New York Age
Thursday, June 1, 1905
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
VOL. XVIII. No. 42
SAID HE SHOULD RIGHT-ABOUT-FACE OR ABDICATE.
Apparent Leaning Toward Southern Sentiments Has Allenated Love of Students and Confidence of Public—Howard's Spirit Contrasted With That of Clark, Atlanta, Hampton and Gammon—Will Gordon Reform?
Safi Correspondence of Tink Ack
WASHINGTON, May 29—Affairs on University hill are certainly in a bad way. They can hardly be in a worm way. The relations between President Gordon and the student body are anything but friendly. The students do not try to conceal their aversion to the presidents' advice. They are in the open stage at least once it culminated in the open biming of Dr. Gordon. And Dr. Gordon on his part reciprocate cordially, it is said, the hostility of the students. Apprehensive by the students, the president, by the student body, the president, rumor runs, acting on the good old way that "anouncement of prevention is better than a pound of chivy" called in recently the aid of the metropolitan police as a precautionary measure, the better to prevent the university mishart, like oatten eggs for instance.
Which alternative will Dr. Gordon chomel we confess may have you do not know. We have no idea what he will do. But this much we do know, that if he goes to the position, he will go to the position, and this sort, out of the hands of Howard University. For much an election institution, he will choose for any position, in a colored institution. But we have to decide to make choice of the first alternative, and with this choice he will have to prove himself, as he has failed to do yet, the right to be president in the double capacity of expert educator and expert money-racer. The institution needs him, he needs him, needs him at once and needs him badly.
is the present head of Howard University. He has been teaching at Harvard, can possibly claim that he has during his first year proved himself by actual achievement, and has been able to establish an educational proposition, which he faces his office as the preternatural in matters not has taught him. He has been able to adjust and reform not in the spirit of the present, but in the spirit of the past. He be the mental outlet as an up-to-date educator, the educative equipment in modern schools, and the problem which demands solution at Howard University. We doubt it, but he are willing to accept it.
F.R. MOORE AT YONKERS SPREAD
Spoke on "Negro in Business"
Other Speakers-Personals.
YORKERS, May 27 - Last week occurred the Men's Sunday Club second annual banquet at the Men's Sunday Club, sponsored by Moultrie. Music was furnished by Prof. W. H. Buller's orchestra of New York city. The secretary of the club, J. K. Browne, read letters of resign from the Government of Mexico and a telegram from Dr. York Browne of New York city, who was to have spoken on "the Negro in Material Mexico." Dr. J. A. M. Murray, Mr. Murray, president of the club, transferred to South Carolina speaking on "The Destiny of the Negro: Column A. Powell of the G.A. K. Soldier"; Prof. K. Moore of Brooklyn, on "The Negro in Business"; R. C. Sinnison, associate "The Economic, Educational and Industrial Society"; Prof. K. Moore of Brooklyn, on "The Prince of the People of Corporation."
At the Messiah Baptist Church Sunday morning a worsening a woman was arrested to the Yankees and ordered to be held in a jail cell and ordered was well represolved. Mrs. Infant of White Plains was the guest of Mrs. Winston and the family. The quarterly dividends were distributed to the family on Wednesday morning at Wiggins bell.
New Rochelle Notes:
NEW ROOKLEE May 22- Five persons were baptized, Sunday afternoon at Bethesda Baptist Church by Rev W. H. Slater, pastor of the泖岸 Baptist Church. A successful strawberry bake-off was held on Friday, the泖岸 Baptist Church Thursday evening. Promenade Lodge, K. of Fayette, a congregation Thursday, hosted the Shiloh Harris of New York where the guests baked bread of their master, M. K. G. Harris, K. of Fayette, with Mrs. and Miles Johns, Judge of Custer County.
Togo and the Mikasa
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STAR CONCERT IN PROVIDENCE
Mme. Hackley Took Part—Church and Social Activity.
PITT8BURG BECKONS K. OF P.
Hospitable Preparations for Bicentennial Remain in August.
Perrineco, Pa, May 28.—The people of this city are asking great preparations to entertain the dedication of the Kyleigh of Python at the National Quarterly which must be on August 28.
Pittsburgh is the center of the Grand Lodge of Pa, of Western Pennsylvania and of the State of Ohio. The people are on their way to appreciate the vision of changing the future of our people to be safe and happy. They have planned preparations.
ADMIRAL TOGO'S FLAGSHIP, MIKASA.
R. R. MATTHEWS' CONCERT.
Star Artists Excelled Themselves
at His Benefit
A baccalaureate entertainment was given to Mr. Robert Roy Mathews under the auspices of the Young People's League of the M. Olivier School, following program was reedited: Piano solo: "Rhapodon Hongkien," lisa (Zita) Miss Helen Elaine Smith; solo (liza): "Kissing Star," Wagner; Mr. Charles Wilson; reading, Mrs. Samuel Orton; organ solo: "Overture in E. Plat." Fortune, soprano solo: "Man (Dean), Nevin" Miss Aibie Mitchie; violin solo: "Karatma" (haf) Pater. Panda Tanner; liaisons solo: "Palm Benches" (Paure) Mr. Robert Ridgway. All of the artists were enriched and the tradition of "Mom Deair" by Miss Aibie Mitchie pleased the audience that she was compelled to respond to three enriches. The piano by Misa Smith was a palpable presence in the audience of Punchesty "That" was given in fashion style and was of a large character. Prof. Panda Tanner's solo was also greatly enhanced with aquisition delicacy and artistic effect, and humor was no less enthusiastic. Dr. Gilbert the pastor, introduced Mr. Fortune, who made a short address to the musical and public in our life. Dr. Gilbert to that a more artistic program was presented to fit in exactly. The attendance was pursued to fit in exactly. The attendance was numbered by appreciation and applause.
TO HELP BORDENTOWN SCHOOL
Gor. Stokes Advised by T. Thomas
Fortune and Others.
WOODWREN, Mimi, May M. - Alhaze H. Henson, son of Miri, Benn Sam Henson, 80 St. Mary's Hospital, Oakland, from a attack of appendicitis, after less than a week's treatment in Ambient college. He had taken a prominent place in the athletics of the oblique jumper, and by four alumni, Mimi Jemmaite, Beach, Hearnes and George Jemmaite, Woodwren, and by four alumni, Mimi Jemmaite, Beach, Hearnes and George Jemmaite, of judgment street A. M. K. Ellen Church and with a wide circle of friends in Worcester. George Jemmaite were held in the college during the war, and George Jemmaite official train was brought to Woodwren. The final service was in Zion A. M. K. Church Wednesday after graduation in Woodwren college.
Mr. Shannon had many Friends in Worcester, Mass. He was a very generous account of his life of college. It also states how much his friends have done for him. Dr. Freedman represents the faculty and told of the great work. Mr. Shannon had done and was very helpful. He was the first, necessary, of the M. V. C. A., was also present and told from his personal acquaintance with Mr. Shannon how much good he 'had
Benzard and Miss S. K. Wilson, Mrs. Griffin hold the party spellbound with her readings, Rewinders are served by the hostess, Mrs. Madd Gordon, young friend, and young friend last Thursday in Zion A. M. K. Church for its benefit. The principal feature of the evening was the Green of Southbridge was the guest of Miss Jackson of 30 Eastern avenue Sunday. Mrs. Ada Griffin, Wincerock's will money reader, left the city Wednesday for Springfield. On Wednesday evening she will read at a concert, and read at the concert given by Mrs. Hickler, on Friday she will go to Providence, and read at the concert given by Mrs. Hickler.
WEST INDIAN CRICKETERS WIN.
Tam R. West, Indian, administered a like
gone at Van Cortlandt Park, where the result
were W. L. C. C., 80 rour, Touhars, 50 rour.
Say Marber Notes.
Bae Khamon, May 28. - The return of Bae.
C. Van Buren to the A. M. B. Skelton Churk for
morning year was qualifying to his participation.
At a golf course he was playing two golf
hours in the morning. Bae president; M.
A. M. E. ZION CONFERENCE
THE 18TH OF PHILADELPHIA AND BALTIMORE DISTRICT.
Most Satisfactory Session - Optimism of Bishop G. W. Clinton—Many Omeons of Better Days for Race—Roosevelt's Knighty Attitude—How We May Help Good Work Along—Appointments for Washington and Maryland.
Superior Correspondence of the AGE.
WASHINGTON, May 23. On May 22 closed the twenty-eighth session of the Philadelphia andittowns A. M. E. Zion conference and has among its membership some of the street, Northwest, on the preceding Wednesday.
