New York Age

Thursday, May 25, 1905

New York, New York

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SNUBBED COLERIDGE-TAYLOR HIS RECEPTION AT BOSTON AND HOWARD CONTRAINTED. Strength of 'Gonius. Everywhere Conquere Opposition of Maleus and Commands Respect of Pre- judicial Maneus - Strange Recep- tion of the Composer by the President of Howard University and the Manner It Was Met. Mail Correspondence of THE AOK. WASHINGTON, May 21.—There is nothing like your had president for repenting itself. And the had president made by Howard University and the had president made by Harvard University, the distinction in the case of President Coggeshall of Clark University, Atlanta, Ga. on the occasion of the inauguration of Dr. Gordon its president, repeated itself in the course of a few months, and in the case of Mr. Samuel Colley Taylor, the famous musical composer, of England. Keepybody knows that this gentleman has achieved international reputation as one of the three former living presidents of his compositions, like "Hiwahata," and "The Atmosence," are appreciated and extolled by music lovers and the world over. Nobody in England thinks of him, but he is "painted" out there for himself the color line, has gained for him a place where people do not concern themselves about his completion any more than they do about their clothes he wears. He is a man of the highest cloths, he is reported to be regarded in any essential sense a part of the man, of the masterly inventor of home of the sweetest and noblest sounds which have ever lived from the score of a magician of chapel and orchestra bar. We remember well, recall with pride and pleasure how he was received in Boston, by the president, on a route to Washington, to conduct the performance by the members of the District of Columbia, Musical Hostaon forgot his color music. He was in the city but two days, but during that time he was fairly bounded with his love of music. We were present with him at the reception given him by the St. Clocca Chora Church. We were present with him at the production of him a son of the former composers of the times and also one of the most important composers of his time, as Colleidge Tayre rose to this graceful introduction, we heard that most infections and coral of welcome, hundreds of hams, and a common request to the author of "Hiahwa" that he had been living heart of Boston, the noblest city of the new world. Ah, how we loved the dark old man that evening, grateful peril to his friend, the brilliant young composer, the three-legged being into those happy faces with a for no less happy, and with a simplicity so pure, that he was indeed the true touch of mature music made and audience one for brief time. There were not a few white people of the time that were familiar with the McClelland Taylor, who wished to meet him. He intimate way that is possible at a distance, that is, that he would talk to someone, to converse with and some table, spend an hour with and some table, spend an hour with and some sphere wholly private and personal. Like Niermann of old, their with was for a lunch or a bar, we were told, he loved, let us hope, forever thereafter, to be a boocher in our prejudice in the musician's life. British Honesty. Southern prejudice of the white people. The President of the United President of the whole people, of blacks of the powerful crest of the Ambassador of the powerful crest of the Ambassador of the distinguished subject. But lafayette's fame is insecure. He was not a good person. Amibendorfer Duranda. His music for itself and will sing of his bright power over increasing numbers of the White and of the British Kennedy shall have come from the states of power and empire that he mingled their dart with the dart of the social recognition which was denied by social and official recognition by the simple ammunition and devotion of outgoing Washington. The big war was water in an inflated bubbling, rushing during the war among them, in consequence of the fact that it was too good for him who accepted her not alone by his own hands. Mr Lang and interested him in the fate of the war. We have seen in it, in addition to one of the most great battles of the war, that there was in the memory of the war a memorial of the war. There was nothing in Washington in which he would not treat or command which he did not wish him. Otterbeck Taylor to me, to engender. And he two whisked to use what interested his friends to acquire in things an interest he had no strength to handle. He hattie a stranger. He found special that he was no stranger. He had come home—home to his family. He had good fortune of guilds to find on earth. He guarded the harbor, the boats of his purity and the gilded ones in turn his heart. Well, how along the place his Washington friends wanted him he can to honor by his hand. He took the place he took him on the hill to me the school where handouts of the young men and women of the Pleasant Valley School of knowledge, to learn the wisdom of the people to climb through self-knowledge to usefulness to their kind, to a citizenship denied, to a country calling itself Republic and Constitution. Uklesdige Taylor want and mow. He looks at the University. He now knows that the university. He now many things and the profuse blisses, when some while he is in his mind, but he noted down in his heart something else, which his friends did not mow with him. And there is a closet. And there is the dim succession of it he colorblends. This shakentable it into its life, to air itself occasionally, to stall abroad not to watch of night, but in broad daylight when it happens that some visitor with a colored shirt shakes the shakentable of University hill. Then it is that the shakentable steps out of the president's closet. ARCHIBALD H. GRIMEL TWO BIG CONCERTS IN TROY. Given by Women's Progressive Association and Home Social Club. Truly, May 22—On Thursday, evening, May 18, is the Women's Progressive American Association gave its first annual concert and reception at Harmony hall. The concert was all of music, including the works of admission, Miss Mary Wade, a sweet pupil of Saratoga Springs and a pupil at the Troy Conservatory of music, pleased the audience with her condition of several songs, and with the music of the reader, reckoned acceptably several pieces. One of the other chief members on the programme was the singing of the "Gondolier Chorus" by the band, which was furnished by the King and Kern orchestra in which the first appearance of the orchestra and to say that their music was superior to time would be putting it mildly. They were most enthusiastically received by the large orchestra that was dressed in anew. The orchestra is chair is done; Mrs. Marie Care, president; Miss Little Baltimore, vice president; Miss Smith, treasurer. Among the out of town guests are the artists Miss Pattinelle Clarence and Theodore Jones of Paskillie. The annual excursion of the Liberty Street Church will go to Bakersfield 9:45am. Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Dixon and children and students of the University of Maryland, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Williams. The members and congregation of Zian Church are the pastor, Rev. Stephen Connard, to Troy for another Marian Conference, Rev. Stephen Connard, to Troy for another Marian Conference, The delegate to the conference, Mrs. Robert Taylor, also returned last week. Veterans Prepare for Decoration Day Thaddeus Stevens Post, No. 255, will attend Abrynla Church in West, 40th street on Sunday evening, May 29, and have invited John Brown Circle, No. 25, Spinaline Christian Church, No. 25, Plaid Fife and Drum Corp. Rev. Charles S. Morton will invite the annualarmon. All vet invited. The post will parade on Decoration day from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. and will be called at 7:16 a.m. . A marriage will contain the disabled Baldwin Bailor's Ballroom, 69th street and Riveride Drive. Uniformed volunteers may be held. Delegations will go to Mt. Olive, St. Mitchell's, Dairy and more to place flowers and bag open the door to valentines. A special service will have to be held. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Baldwin Bailor's Ballroom. The Southern Guided by Robert Solve Rac Southern Education To the model library of brooding over our wretches we have abandoned museums much too extensively. We have offered visitors to be so as to overload some museums tendencies of which we are benefiting. We state into the darkness and greed in disgust: "Ah, will it always be slight?" and do not see that befuddled in the day is already diving. The museo of the Southern Education Board holds word; but how many of us are acquainted with the achievements of the Southern and Grimaldi Education Board and the Conference for Education in the South? You'll it, maybe without help from the museo of the Southern and our country these organizations are pre- looked His arm the same, some nowhere in the heart not with a dark of it in the phobia, ing him bound not blinding it in the colored domino that the doubt It thus due a of Mr. were not allow, going com- in in the third and training colored included an ode of motion of while singing the and with man of sunday, watched and is colored by vir- tual with and is snacking in the bow and the sush admence to have be did writing of the weekholt identity, tower of the not bound of an addictive com- ROBERT C. OGDEN, of New York, Dominant Force in Southern Education. efficient and that Mr. Robert C. Oyden, the dominant personality in them since the late 1960s, has been one of the most useful citizens of the United States. For the purpose of these bodies is nothing less in that the splitting by women of the West and the splitting by black and of the West and backward South. NEW YORK: THIS Education Art C. Ogden, It Helps Face Problem. into coelidal harmony with each other. The study of Negroes in education of the race problem is universally acknowledged. But the education of the white South will be a solvent still more prime, because the race problem, as far as the Southern white man is concerned, is largely objection. Many of the of the former white whites of North have no foundation in reality, and these situations will be laid forever by universal education. Prudence and adjustment cannot live together. One of the causes of the mid- way of the race problem is the inter- ference of the North is the North's comparatively high standard of education. The Afro-American people have looked as hence at the fettering of southern and Northern men in the organizations which Mr. Ogden leans. We have witnessed, with high alarm and indignation, what seemed to us the apology of Northern men to their principles, hospitality and veneration. We have heard that at Richmond and Birmingham the measures of Reconstruction were honored by the river of fire. But we have ever blocked the fact that the representatives of the South have surrendered in their turn still more important positions. The build of the Southern State was a great achievement and is shame and passionate. Bishop Gallory of Mimimpii, in his address at Birmingham, took the most possible grounds of justice and of Christianity in advancing the education throughout the South. Is not this a tremendous advance in forty-five years? In 1960 it was a crime in every slave住着 State to teach Nigro to read. It is true that Bishop Gallory opinions about the ultimate political and social status of the race which are not exactly palatable; and that these opious represent pretty well those of the whole white South. For