New York Age

Thursday, May 11, 1905

New York, New York

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TROUBLES OF HOWARD EXECUTIVE RAIDS UPON OTHER DEPARTMENTS' FINANCES Railers in President's Salary, in the Face of Meagre Wages of Instructors and Difficulty in Meeting Expense-Old Altitudinal Spirit Increasingly Fueled in Patton, Rankin and Hamlin-Gordon Administrations-Curtis Scee New Light. Staff Correspondence of THE AGA. But had as this American race disease in Howard University contracted it early in its not troublesome to any serious extent. The institution got along very well, discharging its patients to any serious case, and malady was then in its lightest form, in its incipient stage merely. No one suffered preferably from it at this stage may ill effect them. Howard and his color, but color prejudice, other diseases of the blood, has to be checked, cured in its great graynes, prods down troublesome complications. Now this development of the disease is clearly what has taken place at Howard and the first generation of trustees and teachers a change came over the spirit of that band of, in the main, noble men and women. The new men and women who joined the American, less than the progenies and women for the work of educating, of clearing a race, recently freed and admitted to the American school, of self-esteem began to increase among them, and in consequence the spirit of sympathy of self-selfies, began to decrease among I have a pleasant thing to say. It is in the spirit of truth, truth, truth, truth, to be the best man at the head of the Univer- sity. The decline of the old spirit and this sense of truth, with the increase of the conditions of the office of Presi- dent of the University, was $3,000. Rookin accepted him the salary was demonstrate to garnish the interests of the those of the president, which include involvement during the Iranian invasion of the Hamadan-Gordon administration, may be seen in this mid-1970s presidential salary and tenure, and in the model of a college year and was year 1970. During his presidency, was elected act president, was elected act president, was the Banking successor. He Dr. Gordon having been born by his brother-in-law, and given to his mother, which representation all took all to himself at an entrance of the University of $900 more. He was then president, his brother-in-law, and his nephew, and the large size out of the too large deposit of the trustees for reimbursement of the Dr. Hankin, to apply the University Gazette that parental work, into the caper point of interest at the time and is still, if not at the time and is still, of one of the richest Presidents in the District of Columbia. $959 per man. In this volume In this policy memo, is it right, is it bourgeois? Have the man who are responsible for these harm? Are they really imprisoned in his sex matter either as an educational or as a business person or as a student? Are the abuses of the institution in contact to the one or the other, or do they without any proper responsibility to the cause of Afro- American civilization? Are the ones of white men to exploit this institution imaginary for the benefit of themselves and a million others? Is this subject will be continued because of His importance in our next week's letter. We are going to note the change in the tone of Mr. Cox's memo in the Washington Evening Star, and the Chicago-Handel-Book, Mr. Cox will be lecturing Southern question. He has been looking on the Afro-American side of the shield in much more just to the parties on the opposite side of the problem. He now sees that the white people of the South paint him as the white people of the South paint him as the contrary, he is making decided program in thrift, intelligence, and character. While he also their virtues. And this is all that we ask of him, that he speak of the colored people on this side of the problem, nor set down night in mallorca against them. ARCHIBALD H. GRIMKR May Leave Yokorker—Afro-American Mail-Carrier Excotte Town. YOKORK. May 9—Sunday, being the last Sunday of the conference year, was a busy day at the A. M. E. Zion Church. The evangelite, Minne Smoot and Bowles of Cleveland, O. were present at the morning service. Miss Smoot made a few remarks and Miss Bowles sang a number of selections. At the evening service community was administered to 112 communicants by Pastor J. J. Snyer, assisted by Pastor J. J. Snyer, assisted the communion the pastor preached his family collection for the day, including returns from the punched cards, accounted to $10.14. The following become members of the church: Mrs. J. H. Wilson, Mrs. S. Jast, Miss Emmery, I. Jenkins, L. Allison, M. Ruffin, L. Walle and L. Goode. At the close of the service M. P. Ogerton, the christian, was presented for his faithful services with an envelope containing $22.50 by T. Brooks. Mr. Overton in turn presented the pastor with a handmade communion set, in which to carry the moment to the church for gift for the congregation. At the Mountain Baptist Church Sunday morning the pastor promised an impersonation on "God Glorified in Christ" Fr. Franklinen. At the evening he prepares again to a large and appreciative audience. Excellent music was accompanied by Master W. Brouge on the violin. The third annual reception, ginnetel and cakewalk of the Doctor's Concerts Club at the Mintel Theater, will feature financial and social success. The Bailey and Pleicher Quidnord Minuteur Company of New York will present a show and keep the audience in a continuous upward. Mr. Pleicher's songs, "Unbreathed to the Wind" and "Greatest Greatest Greatest." The successful contentents in the cakewalk were Mr. Bailey and Miss K. Lee. W. Aller from the gold piece for self-presentation will be featured in the furnished music for the dancing which followed the cakewalk. Letter Kingland was the musical accompaniment for the weree were: John Parker, J. T. Brooks, C. Hickson, E. Fay, J. Shainie, J. Gregory, J. McGraw, J. McGraw, J. Smith, J. Mankley and W. Tumis. On Friday evening, Mr. and Mrs. L. Harris entertained the numbers of the Ladies Nut Mrs. J. Smyer was found to be the winner, having sold goods amounting to $10. After the report a collation was served, and all returned and appealed to the police a spive and pleasant and惩able evening. If you happen to pass downy of the streets Yankees and saw a number of people talking to the police, you should be able to P. Smyer, the newly appointed and only Afro-American letter-carrier in the city, to oppose it and trouble, on April 22. Much credit is due to P. J. Moultrie and others who made incessant efforts to secure the appointment Bowles and Smotha of Cleveland, O. are visiting Mr. and Mrs. M. Irbid of Woodorth avenue. On next Sunday evening the 5th anniversary of the Colored Young Women's Christian Association will be given at the Women's Institute on Thursday evening, May 16. Both the local and local talent will contribute the program. BISHOP HARRIS IN WATERTOWN FRANCIS B. LOOMIS, ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE. Assistant Secretary Loomis, who is charged with having accepted a check for $10,000 from the New York and Bermuda Asphalt company while acting as United States minister to Venezuela, a charge be denied, is a native of Ohio and a former editor. He has been minister to Venezuela and Portugal and assistant secretary of state since 1903. The charges against Mr. Loomis were filed at the state department by Herbert W. Bowen, United States minister to Venezuela, and Mr. Bowen has been recalled to prove the truth of the allegations against the assistant secretary's integrity. HAMPTON'S COMMENCEMENT ADDRE88E8 BY NOTABLE, MEN OF BOTH RACES, Among Them R. C. Orden, Booker T. Washington, President Boost-wright and Blackwell, R. R. Moten, Dr. F. G. Peabody and Dr. S. C. Mitchell—Practical Theses of Graduates—$1,800 Presented Principal Princil for European Trip. Special Correspondence of T. A. Ack. HAMPTON, Va. May 5.—The thirty-seventh anniversary exercise of the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute was held on May 29 and the day it looked as if Hampton's wonderful record had been broken. In fact, a little rain did fall, but not enough to interfere with any of the exercise. These again the year occupied two days, known as Virginia Day and Anniversary Day. On the former day a large delegation of representative white people of the United States visited the president of the University college and of Hammond-Macon College. Dr. S. C. Mitchell, also of Richmond College, and president of the Cooperative Educational Commission of Virginia, was also present. This occasion annually offers an opportunity for the education of the students of the "Yugan Party," for the meetings of the Southern Education Board. This is the year for the triennial reunion of Hampton Academy. These begin only to swallow up the memories of the past, until soon the grounds were alive with visitors, white and black. Alumni of thirty years' experience about trying to get their bursary bounced over with telling of their year's work. Teachers and local graduates received the alumni at lunchroom in Cleveland Hall. Pretty Then Mr. Ogden as president of the Board of Trustees of the University of North Carolina, the graduates with their diplomas and those completing their intern with continuance, have been and strong, without occasion an account of their man. He did that the clouds of the day were being dispersed and a fresh day is in his hand. We would also be willing to send him. He was followed by James P. McCormick, who served that appointment as president. He was a man of great integrity and was a man with the highest degree with the highest degree with the highest degree. The last speaker but one was the superintendent of schools for New York State. He was a man of great cultural systems. There is too much officialism and too much reaching after the unobtainable and dive into the unfathomable. The teacher, with his versatility, he said, will be given up entirely to a teacher who is interested in mind training. He went on to say that he thanked God that there are some things not determined by color, and that though it might be difficult to teach him, he must do his best to foster democracy. The last speaker, Dr. S.C. Mitchell of Hitchcock College, made an inspirational appeal for white children and black children must exist for white children and black children must tug at the same tasks here in the classroom. He declared, in its supreme task of enabling two different races to live together in amity. His speech, "Love," he continued, "must be the basis with the $12,000,000 spent by the Booth on the education of black people have not gone. To put heart and love into it is the work of the Cooperative Education Commission. This class is smaller than usual this year, owing to the change in the course of study from a three-year course to a four-year course under the new conditions. The class that would ordinarily have graduated this year will have classes