This is the largest of the Northern conferences of the A. M. E. Zion denomination, and has among its membership some of the race.
At the opening of the variable session was delivered by Dr. K. H. Curry, presiding elder of the Philadelphia district. He is a Kentuckian by birth, and has spent most of his nearly three year ten years working on the race, and far advanced in years and perfectly white haired, his frame is tall and erect, his voice is splendid, his reasoning sound and his argument forceful. More than a hundred palestine took communion, and the spiritual atmosphere prevailed throughout the entire session.
Bishop G. W. Clinton, who is seeing his presided presenter of this conference, presided presenter of this conference, the business with an man and system which Walter D. JA, a few hours at the conference before continuing his journey to attendance in attendance most of the season: Dr. G. L. Blackwell, corresponding secretary of the conference before continuing his journey to attendance in attendance most of the season: Dr. H. Coffey, corresponding secretary of church extension department; W. H. Gollet, George C. Clement of the State of Zion, Lt. W. Hood, M.D.J. S. Caldwell, D.D. and F.R. G. S. Akhmin, education of secretary of the conference before continuing his journey to attendance in attendance most of the season: The preaching during the conference was supplied by ministers of marked improvements along all lines.
In the church where the conference was held at 11 a.m., by bishop Lloyd, it lasted at 11 p.m. by bishop Blackwell. During the conference one woman was converted, two persons were baptized, and a few years came forward and asked for prayers. A group of young people attended the entirety of young people, rendered excellent music. The program, which was arranged by the choir, was the most ever had. The entertainment of the delegates was in the lecture room of the church, which all that could be desired. The able and programmed priests from ministers and visitors matched praise from ministers and visitors alike, so pleaded manner in which they were invited.
The episcopal address was delivered by Bishop W. G. Clinton. Excurt from it fol-
"There are many clerics who to the
Niger of which we have not a nation,
Niger of which we have not a nation."
"The outspoken and main agent of the American press, a prominent legislator, a prominent government, some court officers and other prosecution officers, and many prominent protestors of militants and many protestors must against the effort to put Maryland in the grip of the Supreme Court of the United States against that humiliating law which, according to a present decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, upon the railroads and boats superior jurisdiction of the state, and to interpretation of the law by judge Sper of Georgia and June of Alabama; and two representing almost every rank in the college professions, high churches and two representing almost every rank in the college professions, high churches and signs of encouragement. This present state of affairs following the recent National election of 1972, and the representation of the President and the unnecessary inception of the new issue into political
"As a fifth and last suggestion, I would recommend the formation of organizations to train and employment for our young men and women enterprises which will furnish both training and employment for our young men and women for their services. It is evident that something along this line must be done, and that right specifically, if we hope to improve the quality of our work and develop in business to any appreciable degree.
"The subjects of the home and the moral, social and political life of people should be made pulpil these. Our preachers should heartily co-operate with all the communities in which they labor as partners. Upon such questions as temperance, social responsibility, moral conduct, wrong-doors, the minister should by proact and example, earnest heart-to-heart talk and love, and love that whenever we can get the premise of the race united along these lines we shall be able to solve the problem in this country."
West Washington District-Rev. Logan
Washington, W. H. Iverson, Dr. D. Jenkins
Washington, W. H. Iverson, Dr. D. Jenkins
Washington, W. H. Iverson, Dr. D. Jenkins
Louisiana Church, W. A. Washburn, D. Dz
Louisiana Church, W. A. Washburn, D. Dz
Olive Grove Church, W. H. Witk, Union War
Washington, W. H. Witk, Union War
B. Bailly Brent Wood Academy, Lincoln
B. Bailly Brent Wood Academy, Lincoln
older of the Philadelphia Museum, graduating
FUNERAL OF MISS BCARR
Success of Pastor Proctor—Coming
Events at Concord Church
ALBERT, May 22. The signature of Icelandia B. Price Jr. at the residence of her mother, J.W. Price of 25 Congreestreet, on thursday afternoon was largely attended. She was 16 years of age and had lived alternately with her husband, Idalphilde and her relatives in this city. Twelve years later, she attended school No. 2, she was taken ill. For a full account of the funeral the Troy letter in this At the Hamilton Street A. N. K. Church on Sunday Factor Procter preached happily both morning and evening. The Subba school enrolled. The lesson was reviewed by the district superintendent, Dr. Schermersch of cliffing. The collection was $20. The collection was increasing. The building up and the collection on Thursday night was largely attended and greatly increased. The church Smith and about 200 receive presents. With books and cards yet to be reported, work administratively. Her. Factor worked all church spiritually and to build up our church spiritually. Now he is labeling equally as hard to improve and, in front, painting.
SEPARATE PARK ADVOCATED
By Nowark Judge, Better Servants and Trade School—Cosey Halked.
NEWARK, May 29—At the Union League Club's public meeting on Wednesday, evening the organization invited delivery of an address. He advanced the idea that the Afro-Americans of Newark should establish a building and loan association and that the board of education should have a board of education should have a colored pupil house for the colored pupil house for the people. The Judge after the chairman, John T. Chulhie, and in part:
"Some of you have had the advantage of special training and are now opportunity to the city, every kindergarten, every grammar colored pupils. But after the boy has succeeded in study, it is every door burned against the judge. The judge advised and the building of a special Afro-Americans school and the training of servants. In support of the building and loan institution in the city before he got money, little weight in the city before he got money, James A.M. Halked endorsed the judge's financial arguments. That the social side of the Afro-Americans should have more consideration and the moral side of the profession and domestic work work should be presented and domestic work work should be presented and professional work work. So far as he was concerned, he would not endorse the annual training school for Afro-Americans."
Saratoga Notes.
Glen Cove Notes
142 DIPLOMAS AND TRADE CER.
TIFICATES BESTOWED.
23 States and Territories and Four Foreign Countries Represented—Southern Whites Interested Visitors—Rabbit A. J. Menghos of Montgomery Proceeded—Principal Nature of Graduation Addresses—Dr. G. T. Walker Spoke.
TENNESSEE, the Twenty-fourth annual commencement exercise of the Fulton Normal and Industrial Institute closed from the academic year to students who graduated from the academic year to students who graduated time 113 students were given trade certificates indicating that they have done the work intended to be them for one of the thirty-five trades and industries taught here. Of the students who completed fifty-four班 both diploma and trainee courses. The total number of individuals receiving diploma and trade certificates is 142. By the native born students there were 32 States and territories represented among the Alabama and 12 from Georgia. Of the graduates were foreigners. Among those from Porto Rico, one from British Honduras, two from the Bahamas Islands and one from Jamaica. The total number of students enrolled during the past year in all departments of the school was 1500. In this number 32 States and territories were represented. Of the foreign students represented, 19 from Cuba, 15 from Central America, 19 from Cuba, 15 from Dominica, 2 from Haiti, from the United States, 6 from other islands in the West Indies. In the exercise began last Sunday, when the commencement exercise of the gonery, Ala., delivered the commencement exercise. On Monday, May 22, were held the twelfth anniversary exercise of the Paulus Hall Bible School were given certificates, highlighting that they received by Rev. J. Bryce, BJD, dator of the Wheat Street Baptist Church at Atlanta.
Four students of the Bible Training School were given certificates, highlighting that they received by Rev. J. Bryce, BJD, dator of the Wheat Street Baptist Church at Atlanta.
The examination closed with a few remarks from Principal William H. H. Brown. The number of students who have graduated from the school and the number of certificates from the school at Towson since its foundation amount
Five Weddings in a Week
Petersburg Note
PERNICKEN, V. May 20 - Mim J. V. LOWER of Scottrall has just returned home, home after attending the commencement of the Institute and the appointment of Mr. W. H. MITCHELL who also witnessed the closing ceremony of the Virginia Union University and Hartnorth College of Richmond. Dr. Mitchell will be the guest of honour which he recently had built to order. He has also purchased a private room on Wednesday night at the Oak Strep. A. M. K. Eisenhower has also lectured on Thursday to a night audience.
FORTUNE & PETERSON.
New York, May 17, 1865.
Decoration Day.
On last Tuesday occurred the holiday, which, with Kenanieday day, should be honored by the Afro-American people all over other holidays—we more. December day. On May 20 we attempt, in our heavily denuded but heartfelt way to make a small payment of gratitude and honor upon the immense debt which we owe to the African-American Mafia black, who came to the rescue of the Republic in the almost fatal days of 1860. This that. Nation is in toy the first Nation on the globe, and not two hostile nations, glaring upon each other across the narrow founder of the Ohio; that slavery does not usurp in the eyes of the civilized world,—those conditions we owe entirely to the incredible moritrix, to the most powerful history records, of the return of the Union areas. Their glory can never fail.
