New York Age
Thursday, April 27, 1905
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
The Steamboat of It Offends the Hon-
orne—The Case of a Dirty Wrench
—Betrayed Afro-American Girls
Have No Bedroom, but Are Lables
for Blackmail—The Innocence
of Curtis—Afro-Americans in
Commercial Service.
Military Commendation of Two Aces.
Staff Occupations of THE ART
WASHINGTON, M.A. April—SOME Names that ago there occurred in this city an indictment which is typical of the American culture: women and women of the white woman. What is meant for the white woman is not indicted more for the colored woman, however obstructed and reduced she may be. A white man might mistaken in the benefits of the white people witting in the benefits of the white people not feeling of indignation against the insulter, or sympathy with the insulted. What the count of well-dressed white people both must hold against the well-bred colored lady an outrage, they treat on a joke, a thing for white women to whisper and titer about, and for white men to talk and gaffer laughter. But let us rehearse the incident.
While two young colored Indians were standing on one of the throeshacks of the Opalai walking, in common with a number of white men and women, for the next six months, young white folks in the village looked young and he was pacing the colored hide he touched them lightly with the whip he held in his hands, minging as he did so: "Don't be in a harry, girls, there is plenty of room up here." We do not intend to describe the ingestion of the Indian men limited. We do not mean to describe the pain, the hissilation, which this well drowned and wall mounted blackguard was able to infiltrate upon them. They were without consent. They were manishaically injured. They were both brothers, one in this city, the other in the town, but he was raised by men and women. Hot ticks of red raised to their eyes became of the green ingestion. They looked around, as they had a right to look around, to their own aunt, a white, for the redy sympathy, the queenly affection, to express under such circumstances. But these young girls found in the open which they found instead coloured and amused. Who were they that they could grow hover over? Who were they that they could grow hover over? Who were they that they could grow hover over? Did they not have that they were colored girls, pumming no rights in the capital of the Nation which any young white man had to take the crest indifference of the white women to throw ladden, and it as plainly, as the course laughter of the white man had it to throw ladden, and after they entered the car.
Now, incredible it may appear to those who know nothing of the color-prejudice of the law, but it is not the case that he cursed just as we have related it, including the part of it played by the young white rake, and white men and women whose conduct in the premises made them participate in the assault. The conduct of the curved proved their better than the perpetrator of the outrage. Suppose the revenge of this case. Suppose the perpetrator of the insult had been colored man, and he was installed by him had been two white school teachers, and we will let the crowd remain a mixed crowd of white men and women. What difference does it make if the curved does not know that that crowd would have been converted as if by magic into a mob, the funeral funerary raking to lay the bones on the young men and women would have been asked and be himself jerked by murderous hands from his drag to his hands, and then locked into inexebility before rescue by the police of the city, and these same police would have handed him over to the courts for their trial for a crime of murder, to survive the injuries inflicted on him by the mob, he would have found himself a prisoner for a term of years at hard labor in one of the cities, and then he would be forced to be colored on one hand and white on the other in free America. It makes a world of a Nation of color-prejudice, which he must prove, but if the as or should by any possibility be the white raws. Good Lord deliver the Frayer book deactivate it.
We were interested to watch the report of the accounts of the National Council of Women last week. The council did not draw the color line, we were glad to note. Colored women were excluded from the council with their white sisters. But white women to observe the council approach the sub-committee of diversity and the social evil of white women and the social evil of freedom and compassion, nevertheless backing in defiance. This was repeatedly noted by the ladies tried to make more sure they by injecting into the proceedings something about Mormonism and Satanism.
The amount thing which we desire the helms of the National Council of women to paddle, colored girl could with the slightest progress of success any her white mourn, or the order of her child, in any court in any of the justice, a wizard and judgment in her favor, or in favor of the colored child against its white mourn, a wizard and judgment in her favor, which might be adjudged in favor of the women and the child. He jury, no count of the South now deeply the women had been waged by the man, no matter how improbable the proof of the child's paternity. The white woman, poor costume, would be lauky if the emperor a prosecution, conviction and custody of just such a case in the Atlanta, Ga. The man stood high too high for his poor victim. In Georgia, he stood high day by day while his wife was being killed in his serving or was serving in the penitentiary of the State a term of imprisonment for blackmail.
"Will the helms of the National Council pounce on the South?" We cannot name them they fear to offend their Southern sisters. Tall them to the poem. Will it publish themselves the man of the South. Curry the curry to the magician, will it be accepted? Certainly not. Why? Because the magician, religion, financial consequence to the business end of their interest, were the wrath of the South. By throughout the time a publication of their financial consequence to the business end of their interest, were the wrath of the South. It might be a Congress of Mother, nor by those who met as the National Council, nor by those who met as the National Council, nor by the periodicals. Mum is the word num the country has become in response to it.
Educational Mass Meeting.
An educational mass meeting will be held at Bethel A. K. Church, in West Zid street, on next Friday at 3:20 p.m. under the auspices of Morris Brown College and Wilberforce University. Among the openings will be Helen M. Turner, Dr. D. R. Dr. Hisman, Rev. H. T. Johnson, Prof. H. W. Arntz, Bovn. M. C. Brochas, Chen. B. M. Marvill, W. M. Gilbert and A. D. Chandler, and Miss Frances A. Keller, member of Household Research in New york city.
The singing by the abode of A. M. B. Sizem Church of Troy, L. B. Latham director, was of early origin. It was only restored by Mimi Fiorenza Gouwden of New York and Mimi Mahon Johnson of Albury. Connors Baptist church has taken on a new loom of life. The people of Albury always accuse a good pastor of being a sinner, but he and it keep his God hold them. Christianity of all denominations are hoping for his success. The stance of the church is the platform liberally with potted plants.
The Master program was will rendered. In the evening the choir prepared for the occasion, Henry King of Troy with his violin, and John Harding of the choir with much similarity to the choir. Little Ms. Sarah Harding, Miss Alice Green and Miss Emily Harding, were the beautiful choir at the Master encyclopedia.
White Plains Notes
EASTER IN NEWPORT CHURCHES.
A Special Service. See Portuguese
Kaster Wedding. Personal
The funeral of Mrs. Wm. Monroe was held in this city at Bethel Memorial Memorial Chapel. The she was well known here, as also had been stewardess at the Business Men's Club some avenue, who has been confined to her bed, is able to be about the house. John Mitchell of the avenue, who has been confined to calling on friends, Mrs. Walter Thompson is still very sick with Krueger Turner's, 83 William street. Rev. H. M. Jeker inft. Monday for the funeral of Mrs. Monroe, Baptist convention and take a much needed rest. Henry Pionion of New Hed '2d. Mass. Blanche, Ruth, and Kirmyth, daughters of A. B. Foster, have joined him here after spending the nearly two weeks with people who will take part in D. Kroest Gibbons on stage on May 18 am Mrs Wilhelmina Mason, Newport's favorite reader; of this city; and Mrs Grace Stevens, a well known singer, formerly of New York; and Mrs W. Mason, last week in a church case. Rev. Gibbons also attended.
Poughkeepsie Notes.
POINTKREISER, April 25—A concert and drama will be given on May 3 for the benefits of Blenhagen, Baptist Church by the Young People's Social Union. The drama is entitled "Ulrich Kappy's Rue." There will also be a chorus of twice voices, Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Holmes are being congratulated over the arrival of a 9-pound baby boy on April 17, Mr. Holmes was congratulated by his assistant last week to be operated on for burnia. She was doing nicely when last heard from. Garnet Rook, who has been absent from school for a month, presented by Miss Hilda Jaycox and Miss Benin Harden spent Easter with Miss J. Hail. There will be a match card and patriotic concert with friends here. Leander, North Clinton street, where the building has been thoroughly renovated, John Green, formerly of Poinchkepie, but now of Syrnaeus, visited the building. Carly Ginnie, employed at the St. Cloud Hotel, Mossur, Vanderbilt, W. R. Kearn and L. R. Kearn spent Kearn's St Phillips Lodge. At the Varick Christian Redevelopment on April 18 a very important paper was read by Charles Thomas of St Phillips Lodge. A read from "Hibernac." Mossur Jones also read. The Hearst concert at the A. M. B. Zine Church on Sunday evening was well received by the audience and sales. The church was headcounty decorated with choice pieces of violet, white and yellow flowers that he shared with the white moth on the cake.
NEW MAYVIL, April 21—The annual fair at A. M. K. Church was held in the church on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday evening of last week. The fair was opened each evening with a brief and spicy program. On Tuesday evening, Occidental K. T. Goddard was in charge and played the overture. The opening show was conducted in full blast by the Orchestra, Gritti sing a pearl solo and Bindle and Minky sing a melody. The solo was by Mr. M. Thoreau and a reception given by Mim Barbite Fundenau, a ham solo song by George Wohl, a a cappella by Mim Flosse Potens and a reception ordered by Bortha Higgins.
The feature of Wednesday evening's program is production of the theme "The Same Old Dale Thompson and Bundle Bldd and George H. Hicks." The Thursday evening covered the grand contest in which the following person participated: Mr. Aldeondo Pateren, B. M. DeKalb, Florence Poten, W. H. Hasten, Mr. Dalkey Godette, Mr. William Amon, Mr. Henry Wesley, Mr. William Newcomb, Theodore Poten, the program was planned and abounded in beautiful tablescapes. Prairie were awarded to the three winners. The winner was Bundle Bldd, the prize $1 in gold, was awarded to Mrs. Eddie London, whose male was $28; the second to Mrs. Ida M. K. Goddard, whose female was $28; and the third to Mrs. Davis, and $18. The receipts accrued the net proceeds worth $28. The series both socially and financially. The officers were: Mrs. Soleil L. Spencer, president; Mrs. Liazie Wilmons, vice-president; Mrs. Solaie London, secretary; and Mim Hearnstone Weston, treasurer.
Buster was a percussion day and was cavalier at attending divisional battles throughout the city, not in Bury and elaborate dressing such as chaundieries by pony-dogs, but in the true military attire. He was a member of the Loker P. B. Hancock there was a celebration of the Holy Bishops at a 4 a.m. morning prayer, A. M.; when Buster Jacques L. Hancock provided a fueling and impromptu sermon on a public use of a high order under the management of Bertumann. At the officiary the choicest music was played by Loker Hope under the public parts. The decorations of Buster and cavalier were imagined. J. Arthur Hareley, who attended the roster at the second naval.