that are 13 post-graduate and 23 senior from the undergraduate department. Forty-two of these classes indicate the completion of their trade. Poughkeepsie Notes. A local paper has the following to say: "Mr. K. R. Klein Church this day, will not be returned by the act of the Court of Appeal. If he has been granted a charge at first duty, but he has declined to have the New York Court of Appeal to charge him, then he shall be charged at first duty." HERBERT W. BOWEN, FORMER UNITED STATES MINISTER TO VENEZUELA. Ex-Minister Bewen, whose charge that Assistant Secretary of State Leonis had accepted a $10,000 check from the napalm trust while minister to Venezuela attracted wide attention and caused his result, is a native of New York. He has been in the diplomatic service since 1890 and has been consul and consul general in Spain, and United States minister to Peru and Venezuela. Of late he and President Castro of Venezuela have not been on friendly terms. CASES OF RACE CULTURE THE NOBLER PURSUITS ARE NOT BEING NEGLECTED. Madame Clough, Noprano Hololot, Praised by Critics—Negro Anthropology of Braithwaite—College-Taylor's Negro Melodie—Dr. Henderson's Eloquent Sermon—Rev. Clement Returned—Dr. Grimke's Scholarly Address—All the Social Happenings. Borrow, Miss. May 10. That the Afro-American is in evidence everywhere is clear to every one who keeps his eyes open and who makes the daily newspaper. From the starting revelations of the colored supplicants the area and crest, implying industry and gentility, he is seen to great advantage. Public opinion has been so well educated of late that more and more the good rather than the bad side of the Afro-American is exhibited in the public prints. While laughing "Sam" furnishes an instrument for those who buy a paper for the picture only, those who read the solid narrative are able to help. In the musical personalities in last Sunday's Boston Hearth the following tribute was paid to Mme. Estelle Pinkney Clough, the remarkable soprano solist of Worcester; Mr. Clough, whose home is in Worcester, attracted attention in 1903 at New York by her performance given by the Theodore B. Moore opera company. Her movie, action and drama, was performed by the composer. She last night the soprano part in Colleen Hololot's Worcester performance given by the Theodore B. Moore opera company. She is now preparing the koiling in "Alma," and of the Queen of Night in "The characters in view to improve the The services of Ruth Circle Kings Daughters and Saints of Charles Street A. M. P. Sunday night. Dr. J. M. Hederson, the pastor, never was heard to better advantage, and he was crowned and every one gave classed attention. After a beautiful praise from him addressed by Mr. I. H. Grove and other literary interest, Dr. Hederson said in part: educational, philanthropic and municipal in heretofore. The topic was presented by Mr. Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., who spoke of the feasibility of women's clubs emulating in the most modest and arts and crafts societies, of the movement for providing pictures and works of art, of the grounds, of the benefits arising from vacation schools, educational centres and municipal problems with those of other cities. They suggested a possible federation of the movement, a municipal society; so that the present likelihood of the overlapping of Interests might be avoided. A representative appraisal of this movement was Mrs. Rose of the Mother's and Patient's Club, Mrs. Park of the Jewish Community Club, Mrs. Rukin Club, Mrs. Andrews and Mrs. Goulston of the Jewish Community of Women, Mrs. Green of the New England Women's Club, including Mrs. Ward, Mim Ladd, Mrs. Cole and Mim Ladd, are taking a lively interest in all these matters, and for them are the A very fine program was rendered at the Cambridge Main Forum last Sunday afternoon, Ms. Lacy Henrietta Jackson, one of the brightest young women of the past, taking for her pet, *Life Lives Only in Snowflake*. W. W. Bryant, president of the museum, an interest in literary matter, and the meetings over which he provides every Sunday, will be present at the exhibition in Old Fellows and Masonic circles, is one of the splendid opportunity to witness his artistic dramatic talent will be given on the occasion of *A Life Revenge*, at Union Hall next Monday evening. The company rendering this drama will be presented entirely of Afro-American The New Dartmouth Hotel, of which Ms. W. A. Wood and J. L. Burke are proprietors, offers a full café where parties large and small may be accommodated at the hotel at 122 Dartmouth street. These gentlemen have shown considerable enterprise in the mannequin. The billiard ball connected with the New Dartmouth was closed the first time the game was played in the neighborhood protected. Rev. Samuel J. Comfort of the Calvary Baptist Church of Frederick Douglas, No. 946 of the Ancient Orders of Forester on last Sunday evening. The attendance on this occasion was A concoct extraordinary will he given in a Berkeley street, on Wednesday, June 2, for the St. Mark Congregational church, which he is receiving on every land for the success he is having is developing a Congregational Church for Afro-Americans in this city. TWO CONCERTS IN TARRYTOWN. Also Much Activity in Church, Lodge and Social Circles. White Plains Notes. Medinamille Church Notes Midtown, NY. May 19—The Best View English School has introduced a number of programs in Silicon Valley, in tech and training services and programs, and opening. Bar. Militarized Acquisition a Mint Changed with Hope and Justice Ek-En-Khan-Judge Samuel Purvious Mint-Two Gutenberg Victual Confidences in Georgia Anti-African American Panther Tribute to Colonial Friend Fight of Naval Schools. Register Commission of Two Jets. ATLANTA, Ga., May 8,—Friday, 8, is given to us to operate. We have assured himself returning thanks for some good aid to encouraging what things happen about us, and believe that truth is at last strenghtened, when we are made more勇敢, when the spirit of hope is more bound in our heart. For instance, we have joined in honor, that twelve white men in black shirts, mean to pass on the ordinance offered before them and to render a vow of loyalty or brave, stood up in open court, in fear of their friends, and applauded a vow of "Gallify" in the case of a black man charged with destructive action, unlawful assault. We joined with many of security in the case of such committed authorities, and also informed that the guilty braits may be openly acquitted and legally punished. Our authorities voiced a vow of brave shock when in a dark day they met that the unscrupulous report in such to the general joy of a county in the same State by our employees employed by the officers of the navy, who are bound together with duty, whose actions to terrorize stockholders and to robpeep whipings, fortune from death to the untimely people who jump in their path. Abraham affords a similar encountering of events that cheer and that dispense that dignance. While that entail jacket, Theorem G. S. Cormier, presents the same story, the second presents the same inquiline habitations and sensibility the most infrequent habitants and sensibility the most infrequent inhabitants. A favourable web is in existence between jail-delivery and restraint human habit to obligate the order to order more men who must be the law. "But," said Mr. Plagge, "if we are left to very few Republican of any office in other, and yet in this case, the applicant is accountable for the very few Republican of any office in the community, he should be held "All of which may be all right," penned the sort of way, "but I am running this department and don't need any advice." The area and process to tell in perforied and pictured English what he thought of the situation in which he strade out of the place with his characteristic Chancelledine look, to the star character of the superlative patronage of power. The Union Mutual Association of this city is the largest union in the state and is in everyity of great good. With Marian Walker, King, Driscoll and Stainbridge at its head, the union is a business in this and explaining Station. An annual report made to the State commissioner of labor has done last year. Thomas E. Malan. New Brunswick Notes New Brewster, N. J.,—May B. Dr. W. H. Hart of Georgia punished at M. H. Ellis and M. K. Gurcha Sunday night to a overdose. The servon was impersonal and affectionate. The Lord's Supper was moved. Afterwards the Lord's Supper was celebrated Wednesday; no bread was eaten and hops for his recovery in adultery. Jerry Coryma of South Carolina in his business, John Bell of New York City in his business, and Mr. McPurland will be his assistant. Head of Domestic sales, John Ellis, was given a Friday morning sursevillin, which was赦除了 a huge number of patients for his length, but he turned to her home home. studied at the National Institute of the important matter of the higher education of the nation, and was a gift from Harvard and best of America in the prize awarded for the prize who brought the nation A.H. of the highest degree, of the longest and varied use of strong drawing to the eye of the Afro-American whom he is admired, a devoted member than acquired. P. J. Grisham, the data of Howard University, we be able of them, therefore, must, by all the same, have the best interest and University at heart. We have been led to propose that Dr. John University, upon the foundation of Howard University, would establish the University to that high degree in the confidence of the people which national under the presidency of General Oliver O. Howard, the founder of It, and which it has not enjoyed since, because of his division of opinion which followed the decision of Dr. Patton, instead of John University, and which he had instituted in 1877, we believe, as we must open our memory for the fact, many of which transpired when the writer a student of Howard University. We note that Dr. Gordon but once, soon after we was elected President of Howard University. We then formed a very high degree of his character and of the work he expressed a hope to accomplish for the University. We still have hope that he will accomplish all that he had in his mind to undertake when we talked with him. A man of full fallows of hearing and experience and with such high ideals, it appears to me, that he will be a man of great race, in the position he himself as president of a real life man, or of allowing others to influence him along the lines of prejudice. On the contrary, we still hope that he will stamp this phase of the matter which fourured under the administration, in a mild manner of President Patton, and assumed proving proportions under President Hankins, the last man we should have supported of harboring in himself or tolerating in his association in the management of the Institute of Judicial Research on race and the rights of Washington, and the private conversation of responsible people in Washington, have been burdened with people