glanta. The crack Cuban Glanta also won a game. The Glaukard Glint will soon be on the diamond and an open for gamed with the Colored Glanta at Montreal. The Montreal of 18 West 18th street in captain SPRANG FROM ASHES $2,000,000 Owned by Black Richmonden in Real and Personal Property - Resources of Four Banks $42,676,45-Capital of Four Insurance Companies $100,000-Offences of Washington Bee-Other Topics MARGARET CORRESPONDENT to the AP RICHMOND, Va. April 3, 2012 this year upon the one day of the week, Monday fourth day of the year, when the once cloaked of the Colonel Robert R. Lee and by the army of Northern Virginia under the command of General Robert R. Lee and occupied under the Stars and Bloody drama, the prologue of which was enacted at Sumter and the curtain of which was rung down aloud gloom and devastation at Appomattox. From the seelg, smoke, fire and ruin of April 3, 1963, Richmond has Phoenix-like art from its sites, and is today one of the South Atlantic States. And this in rehabilitation her Afro-American citizens, former slaves, have taken a very important part. With acerely forty square feet of soil in free and not the value of the provisional "Yankee mule" in personality, they have accounted fully $200,000 in real and personal materials. These forty years up from slavery have broken the record of advancement in any part. Our four banks, in their last statements made to the State Corporation Commission March 14, 1958, show resources amounting to $100,000 in personal and financial companies have a total paid up capital of $100,000, and each of them has depended with the State Auditor of Public Accounts $100,000 an security to indemnify all losses to policy companies. We have found Afro-American citizens actively engaged. Our white business citizens recognized the importance of women to the success of them among who are a charity and businesslike in their dealings, and who are adding to the advancement of the proud community whose motto is "Sieur and Astra." Poughkeepsie Personals POUNCHKREISP, April 6—Mr. Vanafolof of New York city is the guest of Mr. I. Dibbos of Gardes street, J. Sinnons in sick, Mr. W. Smith of Market street was in New York city the past week visiting her sister, Miss Debra Potter, Rob William sinks in sick. Many friends of the late Henry Jumison attended his funeral at the Riverside Cemetery, Peekwild, and Mrs. K Robinson came from Hartford, Ginn. The floral pieces were many of G. J. Smith of 3 F. Marianne came from hold from his late residence on April 4. Internment was in the Rural Cemetery. C. C. Cooly attended several weeks ill. The series at the A.M. K. Zion Church was largely attended. At 10:35 a.m., the pastor, Dr. Parrish, proclaimed Heaven Composed Kernetly. At 4:35 p.m., he proclaimed upon "The Vision of Angels" drama sung in lambellia Bryan on ANNUAL FAIR IN TROY The Programs and Booths—Annual Sermon to Order of Moses, Etc. DRURY'S OPERA Mrs. Marshall's and Mrs. Perry's Beautiful Gowns Miss Karr a Genius in Lace Work— Box-Holders. Mr. and Mrs. James Marshall have engaged parties box West; Mrs. Marshall who was engaged by every one at the last reception given by the Beam Brunnel Club, and who wore on that occasion a black jacket, being the most costly and brilliant gown worn that evening, will have in her party Counselor and Mrs. Rufus L. Perry, Mrs. Perry is a great lover of music and a regular subscriber to the opera. Mrs. Perry, aside from being one of the prettiest women in New York, she will wear a pink pixie trimmed with hee, and the dickminds usually wear, among others who have acquired Mrs. Jarrett, who will accompany Mr. L. D. Hinton, and Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Battle, Mrs. Murmether and daughter will be in Miss Helen Karr of the Hotel Macon is bently engaged making lace for several costumes to be worn at the opera. Miss Karr in her 19th birthday, she is 60 years old. She numbers among her customers many of the wealthiest and socially prominent residents of New York. Mrs. Heen Strange and Captain Paul Mrs. Sergius of Philadelphia have orchestra musicians. the performance of "Carmen" will begin at 8:20 per minute at the Lexington Opera House, 58th street near 3rd avenue, on Monday night, The Orchestra must rent $1 for sale at Theodore Drury's, New 58th street, at E. F. Hall, Naval Hospital, Brooklyn; his telephone, Fulton and Adriam's "Cangers" drag team, Fulton and Adriam's telephone, Fulton 218 Prospect. In New Rochelle NEW ROHDELL, April 4- The Froemin Lodge, K of P, head of a nermal annex on the Bethedda Baptist church Sunday evening, March 28, by Rev. Roberta of Newark, N. J. The Bethedda Baptist Church was packed Tuesday evening to listen to the Lions and Millar star concert, which was a snooop in every per- son. The concert was entertained at dinner on Sunday, March 28, fourteen friends. The out-drown guests were: Mr. and Mrs. Crace of Hidropity, Coun. and Mrs. Crace of Hidropity, Coun. and enjoyable time was had by all present. Mrs. M. Pallley and Mrs. S. Johnson have opened a celebration on railroad avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Crace of Hidropity have moved to Railroad avenue. Mrs. Kruger-Henne of Main street has been very sick. Deacon Charles Landrine of Morristown is agree to work this thirty event to Mr. Vernon Thursday evening to bear Bishop Alexander Walter lecture. Old Folks' Concert at Glen Cove. Glen Cove, April 8—The old folk concert and dagger supper on Thursday, March 30, was a great success. Mediaries Oates, Abram, Cutter, Ctrl, Coffle, Lyons and Hopkins Cutter, Ctrl, Coffle, Lyons and Hopkins Cutter, Ctrl, Coffle, Lyons and Hopkins Kallery, Alona, Abrams, P, Townsend and John Artis were the old men of the concert, and Mimi Stella Oates, Fred Townsend, and Jasmin Jillie, Rachel Parker and Ada Lacey made excellent old women. Mrs. Clerks as the most pleasing character. Three women most pleasing character. Three women most pleasing character. Three morning Rev. Wm. H. Lacy was a dialectogram to the bedside of his father who is dying. 1880 THE MUSEUM OF ART AND CULTURE AT DOWNING BURIAL BISHOP HOOD AT YONKERS. Great Interest in Church and Literary Society Work. Yokkers may be proud of its two literary societies, both of which meet on Monday and Wednesday, and R. Webb is president, is often the source of many interesting debates in which regular Ciceronian onomers participate. The Programmes of the Society, other other society and its president, Mr. J. Spoonish is constantly on the alert for new attraction. A joint concert to be given by both societies will be held on Monday evening, April 19. The leading literary and musical talent of both societies will participate in Bishop J. W. Wood, R. Booth accompanied Bishop J. W. Wood, Zion Church last Sunday morning, Mr. D. Shimner has returned to city after an annual trip through Virginia and North Carolina. H. Parall Lodge, No. 24, F. and A. M. will give a musical and literary entertainment and visiting talent will continue in the best local gram. On Thursday evening, April 11 a cooundress may appear and grand concert will be in the background. R. K. Zion Fasting Word With Old Suburbs With this issue of The Ace we shall part company with a large number of subscribers who have not removed their subscriptions. We have kept them on our mail lists because we hoped that they would renew their subscriptions. Many of the delinquencies will promptly return to us, as they will be unable to do without an old reliable friend, like The Ace, but many we shall not have with us any more, and we part from them with regret. We trust that their long association with us and our ideas has been helpful to them. It costs a great deal of money to issue a good newspaper. The publishers are compelled to pay cash for everything that goes into the manufacture of a newspaper, — for brushes, for labor, for material, and like the; they must, therefore, insist that their patrons pay cash for subscriptions and advertising space. No publisher ever depends from this cash rule without getting it hard in the juggernaut. We have got it in that particular spot a great many times in the past twenty years. We ask all the time to make The Ack a standard of high journalism. We have spent freely in the past to do this, and we have never spent more freely than at this time. With the co-operation of our patrons, Cash Co-operation, we hope to make The Ack better and better with each issue. For the second time in the past six months The Ack appears to-day in a new dress of type. Before many months we hope to enlarge the paper. Let our patrons back us up by prompt payment of the money they owe us. Our Bishops and Spurious Degrees In another column of THE AGE to-day Rev. Albert Long calls attention to the sort of preachers who purchase honorary degrees, even as we had striven to show up the sort of institution that bestows them. But this view of the matter does not cover the case because it does not go far enough. A great many worthy preachers have honorary degrees which they did not purchase and to which they are not entitled, simply because they do not possess the requisite scholarship. In many cases the institution forced the distinction upon them, which they did not possess the strength of character to decline. More is the pity of it; but vanity is a weakness as old as the human race, affecting alike the savage and the civilized man. Most of the large church denominations we have possess one or more institutions of learning. In the past fifteen years they have created an army of B. Aa., B. Sa., D. Da., LL. Da., and the like. That a great many of this army do not possess the learning necessary to justify them in having the honorary degrees is a notorious and scandalous fact. Mr. Long says, pertinently: "Will the Bishops in Afro-American churches take ignorant men who have bought degrees and give them good appointments because of that fact?" This question is full of pith and moment. All our churchmen would be gratified to have our Bishops answer it. And, the question should also include those who have been given honorary degrees without their solicitation and who should not have them. We go to the root of this phase of the abuse when we urge institutions run by or for the Afro American people, both denominational and secular, to exercise in the future a wiser discretion in the bestowal of honorary degrees and thoroughly to convince themselves that the recipient of the honorable distinction possesses both unusual scholarship and unblemished personal character. The San Domingo Muddle. Those who hoped and those who feared that the refusal of the Senate to raffy the San Domingo treaty was a death-blow to the scheme to stretch the Monroe doctrine to comprehend underwriting the debts and collecting the customs of delinquent American republics, did not reckon on the stubborn resourcefulness of President Roosevelt. He has, indeed, suffered in this matter checkmates which would have discouraged many men. His protocol, which was to have gone into effect upon his own initiative, was construed by the Senate as a treaty matter requiring its concurrence. The instrument, now christened a treaty, was referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations, and was there mutilated almost beyond recognition. Even in this amended form the Senate, adding insult to injury, refused to pee it. But the President was not yet at the end of his expeditions. For, to the intense disgust of Senator Morgan, he has been able to accomplish, for the time being, almost precisely what the treaty, if ratified, would have empowered him to do. He has nominated for appointment by President Morales two American citizens to act as collectors of customs in 'San Domingo. These Americans, if their authority is disturbed by revolutionists, will have to be uphold by American men-of-war and soldiers. Even President Morales can seek shelter under the American wing. The European creditors, in the main, have concurred in the arrangement. If this is not a fiscal protectorate, what is? To be sure, the Senate may put an end to it at the next session. But autumn is a long way off. Between now and then things may so fall out that we cannot withdraw from San Domingo even if we