Abdelhail, who has been skip with a compilation of dinas since last August at 1377 Springfield Farm at 9 o'clock last Saturday night. The skip man has no more租赁 here, but he will be on the music mall. A ground musical entertainment will be given for the benefit of St. Lukes P. Church, St. R. L. Henderson vecteur, Warner Bros. or the program has been presented for the occasion.
DEATH_OF JUILY C. UNLEY.
White Mon Wore Honorary Pall
Bearers at His Funeral.
The funeral was held from the residence on the afternoon of April 17. Rev. B. L. B. Rilson, Deacon, died on April 17. Deacon, D. A. Lynn, Geo. H. Mays, G. W. Wetmar, S. H. Hart, H. D. Anderson, and W. H. Alexander. The honorary pal-bleen was Mr. John Robinson, a native of New York, a Robinson, C. C. Bliese, Wilkit, and Marz.
In the Oranges.
OHANSK, N.J., April 25—Miss Mary Skylery of 333 Glendale avenue will reenter a piano gain at the Epworth League meeting Sunday afternoon. Mrs. L. Micholson of Bloomfield avenue has been quite sick, but is improved. Rev. Parry, formerly of the Union Baptist Church on Bloomfield avenue, prescheduled a nine worm to a full house Sunday evening. Many Easter honors were seen. Rev. James Churchman, president of the M. Q. Church, prescheduled an Epworth League Sunday afternoon. St. Paul's A. M. R. Church exercise were largely attended. Rev. G. W. Krayer and congregation celebrated Easter at Mount Olive Baptist Church Sunday evening. The decorations were fine. Miss Manis Gratty of 3 S. Wilson place, was taken to the Epworth League Sunday afternoon. She was taken to the residence of Rev. Turpurean until a cab conveyed by Rev. Dwitt Turpurean at 4:30 a.m. A large number of men were out. The children at St. John's A. M. K. Church did very well. Rev. Turpurean at 4:30 a.m. A large number of men were out. The children at St. John's A. M. K. Church did very well. Miss Manis Panyan Avery and Sallie C. J. Samuels on Easter Sunday. William C. Dolamar has been quite ill, but was able to meet with W. Thomas who have been confined to his room for several days on account of illness. The New York Ann is the paper. Call at or send to the Epworth League office. A quite ill. Batter, the new pastor of St. Mark's A. M. E. Church, prescheduled Sunday morning to the Clairmont Avenue, is quite ill. The Y. M. C. A. is improving rapidly. We wish the new secretary, whose name will appear in the New York Ann, much more respect. You can find The New York Ann on Hoover's newsstand on Bloomfield avenue.
Bag Harbor Notes.
SAO HAAGO, April 25. - William R. Crippen met with the very serious occasion a week ago of having his leg broken in two places by a piano's fall on it. Mr. Luke Lee of South Hampton and family spirit. Hester here. Mrs. Maria Maria of South Hampton spent Easter here. Miss Evelina Prime of Williamsburg came and spent Easter with her cousin, Catherine Quay. Her return after a long visit from home. At the A. M. B. Zion Church last Sunday the B. V. Car. Bury presided on an annual library fundraiser, for five days more.
The servies at the Plaet Street A. M. B. M. Lion Church were very interested in Hunter. He served with flowers and delivered by bikes. At the church was well fed. Prof. Barry and his most excellent choir rendered enjoyable service. Prof. Barry delivered a powerful service. Rev. P. K. Franklin was present and assisted in the service. At 3:20 p.m. the Babbath served with flowers and direction of Superintendent T. H. Miles. At 6:30 p.m. the Christian Indoor meeting was well attended and interesting. The grenwalters at 7:30 p.m. the church was paused to its utmost. Music was rendered by the church choir under the direction of Prof. Barry, and the choir was directed by the direction of Pai Palton. A very excellent program was run.
Buster Sunday was a red-bellied day at the Blessed Baptist Church, of which Rev. G. W. Browne, the pastor, occupied for the first time its new building, which has a lasting capacity of 780. For the chapel at 208 West Bird street. This is the second building which this congregation appropriated for the pastor's service by giving him an Buster offer and a kit of cutlery. The collection for the day was $51.1K. In the second building on both morning and evening. The subject of the evening service was the "Blessed Baptist Church Their Impurities." The chapel showed many employment of improvement under the direction of the Rev. W. Browne. The growth of growth along with beautiful and appropriate services at St. P. K. Church, which was filled to overflowing at both the morning and evening, delivered a powerful sermon on "Christ's Resurrection." The musical program which was performed at St. P. K. Church, the various departments of the church are currently preparing for their annual Blessed-tale entertainment on May 11. Churches, rendered the following program at 4:29 p.m.: Org. overture; Mrs. Katherine Garcia of George Young小学; Colleen Browne of Book of Miracles; Lillien; Imbringa Bly; Hlycum Mina; Harper; Better onion; The Imagination and the Composition; the Controsoudio; the Controsoudio; the King of Love My Blessed-Harper; Mr. L. S. Vette; and bad solo. The St. Mark Church of Dolphin Hollow, with flowers and vocal with non-song last Sunday. The pastor, Rev. W. H. Brooke, who has been serenaded by the chorus, orchid performed a selection, Mrs. Randle readed a solo very beautifully before the opening of the service, and Mrs. Randle performed a selection, Mrs. Randle had charged of the League program.
At 7:30 p.m., the church was crowded. The children were in the church, the Renter Bell Club, of which Mrs. Pamela Lawrence is president, was on "Incentives to the Church," a program that skirts upstairs and prognostic illustrations. The club presented to the church $40, making the event a fundraiser to considerably over two hundred dollars.
Englewood Notes.
CASE OF CHICAGO CURTIS
Wilking Duges of Southern Information, He Blanders the Race in Chicago Record-Horald-Disregards Crime of White-Dozeno-dence of Arfana Emigration Movement-"Jim Crow" Parks-Votes of the Negro Moves
Broadband Omnidirectional Wi-Fi Aerial
Coming from the source that they do these words are worthy of consideration.
Mr. Curtis was in Jackson, Mim, when he heard a line he repeated. A few moments after he was shooting to the death of a little town just to the north of Jackson became this a little town in the same State乡es of white men were under indictment for whitening and other crimes. Mr. Curtis had investigated he would have found a considerable number servant sentence. The matter of committing crimes is a - one of the most serious crimes in the State, and sometimes of environment. And for that matter, Mr. Curtis can almost any day and has a street, dives and slams of his own dear Chicago as could be found in the entire South. He cannot commit crimes, for he does, but he is not the only criminal. It is asserted on the author that the official records and not from the
As to the moral condition of the Negro it may be said that while it is not ideal it is always that crime, vice and humanity are spreading. He says that he has been told this by the few people he met and with whom he discussed the matter. Probably in all of his life, Mr. Cortiz has never done one thing to help a slave, and he has not made a new resource for his maternal years the right of wantonly, viciously and it would be delicately regretted that a man of his standing should publish to the world spaces so slaughterly and also unworthy of a great newspaper to publish such a monstrous libel on the entire womanhood of a race. In the case of no other people he has not done anything to the situation. In our case it is doomed, not because the fault justify it, but because we are, for example, the breed of our traitors who rush into print to war all of the natives, mean things imaginary about us, to themselves in the thought and assertion of the other side. Did Mr. Cortiz call on any Negro business man in Jackson to ascertain what he believed with the other side, without being charged with social equality and he would have received more information of a reliable man than he has acquired to the extent he believed in the question if he thought it was not true, but since he was not a slave, he would have written what was said by the other, and then he could have left the whole story go to the other, and he could have been left to say the lesson, and it could have written on face the doctrine to do absolute justice, to be held in justice, to be held in justice and serious injury to a people whose greatest offense consists in being black, a people who can be neglected with impunity.
Hishop H. M. Turner, active and one-cotie in spite of his six year scores and many small problems that confront us. Recognizing the foot that the open houses and large labs are closed to all gatherings or more large and well appointed auditorium on one of the lots he owns in this city. It has proved the revenue of the reenable and much loved Bishop. Speaking of the Bishop, it would appear that he devotes an entire day to his biography. As if he once did. This is not dawn, it is believed, to any abatement of his but he must have been a good acquaintance with the court he believed to receive. No one who knew him could doubt for a minute that he was in the efficacy of amalgamation. Whether his ideas were right or wrong, he has received but scant follow. The Southern Negro from emigrating to Africa or some other country has been the Southern North. That he has received from the South, while some of the States have cannot have acted against emigrant agents there are almost probability, that he has received the decision of adventurous emigration. In one of the States a lawsuit three hundred dollars for each country is in progress (Opened on Second Page.)
With the South? They are, indeed, weighty reasons why we should be willing to enable our distinguished wholly to the guilds merchant of the South. In the first place, that region, from the most philanthropic of missions, hold our foundations two hundred years in crowning burgundy; and could be induced to relinquish its affiliation only by the most pointed argument, by reasons. At the close of the war the South, with the utmost benevolence, re-enrolled by means of benefaction veneration. As a mother, in her loving solicitude, takes from her child the sleep instrument which might be injury, the South, by the tender-buried Ku-Kwu civil rights with which we have been permanently endowed us. A region of similar interest of the South's benign interest in us might be ousted, such as charitable humiliations, companionate associations and loving murders. Having thus acquired justif of our part, the South may well be entrusted with our future. This result Grumacher hopes to accomplish by reducing the South's reputation.
Those misguided members of the race who have worshipped Crumpinger as their political review are now advised into what hands he proposes to battery them. Fortunately, he proposes what he will never be able to do: for we can amuse with authority that the minimum scheme to cut the Sooth's representation will never be put into effect.
The Production of Bacteria
The festival of Easter is the most sublime in the calendar of the church. It is the anniversary of the day on which Christ, according to orthodox tradition, having lifted His own to appease by His own death the wrath of God against offending man, defended the tooth and gave a symbol of the victory of Him himself over death. He might an event, it seems to us, should be celebrated with the profoundest, spiritual joy, with the lowest self-interest, with the utmost solleness of thought. It is shocking, therefore, to see how Vanity has insured the anniversary of Christ and assigned to herself the homage which is His dawn. For the sorcer and sage joys of religion are substituted (what vile luthers) the frivolous and opaqueible pleasures of dream. If the dandy can but more a new malt in which to splurge on Hester, his joy equals that of the disciples over the rime Christ. If the young woman of style falls by some mischance to pose the new dawn and occasion which the sinner appropriate with the two Marys for the crucified Saviour. Burly Vanity deserves the first place among those ideals described with fine indication by Milton:
Who, from the pit of Hell
Blooming to seek their pay on earth, dawn
their sons long after next the seat of God.