concerning the tendency in the prospect of affairs at Howard University under the management of President Borden extended to bring the University into dispute and to cripple any efforts that might be in contemptulation or be ad-hoc, and to maintain a healthy bank. Mr. Grimke's conclusions as an outcome of the dominant sentiment in Washington towards Dr. Gordon and in work in the University. We still have confidence in Dr. Gordon, and hope that he will succeed in dissipating the rumors and doubts that now surmount him and the work of Howard University. We still hope that the generosity of General Howard, and that his efforts to promote university research is a principally endowment, which honors research in authority squared or, indeed, will result in accomplishing the work intended by the noble benefactor. baker Washington a Prophet of National and Race Good Will. Burmese in all ages have been men, for the most part, whose teachings or activities inevitably led to violence of one and another. When the Gracoch unintended to reform the civil abuse of the Roman empire it led to continual upheaval in the government which did not subside even after the two brothers had been accused of adultery. Mahachan undertook to reform the religious abuse of Europe which and grown up under the Roman Catholic Church, it throw the whole Concinent into intense connection; when the Puritans indoctrined to reform the abuse in the government of Great Britain it led to the burning of the King and to the Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell and ultimately to the full power; the unveiling of the evils if the government of the French by Voltaire and Rousseau led to the French Revolution, which devoured kingergy, preaching the sodality, brought forth Nara. the emancipates and the Napoleonic force convulsed Europe for a century, and culminated in the war, which is with in to day; the colonization, in which they attack the institution of the joined by William Lloyd the battle slogan, "I am in not equituate, I will not inch into such—and I will be heard," Northwest, it naturally culminated in the Civil War, in the emancipation of the slave and the enfranchisement of the freee. It is difficult in the vault of the sword, where whose honeys have not led to revolution. And this is logical, a fact of whatever sort, because so they refuse to be dislodged at the point of the bayonet. The conditions growing out of the Reconstruction governments of the South were bound to produce a revolution of the most far-reaching character. The revolution amounted to a general of government and to the institution of a policy of reaction in all matters affecting the Afro-American people, the leadership of which, like that of the most organizations, is behind in obscurity. It came to a head in 1877. Since that time the Afro-American citizens of the Southern States have had "no rights which a white man should have," and the Federal Supreme Court has rescinded, for a man who enjoins neither civil political rights can be victimized at will by any compass who has the disposition and the nerve to do it. History proves this much, as to conditions in the Southern States, since 1878. All sorts of white and black and colored men have stood out from time to time as the representatives of their respective races; but the master finally settled down to Booker T. Washington of Alabama and Henry W. Grady as the two men in the South who more than any other were the spokesmen of their section and of their people. That Booker Washington was the abler, braver and stronger of all the people of the Southern States will be helped by the underlying philosophy of such of them. Mr. Washington has always stood on the following platform: I thank God that I have grown to a point where I can sympathize with a white man as much as I can sympathize with a Northern white man, as much as with a Northern white man. * * * The black man who cannot, let love and sympathy go out to a white man is but half Mr. Grady laid down his platform as follows The imprescence of the white race of the South must be maintained forever, and the dominance of the Negro race resisted at all points must all harmonize, because the white nation of no new truth; it has dided forever in the marrow of our bones, and shall run forever with the blood, that feeds Anglo-Saxon hearts. Mr. Graddy has long been dead, and the philosophy he laid down as a rule of conduct for the white men of the South en states is dying, and will not survive. Why? Because the Dritine Master has written "Ichabod all over it," "Love thy neighbor as yourself," with the Good Book. The South west mad with the Graddy philosophy as it had before gone mad with the Calebon philosophy of secession; but the latter was shot out of it and the former has been dying for years, because it breeds race stifle and hampers industrial development. Mr. Washington started with no place to stand in the estimation of mankind twenty years ago, and during all of the time since he has prescribed the gospel of peace and good will and labor for all of the people of the Southern States. At first the South came to hear him gladly and then the North came to the prophet of National and race good will—the prophet of love and of industrial education and uplift of all of the people. In the supreme effort to create a better sentiment between the two races, especially in the Southern States, Mr. Washington was fortunate in first being able to influence President McKinley in this direction and then President Roosevelt, who has leased him by him very largely in all of his acts and speech upon matters affecting the country, entirely to the wisdom of Mr. Washington's philosophy and to his persistence during the past eight years in preaching that philosophy all over the land, that at last we have come upon a period of calm after the long storm in the affairs of the two races, in which violence has almost disappeared as a prime factor. The first half of the current year, for instance, there have been but 13 loyalties as against the corresponding power of the Southern States in 1888 of civil and political rights in the Southern States is bound to follow, gradually, to be sore, but none the less sad and welcome. We do not claim for Mr. Washington that he has accomplished all of this good work alone; but that he has created and directed the sentiment which makes it possible we are free to claim, because it is a fact. And there is nothing marvelous in it, except the man himself, who was enough to array himself against the best thought of the man of the sort of education the mission of the race would be towards the radical and violent attitude of the Southern whites. He has been the prophet of peace as well as of industrial education and development, and has not allowed himself to turn aside or to be turned aside from his main purpose. Both men have produced by his wisdom and self-restraint. They will proclaim more in the future than in the past, for the good and even in the ground will continue to grow with the years, white grass and material prosperity and natural signal of the more boundless Christian charity and the full march of man will continue and the full march of man will continue. New England and the Old America, the American and the Old America, the Old American and the Old American, the Old American, the Old American, and best intrepe in the Life of the church. As the most usual in the days of New England was the center of all social life, as the New Mortgage was the center of all political life, as the church is among the American people the center of their social Life. This is not as true now, especially in the large cities, or it was in former years, but it is infinitely so as to need a determination influence in the meeting of the character of the people. So what exist? the Afro-American women helped to build and instigate the government church; property that we have it is not easy to estimate; but it is true that in all of our church work the women have taken a leading part in the raising of the money to筹建 and to sustain them after they have been built. Few persons can be found who will not treatly to the vow of the statement. We have spoken to large audiences in many of the churches of the large body of the country, and we have never failed to notice that by far the larger part of the audience in every instance was made up of women. Observations of the women of regular dress will distract them thing. Indeed, our women have been and are the Life of our church work. They appear to take more interest in it than the man, who spend most of their time and effort in the work of the secret and fraternal organizations, where the sleepsome purpose is to make provision for caring for the sick and buying the dead. The division of the two men in this way is not necessarily to the observant, and may, if properly analyzed, "point a moral and adorn a tale," the nature of which does not moth not. It is also a fact that Afro-American women are the life of the Sunday school work, the most important because primary feature of church work. In this field they have rendered a great good of it has been maintained broadcast throughout the Life of the people and of the church. The race has just come to be proud of the splendid work the women have done and are doing in the Sunday-school and church, as well as in other important relations which make for race character and strength. Aro-Americans and the Philippinean The New York Evening Post says: From letters and newspapers received from the Philippine plane it is more than ever evident that the islands are no place for the American Negro. This was the conclusion of Mr. T. J. Lynch, the archipelago a couple of years ago as a special commissioner to ascertain whether there could be Negro colonization on a large scale, as was hoped by some Southern Semenat. But conditions have grown worse. Writing in a Mail newspaper, James J. Lynch, the archipelago declares that the Negro is debarred from certain positions in the civil service which he will fill well. Mr. Lynch thinks this injustice mitigates; none less this discrimination is partly responsible for the large number of Negro vanguards in the Philippines. Not a helping hand is extended to the Negroes who go down, and even the best fitted for the struggle is far from being an opportunity. Instead, he is writing well-received Republics a colored man recently complained that a number of Negro workers who were arrested at a drinking resort in Malta were innocent of the growing prejudice in civil, military, social, and official circles against their race. Everything possible is being done, so there are no reports, to discourage American Negroes from going to or remaining in the islands. Mr. Fortune has not said that Negro colonization would not be good for the Negro and for the Philippines. Under Government control and management it would be good. It would, put new blood into the Philippines, who badly need it, and it would introduce a labor force into the Islands which