the Southern State to open our eyes to the good and opening our only to the bad, permit ourselves to become dependent, we shall be in the position of that impatient person who upheld the seed it not did grow up overnight into a tree. The marvel of it all is that Mr. Opden, man controlling one of the largest commercial banks in the country, has 4,000 people, is able and willing to devote himself to labors so purely philanthropic labors which must, by their nature, cannot be performed by the full force of human effort and which can make no return the most noteworthy of duties unnecessarily performed is well for the Republic that three men, Mr. Opden, Mr. Robert C. Opden and Mr. Robert C. Opden have crushed gruppe with the difficult educational problems which have hindered, and still burden, the Bank of Baltimore, Pine Street. ALL THE HAPPENINGS IN PROTECTION Mimi Chan McVey, senior, sister of Mrs. Sallie McVey, was born from the Congo Street Impression Chance on Friday at 1 p.m. A large nurse, W. Smith conducted the session. There was a man in North Congo and Andrew York was given a concert on May 15. The program was made up of choruses, recitations, character skits and drills by the boy's company. O. Quintette, drilling by the boy's company, children were all under five years of age. Burt's Orchid, with Mrs. Lynch at 11 a.m. The challenging task of developing a doctoral degree in theology and designation of Hammersmith of North Carolina was held at the University of North Carolina. A number of members of the orders turned out to be the only faculty members in the church under Prof. Greg. Paster William H. Thomas gave a great attentive address on "theology and designation of the church collection was taken up for the beginning." Saratoga Notes. WHITE AND BLACK JOBS. It was not so long ago that it was considered more than disgraceful for a white man to be a bather, and the few who had the tenacity to do so were more likely to next, next, next, while stapping the blake prepare to douse peculiar stains to over-threatened faces, were loafed upon with disgrace, contempt and disgust. The skin certainly less than white men. With the flight of the blake, the skin certainly increased and the delectable job of making male humanity to death while separating it from the rest of the population and care of keeping the color of city. MATTHEWS ADDED NEW LAURELS. OSSINING ODD FELLOWS Hold Thanksgiving Bertice 'and Give Dance- Personal. Wen Horton spent time in the metropolis at the Mint in New York and Minneapolis at Mitte in Missoula and Winston-Salem at N.C. at Samuel Islanded of Porkskill. He was a member of the Winston-Salem Grosse Hoseau, Bown Housen and Frank Thomas of Oueling were entertained on Sunday after the funeral of his brother, Bown Housen, at their residence in Briefer Cliff. Among the Colored Cricketers The West Indian Cricket Club will begin in the season of 2016 on Saturday, May 27, at Procter & Gamble Cricket Club, which is the West Indian Cricket Club, which. The colored club will help to work hard if 45 returns the penalty and win, then a win. The Division One team will compete in the Division Two team. West Indian Cricket Club will begin in the season of 2016 on Saturday, May 27, at Procter & Gamble Cricket Club, which is the West Indian Cricket Club, which. The colored club will help to work hard if 45 returns the penalty and win, then a win. TARRYTOWN NOTES. FORTUNE & PETERSON, New York, May 17, 1805. The Age and Its Readers. The Ack, we can easily assert, has a speaking contempt which, for the most part, is among the oldest and most reliable of guy of the Afro-American newspapers. There are hundreds of readers on his sub-script list who have taken the paper continuously for twenty and more years. And when we have once acquired a reader we solden ever lose him; he abides with us, because he has it good to do so. We have a larger number of readers to-day than ever before in the history of the paper, and the number of new readers is growing more rapidly than ever before. And we believe that The Ack is a better and stronger paper to-day than it has ever been. We believe that the probable improvement in every department of the paper, and we shall make those just as rapidly as circumstances will allow us to do so. We are determined to double the circulation of Taxx As, as well as the process of it, by the end of the next twelve months. It can be done, and we are determined to do it. We want our readers to help us do it. Pay your subscriptions to us and make an impression. We drop those promptly who do not snort. We cannot afford to carry any dead timber. Ask your neighbor to subscribe for the paper. Urge him to do so. He could hardly make a better investment. He will answer a weekly video call with the publisher that he can send from any other newspaper. And he will help us in our efforts to publish a National newspaper which will adequately meet all of the demands of Intellief Afr-America. If our readers will do their share of the work of creating a newspaper we will do ours. And the first and most important part of our subscribers in helping to make a newspaper strong and useful is to pay his subscription promptly when it is due. Mr. Orden and Southern Education. On the first page of Tax Act to-day we publish a running sketch of the gradual development of Southern education and the influence which the Conference for Education in the South, the Southern Education Board and the General Education Board have exercised in that development; a development which, when all of the facts in the situation are properly weighted, is remarkable in the history of education. At the dawn of the War of the Rebellion there was no public school system in the Southern States. Before the War the blacks were not allowed to secure any education whatever, and the poor white people, while not disbarred by law from acquiring an education, were almost as badly off as the blacks, as they were unable to send their children to the many cozy communities, communities, colleges and universities, among the best in the Republic, maintained by and for the landed aristocrats and biggers. Indeed, the children of the poor whites were not desired in those schools, and nobody intruded in them. The public school system of the South State is as state as it is to-day grew out of the President's Bureau, under the direction of General Olw O. Howard, but the oceans erased the system eliminated from the except-hag legislatures, in which purists of the present time affect to find no good thing to do. The most important elements of education of State and counties were Afro-Americans, who held the foundation upon which the system has grown to what it is to-day. This was especially true of the State of Florida, where New Jenaan C. Gibba, a graduate of Dartmouth College, was superintendent of Education for the State, and had many Afro-American county superintendents, educated men for the most part, under the supervision of the public school system in the work of public school education in Recreation days in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Mississippi. The poor white people of the Southern States are indebted to the Afro-Americans legislature of the Recreation period for the public school system they now have. Dr. J. L. M. Curry of Virginia, as sold agent of the Pondy Fund, took up the work of Southern Education with great vigor. No man of the time was older and more aptly or comprehensively a greater and more lasting work for the South than Dr. Curry. He was a man of the highest intellect and of a broad and progressive spirit as an educator by the leaders of the South State he was one of them, and had been a distinguished part in the course of the Southern Legislature. All persons to the highest of the public schools of the South State, system of education and in all related educational institutions. on behalf of the Southern Missouri State University. He was appointed by T. Washington and will remain responsible enough to deprive the institution of all public and private work. It was particularly Dr. Curry who has resisted the Southern educational work with the policies of urban schools. Mr. William H. Baldwin, Jr., of St. Louis, played in the body of his upheld position, and Mr. Oglion. These four men, wrought an injury before and four men wounded for the development of healthy public opinion. North and South, in favor of a strong public school system for all of the people of the Southern States. They crowded among them the Conference for Southern Missouri, the Southern Baptist Board and Dr. W. W. Jackson in a solid award of the Dr. W. Jackson Education Board and his influence in the教会 and development of all of them has been positive. By the deaths of Dr. Orrery and Mr. Baldwin Mr. Ogden has become the head and front of the two Boards, as president, as well as president of the Conference for Southern Education, president of the trustee board of the Hampton Institute and member of the trustee board of the Tuskegee Institute. Mr. Ogden is a business man, as Mr. Baldwin was, controlling a vast dry goods business in New York, as he had before coming to New York controlled a like business in Philadelphia. He was drawn into the arduous work of Southern education because the philanthropic dispute could not be resolved. He could not resist its plight. Even so, he duod such men; and it is well, for they redeem the foul common nature from the charge of selfishness and ardoriness which punish of the loosest lodge against it. We deem it of the utmost importance that the Afro-American people, who are so largely interested parties, should have a thorough knowledge of Mr. Oden and the influence he has and will continue to exert in all of the work of education in the Southern States. It is good to know such a man and his work. Northern and Southern Church Consolidation The Northern and Southern Presbyterian and the Northern and Southern Baptists, who were divided in body and church government during the War on the question of altery, and have since been divided in body and church for years had been striving to get together. Last week both bodies reached a balf of unloose, and their reunion may be regarded as certain. In the future those Afro-American Presbyterian and Baptists who remain [true to their parent bodies will have to subdue so肥 governed in large numbers that they will be breached, who boss every job they get into or break it up. Already Afro-American Presbyterians are talking of having an independent church organization of their own. We advise them to get it in a hurry. There is no other way in which they can get the fair play they deserve. The independent movement among our Baptists, of recent origin, has been so successful as to be of the greatest encouragement to the Presbyterians in any movement they may make towards independence. Our great Methodist bodies drew out from the parent bodies a long time ago, because they could not have been so successful. He has come to them justifies the observation recently made by Bishop J. W. Hood, that separate church organizations among us are necessary and have wrought for the good of the race and of the church. Bootblacks. In another column of *Tikx Auc to-day* we republic from our esteemed contemporary, the Topena Plainlander, a highly significant article on the passing of the Afro-American boot鞋 in the Kansas metropolis. What is significant is the generality of the application of it to other centers of population where there are many people who have in advance to have they have had a monopoly of boot鞋ing. The foreigner, especially the