wish to. As is perhaps natural, the President's prudence and versatility of resources in this affair are regarded with mixed feelings by the American people. But there can be no difference of opinion up to the part played by President Morales, and the Sun Damaging people. We conceive that hardly any contingency, short of actual substitution, could be more buffering an耻辱ing threat, fiscal restraints. By inviting information has compromised the impatience and integrity of his government and his willingness. If he can but bearer up his own power, to impose upon his people the domination of alms. And, like ruler, like people. If they had evolved an orderly and intelligent administration of alms, an ordinary standard of official honesty, a sufficient public spirit, no protest could have been afforded for outside intrusion. We cannot render a severer indictment of the fan Domhnacne to than to assert our belief that they mark, because they have invited, the imposition upon them of this fiscal protectorate. A Warning to Hayti. Because the confessed inability of San Domingo to administer its own finances affords at present no much discouragement to Afro-Americans and their friends, it is with great relief that we turn to Hayt, where, largely through the intrinsic patriotism of President Nord Alexis, self-government by a people of African descent seems to be a considerable success. It is true that the Haytian people have suffered frequent and sometimes disgraceful vicissitudes. As is natural where so large a proportion of the citizens are idle and poverty-stricken revolutions have been numerous. The fundamental political principle of the United States, "to the victor belong the spoil," has been carried in Hayt almost to the point it has attained in our large cities. But on the whole, Hayt shows a commendable and encouraging progress in the direction of fitness for autonomy. The best sign of this progress is afforded by the career of Nord Alexis since his accession to the presidency. He has been as relentless and fearless in hunting down boodlers and graffiti as Governor Folk of Missouri. Supported, it is said, by his wife, herself the grand-daughter of a Haitian president. President Alexis has striven to rule for the benefit of his people. The Haitian people can in no better way deserve the esteem of the world than by holding up the hands of their present president. Tempering justice with mercy, President Alexis has recently issued a proclamation, which we print in another column to-day, promising that Haitian exiles may soon return home and those imprisoned for pillaging the country under cover of the consolidated debts will be pardoned upon the restitution of their plunder. Especially notable is his indictment of civil war, which Latin republics have believed the panacea for all political ill, as the source of misery to a people. San Domingo should serve to Haytil that a horrible example. The knowledge that offences and delinquencies similar to those of San Domingo will draw upon Haytil a similar humiliation should act upon the Haytians as a powerful incentive to good citizenship and orderly administration of the government. Names by Which We Are Known. The New York Times, by saying that "If Negroes offends it must be dropped by the considerate," shows a regard for the feelings of the Afro-American people which we greatly appreciate. The inference is that the employment of this epithet will be discontinued by the Times itself; and certainly its influential example ought to give great impetus to the reform urged by our Washington correspondent. The Times discusses, not with finality we think, the various appellations by which our people are known. The least definite and accurate term which is applied to us is "colored people," which is, however, certainly "free from any implication of inferiority," to use a phrase of the Times, "Negro." we like better, for it is a frank, manly name. Our sole objection to it is that it is inaccurate, "Negro" is the race name of certain uncivilized black tribes in Africa; can it therefore be applied with entire truthfulness to us, modified as we are by two hundred years' contact with American civilization and, in the case of two millions of us, by the infusion of a greater or less proportion of Caucasian blood? The race designation to which we give preference and which was, by the way, given vogue by our Mr. Fortune, is "Afro-American." This term is dignified, is accurate and is incapable of being used as a term of reproach or insult. We wish that the Times would take it into consideration among the other names which are applied to us. And will the Times explain why in using the terms "Negro" and "Negra" it treats them, as designating a race, as common nouns? Bobey! Where is Bobey? In the Indian Territory. Bobey is young, bounty, ambitions Bobey is Afro-American and proud of the fact. So much we learn from the Bobey Progress, a copy of the first issue of which has reached us. It has a brave, honest, intelligent front. The Bobey extends to the Bobey Progress and to Editor O. K. Bradley the hand of fellowship. May they trow grow in strength and usefulness with the years, keeping pace with the growth of Bobey. Everybody wants to shun a man with a grievance; it is even so with a race. Save the penny; the dollar will save itself. The Way Mr. Terrell Shows Appreciation of the Age. To the Editor of The York耳耳. There is in the telltale that I appreciate your labor in trying to lead the people in the way they should go, but I rather show my appreciation by renewing my subscription every year. I think your editorial of March 8; instructing our people to purchase homes and to build factories, was grand. We will surely have to do this. Wishing you success I am, Very truly yours, JAN. H. TERRELL, Richmond, Va., March 29, 1906. Instant Relief Company's Progress. At a meeting of the Instant Relief Company at the home office in Jersey City reports were received showing the company's progress, which was entirely satisfactory. In consequence of the special inducements offered, we find from the reports submitted at the meeting, that we have received more readily than any other of its kind. To the Editor of THE NEW YORK ART. It is well known, for Sir A. Ackman, a great time mentioned the fact, that a great many. Southern white men have come North and entered all things of Northern social and business life. It is not generally known that many of the foremen men in our Northern institutions of learning are Southern white men. Few example, Mr. Brown, who wrote that diary article in last December's North American Review on "The White Peril." is a Southern white gentleman, a teacher of history at Harvard. So that the man who are at the front in law, medicine and theology are, is not a few innamata, Southern white gentlemen. They write books and magazine articles and give popular lectures before "mixed" (white and colored) audiences or before gathering of scientific societies and the like, and every time they have a chance they "rub it into" the Afro American. If they consider the race problem they always start from the premises of those unreconstructed opinions which were so popular in the South before the war. If a man's ideas are infused by his prejudice, he is incapable of reading a correct judgment, or making a fair, ultimate of matters which pertain to the colored race. It is in the medical profession, in the medical journals, reviews and text books that the Afro-American is being constantly attacked. The white clinician attacks us, basting his arguments or deductions upon some previous doctors, which the clinician, without investigating for himself, accepts as true. The deleterious influence which these ill-informed doctors have upon the insurance companies is obvious. Here it is that our young Afro-American physician, better than we laymen, can meet the best in the medical fraternity, medical journals, and, day by day, in the college class room or lectures. A medical vagary, taught by Warren and Gould's international text book on Surgery* (Vol. II, p. 766), is that, the medical and surgical affections that the white race. The presumption is that the Afro-American has not the stamina of the white race. Hence, physically, he belongs to the white race. The presumption is that the ignorant and prejudiced white surgeon is evident: Anything to make the colored race inferior. Such statements, when quoted by men and authors who feel the same, are not the right weight. They are regarded as authority. White men who teach in the hospital, clinical, and medical colleges; and who write text-books on surgery, physical diagnosis or theory and practice of medicine, and who teach in the hospital, that, whenever the history of a patient is taken, it is always proper, they say, to note to what race the patient belongs, since it is said, certain races have a ten percent chance of having rickets; they say, colored children are prone to have rickets, white little children, as a rule, do not have rickets. Is rickets, then, a disease which only affects the child of the colorest mother? Any old girl will hallucinate that she has rickets that nearly all bottle-fed babies are liable to become "double jointed" or colored, be they white or colored. Another medical vaginary is that of white children, who lecture before popular audiences, who delight in singling out the colored people and attacking them with a "tubercular diathesis." It is a common every day occurrence on the "white" side, on the "white" side, say that colored people, owing to their "ignorance, immorality and race prejudice," become an easy prey to tuberculosis. Of course, the medicine men who say three "Fama clamors," newspaper motivory. Here again, our young doctors can come to our rescue, but than any one else, because they are trained in histology and therefore know the structural changes that occur in the body, which follow, and know the etiological factors; the contributing and exciting causes of this disease. Now, immorality has been here ever since and before the days of Moses and Christ, and it is quite likely to last as long as there are axes in the body. And since the largest proportion of deaths from tuberculosis is among the white races, then, according to the statement and reasoning of these pre-judged doctors, the white race is the more immoral. Persons who are always throwing stones at the alleged immorality of the white race, the Saviour of world, had Rahab, the butyl, as one of his apostors, and that the Anglo-Saxon race has been the most immoral of all the races. Beginning only as far back as the much married Henry VIII, they have mingled their blood with every race, and they have from the West indies to the East Indies, and everywhere else they have been. Some white physicians say that race prejudice has something to do with the tuberculous tendency of the colored race. This is another statement without scientific warrant. Intelligent laymen of our race accept these statements as medical vagaries and as impositions upon the sentence of respect for race, but it does have a respect for persons. It can be frustrated by a sound mind in a sound body. It is a sad and humiliating admission that while our race know the value of more morrow fresh air and sunlight in the sleeping room, the value of a daily full bath, and of many other positive aspects of health, these precautions are selected in the cities and big towns. Let us not have our Afro-American charlatans parade the alleged vices and derelictions of the race "in the presence of the enemy," and let the lay gentlemen of the medical and surgical journals and festional men to puncture the myths and vagaries of those prejudiced physicians who help create public sentiment against us. Our physicians and surgeons in the columns of the medical and surgical journals and the medical and surgical errors which are quoted by such scatological writers as the author of "The Leopard's Bops" and "The Clansman," Thomas like the doctors, Hankerson like the doctors, running down the condition of the race to which he himself belonged before he went over to the other side. Our colored physicians must meet these attacks and our students must challenge them, in the laboratory and college reception rooms. New York. X. Y. Z. CARD. OF THANKS. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Dekah and Mrs. W. R. Brown desire to thank their many friends for their support, and especially Mt. Gothenburg Council, No. 25, for their beautiful Borni Stunted on the Fort Smith & Western Railroad about twenty-five miles east of Guthrie, Oklahoma, and twelve miles from the Oklahoma Territory line is the charming and thriving little town of Boley. It is situated in a belt of fertile land that is well adapted for agricultural purposes. Cotton, corn, wheat, corn and potatoes are produced abundantly in this belt of the country. The town of Bellevue is about eightteen old and has about 20. business establishments, including dry goods, drug, hardware, millinery, clothing, and real estate office, a six thousand dollar gift, a single mill, two new mills and a first class hotel. It has a free school, a good school house about 4024, an enrollment of 150 pupils, a library, a museum, and colored youths of this community. We also have a colored station agent here to look after the affairs of the Railroad Company which will soon be occupying a brand new building and are expected very soon by the Railroad Company. This town is backed up by the Fort Smith & Western Railroad Company and was organized of governing affairs of their own. Great opportunities await the colored people here where their children can be educated and find jobs. They have men and women of nearly every profession and still there is room for more. There twenty thousand acres of the finest land in the Creek Nation surrounding Boley to be leased and by Negroes. Now is the time for the Caucasian community to come and help prove to the Caucasian race and not only the Caucasian race but the African people making and having children, and help solve the great racial problem that is now before us. HAYTIAN EXILE8 MAY GO HOME. Soon, Naya President Alexis - Will Pardon "Consolidards," too. Translated for Tue Ang from L'Echo de la Republique. At one of his recent Sunday morning receptions at the National Palace, at Port-au-Prince, Haiti, President Nord Alexis spoke as follows: "I know that certain persons desire to my that I have forgotten my promise to pardon the exiles. Let them have patience, however, for I believe the time for performing my promise is approaching. I am only waiting until we arrange satisfactorily divers matters bearing on this point. But the exiles must not have forced my hand by threatening to return. "I am immovably convinced that civil war can only increase minery, and that good citizens must unnaturalize who compete the government to expand for public safety much money, which might be better applied to the pressing needs of the country, as promised to pardon those implicated in the Consolidation Scandals, but only on condition that restitution be made of the money appropriated from the public money, to make anyone safer, Haitian or alien. "In acting as I do, my endeavor is to create an ens of good feeling among all classes of people, thereby augment the welfare of the Republic." NOTE AND COMMENT. M. J. Hornby, an Afro-American of Jackson, Mim, received an appointment through the Civil Service in the post office at Yazon, Mim, the seat of John Sharp Williams' district. After entering upon his duties, Hornby was several times annulled and thrashed by young white men and warned to leave town. This he was compelled to do. But he took the examination of applicants for the position from which he had been driven and again won the highest mark. Before he could resume the position, however, he was seized by a party of white men who "ingested him into a barn and thrashed to take his life, which he was able to save only by promising to leave town. He then came to Washington to complain to President Roosevelt, and to see him referred to the Civil Service Commission. An effort has been started by Mr. Charles Banks to organize the Afro-American businessmen of Mississippi into business League. The National Negro Business League has secured an abiding place in the condition of the people. The annual meeting in New York, next August, should be the greatest in the history of the League. Samuel Evans, an Afro-American of Kenton, O. received on March 23 a patent on a swamp-disposal plant, which is promoted by experts to be the first yet invented. It may be used with a single residence as well as with an enclosure. It is also available been at work for ten years on the invention. --- The sixteenth anniversary of the founding of the Curry School, Virginia, O, will be celebrated on April 7-10. Rev. Dr. George Washington of Athens, O, will deliver the address. The Curry School has English, Theology, Normal, Normal, Business and Industrial departments. --- The cause of Foreign Missions is making an attempt to keep the breath in its body. The Mission Herald, a Baptist organ, makes an appeal that $5,000 be raised on Easter Sunday for missions; and the Voice of Missions, an African Methodist organ, asks for $5,000 for the same purpose. Alexander Purves, treasurer of Hampton Institute and a non-fellow of Mr. R. C. Oden, dissent Hampton on March 20 an illness of nine weeks. He was much loved by Hampton students and graduates. He was only 28 years old. Afro-Americans of Louisville, Ky., are indigent because they were refused permission to participate in the parade in honor of President Roosevelt during his visit there Tuesday. There are said to be twenty-six Tuskegee in the South, that is, Afro-American trade schools founded or largely managed by Tuskegee graduates and ex-students. Diogenes. *Dingles* 'Card of Thanks. To the Editor of the New York Age: My most extremed air: I was mutch affeared and many spermuality in Boston has tote Me you wnd not publish My letter. Becon I was a Enemy to you and friend to mr Trotter, but you has discurschally did it. And I Expires to suppress My Grattytood to you. I wishes you to no I no Ingratytood thou horrible-bargreed Feerd. You does well to have Speak of, my accomplish scoliarity which Has bin Wondurd By at My personallylys. Notwithstanding, moreover, nevertheless can not gitt him thru What he Wah what he can. The Hler draw without blood oppose of the Meens to nominare I a rope. Wich wud be Iroping and I do not Think I remires to be treated With ironing. A Word to the Wise sofunctaten. Ages thankin you for pure discurscant in printin my Letter, I remires. DIOGOER DIMOLER. Bewdoin street, Boston, Mass. April 1, 1905. John L. Dockett of Birmingham, Ala., is a successful brick mason who is asking this training he received at the Tuskegee Institute pay. One proof of the utility of the methods employed by Principal Booker T. Washington is the fact that young men and women trained at Tuskegee are in demand before they have completed the course. In fact, the demand for them is no large from all parts of the South that quite a large percentage of them do not finish the course because they are lured away by offers of work at the trades which they are learning. Dockett was one of those students, but he did not leave the school until he had all but completed the course in brick-masonry. Having learned of the opportunity offered by the school to Afro-American boys and girls to learn a trade and secure at the same time a good English education, Dockett left his home in Troy, Al., in the fall of 1896 for Tuskegee. He was admitted to the night school, where students are able to earn their board, including room, feel, light and laundry, by working at their trade the whole of each day and studying and reciting in the literary branches at night. From the thirty-ai industries taught at the school, he selected brassmasonry. He remained in the night school two years, and during this time took advantage of another feature of the school's system. He remained at the institution during the summer, vacationing and worked at his school. In this way, he getting valuable experience. In this way, he became some of the large brick buildings which were built almost wholly by students, he was born fitted from a financial point of view, for the school paid him for his services and thus enabled him to ray for his next year's schooling. In the fall of 1985 Duckett entered the day school, where students work at their trades and learn the necessary skills to terminate days. This system smiles the day school student, that is, the student who is able to pay his expenses in cash, to learn a trade and learn the time makeovers (progress) program in literacy. He enters the day school to enter the day school because, as is usually true of students who are unable to pay their expenses when they enter the school, what he learns is important. He over the $50 a month, necessary to pay his board was placed to his credit in the school's treasury to be used in, paying his expenses in cash. He is also a girl who is ambitious and willing to work or secure an education which will fit him or her for usefulness and put him on her services money to meet expenses while in school. As we said above, Dockets, like many of the six thousand and more Takkegee graduates and ex-students who are doing good work in all areas of the course because he found lucrative employment at his trade. He left school and began work as a brickworker on one of the largest buildings in Montgomery, the town of Takkegee. After the completion of this work he went to Montgomery, where he was employed by a white firm which does a large contracting business. Since leaving Takkegee he worked in various white contractors and has worked on some of the largest brick buildings in the South. In every place his work has given him a reputation. He has been played by the Birmingham Hallway, Light and Power Company at a very handsome salary. He has charge of all the brick work of this company and his work is highly complimented to his salary but by the words of his employers. The success which Mr. Dockett has won should be an inspiration to the large number of students in the North and the South, who are growing up in idiosyncrasy and its attendant views in the large cities and in the rural districts. When such opportunity is offered, as are offered at the Tankengine Institute in reach of all, there is little or no excuse for the illiterate, careless and almighty. Negro boy is taught what he can do, an ample of what a thorough course of industrial training, that is, the training of the hand, the head and the heart, will do for a young man; his advertising work for the Tankengine Institute. HONORARY DEGREE ABUSE The Sort of Preachers Who Gun for Such Degrees. To the Editor of The New York Act, Your oldly edited paper, in the last two issues, has contained some sensible advice about the rocky way in which humour degrees are conferred. I desire to say just a word along this line through Tit. Act. The desire for degrees among us on the part of a certain class has exceeded the desire for study. There is a class of preachers among us who believe that degrees will increase their prospects in certain directions. The class of men whom we now speak of are aware to study. They shift here and there until they find some school that will sell these degrees and then buy one or more of them. I know men today who have them. I know men who have such degrees that can be spelled or spiked the language correctly. It seems to me that a man who does not know anything ought to have something to show what he has done before he In our Methodist wing of the Christian Church, we have some men who have purchased a good appointment from the Bishop who presides over them. They told me that they wanted the degree for this purpose, and the condition was that the woman or woman who has complied with the conditions only upon which degrees ought to be given to the Church to be or be she may belong, and to the race in general. But to see a willful and deliberate ignorance, with the degree of D. D. Church to be or be she may belong, and to the race in general, day before the common-school graduates now to be found among our children light. The Bishop in Afro-American churches take ignorant men who have bought degrees and give them good appointments because that some Bishops will. The degree men