The altar by His altar; and dunt abble
Jehovah thawed out of Sion, thrown
Between the churbern; ye often placed
Within His sanctuary itself their abrine;
Within the temple their sacred priest;
His bury rites and solemn feast prefaced.
And with their darkens dunt afflicted His
Mobs and Sheriffs
The demon of mob-victim in best exercised by a faithful and resolute abbery. From every every locality in which a sheriff has successfully opposed a mob the lynching spirit has fled. A still sweeter blow is dealt the evil if he happens to be slain in the performance. A case in point is that of Sheffield Pong of Tate County, Minnesota, who was fatally shot while protecting an Afro-American criminal from a mob of lynchers. So horror-struck were those seeking to spill the soul of a black man when they found they had killed the white sheriff, that they slink away without molesting the prisoner. The community and the South to an appalled realization of the disgrace and peril of mob-law. Whose ox is great always makes a difference. If the black man had been lynched, the Southern papers would have manifested merely a decent regret, tempered in most cases with palliations of the mob's crime; but as it was a white man who was killed, they were the authors of this cowardly mob." This gives us much hope that brave Sheriff Fong has not died in vain.
To launch a human soul into eternity is an awful thing. Its awfulness is too impressive to be enforced or aggravated by the color of the victim's skin. Why, then, does Southern public opinion place such different valuations on the lives of white and of black men?
Our Southern Schools.
Last week we prophied that the reminiscence of liberal thought in Southern white colleges would result in a nausea and more Christian treatment of the nce problem by the future leaders of Southern thought. We shall be most present to our duty if we fail to meet them half way. To do so we must expaint education, again education, and always education. Our Southern schools, have accomplished interesting results with the mongre facilities and in the brief time which have been afforded them. Moreover, there is still great scope for improvement.
The capital defect lies in the common schools. In a perfectly correlated system of education, such as we have evolved in Germany, the public schools deliver the boy, at the age of ten to fourteen years well equipped in grammar, mathematics, reading and spelling, over to the industrial college schools in the fourteenth century to complete the opium, are no inadequate in material and efficiency that much of their abuse in educating the young must be shouted by the industrial and preparatory schools. This condition not only excludes from all education the most refractory
With a better system of grammar schools, and the Middle and High schools which provide them often behind their academic and practical departments. The academic teachers, stung by the hypothesis that made schools make students, must encourage to admire the student as in his needs as possible. The industrial teachers serve with all their might themselves purpose to fit the student as well as possible for coming a good living as his trade. The result is that the student, overwhelmed by both departments and often forced to cope his way through school burden, is subjected to a stress which exhausts him. But them are obviously on that time will cure; and it is only fair to say that our schools are doing the very thing they can do, that the student is not admitted in a day. In many instances in the South, particularly in this invention informed by the Turleague Conference, Afro-Americans are on their own initiative building and maintaining public schools at other individual or commercial expense; and that such enterprises are increasing in number in an encouraging sign of future improvement of the primary schools. Perhaps, however, they will not be perfected, such is the poverty of the race, without Federal subsidies.
Emergence to Africa.
Our Atlantic correspondent notes a decidence of the movement in favor of racial emigration to Africa. This movement has never indeed, attained to any great vigor, for the common name of the whole race has always condemned it as imprisonable and invincible, and has preferred rather to "bear those ill we have than to fly to others that we know not of." We are not so ignorant, either, of the ill which would affect us in Africa. The sections of that continent which enjoy a tolerable climate are those of the Mediterranean. To the entry and matured atmosphere of the West Coast we have become, by nearly three centuries absence, disconcerted. This atmosphere, would naturally and inevitably devilinate our energies and infeable our ambitions. In such a climate we should have to wade wildernesses and cultivate deserts. We should have to resist destruction by invade bounties and more invade men. We should have to erect civilization where civilization is impossible, or decline into barbarism. The rise of English society, nevertheless concluded that fifty years of Europe are better than a cycle of Catley. So we, while not hating a jot of our recruitment of the wrong practiced on us here, do still submit that fifty years of America are wipe a cycle of Africa.
NOTE AND COMMENT
Summarizing legislation, in Regarding treads upon the liberty of the individual, always on Cigarette, class sponsorship opposition is an independent people. There is much pro-publicism in the law, and the dawn daims how making cigarette smoke a inside meaner, particularly as this law not only of fends our principles but invades our enjoyment of one of the most precious boons with which nature has enriched us. Tobacco—but who can worthily sing its praises? No other thing saving a woman's love, ministers with such venable sympathy to our varying moods. If we are irritable tobacco soothes us; if we are dependent it hears us; if we are morose it happiness; if we are weared out it restores us; if we are full of energy it sustains us; if we are intellectual it induces thought; if we are not intellectual it gives animal comfort; if we are poetic it enjoys lovely visions in short, what good offices does it not perform. Such a friend is it that many men, by no means hospitalater either, have found in Killing's pangyric that instantaneous satisfaction produced only by an axiom: "A cigarette is a smoke." There are several means by which we may avail ourselves of the benefits of tobacco, and of them the least exalted and refined, we think; is that of the pipe, which is for this reason perhaps, much affected by athletes. Into this instrument, too often fault with bedhospital accumulations, the tobacco is forcibly crammed and is consumed with greedy, grows rapidity in huge inhalations and it is forcibly cramped in the cigar far nobler. It connotes the luxury, the pleasure of a five-course dinner. All瞑ures know the pleasure of cigar smoke so rich and heavy that its weight can be felt on the tongue. But still, much of the earth earth clings to the cigar. It is in the cigarette that tobacco attains its sublimation, its apotheosis. The cigarette is essentially daly, refined and exquisite; it is redolent of the Orient—it is the smoke for the genius. Why is it, then, that the cigarette is its unfortunate association with the dude, Illegible person, beholding the indubitable degeneration of the dude, it has attributed it to the cigarette. But it is not the cigarette that degrades the dude, it is the dude that degrades the cigarette. It is significant that women, whose instincts are all fastidious, when they smoke, always smoke the cigarette.
Forth, bestows upon our magazine in Writing, reviews its印版 indeed, as the Home News is almost the only one of our new paper, maving one which modifies forbids us to mention, which makes any attempt whatever at literary excellence. Yet the verbal dream of our thoughts is of quite as much importance as the thoughts themselves. Five History works have survived which have not been perfect both in form and in substance. Indeed, a great deal of the difference between medicine and immortal writing like in the style. The thoughts of the genius are often no better than those of the average man, but they are still the best historic, exposition them in a form which at least them to everyone and which thereby propitiates itself and the name" of its author. The Home News, like ours, is perhaps not a number of literary expression, but it makes a very honest and palestaking effort to achieve it. The attitude of the Home News is also that which spells up the profession of letters, the attitude, we mean, of emoil, of sincerity, of assurance.
Acknowledgingly indicative of the vigor of the movement for manual training is the fact that many, "learned, deep-thinking Germany, one country where abstract thought can take abelier, the country of all countries for world-class training, the country of itself, lavishing ignorant limbs upon those who love scholarship for its own sake, and penitence, has placed the seal of his approval upon industrial education. He browns those who place the chief strain upon himself, and he browns those who penitence, and approaches them with sterility. But surely our enjoyment of a woman's beauty is not the same as it appears to be of a gentleman. He has never trained a woman a firm footfoot in Germany and has been developed with this characteristic of the German people.
Those interested in education have no doubt noticed in Germany a common school in which the teacher is a fundamental theory there that the mind must receive some training, before the training of the student is only after four or five years have been spent in the primary school that the student is trained whatever, even the most rudimentary. It is an unfamiliar and costly fact that in Germany the teacher must train and mind begin simultaneously. This is due to the inefficiency of the common schools, a great part of whose duties the industrial school is extremely important, but this is a defect which time will obliterate. Among the industrial schools of Germany the architecture and carpentry are tremendously important, in view of Germany's assistant position in the weaving industries of Germany. Of these schools there nearly a hundred. The schools for builders, affording instruction in architecture, masonry and carpentry, are the most beautiful structures which meet the eye of the foreigner in all parts of Germany. There are so many of their work is indicated by this outline of the four years' course in one of the Prussian schools. The Arabic figures denote the number of hours per week devoted to each subject.
We wish that we could take up in detail the engineering schools, the eleventh schools of mechanical engineering, the twelfth schools, the twenty navigation, shipbuilding and naval engineering schools, the twelfth schools of microscopes tandem. Even has been made, however, to give an idea of the astonishing training he reached in Germany. However, the temperament one may be with industrial education, he must, unless he is a fool, thirsty, and doing so much good as these German schools.
ELABORATE EASTER PROGRAMS.
Yorkshire Sunday Schools Celebrate the Funding Partnership
Auburn Notes
Order of Fishermen of Galilee to Be Extended
Building Boom in Corona.
CONNOR, April 28—W. H. Wootton, Mist Miller of Manhattan and Mist Harris of Philadelphia spent Sunday afternoon in Copenhagen. Mr. Wootton expects to build soon on Lincoln street where he owns some valuable lots. The contractures broke ground last Tuesday, and the firm is now working on avenue. Then, Owen, also of Manhattan, has let the contract for building his house on the same street as Connor. He is on the appointment of this suburb in Conn. A. J. Johnsen carpenter, lately of Oyster Bay, where he worked on the house, placed his residence on the place. He is working on men and bidding for contracts for the erection of house. Mist Connor Turner of Manhattan and Mist Harris of Mrs. Merrill, Mrs. McFarlane of 15 Washington street.
Williambridge Notes.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Crooker were the guests of Mrs. and Mimi Taylor of 75 Park avenue on Hunter Sunday. The Trinity Baptist Sunday school had very delightful audiences. The church was large and social at Mrs. Harrison's for the benefit of the church was largely attended. There were two converts affiliated on Palm Sunday, Samuel Street and Mrs. Howard of Ninth street.
Arthurv. Davia—The emigrant is a memoir of Mimie M. P. Davia, of No. 28 North 30th street, and Charles B. Clarke, of No. 31 West 30th street, New York city,
TO ROOT OUT TUBERCYLOBIS.
Goods Habits of Life Are Needed.
Maya Dr. Alexander.