Italian, has taken the work from our boys and men in the same way that they have taken away from them the barber business, janitor service, and the like. They have improved upon the methods of boot鞋ing; they have secured the highest grade of blacking and polish; they have opened parors, nicely kept for their furnishing, furnished periodical literals, and daily. In convenient file; they have attended to business, and have received rather than invited familiarity of their patrons. The element of personal nostiness and politeness, wilful, has entered largely into their service, and has had its effect, as it does in business of whatever character. The man who attends strictly to business, who gives his patrons what they want, and who carries into his business available and easy to use, will run out of business any competitor who does not do so. The question of race has little to do with the master. The Topka, Pflaedaler makes a brave statement when it declares that the Afro-American bootlacks of Topeka are better hands at the business of blocking and polishing shoes than the foreigners. We have not found it so in our extensive travels over the country. We have found but two of our men, one in Chicago and one in Philadelphia. We also in Italy—will could block a shoe as artistically will be our Italian. We think this will have very general application, however, much we regret make it. In the city of Washington the Afro-American have had a mocooply of boot blacking and polishing. If there is more miserable, incompetent and impudent of boot blacks than those many Washington youngers, you might ask anythings do with them. And this will well to black news boy of Washington, who seldom over have the particular newspaper a man may desire and never have any change. Now, foreigners have entered into competition with these Washington men and youngers, having opened next phones on the main avenue and side streets, drawing to themselves most of the attention they are behold, when they will shroud their outfits and make a game struggle to explore the street trade. When they have conquered Washington they will move on to Richmond, Charleston, Savannah, New Orleans, Galveston, with the results of taking the hands of all of the Rings of Hands of America—just on the Chinaman and the Indian ancestry people with him and the Indian ancestry people have done in the past in the past in the past. We must hold on to the global competition where we now have them. This is an issue of the bookhook as of the compairer trade. All Tabor is hewn. The very banks of the greatness of a ruse or a nation in its firm grip on the global competition must be able to do what they can to supply the demand for efficient men and women in the global competition, and to advance the opinion of the man to the absolute security of such abstractions, but a great deal must be done. We need a school for the education of bookhook and harbor and we need it at once. President Bennett's threat to buy the supplies, machinery, implements and stalemate necessary in the work of digging the Panama Canal where they could be purchased cheapest, in the basins or foreign markets, has raised the question of whether the highest pitch of entitlement. The Secretary of War asked the last Congress to instruct him to no bows those purchases should be made, it had designed, the issu. The President is right. The people of the country will must protect themselves from the protection interests of the country have to rob the Government as they habitually rob the mummies of the people in overcharges for their products which they do not except of foreign buyers. Our tariff should be re-established. The manufacturers now have all the best of it. Foreign immigration has increased wonderfully during the past few months, and the present year promises to be a record breaker. Advances of the Southern States are Georgia to direct a part of this immigration to themselves have not worked so well. A writer in the Sunday Sun thinks that the low wages paid in the South is the handicap. Providence, Rhode Island, the fallen have had in Louisiana and Mississippi, and the general lawlessness which has characterized the past years of the Southern States, also have had a moment to do with it. We have no objective whatever to this foreign people, and the Southern people are too concealed and provincial. These foreigners will broaden them in many ways. The movement started in Georgia to erect a monument to the memory of the late Col. William A. Pledge is drawing of all encouragement. We shall contribute to it of our means and influence. Col. Pledge was a strong, loyal and devoted champion of the best interests of the Southern States. A public journalist and lawyer, a leader always and in every situation, he rendered service to his race and country well worthy to be commemorated by a suitable movement. And it is good that he has succeeded in to erect monuments to those who have served it well and honorably. The San Diego business who welcomed, with bollage the United States deputy collector of affairs at San Diego Hall Thursday were merely trying to look the stale after the horns have been cut. They had been taken on an orderly government and paid their debt, this country would have no reason to intrude in their affairs. The wounds which they have indicted upon their country rendered this beaded exhibition of patriotism may be shown in silhouettes ways then by flying a safe rage upon those regarded as invaders. The commercial bodies in China which control the trade of China are taking steps to boycott American manufactured goods in retaliation for the restrictions against Chinese goods. The Chinese government. The marvel of it is that the Chinese have not before retaliated in this way. BOOTBLACKS. Foreigners Are Taking the Places of Our Men—Why? From the Topocha Paladinier. In the Negro going to sit ally by and see a business out of which he has made money pay into the hands of a people who are not only disillusioned in the art but cannot utter a sentence of his own. He is a man of great art, and the young, thoughtless Negro has no one to blame but himself. In Topkapi the Negro bootbuck is a sting of the past, he is succeeded by the Greeks and Italians, who were more thoughtful, and are sitting up next shining parlor for ladies and gourmet in their rooms. The Negro is the best bootbuck, but he was too well pleased with his old high chair and foot rest. He studied too much about baseball ball, policy, ball, etc., and not enough about the comfort of his patrons. He was earning money who护护ized him were under obligations to him and he would quit working on a customer to "joify" with a bystander as quickly as he would offer to serve him! On the other hand, our Grecia brothers knew they didn't understand the art of polishing a shoe as done the old way, and the nature of the job he was willing to swap the difference for a nice place in which to be served, and immediate steps were taken to supply this long felt want, and the nature has proved so profitable that as fast as rooms can be secured they imitate the old way, and the nature is in charge of a new place. Thus has the Negro let a business altar from his gown out of which he has earned thousands of dollars and could have owned much finer places than the ones conducted by the Greeks. Perhaps some day the Negro will awaken, but he is allow in his own time. The Negro, black business, it will be too late, and he might as well continue his sleeping. INDEPENDENT VOTING. Chicago Afro-Americans Have Set Good Example. The Negro vote in Chicago created confusion in Republican circles last Tuesday, but not standing up and being counted for the Republican candidate for mayor, when the Republican candidate had proved himself to be a humiliated bitter friend to them while on the bench than had the Republican candidate under similar circumstances. Had the Negro vote stood for past and not for present, the good round plurality. The Republican party in Chicago, and in fact, all over the country, voted one and forewrote the same national volume, so on the Negro in Chicago and in Chicago Tuesday, and the mortgage ration when it is too late he was "indicted in his last year." To the Editor of the New York Times The recent "Granth Congress"—which met in Brooklyn May 10, 11 and 12, presenting over by the Right Wing, Pandurik. Buxman, X. D. Bishop of the Domeau of Long Island, engaged in a debate with the president of the "Future of the Magic in America," not developed anything unusual about the distance of this question in included in by members of convention congress of both New York and Southern delegates and affiliates. The final decision was to sponsor a convention provided covered. But, taken all in all, the militiamen expressed the full short of very divided opinion. That which gave the greatest indulgence, putting forth the short of very divided opinion, but the manifestation of the militiamen, which applauded indeed its apprehension, that inocent us on such a question that the attitude that audience could consider it that approved of liberty, fall and completion, and an in discussion the question of "The Future of the Negro in the important side of the question in仁 being bound upon its own life and work. Let field where the South is containing it, to the question: "What shall the Church do for the Negro in important side of the question for the North in: what shall the Negro do for the Church?" Just think a moment. Answer, will probably accommodate 1500 people, not calling delegates and friends from every possible quarter, it was about three-quarters of all know, who know of these parts, or of like parts in any large Northern city, that a Dear Dept. Prof. Horror, or by the Rank followers of Herr Moth, either ecstatic or marched, will be sufficient to pack that hall with a crowd that would seem to have come out of the A Trinidad Appreciation Recognizing as I do the immense value of your paper as a payoff payment of the course of the man I hate to renew my subscription. Permit me here to avail myself of the opportunity of informing you that your paper has been of considerable help to me. It has written to me that you have given me a subscriber given me information about ourselves that I never dreaded of. In first it was imputed in a mutual pride of which I was proud. I agreed with you that the race needs powerful advocacy and I am prepared to give it by you. You very timely. California, Trinidad, R.W. L, May 8, 1966. DREAMS OF LIFE ```markdown ``` MISS DOBOTHY J. BOVD, Minisister, expedited by the White House Industrial Association of New York to meet in Staten Island to discuss the need of advenir, or assistance in finding their way about New York city, or to the warden, deputy, prisoner, one man, or obstinate inmate. They are in a cower by the head of white mans ribbon worn as seen in the picture. Parents up to some knowing of, or sending young girls North Minisister must all Staten Islanders. STRIKE - BREAKERS SLANDERED Chicago Palpit and Press Cook Stir Up More Stir. Beverage Commendation of Tax Act Illinois, IL, May 23. In a former letter of ordered face, figures, and observations concerning the teammate's strike in Chicago. At this writing the light is still raging. From the last few days the first line of the last line proclaims the unlawful protest against colored men who had been imported into this city as stalkers-breakers. To listen to some of this pulpit invective, one would believe, without evidence to the contrary, that the police had been forced to intervene, during turmoil and hilling unrest and misleading citizens". As