which we read in your paper a few weeks ago was bought with the purpose already indicated in view. We propose to give the facts as to how that and other degree men were called, and to call the names of the parties concerned. If the scholarly men, in the ministry in all of our churches would show up these degree-bot fellows who are averse to study, they would do their respective churches a service in more detail. West Corpus Christi, N. V., March 15, 1980. $77,400 FOR LINCOLN INSTITUTE For New Dormitory, Library, and Summer School. the great Afro-American schools of the country, more than any other one agency perhaps, are helping develop the manhood and womanhood of the face and mould public sentiment in its favor. That this is true we find gratifying proof in the fact that the American public not only will willingly educate our education, but will also still farther by granting endowments, appropriations and other tangible assistance to our students, but which all friends of education will rejoice, is the appropriation, for Lincoln Institute, at Jefferson City, of $7,700 by the Missouri sum $1,000 is to be expended in increasing the number of books in the already excellent summer school, one of the most valuable and interesting of the institution's features; and the remainder will be applied to the erection of an endowment of an additional dormitory for girls. During the summer school session of 1904 Dr. DuBois gave a highly instructive course of lectures on the pedagogy and the facts of the subject. Miss Caroline C. Smith, an instructor at the Tuskegee Institute, had charge of the industries for which she was interested. From the likewise conducted by specialists, each teacher who enters the summer school has in view a dutiful role to attain it well early and from the beginning. The members of the faculty have received letters telling of increases in salary because of inexperience, of the summer school, and a number of the latest special students are making pin-money by means of the skill gained in the industrial sciences. Because of the liberal appropriations made at each session of the Legislature for Lincoln中学, students must now move in the country. Dr. Allen sparing neither time nor money in his efforts to advance the highest interests of the industry, and to embark on the embracing Washington. Chicago posters, New York State, in all of which places have wonning fresh hands for himself and the country, and features in the courses of the summer school, the prospectus of which will soon be read and also in the curriculum for the regular school. Diplomats from the normal department of Lincoln Institute are life certificates to teach fourteen counties, there is always a demand for good teachers; a demand which is widened by the school laws recently passed upon in Kansas Territories. The only condition, apparently, is to know how to do something so well that one's services are always in demand. President, National Association of Colored Women, Jefferson City, Mo, April 2, 1985. Quarterly Meeting at Hudson. Hypnosis, April 3.—Quarterly meeting was held on Sunday at the A.M. E.Z. Church Love-foot was celebrated at 10 A.M. at 3:15 p.m. Rev. J. Oscar Vick of Kindlewood Bethel A.M. E. Church preached an acceptable sermon and Holy Communion was administered; and at 7:45 p.m. Rev. Randall preached on the services were overnight throughout the day. A committee of ladies at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Prince on Wednesday evening was a social event. Graphophone where Charles Hazard of Manhattan was in town during the week. Mrs. Martha Coney of Malden is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Howard-Smith. Charles Hazard of Manhattan was visiting relatives. Rev. and Mrs. W. K. Randall, Mrs. Mary Livinion, Matilda Johnson and her grand-daughter, Mattie May Simpson, were entertained at dinner on Thursday of Stephen S. Whitlock was held at the residence of his son, Harmon R. Whitlock, on Wednesday at 9:15 p.m. Decosed was 51 years of Stephen S. Whitlock of the M.E. Church obtained. PRAISES PROFESSOR BULKLEY CULLED FROM OUR CONTEMPORARIES —Governor Glenn has accepted the invitation to deliver the annual address at the commencement of the Colored A. and M. College, Greensboro, M. C., Wednesday, April 26. It is thought the Governor will take occasion to make plain his position on the question of Negro education in this State. The election of Mr. Glenn in view of what were his supposed ideas and intentions as regards the colored schools, asked much migrating, especially among the thoughtful and progressive Negroes of the Old North State. Fearing that a reactionary propaganda would be imprinted, many of them, it is believed, prepared to make their State for more congenial climate. It is known that in private conferences the Governor has declared that he will see to it that we are properly treated in all public affairs and that no fears need be entertained by us. Hundreds of the anxious citizens of color will hear him at the A. and M. commencement, and the whole State awaits his message. Now our honorable Governor has a great opportunity and we are hoping that the will take advantage of it for the good of all the people.—Star of Zion. —Colored men are taking the place of foreign laborers in the steel plants and other big factories in and around South Chicago. While they may not work cheaper than those they displace, they will lease the number of accidents about the plants, it is said, as they can be made to understand the instructions of their foreman more easily than the foreigners. W. W. Hale, general superintendent of the South Deering plant of the International Harvester Company, said: "We are gradually replacing the foreign laborers, by Negroes, their work being more satisfactory." W. A. Bolley, experiented of the south works of the Illinois Steel Company, said the company is now employing men and found their work acceptable. Several companies have built plants in the Southern States in order that they might take advantage of these colored laborers. The men have become experienced in the steel work and are gradually being induced to come North Philadelphia Tribune. —If it is any part of the President's appointment shift the office-holding Negro from the South to the North, out of reference to Southern prejudice, we cannot see for the life of how he can maintain his "door of hope and equal opportunities for all men" without doing violence to the fundamental principle underlying our manhood rights. The Negro right to hold office in this country ought to rest upon sectionalism, or political work expediency. He should neither lose or gain anything, because he is a Negro. His right should rest upon his peculiar fitness as a citizen. Every applicant ought to be measured by the rule of character and ability. No man should rest upon office simply because he is a Jew, Greek, German or Negro neither should he be discriminated upon the ground of race or creed. He should rest upon his merits as a citizen and measured by the worth of his character and his fitness for the position to which he acquires -Martha Independent. —The appointment of Harry New as Chairman of the Republican National Committee and endorsement of the value placed upon him by his many friends over the entire country. Mr.New's promotion is an evidence that the square deal policy that President Roosevelt has so strongly emphasized, has taken in more ways than one. Mr.New's promotion also places a premium upon moderity. He was not an applicant for the position, nor did solicit support from any source that he believed would be appropriate in place as his own successor. The World committates Captain New and predicts for him a lifelong career as the manager of the political activities of the great Republican party - Indianapolis World. The Hornet takes especial pleasure in taking it to Mrs. Maggie Walker, old tinker, in organizing a company of colored women to open up a biography in Embroidered N. The store to be a largest capitalized at $25,000. We wish it a happy life and God's blessing. Give us more Maggie Walkers. Along all lines our people are making great progress. It was only last week that colored man starred a pottery at Briard town, N. J. Catch the spirit, young man we would possess we must walk in and hold with pluck and determination to succeed Frederick (Md. Hornet. —The Tribune has always contended that lynching is a bad business and that many incarent person have suffered therefrom. Proof of this have been presented at several times. Another case presented itself this week. In Payetteville, N.C., a colored man is sentenced to be beaten up, 6, for alleged crimes, while white women struggle only through strenuous efforts that he was aided from the mob. It has now developed that the woman has declared that the second incarent of the charge, that he did not surrender and that she was offered money to tortify against him and cause his convicted. Satar tribune. A movement is on foot throughout country to fix December 15 as the proclamation for a general celebration of emancipation. Heretofore several different days have been celebrated in commemoration of African freedom, and in order to obviate any are requested to unite in fixing December as the most appropriate time, on that December 15, the Amendment which completely abolished American slavery was enacted bygress. Xenia and Willerforce (O.J. Sandst and observer. - The multiplicity of Negro business prices is a happy indication of the great winning that has come to the Negro maze. It learned the valuable lesson that pauperism is nagrams, however pious they may be, adorns a civilization or prophecy better than the business of the slave that will continue in the good work of establishing equipining and maintaining such enterprise affect the business ability of the race-Nashville Clarion. —The article reproduced in another column from THE NEW York AOE entitled "Churner Knight: How Build Stores and Factories" worthy of deep consideration by all. The doctrine should be preached more extensively throughout the entire country. The article is so broad and far reaching that we trust it to be a good guide and direct Brother Fortune invariably in the call to the bead—Maxton (N. C.) Blade. —Why should we become offended at being called "backward race"? All that race that we want to anything in the world's history were created for nothing in the world's history and powerful Angle-Boxon race were called "backward" that Camar and they were fit for slaves—Maxton (N. C.) Blade. Reserved at the Post Office at New York or at the University of Pennsylvania. Mr. Browder and the Philadelphia Institute, Postage Street, Philadelphia, PA 19105. Mr. Browder, 810-820-1499; Mr. Mendola, 1-807- 320-2222; or by Postage Grants, in the Universal Postal Office, with your exemption for each paper or matter. Many can be hired by Mail in a Postal Money Office or by phone. Many types of jobs can be provided by a Postal Letter. You can buy a Postal Letter or a Postcard, at the New York-Post Postal Office. Postcards are available for purchase for publication. You may be required for publication to reach the post office. Postcards may be received until when a Wednesday bill of current work. Address all mail to BOROUGH OF MANHATTAN R. B. Bundy, practical barber, 107 West 3rd street near sixth avenue. - Adv. Miss Madge is still very sick. Propetlector George E. Michaels of the Hotel Benard has secured a new chef. Mrs. M. E. Slaughter has removed from 134 West 134th street to 196 West 134th street. A literary and musical treat—the Bonehaven entertainment. Swe advertisement. George T. Jones died on March 31 and his funeral was held on Tuesday at 215 East 80th street. Mrs. Charles Oates and Miss Grace Oates left for Atlantic City last week for a visit of the artist barbershop, 215 West 80th street. - Adv. Boy wanted to sell The New York Age. Apply at Grove barbershop, 215 West 80th street. - Adv. Miss Lucy Reed of Washington, D.C., is sewing with Mrs. Emma Doyle of 310 West 41st street. Miss Montgomery A. Jones have removed from 19 West 134th street to West 133th street. Miss W. H. Higgins of Providence is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Goe, W. Allen