they have not now and which they badly need. Properly directed, such colonization could be made to solve the race problem in the United States and the Philippines, question in the Philippines. How? We shall elaborate the matter in another article, in a future issue. But Mr. Fortune has said that in under existing conditions of Government in the Philippines, where the Southern white man dominates the civil and military administrations and does not want the Negro in the Philippines in any capacity, they are no place for the Negro. In our last issue, our editorial on the Philippines and Mr. Lynch's article, which we reproduced, sustained our position as here stated again. Mr. Carnegie's Benefactions Andrew Carnegie has given $10,000,000 as a fund to pension old college and university teachers. It was announced some time ago that Mr. Carnegie would give bit more to the establishment of libraries. When he gets through with helping the small colleges some he will be at the end of his giving. And what a time Mr. Carnegie has had of it, scattering millions for the intellectual enlightenment and instruction of mankind! History furnishes no example like it. And broad sense character he has displayed to the old man over he retired from active business! Mr. Carnegie began life on a wage of $0 a week; in his old age he has given $130,000,000 for public education and charity, and done it with a cheerful word and a smiling face which have lightened the burdens and resilient the hopes of millions of people. A woman committed suicide at the Imperial Hotel, in New York, last week, who is described as a New Orleans octoroon. She was well educated, and some years ago married to a businesswoman. She became attached to a New York broker, who is married, and when he tired of her and abandoned her she decided to commit suicide. There are a great many octoroons throughout the country who sing with white people and make allusions of one another. They found out to be other than white. In the same business we have found that, always, "grace in bliss." But the women do not have it all their way. There are plenty of men who sing for white, just as the many women who belong to the black community sing for black people to sing for black men. CARRAGE Voy. April 14. Although the South American Regiment, all of which allied the division of their Spanish disarmament and put up in battle for themselves, more than one of these men, the importance of their success came from the contentious question put into the negative documentation. In none of them committed to the more clearly evidenced them in Venezuela, where people in their裤子和 hose, as well as in their drapings and costumes, present much of the evidence of their military prowess. This is especially available in their document, among which ball-drawing takes the first place. To be sure the sport has only degenerated in the opinion of those who designed it in the imagination - spontaneously presented in the ball-drawing - but it has not been of one of the systems. This has been done away with to a great extent by styling the sport "coordina de torne," that is, in changing the hubs, and counts of the presumably moving tearing and infiltrating the hubs, when the ball is thrown. This is the tail. Whether this is due to the difficulty of moving balls with sufficient spirit to fight, is not clear. It certainly is not due to any intervention of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. However, the sport is always drawn a specter. But to show that the spirit introduced by the Spanish conqueror is not alive only requires the special permission of the authorities and the announcement "So Hiberna a morte," which means that they will fight to the death of the bells. Such was the unanimous decision of the Council of Tours of Guatemala is being the second record of the season of 1894-1896. There were six bells inscribed from a famous stock farm and divided under the colors of papyr and green, with two men held in reserve in any one of the first, but tamed tall. The fighters who were to wield the swords were known by the following subterfuge: Ohioans, the Indians, the Papyrians, the Tepians. The handlers, or those whose tichelick task it was to plant dents in the bells, were designated as "Zoord," "Papyr," "Fur," and "Mexican," the penalties, whose rulers it was to give the final comp de耕 with his muskets half after the hovine victim had been Magnificent weather marked the afternoon. President box was occupied by three named guests, one of whom provided an commemorative plaque. The box was adorned with a shrine. There was a numerous concern of spectators in the boxen located on the study floor. There was a few frowning fowers. There is a difference in price of the boxen and the shrine, in the air, the former being merely twice as much as the latter. The description of the boxen is not known, knowledge so may be judged from the fact that "Vomobelische Traino" is in course of being a public speech speaking people like the Vomobelische Traino, the plastered boxen given by the porter and somewhat freely imprinted will give a hint of the artworks to give a hint of the artworks. "The second ball, also black with white stripes, was thrown from the same style by Campion. A good pair of darts was planted in his quarters by Zonza and a man with a long stick. The pair move for good measure the gorund bowed into the hands of Campion, who was standing still. The ball was thrown under unstable conditions, after a protected and unarmed man threw it from a fall by which it busted the player's weapon. The compoisoner in bull-fighting considers that the success of this performance shows that the fury bells and favourable conditions to enable the band of fighters to prove their merit. FAR-OFF 18LANDS OF THE BEA. BY MRE O. WINKLER Suffolk County, Massachusetts, of New York. Custodian, Capt. May, 18-3-1748 The Osservant, Mass., of New York The Osservant, Mass., of New York with a membership population of 84,928, whose electronic database is available and candidate of 14,154, appropriating on its face, and in to the election that is dislunce the first that the Osservant, Mass., of New York Democratic Committee is appointing, James The number of males, whites and blacks of age, in then three States is 1,404,938. In the Provincial, election of 1944 there were 292,953 elected Further in Father and George, with a combined white and Georgia, with a combined white worship of citizenship of 799,977, and with a colored male membership over 21 years of age of 699,938. The number of males in Alabama of voting age is 292,954 and the sum of Alabama and Georgia is 799,977. For Father in the Fourth Provincial State returned to Alabama, with her 292,954 white male, voting only 78,975 for Further, election is that the white names in Alabama are under the Democratic Dump. Twelve Southern States, Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia, pouled 1,159,178 for Furber, while the white voting old man of Alabama was 4,811,777, and the white voting old woman of Alabama was 4,811,777. The total number of whites and blacks of voting age in 4,858,172. "When the real attitude of the President to the South is coming to be understood there in the South after all," in now declared to be the situation by the very paper and political documents of the President and employed the slimness and vicious abuse of him for his love of the South, and the ignorance of our thought the President an advocate of the southern conception of social equality, all the more so because it is in the popular mind that a vote for Reconstruction must an approval of the Illitatus constitution. It will take less a short while for the white man South to realize the illocacy of the South, and the injustice of the South. The Alabama Democrat need not much longer endeavor to terrorize the poor and the destitute, so to any dread of social equality with Washington. The one white white man South must have no fear of resuming a dollar small." TU8KEGEEGRADUATE8 IN EQYPT Satisfy Their Employer and Bid Fair to Make Fortune. From the Southern Letter. Some weeks ago three of our graduate Mennon, Chin Tupinje, Polandar Smith and John Powell, west to the Boondan to grow their business and write as follows conserving these young men: "We involved in good health and cheer and have hired a man in which argues well for their future. If their beginning is in a true index of their character and worth, then I congratulate you upon the kind of man Tungkak made out of dedicated with these boys, boys and their beguilal with their experience in being to the kind of promise is going to prove beneath all at home, some of your man. I hope to then to see these who came in no doubt for any good man. The bigger things in my life will be the things in my life. One who is a leader among our people here in New York, at the highest order of intelligence, can whom opinion upon all questions of mine are respected and delivered to spite of us this morning with considerable counsel and intelligence over certain records published recently in the New York Times and credited to Browder, T. Washington and others. I am pleased to be Virginia Day, May 6 at the Institute. I can be credited to place question marks upon the following as a correct amount of what you need to use. "The remarks of Bender T. Washington at the moment visit of members of the Southern Education Board to Hampden Institute are heartening to the Negro men and show a disposition to kiss the condition of servant to the whiten and to consider this as perfectly antisocial, and as the height of Abolitionism, by the New York Times in its editorial of the following day. The man who poses as our leader, the "Mourn of the Bloo," has taken no position in advancing the platform with him where he is to plaint the name of the Negro." The second article is an editorial in the Times of May 4. of the objections urged against universal education there will be no servants. An educated servant is the best servant for educated people. Day after day, those belonging to property to the sphere of intelligent service educated people daily and whose degree is secured by the security of educated servants. The demand for such servants is then and compulsive; they are given a grace in being a cook," says Mr. Washington. Being a good cook, the president of Harper, was giving the support of intelligent education to the class of every southern community schools for the education. In these I see a more statement of fact and an intelligent observation there. Statements of facts, however, seem offensive to many of us who would possibly prefer to ignore them by silence. "We are largely servants, and the first thing in program must be that we should be good servants," says Mr. Washington. Now, we must rely upon our first becoming good servants, but, being largely employed as servants, let those who are no employed become the most intelligent, the best. And let us remember along with this that are not the only servants who serve in social positions, and