a matter of fact, them fifteen per cent of the man imported as stalkers-breakers are colored men. As to the appearance and character of these stalkers-breakers, it is not possible to justify the abuse and generally business accounts of these hysterical preachers. I have learned from a reliable source, in fact from a man employed as an agent, that over sixty per cent of the white man brought here from cities with stalkers-breakers, he violated the colored men. There have been very few arrests among the stalkers, and really only thing that has been done is to disposition to defend themselves when attackers infiltrate. We have to attempt attention. At a largely attended meeting held in Baskell on Wednesday, the council of Chicago voted to abolish the unannounced memorial, against the brutality of the city's response to the reports of the city and out-of-town papers were present, and gave extended reports of the city's response to the reports of the city and out-of-town papers, and every day more black men is killed or wounded for no other reason than that he is a member of the city's police force, whom other police have refused to do. The accidental killing this week of a white man in the Bronx, who was alleged for rescuing a child accompanied with his family, occurred ten years earlier. Some of the presumed daily publicity notions sponsoring this incident are the "City in the Group of Armed Men" and the "City in the Group of Armed Men" at Long Island. The publicity notions promote the group of armed men, the accused killer, the accused group will be flamed with a newspaper statue that proclaims Those who claim to know what they are talking about boast a new colored book in the Illini Press, a book written by Green, member of the present legislature. His name the speaker of the House includes among his colleagues the Anti-yaching law and the Anti-policy law, just enacted by the Illinois legislature, which governs Green's good work. It is wholly self-made, with no endorsement with a strong sense of honor, to be well being in a strong sense of pleasing manners. The book is a response to a sensation last Saturday evening which was in the major of a testimonial for the spindleid manuscript for himself and his mics in the legislature. The local Business League has already begun their work, including a new season coming August. The former Jones has again been chosen president of the local League for the upcoming season. FANNIE BARRIER WILLIAM Held Interesting Session-G. A. R On Sunday Rev. L. H. Cook of Antoirla, P. presides over the service, Rev. John F. Presley of Providence at Zion on p. m. and Bibby Wilmore of Canada at Zion on p. m. Other pupils were also filled by mints of Zion A. M. K. Church and the members of Zion A. M. K. Church courteously give the use of the church to the conference all day. Decoration day exercises will be held by the Administraite Foote Post, No. 17, G. A. R. at午 preceding Decoration day, May 20. A program has been prepared for the occasion, and the Memorial day, detachments from the General Army will be sent to various counterparts to the people will take place in the foreground. It will form on the General Mall, march out to Chapel, to Church, to General Hall, to Tork, to Budley, to Grange, to Trumbull, to Temple and to the Groom from which the military order is given. The second annual competition of the New Jerusalem Parishies, No. 17, and First General Church, to Grange, to Trumbull, to Temple and to the place at Warrior Hail on the evening of May 29. The Lastier Antoirla, No. 2, will be held by Mingyu's orchestra. Dr. De. R. G. Geiger, M.D., by appointment of the Mrs. A. M. K. Conniferous, held in the office of the M.D. at the University of Michigan over the New England region. J. W. M. Bentley, on the nursing of M.D. high schools, on the nursing of M.D. high schools, on the nursing of M.D. high schools, on the nursing of M.D. The annual tour to the brethren of the Grand and Subordinate Lodges will be prescheduled at 2 p.m. on the 1st Sunday in June by Bvv. T. Wellington Henderson, DD, pastor of A. T. Wellington Henderson, Worst 5th street in this country this season the Bishop of Sir Knights will set as accoort, and the Indice of Alpha Chapter and other Order of Eastern Star will also be present. The sessions will commence on June 7 and last two days. Grand Master R. V. C. Mato, Grand Secretary R. V. C. Mato, detail the details of the assembling of the craft on this, the 50th annual gathering. The ritualistic work has received considerable attention. The members of Plojercorty村, T. H. Akton town, are nationally laboring mulling workers with a bloody-workers' confidant that the first "Mancio" district will stand amid of all other districts. The Borough of Brooklyn is looking for invasiv. Widows' Bone Lodge, No. 11, Hirsch Lodge, No. 1, have new Lodge, Carcassius Lodge, No. 1, have a well-work and maintain- —As the time approaches for the annual communication of the Grand Lodge of Mason of this State and its deposition considerable progress has been made. Probably never in the history of the craft has the growth of membership all over the State been so general. The addition of many good and true men has added strength to an institution of influence for good cannot be questioned. UP THROUGH DIFFICULTIES. Who can read the life struggles of Frederick Douglas for human rights without being touched by his sinister devotion to the enslaved and oppressed? Douglas was first a slave boy, then a fugitive slave, then a free man, and finally a man who wrote richly in reference to the long train of difficultie which confronted Mr. Douglas and which he overcome. "It is a remarkable fact that, in a time of civil and war, the slave boy was a victim of death of old institutions and ideas, this slave boy's voice was heard around the world; kings and monarchs were so enraged by his cause." Like a tall, rugged mountain peak, a giant pillar of defense, Douglas stands unshakeable. The morality of execution by our ambitions youth. Most all great course and reform, like 'the Church of Jesus Christ of Jesus', definition, formation, of study and, to all, research and palmistry will at times produce a fortune may be obtained. Paganism is a monotheism. Whitney's cotton gin, the Brooklyn expansion of the New York City water supply, the Jews were excavated in the enjoyment of their rights and privileges all over the world. The Jews were for their men and women in the Western world. They lay time by time the Brooklyn, and the American and European coasts of America. The Jews against information and education. The program of the Jews against information and education. The program of the Jews against information and education. MARIAA. M. I, March 6th. I have made ahead! My God forgives me! A mitted ripple of approval ran through the room, the terrifying barricade of the gun in the back of the soldiers prevented a general outburst of hurry. The hangman out the disguise of a nurse, who was over his head. A lapse of a few minutes' signal made and the three men were off on their way to the hospital. The hot sun for forty-nine minutes, but the morbid crowd stood it through. When they moved on, the nurse faced uncovering our inspection, and we dutifully lied by to take a last look at the blood and their tongues protruded from their mouths: "What a ghastly sight it was! I waited a great way out of the car, turned and saw my officer of convalescence issuing pieces of the noses as novena. When I had got clear of the place, Names had overcome me. In my time I have seen men fall sound like mature stalks of moss under the earth the days exposed to the elements, but never I so affected as I was by this spectacle. Mother Zion Notes Dr. J. H. McMahon's return to Mother Zilch Church for another year was welcomed at Sunny morning by a large congregation, to whom he praised a sermon. In the evening he pruned the annual service to the Brothers and Sisters of Love and Churche, Mount Olive Taborakum, No. 114. Mount Olive Taborakum is to her home with stained glass. M. Minnie V. Ackley has qualified a catholic. The young people of the Sunday school will give a documentary feature —Wilhelm in weekly journalism does find a more vigorous editorial page than the New York Age. A copy of the New York Age has been his assignment and other assignments, The New York Age, an expenment and champion of the New Yorker, takes first rank—Philadelphia Council. —E伯特 Fortune of The New York Age has been the principal patron of his paper. The Ace Attends the landing journals of the respective row—Sarahman (T. H.) —The Inderer extends congratulations to The New York Age for the excellent work he has done in writing it with integrity. The Ace has been chosen to enter space and improve its makeup year—Detroit Informer. —The New York Age very modestly attends to its increased size and other details of its composition, it brings it diverse competence and we hope to partner. —Alexandria (Va) Home News. —The sparkling New York AO is brighter and better than ever, typographically and artistically, and in correspondence. Like the Thomas Fortune AO, it is a proud prowess with age. Yet he is the most important to the Oiler treatment. Indianapolis is the New York AO is larger and better than ever. It is one of the few rare professions which may be accepted as a standard. It increases the size to eight pages for the requirements and wording and sympathy. May both be furnished bounded to Cleveland Journal. —the Bee foeer its inauguralable contemporary, THE New York AO is more prominent and increased size latethan Editor Fortune to give the plea an up-to-date appearance, and lone may it come to prosper.—Washington Bee. —We doff our hats to THE New York AO and congratulate it upon its treat appearance. With state pride, the column of splendid reading editorials which have come a long way to THE AO's success, we predict for it a great and resilient future. It certainly the best and strongest race journal country. We extend to the management of the best wishes.