Within the last few years there has been evidence a tendency ever increasing in no manner to heal the sectional wounds of the War. The men of the North and South, brought face to face with each other by commerce and travel, and persecuting each other, not the thorough williams they had respectively believed, are helping to say to the other: "How hard they have divided almost trail of war, house divided almost trail of war."
unable aside did it chishen must favor the mation of the North and South, proclaim that it does not entail evils now, nor that it does not entail evil now. North positively cannot afford to surrender the glorious gales of its saluted defender, the Civil War veterans, even to win the good will of the South. In other words, it cannot sacrifice the liberties of the Afro-American people on the altar of national harmony without proving itself most recovert to the memories and memories deeds of the great Giant and Sibbern. One could explain only in two ways the behaviour of a man who should receive into his bosom his father's unanticipated murderer or would be murderer. Such a man could be only infamous or outrageously magnanimous. The North, if it is going to receive the South again into its friendship, should do so in terms which would not make the North a victim of the South for the degenerate recency of the race.
We Are: Americans also have our duties to the great dead. Many of them believed in us with terrible slaughter—to prove their belief they gave up their lives. This be their we alone can vindicate. Even more in the future than in the past we must discern the graves of our benefactors with the flowers of moral, civic, educational, intellectual and material achievements. Let us prove ourselves worthy, for as men can do so, of the sacrifices with which the Union soldiers sacrificed us.
Southern Industrial Development and Our Part in It.
During the last three weeks our readers may have noticed that several National meetings have been held in Washington, writing for their object the planting and foundation of the industrial and commercial activities of the white Americans. There have been held in the South, and they have been composed largely of Southern men. The Cotton Mill Association which in 1860 was the first Association which assembled in Alabama a few days later, and the Industrial Congress which met in Washington, will have one object in view: The improvement and strengthening of the balance of Southern white people in the industrial operations of the country.
These Southern white people see the industrial and commercial opportunity that is open in the South. They realize that land is now cheap, that there is comparatively little competition, that a man can start in business with less capital and that then in any other part of the country, that the hills and mountains and the development of every description, that the nation of the rivers and creeks require little machinery; in a word, these white people make that there is a perfect and special developed Eden in the South. They are starting such organizations as we have mentioned; technical schools are being required, including schools for the training of persons to operate cotton cotton, as well as several other lines of industrial activity.
All important to emphasize the fact here is the Governor of Massachusetts, in the passage to the legislature, has pointed to fewer of our industrial workers in Massachusetts than in industrial areas elsewhere and that a special emphasis is required to take special measures.
keep on the same level of skill in working with plants
need to be trained in the techniques necessary
need to be trained in the techniques necessary
when the white man is in charge, going forward in these things, without becoming a slave to them, to the white man!
It is an art that requires the hardest to eat and speak up so that we may not lose our hold upon the industrial development and operations of the South! We must not only hold what we have, but our young men must be encouraged to enter into all commercial and manufacturing enterprises. There is no reason why the Negro should not start deserts of cotton milk. There are special places in the South where he can be employed in storage and drug stores where he now has business. There are a hundred places where he can start markets. — In spite of the opportunities are practically unlaiked. What are our people going to do? Stand mill or go forward and reap the magnificent harvests within their reach?
Africa for the African
It has been a great many years ago since we first heard the statement that the Irish people are more at home anywhere in the world than in Ireland. That was in the height of the discussion of the Irish question when Charles Stewart Parsell was in Ireland. He was a great man. The statement contained a large grain of truth at that time as it does now. But it is true in the case of the Hebrew people and Palestine than of the Irish people and Ireland. Indeed, it is nothing strange under the sun for a people native to the soil to be alien to it in possession and in the enjoyment of equality under the law. Much also is made of it nowadays only because of its origins, as everything relating to them is regarded as peculiar, however common it may be in fact.
IN THE AGE of to day we reproduce two articles bearing on the question of "Africa for the African" which will be found of interest, we believe, to our readers. The British Government for some time has kept very much worried by the development of the African, which has come to be documented as "Bibliophism." The African Methodist Episcopal Church of the United States, is supported by the British Government to be at the bottom of the "Ethiopian movement," and the authorities of that church and the British Government have had negotiations on the subject in London from time to time, but the dis trust of British Methodist Episcopal Church and its work in South Africa are still under suspicion.
We are not surprised that Bishop Turner in particular has given expression to sentiments on the question of Africa for the Africans which have enthused the native and aroused the antagonism of the British Government, as his views on that question have been proposed for a great many years. But that which it wise and expedient to entertain and to express on the subject in the United States is one thing; whether it was equally so in South Africa depends upon the view point. Certainly, in the present condition of affairs in both countries, it is not likely consideration. Whether it is wished to begin a propaganda as soon as possible, so that the longer the seed is to tructify the better, or to wait until the soil is ripe for the reception of the seed, is a question which each reformer must decide for himself.
That the Africans will ultimately dominate Africa is a view of the matter we certaintied twenty years ago, and which we still entertain. But this consummation will not be attained in a great many years. The operations and the conduct of government in Africa will be complicated which have conquered and delimited parts of Africa, with the introduction of steam and electrical forces, along with opportunities for obtaining a liberal education, will accessively facilitate the ultimate uplift of the African natives and the consequent re assertion of their right to dominate the land which belongs to them.
Several View Points of the Race
Obedition.
The New York Herald of last Sunday contained a sort of symposium on "The Problem of the Negro," from which we learn no now less. Old truths and falsehoods appear as usual, and the doozie runs through all that Thomas Dickson, it is lawful to shoot a mad dog wherever he is found, in the interest of the public peace and security; why should it not be equally so with such human things as Thomas Dickson, Jr., in the interest of the public peace and security? Does he not play the same role in society as the president of North Carolina Governor R. B. Glenn of North Carolina has grown a heap since his insurgency, and we are waiting to see Joseph Daniels, the anarling Mophistopheles of the Ralsh Valley and Observer, fly—as the thing Frankenstein created sought to do—the man he made Government for he was a man of great courage and brave the Democratic politics of the North State. Governor Glenn asks:
Treat Negroes kindly, but with fines. He just to them. Take an interest in their welfare. Give them their legal rights. Educate them in hand and heart, as well as give, help them an individual to an indifferent to their requirements. Make them better citizens by teaching them honesty, thrift, purity, the value of legal and moral obligations, thus forming character. Stop the abuse of children and adjust itself under the above treatment and there will be no need of deportation. Exercise toward them Christian forbearance and toleration and instill in them higher ideals of life and its responsibilities and we can make of the Negroes a good people. This is not bad at all, concluding from Governor Glenn. If he will live up to it all while he is Governor there may be better times in store for the Afro-American people of his State; and that it is possible for him to do it we have only to poet to the tranmendous reformation which has been worked in the intellectuals of Governor Jasseon K. Vardaman of Arkansas. We have told him that a African American residents of Arkansas have told us that Governor Jeff. Davie is not half so bad he has paired himself, Governor William D. Jenkins of Alabama, who is not a bad sort, says:
The deportation of the Moro, if it could be accomplished without too much delay, would not take the problem, and would be to the hinterland and the interior, while white generations in the British colony, as well as Indian generations, would be liable so far as I am aware, to allow the Moro to remain without two
The Negro begins to die from the disease, and prepares to die by the condition, and Negro dies in their wagon or to a comrade. The male Negro assumes responsibility to the comrade. A female Negro assumes responsibility to the comrade, when more than a male Negro enters, promenade. There is little place for the Negro in the olden. The present plan also involves the Negro in the olden. He is absolutely dissimilar to his future.
If the question of slavery and then to the South we should have slavery new. Governor Jane shows this perfectly well. All problems of the moral State which affect in any way the crimes that go up with slavery are the same to the South and Governor John. If he will take a day of and visit the Tuxedo Institute, which is not far from Montgomery, will find that the best way to have a model farm in any sort of model, community is to have a model school in which to teach people to model farmers. This applies as well as white as to black and yellow from the farm it concerned that will apply more seriously and positively to the young white men of the South than to the young black and yellow ones. The grims chick-drawn and have always drawn to themages the restion, renourished and ambivalent long times and in all hands. We have in the country life for the white and black masses, but many of them do not believe in it.