that it is perfectly true that "An educated servant is the best servant for educated people." WHITESBORO. Assured Success of the Ex-Congress man's New Jersey Preserve. Ex-Coorgressman White and Prof. S. H. Vick of Wilton, N. C., returned from trip to Whitesboro, N. J., where they had spent most of last week. We explored the extremes hard winter, Mr. White reports his new town doing very well. H. W. Spandring, his nephew, has just completed a neat, two-story, six-room cottage into which he will move in a few weeks. He recently built by Mr. Vick on Reading Avenue (Railroad) is quite a credit to the town and in now arrangements are also being made to organise a home for the patrons are preparing to build this spring. Arrangements are also being made to organise a home for the patrons are preparing to build this spring. A number of the inhabitants have resided land and will engage in trucking about 350 or 400 lots to the place. He also about 350 or 400 lots to the place. Building and Loan Association, also building about the patron, to aid them in getting homes, will be at his law office in this city. It seems that the success of this venture, re-requiring 300 lots have been sold and there are between 50 and 100 inhabitants in the town. The insurance that there will be no failure. W. I. CRICKETERS' RECEPTION Bachmann, Van Vogel - de Havilland in the South we hear, much more a-side about emulating black labor in the form with Indian labor. Three advancing the plan that the latter is more reliable than the former. The average Afro-American laborer is in the form of a boy in hiding alone,aping nothing, moving the better portion of his valuable wages and buying half-a-dozen plus a neat or so he can, when the Indian ladder, the Afro-American will have had sufficient open which to rouse more "dog and homestay" then will be able to cover his wages. For this reason he will be able to buy other necessities and possibly injuries. The South planter or farmer is by nature and raising accustomed to Negro help on the farm and known it is the most desirable, the least expensive, and the only kind that is possible to enjoy a life of cam, life, in his career in his slave when he hears the theories, the economics, the students of social problems and other important institutions of Ireland. Sweden and other countries. RECONSTRUCTION NO CURSE. From the Independent GOV. GLENN ON RACE PROBLEM Commencement Address at Green boro (N. C.) A. & N. College. High Tilthe to Mrs. Terrell. Mrs. J. A. Lumpkin in the New York American THE PASSING` SHOW Current Opinion of Bright Editors of the Afro-American Press. — In Iowa there is absolutely no reason there should be any strictures placed on an account of his color, and we should not on that account. -Hutton to Gazette. — Individuals of great littleness of word, row, selfish and bigoted, always as to others those motives by which they are adversely impelled to action. -Sumner to Defender. — Kindly want to expose the wrong of prescribers. It is an unpleasant thing. But the manually preachers have been numerous and so bold that nothing but will do. The preachers and people who hold theracis are their partners in the fight. Let Rev. Carroll go his way. The reason that he now sows will spring up by he must reap what he knows. If he does it we believe that the iniquity of his past his posterity even to his third relation. -Guttenstrom (S.C.) Chronicle. Yet we must continue to warn our children to be polite and not publicize it. It is now an observable fact that of them who will behave well in the presence of the white contempt will act outrage when their own color comes alone. -The Plain, right, Mr. Mitchell, Spring (11). Forum. — Gossip does not hurt a person as much he thinks. Everybody is gossiped about the same way and yet they all survive it, and if let alone has a tendency to die out, and if it contradicts itself and is self-destructive, then it half-gall� what they say. People have much gossip that they cannot keep track of and they forget it. — Indianapolis World. — While waiting for a car last Sunday of the quietest part of town we behold repeatedly dressed a man wearing backpacks, the opportunity for evenings of growth, and two minutes to two minutes, to be specific, six minutes four minutes, four minutes of one, thus making a visit. Hadn't we better examine the situation of the republic: East St. Louis, St. Louis. — Have you noticed that there are more men in Congress, and that Northern State is into the legislatures. Who is to blame this condition of affairs? Some say the voter is not prone to allow himself to be by some box or contractor, and for the reason it is no longer necessary to reason this true, and it is not a great shame. Why do change it? — Nielbush, New York. — Two policemen of Atlanta saved a boy from a mob of one thousand men and had not care enough about the boy to certain him a name. Had it been a white child, the police would have appalled and the child would have appealed the daily "papar" and the whole family; since it is a colored child, it is well the life was waved. For the city to keep when a graves crime has been committed, the police must be Atlanta Apts. — As we go round the street, men of our race are amazed that a Rev. Carroll) should be found beating someone to bolster the doctrine of priority, and wondering what good can be of the discussion of that subject. If it were a white man, white blame? for the Negro? The God whom Rev. Carroll chime to man has hitherto been represented. Creator of all men. If this information be correct, and there be responsibility where it belongs. Some men will do almost anything haul in the cash. South Carolina. Brother Fortune of the Titicaca N. W. is displeased because there was a vision for utilizing the Afro-America of the South in the construction of the South suggests that it may be an unpleasant experience for that interesting portional Uncle Brother Fortune's reasoning is likely for any attempt to divert South- Panama would provide a blow to that would appeal Christiana. O. W. would be more likely to see the South would soon become a host dermas. *St. Paul (Miss) Appeal.* We notice that some of these bakers over the country are fighting in Washington and are replying every state his town. They may be wants to be without asking their consent. But if they are displeased at his way of doing him, will they give up their position about what they are doing, they will be sure to be around for an anger hole. Of course Washington may not be as perfect as Avens, imperfect mortals, but he is a noisy person with a most remarkable capacity for kissing and for patting greatrants. In Karen make-up and worth, he is around to admire, and he is not only loving the cold weather but also the warm weather as well. He is not only loving the people of the province but also the people of the world. Lancaster at the Post Office at New York or Saint Mary, Michigan. In the United States, Markets and Commerce Institute, the Philippine Institute, Federal Bank, One Year, $150, Six Months, Three Months, 30 cents. In Foreign Countries in the United States, extra cost extra for each postage of postage. Money can be sent by Mail, in a Postal Money Order, by letter, by the Post Office of those can be registered, in a Registered Letter. You can a Money Order at your Post Office, pay a Money Order at Peterson, at the New York Post Office. Advertising Rates furnished on application. News matter for publication should reach the Post Office, and the advertisements will be received until noon on Wednesday for issue of current work. Address All Mail to: FORNEY & PETRSON, Publishers, 416th Street, New York, NY 10024 New York City News BOROUGH OF MANHATTAN R. H. Huney, practiced martial arts 107 were hired most recently Avenue - Adri. C. H. Marshall left for Atlantic City Houston. C. H. Hamlin has moved from 760 Greenwich West Alphard. 1. served to sell the New York Ack App. Store 2. served to sell the New York Ack Street in 113 Alba and grip 3. served to sell the New York Sirt St. 4. served to sell the New York Sirt St. j Cincinnati Carter of Washington, D.C. for appointment to K.C. Shorter, of 311 Wight H. Lawrence after spending the winter he has returned to his bone in Abbey N. Bell. Little Nass Class, W.H. Vaughan and K. Vaughan, of 111 West 51th Street—Adry. 111 West 51th Street will be open all after Trump's Open, May 15. Special Louisiana W. W. of Richmond, Va. is his brother, R.G. G. Forrester, of 16 West the open "garner" Monday May 15. Sunday Gilbert now in the State has been transferred to the State University of Alabama on charges. Mrs. W. Wiggins of West Street street left Wilmington, Wilmington, N.C. the expo of reason several months, Dr. Perry Opens in the fourth and twelfth street can be held at the Hotel Macosco 213 Adelaide Street. Mrs. Maude Rake Rivers, the well-known woman of the city, might better be able to take nourishment. Mrs. Nellie Johnson of 310 West 53th street party recently in honor of Mrs. Many of her friends were every Tuesday, Thursday and Wednesday at Anderson's Dancing Acad- emy. West Side area is special attention to this event. Special attention will be held at the dance academy in West west Thursday evening, May Avenue of 101th avenue is a leagate of W. M. Wainshanger, who died Askham, N. C. He deceased was every day. May is the night of the Hotel Marshall will be open a special event has been prepared Advent. May L. Hatcher, who had been in ill- ness months, suddenly expired at West side at Westlock April 30. Mrs. R. R. Dennis of Belfast avenue Advent, Dame of Belfast, to Mrs. Mrs. Thompson, and Mrs. Mrs. Watkins, N. Y. Avenue are now being taught on Friday evening, 114116 West American Association of Modern Advent. W. Wainston was born from on Saturday evening, She N. C. of True Rotten, No. 114116 True Rotten. W. Wainston, Lakes of gantle, N. C. of True Rotten, No. 114116 True Rotten. W. Wainston, the great lute, N. C. of True Rotten, No. 114116 True Rotten. London, prior vice commander of the Post, 205, author of section 10 of the Act, and member of the committee where he was appointed. branch of the Trial has been owed to West 13th street, where an adventure day or night, Charles H. H. traveling saloon for fishing of H. Shawton & I. H. H. has gone on an erry day, West 13th, and North A. H. H. of Charleston, S.C. H. H. of H. Mrs. J. L. WH. H. H. of H. afflicted here few those great for the same J. J. J. West 54th street, who has prawnmum, has almost Washington, D.C. in a Boston, Charge, 20th Ecst. 25th An. L. Arthur, posted last Sturn- till, day, $100 was raised, alternations of commission Rev. will be held. black blood pear and rice, bone made baked beans, good fried chicken, dinner 20th 25th, Navy battleship of New York city - Adv. Johnson, who invented naval storm force, of extraordinary power, of longevity, of longevity, has returned from a storm. Among the many lice plants that have the great cold storage plant of the Company of Palatine, by electrical He Plant at Atlantic New York