—Long Bain (N. J.) Kecho. —THE NEW YORK ACK, the brilliant T. Thomas Forton, editor, came to us that we improved in every respect. It carried two columns and threatened the journal with an eight page broadening. It never succeed. We have a journal in the United States and it keeps up the pace set and makes money to be the marvel of the age and the world of the twentieth century. We know a magazine when we see it. -Richmond Planet. It is a highly encouraging and exciting gratifier to the improvement made by our metropolitan New York ACK. As it grows in years, it takes on material improvement that I please every one of its readers, in fact, in compliance of the race should be more active appreciation. The New York ACK takes on the Negro in this race and to them it measures and marks the way it measures and marks the way it measures. -Columbia (B. C.) Southern Sun. —The great NEW YORK AOE comes late late in a beautiful artistic appearance. It now shows two columns of all original matter, and the first is a large, beautiful portrait in every issue and in every detail, been reading this splendid journal for a while like eighty years, and we are free to confess that THE NEW YORK AOE is one of the most prestigious journal publications certainly improves with age. Editor Fitzgerald is one of the most ardent race men we anywhere and we are all proud of the Orangeburg (S.C.) People's Recorder, the journal of the American museum is THE NEW YORK AOE, that talented and versatile writer. Fortune. This week it comes in an improved, enlarged, and as bright script list and a more general patronage. We replicate in the preface of the efforts of Fortune and hope the most for THE AOE which will make a great contribution to the journal the told. American list. - Every Negro in America or elsewhere ought to feel proud of the property with which the New York Air is rejoicing. The past year it loaned a new dress, and the present year it added on additions of the four pieces, adding a column of the four pieces, and these new columns, like the old ones, are filled with original and interesting radiance of the most wholesome and stimulating The Ace and its great editor, T. Thomas time, and are to be congratulated upon the hard work and the race must rejoice in the power and an agrocy is so potent for good as the journal guided and by such an agrocy the Lancet wishes for both journal and many years of valiant service in a country with the highest endowments - Baltimore, New York. —THE NEW YORK AOK, edited by Thomas Fortuna, has taken a deep size and contributed news matter. The temporal department of THE AOK has a special place with the advancement of the American public and also allows us to offer our educational and scientific journal as THE AOK appeals not only intelligence of our people, but its clair- itude and convincing editorial dis- council public questions affecting the race from the colored men and women. Nor- thwest, who feel and know the condition Nepal, we are in the New York AOK, a polite American journalism that few race even hope to reach, because there are enough Tom Fortunes to go round. We us who claim to be informed on curre- tions and possess a reasonable share of information, concern the best in this, must be informed and strengthen our encli- sion by reading the exceptional race per- spectives, THE NEW YORK AOK—Florida WOMEN MORE WILFUL THAN MEN Subscription Rates In the United States, Mexico and Canada Porto Rico, Hawaii and Indonesia Puerto Rico, Philippines, Sri Lanka Sri Lanka, Three Mountains, 30 cents To Foreign Countries in the Univeral Portal Union, add one extra cost for each paper or postal card to be sent by Mail, in a Postal Money Order, by Bank Draft, or an Expense Money Order, and when more of it is required, you can pay it in a Money Order at your Post Office, pay- able to FORTEC & PETERSON, at the New York Post Office. You can also furnish an application: News matter for publication should reach this office by Monday or Tuesday. Advertis- ment will be received until noon on the area of earliest week. Address all Mail to: FORTEC T & PETERSON, Publishers, 4 Cedar Street, New York City. David A. Gunn, General Advertising Agent, 4 Cedar St. N.Y., 114 Albany Ave. Brooklyn. BOROUGH OF MANHATTAN R. H. Bunty, practical artist, 107 W. West Street he wanted to take the New York Amy. And he wanted to take the New York Amy. At Critic Larchmont, 32 West Broad Street. -RV. Maine is located at 29 W. West Street. Mr. Leonis Harris of West 41st street is with an acute attack of asthma. He will be in the hospital much improved. Mr. Giuseppe Jones of 100 West 107th street is very ill with tonsillitis. Mr. Harrison of West 41st street is visiting the hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Kasteo of Philadelphia, are spending their honeymoon at the Clarendon. Mr. Joseph Kemp of 327 West 41st street has been returned from Nassau for improving. Mr. Intare Nous Chang, W.-H. Yangh and E. Kim, directors have class class Wednesday. Mr. David and popular organization known as the Lincoln Memorial and Literary Association has opened a studio. Every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, students at Anderson's Dancing Academy, West 31st street, Special attention to the West 31st street. Special attention will be held at the Art Hall on May 30. Ec. Mayor Seth Lowe will preside and Senator Will dew will establish at West 138th street, where adoration or night. Charles K. Miller will be in charge. Adv. Wanted, five good agents, either gentle or tough, to sell Kinkins, the great hair tonic, to the West 138th street, New York — Adv. Benjamin F. Thomas gave a Hole in Moose in honor of his wife, Mary, on July 17. Mrs. Mrs. Revello, Mrs. Frank Miss Jones Letter of Kings- city, Theo- Adolphus Hannon. The black eyed pen and rice, cooked made baked beans, good sauce, made ice cream, 50 cents with bottle of light. Nail Bron. Restaurant New York city—Adv. super store and advertisement permity. $200 required to Handles your own money in advertisement. Thompson. Advert. reception at Anderston's 16 West 50th street, Tues- day, March 16, 1890 morning and Saturday evenings at beginners from 8:30 Woodhill's annual outing and his hold on Memorial Day, June 15, 1890 Prince Park on Jerome ave. June 15, 1890 Jolene avenue car on the park, Dancing from 2 to 7 May 11, 1890 May 11, 1890 sum of the season, which was principal thoroughfare of the city, riding in not a thing of the city, ebb run will be to Comey June 11, 1890 May 11, 1890 York has been on ward of the Atlantic, York yacht, which is the favorite in the Portrait Marquis, Glad White. They will be in infor- mation a month. May 11, 1890 May 11, 1890 Mark Lyon on Tuesday evening Mark M. K. B. Church, 31 Henry M. Myrtle Hare, and Henry M. Myrtle Hare, supported by assistance, and other help May 18, 1890 in organizations based further Chicago province. He was a P. B. Law School law professor. The writing of the book "It will render a strong ground in teaching of Sunday from 12:00 to 10:00 a.m." Bedford, by P. A. L. Brown. "The Building of the Law state of 50 values." BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN S: H. Lark, the hunting trip of "the art of the hunt," bites on Burgess street, near Boffalo ave. Mrs. Lulu Howard in spending a few days at friends 29 217 Division street, Baltimore, Dr. L. Delante, dantist, 394 Carr avenue W3. Prospects W3. W3. Prospects -Adv. May 18 3 The fourteenth annual dramatic entertainment under the auspices of the Willing Worker place at Friday evening, May 19 at Jefferson hall. Eight hundred people were present. The place was named the Willing Worker moon was rendered. Those who took in the cast were H. M. Harbaugh, M. I. Mackenzie, M. W. Moore, M. J. Stapel, H. Mertil and J. M. Hirsch, K. Cooper, C. Clagett, J. Vernor Van Horn, J. K. Nail and K. Bratton. After the comedy program of twelve numbers. On Wednesday evening, May 19, N. J. Mimmon Jones gave an informal dinner and dance to the students of the SLXington avenue. Those present were Misses Lydia Lynam, Alice Cunningham, Bishop Maris, Mary Wayne, Kate Johnson, Effie Stinnaard, Florence Jackson and Lila Jones; and Merrim, Louis Smith, Peter Harry, George Nimod Jones, W. William, Charlene Arrington, Daniel Agard, Adrian Smith, Walter Thompson and Ludwig J. Brennan. A live session to a large gathering Sunday morning at the Fleet Birest A. M. R. Church. The Sunday Communion was administered at 5 p.m. The Christian Endeavors hold a good session at 630, and at night Rev. Joseph prescheduled again. The Christian Endeavors was administered by Muse. R. A. Robinson, Rev. Hayes of Charleston and Rev. Tappan assisted in the reception for another year before his retirement. St. Mark's Lyceum: **Physicians' night at the Lymeau was a success.** In the absence of Dr. Gustavus Henderson, Dr. P.A. Johnson discussed at some length the subject, which was "Cerviro-soft Meninism" and Dr. K. Roberts H. Johnson and Dr. K. Roberts also spoke. Misses May Clark and Harriet Stewart present many of the participants were from Brooklyn and had been accused by Mrs. Abbott of the Bridge. Misses H.L.K. River piano, Miss Vivie Karnay; recitation, Kenneth Spottwood; piano solo, Miss Maude Roberts; piano solo, Miss Jolie Holt; recitation, Miss Ploise Collins; solo, Miss Jederon; recitation, Miss Angela Roberts; piano solo, Miss Female Quartette. The Civil War heroes will be fittingly remembered on Sunday, May 24, at 11 a.m., Allen D. Wood will be in charge. MARRIED. BROOKMONT, VA., May 28. Much comment is being made by our white Friends who are interested in the educational revival of the South because Afro-American educators do not teach in the schools. Two weeks ahead was a Marching in Richmond of the Eastern Education Association. The concerts were held in the Mechanical Institute and the "Athenaeum of Music" special arrangements were made for Afro-American educators and Afro-American interested in the movement, and this arrangement was held at the University of the Colored People are returned for the exclusive use of the colored people. With but few exceptions, our people down here are opened to "Jim Crowism" in every one of the words and allow them to be "Jim Crow" only when they cannot prevent it. The result of it is that the people of Brookmont and the Academy were invited at every session of the educational rally. Our people are learning not to accept public education patrons' only offered, but to expect them to come to our classes, they to do to all other classes of our citizens. Afro-American is this section are manifesting much unevenness as to the fate of Howard and his family, as to the appeal of Dr. Drew from its Washingtoon correspondence regarding the serious troubles breaching there has been read with interest. It stands to reason that the family is fourth at least of our emotional men, doctors, lawyers and dentists, are Howard man. It is hoped in Richmond that graft and colorophilia will get to get sourced a child upon what is the most difficult of failures, so far as the race is concerned. The death of Dr. Sarah G. Jones, which was still in the minds of the Richmond people, "Dr. Sarah" was one of the most popular practitioners in the city, her patient being a woman who was running into the thunders. In connection with her death it might be mentioned that in especially our lawyers and doctors. There was Robert Paul Brooks, one of Richmonds brightest minds, who merited; there were William H. Kronen, Walter J. Scott and James T. Pry, all Howard University alumnus. Brooks in a short time of time. In the medical profession, John Cyrus Ferguson, the plosureist over the air, the blah blah apocrite of life, Dr. Taylor and Bun. Diamond also entered into the great arena at a time when it was time for a new profession, duration. But while our physicians and lawyers die young, our prescriber lives on, even after our death. Dr. James H. Hobson, John James and Richard Wall, full of joy, and full of honor, and complete, they are no less learned. The Grand Court, Independent Order of Caliburn (female department), elected the influential John Mitchell, J. Jr. Richard; grand worthy inspector, Julia A. Wata, Lyndsburg; grand worthy inspector, Julia A. Wata, Lyndsburg; grand worthy register of deeds, Marielle L. Cahill; Richard; grand worthy receiver of deposits, Joanie A. Graham; Richmond; grand worthy inspector, A. Graham; Richmond; grand worthy inspector, M. K. Washington, Newport News; grand worthy senior directeur, Anna Tayler; Richard; Richard; Richmond; grand worthy conducteur, Annie L. Griswold; Richard; Richmond; grand worthy protector, A. Morton; Davenport; Virginia in Virginia, under the lead of John Mitchell, form one of the strongest financial and financial organizations in the State. They own considerable property,含 Poughkeepsie Notes POGHEZERIE, MAY 23 — The Paint Club中学 which is composed of young ladies, entertained their gentlemen friends on May 19 at 8 North Bridge Street. The evening was spent playing cards served by the ladies. Mrs. James W. Smith of Market street will entertain the club next morning. The street being congregated over the area of a baby girl on May 14. Curtis Potterspent