Bishop Fowler of the Methodist Episcopal Church does not believe in deportation because it is an impossible, but he does believe in toleration and education. He makes the following statement of facts which must have great influence with thoughtful people:
As to tolerance and education, however, we have facts to prove the worth of the people we use. The work of the South Carolina missionaries on the surface some remarkable arguments in favor of the adoption of this attitude toward the colored race. We have educated in our Methodist schools throughout the Southern States some affection to twenty-thousand Negro young men among those graduates a single instance of guilt of the specific crime which has become the chief weapon of argument against the education of the Negro; not have our young men students been implicated in other and lesser crimes, so far as are able to discover, to say great extent by young men of similar education and environment.
Regarding our girl's schools, we have an ever brighter record. It is only too often and too insistently charged that the colored woman in essentially liminal—as much so as her father and brother are involved in her life—has two 2,000 girls, both of mixed blood and pure African, pass through our schools and collage in the South, and of that 5,000 and odd number we have yet to discover the slightest accusation against the morality and uprightness of their parents and of our teachers and missionaries go—and they go into the matter exhaustively—it would appear that the young Negro girl, under proper training and environment, is capable of the highest degree of Christian feeling in her life and experience in all our Army acceptance of innumerable virtue and perfect quantity.
It is disgusting to have to turn from a man of Bishop Lincoln's broadness and toleration to the narrow black guardian of Thomas Dixon, Jr., who says:
I hold with Abraham Lincoln that this problem can only be solved by complete separation. We have in our nine millions of Negroes enough black blood in our hearts to suffer a multitude of ink in blood a gallon of water.
Abraham Lincoln believed according to his lights furnished him by the awful conditions of the slave system. If he were living, to-day, in the lights furnished by thirty years of freedom and steady growth of the Afro-American people in all directions, it is not conceivable that he would believe in anything that the Union Jr., believers in the Union Jr., as a willful disinterested person of the public peace and security. It is very true that "a pot of ink can foul a gallon of water." And the ink need not be black. As a matter of fact, a pot of white ink did foul the gallon of pure black water by a widespread prevalence of rape, called coercion, by the master slave class, and produced the multitumor which we have to day and shall have to-morrow with us. The ancestors of Thomas Dixon may have contributed to share this to the ink that produced multitumor, and those of his blood may continue to do so in the future as in the past. Thomas Dixon, Jr., is not only a very dangerous, but a very tiresome citizen.
Spread of Tuberculosis.
The spread of tuberculosis among Afro-Americans since the War has been alarming, according to all medical authorities. Both encouragement and discouragement were the conclusions of the recent consensus among Negroes, "for its consensus of opinion was that our death rate from consumption, while abnormally high, is not due to inherent and racial prediposition to the disease, but to causes which can be removed,—vitalities of sanitary laws, ignorance is partly responsible for our transgender mental cause is prejudice. Real estate landlords, obeying if not sharing the racial antipathies of the populace, compel us to herd in such unhealthy dwellings as are abandoned to us by Angle-Saxon dickens. A more heartfelt form prejudice has seldom taken. It seems that our realty companies may possess it, but our business will philanthropy by affording us dwellings which are not fatal to our children.
To Our Subscribers
This is the time of the month when we send notice to those patrons whose subscriptions have expired that they are expected to renew promptly, if they desire to have the paper continued to them.
Subscribers should make a point to new their subscriptions promptly. We will notify them timely and firmly. If do not respond paper is discontinued. It is only in that way that we can keep the paper up to the standard which we think it should maintain. And we wish our patrons to assist us in increasing the circulation and consequent usefulness of Tux Aox. The prompt payment of their subscription is the best way in which they can do this. By requesting their neighbor to do as they do in this matter is another way.
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BORDER OF BLAIR AND BLAIR
Signatory Cannot be Name Signatory
Furioused, Hateful, Baited by
Afro-American Ministers and
Successful of Oppression,
Dry "Atrian for Ardicean"
From the Springfield Rebellion
It is said that the race problem in South Africa is the most pressing comparison. There is a growing feeling that the part of the blocks that they do not want to take over is part of their own country. The proportion of whites in that part of Africa is 12 to 1, and that proportion is higher with apprehension. It is said that these blocks show any tendency to rise apprehension and that the hand to be treated on an equality, and show more the spirit of manhood and of independence, and that the disquiet, and its spite of all that, religion and the elevation of the blocks, there is apprehension that a terrible struggle for race supremacy
From the New York the
There is a move entail—also described as "The African Movement" to consolidate the black matriarchal role in the movement and to stimulate in them pride of raw and its association. "Africa for the African" is its watchdog. It is the movement's habitants to the movement is expressed by one of them in the Nineteenth Century. The origin of the movement to "American Negro" whose teachings, if not deliberately sedition, implants in the black matriarchal body of man" for he describes "Ethiopianism" as an importation from the United States to the African Methodist Church as a means of religious propaganda. These ideas, "go up and down the land telling the black matriarchal country and that the black matriarchal country their rights." For example, he aligns as a pastor to African Methodists a missionary of one of the African Methodists that "God meant that the Negro was to build up a republic of his own."
So strong is this feeling of opposition among the African people in South Africa, in Natal and the Transvaal, who would bundle out of the country the slave trade, and exclude undesirable "excluding undesirable." The expulsion of all American Negroes from South Africa was the result of the at the last session, and "all the South African Governments are opposed to the presence of the slave trade on the continent," the opinions of the Transvaal themselves, this authoritative anglocation has sprung up with the ability of American Negro element. He acknowledges, that the industrial native paper lives, that by other native prints, and that "the will of the industrial native paper lives," the tendency, is in the direction of equality with and detachment from the white man. Moreover, the American organization against which he is active is actively a point of membership and support of other Ethiopian churches put together." The white man would close all African, the home of the Negro, against the aspiration of the African, the Wen Ethiopian Church. Wen Ethiopian Church must not be Ethiopian.
IN BEHALF OF TRADE SCHOOL
Great Mass Meeting to Be Held—
Lodge and Personal Notes.
LOUISVILLE, N.Y. May 29. A mass meeting
will be held on Tuesday night, June 6, in the
training school for the Afro-American boys and
the purpose of this meeting has been endorsed by
the pulpit, the press and the citizens as the
aviation of our boys and girls South.
The United Women of Friendship and the
Society of the American Girls will have a
considerable membership, heard their annual
Thanksgiving session on Sunday, May 29. Mile
M. V. Weder, National grand princess of the
Thanksgiving session of the U. K. F. and S. M.
T. at Cincinnati on June 28. The constitution
will meet here on May 29 to arrange a new
constitution for adoption by the State grand
princess of the August 8. The order has paid in cash to its
own endowment. $18,277.77
Truf, A. H. Payne, who died a few weeks before his death, was a professor at the University and a fine house and lot. Mr. W. H. Loomail is sick. Bav. John H. Prank, W. H. Win. Bierhoff, and A. H. Prank, who moved to mail about 100 I. for London, Kog, as dean of the World's Baptist Convent in which he was a minister. Pitcherhead, son of the late Dr. Pitcherhead, died in his home. Mother of Men K. W. Mussell, is very sick.
New laws Conquered Prudence.
The Constitution (Ontario) Interpreter.
The New York Times.
The New York Times, edited by the mention of Oliver J. Jones. Translated over. New Prudence.
New York University an important home for the university. We as a people believe in it.
Tennessee Aubrey May M. *The Truman Institute* is grounded in measurement work with a wide field. Mr. Phillip A. Pugh, Jr. of New York, the first president and general manager of the Afro-American Retail Company.
Of the many interesting addresses that have been made upon various occasions, and exhibited the announcement herein by Baldwin A. J. Manning of Montgomery, the address is to the President of the Royal Bisho Training School, by Rev. P. James, Agent of Adoring the commencement address by Dr. G. T. Waller, Amman, Qa.; and the
"You know," he said, "that it is important to see the Negro. North they are curious to see what his will do and how he will behave. When he is in the house, he will devise a plan of the papers devoted a page in the Sunday日 letter to discussing it. Another gave it a book, and it all over the country. The paper distributed upon it, some favorably, some negatively, and it lasted at least $50,000 worth of advertising that way. If a white real estate man highly granted that the Negro would be interested in buying, we had at least $20,000 the better of him then.
The sinister agent all connected with the
future of the world, the Fortune, editor of Turt Aux, did not accuse
him of being a conspirator. He, along with Mr. Dayton, was to
communicate the commissioned work. Turtle did
the commissioned work.
the Editor of The New York Aut
from a true lover of THE AVE and exertion to be a subscriber as well and I can raise the price. I shall also try to influence my neighbors to subscribe. THE AVE is a true story, and I have read the very article and editorial in a true source of inspiration, of hope for the ultimate triumph for our people. Hoping that you may live and continue to serve the right and that you may subscribe, I am C. G. BUT I want Humfairley, Ala., May 29, 1905.