of 372 Canal street. Miss Richard T. Litchy returned recently from the South, where they have been spending the winter. The Hyperian Whist Club was entertained by Margaret Marshall of 60 West 131st street on March 31. William T. R. Richardson has been appointed as the county of New York by Governor Higgins. You cannot fall in business. See King, reasonable printer, 503 Sixth Ave., and know why. Adv. 5p. 2t. Sunday, April 8, the New Amsterdam Musical Association will present an elaborate musical performance at ten at dinner Sunday evening at their home in West 39th street. Mrs. Ella A. Thomas was presented with a Past-Grand Officer's Jewel on Monday night by Kraodion Tarnachem New Order of Music. Mrs. Henry S. Ziegler entertained a party of ten at dinner Sunday evening at their home in West 39th street. Mrs. Ella A. Thomas was presented with a Past-Grand Officer's Jewel on Monday night by Kraodion Tarnachem New Order of Music. Mrs. Henry S. Ziegler entertained a party of ten at dinner Sunday evening at their home in West 39th street. Adv. Mrs. C. P. Stinson of 185 West 31st street has recovered from a very painful ulcerated tooth, which kept her at home for the past two weeks. Mrs Mabel P. Dublin has gone to Baltimore to attend the funeral of her cousin, Mrs. L. Thompson, the daughter of Mrs. M. Murphy of Baltimore. Chase sessions every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at the funeral at the Acadie Auditorium, 118 West 31st street. Special admission to beginners from 8 to 9:30 o'clock. Adv. Mary Lyman Berry gave Monday evening the last of n series of eight whist parties, with invitations issued, among those who met prior to meeting Grace Williams, John Miller and Charles Smith. Robert A. Lane, drum and bells artist, recently joined the Musical Mutual Protective Union, Local No. 310, A. E. of M. of this city, and a member of Uniag's Orchstra. Mr. Chuck McCarthy, 30th street has just returned from a visit to Mrs. Matilda Cabolian of Potsburg, who has been offering from a secret attack of pneumonia. The Elmhurst Baptist Church Pastor Katie Burke had strong support a morning and evening. The Sunday's increase in increasing and credit is the Superintendent C.A. Wilson. Robert Loe, who recently returned from the University, is the proud passenger of a letter high above him as chef and steward and bearing the signature of J. Portter jont Morgan. Herman E. Carle, comedian, passed a very successful examination in the Musical Mutual Protective Union, Local No. 310, A. E. of M. of this city, and is now a member of C.A. Orchstra. Charles H. Peterson of 400 West 125th street was killed by the explosion of a steam boiler in his work last week morning in the date when he was employed for the last ten years. His remains were taken to Pleasant Hill for burial. A Hatton branch of Trum Agr has then established at 108 West 10th street, where admired Charles R. Miller is in charge—Adry. On account of their N. Y.—arena balcony at Lyric Hall, on Wednesday evening, April 5, the Eatre Noun class will omit their regular session on that date, but will resume following Wednesday, April 12. W. H. Vaughn and E. C. Harris, director—Adry. The funeral of John L. Hopkins, a member of the Manhattan Fife and Drum Corps, took at Bethel Church Sunday. The entire drum session was attended by veterans of Thaddeus Stevens Fort No. 252, acted as mourners. Rev. Henderson officiated. On last Sunday, Mrs. A. L. Thomas, Master Alfred Thomas and Mrs. C. Blanchard of 412 street spent a pleasant day with their friend H. Jackson of 450 Bergen avenue, Jersey City. Very large congregations heard Pastor Anthony proch at Stairway Baptist Church, 210 west, street, last Sunday morning and 108 Sunday at 3 P. M. Rev. A. J. Fox of Mt. Olive Church, will administer the Lord's Suffer at Stairway. Oxford St. H. H. Wilkes, born in Oxford, was a steward with a stewardship career to large towns with a strong domestic interest. Annotated preface presents Mr. Wilkes as a man of great virtue, kindness, and wisdom. Annie Goggen, Mr. and Mrs. Wilkes, Anna Goggen, Mr. and Mrs. Wilkes, Ann Goggen, Mr. and Mrs. Wilkes, and many others. Miss Bottle Wilnes called for Europe Tunnels to be gone two years. The Board accompanied by Mrs. Wilkes, of Mount Pleasant, who will resign in four months. Mrs. Barril Wilnes, Mrs. James Dano and Mrs. Wm. H. Gilligan were at the Rikkenhoek to bid the travellers bon voyage. Sunday was childrens' Day at the Union Baptist Church, 202 West 53rd Street, and the Sunday school was out in fall. After the lesson, the quarterly report was and which showcased the work of the students for the quarter. Superintendent, J. R. Kline, much credit. Pastor G. H. Hims preached morning and evening and the day's offering was $12.11. Kink-line makes the half grow long, straight, so that it can be used as a 35 coste. The Kink-line advertisement elsewhere in this paper. Kink-line is now for male, the large size only, at the following well-known barber shop, Robinson's, 340 West 40th street; Benjamin House, 51th and 34th street shops, and M. B. Winegarten, 322 West 59th street.—Adv. A treat was afforded music lovers at the concert given at Bethel Church in West 20th Street, March 30. Vocal songs were reodeed by M. Crawford, Mr. Hebbons and William A. Madden, the well-known ballad singer, Mr. Madden, well-known applauding two songs: "Because You Were Old, Swimming Mine," (Whitmark) and "Somebody's Waiting for Me" (Leo, Flett). Several piano solos appeared by E. A. Jackson of the y. M. C. A. He was very good. The affair was managed by Mim Minnie Evans. On the evening of March 30 John Bradshaw choreographed his wife his wife and son at their residence, 31 West 20th Street. His guests were Mrc Jane Yates and her daughter, Miss Edith Yates, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert, Miss Daniel, Dennis Herbert, Mrs. C. Walker and Mr. Wren. The table was decorted with imported French napkins and embroidered with claret punch, cakes and wine, ice cream and white mountain cake. HOGAN MAKES 'EM LAUGH. High Class Concert at the Baptist Temple. The audience which greeted the participants in the concert at the Baptist Temple, 118th street near 8th avenue, Thursday evening last was a large and appreciative one and showed its pleasure by the unstinted applause given to each number on the program. The opening number by Mr. Charlton was rendered in his accustomed artistic style. Miss Abbie Mitchell, whose voice is round, full, clear, and admirably placed, and whose enunciation was so distinct as to make every word perfectly understood, was received with fond after applause each time she appeared, Mr. Haskin, the Canadian baritone, characterized the numerous results which were given him and showed by his interpretation of "Hybiscus the Cotton" the temperament of the taurine artist, Madame Dumkight was in excellent hearing her know what that means. Emma Hogan, at home before any audience was ever imminible, prowls: laughter from the dignified and putting everybody in good humor. The Gotham Trio rendered several selections for the film, including a remark that were made by P. Scott, W. M. White, and a portrait of the concert, Dr. D. P. Reid, a manager, R. A. D. Chandler, pastor, and artist. BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN Grand Bazar for the benefit of the Mother's Day, Nursery, April 25, 26, 27. See advertisement. fo25 $3 Mrs. Sadie Bill of Marion street still remains ill with pneumonia. Mrs. Laura Francis of Sumpter Street, after several weeks' illness, is now able to be out again. Miss Colia Coward, formerly of Brooklyn but now Newark, visited friends in Brooklyn last week. Rev. Boulden of Union Bethel Church has returned from Delaware, where he went to bury his mother. Fourteenth Annual Dramatic Entertainment by the Willing Workers' Circle in aid of the Brooklyn Home for the Aged, May 19. See advertisement later. Adve. Rev. T Dixon are expected to arrive from Jacksonville, Fla., Thursday afternoon of this week. Miss Margaret C. Mears died at the residence of her mother, Miss Ida W. Duncan, on Saturday, April 1. The remains were taken to Philadelphia for burial. Chaing exercises of the Central Excavation Hall. March 29, 2013. Adeline O. Leeward received a diploma for medicine in the first year's course in book-keeping. Charles Thomas, an officer of the Union Bethel Church, was buried from the church on March 29, 2013. The services were made impinging by the different societies. Rev. Boulden officiated. The celebration of Holy Commun at Silicon Presbyterian Church last Sunday was largely attended. Six persons were received by the congregation. Society held a meeting on Tuesday evening. The ladies of the Bridge Street A. M. E. Church met on March 29 for the purpose of organizing a floral committee. They elected the A.M. following officers for the ensuing year: Mrs. B. Hattie Adams, vice president; Mrs. N. Saranin Hadly, treasurer; and Mrs. Hattie Abbot, secretary. At the last meeting of the Concord Literary Circle Miss Pauline E. Hopkins delivered a very thoughtful and convincing address on Young Men and the Ballot; and Why We Deserve the Church. At the last meeting the F. M. C. A., led by Prof. P. K. Pleasant, some excellent music. Vice President Simeon Blanks presided. The general discussion was opened by Mrs. N. B. Dodson. April 13, D. B. Fulton (Jan. Tuesday evening), will read "Short Stories from Manuscript." Rev. A. L. Bouldin, pastor of Burch Church, having returned from his and trip to Maryland while he went to attend the funeral of his wife, Mary. He was the morning service last Saturday, and 2.5 conducted the funeral services of Charles W. Thomas president of the board of trustees of Charles Church, who died on Wednesday, March 28. In his last service, he was crowded, as the deceased was well known and had been 6 church member 45 years. Dr. W. L. Humber at 7.45 P.M. gave an interment at Lyons next day at 9 P.M. will have an intermingling program of music and receptions. RELIGIOUS NOTIONS. MARCH. West 5th Street, between 7th and 11th Street, Sunday Services--11 A. M. and 7:40 P. M. Moly Communion every first Sunday 2 F. M. Moly School Sunday school X 2 F. M prayer Meeting 6:30 P. M. Weekly Meetings: Class Meeting on Monday and Wednesday nights at 8 o'clock. Prayer meeting on Friday from 8 o'clock to 8:30. SKATE FREE. ALL WELCOME. BVY T. WILLINGTON HENDERSON, D. I. D. Pastor's residence. WEST 10th Street. At home from 8 to 10 A. M. Pastor seen at the Church every day from 12 to 18 P. M. Sunday Services: Preaching at 10:45 A.M. and 7:45 P.M. Mabbath School 2:45 P.M. Young Prayer Meeting, every Sunday vening at 8:15 O'clock. Public invited. mar 9 to 5 Flats and Apartments. Handmade Apartments with all improve their quality. THE DOLLY-MOUNT. 211 West 80th Street. THE SARATOCA, 200 West 80th Street. THE VENICE, 210 West 81st Street. The above houses have First-Class Junior services and are always in good condition. ALEXANDER CROSBY, 217 West 60th St. MR. HOLYARD, 210 West 61st Street. janlyr 554, 556, 558 & 560 West 126 St TO LET Handsome Apartments of 4 Large, Light Rooms. Range. Hot Water Supply. Finely Carpeted Halls, &c. Good Janitor Service. Rents $16.50 to $17 per Month Apply D. JOHNSON, Janitor 560 West 126th Street (612) 3600 DAVID H. MASSEY 28 West 134th Street, REAL ESTATE BROKER. FOR SALE—House in Manhattan, Brooklyn and the Bronx. EPA 4 at all times. Five apartments in desirable dwellings. Agent for Afro-American can Realty Co. 458 Ninth Avenue, Pwt. 50th and 510th Streets CLAMERS EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY EVENING PROF. OSCAR JACKSON, Instructor Hall to let for Recruits or Firties Apply on Promises TAYLOR "THE TAILOR" SUITE MADE TO ORDER FROM $18 UP Cleaning, Dyeing, Repairing and Pressing Nearly Done. 171 WILLOUGNBY ST.. Corner Floet Street. Goods Offered for and Delivered. January 18 2000 GOOD ROOMS Plenty of Light .. 