a few days at Summersfield Field, Mass., last week. The children of a baby girl which was born on May 16. Rev. G. Fairfax, who has been returned to the school, was greeted by a large attendance at both services Sunday. He received many interviews and joint service. The meeting was led by the senior Christian Endeavor held an interning joint service. The meeting was led by Mrs. Ursula Uckel and Plosia Vermong. A junior chore was reordered, and E. Zion was occupied by Rev. W. Wright Butler in the absence of the pastor at conference call to Danbury, Conn., on a visit to White white route for his home in Rochester. POGHEZERIE AT LAW OVER CHURCH. Both Claim Right to Presach in It. Other Church News. Newcastle, B. L., St. Mary's University, newcastle hall in St. Mary's University, big hope upon whipping the student and group given by the W. W. Club under the direction of D. Hammond Gilbert. The program of the summer was an all- lowers "Piano note," "Brown Land," "Mike K. King," pianist of the stochastic piano, "The Balloon and the Bone," Mike Jimmison Swainson, soundation "Restoring Big Staircase's Staircase, "Mike Kather Gibbons," pianist of the stochastic piano, "That We Two Have Engaged," the Minster concert, concert solo, Piano Preference and solo, "The Holy Mary," Mr. Browning's number Refreshments were served in the lecture room and all who took part in the entertainment were invited to join in the fun. The audience was encouraged to watch on the evening's entertainment and had been asked to repaint it again soon. He also been asked to produce it at downtown, R. I. I thought "An evening on the Avenues" was appropriate. At Jamestown some time in July or August. The committee of armamentance was: Mimi president; Mina Parel Gilden secretary; Miss Parel Gilden secretary; The May star concert given at the Union Gaynorian Church on Friday the 14th in St. Louis, Missouri, was given by ington and his beautiful bride took part with a grand entrance. Two stars were presented by the bride, both of whom were Ethish Buchan opened the concert with a pl auditorium. Both stars rendered an song a solo. Minnie Turner took part in sang a solo. After much applause Mr. White and the program, the orchestra and played an instrument by H. H. H. cased it. L. L. Leonard Jeter, who closed the first part of the program, took part in song a solo. Of S. Coleridge Taylor's compositions, Following this Mrs. Allen Weston Gunkin sang. Mrs. White then held her audience spell- ing "The Greatest Song of All Time." There then sang a musical by L. T. Ickham. The concert was brought to a close and "The Greatest Musical Motion." The accompanies for the evening were Mrs. White, Master Wai- lie Jeter and Mrs. Thomas Livingston, white. At the close of the concert the ladies hold an informal reception to Mr. and Mrs. White played, in which Mrs. H. L. Johnson won the first prize, a large coin, by finding the gold prize by finding the largest number of small coins. White not the agent of this paper and said: "I am always glad to meet one from the NEW YORK ACE because when I meet her, THE ACE is the paper." White in this city市, Mr. and Mrs. White were the guests of the reception for the evening on the early trial for Washington. on the evening was Miss Alice Boone, Roe Minor and Johnson of Boston. Monday evening a number of members and friends of the People's Church surprised Pastor Rickerson with many good things, Mrs. White with money. Mrs. White, who is doing as well as possible, Mr. and Mrs. A. Purley have removed from 31 Pleasure court to 30 Last Wednesday evening a surprise party was given Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Johnson of White who filled two tables with gifts. Then Glover presented Mrs. Johnson with a purse to be her mother, who is blind. A surprise was given the junior chair仕席 to ice and cake at the entrance to ice and cake at the entrance to ice Lawyer Douglas and wife and Mira, Rancho of New Bedford Mass, warn in the city on Monday that "After School, What P" on May 20 at Union Congregational Church. The young man of Mira, George, is preparing another of her entertainments. Mimi Sadle left on Monday evening for Wilmington, Deli. Rachel of New Bedford, Wednesday evening at his home. Rev. J. P. Sampoo sat at all the services at Tourno Chapel Sunday. Richard Green is home from Plainfield Notes. Two Deaths in Hudson Hudson, Mary M. -22, Mrs. Kimmia D. McIlroy widow of Comrade Henry McIlroy, died on May 11 after illness of four months. She was an earnest Christian. W. R. H. Browning of St. John M. K. Church received a sermon at her funeral. Mrs Amble V. Bald aged 41 years on May 15 Pongapohaite, sermonator at Zion Church. She leaves a member of Zion Church. She leaves a daughter of H. Brown, officio staff, assisted by H. Brown, officio staff. The members and Friends of Zion Church are well pleased over the return of their pantsuit. The annual conference in Manhattan was Peter A. Browning, Mr. and Mrs. John R. Tucker, and Renee Pratt, Mrs. Renee Pratt and Chrissie Williams. Meriden Notes. MIRIDEN, Conn., May 22—Joseph White, formerly of Annah, but now of Meridan, was married to Min Bella Eggleston of Waterbury by Attorney Aubrey. Many Meridian people attended the theatre party in Harbord Thursday evening given by Glen, Harbord Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. A. Harbord, and Mrs. P. Cohen, Mrs. A. Harbord, Minneapolis Malle and Rita Ching of Waterbury. After the guests resumed a light collision served by the host, Minneapolis Malle and Rita Ching served by the host. An investment that will pay 10 per cent in annual dividends besides making it possible for respectable, law-abiding people to live in respectable law-abiding neighborhoods. Now is the time to buy if you want to be numbered among those of the race who are doing something practical toward the solution of the so-called "Race Problem." MEYER'S BUILDING, 49 Maiden Lane Between William and Nassau Streets Eleventh Floor, Rooms 1106-6-7 NEW YORK CITY BOOKER T. WASHINGTON'S advice to all indistinct colored folk is "GET SOME PROPERTY" "GET A HOME OF YOUR OWN" Why Pay High Rent? Home at $1,200 up or we will build you a home just as you like it. For a small payment down, the money will be per person, but—but you get a home for your moope, as Kalwyns takes 80 minutes from Hersula Square, New York, on the Kenne- yankee Railroad. Obviously located. Lots 100 up.-$5 Down and $1 per Week FRANK PFAFFMAN, Room 904, 80 CURTLAND STREET New York, NY Presents $70 COSTAUD. March 23 3:30 Do You Wish To Play the Piano? Do you wish to better yourself? It is not too late to begin. If you cannot afford to take guitar lessons, this book will teach you to play. The book costs the reader at the piano talks about the basics of playing the piano. You will be playing and by very easy steps the player is led on and to still simple melodies because easy. Another advantage is the much shorter time it takes to learn to play with pianos. Anybody can learn to play by this simple and easy method. GEORGE BELDER'S Music Store, 10 Eighth Street, New York 312-755-2222 MAJORIOUS POTIONS. Ground, between Tibb and the avenues. Sunday Service—11 A. M. and 7:40 P. M. Monday Service—11 A. M. and 7:40 P. M. Early Childhood Sunday School 1 P. M. Midday School 1 P. M. Prayer Meeting 6:28 P. M. Weekly Meeting—Class Meeting on Monday from 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Meeting on Friday 11 a.m. from 8:00 to 8:30 a.m. SKATE KREAT. ALL WELCOME. REV. T. WELLIPONT HERBERT, D.P. PRESENT. REV. T. WELLIPONT WEST WEST STREET. At home from 8 to 9 p.m. in the Wellington Room, seen at the Church. Day from 12 to 18 p.m. RV. J. H. M. COLLEN, M.D. Sunday, 7:46 p.m. 7:46 p.m. Babbah School, P. M. Young youngs C. K. Frayer Meeting every Sunday 4:30 p.m. Public Invited. MICROLANDOUS FLOOR to let suitable for light housekeeping, all improvements, fine location. Apply 697 Lestington avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. TO LET - two or three unfurnished rooms, call in the evening. Macon Parkway 900 West 51st street. A PARTMENT to let in a quiet house 300 East street, to a respectable collared family, quaint Jailor. With tuts, with diction, quaint Jailor. May 25 th. FURNISHED BOOZ-Large, well ventilated from room suitable for light housekeeping. Call after 7 p.m. Lennon 300 West 51st street. AGENTS ANTIBODY AGENTS We want good life representatives to take want for "Powder Post" Mailbox. Brightly new. Sell at right. Big money. Bishop's territory gives. Agent's appl. position in New York. Universal Manufacturing Company, Pittsburgh, Pa. may 14 th. We continue to pay high rentals! Brightly new. Cottage for sale on trade on unclever terms. HICKS G. ROSS REAL ESTATE, AND INSURANCE 123 Evergreen Avenue Queens, N. L. New York City, 68 West 53rd St. day 4 p.m. Mr. Hicks to Warner Square, Queens Forty minutes run from New York over the Erie and D. L. W. Railroads. All trolley lines from Jersey City and Newark pass the Park. An ideal place for Being fitted up with Pac-Itons, Merry-go-Round, Swings, etc. Baseball, Tennis and Croquet Court, For information write CARPET CLEANSING Prices for Cleaning: Brussels and Tapetry, 5c ayd Wilton and Velvet. - 60 ayd. Axminster & Moquette, 7c ayd Refitting Bewning and Relaying Metropolitan Carpet Cleaning Company 339 West 59th Street Telephone, 4139-J Columbus may 11午no Mutual Hall 468 Ninth Avenue. Bvt. 8th Mth Streets CLARINS EVERY MONDAY AND THEDAY EVENING PROF. OSCAR JACKSON, Instructor Hall to call for Reservations or Parties FOR SALE Plata, Tremontana and Private Houses, also Suburban Houses, all On Easy Terms RENOLD LIGHTSTON 150 Nassau Street may18 3mo Suite 1105-4 3, Tel. 3228 John Afro-American News Stand FOR SALE A first class news stand and large paper notice. The room is well furnished and no opposition. The suitable for a good Afro- American Hutter. Terms reasonable. Apply to the advertiser. Please call for J. J. Schenck. (Business confidential.) Metropolitan Hotel MR. AND MRS. E. C. BURROOK. Propa. Atkina and Springwood Aves West Asbury, Park, N. J. Best located, finest ally rooms and large shady grave. Serve minibus walk from station. Everything now and neat. American Phon. 230 West 25th St. TO RESPECTABLE FAMILIES ONLY Janitor on Premiere 144 West 100th St. St. Rooms and Bath RENT. $35.00 Royal Apply to Santor at 10:12 West 99th street or to Owner, Dr. John J. O'Dillran, 211 W. 133rd street. References Required. SING KEE FIRST CLASS Chinese Restaurant 888 West 99th St., bet. 8th and 9th Aven. Ground Floor. Open All Night. may 25 3 noon. A Large Store To Let At Saratoga Springs Two or Three Large Rooms TO LET Dublinburgh in Private Room, Bath London in Private Room, Bath Jersey in Private Room, Bath London in Private Room, Bath Tenth Annual Summernight's Festival and Picnic Of Theobald Lodge, No. 3890, G. U. O. O. F. At Sulzers Harlem River Park, 1904 Street and Amended 47th. FRIDAY EVENING. JUNE 9th, 1905 Music by PROF. W. P. ORAIG TICKETS, 35 cents Executive Committee: P. N. P. J. Thomas Johnson, Chalmers; P. N. P. W. P. Hooper, Vice Chalmers; P. N. N. Oscar Stovers, Secretary; P. N. P. Charles E. Mistner, Advisor; P. N. P. Henry A. Bonley, Treasurer; P. N. P. Jean Saunders, Grand Marshal; P. N. P. Edward P. N. P. William D. Coke, P. N. P. Walter O. Smith, P. N. P. John Samblis, P. N. P. William D. Coke, P. N. P. Thon A. Lockey, P. N. P. Cary Epps, P. N. P. George N. Taylor, Bro. Major Morgan. Floor Committee: Audalio Palacio, Chalmers; P. N. P. Walter O. Smith, P. N. P. Alfred Hopkins, P. N. P. Edward Kandolph, P. N. P. Harry Marsay, Second Annual Picnic & Summernight's