THE PASSING SHOW
Opinions of Bright Editors of the
Afro-American Press.
—the colored newspapers are multiplying and their power is being felt throughout this rich—Bickford Planet.
“Get rid of the “Jim Crow” Negro, in public places like Littleton (N.C.) True Reformer.
Some years ago the white paper made an effort to credit Fred Douglas to the Canadians. Now a plan is on foot to stook Bankingham — Atlanta (Ga.) Independent.
Where is Pitchford Tillam? The committee appointed of Anderson must have killed him. Such are the last days of American internship — Dallas (Tex.) Express.
The tendency of the time is to paint things that are troublesum up to the other side. Southern ministers who passed the law have God have gone the limit. — Western Outlook.
The Southern States claim that they have paid $120,000,000 for the education of the colored people. That is only a very small part of the interest on the money they borrowed for people for 26 years. — Ohio Standard.
Some of the leading daily papers of the country condemn mobs and outrages when there is a case in point, forgetting that their contention for white men’s superiority white men’s rule is the food on which they feed’s and fattens — Nashville Charlion.
—Much comment has been made upon the action of the colored man, who were being inked to go into Chicago to break up the present strike there. In our opinion the crisis he clearly shown that the Negro can at all and should not be forced to cast his lot on his life on the side of the war, should upio do so. Wisconsin Weekly Advocate.
MALAYA, D. May M. R—Reporting foreign immigration into the United States. B. Tillman recently remarked that he favored the movement only in case the immigrants were content to be tolerated without any attempt to higher things. This is merely another way of saying that the white immigrant, like the black native, must have a place and keep it. This view, shared by the majority of Southern whites, has touched to drivern immigration
Amos the remarks of the Nematator, it might assist him in his employment a colored forensic colored laborer to do his work. It is made that he keeps in his employment a colored forensic colored plantation and to render other services of a similar nature for which he is paid a sum that has come a very remarkable begin on the part of the whites in the farming districts of the province. The plantations are being kept a consequence the plantations are being kept Your Italian and your Polak do not take kindly to the solitude of the sugar, cotton and rice farms after making one crop, to seek the allurements of the towns and cities, to sell the crops of the brown, to sell the crops of the white and to make their living by the wint and not the sweat of the brown. It will be a long time before their accompaniments of hard work, diligence and
NOTE AND COMMENT
The old guard of friends which the Civil War produced for the Afro-American people is deriding away one by one. Among the trust and most illustrious of these friends is the person of the late Winston Tougare, American poet of the African-Prince. He served with distinction in the Civil War, served a term in Liberty Piscine, practiced in North Carolina, became a judge and largely through his individual efforts became a leading author. He was a prolific author, his most famous book being "A Fool's Errand", in which, though he vigorously opposed the Reconstruction measures, manifested the most high-minded affection and appreciation for the free-market codexamination of the Ki-Klu. We have not many more such friends as Judge Tougare.
Governor Douglas Mammuthus has got tired of his big job, and has no more of it when his term expires. He has been out of office for a long time. Democratic machine of his State over since his took the office of Gov. How a man of his independent character could have overtied up with the Democratic party is a question in political ethics we shall not attempt to solve, and the same conclusion in of Mammuthus is of Mammuthus. Neither of them two good men has been in common with the Democratic party, State or National, and yet they are likely to hand the Democratic Party in Mammuthus. We should not impress Mammuthus by any other result may be in the best possible manner.
The mission of JESUS is to unify the opposing of our church men agree with the old official which appeared in The Act. Some time ago regarding our having enough churchmen, one thing is crucial: there is a religious rivalry in most of our church work which in both members and problem it is crucial on in the name of Jesus the Christ, and yet the psalm (self from Christ and brings the gospel it allows to adduce into context again).
The effort to **build two and three** churches in a small village or in a city in which neither the wealth nor the number of our people are equal to the tank in foolish and vain Christianity. It may move to maltify the slaughter ambition of milk, but much a spirit can have no connection with the Christ-spirit. Nor can it further the maltification of the people nominalism challenges, there is still a reality among us which calls for a more spiritful and more braver the breamers." The pitting of three and more churches often appears in homes to the cause of Christianity. Such men, as a rule have no connection with the Christ-spirit, have other than medium magnificence which are often carried too far. There ought to be a better church along the lines indicated. The efforts of one deposition to build a more spiritful church have it no connection with the maltification of the people. Often it does not bring to the service do more to related the program of vital Christianity of an ignorant ministry in its misunderstood name. The most valuable thing which the church can do is the mission of the church to this view in the true view, then we must admit that many of the efforts put forth by the maltification of the people. The whiteness of the church there is a real work for the church to do for the rank which the present method of the church should the rough element of the race in New York city, in Philadelphia and hundreds of other cities, in a problem which confuses our churches. In the church making any handy in its advance strengthens of resident, vice and crime?
MUSKOGEE'S BUSINESS GROWTH
Everything Supplied by Black Men
-In Society First-Class.
Missouri, L.T., May 29. - This place, with its 20,000 inhabitants, is one of the biggest little towns in the United States to day. The Negroes here are among the most progressive and highly educated by some ostensibly man of his race. Here we have 10 lawyers to look after his property right and, perchance, his crimes; 7 doctors to look after his health, and if, perchance, they fail, 1 undertaker to look after his health; 10 grocery stores for his money; 10 grocery stores, 1 drug store and 2 dry goods stores, 1 laundry, 1 livery stable, 1 to date to bath homes, 5 ten-room hotels, I incorporated Land and Trust Commission, churches, built or in course of erection, 3 and weekly newspapers, and restaurants and pool balls too numerous to mention. We have no saloons, because our Uucs Sail does not that we ought to drink in the presence of the
Hew. Jack M. Walshone, the new pastor of the M. K. Church, is one of the brightest young men in the country. He has dedicated his life to our ecclesiastical and social life. Mrs. Wallace, who was Miss Dorn Stone of Selma, Ala., will join her husband in the social set of Mokugee is made up of the nine states in the United States furnish. Unlike the condition that usually exists in the States there are more Mokugee students than Mokugee class members A. G. W. Sango, who was Mokugee class member J. Work of Nashville, Tenn., joined her husband and had a son, former Mokugee class member A. G. W. Sango, who was Mokugee class member M. C. Boyd of Kentucky, who was music teacher at Sage Hopstick College, left for Kingfisher, G. T. Wednesday to spend the sum
Catherdale-Taylor, Drury, Tinker,
Mimi Gibbs and Preston Dung
Much to Mitigate Have Priority
dise- Black Men Support
Transcereo Sterke.
Regular Correspondence of Tara
Catherdale, III, May 28. The performance
of M. Drury's performance of
mom" as given in the May is edited
The Anon, augments what means to me
country. The visit of Catherdale-Taylor
county and the internet awakened to
what may be called higher music, is
shown in many maps.
To Washington city belongs the music
of the culture of the nation. The culture
influence of such individuals and
as Ms. Prof. Layton, Mimi Littie Ginn
Mr. Robert Fahmen have extended beyond
coord of the capital city. As a
people themselves are becoming more
important in the high art of cultural
civilization and their intelligent tradition.
Prof. Freeman came to Chicago summer
of the musical department of Wor-
He, too, has a private studio in which he
practiced. He is a quiet man, a quiet
man of scholarly interest and a
too much to say that he is destined
to really articulate merit is a sacred
power and charm entitled "The Mar-
tial." He was recently rendered in one of the
most important composers by compo-
ners a work of highest merit.
This noticeable advance in musical
freedom is not only interesting, but
with his antiquity is to be mollified. The
last factor among us on to day is the N
really sing or play obtain a bav-
rity of the best people of this country that
who express the greatest hatred
race will eagerly sing our wom-
her. The music that music in to play an impor-
nant nothing the savage breasts of the
people. Think of the strange paradise that
in a New Orleans theatre a few days
Anglo-Saxon people of this city
in and protected from all possi-
bilities. The rendition of Coleridge-Taylor
Can we find anywhere in the world a
bavrity of the highest quality over
Boston ignorance and prejudice?
NEGRO FOLK SONGS
Well Up From Depths of Heart
Lagen and Plugs Heart
The slave had found in the thriving rude, half-barbaric form, a refuge, a tenderness and hope, a subsequent expression to our three wonderful old-time melodies "spirituals," as they have been made by the singers of the Negro colony. The melody is a pathos, a charm, a power, born out of the heart's depth, the centuries of sorrow dimly lighted by mortgages of a divine love and hope. African (temperament), body, blood, soul, and triumph of ligion, and voice in the psalms - George Merriam in the Springfield Republican.