division of the Order of T the Metropolitan Mercantile and Jointly appointed in tendering on April of 1908's Hall, 13 West St. near N. W. L. Taylor on the ocean beaches made by him. Richard H. Smith, J. H. Garner, and James E. Garner, both from Atlantic. BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN Dr. L. J. Delaware, dentist, 384 Carlton avenue nuea, Telephone: 1888 W. Preston-Adz. The spring festival and hamer of the Dorcas Home Mimionary Society hold three nights with large results. The half closed Friday night night was highly amazing, with an excellent moral tread in the characters impermeated. Mimionary Lewis of Fulton street went to Newbern, N.C. has work, where she is to be guest at Mrs. Mary Pulcher, and Mr. and Mrs. Pulcher, and mother of five members are mother and brother of the late Jacob Pulcher, Mimionary fance, and the former has former home. Mrs. Pulcher and Mrs. Linnia are to return in June. At Newman Memorial M. K. Church Pastor Jingling to large congregations last Sunday. At the Sunday school at 2:30 p.m. the pastor conducts prayer and praise service, at which the temple is joined in prayer for the saving of the souls of the children under their charges. At the evening presentation the church with a handmade alar gift, which was received in behalf of the church trustees. Mrs. Ulling was accompanied by Mrs. Therena Burton, through whose solicits Mr. made. The commission of the church was by the bayer, assisted by Rev. J. A. Tappen. BROOKLYN Y. M. C. A. Celebrate Third Anniversary - Natal Justice Showing Growth. The third anniversary of the Carlton avenue brunch, Y. M. C. A., was held at Bridge Street A. M. K. Church on Friday evening May 5. The speakers were George Foster Peabody, Dr. William L. Holkley, chairman of the branch; Rev. M. C. Brooks the pastor; and Dr. William L. Holkley the pastor; and the platform, besides the speakers, were General Secretary E. F. Pee, Assistant General Secretary H. L. Simmons, E. V. C. Eato, P. H. Gilbert, vice chairman of the branch; Secretary P. E. Orange, N. L. Rev. Peter Fraser, Atlanta, Georgia; International Secretary W. A. Huntner, Rev. W. T. Dixon, D. D. and Rev. W. T. Dixon, D. D. and by the Y. M. C. A. orchestra and Bridge Street church chair. The meeting was in gay attire and the addresses were withinline. Lakewood Notes. LAWKENH, N. J. May R.-Nov. Brooks of Richmond presided a service on Monday morning at Mendonca Baptist Church. In lieu, the president month of the year, and our guests are closing. The people are going to their summer honeys. Go out at the A.M. B. King Church a short time before the service. BENEFIT The Young People's Lyceum Of Mount Olivet Baptist Church REV. M. W. GILBERT, D.D., Pastor At MT. OLIVET BAPTIST CHURCH, 159 W. 53rd Wednesday, May 24, at 8:15 P. M. MR. ROBERT ROY MATTHEWS is ambitions first for the advancement of race, musically, and he is devoting his life to this noble object. He has just graduated a higher course in voice culture, and is now prepared to study at European Mutters. Notice is hereby given that I, the undersigned, have no longer necessary and consent of the owner of the building of which you K. Davis and Samantha Bright of 1967 Broadway are managers. P. Louis Spelling. $7,000 Deal in Atlantic City. ATLANTIC CITY, Md. R.-A. $7,000 deal was commenced yesterday through the Wm. R. Page Real Estate Agency when S. W. Themes of New York city bought the well-known building of the city. He will open a first-class hotel for our people, something which is greatly needed. Williamabridge Notes. J. Travis was called suddenly to Washington, D.C. to his campus, who was ill and died before he could arrive at his bedside. Trinity High School Church held its usual services and was largely attended. The Sunday school was closed at 10.43. Mrs. Winston's three children are very ill from the whoooping cough, which the eldest caught at school. Attorney Cowan Wins Two Cases. Consulmaster C. Cowan has recently won two once against the "Metropolitan Street Railway Company." The first was then awarded to Travis, who was awarded in 100, by the Metropolitan, and who was awarded on May 3, 1805, a jury verdict for $400. The second is that of George C. Murray, whose home, wagon, train, and car were awarded to Travis, and who was awarded in the New York Supreme Court $400 damages. R. C. Simmons to Speak in Orange. ORANGE, N.J., May 8. The Eyeworth League of the Methodist Episcopal Church in East Orange is planning for a large meeting next Sunday afternoon, when several special addresses will be delivered. Reece C. Simmons has been accustomed to make the principal speech. CONCERT RAISE8 $212.66. But St. Luke's Is Always Successful. "Full" - The Smart Set. New Haven, May 9. - St. Luke's Parish scored a success in the excelsior concert given Wednesday evening, May 5, at Warmer Hall for the benefit of the church. St. Luke's is a good drawing card and always makes a good hit. The proceeds for that night only were $212.00. The program consisted of vocal, wind and string music, which elicited enthusiastic applause. Those who took part were Mine, Hriley Jackson, Maniamea D., P. Duller, K. L. Henderson, E. Butler and P. K. Swan; Minea Jack, I. Locke and P. K. Swan; Minea Jack, W. Smith, G. M. Murray, W. T. Hillman, L. A. Ponderon, J. A. Anthony, C. P. P. Baker, T. K. Jones and R. Friedwell. Mine Sadie Anthony was accompanied. The first prize, a dinner set, was awarded to Mine M. Jones, whose sale of tickets resumed the highest sum, the second, a Morris chair, Mississippi and Linda and George H. Biddle joined their parents Sunday at the Zoo conference in Waterbury, and returned Monday night. G. U. O. OF GALILEAN FISHERMEN Hear Annual Sermon and Report on $100,000 Bank at Hampton. The Grand United Order of Galilean Fishermen board its annual Thanksgiving sermon, which will be held April 27th. Barbara S. M. E. Church in West 25th street. About 220 members of the order were present, including 20 juveniles, in charge of Sister E. Katherine D. Henderson prized the fundamental principles of the order with great force and obequence. Charles P. Wilmore was chief marshal and was assisted by F. Douglas and F. Thorpe. The order has never made TO LET.-Nearly furnished front room, 180 West 57th street, Mrs. Hocken. WANTED.-Young girls to do dozing on dromes, Lawns, 73rd Patton street, upstairs. TO LET.-Nearly furnished rooms, large and Mrs. Dickinson, 180 West 57th street, apr 20. Given warranty dead free the lot you are buying, no matter how much you still own. Send for Free Tickets for our Grand Excursions every Tuesday and Thursday. Trains leave at 12:15 p. m. sharp. FRANK PEAFEAM Bloom 204, 36 CURTLAND STREET FRANK PFAFFMAN, Room 904, 38 CURTLAW STREET New York, NY 10017 PRONE 210 CURTLAW. WALTER F.CRAIG'S GOLD NATION STAR Largest and Most Popular Furniture Firm on the West Side. Furniture, Carpets, Bedding, Oilcloth, Linoleum, Stoves, Go THE GOD WILL BE WITH US E F I T TO JOY MATTHEWS AUSPICES OF People's Lyceum Baptist Church ERT, D.D., Pastor CHURCH, 159 W. 53d 24, at 8:15 P. M. It is ambitions for the advancement of life to this noble object. He has just and is now prepared to study gree able him to complete his studies at Miss Hirstress Ballock, President; Miss Marceline Kennedy, Vice President; Miss Clonlin Nelson, Sec.; Miss Ottawa Fields, Am't Sec.; Mrs. Chen, White, Tress; Thos. K. Cohen, Mgr may 4 26. Bvv. Gruntish Rimst of Mt. Vernon canon at the Rathen Presbyterian Church and PHD- day night. James K. Churchman of Gougne at the Rathen Presbyterian Church in the chapel in the town of Engwarden on "What I Am Determined to Do" under the Mt. Vernon chapel. His epistle also in the evening at the St. Elizabeth A. M. K. Klein Church. Bvv. Gruntish is at stand- ing A. M. K. Klein Conference at Gudman, N. BROOKLYN 9079 LOT K. Furnished furnished to one or two type- ers. Apply M. Payne, Paper- West Road, lil ball. LOT K. Furnished furnished with respe- tive room. M. Payne, F. Bulkeley, O. Olsen- Avenue, Brooklyn. TO LET - Furnished front porch and bedrooms for light livingroom; first floor, Mrs. C. Landis, 43th avenue. TO LET - Two nicely furnished rooms with baths. TO LET - Two nicely furnished rooms with average, Williamsbridge, N. Y. TO LET - Nestly furnished room with con- veniences for guests only. Apply Mrs. D. Nelson, 79th avenue, near 6th street. O LET—Nextly furnished rooms. Lamps and appliances. Kitchen. Bedroom. Bathroom. App. M. Mrs. S. West 10th Street and 8th street. [ODDING for guestroom—Nextly furnished room. Kitchen. Bedroom. Bathroom. App. M. Mrs. S. West 119th Street street. Furnished rooms. ROOM to rent - Good location. 99 Wil- lson avenue, Long Branch, N. J. may 4 TOLET - Furnished rooms. 91 West St.街 all amenities. 7 Tacklin. may 4 AGENTS ANTIBODY CAN DO IT AGENTS Universal Manufacturing Company Pittsburgh, Pa. mall & REAL ESTATE The cheapest and best invest city, directly on the beach, a lot 30,100 with a dwelling of 12 rooms. Must be sold at once to settle an estate Price. $4,000 W. N. R. PAGE, 116 N. Connec- tent avenue Atlantic City, N. J. Why continue to pay high rentals? We have a beautiful line of contages for sale or to rent on moderate terms. HICKS & ROSS REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 123 Evergreen Avenue Corona, L. I. New York Office, 602 West 22nd St. CARPET CLEANSING Ottimizing Brussels and Tampa, Florida, Wilton and Velvet, 6c ayd, Axminster & Moquette, 7c ayd Keepping and Relaying 213 West 60th Street TO LET A Large Light Store with three large living rooms, Good, well populated neighborhood. Rent, $75 per month. Without rooms, $25 per month. Good chance for right party. Apply Janitor, 1ight up, West side, or 18th Street, 868 Eighth Ave, 143rd St. Tel. 1339 33th St. may 11 TO LET. Nice apartments, 6 rooms, bath, range, etc.; excellent neighborhood. E L WILLIAMS, 220 E 75th st., 456 Ninth Avenue, BW1 50th and 80th Street CLARENS EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY EVENING PROF. OSCAR JACKSON, instructor Hall to call for Receptions or Parties CAPITAL STOCK - $500,000.00 (Unexpired under terms of the Rule of Sale Type) An investment that will pay 10 per cent in annual dividends beaches making it possible for responsible, law-abiding people to live in responsible 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." WM. TEN RYCK, JOHN E. BRUCK, WINSTON E. DARBY, RICHARD E. WILSON, WALTER E. HANDY, JOHN W. STEVENSON, FRANK STRUART, WILFORD H. SMITH, JAMES E. GARNER, JAMES C. THOMAS, PHILIP A. PATTON, Jr. Telephones 6768 Cortlandt and 6707 Cortlandt Write for partitions and Prospectus 1yr Piano Playing Self-Taught --- BOOKER T. WASHINGTON advice to all industrious color "GET SOME "GET A HOME O Why Pay High R when we offer you a beautiful 6 or Home at or we will build you a home just build a bahrain $13 per month,—just like rea at Railway, N. J. 20 minutes from sylvania Railroad. Chokely located Lots $100 up.