MAHONE-BISHOP WEDDING
New Yorker Wins a Troy Malden-
Baker Services - Personals
Thuy, April 24. A very pretty home wed ding occurred at the residence of Mrs. Charlotte McDougall-boy of Ferry street on Wednesday day afternoon, April 19, when her niece, Miss Leah Bishop, was united in marriage to Charles Mahone of New York city. At a clock the bride entered the parlor on the arm of Rev. S. Smith of Jersey City, who married her sister, Josephine Mahone, and her sister, Josephine McDougall, who acted as maid of honor, also attended the bride. They were joined in the parlor by the bride, a wedding guest, and the happy couple. They were married by Rev. Stephen Candid of the A. M. E. Zion Church. After the ceremony a wedding was held at the New York city home. Although the ceremony was strictly private, being witnessed by only the relative of many useful and handsome presents. Among them were a handsome dinner set of dishes from Mrs. McDougall and a dinner set of flowers from Miss Fitch. Among the outgoing relatives present at the ceremony were, Mrs. Minus Houper, Mrs. Katie Calle of Washington, D.C.
Easter in Oaxing.
EASTER IN TARRYTOWN.
Bishop Walcott and Rev. Goost Preschool Good Germans-Personalities
Tarentown, April 21. A grand church celebration was held at the A. M. K. Zion Church last Sunday. At 8 p. m. Bishop Alexander Walcott of New Jersey delivered the Buster cermon on "Ho Is Risen," to a large audience. The choir, under the leadership of Madame A. Wilcox, rendered an anthem and excellent Buster selection. Solos were sang by Plonice Thomas, Andrew White and Madame Corn and Lilia Jacob, and a duet by Missia Allio Jacob and Loutis Hunter. The church was appropriately decorated with palms, Easter illies and potted plants. Madame Wilson was especially complimented on the good chorus work of the choir. As this was being prepared, the children of 6:34.24 with 3 $1 guernica still to be heard from. Rev. W. Augustin Flich occupied the pulpit in the morning. At the Bishop圣保罗 Church mom and the children of the Sunday school rudered their Easter carol in a very creditable manner at 2:30 p. M. Levi J. Gervais, the great credit for the training of the children.
Hudson News.
HURON, April 24—On Wednesday evening Mrs. Charles Morris of 88 North 7th street entertained a few friends, Master T. Earl Morris, the promising pianist, rendered selections. Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. John Brandon and Alexander Lippone of Catakill Mimi A. Louse Grave and Homer R. Hazel. A choice menu was served. Peter A. Brink has returned in fine spirits, Mrs. Brink and her wife, Rachel Sisson. At the Zion Church Sunday at 10:30 A.M. Rev. Randall preached an instructive sermon on "Revelation from the Grave." At 2:00 P.M. Rev. Randall entitled, "Xies the catarp." The singing and recitations were excellently rendered. The church was a perfect bower of flowers. The fathers of the choir plan Peter J. Simpson of Mabusha in father, John Simpson, Norris Earl of Albany is visiting with him. Mrs. Edward Pell and Maude J. Favreville are guests of Mrs. Maude J. Favreville, the father of Halifax, Va., is in town. Rev. J. Harris Accordo, D.D., was the guest of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Jones has returned after an absence of six weeks.
Saratoga's Easter
Rev. Crows of White Plains presided at St Catherine's Church on Easter Sunday morning. In the afternoon the little children of the Sunday school took part in the exercises under the management of Mme. M. P. Harper. Every piece was well reordered. The program consisted of recitations, diets and salads, after which addresses were made by Mrs. Annu. The superintendent of the Sunday school is Howard Harper, being quite sick, was unable to take part and his plan was filled by Lewin. The superintendent of the Sunday school and the Sunday school and Varkic Christian Henderson rendered a program which was one of the best ever given here on such an occasion. Harper, Mrs. Annu Landrieu, Lewis Buck and Mme. D. P. Harper, who sang solos; Miss A. Berry, Mrs. Laurin Crump and Mrs. Lewis B. Green, who recited. After the short sermon was preached by Rev. W. H. Neby. The church was handsomely decorated with flowers, a large table and the oldest member of the Sunday school. Drummed and Mrs. Logan also gave flowers.
Tremens and John Harrington are on the stage. The
circus in New York city Wednesday attended the
circus in New York city Wednesday.
Commencement Speakers at Tuskegee Institute.
Rabbi A. J. M. Meeting of Montgomery, Ala. is to prosec the commencement sermon at the Turkeys Institute on Sunday, May 21. Dr C. T. Walker of Anguera, Ga. is to deliver the commencement address on Thursday, May 28. The academic and industrial exhibits planned to be more comprehensive and satisfactory than in any previous year.
POPE'S GIFT TO ST. BENEDICT'S
Cruciat Brought From Home to
Rector John E. Burke.
Pope Pius X. he sent to Rev. John K.
Burke, rector of St. Benedict's Colored
Museum, by Mgr. Kennedy, rector of the North
American College. Benedict a large ornate. It
was on exhibition at Titian's on Monday and
was on display at St. Benedict's at the
Bapter fitt in St. Benedict's Church.
NEW. YORK CITY NEWS.
The Colored Giants, of whom Mr. Corbin is manager, and the Clantarf Giants, of whom Mr. Corbin is teammate, are equipped for a lively season. The former have won 2 out of 3 games played. The latter have games scheduled and are practiced. The hop recently given in the Hôtel La Rochelle was one of the most enjoyable of the season. Some of those present were Meghan Peck and Margaret; Minnie Walker, Baggott, Camp, Clark, Prime and Gillett Hutchinson; and Meghan Robinson Moret, Radd and Jones. At the Baptist Temple the Easter audience was filled with five persons were added to the membership and three were received as consideration for baskets will be held May 15. Dr. Brooks, Morris and Wyn will preach; and Dr. Wm. A. Curtiss of Philadelphia will preach on the Fourth thousand people crowded Grand Central Palace on late Monday evening on the occasion of the 16th annual Easter reception of the Fourth thousand people attended by the orchestra of Prof. Craig and Mim Hallel. L. Anderson kept the light fantastic toe in continual action. The former are prominent New Yorkers were present.
Arrivals at the Hotel Alpen are: Mr. and Mrs. K. J. Adam, Framingh; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jones, F. Winston; Mr. and Mrs. Thompson, Botton; "Billy" Jones, Port Chester; John Knight, Owens; J. H. Powell, Plainfield; R. H. Johnson, Newbury; R. H. Johnson, Tenton; and Mr. and Mrs. Spencer, Philadelphia.
This is to certify that Prof. Walter F. Warner, Jr. year ago to furnish the same music for Mr. Drury's opera of May 15, 1905. Mr. W. A. Hilker (manager of the New Amsterdam Orchestra) Mr. Craig very much for the kind feeling he has shown towards Mr. Drury and myself combined. Mr. H. Hall, Naval Hospital Brooklyn, N. Y.-Ad.
Arrivals at the Clarendon House are: Edwin A. Higlow, Pennsaukee, PA; W. H. Knox and wife, Pittsburgh; B. J. Taylor and wife, Piggett; C. L. Smith, Hampton Roads; H. Smith and wife, Savannah; J. William and Geo. Brown; husband and wife, Payetteville, N. C. Mr. and Mrs. B. Burton, A. J. Mitchell and A. N. Telford, Philadelphia; Frank Spencer, Jucca; Sai Francisco; Frank, S. Spencer, New Haven; J. F. Scott and wife, Buffalo.
BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN
Miss Octavia A. Barker visited her sister, Mrs. Esther A. Barker, in Port Richmond, S. L. last Sunday.
Grand Bazaar for the benefit of the Mother's Day Nursery, April 25, 26, 27. See advertisement feb 23 95
Daughter was born on April 28, 29, and Mrs. H. S. Newton of 128 Ashland Place, Mother and daughter are doing well.
A handkerchief fair will be given by Miss Maggie Polton and her committee for the Children's Home. Y. M. C. A. at 405 Carlton avenue on May 16.
Fourteenth Annual Dramatic Entertainment by the Willing Workers Circle in aid of the Home for the Aged 19. See advertisement feb 23 95
Misses M. A. Brown and Henrietta Bullock of Manhattan, M. E. Garner of Nassau, N. and Miss Major of Lakewood were visitors at Concord Baptist Sunday school last Sabath.
Arrivals at 384 Carlton avenue are Rev. and Mrs. H. Williams and daughter, Mrs. Hill.
The sister of the teacher in Jacksonville, E. W. Rowe and the teacher in Long Island are taking a course at the Long Island College.
For the heroic rescue made by Alexander Rhone at the Fleet Street, A. M. E. Zion Church feeling that some token of appreciation should be made; has interested several persons in the matter and has purchased a handmade gold coin to be presented to Mr. Rhone in the next future.
The Siloam Presbyterian Church was well known. Of Livingston, who was recently re-elected, the church was re-installed. G. P. Titus will be re-installed. G. P. Titus will be re-installed. Babbath as a P. M. P. W. A. Jackson as a commissioner to the general assembly of the Presbyterian Church by the Brooklyn Presbyterian Church. On May 18. The congregation will re-institute. The reception and donation next Wednesday.
IN MEMORIAM
In loving remembrance of my dear daughter, Anna K. Edwards, who departed this life April 14, 2015, to the life and great win the reward. We mourn our loss, a vanant chair that never can be filled.
Ex-Confederate Likes The Age.
To the Editor of the New York Post:
I have been reading your paper since May 19, 1894, and am pleased with the stand you have made. I am proud to communicate with you when you defend your positions.
I am Bountiful born and raised, my father owned slaves and I survived 4 years in the Gunpowder Wars, where I have in justice and oppose special privileges. I believe in treating all men right.
Carrie, New Mexico, April 15, 1896.
Providence, Rhode Island 02804
phone: (212) 555-2222
email: mary@providence.com
will be received upon arrival on Wednesday for
time of current work. Address all mail to
PORTLAND & PITTINGHAM, Patterson,
4 Gulbran Street New York City.
Boy wanted to sell The New York Age. Apply at Croft's barbershop, 90 West End street—Adry. Joseph P. Cleary, First Department Commander, died Tuesday at Rochester.
Mrs. Kimma L. Doyle of 310 West 41st street has moved to 250 West 40th street.
Mrs. Sadie Clark of New Haven is visiting
Mrs. W. H. Bum of 340 West 85th street.
Mrs. Howard Johnson of Arbursy spent Easter with her niece Mrs. K. W. James, in New York. R. B. Bunty, precinct barber, 187 West ward. Tom Trey is looking for Hon. Charles W. Anderson's place as Supervisor of Racing Accounts.