Defender of Negro Manhood.
From the soutwestern Christian Association
The New York ACM with its best host
concern in an enlarged form and change of type
which still adhere to appearance and form
to a vigorous and enthusiastic defender of the
music industry. We are pleased to announce
that we will be the life and story growth of the
company.
The Rew Bork Bye
‘THURSDAY. JUNE 1. 108-
cg ere
Habeoription Raven
tera a the Fost Olle at Naw York 0
stunts Sate
in the United Staten, Mexico” end Camda,
rt ists te align ae
thee eid time eae, Blan, Sle
$1.00, Thre Months, 0 q@ata, we
Te Rorrign ‘Coustrien im the Usivarml
sia CoeSe abl"auy ceat attra Yor cock
"Neonp aan be soak Sy Mall, tna, Postel
omey gan 62 oem .
omer Order. By Heat Draft, of aa. Kxpene
MIT} Onde ad when wae’ of chaps ona be
[rss ty Recinore aie, foe ca
siktur Soketen k Perenaan at te’ Rew
Sone Noe Omen
SAivertising Mates ermiahed on application.
Sy matte for pentintion shoei oo
ab'vae by Monday ov Tereany. Advore
tivtcouts will ber received all” woo "om
Wits ov ate SE cent rok Se
FORTUNE & PRTERGON, Pebtichrn
UUme Bureee New York Gir,
Desig A Gree, Grae Aver rat
TRACY: So aFameay hve Brooks
New York City News
BOROUGH OF MANHATTAN
NO LONGER AGH AGENTS,
SEE SV Nee: meer ee, we wre ees
1p avd Charlee K. Milo, oth of No
Yedcincats 90 loager commacted with Tan
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dealt toca Nase: a
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M. H. GARNET CLUB'S CONCERT.
Chariton, Barteigh, Mave. Clough
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Brooklyn Churches.
De, We. Dizon peenebwst at bath services ot
the Cancun bapaint Cen last Sabbaths te
lates sulivarva’ Fim evening rermnn san t
the Feats alsa 10 of whom cere wut. Con:
ard in pretarine for the aaniial New Eostand
Tipeist Misionary Cenvention sich. meets
at ye church at noon om Thursday, June 1
Ktarge deivcatiou ve eapected includion Peps
Peaenhntives frum the Sativaaliaptiet Conten:
Thon of Naabilles Tease fe setents annual
sermon to Oe Saciets, uf the Sune of Vie
Tare was preached by Tere. MC firouke_ at
Aiden semet Church Last Soodsy aight. Thr
nociety war out to large numbers. in full re
Fain Dr, Hrwoha, after reading « bref sketch
St the society and its” sccomplisheorata
jrcached a bidad and illumination sermon.
Wi society wna bighy plenacd with" on
cnuracing words of Tit Irooka, and the prea
Gent thanked bln. and she people of liriigr
Street Church for tall Kindoran Peter ft
Place rained a coatrthation af the society. to
tie Chureb to the ammount of $1230.
ORITCARY.
Tixnox—The death of Mra Rachel A Tin
son wits of Hess Pets Il. Preans,occarted a
BoD gees afi 19 tock on Tema nen
fe ape e's pounced ine,
which doveloped into, acute gasteitie at bet
Tipe UE Wat Soe tee Sire Poem
wer teres Plemsriog Be pant ng ot
Eee peised tee 2 phim She can See
Best lett Chard and wer mea etenmed
Serbo tied daponiion and seve worn te
Cork NR elo" ake enced the sevice of
SRO. ita aiizion a2 Wt Gand rete,
Gfwhich ber husband was pastor. Dietide het
SEONG et eitctecd UF to acne aged
ata and na ntact Savor mgd 1 tenth
Toned senior ove et tanita mere el
eaerntans of Tog Henther enderakera 25
‘Woat 634 ntreet. Rev, lakers 1), Paaaley. mea
rere fee Nov vor Stace apie Consent,
Behe Nokon oateds ore Posies
ao Rey abe Chena atte and xemylasy
reas Oot the deceadenaid ter tsk
Satie tat tbe sancie were Ruins er
Sea oetort was bared og tne sae
505 det tchd ogee bene the iver wating for
ree ne naice Cok bes ta
Sigepauttetintord coun, Siststand, here
A1'[2Petck oe Seay the Sat Hntane, Re
EAC Pasty so Rr cor he
eared mle fhe Unie Cat in the
recucet are fort strong veltnr and
Hoyepmpabiiing Mende bre were nan
Boat fa Rural tebston ”,
“GaxnunysMre learnt. State Grog
ony, died at Blteon mitten tat weluck oa
opiay Stoning ly 3 after a ne
Tpetea nine of pete cher bent SO
West tt Trae we ta ioe
Le a etl irene
BOs and Ma Hemdoren fon, and the
cheats Rommwoettrgnry she hed eae
Fred fend oes sa meer a
Rijeinlan Haptic cage tee
aaFing Cavan Hey Sexker, Witioas A.
slain, und Your elle survive et,
davieu by hers Worriat Abpataton Bogae
ed by ent om
‘Sich 2 len oo ety momtige May
Sr Pre woe toy beet Borel SO ga
Brn aes
gevlt,le.te Whenet an, she Tutied Bustos
nie aimee
Sahoo
= peg
Tat sys. Splat
pqpountuige of the Scat Perentant
i (Canin, Mag t0-— Bho a Bere
cierehe eset
Gap. The Knights of Pythian will bold thelr
‘Remecial corviews ot ‘thd Messiah’ Baptiot
Cher on Sumcag, Mag it. Ten sermon will
‘Ne penesbed ‘ty Rov, W. M. Merton. Them”
‘ered consort thet was held ot te Bethel A. M.
R.Chmrcd Inet Gamdny wes nrgely attended.
‘Teo program consioted of readings ed. voqs!
fed instremental solestions which were well
eet. Mer. BM. Bohien, pater of tbe
last
paso Moriah!
SST ae vee ee
Siw ewe Yowt, Toe Wonca Asiaing
QS pie poelate a cere sa ot
Mie. Jona Chet'S eo Guitar elon oe There
Si ée0). 2 Whedvieder sad other
- Tee apes oh mo
EE mewn ou Samay. Tis Oad Pollown ond
oneal of oak ct at eral orcs
Rise ie Soe
‘Wentaba eremne om Wensy
ete Fiat erm owesy
SoS eset ormse tay Ba lies
Sitio k ROW Ei Sey att Te
ast ‘cod we very mock,
Raped Seta we ~—
SSrasT704Dr—Ren Themed owed to be st
hs beet any ofreoes mt
Sonor e ee
Bre Biiy Taplernad Soe sckensel Rew
Hares Migs Geta Silind sr. Boe
como ct Stats pees Te ee fetailntion
Sf the peter of e FisetBaytse Cheroh will
Seaplon of "New Besdalie will preschthe
mrtom towhlek all re invited. Bors Thome
Tit tapeing several tbe’ drt Seeaey” ln Jame.
Masvemomt, May S—wre. A.D. Baskett
sot agin ntl gw Hee roe in
townon Tuctag Thon J Sachem ieh Mom
doy ts begins haetent for he Far Rime
Bale dogg often Vert ly, bli
wed Mic Brown of New Hnves re he gost
Sere, Mar Buren af Uingoy ste nt
Weaaeaday. Mra Hints Clos of Newoeld
aoe trom a severe cok. Soe
Spring nn reared ior peeing
two, works wt freede aul ripttente Se
Nem lg. Mie Boris None tad hr Dov
oon of New ork eliyars the guar of Rav.
ted Sire Av Ie Nerusn The macy frida of
evening guraibcars surprcs party. Sim Goes.