-$5 Doll Your life insured FREE. In case of dishe the lot you are buying, no matter how mu Sand for Free Tickets for our Grand K mar leave at 12:15 p. m. sharp. FRANK PFAFFMAN 'PHONE 570 CONTLANDT. WALTER H. Orchestra, off Don't lose time, money and patronage. HAVE THE "Craig's Farm Is the Object, Best and Most Reliable, colored musicians in the city, each on tective Union, Local 310, A. F. of M. mar 30 8 moe. Green Ladies' Hair D MANUFACTURER OF H Afro-American Hair all kinds of Wigs, Front Pieces and S 589 Eight feb3 6mo. Near 32 CASH OR E. V. K 603, 605, 607, NINTH A R T. WASHINGTON'S advice to all industrious colored folk is "GET SOME PROPERTY" "GET A HOME OF YOUR OWN" "Pay High Rent?" are offer you a beautiful 6 or 7 room modern Home at $1,200 w. will build you a home just as you like it, for a small $13 per month, just like rent--but you get a home away, N. J., 20 minutes from Herald Square, New Y ork Railroad. Checkedly located $100 up,-$5 Down and $1 po lumed FREE. In one of death, your family will get a W are buying, no matter how much you still own. Tickets for our Grand Excursions every Tuesday 12:15 P. M. sharp. K PFAFFMAN, Boom 204, 36 CURTIS New York HOME $20 CONTLANDT. ALTER F. CRA Orchestra, Office and Studio 831 W. 59th S free time, money and patronage experimenting with inf HAVE THE BEST "Craig's Famous Orchestra" Best, Best and Most Reliable, and contains a represent musician in the city, each one a member of the Mus Union, Local 310, A. F. of M., the only recognized Un moose. Greenberg' les' Hair Dressing P MANUFACTURER OF HUMAN HAIR GOODS -American Hair Goods a Spe Wigs, Front Pieces and Switches In Stock, and 89 Eighth Avenue BOOKER T. WASHINGTON'S 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., 20 minutes from Herald Square, New York, on the Pennsylvania Railroad. Chokely located Orchestra, Office and Studio, 821 W. 59th St., N. Y. Don't lose time, money and patronage experimenting with inferior Bands Is the Oldest, Best and Most Reliable, and contains a representation of the best colored musician 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, March 30 3 m o Ladies' Hair Dressing Parlors MANUFACTURER OF HUMAN HAIR GOODS Afro-American Hair Goods a Specialty Near 39th Street CASH OR CREDIT E. V. KRAUS 603, 605, 607, 609 and 613 NINTH AVENUE 603, 605, 607, 609 and 613 NINTH AVENUE Northwest cor. of 43rd St. Largest and Most Popular Furniture Firm on the M Furniture, Carpets, Bedding, Oilcloth, Linoleum, Sto Carts and Baby Carriages. A Guaranteed Sewing Ma- and Most Popular Furniture Firm on the Carpets, Bedding, Oilcloth, Linoleum, St Carts and Baby Carriages. A Guaranteed Sewing Ma A Guaranteed Sewing Machina Free With Every Purchase of over $75. Sunshine Workers' Spring Bazaar AT ST. JAMES PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 359 West St. Lst. Rev. C. Le Roy Butter, Pasto? Miss Hallie L. Anderson Sullivan's Harlem River Park and Casino 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. The book meets the reader at the piano, tells you how to play it, and then the one for P, and on so. Within five minutes you will be playing and on very easy steps the player is led on and on till simple, easy steps. The book also teaches the much shorter time it takes to learn to play with pleasure. Anybody can learn to play by Mail or on premises of One Dollar. THEODORE DRURY 217 East 50th St., New York. BINGTON'S and folk is "PROPERTY" OF YOUR OW " nt? room modern $1,200 up you like it, for a small payment down, the but you get a bond for your money,— Herald Square, New York, on the Penn- town and $1 per Week your family will get a Warranty Deed free to you still ow. durections every Tuesday and Thursday. Room 304, 36 CURTLAUND STREET New York Oily year 23 $ mo. T. CRAIG'S Face and Studio, 821 W. 59th St., N. Y. experimenting with inferior Bands BEST Mus Orchestra " and contains a representation of the best member of the Musical Mutual Pro- the only recognized Union in New York. berg's Pressing Parlors HUMAN HAIR GOODS Goods a Specialty stitches In Stock, and Made to Order n Avenue n Street CREDIT ARAUS 609 and 613 AVENUE re Firm on the West Side. Noth, Linoleum, Stoves, Go- Carriages. Sewing Ma- THE GOLD TRADING CENTER GOLD TRADING STAMP M. K. Orchestra Scats $1, for sale at the following places: Theodore Drury, 217 East 58th street; E. F. H. Naval, Naval Hospital, Brooklyn, Halls' Thoose, 2000 Willisburgh's Handler's Music Store, Fulton St., Brooklyn; Chamber's Drug Store, Fulton and Adelphil Street, Brooklyn. Dancing after the Opera. Republican Club of Kings County AT THE BAPTIST TEMPLE, Thursday Evening, May 25th, 1905 All Seats Reserved - 50c, 75c. and $1.00 DOORS OPEN AT 7:30 CONCERT AT 8:15 p.m. This effort on the part of the Club is for the purpose of securing a fund with which to purchase a Home for the Club. To this high-potential effort we urge the cooperation of the friends and well wishes of the organization. Tickets on sale of Danielle Hells Piano Warerooms, 433 Fulton street; Seaton Baptist Temple; Tennessean Gift and Intercultural Club, 43 Rockwell Place, Young Ma's Christian Association tilt avenue unreach. Persons from New York take Third avenue and Flatbush avenue cars from the Bridge direct to the Temple. Annual Summernight's Festival Metropolitan Association of Dancing Masters At Sulzer's Harlem River Park and Casino Second Avenue, 126th to 127th Streets, New York On Friday Evening, June 2nd, 1905 Music by PROFESSOR W. F. CRAIG Thomas J. Turner William H. Vaughn William H. Hanks Edward C. Smith William Gay J. Hoffman Woods* E. C. Harris may 14 17 Doors open at 8 a.m. clock Curtains rise promptly at 8:30 The following cast will present "THE SECOND HONEYMOON," a comedy in three acts by Wybert Horns. Moestra J. Howard Braxton, J. Edward Nall, Charles Chagett, J. Jr. Horns, and J. Horns. Burleigh, M. Vernier Van Home. Musical by Prof. W. F. Craig. J. Hofman Floors, Floor Mgr. Admission: 50 cents Reserved Seats, 75 cents CIRCLE: Moestras N. Brown F. Carnand, J. W. Dlas, H. Douglas, V. C. Kato, T. J. Fisher, A. J. Horty, F. Gilbert, P. Harrison, F. Howe, R. Moon, M. A. Bicklett, L. A. Mouserastra, T. R. McKeel, I. N. Smith, J. Hoffman Floors, K. D. White, Dr. V. Morton Jones. Amicitia, Amor et Veritas Tenth Annual Summernight's Festival and Picnic Of Theobald Lodge, No. 3890, G. U. O. O. F. P. At Sulzner Harlem River Park, 1918th Street and FRIDAY EVENING JUNE 9th, 1905 Music by PROF. W. F. CRAIG TICKETS, 35 cents Executive Committee: P. N. F. J. Thomas Johanon, Chairman; P. N. F. Wm. T. Hooper, Vice Chairman; P. N. F. J. Thomas Secretary; P. N. F. Charles Minstrel, Chairman; P. N. F. E. Edwards, Vice Chairman; P. N. F. Robert T. Trevino, Chairman; P. N. F. Sander Minstrel, Chairman; P. N. F. E. Edwards, M. Randolph, P. N. F. Robert L. Jones, P. N. F. Waler O. Smith, P. N. F. John Sumner, P. N. F. William D. Cole, P. N. F. Thoos, A. Lockery, P. N. F. Cary Epps, P. N. F. George N. Taylor, P. N. F. Morgan Jurgens, Players, P. N. F. Edward M. Rudolph, P. N. F. Harry Haynes. FOUR NEW HOUSES FOUR NEW HOUSES 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 halls and baths. Hot water supply. Rents $23 & $24. Basements $12 NONE BUT RESPECTABLE TENANTS NEED APPLY Robert B. Ward SUPERINTENDENT 158 West 62d Street The annual meeting of the Providence University's medical school, the second annual meeting of the organization, at the University of St. Stephen's Church, the center of the memory and tribute was read by the memory and tribute was read by 18,000 and 16,000 in change of the life- span of the deceased. The memorial have been built at the University of St. Stephen's Church. The tribute's report shows the dedication to the Old Palmery will Owl Hall Owl Hall willow is bred by R. W. Sawyer, a Baptist Church, Sunday at 2.55 p.m. in the Owl Hall and Hall A, P. G. Kennedy of Carrion are bred in association with invi- vigent Owl Daisy. The financial services over the remains of little and very little of the R. Linneman, who died on the 14th day of June, was held Sunday at a ceremony long held on Washington Avenue based on the author of Washington, and the private in the city of Washington. The Rev. D. Linneman, member of Cooks and the Rev. D. Linneman, member of Cooks and his home in Bank street, is convalescent. Mr. Fred William, who broke his leg in New Hospital, has return to Providence. HERBERT ON IDEAL GOVERNMENT No Distinctions of Mace or Creek But Universal Brotherhood. President Scotland made reference to the recent brilliant work of a large number of friends from every direction to make the event a most memorable occasion. A large number of friends, Boston University, Brooklyn, Boston University, Parton and other ladies were invited to attend the event in a letter of the guestmen, who encouraged the number's able discourse. Those who took part were Mrs. B. H. Parton, M. B. Sauer, R. R. H. Parton, M. J. Sauer, L. A. Sauer, J. H. K. Scotland and May 17 a joint debate between Mrs. I. W. Frazier and Louis A. Sears will be held at the University of Glasgow in women than in men." A prize selected will be awarded by the Forum to the constant presenting the most logical TWO HUNDRED BAPTIZED. Four Thousand Look On "Black Patii" Applauded by Whites. Troy Notes. SHUT OUT OF EMPLOYMENT Afro-American Help Displaced by White on "Saratoga." ALMANT, May 10.—The Troy night boat "damnato" has always had colored men in the hall and also in the dining room. This year, the boat has always been a bell hall and white shoes also in the hall as bell boots. [The boat is trying to do away with colored hall men so as to receive the applause of the company, but it is hoped that his schisms will be resolved. It is out of every second employment very rapidly. It is hard, however, that the traveling public is not greatly pleased over the change on the Rev. Michael贮 occupied his pulpit on last Sunday morning at the Concord Church on the 4th Sunday of March, at which time the pulpit will be occupied by a woman, and there collection. The revival meeting at the Concord Church is being continued this week. Sister Adalbert is hosting Sister Proctor this week with the revival meeting. Rev. Iris, Nicholas of the Concord Baptist Church on the 4th Sunday of this month. The peculiarity about this baptism is that all who are to be baptized are Wallee Lewis, oldest son of Walter Lewis, is very ill, at the home of his parterie, 322 N. 4th St. in Chicago. A bromide headdress, Charles Vedder, husband of Ilanck Brunk, was drowned last week in the Hudson, Mr. Edward Smith of Gloverville, Mt. Vernon, and the guest of Mimi Faill Williams of Ekst street. NEWPORT NOTES. Club, Social, Business, Church and Personal Events. Newswire, R, I, May 8—On that Tuesday evening the W. M, W. Club at the campus home of Mina Jakephine Jennings. As there was no business before the club except the concert on May 19, the club itself would receptions to Irwin Merchant. After a beautiful collation was served all tume to music and song. By special request Mina Jakephine named "My Heart's in the Rose I Gave to You." Some of the gentlemen who danced great sorrow to have Mr. Merchant lauze the city so soon, Mr. Merrill, who gave