Festival At Sulzer's Harlem River Park and Casino 120th Street and Second Avenue, New York Music by MIMI ANDERSON'S Orchestra of 25 Musicians Dancing from @ p. m. to 5 a. m. A Married Ladies' Grand May Party At MT. OLIVET BAPTIST CHURCH 101 W. 53rd St. REV. M. W. GILBERT. D. D.. Pastor Monday Evening, May 29th, 1905 Under the auspices of the Poor Saints Handing Hand Club Made by New Amsterdam Orchestra of New York. TICKETS. - - - - 25 CENTS TICKETS. Attendance: N. A. McKeechney, S. J. Alexander, Observed by: Mrs. N. A. McKeechney, President; Mrs. Ela Winnow, Vice Pres. N. R. Take "D. L. & W." at Christopher Street Ferry, every half hour after 3 p.m. up to 10 p.m. Also Trolley car at Jersey City. Fresh, good, pleasant time available. may 18 WALTER F.CRAIG'S Orchestra, Office and Studio, 321 W. 59th 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 m 30 THE GLENWOOD PARK PETER R. LEE., 75 Oakwood Avenue ORANGE, New Jersey Ladies' Hair Dressing Parlors MANUFACTURER OF HUMAN HAIR GOODS THE LION CASH OR CREDIT 603, 605, 607, 609 and 613 NINTH AVENUE Northwest cor. of 43rd St. ```markdown ``` A Guaranteed Sewing Machine Free With Every Purchase of over 875. REV. GEORGE L. WHITE, D. D. consolidation of his church has been greatly improved, as well as the financial. His record has been examined all former administrations of the church. SMYER WANTS, GANNER, AGAIN. Ungan. Members to Still Greater Efforts- Personals. Yoyomi, May 22. On Sunday began the new conference year at the A. M. K. Zion Church. Pastor Snyer preached morning and evening. In closing his night message he said that the church would have to work just as the last conference year, because the last conference year, because a number of pastors have said that Yoyomi will not have the "banner church" when conference meets again. At the Mumbai Baptist Church Sunday Pastor Booker preached in the morning; the Sahibbath school and young people's meeting were attended; the memorial to the Women's Home and Forensic Maternity Society. On Tuesday evening, May 16, a literary and musical entertainment was given by the W. W. Church of St. Mary's Church for the benefit of the proposed W. W. C. A. The program was as follows: Involvement; Preservative quartets, Miss Maly, Mrs. Fannie; solo song, "King of Eternity," Mrs. Fannie; Guitar quartet, Mrs. Griton; John E. Grimes and Master W. Brown; bass, "Two Grammarians," J. Spannie; vocalation, "Dot Long," J. Small selection; Preservative quartets; piano duet, "Obron," Miss D. Cox and B. Brown; trio, Miss D. Cox and B. Brown; vocal duet, "Hold Thou My Hand," Miss W. Frankel; address, Kev. Dr. Joseph Duppe; vocal "Hold Thou My Hand," Duppe; the incarnation of the weather the "w" at the Institute Hall was well filled and those who were present hard an excellent Greenbore A. & M. College Growing Gunnamono, N. C. May 20-Work on the new dormitory for the Colored Agricultural and Mechanical College here in progress and the college activities are expecting some of the another large dormitory added to their equipment. The building will be a documentary built structure containing forged granite stone beds and electric lights. Plans for the building were drawn by the architectural director of the museum, Stephen G. Harnett, a graduate of this KINK·NE Most Wonderful Discovery ever made for kinky, curly and knotty hair. Acts like MAGIO on the hair. To prove the quality and superiority of our goods over all others, we will send, prepaid, one full-size bottle of Kink-ine, price, 35c, one cake of Soap, price 25c, both for only 40c. Send stamps or silver and write your name and address plain. FOR SALE BY 8. Rosenstock, 7th avenue and 41st street; W. B. Rockey, 4th street and 8th avenue; E. J. Ward, 50th street and 5th avenue; Chas. E. Frantz, 2004 5th avenue; W. B. Riher's Norveg, Hogemann & Co.'s Norveg, J. and P. Grotia, 70th street and 6th avenue; L. P. Napp, 80th street and 5th avenue; 2004 5th avenue; F. K. James, 40th street and 7th avenue; P. K. James, 40th street and 7th avenue; J. Dewirkh, 440 Hudson avenue; James C. Hoyle, Hudson avenue; Hogemann Norveg, Hogemann Norveg, Lahore, Hum; R. Mata street; Burberry in New York, R. L. Robinson, 900 40th street; Burgess Norveg, 120th and 120th street; B. Whegman, 220 West 50th street; Landis & Gorman, 230 West 50th street; L. A. Wingham, 230 West 57th street; B. A. Jone, 240 West 57th street; W. P. Klanen, 240 West 57th street; THIS WEEK BISHOP HOLLY is giving a speech on the day in the city of St. Louis and Minneapolis, on Mighty Hill, and South returned to his home at Champlain, M. W., near Burlington. Saint John, Bishop Holly, will address attorney to the Spanish Chinese Commission, with headquarters at St. Louis, to the secretary for short time, and visited The AOE office last Saturday. Missus, Bob Cote, James W. Johnson and Benjamin Johnson will go to Europe early in June. They will do the Capitol, spending some time in Paris before beginning an engagement in London. James W. Johnson will send The AOE a series of articles while abroad. CHURCH ACTIVITY IN ALBANY. ALBANY, May 22—Helpful services were held in Israel, A. M. K. Church on last Sunday, when Paster Prostor presided two services. At 11 a.m. m. his subject was "Christ's Triumph a Pledge of the Bellers," and at 8 p.m. after an inspiring song service, the pastor spoke upon "Hone Pride Love and Sympathy" to a large congregation. Mr. West, one of the young men running on the boat here, made a helpful address to the Sunday school. A good musical program has been prepared for the concert and donation on this Thursday night. Some of the best talent in the city are to take part. KII Great Hair Most Wonderful Disco hair. Kink-ine Is No Experiment It was discovered by Dr. Roberta, a famous English chemist, who has made a study of the scalp of colored people for the past 30 years, and who, after much time and experience, has prepared this great tonic especially for the colored people. The Doctor says that his experience and study have taught him that the scalp of the colored people requires a special treatment and after laboring and testing these many years he has discovered the greatest REMEDY the WORLD has ever known for the HAIR of colored people. KINKI will make the hair GROW from one to three inches per month, if the directions and instructions are carefully followed out. We have many cases on record where the above results have been obtained, and we do not hesitate when we make these claims. KINK-INE is the only safe preparation in the world that is guaranteed to make the hair straight and make dry hair smooth and stop it from breaking off and falling out; takes out all the kinks and knots, cures dandruff, makes the hair soft and silky, and by nourishing the roots gives it new life and vigor, restoring it to natural color. Agents Wanted We want live agents everywhere, Ladies and Gentlemen, to sell Kink Ike. We supply you with Samples and Circula- lars and any one that tries a Sample does not hesitate to buy at once. A Large Bottle for 35 cia, $1x for $1.66, or One Dozen for $3.10. Write at once for terms and full instructions. SP To prove the quality we will send, prepaid, or cake of Soap, price 25¢ and write your name an FOR SALE BY 8. Rosenstock, 7th a street and 9th avenue; Chas. E. Prantz, 220 street and 6th avenue; L. P. Rapp, 23th street; Olitas, 3rd street and 8th avenue; D. Russell, 6th Street and 8th avenue; C. Mata street. Burbage in New York, R. L. B. R. Whippham, 231 West 56th street. London gate, 231 West 57th street. P. W. Kinnan. Ironsides Commencement. BORNSTOWN, N. J., May 23. The annual commencement exercise of the Bordontown Manual Training and Industrial School will be held at the school June 1. The commencement week begins Sunday, May 29, with the beccarlate mission delivered to the graduates by Rev. J. H. White of Trenton. Thursday the commencement day, will be opened by the industrial exhibit from 9 a.m. to 12 a.m, and concludes the literary exercise beginning at 1:45 p.m. 'Married Ladies' May Party. One of the most beautiful entertainments ever given in the history of church entertainments in New York city was that of the Married Ladies' May Party, at Mr. Olivet Baptist Church. Thursday evening, May 11, under the management of Mrs. Montgomery A. Jones, the pastor of the church, with most highly appreciative audience. The coronation of the queen, Mrs. Lewis Manning, by fifty Mr. Olivet's ladies, could not have been more impressive. The grace and dignity of all the ladies who assisted in the coronation of the king, was hardheaded, in a royal costume, representing King Edward. Fifty married gentlemen and a tableau was all that could be desired. The May party will be repeated at Mr. Olivet Church, in West Std street, Monday evening, Corona Notes CORONA, May 22—M. Guline, who was in injured the "Ogden Party" wreck, is just getting into shape. Miss Ruth Butler of Washington street, who has been indisposed for a year, said she was surprised Friday night by friends and a pleasant, time was enjoyed. Dick and Rose have formed a partnership to run in real estate and insurance in this place. Real Estate. AND INSURANCE My specialty is the management of Colored Residential Property. AGENTE. 67 West 1846th Street. DOWN TOWN OPERATOR 46 MAIDEN LANK Telephones: 817 and 818 Harleen; KN and EK John. inv2419 NK-II Straightener a covery ever made for ki Acts like MAGIO on the KINK-INE Makes Hair Grow Makes Hair Straight Makes Hair Soft Makes Hair Silky Stops Hair Falling Cures Dandruff Hair Invigorator Nourishes the Scalp FREE to show what KINK-INE will do, and to prove that it is the Beffair Hair Tonic in the World. send us 15 cents in Stamp or Silver to pay postage and we will send you a Sample Bottle. SPECIAL OFFERS and superiority of our one full-size bottle of KINK c, both for only 40c. S and address plain. Venue and 41st street. W. B. Rockey. 84th 5th avenue. W. B. Rilker's Store, Hogues and 4th avenue, 29th street and 7th Colp, 20th Hartnett street. Brooklyn, Monk's Drove Johnson, 88th West 69th street; Benjamin & Grosse, 831 West 69th street; L. W. Wheeler & Co.'s Drug Store, 831 West 69th street; and 60th Howard University SUMMER SCHOOL SECOND SESSION July 1 to July 28, 1905 Courses in History, Psychology, Pedagogy, Mathematics, Nature Study, Manual Training, Haskell, Kafka, Cooking, Millinery and Sewing. $40 registration fee covers all charges for tutoring and lectures. Board and lodging on University campus cost only $150. For further information, address. Rev. John Gordon, D.D., President, University of Washington, Ph.D., Director, Washington, D.C. Miss H. L. Anderson's Orchestra. PROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN TO ALL COMMUNICATIONS 816 West 59th Street NEW YORK CITY. Telephone office 612-255-0000 June 5th The New Amsterdam MUSICAL ASSOCIATION (INCORPORATED) Will furnish COMPETENT COLORED MUSIC CLIPS for all instruments. NE and Grower inky, curly and knotty e hair. Kink-ine Read what Miss Elizabeth Jones of Chicago says of KINK-INE: "My hair was not more than three inches long when I commenced to use Kink-ine, six months ago. I have used it steadily since that date and it has grown on an average of two inches each month and it is now more than fifteen inches long. Heads, my hair become as tall as the height fully grown and as tall as it will have the most beautiful head of hair of any colored lady in the world." As a Hair Dressing Kink-ine has no equal, being far superior to any hair oil, pomade or vasseline. The great advantage of this wonderful preparation is, by its use you can straighten your hair at your own home. This, we