Soe tla, wcted ae ete” a ses
ra ace ky Sea at |
fo of New Milford cha comet of bar brtber, |
Bs Magee oof Noreen yea
Beil wives. stzeard’ at ‘Roton Pelat this
iam Gactt. bare leit for Normganett
Pies te eer, The Norah hrvinn
se Sag Tee, Simi ee
peanfi of tay. 6. 5. Uavier's choo! Is Groom
pores NC. bivm Chen oom Sanithvioied
bor tothar bn Bech ys ist wrak Se Last
Latin of 3 Gregory cent open ant Weds
Sy fa Natebny rw hale Wishes a
meiber of Rew Finvon vere the gusts of Sir |
Shani? Brown of Kine rvot‘Sircaad bre |
jomer of New York are the roesta Gf Bred!
lay Mewrbey aod Miss Blanche Spiers actse: |
aided tor temada tat Fray eiesrnone oe |
janchson and whist ln honge of Slee Roberson |
od Bre, Toes Bell of Now Fork city. Or |
Jame f Raye Adame of Nerralk wil gives |
meri. pict entrain of be Rosas |
Sot Ris bold thei tmemerial service me Ure |
serine pressed aid PecBetvern chav” |
siloty delivered. the recesorial wrntion. The |
Boel ADEE Chere cncorted Tadianood |
aig tac Asien hate ot |
otk sy wee tr peacipal fateger and mcs
vi induc Wallet Bild ot Beoekign Poors
Se eed
Nw Yosh lig, Rrvlyn, New Haves ao A>
wala. Mra Mary Lockwood, and ‘Stew Gene: |
se ot Now laven sisted le city ct work. |
as Bon ota erg |
ane acting se ctanent Yor fate A
Paige’ David dubeenm of New florea was tr-
ally ule gorct at hie mourcctarion, Mire 1,
BA Tstind of Heantaleyatrses
‘GruatromDs There wil be taptlsing by Rav,
pancoancf the Puigrca Court I me tan’
ayreftoc machiag at tbechereh.at tbe fontt
ited ‘stim Mc Hervie tad sonen feted
tinaad the iat Hapaist Church Suipiny even: |
me Reve Jett Wyeingee at New Soney sii |
eFinatalca net It hopes Church Ria
few Lilly. Stoeby 14 sll, Sr, Sumroces will |
itd Regan hn’ Chabert li the ame
tees and rm Siesta oF Anata’ wore te |
Gosia af Mr-tod Sr Deacon iotnoons Toure |
ay and called on a fem friende while bere. |
\n ald folk's concert will be given at thei: |
irs Raptist Church oo June'®. "Ae the tally
CGhertt Hay Chur wen ace Sy |
tins oe Tyner tao Pee
cen woe teaver fi Aarons
sil'on Mine HovthaPapton. 38 Grequry tirect |
ni ert tora.” Mie Symare fe gong Past om |
rp for he tieseval Acteent Tantrance Can: |
sy doetekich ke le noperal acent i
sols heidbomdan 2h i
TOURO'S CONFERENCE
| Reception to W. M. W, Club,
Naw roirs Mee May ST four genre
serine oh Poslding ler cB rete
Sh ha etanese saeco
Som WN cage So ae cea aoe aah
Beh ny, Hos es ote Us ge hes fe
[a Sac pms Tsar mes corrcate
onion cvir maa rad by Hurray Mi
Stats naaacdsoou Cae cesod oo he
as weeaau rceaca grads ieee ase io
shell preted withthe werk ofthe chi at
Me Rap ecied atc purdicg Vote ake
Bullsnepaciarts wae ten ts Uae each
dander et oboe racer
eng eteretr e
st Ratner She span eet
sete ictacee, Cf testa oC es
Seas case tens Means eden ne
Seats it Vilma cutee oa
Matti
re Tse Cake vases tbS foes
bers of the W. M.W.Club ty sie. ‘Lert Jack-
Bs, ee ce oe Se
Hoste illta sie Beane tert
[bina sioh en Soe pee Mic Ta
Since setacSirand Se ucten ie
Vikings vooal selection, Be Kiogand § taste
Tee sare caer tas Cone
tse “hette Yonago Sock:
tS ional, Sn A ares ae
fee Sas $e Jeatogs metiilon “when
fees Deseo aes rena, arn
Mines Parker and King. Sopper waa seceed
Bate tet a Wteeee Marae Cane
Be ee ie Miasres teeta ee Pen
SNCs Seca ncaa
oi eee cee |
“a any asi ment of the
aha cect ie sees tee
Hani cing a ea |
ton and dioner ot Muenchioger @” Soins vo
Hore tere eee eo
Heuer aan Tacludog Sr ucla ee
Present. cd
“TS funeal of imal Ray man held atthe
amen Gre Seale Tae aan ate
Boe “heed Wo sterita sed veer st
Fate Hees (eae een rse ee
Eee patos tia ee
tha lie ore ay at Tate
opel Sat ie Garay See hee
will speak. “Toe W. M..W. Cloiy with farniad |
indy eo
‘Aiphonan Blake has accepted a rosition ax
peslorean ie ‘Uhe Hotel Narragansett at Prowl: |
"Eek patie of ruading THEAGE, Pot ae
oa Pecan acronis mashes, ire
se Fostes barber ahem trea ret od
FORENSIC’ CLUB'S RECEPTION.
_ On tnat Saturday evening a social wad given
ee ae
Bot ire nian
aa see sari Soe dias Rit
penidenhslia corn tia possess tae
ace ean Peeee eaeeroer
: ” proer Be :
ieee dae ees
Sih Vert Coneves, Rete. Bras ead: ial
The evening was ‘ ond
salen tp ens rire Soak
Fo wale eee
pond Lapel octane
an hag O oe Me ey
Church ond, Gaetipraire-fanat
cen for Westehewton Gomvention,,
Tannerown, Magy 28d’ the Ghfich the
Hat Conrch lath Benpag Bow. 3. W, Gastt's ex
fare well attended eich Wotmnotay -ovenin,
alr one epee Sn
MeMatoe, Honest Beiggn, Joma =
David Silver; will, gives onsicert: ot
Baptist Church on Thumdag evening, Jane i
At the A. M. Bion Chrereh tant umay Ber,
haettioy beets
Helge fropentowet
Mre.J.N, Criapell, ka well ettended amd be
crensinx In interest. The stemwherry Sentival
tiven by the Untsown Lilies of the Vallay
Inst Thumday evening st Bion Ubarch was s
wacom. Mra. Copper of-Broskiyn ‘was the
geeet of Mra Rebesce Tangle last Sunday.
‘At the Republicnn primary coneus | last
Drea’ Peter M. Mathews was clected s
Poy i te ears
ieee
Seite rar eata
eae Ta seat
sti tr an rane
cai eee ae
Schecter
mies Se dee Saye
Bock otha oad Lift ae tng wal Br
Sf actual ean
ie ei cite
TSE, wee 0.00r we
fs Whe Pes So Onda Seon
trees
eat eect Sees ook
Sei maiaae estate
cca ann a
sicher mom ea
ariemteeee |
persons, makes every i
eae het ees
as heen
tov tant op hw tat ete GM A
ie, temenl ord has tahen hogs of his 2p:
Willing Workers In Zion.
Arion, Mam, May 28—There was
tevatbert wreting th the AM, Zion Chere
fn Fritny night to decd Upon the pastor?
sary and faetall Gore for the Jee Wi
{ht rdceplon of Adam Hall who roigued s
clam lesbo oonccvant of bls ejealght, and the
chole committan, tbe Scale rersiaed the
saree. ‘The new chole commiting are: Bre W
H.Taylor, Mra Ed. Slater, ew. W. Tay
lor, Wen. Deelon mod W. 1. rans. ‘Tbe com
mitten inet atutday night and choos Mr
Pre Young reat ad Mim Flore Mille
Sica Gar Cilatlan ha returned to Ait
boro for sa snus, Oving to tn ala her
were wary prone coke tn dein
poy Min J. Ae rae Sit a me
Frm Wu rinsed nad phtvoted to herby Rew
RTucThyior nthe dey openchte baa
Drettowabers ofthe chunths ee gift wa
bnaly stormed by re Cig and, Car
Th ofan’ reed Yo te oprach athe
“Toe John Wesley A.M. ion Church ne
cromital shoot tia capaclsy Sunday ope
fae nico Rave W: fi, Saglor.pipache ae ee
idan tro Poni 12, Sebo Pesta
fe Berkaren” vate claw of tt sorvce’
W. [doy fed bie rept from the conforms,
tnd io wiort way Zaid nome of all te Kop
Pa vail wae aloo Boston
on Thiretay and Hendy.
Ree. We fl, Taylor bet ongnnieed clad of
Willing Worker in Sea ChareN witn fotos
Sulla a president nad » club ot edliree
Slled the es Coet Chat. Heney Pale
pride Thora apanned chat a
Bron ls pparise to gles Seutcert aad mapper
May sa Ally: praleand friend, ger: Hedfoea
meh guts tate ot Wim Brown
Mradames K. i Slater’ and (bat ine Brown are
ai nen enn
—— a erste won
ETHEL AYRICAN M. CHURCH. Woremen
Tene cee ah pone
RS ew
adr aliace store anaes ©
So neg SU Aad ate
Fepaaie tal
BEN Ee tle wecinece wena.