great sorrow to have Mr. Mitchell and left this city Thursday to study in one of New England's noted board schools for young people. The wry woman was royally entertained by the young people. On Friday evening, May 5, the board of directors of the Bank in the Office of Attorney 2.1. Mitchell in the Cogebell Building to perfect the office of J. T. Alma, business manager; J. T. Alma, chief attorney; and W. Jobkowski, secretary. Mme. Lay Glyfes gave a closing reception to Mme. Lay Glyfes with a message at her beautiful cottage on Him Street. A large number were present and spect a very large audience. Min. Dervish Bedorey opened the house and received the guests. Mme. Glyfes is in charge of the house, it is in charge of the big house. The City of Oakland Baptist Church, hold national national Sunday at 1:30 p.m. at the Fort George Beach Baptist or Birkley Park and Cemetery, Fort George Beach, S.W. Ocean and Dr. J. Johnson, the church has a local preacher at Tenth Street, 1200 S. Church Street, Inglewood, CA 90209, the church is located at Queen Square, Inglewood and Cemetery, and holds lunch to the Don't forget the concert and dance. Assemble at the concert and dance on May 14, Miss Rene Miner of New Orleans, La., in this city, and in a guest at the concert, the band will spend the summer theatrical. Mr. Walker Thurston, who has been very ill at Miss Tummer's, will be there. The concert will be Bata and Ida Gibbons staged the concert at Bata Hall Thursday evening. The Spread-the-Hand concert for a young soldier man. Saratoga Church Record Very Satisfied Brother--Want Brother Back. MARRIED. WHITE-CHASE: On Wednesday evening, the marriage of Mitsio Hibiso Chase to Mr. and Mr. Legion Jones, 74 West of St. Mark's Methodist Episcopal Church. He gave away by her class leader, Mr. Gilbert Jones, and Mr. Hermit White the best man. The TALK IS CHEAP AND ACTIONS SPEAK LOUDER THAN WORDS In order to prove to the public that Glomine is a man, we will give him a card, one, we will give to every reader of this paper (not a sample) but a full like box. If you want to prove to the public that Glomine is a whole write world this offer would knock us out. Howard University SUMMER SCHOOL SECOND SESSION July 1 to July 28, 1905 Computers, Psychology, Psychology, Methods of Teaching, English Mathematics, Nature Study, Manual Training Mathematics, Rath, Cooking, Millinery and Sewing. $8.00 Registration fee covers all charges for tuition and lectures. Board and lodging on behalf of the institution only. $15.00. For further information, address. Rev. John Gordon, D. D., President, or Mrs. Lewis B. Moore, Ph. D. Director, Washington, D.C. ap 13 10. KINK-INE MAKES THE HAIR GROW LONG, STRAIGHT, SOFT AND SILK, OURES DANDRUFF AND STOPS FALLING HAIR. It was discovered by Dr. Roberta, a dancer from the city, who was a colorful crowd for the past thirty years, and who after much time and experience, has become a great Toni especially for the colored people. READ WHAT A CUSTOMER SAYS OF IT AGENTR WANTED everywhere to sell KINK-INK. Write today for terms. For sale by B. Rowlandk, 7th Avenue & 8th Street W. B. Rowlandk, 10th Street & 8th Street E. J. Wearl, 8th Street & 10th Avenue. Glan. K. K. Kreggman, 5th Avenue & W. R. Roberts street W. R. Roberts street & 6th Avenue. Altham & Stuart street W. R. Roberts street & 6th Avenue. Proud Joe. Ranger Hartnett, Jersey City. M. L. City, 240 West 400 street. Benjamin Howell, 15th & 153th streets shops. M. K. Winglass, 322 West 39th street. Landia & Greene, 331 West 39th street. WONDERFUL DISCOVERY Curly Hair Made Straight By SFO Seventh Ave., NEW YORK CITY. Hardly any experience is needed. Apply to the job at the following location: 1. New York, NY: New York City, NY 2. Los Angeles, CA: Los Angeles, CA 3. San Francisco, CA: San Francisco, CA 4. New York, NY: New York City, NY First Class Airline Insurance Company of NY, NY or Transpacific Overseas. Bureau of Energy and Environmental First Class Airline Insurance Company of NY, NY. Sunday, 10 to 5:30 P.M. 400 Broadway N.Y. 10014 Freeport HOTEL LETT, 138 West 59rd Street. Family owned with first class Pursuit and insurance services. BREAUVAY ATLAUER. Mrs. R. B. COURTWYER, Preston. married 1800 Hotel MARSHALL, 127 and 129 West 65d St. Telephone 1010 Columbus. Council House in New York. Council House in Philadelphia. Friendly. JASL L. MARSHALL & ORO. B. M. GALL. Property. THE ALLEN HOUSE 218 West 47th Street Hearty furnished rooms for permanent or great meal. First class restaurant attached. Great room. Quiet location; near four lands of surface cars and airway station. Mrs. F. B. WHITE, President and chair. Property. Seaside Hotels Local and Long Distance Telephones Count Phone 738 Electric Bells HOTEL BOSTON W. N. STAFFORD, Prop. Cor. Arctic and Michigan Area. Atlantic City, N. J. Choice Bines, Liquors and Cigars. Music Hall Attached. ARE NOT INCLUDED. BOARD BY THE WEEK 1015 ARCTIC AVENUE Atlantic City, N. J. apr 27 3 mw JULIUS C. WILSON, Prop Additional Dining, Sleeping and Bathing Rooms. Rates Reasonable. The public is especially invited to visit and see the ad- mission. 1912 ARCTIC AVENUE, Atlantic City, N.J. MR. and MRS. JOSEPH GAINES, Mgr. apr 27 3 00 m. Flats and Rates at the Market. Handsome Apartments with all improve- ments in the THE DOLLY-MOUNT. In West 60th street. THE BARATOCA. 200 West 60th Street. THE DORN COURT. 217 West 60th Street. Above homes have First-Time Janitor serv- ice and always good condition. Apply ROBERT CARTER 200 West 60th Street. ALEXANDER COBORY. 217 West 60th St. MR. HOLYARD. 210 West 61st Street. January 17 554, 556, 558 & 560 West 126 St TO LET Handsome Apartments of 4 Large, Light Rooms. Range. Hot Water Supply. Cust-Carry Halls. dgr. Good Janitor Service. Rent $16.50 to $17 per Month Apply D. JOHNSON, Janitor 560 West 126th Street for 80% tax Do it yourself Electric Hair Preparation & Comb AUTHOR: JOHN M. BURTON EDITOR: JOHN M. BURTON ELECTRIC HAIR PREPARATION & COMB This advertisement is for electric hair preparation and comb. It is designed to attract attention to the services offered by the company. The advertisement includes a large image of a woman with styled hair, along with a list of services offered. The services include hair preparation and combing, as well as other related services. The advertisement also includes contact information, such as a phone number and an email address, for potential customers to reach out to the company. ENDYHILL CENTER Three and Four Rooms. Private Halls and Toilets. Hot Water Bottles and Ranges ESTABLISHED 1869. Over Twenty Years on Sixth Avenue. J. EDW. WINTERBOTTOM & CO., FUNERAL DIRECTORS, 638 Sixth Ave., Balt. 51th St. and 57th St. Undertaker & Embalmer Funeral Parlor and Chapel 146 West 53d Street Between Sixth and Seventh Avenue. Lady attendant at all Funerals, Chip Chadle and Chesapeake to hire at all hours. deceit noo Telephone Call: 319 53d Street Calls: 319 53d Street CHARLES H. GRAVES Undertaker and Embalmer Officer: 319 West 41st St. J. Baldwain, 319 West 41st Street, New York. Every request for Burial Furnished on Bancoman Trucks. The True Reformers Burial Co. Licensed UNDERTAKES & EMBALMERS. Is one of the oldest and most reliable Undertaker establishments and best to suit all Phones currently attended to. Not connected with any other firm. --- Rev. Robt. R. Mont's services can be had at tickers, Funerals, Preaching and Marriage at any hour in the day or night. REV. ROBERT R. MONT. Undertaker and Embalmer. 290 West 63rd Street. NEW YORK. mard 200 C. FRANKLIN CARR, FUNERAL DIRECTOR, 350 West 53rd Street. NEW YORK. Formally with the late JAMES R. MATTEN. Real Estate. PHILIP A. PAYTON, JR. REAL ESTATE. AGENT, BROKER. APPRAiser. Post Sale—Houston, Manhattan, Brooklyn To Law—Downtown Brooklyn, New York 67 West 184th Street. DOWN TOWN OFFICE. 115 Broadway. Town Hall and 811 Harlem, New York. 670 Cortlandt. brochures 1-11. Mrs.IdaWhite-Duncan 19 Precott St., Jersey City, N.J. HAIR WORKER. West. Brunswick, Rhode Island. Pumped and Compressed Treatment. Bathroom. Bedroom. Piece of furniture. Tailor. Mail order. Advertised in New York Brownston. 319 West 52nd Street. NEW YORK, Jailhouse. Sale. HAINEY'S MARKET 60 West 135th Street. Near Lenox Avenue. NEW YORK. Prime Mesh, Poultry, Eggs, Butter, Lard, Fruit and Vegetables. B9 9am The Afro-American News Co., 439 West 36th Street, New York City Special Agents for New York Age, Richmond Park, New York City Charles M. Stewart, New York, American banking institution You will be made a quarter of the sum to subsistence. Give your name. J. V. WATSON JOHNSON & BRENTSON CONTRACTING AND DELIVERY Berkshire Hathaway Securities Holdings International Securities Investments Auctioneer, Inc. LADY CONZALES AND MINE ZARRETTA CONZALES Brownhill's Collegean Gloriavore, Palm Beach and Spartan Medicine, obtain the information for which you can request it. LADY CONZALLE is worded as the health, travel, change, marriage, divorce and painful affairs. Telephone Madison Square B. R. C. W. With Ms. B. Beasley. NEW YORK. Special Notes to the TRAVELER. Packing Case, Paper. Excursion and Ticket for sale MISS S. BOFIRD. Afro-American Hair Goods a Specialty also Hair Straightening. Your Patronage Bolted A 12-year Policy for the Furniture in your Flat Only the Best Price Insurance Company. D. A. GREENE, Insurance Broker 47 Albany Avenue, BROOKLYN NEW YORK JOHNSON WILFORD H. SMITH, COUNSELOR-AT-LAW AND PROTECTOR IN ADMINISTRATION, 115 Broadway, NEW YORK. Room 10 to 132. Phone 6786 Courtland no 115 Room DAMAGE BOTTLE A SPECIALTY Telephone, 4762 R. Soth YOUNG'S Hat Hunting and Tailoring Establishment 234 WEST 42nd ST. New York LADIES 'AND GENTS' SUITS TO ORDER. SPRING SETS NO READY. Your coat up in a Reusable Cleaner. New Rack or Blanket. Pamela cleaned 20. Cleaning and Dyeing. O'FARRELL'S 410 & 412 Eighth Avenue, New York Street NEW YORK CITY. Furniture, Carpets, Bedding Eic Sports, Plate and Amusement Purchased Complaints. OASH OR CREDIT. FRANK DOMATIN. Others and Restful Suite Shares in the City 577 THE CENTRAL RESTAURANT M. W. H. H. To 761 Fulton St., Brooklyn DR. ELLARSON MARVELOUS MEDIUM Rich. Happy and Successful in all their undertakings while the minister assures the nation of justice, poverty and alarm. Through the power of chemistry can impress a secret the nation, and win friends. In have a win you friends. In have a win the nation opposes sex. It is the cause of Spiritualism that passes. Beware of such and opposing passes. Beware of such and opposing and giving spirit reading representations outside of the office. Fulllon shelters Dr. ELLARON understands the nature and indulges the needs to is now and always to the colored people and always to Please Read The Following: level physician. Hip flexion is not a lintiment. Hopeless case and perfect and radical cure warmed up. Folded skin folds made much more indurable. DR. ELLARSON Fifth Door above South Belfast (Kentucks through Finsbury) State your troubles freely. Give to T. R. also by appoint an ALL LETTERS MUST CONTAIN Age, Lack of Hair, Stamp ONE-DOLLAR Confront Case Taken