guarantee, can be done in six to twelve hours, our instructions are carefully followed. A Word to Mothers Every Mother owes a as duty to her Child to use every possible means to beautify and promote the growth of their child by instilling the childhood a persistent use of Kink the. It keeps the scalp of Babies and Children in a fresh and healthy condition and we can teach the child can have a beautiful head of hair when they become a young man or woman. Kink-ine Soap A product of perfect purity, prepared expressly for use in connection with Kinki-fine. It contains the highest medical qualities. The best Bamboo Soap in the cold, for warmth and scalp in perfect condition it has no irritation. For imparting a velvety softness and whiteness to the hands, for preserving, freshening and beautifying the complexion and the bad effect of cosmetics. Offensive perguration of the feet and arm pits, and irritation of the skin, may be pear with the use of Kinki-fine soap. Read Special Offer below. goods over all others, ink-ine, price, 35c, one Send stamps or silvery street and 8th avenue; E. J. Ward, 500 Jones & Co's Stores, J. and P. Grota, 275 avenue; F. K. James, 40th street and 41 street, Abbey Road & Bromwell, New River Road, Bromwell, Rim F. Grota, Haworth, 150th and 150th street shops, Bromwell, 200th West 57th street; R. A. J cott, 20th and 21st avenues and 180th street. West 14th Street ANDERSON HOUSE, 67 Douglas Street. The Lost Baskets and Furniture Store GILBERT HOUSE, 614 West 91st St., Deep Ellen Ave. New York FINE CITY ACADEMICATES Purchase and equipment supplies Premium and superior service Associate with the management of the hotel Associate with the management of the hotel Keystone Hotel 206 West 87th Street. First Union Purchased Rooms by the Day, Week WINNIE LADOGS AND CIGARE POOL AND BILLARD PALLOON DOWN STAIRS WIM. BANKS. Proprietor. NEW MARYLAND HOUSE MILABORD AND REMODELED 202 and 204 West 87th Street Well Purchased Rooms by the Day, Week or the Night. RESTAURANT ATTACHED Meals at all hours. JOHN WALGOTT, Proprietor mine. The Hotel Alpen, BOROPLAN PLAN, 607 Second Avenue, NEW YORK CITY. Northeast Furnished and装饰. Mature building and interior. To be by the only plaza for travelers in New York. MISSING INNER JOHNSONBOK, Proprietor. North January 1917. Tel. 201 60th Street. HOTEL MACEO. 218 West 58rd Street, N. Y. First One-Stop Service of One-Way Transportation of Travelers. Best Service of Transit Guests. Best Service of Transportation. Regular Dinner. Including Wine. S. P. M. to S. Sunday. 1 to 5 P. M. Sunday. 8 to Y. TWONDAY. Proper HOTEL LETT. 186 West 58rd Street. Nearly equipped with Bristol Plum Punished Brown Electric Light. Telephone and Residence Service. BESTAURANT ATTACHED BROWN, COUNTWRIGHT. Prestigious. Telephone: 212-765-1234 Uptown Uptown Hotel in New York Ontario unoccupied Plenty turned turned JAN L. MAINHALL & GROE M4 BRALL 6060 Simeon Properties THE ALLEN HOUSE 218 West 47th Street Nearly furnished rooms for permanent or trans- port guests. First class restaurant attached. Meals at all hours. Quiet location; near four hours of surface care and subway station. Mrs. F. B. WHITE, Proprietress Seaalde Hotels Local and Long Distance Telephones Coast Phone 738 Electric Bells HOTEL BOSTON W. S. STAFFORD Prop. Cor. Arctic and Michigan Aven. atlantic City, N. J. Choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Music Hall Attached. arre 738 BOARD BY THE WEEK 1015 ARCTIC AVENUE Atlantic City, N.J. Additional Dining, Sleeping and Bathing Brooma, Rates Reasonable. The public is appropriately invited to visit and see the ad- vantages offered by the management. 1612 ARCTIC AVE. Atlantic City, N.J. MR. AND MRS. JONSEPH GAINES. Mgr. apr 27 3 moa. WONDERFUL DISCOVERY Curly Hair Made Straight By TAKE FROM LIFE LOUIS A. LEAVELL Attorney and Counselor at Law Office 104 West 30th Street Tel. 503-712-3000 NEW YORK CITY Special Name: 8 in 8 A. M. 40 8:20 P.M. Provenance at 130 West 30th Street. mar 20 5 P.M. Preference in all the Court's The New York Realty Co. 490 West 51th Street NEW YORK CITY REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE CONSULTANT New York Insured by Bain Capital C. A. Aguilar 586 W. 51th Street J. W. Worthington, Agent ```markdown ``` BRANHLERD 1804. Our Twenty Towers on Sixth Ave. J. EDW. WINTERBOTTOM. FUNERAL DIRECTOR 638 Sixth Ave. Bst. 90th N. and 90th E. E. EDWARD WINTERBOTTOM. Twelfth Avenue, 638 Fifth Ave. and 90th E. No telephone. George A. Brambill, LADIES & GENTS TAILOR, 187 West 134th Street. New York, N.Y. Gentlemen, Signature Gents a Service. Dinner with ELB. Work called for and delivered to any part of the City. Branch: 79 Congress St. Barretton Springs, New York. July 17 LADY GUNNY MME ZARA Brooklyn's Patrons and Friends no. 1 LADY GUNNY present an ad in personal affairs. Mortable property gifted in advancing. UNDRAKERS AND SHELTERS No experience, with any other house or agency LADY GONZALES AND MME ZARRETTA GONZALES Newbury's Celebrated Overseas Palestine and Spirit of Islam. Fundly no charge unless you obtain the LADY GONZALES is world renowned as the greatest advert upon business, law, in residence, marriage, marriage, divorce and personal admin. Their vast experience, years of study and re- lated experience, especially in raising and edging them. AN HONEST PROPOSITION: (You to be full male) To the MAK NACKOONBOW we fall to you by email in name. In mass: mason of your Friends, ensembles or bands, to the MAK NACKOONBOW we fall to you by band, wife, or sweetheart is true or false. We must do justice, even through indies away. In we will tell you every hope, fear or ambition we have, and we will tell you being one word, and if you are not a nobility, we will tell you we are to be full judges, then we pay us not one penny. During the year our record for successful work around 52 MARRIAGES, gained the love of covens around 52 MARRIAGES, gained the love of covens opposition, overcame rivals and hundreds of other cases such as bans, accusations, inv Funeral Parlor and Chapel 146 West 53d Street Between Sixth and Sventh Avenue. Lady saintadant at all Parochies, Camp Chains and Gauches to hire at all hours. death ban Telephone Call, 146 53th Street. Night Call, promptly attended to. CHARLES H. GRAVES, Undertaker and Embalmer. Oxford, 319 West 41st St. Between 5th and 6th Avenue. Bundleshire, gift of 53rd Street, York. Breyry, gift for Mortal Paradise on Resonant Term. as is shown below: Boundary of the military occupation, over- land occupation, over- land and侵占 Unilateral Impacts on the land occupied by you if you have a view of the land of the world. All They tell you you will help your boss become boss. their process. their questions and responses and honorance. Permanently is 236 between Bond at the past 19th day. Charles H. GRAVES MISS S. BOFIRD. Jennifer and Mike Pinkney Ladies Hair Dressing Parlor, 727 EIGHTH AVE. Afro-American, Hair Goods a Specialty, also Hair Stylingen. Your Patronage Solicited Don't be Burned Out and Have Nothing Left A 6 Year Loan for the Furniture in your Flat at very low rates Only the best Fire Insurance Company. DOWNEY, Insurance Broker Albany Avenue, 6040 New York BROOKLYN Insurance Broker Undertaker & Embalmer 883 Hudson Ave. Brooklyn Near Myrtle Ave. Opposite Fleet St. Church NO BRANCH STORE may 18 ams P. J. Drummins, Mgr. COUNSE ANDROOFTEN Mgr 40 M. HP Rooms 1105 to 1107 Field 100 Room 1106 to 1107 1016.1005 DAMAGE OUTSIDE A SPECIALTY Your own Material made up at Reasonable Price. New Head or Blinding. 25 c. Panamas cleaned 50 c. Cleaning and Dyeing. mar 12 19 Near East Street NEW YORK CITY Furniture, Carpets, Bedding Etc Brooms, Flats and Apartments Furnished Complete. Oldest and Most Reliable Store in the 697 nov19 17 COR. OF HICKORY AND BROWN STREET, Orange. N. J. Meals served at all hours: Pride Ice Cream, Polar Soda Water, Cigar, Candies, DINNER PARTIES AND WEDDINGS A SPECIALITY. THOS. H. S. ROYSTER & CO. The Afro-American News Co. 690 West 50th Street, New York City. Special Agents for New York Age, Richmond Charleson Management, New York American Charleson Management, New York American by released authors. We make a speciality of sub- scriptions and advertisements. First notice to subscribers. Give us a call: 212-765-4000. J. W. WATKINS, Mgr. TO LET Handome Apartments of 4 Large, Light Rooms. Range $14.99. Water Supply. Finely Carpeted Hall, Inc. Good Jupiter Service. Rooms $16.99 to $17 per Month Apply D. JOHNSON, Janitor and Wash Linen Service JOHNSON & BERNTSON CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS Reserved to Lumbeth, Burnett and Stainfieldshire www.johnsonberntson.com 40 Westbourne, Stapleford and Bromsgrove 07878 5555 5555 JAMES C. THOMAS UNDERTAKER & ENBALMER 404 ROWSWATER AVENUE TEL. 827 R. COLUMBIA W. DAVID BROWN HIGH GRADE LUNCHED Undertaker & Embalmer The True Reformers Burial Co. Licensed UNDERSTAKEN & BERALDER, of the largest and most important Underground Reformers in the State. We guarantee satisfaction, and turns to us all. Prices Only properly attained to. 90 West 114th Street. Telephone Call 1803 Saratoga mard 17 BETS & BROTHER. Property. Not connected with any other firm. --- Rev. Robt R. Mont's service Montgomery Flickens, Fane- mals, Preaching and Marriages, REV. ROBERT Undertaker and 200 West 63rd Street, R. MONT. Embalmer. NEW VOUCH. mort & B C. FRANKLIN CARR. FUNERAL DIRECTOR. 850 West 58th Street, NEW YORK Formally with the JAMES R. MATTHEW Tel. 2642-J Main Calls promptly attended to Carmellus Parker Mrs.IdaWhite-Duncan Flats and Apartments. ELEGANT FLATS To Let Roadside Apartments with all improve THE DOLLY-MOUNT. 21) West 60th Street THE BARATOCA. 209 West 60th Street THE VENICE. 216 West 60th Street. THE VENICE. 216 West 60th Street. Above houses have First-Line Janitor services and are always in good condition. Apply BOBERT CARTER. 209 West 60th Street. ALEXANDER CURBY. 217 West 60th St. MR. HOLYARD. 210 West 60th Street. jan 1977 554, 556, 558 & 560 West 126 St ```markdown ``` Hand GET INSURED Miger Building 40 MAIDEN LANE NEW YORK A. B. To 701 Fulton St. Brooklyn DR. ELLARSON MARYFLOUS MEDIUM and TRANCE CLAIRVOYANT. can do all for that Dr. IBM did, and has Rich. Happy and Successful in all their undertakings while those who neglect Dr. Eliasson's advice will still be subject to the effect knowledge of chemistry can impart to others. Dr. Eliasson will all oversee the work with you and be your friend. He has the secret of winning the effect of the opposite force in the course of Spiritualism that there are no many who claim possession. Beware of such and other frauds. Dr. Eliasson will give spirit reading representing the power of the one. Dr. Eliasson does not endorse of the one. Dr. Fulton street, N.Y. Dr. DILLARSON understands the thought of spirit reading. In love and always has been a teacher of spirit reading and always has had a patronage from you. Please Read The Following: Call on or write to DR. ELLARSON 761 FULTON ST., BROOKLYN, N. Y. Fifth door above South Portland Avenue (Entrance through Drug Store) State your troubles freely. Office Hours to 7.午. Make up any apologies. ALL LETTERS MUST CONTAIN Agre. Look at Hair, Stamp and ONE DOLLAR Confinement Once Taken. When writing, please mention this paper. RUFUS HURBURT Select Employment Agency. Good situations at all times. A service of full and Charge. 165 West 28rd Street. 8074139 OPEN EVENINGS. Working Girls' Home 217 East 86th Street Between 2nd and 3rd Ave Pleasant heights for girls with private school. 217 East 86th Street and library, at request of room. The Move Boy office for working dogs, goats, etc. at 217 East 86th Street. Call 1-800-255-2555 on web.