800 Second Ave. near 43rd St. Rent, $14 per month Apply to M. J. NEWMAN, 39 East 434 St. 38 ft An investment that will pay 10 per cent in annual dividends besides making it possible for respectable, law-abiding, people to live in respectable law-abiding neighborhoods. Now is the time to buy if you want to be numbered among those of the race who are doing something practical toward the solution of the so-called 'Race Problem." DIRECTORS: WM. TEN BYOK. JOSEPH H. BRUCE. WINSTON E. DARNEY, RICHARD R. WILSON. WALTER E. HANDY. JOHN W. STEVENSON, FRANK STEVART. WILFORD H. SMITH. JAMES E. GARNER, JAMES C. THOMAS. PHILIP A. PAYTON, JR. BOREEL BUILDING,115 BROADWAY ```markdown ``` 1886 Eighty-Sixth Bethel A, M. And the 16th Anniversary of the Removal REV. T. W. HENDER On Thursday Evening At Grand, Central Palace, Music by The New Amsterdam Orchestra, CARDS OF ADMISSION, Children, (Including Supper) 25c. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE (Trusted) Charles R. Manager; Francis Turner, Truss, and Ticket Committees on Music—Pred Savage, David Low Wm. A. Green, A. B. Roberta. The program will entitled "THE JOLLY FARMERS." NEW CREAT Eighty-Sixth Anniversary Bethel A, M. E. Church Sixth Anniversary of the Removal from Sullivan St., to West REV. T. W. HENDERSON, D. D. Pastor. Thursday Evening, April 13th and Central Palace, Lexington Avenue. The New Amsterdam Orchestra. Supper by Beau. F. Tho BRDS OF ADMISSION, (Including Supper) 50 in, (Including Supper) 25c. Boxes, (Seating 7 COMMITTEE, (Trunze)-Charles E. Holmes General Manager Francis Turner, Trunze, and Ticket Agent; G. S. W. Hatey, Muso-Prad Dewald, David Lewin. Committee on Good A. R. Roberts. The program will consist of Musical Sele JOLLY FARMERS." NEW CREDIT I The idea is we sell And the 16th Anniversary of the Removal from Sullivan St., to West 25th St., New York REV. T. W. HENDERSON, D. D. Pastor. On Thursday Evening, April 13th, 1905 At Grand, Central Palace, Lexington Avenue, 48rd and 44th 8ts. Music by The New Amsterdam Orchestra. Supper by Bejn. F. Thomas, of Hotel Macco CARDS OF ADMISSION. (Including Supper) 50 CENTS Children. (Including Supper) 25c. Boxes. (Selling 7 persons) $3.00 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. (Trustees) Charles K. Holmes General Manager. John H. Green, Anst. Manager; Francis Turner, Truss, and Ticket Agent; G. S. W. Bate, Senior Ticket Agent; Committee on Music - Pred-Savage, David Lewis. Committee on Good Order, Ed. W. L. Walker. Wm. A. Green, A. B. Roberta. The program will consist of Musical Selections and an Operetta entitled THE JOLLY FARMERS. NEW CREDIT IDEA The plan is to sell CASH BENEFITS in event of SICKNESS, ACCIDENT or DEATH Insurance Policy FREE with every purchase. Issued by Mutual Contract Protection Co., 38 Wall St. AT STRICTLY Sixth Ave. C No Reference or a 223 Sixth Ave., between ONE FLIGHT UP Greenb Ladies' Hair Dr MANUFACTURER OF H Afro-American Hair All kinds of Wigs, Front Pieces and Sw 589 Eighth feb2 6mo Near 39t CASH OR E. V. K 603, 605, 607, NINTH AV AT STRICTLY CASH PRICE 12th Ave. Credit H No Reference or security required 12th Ave., between 14th and FLIGHT UP OPEN Greenberg' Les' Hair Dressing H MANUFACTURER OF HUMAN HAIR GOODS -American Hair Goods a Sp Wigs, Front Pieces and Switches in Stock, and 39 Eighth Avenue Near 39th Street CASH OR CREDIT E. V. KRAUS 603, 605, 607, 609 and 618 NINTH AVENUE 223 Sixth Ave., between 14th and 15th Sts. ONE FLIGHT UP OPEN EVENINGS Greenberg's Greenberg's Ladies' Hair Dressing Parlors MANUFACTURER OF HUMAN HAIR GOODS; Afro-American Hair Goods a Specialty All kinds of Wigs, Front Pieces and Switches in Stock, and Made to Order 603,605,607,609 and 613 NINTH AVENUE Northwest cor. of 43rd St. Largest and Most Popular Furniture Furniture, Carpets, Bedding, Oilc Carts and Baby A Guaranteed chine Free With chase of over $75 WE GIVE GOLD TR THE BEST PREMIUM LOUIS A. LEAVELL Attorney and Counselor at Law Office 104 West 30th Street Tel. KW-J Madison NEW YORK CITY Special Hours: 8 to 9 A. M., 8 to 6:30 P.M. Bewalts at 130 West 30th Street. mar 28 8 mcs. Practice in all the Courts. The New York Realty Co. 490 West 30th Street And Most Popular Furniture Firm on the Carpets, Bedding, Oilcloth, Linoleum, St Carts and Baby Carriages. A Guaranteed Sewing Machine Free With Every Purchase of over $75. WE GIVE GOLD TRADING STAMPS THE BEST PREMIUM OF TURN ALL. Largest and Most Popular Furniture Firm on the West Side. Furniture, Carpets, Bedding, Oilcloth, Linoleum, Stoves, Go-Carts and Baby Carriages. A Guaranteed Sewing Machine Free With Every Purchase of over $75. WE GIVE GOLD TRADING STAMPS THE BEST PREMIUM OF TERM ALL. NEW YORK CITY REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE AGENCY Money advanced on pennsylvania goods. Plate and Room Reserved at Short Notice. J. C. Ayher, 814 W. 800th St., Attorney J. W. Hawthorne, Attn GOLD TRADING STAMP SELF Do You Wish to Play the P I A N O ? Do you wish to better yourself? It is not too late to begin. If you cannot afford to take music lessons, this book will teach you to play. You will learn at the piano, tells him just where the music is played, then the one for F, and so on. Within five minutes you will be playing and by very easy steps the player is led on and on till simple steps you can easy. Another advantage is the much easier to learn to play with pleasure. Anybody can learn to play by this simple and easy method. Sent by Mail on receipt of One Dollar, 17 East 65th Street, New York Xth Anniversary 1905 M. E. Church Royal from Sullivan St., to West 25th St., New York ENDERSON, D. D. Pastor. Opening, April 13th, 1905 Place, Lexington Avenue, 48rd and 44th Sts. Supper by Bess J. F. Thomas, of Hotel Macco MON, (including Supper) 50 CENTS 15c. Boxes, (Seating 7 persons) $3.00 Notes E. Holmes General Manager; John H. Green, Anst. Ticket Agent; G. S. W. Patey, Sec. and Ticket Agent. Lewis, Committee on Good Order, Edw. L. Walker, man will consist of Musical Selections and an Operetta mar 30 2t. EDIT IDEA We sell CLOTHING for Men and Women ON CREDIT BY CASH PRICES Credit House or security required ween 14th and 15th Sts. OPEN EVENINGS Lmberg's Dressing Parlors OF HUMAN HAIR GOODS. Hair Goods a Specialty Good Switches in Stock, and Made to Order South Avenue 39th Street FOR CREDIT KRAUS 77, 609 and 613 AVENUE Furniture Firm on the West Side. Oilcloth, Linoleum, Stoves, Go-aby Carriages. Red Sewing Ma-ith Every Pur- $75. TRAINING STAMPS. PREMIUM OF THEM ALL. Mrs. Margaret Watley MUSIC TEACHER 325 West 50th street Piano Her Specialty This artist has but few squals. Terms Moderate. If you would like A Good Situation call at once. I charge NO PEE IN ADVANCE E.L. Williams And Street 9th St. Phone: (512) 731-7311 page 444 Gold TRADING STAMP RADIO RADIO 1898 T E SEVENTH ANNUAL 1905 Musical and Literary Performance and Reception OF THE AT BRONX CASINO, 2004-2009 THIRD AVENUE Near 1608 Street Easter Thursday Evening. April 27th, 1905 Among the artists who will appear on this occasion are: MRS. A. HARPER Custable, MRS. CLARA JONES, Seanne, MRS. FREEMAN, Erik Chaplain, Mr. JAMES E. HOLT, Tessy, MISS E. PERINCHLE, Educationist, MR. E. HARDY, Classic Bandist, introducing some original sketches; MISS MAUD AGES and MISS ESTELLE PARKER, Plainstreet. Curtain at 8:45 o'clock and Dancing 10:45 p.m. to 8:30 a.m. Music by PROF. W. F. CRAIG'S Orchestra ADMISSION, including wardrobe check 50 cents Executive Offices: Mr. John C. Simona, President; Miss Elimia Caley, Vice President; Mr. Charles W. Robison, Fin. Sec.; Miss Margaret, A. Campbell, Rec. Sec.; Mr. William G. Glibbons, Treasurer. Reception Committee: Miss Florence R. Joynes, Chairman: C. W. Robinson, W. A. Jones, Mr. R. Ferdinand, Miss Elimia Caley, Mrs. W. T. Jemmons, Mrs. B. Smith, Wm. C. Gibbons, Wm. C. Foster, Secretary. AT TAMMANY HALL, 141-147 East 14th St. FIRST WEEK IN MAY ADMISSION, 50 cts. Boxes Seating 6, $3.00 (Good music in attendance. Talent announced in next issue. For Boxes address J. FRANCIS GUYN, 144 West 100th Street, care of Burrell). BOOKER T. WASHINGTON'S advice to all industrial colored folk is "GET SOME PROPERTY" "GET A HOME OF YOUR OWN" Why Pay High Rent? when we offer your beautiful 6 or 7 room modern or we will build you a home just as you like, for a small payment down, the balance $15 per month, just like rent—but you get a home for your money,—at Rahway, N. J., 30 minutes from Herald Square, New York, on the Pennsylvania Railroad. Cholickly located Lots $100 up,-$5 Down and $1 per Week Your life insured FREE. In case of death, your family will get a Warranty Deed free to the lot you are buying, whether how much you still own. Seed for Free Tickets for your Grand Excursions every Tuesday and Thursday. Trains leave at 12:15 P. M. sharp. FRANK PFAFFMAN, Room 204, 25 CORTLAND STREET New York City mat 23 2 mo. PHONE 570 CORTLANDT. For Sweet Charity's Sake "THE GIFT OF THE FAIRIES" A Grand Scenic Production will be presented For Colored Children. 325 WEST 35th STREET, New York. Music by NEW AMERSTER DAM ORCHESTRA. Doom open at 7:30. Curtain rises at 8:30. ADMISSION, 50 cta. Hat Check, 10 cta. RESERVED SEATS, 75 cta. Boxes set 9 and 11, $4.50 and $5.50 on sale at Nurnery, and at Dr. A. S. Reed's, 314 West 32nd Street. Phone 4136 Columbus. OFFICER: M. R. A. Donek. Resident; Mim M. E. Bato, Vice President; Mim M. K. Griffin, Fin Secretary; Mim E. G. Fletcher, Cor. Sec.; Mim E. G. Burleigh, Treasurer. 496 42 Mount Olive Lodge, No. 2 F. AND A. M. AT WEBSTER HALL, 119-126 EAST 11TH STREET Easter Thursday Evening, April 27, 1905 AT EIGHT O'CLOCK Admission including Hat Check, 50 cts. Known and Unknown Wonders will be your reward for attending on this occasion. PERFORMANCE BEGINS AT 8:30 SHARP Music by Prof. W. F. Craig's Celebrated Orchestra W. J. CARLE, Jr. Accompanist WM. F JOHNSON. Stage Director OFFICERS: -R. B. Ross, W. M.; Emanuel Stenell, S. W.; T. H. Alton, J. W.; D. W. Parkey, S. D.; J. L. Pritchard, J. D.; John Spencer, Secretary; Nathaniel Farrott, Asst Secretary; R. J. Pritchard, Treasurer. EXECUTIVE ADMINISTRATOR: H. H. Hudson. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE: R. H. Huckes, Chairman, Altona Skrine, Vice Chairman; William C. Hunter, M. J. Moore, Louis A. Jeppé, William H. Vaughn, John Spence; Edward L. Wyman, W. T. Kier, Thomas Brown, David W. Parker. The Committee reserves the right to refuse all objectionable terms. Southern Beneficial League GRAND CENTRAL PALACE Lexington Ave., Between 43rd and 44th St. Easter Monday Evening, April 24, 1905 Music by Miss Halle L. Anderson's Orchestra Of Fifteen Musicians, and Private Boxes, seating 7 to 12 persons. $2 and $3 each. Boxes can be of the following committee: J. Anderson, 118 West 27th St., B. D. Whitehurst, 115 West 27th St., W. A. Fisk, 139 West 18th St. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE: W. A. Robertson, Chairman; A. R. Robertson, Vice Chairman; J. Milton Anderson, Secretary; P. E. Abbott, Asset Sey, Robert Cousins, Treasurer; B. D. Whitehurst, John H. Weston, W. A. Flood, G. U. Shockley OFFICERS: D. S. Reed, President; Carl Holmes, Vice President; John D. Younger, Financial Services, Walker Holmes, Financial Services; John Molbourne, Chaplain; D. E. P. Roberts, A. Kellner, Physician WALTER F.CRAIG'S Orchestra, Office and Studio, 321 W. 59th St., N. Y. is the Oldest, Best and Most Reliable, and contains a representation of the best colored musicians in the city, each one a Member of the Musical Mutual Protective Union, Local 310, A. F. of M., the only recognized Union in New York, mar 30 3 mos FOUR NEW HOUSES Nos. 152, 154, 156 and 158 West 62d St. Between Columbus and Amsterdam Avenues Each apartment consists of four rooms and bath. Open plumbing. Steam heat in halls, and baths. Hot water supply. Rents $23 & $24. Basements $12 NONE BUT RESPECTABLE TENANTS NEED APPLY SUPERINTENDENT 2158 West 62d Street le Wetnbes., r a TennpRomE, Aya Cake anegaty of ves enmity’ cetndd to Bien Lean 1sDaw ot chap wwe ond nth, tied Serdar agecteas water manos 3 Rese ¢ oi - p. - bee 900. yood cement a =~ a ‘cnt Peak Bere ny ‘ond denghter Eve Se ae comer. Ghover dad Teseday March 7 st Samhita ‘Giower exe bore In, Omining*&8 years age ent "wan tho denghter of the lots Joncpius Dailien. Riggers oe Mery Reticle A bectant seataed tree Wrothers marvive bec. She was eo nNOS Order of Saar, Vand AM ted the Standard Demet il Sig" bed ch been a tried serves of Me. Chan. Vandestin for Is Ti tenceal eorvion war beid ot te An ie hen rk Bas Pesky aterm, Bex: WA. ocinting, andes by ‘Barr J. W. Bovté od Bev, Deere of Onsincy, "Stoubers of tne Mamorn Star. astad ‘es pall-beatere nad. alas Tri fereet tok MiecaioTiten interment wae Sieg Below Comte, At te Saitoh Bae’ Nat Sunday, Rov. J. W. Bove Freche gery inaliccemsl oremom. “Fhe it: ‘ary soctety kan started Wedeeday evening Sectings again with Inceresed memberahite Bagtictal servioss will be held arat_ Sunday sat Rab. o4, when x or weren convagis will be immcreed. "Lincoln Lodge, No: #420, G, U. 0 OCF wines ta nel thang fccmon On’ the sroned Ouaday ia May at 8.3 By Bev. 3, W. Sects at atch ‘Church 4b 0AM, oe Cech tae Samay Hew. . Aagutns Fitch proached “i sermon Ta the morning Bare. Mf, D. Butler of tie Viziaia. Conlorence daliveres ine dis- couren “Rev. WA. Fitch prenched che aman srpon tothe Raighas of Prion Lodge Ro St Voukern om Match 38. Ymac Teaghe, drivc for Fi 2 fick martes, had ruse-way oberiees's carvings bat boing hott chopped O75 ee op aaa tot, ae Tittle impevred Chinen N. Scott hes opened n Stooery ad Geaivctjonrry sore oo, Orcanrd fife Petar 9, Mathew emmcee, Owing (0 increase of; business, haw’ parchaned anol sone of bere Nae Coan Bepard f we fering with Sropey ot ows How! Sceeel aye tel stp to Mt, Vernon last Sanday. ‘Gmyers, Green and Wood, PP pergins tha Colored Conoperative Society of Foshers eitended the mewting of Leagit be bold ai AME 28 ark, oh Baste Semdny. ‘Bishop Alea. Walters sad wile wil be "ae <i inthe reggie ag dle sate be ‘lecdevnip of Madame A Wiley. Lincotas Hor 424, GU. 0.0! OF bald bt evening ite quarteriy election ef ofkcern, which Tevulied as fallen: Prank Seiten, NG; Geml K. Pickett, V-G.: John Horten: KS; Jotun Re Richardvn, .N-Ga Thon Willian, N. Fiz J. Ear, Keapp. 