Mrs. K. W. James, and aunt were the guests of Mrs. K. Kelley in 53rd street or Monday evening.
A. L. Mack & Company of 103 6th avenue have held their business place for the ensuing year.
The Entree Nous Class, W. H. Vaughn and K. C. Harris, director, have classes Wednesday evening, 114-116 West 32nd street.—Adv.
Miss Mabel M. Ford of Albany has been the guest for some time of Mr. and Mrs. Watts of 39th street.
R. J. Watson and K. W. James took luncheon with Mrs. Gae. Allen of 341 West 59th street last Sunday.
George Morel, after an absence of twelve years, has gone to his former home, Savannah, Ga., for a fortnight.
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Conynham, recently of Cincinnati, have taken permanent apartments at 338 West 59th street.
Mrs. Mary A. Black of 27 East 20th street left the city on Thursday for Cove Hill, Oyster Bay, where she will spend the summer.
Seats for Drury's Opera in the fourth and ninth rows can be had at the Hotel Macon. 218 West 33rd street.—Adv.
Part-Commander Alexander Powell will deliver the eulogy on the life of John Brown at Tammany hall on Tuesday evening, May 2.
After a pleasant stay of 5 months at Albu-
s, S.C., Mrs. Arthur W. Handy returned to the city last Sunday much improved in health.
Mrs. Alice H. Scott of West 90th street entertained the members of the Afternoon Card Club Wednesday afternoon at her home. Mrs Joseph Curtis is making an extended visit to her mother, Mrs. Sarah Bishop, at Cobes, and also to relatives and friends at Dray.
Class sessions every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday evening at Anderson's Dancing Academy, and also a special attention begins from 8 to 9:30 o'clock at Adwy.
Mrs. Henry Clay Coleman and Edith of Saratoga Spring will make visit of several weeks during the renovation of Coleman Cottage.
Theldae Post 255, G. A. R., were the guests of the Citizens' Auxiliary Committee at the rooms of the Empire Whist Club on West 23rd street Tuesday evening.
Mrs. Joseph Ashley, who has been confined to her home at 20 West 135th street for the past two months, is improving slowly and is able to sit up several hours daily.
Arthur Clinton of 10 East 55th street has returned to the city after spending a pleasant time among relatives and friends in Cleveland, Harper's Perry and Washington.
Our new dancers are now being taught every Monday and Friday evening, 114-116 West 3rd street, Metropolitan Association of Dancing Masters—Adv.
The tenth annual reunion and reception of our dancers, a pupila and friends will take place tomorrow, Friday evening at butler's Harlem River Park. See advertisement in another column.
Mr. John K. Robinson of 668 3rd avenue who was taken suddenly ill on Sunday, April 15 has been removed by her physician to the New York Post Graduate Hospital to undergo an operation for appendicitis.
A Harlem branch of THE AGE has been established at 108 West 134th street, where advertisements can be left day or night. Charles L. Miller is in charge—Adv.
The Sharon Baptist Church, 210 East 96th street of which Lew W. Anthony is pastor, was moved to Sunday. In the evening he pastorished a stirring sermon to a large congregation.
Dr. and Mrs. K. L. Cooper of 321 West 92th street will go to Philadelphia to attend the easter ball given by the Bachelor Club, and there will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jeredith Bradford of 1214 Pine street.
On last Monday morning Miss Batrice A. Moore and Charlie B. Whiting of New Haven are married by Rev. Hutchins C. Bishop at an oratory, after which they left for their item home, Highwood, New Haven.
Old Oka Gumbo, black eyes peas and rice, offs head, home made baked beans, good alma chops, fried chicken, soon dinner 25 in a room, right, Nail Bros. with bottle of ice. Everything right, Nail Bros. Restaurant 0 Bith Avenue, New York city—Adv.
Arrive at the Hotel Macau are: Mr. and C. D. White, Red Bank N. J., J. W. Holt, Macon, G. Alex, Alex Meridian, Philadelphia, A. Colleen, W. Monell, Meridian, Conn.; and Mrs. W. Riley and J. B. Moeley, ooklyn.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Elmore Brock, Miss Hay Rock, Mr. and Mrs. William Willis, Miss Florence Ellis and Miss Emma Fompored a small party who attended the Saturday matinee of Williams & Walker at the jacetic theatre on April 22.
Rink-line makes the hair grow long, straight,
and silky. A large bottle 35 cm³. Read
the advertisement elsewhere in this
paper. Rink-line now for sale, the largeine
at, at the rear, well-known barber
R. I. Robinson, 321 W. 40th street;
gamowin Hallowell, 153th and 40th street;
pm, and M. B. Wippelan, 322 W. 50th
street; Landis & Greene, 331 W. 50th street,
dv
the reception of the Alpha Physical Culture
bon May 5 promises to be the event of
the. The program includes an interesting
list of the members. The committee requests
that having invites present them at
box-office when purchasing *tickets*. Adv.
Add: Adriane, screen of Albany, who spent
m Sunday with her uncle, H. P. McIntyre
10 West 51st street, the balance of the
with M. Mary Bruce, of Jersey
y Heights, returned home to his school
via the People's Line last Saturday.
Owithstanding the fact that I have been used for nearly a year to furnish the dance Mr. Drury's oper, May 15, 1805, I carefully way in favor of the New Orlean Orchestra, rather than see the acts of the stage of the opera ruined by controversy between Mr. Drury and the named orchestra. Very truly, Walter Adc.—Adc.
---
THE FIRST OF THE SECOND GRAND SUMMER NIGHT'S AND MUSICAL SOIRÉE BY THE NEW AMSTERDAM MUSICAL (INCORPORATED) At Sulzer's Harlem River Park and TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 21
Music will be furnished by the Peerless Orchestra and Super Band of the Association. 30 in Orchestra. 30 in Band. Beautiful Silver Loving Cup will be presented to the Social number present with proper insignia.
We thank the public for the liberal patronage accorded us, many friends to assist us to make this the grandest affair of Committee: W. S. McIntyre, Chairman; J. C. Jack, L. B. Wise, H. G. Marshall, W. H. White, J. O. Allen, W. H. Hughes, Benj. Kaiser.
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT
We will present to every customer purchase A POLICY FOR RESPECTABLE COLORED NOs. 152, 154, 156 and 158 West Between Columbus and Amsterdam Each apartment consists of four rooms and Open plumbing. Steam heat in hall and basement.
Rents $23 & $24. Basement ONE BUT RESPECTABLE TENANTS NEVER
Robert B. Ward SUPERINTER
mar 164f 158 W
8. Amloitla Amor et Veritas.
DON'T FAIL TO ATTEND Seventh Annual Mayflower Reception
Eerry Lodge No. 900, Gate At PALM GARDEN, 58th St. near FRIDAY EVENING, MAY 5th
Music by Prof. W. F. Craig's Famous Orchestra (including wardrobe check)
Boxes seating 12 persons, $2.00
Tickets and Boxes can be secured from Bro. C. H. Trent, 252 West 349 West 36th street and Bro. M. Williams, 174 East 77th street.
FIFTH ANNUAL PICNIC AND Summer's Night Festival OF THE British West Indian Benevolent WILL BE HELD AT SULZER'S HARLEM RIVER PARK, 124th Street and Second Admission;
Music by Miss Hailie L. Anderson's Orchard Mission;
Dancing from 8:30 p.m. to 4:00 a.m.
---
THIS being my Truth Annual Recognition and Hall I currently request all my friends and people, and all other persons who are among of pleasure, to have me with your patronage. My Recognition have long been required all among the most popular given in New York, therefore, I shall ensure every opportunity to make this recognition obligate all previous efforts. I have an account of the music hall, and the early period of living, around Sulzer's entire Park, Music Hall and Gate for this occasion, where I know all will be comfortably used for whether the weather be cold or chilly.
The more fact that Sulzer's Music Hall and Gate, situated at 189th and 197th streets and Second Avenue is shaded with a roof, and enclosed with sliding windows, allowing every possible protection from storm, excessive heat or extreme cold, beautifully decorated with many new designs and illuminated with more than 1,000 electric lights, with a dancing space to accommodate 6,000 persons, is a guarantee to my friends and patrons of all evening of profound pleasure.
Trusting to be favored with your esteemed patronage,
I am, very faithfully yours.
The First of The Season! Grand Summer Night's Festival AND MUSICAL SOIREE
At Sulzer's Harlem River Park and Casino
TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 2nd, 1905
Music will be furnished by the Peerless Orchestra and Superb Uniformed Military
Band of the Association. 50 in Orchestra. 30 in Band.
We thank the public for the liberal patronage accorded us in the past and ask our many friends to assist us to make this the greatest affair of the season.
COMMITTEE: W. S. McIntyre, Chairman; J. C. Jackson, F. S. Beaumont,
L. R. Whee, H. G. Marshall, W. H. White, J. O. Allen, A. H. K. Jackson,
W. H. Hughes, Benj. Kaler.
apr 13 31
CASH WEEKLY BENEFITS Paid up for ONE YEAR
IN EVENT OF SICKNESS ACCIDENT DEATH
A Policy with every purchase
CLOTHING FOR MEN and CREDIT WOMEN on At Strictly Cash Prices
No Reference or security required. Come in and have the Policy explained.
Sixth Ave. Credit House
223 Sixth Ave., between 14th and 15th Sts.
ONE FLIGHT UP OPEN EVENINGS
FOUR NEW HOUSES
FOR RESPECTABLE COLORED FAMILIES 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 hallway and baths. Hot water supply. Rents $23 & $24. Basements $12 NONE BUT RESPECTABLE TENANTS NEED APPLY
SUPERINTENDENT
mar 184f
158 West 62d Street
1848 Amloitia Amor et Veritas. 1905
DON'T FAIL TO ATTEND THE
Seventh Annual Mayflower Reception
OF
Terry Lodge No. 900, G. U. O. of Q. F.
At PALM GARDEN, 58th St. near 3rd Ave.
FRIDAY EVENING, MAY 5th, 1905
Music by Prof. W. F. Craig's Famous Orchestra.
TICKETS, (including wardrobe check) 50 cents
Boxes seating 12 persons, $8.00
Tickets and Boxes can be secured from Bro. C. H. Trest, 323 West 33rd street, Bro. B. W. Ramney, 349 West 38th street and Bro. M. Williams, 174 East 77th street. apr 27 2k
Danish West Indian Benevolent Society WILL BE HELD AT
The New Duquesne Cafe
A Clean, Note, Up-to-Date Place. Respected
under management of
J. W. MERCER
Home Cooked Meals. Quick Service.