8. i Elie Hortes RG 8. G. Samuel Tey, LRN. Gs Lew Tureen, Lo SeV.G. Betat Mathews, R.&.V.G; Freak Twitty, 1.6; Sed a teen = 2 Auburn News. -Auwunx, April 5.—At the A. M.E. Z. Church om Parker street lest Sunday there was goorrl clam at 10 4. 4; at 10:45 preaching by Rev. J G Roberta; at 13 a. Sabbath School wns Largely attended ender Superinteedent J. 1 Wodhagtocs ned at 7:30 Fm. there a Iprmaing by fiw, Mobern aftar which few C K“Bmith Administered the Lord Supper Rev, Patricks of Syrecims. wnt the” Kut. Ren. J.C. Roberts, Mra, Hugh Williams spent the week in Byracean with Ara, Kobert Cai Aictinn Min Beverly aud daughter wer the ee ae Benen ae er Sin fm Greene. baa returned home after going ‘South to bury hee mother. The entertainmeat iEiven by Mist Daisy at the A. Mt. 2 Church Sathe Crening of March $i wer = sucvemn Fonlining $1438. Two Concerts in Saratoga. Samatooa, April 5.~The Bev Hive Hally and mcred ovncert givett at the AM. K. Zion Church Inet Sunday evengyg by Unerrtewairte rene fav eal waren ios peeramn coat sel deren by W. #, Money and I. A: Wak Yand and ninsing by the chutes anetshe Swsny South Malenad VenaleGuartetus. Sra Sarah Oliver prewithed, Hew. H. Burnt. wi the. Peve Methodlat Church led ia prayer and Meatasts Ell Hill, Hertha Washingter and Mary Sanne Sa etre tie ok ee Fa. The cwnecet and Tova Tis wading Riven at the ACME % Church list Memtay Srening tinder Use auspices of te Willig Workers andthe Trustee Aid was fatal mucorm, “The fallowing program was cen- ‘Sroanly appliavhed: Chonts, Mines Eelith Oliver, Seatet” Anderein, Mora. Wantington, H-lwns Haoter, Anna Hunter and Julia and baths Williaain: rreitativa, Seater Baro Kies: Avot, Moses Mora Washington anil Mabel Ane ‘Sersoa ; Froitation, Maater: Hebert King: tein, Wine Mabel Anderson, Anna Hunter and Ealith Oliva; recitation, Master Ausiitine Wahing: too; dot, Mic Julia Williams and Master Robeet Kine: rreiiation, Goldin Brown: dust, Mine Edith Oliver and Mabel Anderon ! Frcltation, Maxie Gussie Johneons tablean, FGling to the Creve” apd, the Tom ‘Thumb wedding. The bride wna Goldie Brown, aged 2. Eke is about two fect high. Her dives wan of white bewn and abe wor a veil. The groom Sas Master Grasie Jobneon, aged $, and about Tero fort; threw inches in brighth. Ne wore n fall drew suit. Sin Gertrude Green performed Ute plane. The proorees will be applied to Confernoce staima Lakewood News. Laxxwoop, April 5—Mins Grace Davis of Victory Cottage ix sick. The Macrdsiia Sun- day Schoal is preparing for ita Euator Carnival, The BY. P.U. was exorllent and Ue soung Tolle are doing a rreat work for the cate of Feligion. May they continue and te of gomd cheer. + pee Brunswick Notes. ‘New Brcxswicx, N. J., April 4.—Mrn. Mar- atta scan baa evs th fo sous tims, but is now convalescent. Clarence Se in ella Quick vrei a a ee tig, by be Root, 2.1 Sp ememees rently Pe eine eee tae ner racic ners tal Se iatior one pores seine ot the Me ‘Zaoo A. M. B. Church was occupied on the Zien A Mi cvocgt acay werk by Hah poginsand oviog of Aare sires of te Rice Industria) nad Literary Inatitute were out Beer 8 i citing “Ton stn oa s@ able 000, remarkable for its simplicity. The 1 Ae re eg Cath contin Sea Be Me Loe a ena were oe ured. Lerbert A. Carman has recently become a ie ae STO! oF OE es Poltinn, Us on ee See ate Carproter and to STE BEANE Cape at Torok state deraty, arm PT. donee, on March 2, in ite lodge rooms. The meeting was both’ interesting and instructive. The ee er re amen Br Seacatesih Sem ingey aon Leena es eretine tev op ae a tes Septet te ye ml opeliotot tine itioamericor Fee ree, ok oon on igre to ‘the police committre. Bemnel F. There wR See EE cin preemon f . Bae whe eee neni Ter Brook Boe dev bee taken » preition im Cranhary. N. 3. Pred Salter spent Semday week in Treaton, ‘A. J,,. visiting bis brother. ‘Leonard McFar- und of Boston, Moms, ie spencing s few weeks here ie missionary work. 5 . ——— The Afro‘ werican Mews Co, (689 Wont 86 b Street, Row Tork Ong ‘aeons “Terk Ape, Richatond feel Aetna Dresemans Bab sore Laces, = i oom ra oaemanere a= ‘siversements. ree notice f (Give eee O06F. an, tee eS orrr als me 2g gee pees it, En ee pe bad rae 9 Lae a tats eet ead wrt = : ——“snemsssrbewe Toler iewrerest mete Er renee pet meen oon Mirah Bowie OT wees Ioatne maria a eee Tosci trey ieee anes TO e Agee ae ep eos : te See Met eaaaee ete eae a UREIONED oe, ae thtana meses ESTEE rete coe ‘POR, RALE—In Mount Verses, N. Y.. hoses of =, Se See pee Ts al e Me wee, Sl W.. Sy Gore Pave, al Eien "ANTRD— From June tt, 2 good sited re AW" iirnbised of unfurnishot "Sov above sted segs Mit ad oF Wee Agate W. Seevena, 17MIrstrect and Auddbop aveawe. Tor men, Meena ns 7 LD ea ha araclon Taig wind el ta Fa ne LEE A foes for all fans To Sy te Vasderiit'avenve, Brooklyn *P Po LaF Ney fomioped wpe, ura Te eae Anh Badan To aSecAeny Rebar S woo ein leg Risener Toy sieeve foe repeonte Be. S14 per man thesch. Apply, Gl Went et PCR MEY LAE oe WERE SESE: Wantapcataliups et ya, Mets sgn fad east et aa a Ealiccicat ote sa Ase Nore me ite sO LET papaya eae Ra nico oop. To Rrited un bink ieee Ba ty. ts ars Se To LET —In bo, Agog SOREL Tey eS eT eS TO LET oNKcely Furnished Ball Row, for Se poo, es Poe rept oa we al werent aaah Wihsuakty atta, Sere prank ats Sen nea ati oeress rossiaais ative Savaha es mater: et aearecr sane Ey JA GARG pmb of Sie Rae, and sl ian aang ou nese pipes fazoilien. Call us addrem M.A. oltsmou, Row! sa ace ar elicuce Broa ANTRD--boanding Bablon, Best of care. War istiinoods roe Nisin aver nour eh fret : To ERT Rakin ese Sa aS EET Aaah Ave, peor aoe etree De TALK I8 CHEAP AND ACTIONS SPEAK LOUDER THAN WORDS ae er ectass ‘ana monet taartvorious ef ail bass tay Sree nd mat taettotous ofall al Beg ach ighree ee ncaa eerie crn sah eta Rear eatanife ea, aetna at See Seca ae Steines saree aaa Ss Et cee Seen See vel cea Saree eee rer eae Riese sete ior meaias woke Ser ehreeies fan eal Sey deee en oan Foe as muteieiarnes comes Became eltady orsce Satiare, th a gene steers See Oe eee aes pee ea eter 2 re urea doe ecsier? Serie saerae ore emer Sieh Ste ere RUPerane sae shoei ee He teat sein ease Deval canareasiranaune coe ae ede cite eerie Specs yume ramen ner ou Sig elie asi ee Setar Beer ae Me Sart SEP Y a She ca’ eel Wreeamt tetany gh, “Tot eae cea an ay ta Sake iy aincar art aa tba Heath, oie aatpeea onsen Seeman ut tours eet Bear se talks Glewine. wat onitlvedy tank te hog, moter fet ire tae! taieed warial oagcit Petpeen uaa anaaerck i rts Wt eka ara foner Solon, make the Ralr rote out.ca atl bald ia isin he ei gece Be ear haat attuteinan sei i a oe, ee sins dtnbas eeted cana wt Seicendmeaeran a ara seiatia hie ria eects orate Eri ig aie raves wt see iat nee cur coverc ae in ee ea i ant ae i Sioa ad at eee ie cca ey ena ee SS inl! cn pias a tae Pinks many preparations sich are datirermis ie Tea ere hi ne et ten seat aicee eas sntin oat ent meter radia macate artcaaios eimaraae a eae eta euntnae eck ade Some Baie <a a aie acta at Shae aetna Sa ag) eH Rend tw tsb sonal log MELE ARTS, cory MISS SELS ARTIS care Continental Chemleal Co WONDERFUL DISCOVERY Curly Hair Made Straight By FORD'S ORIGINAL OZONIZED OX MARROW ONIZED OX M BEE a een met Ee eene Sere Bee Pet ieee Fefas ileaee ies ni ctomaarieat, a hs Ser wil porsaus vd seprces heres: eae -.O8ONTERD OX MARROW CO, Chakey Ford Baad 76 Wabash 4 cl linet. Pee MEW Wéebw ‘elt obtains: see EA | Simpeenmnatihs:. ———— a Sure eee nap ary are i. HANOVER ' Employment--Bureau, aries ieee O’FARRELL’'S 440 & 412 Bighth Avenue, . ear Sst Btrest MSW TORK crrr. Furnitare, Carpets, Badding Bic QS Mee eo lortnee Pn CASH OR CREDIT. : FRANK DONNATIN. ge oe non nae te €-2 Sa wonpentutrnoe BUEACM Fens oe eS Sere estes arcs cis eee: ere Saeeeneg Serie acme Sitsccca vena a mae te : 0a. q & 7 ‘peat ¥ set i a ere JOO g0 eipams anasto Blectric Hair Preparation & Comb ts Soe Malt res Lau Pig ent ewes RRS as reo eae Oost en pemice nea See ree Saerarnrs athe cee eo AN Outen bow pain carcit eres Peer Beet ties oss ane pete Staer sr Ruocene Maney Ovtae So ee THE BERNICE CHEMICAL OO. aia Se eee nee eR Tt coe, jan imo AGENTS WANTED . Musicians. Miss H. L. Anderson’s ~ _,. Orchestra. PROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN TO ALL. DETAR AOS B16 West 60th Street NEW ToRK CITE. rowodoensslleuIOEE TT! sessed The New Amsterdam MUSICAL ASSOCIATION ree eee wr aS EEE ae. ieee Lee Senn 7a — EAEEGIN GPE MAKES THE HAIR GROW LONG, STRAIGHT, SOFT AND SILKY. QURESDANDRUFF AND STOPS FALLING HAIR.S - ; Is no Experiment Tunas auucorered by Dr. Roberts, a famous eaeiisy cnenine who bac muden ptudy ef tbe Feain ot solnre reopie for taeranc thirty genre isa ebor alterna time ued earenose has Dremieed ‘this great Tonle especially for the Silored peop Prine Doctor sare that his experience and Sted prome naquirey a special trestneent, Sy SterrJoboriow abd teatiDe uncae sane year Bis "dinoovered. the greatest REMEDY. "the WoaUD tas cree knows Tor ibe HAIR ot cote oret ponte : TINKCGNG will make the hair GROW trom ‘ous t> unre inches per mouth i ene airections Sad ‘iostractions amv. carefolis~followsd ove Wonave many easca on reeard where tpoators Fenules bave bccn Oboe and we do Bot beads Eutishen we minke theso isicon” GINK SINE ts tho coy sate preparation In tne WORLD chat fs guaranteed to make the HAIR STRAIOHT and make dry bait smooth aod stop It from, wreaking of and falling out; takes oat sl fin wine aod knows, cures Bavdruft sexes Thenatt soft sod sllky~ and: by nourishine te FOOU eivestt pew life kad vigor, restoring {t to Bacurat corer READ WHAT A CUSTOMER SAYS OF IT My. Rove Holt, Atlanta. Ga. writer: Fy amm'gied t6 any (chan dour my bead more good than anyiblon I ever sect Beod ost SRroe doea soore bottice of Kinkine at ome! flr like bot cater and worn wostrs os ts ‘LARGE BOTTLE SENT PREPAID for. mo; ‘Toshow what KIMK-I0e wilt FREE cn 2 comple postpaid. AGENTS WANTED. everywhere MINKCINE. "Wrietotaylorirme, THE KINK-INE COMPANY, 943_W. 14th St NEW YORK Yor sale by. Rosetitork, 7th Avonue fe 4tet perce Ww. 'X: Rockey aathstret < Mn Avene, FS. Ward, aah sinctant nh venus” Chae ES Regeeann a Cav. tons. J ar ora ah sirevt fh Avenue, “Abvratiany A irataon, ROR” ir Balt brut” sree, Broo 7an"Eoawne tinett, Jersey Clty” oe Rarharr.