OYSTERS A SPECIALTY
24 North Kentucky Ave.
apr 27 St. Atlantic City, N. J.
1908 OPENED 1908
The New "BOSTON GRILL CAFE"
Additional Dining. Sleeping and Bathing
Room. Rates Reasonable. The public is
especially invited to visit and see the ad-
vantages offered by the management.
1612 ARCTIC AVE. Athens City, N. J.
MR. AIR MRS. JOSEPH GAINES. Mgr.
apr. 7:35 mos.
Dancing Actors
River Park and Cocktail
Wednesday and Second Anniversary
April 28th, 1905
50 CENTS
M.I. L. ANDERSON'S Full Orchestra
from 9 p.m. to 8 a.m.
THE PUBLIC:
Dancing and Ball. I currently request all men who enjoy an evening of plunging into a storm, executive heat or extrême cold, agree and illuminated, with more than 1,000 members, and pleasure.
Music Hall and Center, situated at 189th street with a roof, and encased with adding water from storm, executive heat or extrême cold, agree and illuminated, with more than 1,000 members, and pleasure.
With your esteemed patronage,
I am, very faithfully yours,
J. MILTON ANDERSON
of The Season!
Dance Night's Festival
MUSICAL SOIREE
BY THE
MUSICAL ASSOCIATION
( CORPORATED)
On River Park and Casino
WING, MAY 2nd, 1905
Orchestra and Superb Uniformed Music Orchestra. 50 in Band.
We presented to the Social Club having the chair.
A patronage accorded us in the past and as with the grandest affair of the season.
Chairman: J. C. Jackson, F. S. Bear, H. White, J. O. Allen, A. H. K. Jal.
apr 18 31
NOUNCEMENTS
every customer with every CY FREE
bitling holder to
IN EVENT OF SICKNESS ACCIDENT DEATH
A Policy with every purchaser MEN and CREDIT WOMEN on Cash Prices
Come in and have the Policy explained
Credit House
Between 14th and 15th St.
OPEN EVENINGS
NEW HOUSES
THE COLORED FAMILIES
and 158 West 62d St.
and Amsterdam Avenues
of four rooms and bath.
Seat in hallway and baths. Hot water.
4. Basements $12
LE TENANTS NEED APPLY
B. Ward
SUPERINTENDENT
158 West 62d St.
Senior et Veritas.
TO ATTEND THE Mayflower Reception
OF
No. 900, G. U. O. of Q.
558th St. near 3rd Ave.
MAY 5th, 1905
Gralg's Famous Orchestra.
wardrobe check) 50 cents
12 persons, $2.00
Bro. C. H. Trent, 253 West 53rd street, Bro. R. H. Hame, 174 East 77th street.
AL PICNIC AND
Night Festival
THE
Benevolent Society
HELD AT
124th Street and Second Avenue
11th, 1905
Anderson's Orchestra
35 Cents
9 p.m. to 4:00 a.m.
Pooles Cottage
28 North, Indian Ave.
Atlantic City, N. J.
OPEN ALL THE YEAR
KEEN COTTAGE
1/13 Arctic Avenue
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.
Newly Remodeled, Cool, Nest Room, Ex
college Table. Very hot accommodations.
SYLVESTER A. KEEN, Proprietor,
apr 27 St
WM. TEN STOCK, JOSHIPH E. BRUCE, WINSTON R. DARNBY,
MICHAEL R. WILSON, WALTER R. HANDY, JOHN W. STEVENSON,
FRANK STEUART, WILFORD R. SMITH, JAMES E. GARDNER,
JAMES C. THOMAS, PHILIP A. PAYTON, JR.
Sixth Floor, Rooms 129-138 NEW YORK CITY
Telephones, 6766 Cortlandt and 6767 Cortlandt
Write for particulars and Prospectus. sep1 1yr
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. Books teach the reader at the piano, tells the musician what to play, gives them 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 melodius become easy. Another advantage is much shorter time it takes to learn to play with this book and learn to play by this simple and easy method.
Sent by Mail on receipt of One Dollar.
THEODORE DRURY.
217 East 59th St. New York.
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON'S
advice to all industrious colored folk is
"GET SOME PROPERTY"
"GET A HOME OF YOUR OWN"
Why Pay High Rent?
when we offer you a beautiful 6 or 7 room modern
Home at $1,200 up
or we will build you a home just as you like it, for a small payment balance $15 per month—just like rent—but you get a home for you at Railway, N. J., 30 minutes from Harold Square, New York, sylvania Railroad. Checkily located
Lots $100 up,-$5 Down and $1 per W
Your life insured PERF. In one of death, your family will get a Warmth, the lot you are buying, no matter how much you still own.
Send for Free Tickets for our Grand Excursions every Tuesday and Trains leave at 12:15 P. M. sharp.
FRANK PFAFFMAN, Room 204, 20 CURTLAND, New York City
PHONE 570 CURTLAND.
WALTER F. CRAI
Orchestra, Office and Studio,
821 W. 59th St., I
Don't lose time, money and patronage experimenting with inferior
HAVE THE BEST
"Craig's Famous Orchestra"
Is the Oldest, Best and Most Reliable, and contains a representation colored musician in the city, each one a member of the Musical Protective Union, Local 310, A. F. of M., the only recognized Union in mar 30 3 mos
colored folk is
THE PROPERTY"
OF YOUR OW "
Rent?
for 7 room modern
$1,200 up
as you like it, for a small payment down, the
rent—but you get a home for your money,
from Herald Square, New York, on the Penn-
ated
Down and $1 per Week
month, your family will get a Warmth Dead free to
much you still own.
Encourages every Tuesday and Thursday.
N, Room 294, 29 OURTLANDT STREET
New York City
mar 28 3 mon.
F. CRAIG'S
Office and Studio,
821 W. 59th St., N. Y.
Image experimenting with inferior Bands.
THE BEST
Famous Orchestra"
able, and contains a representation of the best
one a member of the Musical Mutual Pro-
M., the only recognized Union in New York.
or we will build you a home just as you like it, 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., 80 minutes from Harold Square, New York, on the Pennsylvania Railroad. Checklist located
FRANK PFAFFMAN,
Room 304, 30 CORTLAND STREET
New York City
Phone 570 CORTLAND.
mar 28 $ mon.
WALTER F.CRAIG'S
Orchestra, Office and Studio,
821 W. 50th St., N. Y.
Don't lose time, money and patronage experimenting with inferior Bands
HAVE THE BEST
"Craig's Famous Orchestra"
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
Greenberg's
Ladies' Hair Dressing Park
MANUFACTURER OF HUMAN HAIR GOODS
Afro-American Hair Goods a Special
All kinds of Wigs, Front Pieces and Switches in Stock, and Made
589 Eighth Avenue
feb2 6mo Near 39th Street
CASH OR CREDIT
E. V. KRAUS
603, 605, 607, 609 and 613
NINTH AVENUE
Dressing Parlors
HUMAN HAIR GOODS
Hair Goods a Specialty
Switches In Stock, and Made to Order
7th Avenue
69th Street
R CREDIT
KRAUS
7, 609 and 613
AVENUE
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 589 Eighth Avenue
Northwest cor. of 43rd St. Largest and Most Popular Furniture Firm on the West Furniture, Carpets, Bedding, Oilcloth, Linoleum, Stoves, Carts and Baby Carriages.
Mature Firm on the West Side. Dilcloth, Linoleum, Stoves, Go by Carriages.
Largest and Most Popular Furniture Firm on the West Side. Furniture, Carpets, Bedding, Oilcloth, Linoleum, Stoves, Go-Carts and Baby Carriages.
A Guaranteed Sewing Mchine Free With Every Purchase of over $75.
John Brown Circle, No. 24
Ledger of the Grand Army of the Republic
Will celebrate the 100th Anniversary of the
Birth of
JOHN BROWN
(Liberty's Martyr)
AT TAMMARY HALL
141 to 147 East 14th street
On Tuesday Ev'g, May 2, 1905
By a Grand Reception and Sorcerio Drama
entitled 'THE GODDESS OP LIBERTY'
by a corps of young minors assisted by the
Little Patriots.
Music by Miss Helle L. Anderson's Orchestra.
Tickets, (including Hot Chuck) 95 cents.
Bozen holding eight persons. 20.99
Bozen can be rescued by MRS. BERESIA M.
KIR, 60 East 21st street.
age 20-27
```markdown
```
GOLD
MARKET
STAMP
A Guarantee
chine Free W
chase of over
WE GIVE GOLD
THE BEST PRICE
LOUIS A. LEAVELL
Attorney and Counsellor at Law
Office 104 West 30th Street
Tel. NEW-J Madison NEW YORK CITY
Special Hours: 8 to 9 A.M., 4 to 6:20 P.M.
Evenings at 100 West First Street.
Inner 10 3 acres
Principle in all the Courts.
NEW YORK CITY
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE AGENCY
property agent on commercial property
law and human secured at these hotels.
J. C. Ayer, J. W. 50th St., Attorneys
J. W. Washington, Attorneys
L. HABER
1909
Miss Corinne Revelo will be in the city on Monday, May 1st, to attend the rehearsals now in progress. In next week's issue of THE AUR will appear the names of many notable patrons of Mr. Drury, who will be present at the Opera. Write far Reserved Seats $1 to Theodore Drury, 217 East 50th street and E. F. Hall, Naval Hospital, Brooklyn, Hall's Thone, 2000 Williamsburgh. Dancing after the Opera.
WALTER F. CRAIG
[At Sulzer's Harlem River Park Casino and Grounds
120th Street and Second Avenue, New York
Friday Evening, May 12th, 1905
CRAIG'S FAMOUS ORCHESTRA OF TWENTY-FIVE PIECES
Tickets, 35 cents
Floor Committee: William H. Vangha William Tum Byk
Jas. N. Anderson
Reception Committee: R. H. Hucklem, Wm. H. Tyne, Robt. J. Phammer, Rufus Harbert,
Robt. D. Green, John W. Toney, Theo. H. Wright, William J. Carls
apr 13 4 t
For Sweet Charity's Sake
"THE GIFT OF THE FAIRIES"
A Grand Sonic Production will be presented
For Colored Children. 826 WEST 56th STREET, New York.
Music by NEW AMSTERDAM ORCHESTRA. Doors open at 7:30. Curtain risen at 8:30.
ADMISSION. 50 cts. Hat Check. 10 cts. RESERVED SEATS. 75 cts.
Boxes seating 9 and 11, $4.50 and $5.50 on sale at Nursery, and at Dr. A. S. Reed's, 314 West
52nd Street. 'Phone 4136 Columbus.
OFFICERS: Mrs. E. A. Dorey, President; Miss M. E. Kato, Vice President; Miss M. K.
Griffin, Pin Secretary; Miss E. G. Fletcher, Cor. See; Miss E. G. Burleigh, Treasurer. apr 6
FOURTH ANNUAL
VAUDEVILLE AND RECEPTION
FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE CHARITY FUND OF
Mount Olive Lodge, No. 2 F. AND A. M.
AT WEBSTER HALL, 119.135 HAST 111th STREET Between 3rd and 4th Avenues
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 8:80 SHARP
Gold
Stamp
OFFICIER:—R. B. Roos, W. M.; Emmanuel Stencll, S. W.; T. H. Alston, J. W.; D. W. Parkin,
S. D. H. Littich, J. D.; John Spencer, Secretary, Nathalie Parrott, Ai. Secretary,
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE:—R. H. Hoodle, Chaiman, Alpenso Skrine, Vice Chairman,
William C. Hunter, James M. Poole, Louis A. Joseph, William H. Vaughn, John Spencer,
Edward L. Wynne, W. T. Baker, Thomas Brown, David W. Parker.
The Committee reserves the right to refine all objections pursuant
Thursday Evening, May 4th, 1905
Music by New Amsterdam Association
Pref. P. Penalver Director
ADMISSION.
(Including Wardrobe Check)
50 CENTS
Boxes seating six persons including admission $4.00.
Single Box seats 25 cents.
Love
Road
street
Boxes can be secured from George McDermott, 219 and 220 West 50th street; George H. Dayson, 340 West 36th street N. Y. and Brooklyn Borough; James Willett, 179 Prince street, also Eugene R. Godwin, 125 South Killott Place, Brooklyn.
Officers of the club: George B. Dayson, President; Abraham Gage, Vice President; Adolphine P. Harding, Pt. Sen.; R. E. Ashley, Sen. Sen.; Alfred R. B. Bridge, Tran.; George McDermott, Capt.; John H. Purley, Vice Capt.; Harry S. Alexander, Ousted.
Executive Committee: John H. Purley, Chairman; Thomas W. Cobb, Vice Chairman; Alfred R. B. Bridge, Secretary; Abraham Gage, Am't Sen.; George McDermott, Tran.; Eugene R. Godwin, Brooklyn Representative.
apr 29 34
142 and 144 WEST 28th STREET between 6th and 7thAves.
Three and Four Rooms. Private Halls and Toilets. Hot Water Boilers and Ranges
Apply to
M. MONHEIMER, 223 W. 33rd Street
Or Janitor on Premises apr 20 st
Saratoga Notes.
Watertown Notes.
Easter in Petersburg.
Parmesano, Va., April 18—Rev. Goo, B. Howard of the Gilded Blessed Church prescheduled Sunday morning on "Baptism and Burial." Afterward he baptized alitty converts in the presence of nearly two thousand people. At night in praise on "Walking With God in Christian Fellowship." Rev. Buv. "of the Third Blessed Church prescheduled Sunday morning on "He Is Not Here." A good ocrard attested. Rev. B. T. Part of the Harrison Street Church prescheduled powerful nerves Sunday, in the morning on "He Is Here," and in the evening on "He Is Here," and in both services. Rev. J. F. Challard of the United Staten Blessed Blessed Sunday morning. His subject was "The Resurrection of Christ." As 8 p. m., an excellent program was recorded, occupying ad-
The New York Times
Friday, October 10, 1945
The New York Times
Friday, October 10, 1945
New Brunswick Notes.
New Baumwern, N. *J*, April 24-84. Paul Lodge, No. 11, U. G. B., will give an entertainer in Armory hall on Wednesday night. May 10. Music will be furnished by M. L. Vanykhe of Newark. John Williams, an old soldier of Robinson street, spent Saturday in Philadelphia. He visited the place where he resided in W4 and went over the grounds where he was discharged. He was the guest of honor at the old Armory street. B. Stocks, the oldest African-American old schoolmaster with L. M. Moorpark of Comstock street. Fannie Galick of Bayard street died Tuesday after a short illness.
If the Web is to continue there
Mm. Winnebago Stovviee School is named for her over MIXT YEARS by MILLIONS of teachers for their CILDREN WHILE TESTING for their SCHOOL. CILDREN SOTHERS THE CILDREN, SOTHERS THE GUM-ALLS ALL FAIN; CURREN WIND COLIC, and DRAGGLE in every part of the world. Secure and ask for "Mm. Winnebago's Soothing Syrup," and other kind. Twenty-five cents a bottle, age 17
MIDDLELANDS
UNFURNISHED floor wanted in Brooklyn.
May 1. Down town prefured. Address.
Mid Ade. Ace office. age 18 28
WANTED-Dedollar Chores girls and sons. Apply after afternoon at 2:30 to Adams and Purgison, 51 West 89th street.
WANTED-Young girls to do laundry on drums. Mm. Lewin, 715 Fulton street, Brooklyn; appoint. apr 29 46
TO LET—Neatly furnished room, large and small. Bath, gas, all improvements. Apply Mm. Dickinson, 200 West 89th street, apr 29 44.
TO LET—Durable front room to let for man and wife. Mm. D. Turner, 100 West 184th street.
TO LET—Apartments to rent, for respectable colored families, 140 West 184th.
TO LET—Nestly furnished room, for one or two guests. 200 Fulton st., Brooklyn, near the bridge.
TO LET—Furnished front ball room, dres. floor. Landt, 701 Third Ave. between 67th and 68th st.
TO LET—One room furnished. Bath with hot and cold water and gas range. Cooking conserved and reasonable. C. G. A. Mo. 8, 225 West 68th street.
TO LET--Parished or unparished rooms to quiet, respectable people. 178 Bo. Elliot Place, Brooklyn.
FLOOR TO LET--3 rooms for adults. Apply 9 Gay St. bet. Waterly Fl. and Christopher St.
WONDERFUL DISCOVERY
Curly Hair Made Straight By
TAKEN FROM LIFE
FORD'S ORIGINAL
OZONIZED OX MARROW
THE CENTRAL RESTAURANT
COR. OR HICKORY AND PERKW STREET,
Orange, N. J.
Meals served at all hours: Pritze Ice Cream,
Polar Soda Waters, Cigars, Candies.
DINNER-PARTIES AND WEDDING A
SPECIALTY.
THOS. H. S. HOYSTER & CO.
Local and Long Distance Telephone
Coast 'Phone 733
Electric Bell
HOTEL BOSTON
W. S. STAFFORD, Prop.
Cor. Arctic and Michigan Aven.
Albany, N. J.
Choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
Music Hall Attached.
OCT. 27 3 PM.
Ladies and Gentlemen's Restaurant
BOARD BY THE WEEK
1615 ARCTIC AVENUE
Atlantic City, N. J.
apr 27 3 mo.
JULIUS G. WILSON, Prop.
NATHANIEL DIGGS
Arctic and Kentucky Aves.
HOTEL DALE
Atlantic City, N. J.
apr 27 2s.
RUFUS MURBURT
Select Development Agency
108 West Third Street
Maryland 17
O'FARRELL'S
610 & 612 Eighth Avenue,
New and Street New book store.
Furniture, Carpets, Bedding etc.
Rentals, Fash and Appliances Promised.
CASH OR OREDIT.
FRAKE DORMATE.
Obligate and Most Reliable Shoes in the City.
=
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Musiclane
Miss H. L. Anderson's Orchestra.
PROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN TO ALL COMMUNICATION
316 West 50th Street
NEW YORK CITY.
Telephone 618 Octobrush.
The New Amsterdam
MUSICAL ASSOCIATION
(DOCUMENTARY)
Will furnish COMPETENT COLORED MUSIC
CLIPS for all occasions.
For terms and dates address:
W. A. Rilke, mgr
134 W 504 St.
10 W 126 St.
Howard University
SUMMER SCHOOL
SECOND SESSION
July 1 to July 20, 1905
Courses in History, Psychology, Pedagogy,
Methods of Teaching, Mathematics,
Mathematics, Nature Study, Manual Training,
Bathery, Baffin, Cooking, Military and
Sowing.
$3.00 Registration fee covers all charges for tuition and lectures. Board and lodging on University campus cost only $15.00.
For further information, address:
Rev. John Gordon, D. D., President,
or Dean Lewis B. Moore, Ph. D.,
Director, Washington, D.C.
apr 15 at
KINK-INE
MAKES THE HAIR BROW LONG,
STRAIGHT, SOFT AND SILK,
CUNES DANDRUFF AND STOPE
FALLING HAIR.
It was discovered by Dr. Roberts, a famous
sculptor of the 19th century, the body of
colored people for the purpose of
and who, after much time and expires, has
Tonis especially for the
colored people.
**KIN-FINE** is the only make preparations in the **WORLD** that is guaranteed to make the **HAIR** STRAIGHT and make dry hair smooth and step out and dry and falling out; takes out all the kinks in the hair; and makes the hair soft and silky, and by nourishing it new life and vigor, restoring it to normal color.
READ WHAT A CUSTOMER
SAYS OF IT
THE KINK-ME COMPANY.
Formally by B. Rennock, 7th Avenue & 41st
street, B. Ward, 38th street & 8th Avenue,
B. Ward, 38th street & 8th Avenue, Chase B.
Prantz 2204 8th Avenue. W. & B. Rinker,
Brygman & Cox, store, W. & B. Prouse, 6th
street, Bloomington & Neram, Brooklyn,
Bolton Drug company, Brooklyn, Rogene
Hartnett, Jorsey City.
Birrers--K. L. Robinson, 240 West 40th street.
Benjamin Howell, 134th & 135th streets abn.
M. R. Wineglass, 322 West 59th street. Landis & Orean, 381 West 60th street.
The "Hub" Hotel
Choles Wines Liquors and Cigars
15 North Illinois Ave.
Atlantic City, N. J.
John C. Smallwood, Prop. and Mgr.
apr 27 27
CONCERT
This being their second appearance, we hope to peek the Church. Come early to avoid the crowds, and we moved from the Trusses of the Church or from WK. HOLLAND, West West Street, New York.
ANDERSON HOUSE
67 Dunnigan Street
GILBERT HOUSE
KEYSTONE HOTEL
209 West 37th Street.
First Class Published Rooms by the Day, Week
15th.