—H. 1. Rohingon, 290 Weat suhstrert- Renpertin Howell, Ith K 1X5tb streets shes M. i Wineglane, 322 Went 58th ajerct. | The Dickerson House 400.HALSEY STREET * near Kinney Street, NEWARK,.N. J. Pees sors | rk or month. Select Kewpfoyment Bareun. MRS. RUTH C. DICKERSON, Prep . Telephons, 2704-3. fe nares, Gee Cerone: wee . ANDERSON. HOUSE, __ 87 Dougines Street. saan “GILBERT HOUSE, S06 Nest 00h Sas OR See ow Bats fob emo f KEYSTONE HOTEL 206 West 37th Street. virst Cam Peratuhel Boome wy the Day, Week roou ARO RHED runiagewn brane a. NKS eee Proprietor ‘“AVONIA HOUSE 216 West 28th Street. erie Boat or Vransleah gueste. scomnmocatef ‘with or without bean. “Modern tmprove- Mrs. F. B.WHITE, Proprietrees. ABW MARYLAND HOUSE ‘RALAROSD “AND REMODELED 202 and 204 West 37th Street wwiligtly Deryiebed Rooms by the De, RESTAURANT ATTACHED ‘Meals ot alt hewre OME WALOOTT, Proprietor cece ae HOTEL. BERNARD 19 W. 186th ST. near Fifth Ave. ‘Telephdna 10 Marton. Elegeatly Furnished Rooms with every atin Grill Room Attached. oracal Denday Dinero Clon oT wt = GEORGE. E. MICHAEL, Prop. 7 The Hotel Alpen, BOROPERAN FLAS. oat sevewth ave. KEW TORK GIFT. SEE, 'thweos, reoncen, a eer eee HOTEL MACEO, 218: wWeet 68rd toh fee eee Beane Spain hee “HOTEL LETT, | 1836 West 53rd Street. seer quntes Ginter fesse RESTAURANT ATTACHED. tint OOUNTLOGE, Peston hond 1866 R_Coaeen “WILSON HOUSE, 214 West 28th St * TO LET. EE Sante hentia! tems, a FRANK C. HOLMES, proorier aERANH Hotel MARSHALL, 127 and 129 West 53d St. Piso bbe Dew gta m New fork, logos wttn bad Rates reanstabie, Seat racer ee THE ALLEN HOUSE WLS Weet 47th Street” ‘Neauy tarnished rooms for permanent or tran- aici eee emt te permease EL Raine gaeeuee Mrs. F. B. WHITE, _Feeprtctrene ‘Mrs. Camillo Lundt 761 Third Ave. Hear eh ret, HY. Masquerade’ Suits and Wigs for Ladies and Gentlemen: Also Full Dress Suits TO HIRE Suits 61.00 upward : Your patronage solicited. initia PHILIP A. PAYTON, JB. REAL ESTATE. toner, ST ssoran Arran aS SSeoass wee 67 Weet.184th Street. DOWN TOWN OFFICE 11 Broadway. Tepeioer aft tod MO arena oe (All aavertinemente ing in Tama ‘AGk in Part emeremenae Sezom saan sees eres Soto Vastarne ereenae ort preteen yao Goria Dees Beets Sie * Bacau estan 7 * eon Working Girls’ Home 217 East 86th Street Between 2nd and Srd Aves. ‘Phonsant for cirts with privilere of eRe Se Ticlie grag lor working drewen aprotic A. Sek eek of eprom, Castanea, Gueters, @86. al- in: Tew tans : 217-East 86th Street. - New York City. ! k City. 4 a meee? ee yy St SOR GPs I eye KNOXVILLE COLLEGE. ll . io @ ‘i : FUNERAL DIRECTORS, . & 625 Sixth Ave., George fs Brambill,- 187 West 134th Street, ee See i a mine. ‘Werk anlied tor gad doltvered. to ay pert anne 8 eee aire at Tasaeeanas apni maaluame ——————— SSTARALSMED Wau TELEYRONG, 121 W WAM WILEY G. OVERTON, Undertaker and Embaimer. 317 Bridge Street Brooklyn. EVERY REQUUITE 7OR THE BUBIAL OF Tae DeaD, emma Terme Indy sipennas 24 pares cae, ae wot ote S| ‘Fetophows, 8166 20en me |. JAMES OC. THOMAS, UNDERTAKER & EMBALMER, cS sae fe eT eo W. DAVID BROWN miow GRADE LicKxsxD Undertaker & Rmbalmer Funeral “Parlor and Chapel 146 West 53d Street ‘Derween SUrth aed Seventh Avexet SSS ory doce Bo “| ‘Tembeee Sight Calls premier atauntd be. CHARLES H. GRAVES, Undertaker and Embalimer, Orncs, 319 West ist St, eaidences tis Went oh Sereet ew, York to Sas SS oe —_ —, ,_.. q <4 ora +. The True Reformers BurialCo., Ucemees UNDERTAKRRS 2 EXBALMESS. udetakersetsbtobeesnss ta ibe Buse We fioce' Ge cremate anenast te (00 Weet 344m Street matty REPS © BROTHER, Presetsecs, Teispboes M73 Columba, — ‘ Not connected with sny other firm, Rev. Robt R ~Mont’s services cam be Bed for a Preeohing and Marriages, |“ at any hoor in the day or night. REV. ROBERT. R. MONT. Undertaker and.Embaimer, see West card treet, URW YK zee: C, FRANKLIN CARR, FUNERAL DIRECTOR, 360 West 53rd Street, : me NEW YoRE, < Ta nts moo ELLIS BAGLEY&CO., Undertakers and Embaimers, eo . NOTARY PUBLIO 228 West 62d St. New York City, Bot, Ameterdemjand 1th Ave. Tmerwows cit) Coleman. fet ta ‘MECCOOROO MAIR RENTORER , way Ree retiree see Sales nets enter sae 9 33S ecb OTE Aa Ma ire meccoonce wartco: ana JOHNSON & BERNTSON CONTRACTORS AND = Dealers t Lam ber, Doors’ Sanh a4 Blinds ‘TIwemrres aD BOOrRES WT" eroves, Revere ned Fermecee Set way CN HAINEY’S MARKET * @0 West 186th Street, _ | Neer Lenex Avewas, EW Yorx! Fra® cod Vegetabies. ; a esas MME ZARNE ATES AND ne a ZARRETTA GONZALES Rrrctivae, Sotahenres,Cltrversote. 0 ‘cherwe wale Fon ovtmin the n- “ae Sea eres EE eran Langu servings: diverse nad PFhed ret Siperience, yes of stdy"aad 19- ined to oleLing tod sting ecaene AN BOMEST FROPOSITION— (You to be full "we 50, ma mebifocusrseroniee Se ARF RScmAR A we Riccar Sn et pas Soy eee St Pee oe ee ee Saat Romine fae SEED Rae or Pacem Stas perenne abe Ea & sree ee Big elena eet caer eae eye SSR ae et et Lefer tee hat arbre Saar oer Seer ae Seles ees enses. each on ‘Speculations, law~ ‘Unithe impostors a ve take mo pa rae Spee sean eae Se Fa ar mee Pemeninormemer Sata oes eae a Gite, Meee reer eer mei me ee ae Sat an ee ae ben made Rich. Harry ax> Heaty tLrooeh Sor pees he arg ace at fa, nara ee Sr paged an Rae Pecemameny teed at 236 Bergen Street pteeen Bond ane Tees etn v. erie ane Mees ImOORLY xv Siren parte aS Se | 25c., 60c. .00 : 4008 Bio and $1 | Oui nnaee an MME. ROSE, 516 State St: }Clairvoyant,” Brooxsrs N.Y. flag wo eaual, all raymaries rorealed, removes evil (mfuences. eettion lovers Se oze you lores habe Gets Ors, twoubin. Wil adviee $52 nore at rae eee arte dese decetted—by others call on me. {siege with peared cawered, Uplafas: Seer eee weseeeeed lla te tect $3020008004 Consult MME. ZINGALI Prospects of the New Year Palmist, Clairveyast and Card Reader” Soho ee ail oa te died fwil give You poston tea fas cine arenas Ear Sere oats Bln, 309 West 1¥th Street ce Cuans Grex Paan Re BAe Sty, Te Dally, dd Sage alton by Mail, Ne £8 aadary Coe, ETelephoes suv Madison Banana FRANCIS TURNER PACKER AND SHIPPER Gian and ef Caine. Bosesicld Goods ot 419 Fourth Avenue, & B Cot. th Sk, Basement. NEW YORK. refine chem aber: Rxcenst and Ta a poy MISS S. BOFIRD, pe Formerty Wiip dime Flanders, Cadies Hair Dressing Parior, 727 EIGHTH AVE, Americus Bair Goods a Specialty, an Tet Beate, PRPRE oes ——— ee GET INSURED Don't be Burned Out and Have Nothing Left A2-Yeer Bolle forthe Puritare tn your Mat Gulf the beet PLS Inwarance Coepanin, WD. A, GREENE, Insurance Broker eLstres 4 Qader tmet ja Tyo eS WILFORD H. SMITH, " ICOUNSELOR-AT-LAW ANDQPROCTOR It ADMIRALTY, 118 Broadway, NEW YorK, Roman 17 to 198. Phone e798 Courtland. ‘povié Smo Damson Serve 4 Bractaiey Seen — tos Rar 8 Srmnaey Telephone, 4742 B 30th YOUNG'S “s.ersritestrtae ‘3 WEST 43d BT, ‘New York ” Gr a aa oes ‘mere’ Sarre Oana. Your own Material made up at Reasonable Prices, New Rend or, ( 330. Pammes Clannad $00. Chocaleg ant iah 35 Mrs.idaWhite-Duncan 1@ Prescott St., Jersey City,N.J. en Byette, ea ead ae Sey ce eon x3 —+—94,009 REWARD DR. ELLARSON . ere et To .761 Fulton St, Brooklyn . MARVELOUS MEDIUM and TRANCE CLATRVOYANT, can do sll ‘you that Dr. Shea did, and hes is even cult renter pooer, Given the ‘samen of ead an Tiving trend, sell" Seca and ween Fos wal marry Curt Sonsalted ca all aBtinetive,, Dre FLL RCO Sia pon, for gay ry etter zou but wile Jot faces without"aormenee, Will tell yr of absent Stents Journeys, bosines, lawsuit, Sepia or eything pot Wied Ho, Rnow cat Stag gectioan done “mak yu to nr ts assay G08 try to Tam Jou In anyway bet ‘ais hon right offi iy eidionet Keading Opirituailet everywhere: has creicitials no one ele can show’ Can give: thowunds ot oleate year” practi te Brooks aed he York will” prove ta yuu that Dr. lama ‘on Sire you such saticaciion se Bo ore ene can ‘Gaz tcll jon woes ninees bere foe ft ant where, Gan tall: ou bow "o-wia speedy cmt Fagg it ons you ove Maw as bv bunt Ith "your “cnings: niaoecds’ when, all coe fail, Do mot hcp Gompany. mary OF fn Senioee sat fru Know alt iran be Mae Pests Reig ao mtaction or np pare Yeu sar Tacky to comeult. the edn Chratlan poyeciat) and wonderful Medion Has a, aopdletue Unt will care’ drantanece; can be given peilents, a Kasowing Te Too: Soda are now? . Rich, Happy.and ‘Sasoeegiai’l eee ore irecrnatings Soils those whe ne. Seuines povgrty ana adroit hivantt ot Sex Toowiees of Gant Irapatt to Fon Sint you friends. In Tore’ abeirn nee fo tas the aceret ot winning the aliectioas of ae oppose Tt ta tho come of, @ptrituliam that then Pomtme, Betrare ot suctr at eoptedail? Sows Bem teedaiy se cigeecrca 3 ullpg representite Nest be., Falarnon.. br. Parton Goce fo beninos Shiite of the oe, 11 Pulioa nace el, GRE ZELAMBON andertante, thors. te \baieen Epelis hd Inductee tbe rare eetooe oe ‘oerand aiwaye has tec 8 ink tite 8 ult 20 Talat alae hal vies peerage tras Ba i . Please Read The Following: | Hew Youn. Nov. 16, 10. This te to corefly SHAE T wa at nce tat unotens an ge Sebsed thei ning iaeamtitar ase Toe Wout to dud dul new knoe SA Yee Pirie goa 9 eS, a Eattound tant Be, Siva'She teat Din fhe Ibe Beat pincer Secret fhe ood Dever wate That end ect eae Sho tak ee ond tise me Pe abe ugh De East pea ieneong ws Teh fe Hal nian eT Monty ald ee oe rh ce Cay Pa oe a ee a Fak eink in ute es wr sr we {et ring sees or nran a et at forint Hebe armas slog, ae ates hist thie shane Me at inn ease ta noite mae tees wee aoe tim Tain av few ak Toads Seeniatian, Fe eee ge, ewan, 8. J. Mens mai ther ine penis exec erate Patent creche gutta he Piiaremsex: Spee PR Testes he tung Uae mob GCS ah Vike of motieings ok re Some and none did me any Real, Siice f hawt oe meee eee tlt ean euisct sori" hice! en arenty Wier : ese arent 1 Fiano wit my tnttmong and DT Te she thuvuibnn pace omy amie ayers Taisedner Tae I heyhey ee habe tape ‘or tave Raita of tent. ne Te Hikrwne P'S ane wale so Cali encode InSite take net Retna eed team the “dna at Titus av nei oe Creat avenne, ade Verner 8 Bhooxure, May $197.—1, wen fr, Pare hom fi wniy tek Lisanne P Meet tie Fe Tilson eure att marae fo ir ort Temes Fastanneie evtie mad yuit tac hd Inet and to nar prog Bie mca Biod fiead io omnes eal Sra R Hannon 199 Myre avenue, Broly Newanx, Sept, 14, 102.—I_ wish to state thal aA eiTarasnton diced a te Thule and disies fr'a boog tine Rm 3 ‘emed to undersandimy tare "Tt wecrt mas? Hieote Gallus af unset onion what stue the aatter Hono: amid hee way oe esciag of womertl works ee acy BRE asta tea you anes k ni Ba eee Se NF ie he a Seettad gomeraey tind ihe do | Phan Br tains et Siang Fee ca clahod ume rinsing warn and Bae Teun truly and heacs:y mesial Dre Biniach 0 al thle i decors af Ene Sivan 38 Camp ntreet, Newark, NJ. 4 onasvon, 8.3. Feb 1.1903 Dear Papo relent Nout Weiciane ieee mec oad Eat Thacem to toweTns wee ean iy Sey'sourmcaicines nave doncinc at Word tie worlds ana yee are wel U3 te zee isthe papee ee? wantevesjonr is ae ines imac peieted eae xrnietui fara and haw mach T cuatk yu, Lem lying Detptees, In bed ind po ong pceined te hele res epee calc wor fered air meee 5 ihiag mnien ough me Rentighog my fetie shout ek wenn tel ow Bre Ame? Teas od wae ean abe oe Pona'your true hia "Sra sae 5 Coal place, Orange, 8.3. Sew Your, Ped. &.190.-Dear Dr. lear! wi enya tee fen nego pos Con ruck gol weston has dove, foe ne het Tihod acne or pain ecling ance ect laet gixicen year old girl. When 1 wink of bo» bat [asifered before f caine o yor) 1 feed I can tee thank you emsuet for your’ dindnas oo) mitt yes hae te fee Bsa bot SR see e tea ‘ BinLe R, COL The Hiathrmore Pom 2; Corner shad Bt. Snd'brocaway: New Yon 32 DR. ZLLARAON can show thomas ris § ae Sharer Hae toca relay etm et pst dad echoes, ‘Br apsonss net? wonder tor caving. Pacnlyeie Rhcusoae ( Rsthina, Gory yen, fumars, ‘Cancer, Casey °F Sonn Ages Byapcpuin, Fave Worms Live 0 sat Beate Catarth Proper Pi Seg fehility, Heart Bucy Can nprion: nee Komen and Ghikire Pits Wideey brewer Sines aed serous dteases whi ep won understand Ai dices no Iter ey shay bay cthing Due haemabis nS Ty RLUARSON wifonently sal it joucese anki Sasa new remedies Sod nee pegs tat Find ample expeienca im palais oct id private tstoe Ns Witting Sita sii pewriteatonge. Po now diay. Lan? ation. Diplomas bang in park Wnt Tosedy soe Thenmatnas june sr ailnimee ‘Ropes cae a cr shracantet Cane Bled wea or gt criect ‘care waren. made thitant nn folks men baby. TED 4 con made parents, . Pi Call on oF write to DR. ELLARSON 761 FULTON ST~ ___ BROOKLYN, 'N. Y. Vth Dee stove Sota Forint A08 moan oeerend POT oo en + ALds LETTERS MUST CONTAIN Agr Kock of Bair, Many ot ONR DOLLAR ‘Ceamnen Gua Tain ris Same tte ence aus