WHERE LAND AND COAST,
POOL AND TERRACE, SOUTH BRAINS,
WEL. BANKS.
Proprietor.
NEW MARYLAND HOUSE
RELEASED AND REMOUNDED
202 and 204 West 37th Street
Mostly Purchased Rooms by the Day,
West or Health.
RESTAURANT ATTACHED
Made at all hours.
JOHN WALCOTT, Proprietor
doubtless.
HOTEL BERNARD
10 W. 186th ST., near Fifth Ave.
Telephone 182 Stermen.
Highest Purchased Rooms with every
Local Improvement, Moderate Bases.
Oafs and Grill Rooms Attached.
Special Sunday Planner with Wine, 4 P. to
8 o'clock on Monday.
GEORGE E. MICHAEL, Prop. 2
doubtless.
The Hotel Alpen,
HUBERTAN PLAN.
Freshman, State College
Graduate in New York
Ontario and New York
Bachelor in
University of
Ontario
MA in
WARNALL, A.G.D. B.S. in
Allan
State College
Freshman
Measly furnished rooms for permanent or transient guests. First clean restaurant attached. Meals all at hours. Quist location; near four lines of surface cars and subway station.
The Dickerson, House
400 NALSEY STREET
near Kimmy Street, NEWARK, N. J.
First. Class accommodations for respectable
colored people. Board responsible by day
week or month. Select Employment Bureau.
MRS. RUFIC. DICKERSON, Prep.
Telephone, 306-4-J.
Flats and Apartments.
ELEGANT FLATS
To Let.
Handmade Apartments with all improve
measures at Moderate Rentals, in
THE DOLLY-MOUNT, MI West 60th
street.
THE BARATOUL, 320 West 60th Street.
THE VEHICLE, 320 West 61st Street.
Above house have First-Line jacarne street
and are always in good condition.
ALEXANDER CHOWY, 217 West 60th St
MR. HOLYARD,
210 West 61st Street
January
554, 556, 558 & 560
West 126 St
Handmade Apartments of 4 Large, Light
Rooms. Range. Hot Water Supply.
Finely Carved Halls, &c. Good Janitor
Service. Rates
$16.50 to $17 per Month
Apply
D. JOHNSON, Janitor
560 West 126th Street
A Good Situation
call at once. I charge
NO PRI IN ADVANCE
E.L. Williams, Bexhill Street, 74th St.,
Phone 507-370-3101
page 844
JOHNSON & BERNTSON
CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS
Brown in London, Dorset Bank and Mills
VIPHONES AND BOOFS
BF Burrow, Bungles and Pursues Set
COURRA, L. L.
Undertaker & Embalmer
Funeral Parlor and Chapel
146 West 53d Street
Between Sixth and Sewenth Avenue.
Lady attendant at all Funerals. Group Charge and Obligation to Man of all burials.
dont time.
Telephone Oak, 444 with Street.
Middle St. precedently attended to.
CHARLES H. GRAVES,
Undertaker and Embalmer,
Ownton, 319 West 41st St.
Between Sixth and Sewenth Avenue.
Undertaker and Embalmer, 444 with Street New York.
Every request for Funeral Parlor be
Sustainable Terms.
The True Reformers Burial Co.
Limestone UNDERSTAKE & WREATHING
In case of the obsolete and unfit
Dusher's burial parishioners in the State. We
postpone burials and send to mourn all
past Cask strenuously.
90 West 134th Street.
Not connected with any other firm.
---
Bev. Bob. R.B.
Mont's services
can be had for
Fishins, Fumera
ak, Preaching
and Marriages
at any hour in
the day or night
C. FRANKLIN CARR,
FUNERAL DIRECTOR,
350 West 53rd Street,
NEW YORK.
Real Estate.
PHILIP A. PAYTON, JR.
REAL ESTATE.
AGENT. BROKER. APPRAiser
For Sale—Boston, Manhattan, Brooklyn
Broadway. Real estate down
To Law—Deditable Plans at all times.
67 West 184th Street.
DOWN TOWN OFFICE, 115 Broadway.
Telephone-611 and Harrington, 6788 and
6790 Orlandt.
Working Girls' Home
217 East 86th Street.
Between 2nd and 3rd Aves.
Pleasant lodgings for girls with portraits
of music and reading rooms, dining room, kitchen
and laundry, at reasonable rates. The Stores
obtain orders for working dresses, aprons, etc.
A good stock of aprons, dust caps, aprons, etc., always
on hand.
For further information address
Mrs. Victoria Earl Matthews,
217 East 86th Street.
New York City.
HAINEY'S MARKET
60 West 135th Street,
New London Avenue.
New YORK:
Prime Meats, Poultry, Eggs, Butter, Lard,
Fruit and Vegetables.
No 9 on
The Afro-American News Co.,
60 West 93rd Street, New York City.
Special Agents for New York Age, Midland
Plant, Indiana Presbyterian Church,
Christian Makers, New York American
Christian Makers, New York American
by special agents of a specialty of sub-
scriptions and advertisements.
Please contact us for your order.
THE EXPERIENCE, years of study and research, people have shown them especially gifted in inviting and adding others.
AN REMEMBER. PROPRIETOR- (You to be full judged) We do hereby admitly agree and grant- you the PROPRIETOR if we fail to call you by spawn in hell! WE PROPRIETOR if we fail to call you by spawn in hell! We promise to talk you whenever or whenever we expect it in true or false. We will tell you, after the love of the one you most deeply, even when you are not there, we will tell you every hope, hope or ambition you will tell you every hope, hope or ambition you will tell you every hope, hope or ambition when reaching in over. (You to be full judged) We pay us not one penalty.
309 West 17th Street
LOCK CHAIN GIVEN Pam N. St. AV.N.Y.
197 Daily, Evenings and Sundays. Co-
sultation by Mail. Not Shipable.
Twickenham Madison Square.
FRANCIS TURNER
PACKER AND SHIPPER
of China Glass and Household Goods of
Every Description.
419 Fourth Avenue,
S. H. Cor. 38th St., Boston, NEW YORK.
Special Rates to the Trade.
Packing Oasis Paper, Excelsior and Twin-
for Sale
Ladies Hair Dressing Parlor,
727 EIGHTH AVE.
Afro-American Hair Goods is Specialty,
also Hair Dressing.
Your Patron: Resident
GET INSURED
Don't be Burned Out and Have
Nothing: Left
A 3-Year Policy for the Furniture in your Flat
at very lowest rates.
Only the best Fire Insurance Companies.
D. A. GREENE, Insurance Broker
48 Avenue Avenue, Brooklyn
BROOKLYN
JULY 17
NEW YORK
WILFORD H. SMITH,
COUNSELOR-AT-LAW
AND PROTECTOR IN ADMINISTRY,
115 Broadway,
NEW YORK,
Room 128 to 128.
Phone 675 690-1001.
nor16 300
DAMAGES BUTT A SPECIALTY
Telephone, 678 320 304
PETER H.
To 791 Fulton 81, Brooklyn
DR. ELLARSON
MARVELLOUS MEDIUM
and TRAINER CLEARBOYANT. con do all ha
to see even small power point.
Give the names of dead and living friend
tales wag, and when you will marry, Can it
be a good marriage? Will you be able to
you hate for any payer faster you will be
you hate for nonemone. Will tell you
a respect friend, Journey, business, law,
know about
Ask me questions, don't ask me
name, don't try to grasp, you in any way
you right e.g. In thoroughly enforced
articles, no one can show. Can give you
references to both white and colored patri-
references to your practice in Brooklyn and New
York will give you information on what
you give you subscriptions no one pleases.
Can tell you what business is for you for all you ask. You how to win speedy manners with all the skills you need in all your doctice; seconds when all others do. Do not keep company, marry or go to bed. Do not keep company, marry or go to bed. Positive help and motivation or no pay. Will you find it lucky to consult this refresher course on the medium. Has a medicine that will improve health can be given patients, not knowing it. These and are new.
Rich, Happy and Successful in all their undertakings while those who are neglect Dr. Blissman's advice are still labelled as unhappy and adversity. Through a poor knowledge of medicine, through a secret that will overcome your enemies in his pet Friends. In love always never fails to win of winning the abolition of its opposes it.
It is the spirit of spiritualism that they are no many who claim powers they do in. Beware of such and especially brave of man. Do not give up and give spirit reading representing himself as Dr. Blissman. Dr. Blissman does no burden of the office. 781 Fulham street, Brooklyn, N.Y.
Dr. ELABARON understands thoroughly the diseases, spills and influences the race is subject to the colored people and always had a big personality from them.
Please Read The Following
New York, Nov. 14, 1939. This is by order that I was out of work, out of money, out of courage. I had no luck in anything I asked to do I did not know. A friend advised me to do it but I did not know. I found that Dr. Elaron was dead, but I found in Dr. Elaron's place a good kind friend, the Elaron, who took me in and treated me well. Through Dr. Elaron I got a position that my money and did not go to others. They took my money and did not pay me. First I had Dr. Elaron. I would agree all the bad luck, sick or in trouble to go or write a letter. Then I had Dr. Elaron. I would persuade Dr. Elaron's wonderful poem I was cured all right in three days. If I was to know any more come out with my letter. Third avenue New York Borough Washington.
20 ALLELINGTON STREET, NEWARK, N.J. March 10, 2014 The creative quality of Dr. Elliard K. Clinews. I had been sick for a long time, and had been denied medical care for my complaints, and none did me药. I took aaking Dr. Elliard's medicines, I can trustably say I have been greatly benefited. (AP)
I wish to add my bestiessay to Dr. Elliard's marvellous power. By some invention I have been able to unable to speak, or move hand upon my Dr. Elliard. I was made able to walk upon my Dr. Elliard. I was able to tell as if I had been raised from the seven aweals, Mr. Nixon, N.Y.
BROOKLYN, May 19, 2014 — I went to Dr. Elliard when I was so sick I thought I would die. Dr. Elliard and made me feel like a new person. I am the best person. I am there and to God for painting me to most good friend to give me such relief. (MARY K. HAREMON)
18 Myrtle avenue, Brooklyn
NEW YORK, Feb. 8, 1903—Dear Dr. Prussia,
we can you these few lines to let you know how
you feel without ache or pain, feeling fine. For
little or no girl, I want. When I think of how
I laughed at you, I am grateful. Thank you
enough for your kindness and
thank you enough for me in bringing back
health.
SARAH R. COX, The Simmorhore Fisk
Corner and St. Broadway, New York
Call on or write to