Penne wap Aewress eter
Byghed Shady abot Sod
‘eate ruux. At invcoxn
Katy wrung Waxoen DD
ee
secs reine, ewer Yn ET
i aE Eu Gs ay at tbe cha cowry
eotniore sar
MUTE AM. 2109 cH
sen oo Bot, tenn ne neta
ev. 9.11 Molter ies, Panos,
foonay Salat Mince Ei wa
tee Premade Feat
Sh Sais USES MRE set,
Seer
TO LEE Seat turitabea none large and
Apply Mire a. ‘sth, @ Went FA ee raaytt &
MPSWAREIN and pal acwtng AU pintert
Dye No vais Ritwundts Tin eon
Macetines Beye
Gompantam fargatich ntope for elon
1S KN ee aS a aie
20H heat unulet. rotevtaie perenn,ecvera
Fee ican doa andae uml antoe
mane Satna: Shes, aR
OGRE, Seat lamioned roy wits, const
ells Thing srewurs near Gps nee
TPO fe vecwhed Ream ih ve wt
een, Sn aan auch oe
Arar eae’ hres
Slane light run WON tube, Seceralgh IB:
satan. Tayo
GO oD Te Neatly fort "roraos for permanent
1 © ae ease ere by heme oe mh
tebe eevee
TPO LET a daonnahly rewnated anode
stg ihn et, em.
Jonni Nall 40 sixth avenue, a
Te sitet Sei Ser mee
SPOLET Pupitbed Rann, fone parte Tack
rapa sparta Webseite
ae Ie Manin, 347 Wet dorm etieee Top Bor E.
0 LET A furnishet front roge, nuttahie for
Pete a ee AL Pi he weet
suntateet
Waites: hating
Sons eset aftasiane. 3
Croatdy. DT Weat Zist atrvet, =
MPO LIT ont fern private noapewonaNe
ferihgnt howe pine he wets Neve
Gosaxingion avenuerbinekdyn, Se TT
10 LET-.lange airy ram far two seepectabic
Te gentlemen ay? catenienes, SERS
wooat FR Baan avenue breatiya
£0 LF Po Tange man peu ER IE
PO iat nek Fo Reat,
TEE Pinner aauniel pae
fg et Mr i Seno he, Re
RN ae
1X74 Tomah front hall room, Aygit
Todt Lu aN Reet
ROOMA WANTED —A niall famnfly wold Tike
Rented rae ith oct sos ania,
svtatlaht Sareea Sead street Welle Akins
LET Pega furulzh mai tngenee:
Towne Tee Sonpte, oe ta menletaen 160
eee 3
‘0 the Bebe fe Cottiog Tooth
a, Srimtonrs endraise Grav? hen tare, wot
Motntaa” tar wee Ncnicoman BRiLe
Hie irate ee
Ba eres
AULAYS @l PAIN: CURER WIND COLIC aud
pe tos
SE nee Wieow's somiting Oyen te!
See meee
enn ee
LOer IX NEW ‘FORK.
Ratermation le desived of W. B. Betton. ub?
eet be fons ot Bae re de hic
terertgn ett
ieee |
io pom take
Es
a in nk
- REALTY COMPANY:-
_ CAPITAL STOCK, -- _ $500,000.00 -
Cneorpersted ender thie Lawe of the Sate of How York.)
~ Stock, $10.00 per Share, Par Value
OP ood att and concemembie)
satin ee ey oc tievamicnag Deopte
te tive In respectabie law-abiding neighborhoods. Now le the
time to buy #f you want to be numbered among those of the race
who are doing something practical toward the solution of ‘the
S-calied “Race Problem” - s :
«JAMES 0, THOMAS, Presidamts)
is SAMBO, GARNER, Secrtery and Tremurer;
PHILIP A. PAYTON, Jn, View Pres. and Gen’) M’gr;
WILFORD H. SMITH, Attorney.
i : DIRECTORS: :
WM TEN BYOK, ‘ JOQEPH 5. BRUCE WINSTON B DABNEY,
WOCHARD RB, WILSON, WALTER & HANDY, . JOHN W. STEVENSON,
WRANK BTRUART. WILFORD H. QMITH, JAMES.E GARNER,
“JAMES: O. THOMAS, . PHILIP 4 PAYTON, Ja.
MEYER’S BUIL DING, 49 Maiden Lane
‘Bétween William an@ Nasmn Strocts
Bieventh Floor, Rooms 1 106-0-7 NEW YORK CITY
Telephones, 8726 John and 8727 John
gar Write for particulars and Prospectus. <_eepl lyr
—_— Att. £4i.« T2F « OTTTA reece
9
BOOKER 1. WASHINGTON’S
“" dvien'to all industrious colored folls fa
a “GET SOME PROPERTY”.
“GET A HOME OF YOUR OWN”
Why Pay High Rent? :
‘when we offer roa beautiful 6 or 7 room miodera.
_ Home at $1,200 up
r.we will bulld you s home Jost as you Tike ft, for a mall payment dows, the
Sthatwar, BJ, clause fnew Haid guise, ‘New York, ou te Fase
sylvania Railroad. Ceoboely located .
.Lots $100 up.-$5 Down and $! per Week
a Ree Sera, Sic ol Rete ty ait ese Reema Ded ante
moles Eres Fiotstgincom Grand Brourstons erary Nuceday and Tharedey.
FRANK PFAFFMAN, "3" **stcate*Gns 72=""
PI a
Piano Playing Self-Taught
é BY THEODORE DRURY
‘Do You Wish To Play the Piano?
De yes wie. belie roumll? Tt by not ton Inte to gin Tf ye omot nerd abe
Sift wre te lin hy for asl Cy Se Seapree hae ‘ie
See Sa wip hr nage "muck evar te aks toa oP
We Se reeire of One Doles WS GkORGE BELDER'S Mnsic Store,
Fourteenth Annual Musical Concert
IN BENALY. oF
MT. TABOR PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
_ REV. HORACE G. MILLER, Pastor
122 E. 1Ogehs Se. Bel. Lexington and Park Aves.
Friday Evening, June 9th. 1905
1A Cholge Selection of Vocal and Lostrumestal Solos, Duets, Quartet, ith-s
sof Tables: wil be rendered. jeer
ADMISSION, =~ «== == — 2S ets.
JUST OPENED!
DESIRABLE APARTMENTS
At 33: West 99th Street
FOR RESPECTABLE COLORED FAMILIES
Four (4) rooms and bath. Open plumbing. Steam heat.
Hot water supply. Apply
F. S. GRANT, Agent, 6 W. 134th St.
} Telephone, 2659 Hariem
Or dante on Peemieee haiwe
AGENTS ctkTi0'%e AGENTS
We want ood live representatives to take
Dede for’ cPrare, or Tearl" Medallions
Rockette tr ltos elton. "hgeats"ouppiice
Noveltlas uptodate. Welle nace,
‘Unirersal Mansfucturing Company,
Pitsburg, Pas magi at
Why continue to pay high rentals? W
ave a beaulttul Htseof cottages for mle
or torent on moderato terme.
. HICKS © ROSS
REAL ZSTATE AND INSURANCE
128 Evergreen Avenue
Condnay tat.
New York Office, U2 Weat 220d St,
may Hiyear
Prices for Cleaniy’ .
Brussels and Tapestc a
Wilton and Velvet, -\. yd.
Aygninater & Moquette, 7c a yd
HRentting Sewing and Relaying
Metropolitan Carpet Cleaning Company
| $39 West 59th Street
Talephone, 41393 Colembus
‘any 110.
The “EL DORADO”
Win aus ernovewicere
At Winthrop Ave. New Rochelle, 8. ¥
Acct Summer Resort Ploe accom
sean ine oma
ME tarts 0 opiatiy Peoria,
chtererDidhen to hire jut Smo
Of 1 Railroad Ave. cor. 2nd Ave,
ASBURY PARK, N.J. 2
The Providence House
FORMERLY -FCRMAN COTTAGE)
ied nh it ile ant xc
Peet mvemiern of te NeRro Th
EiRPI Dentin Hire dames
Hiscomtnedatioe ot vtters'to the ee A
of June 1%
t¢ TO LET
3. Foy Sanson, a aa-romm cottngss
i} plelaly ferniched
220M. New Jersey Avenue,
ATLANTIC CITY, ¥. J.
~ Mon B.C. Fisher. juni.
'&, Laage: Store: Te Les .
A Sow wee rere...
iz 1 we
Annual Summarnight’s Festival’
® — or a : be SPS
Metropolitan Association of Dancing Masters:
/ At Sulzer’s Harlem River Park and Cavino, =
+ Srcotul Aveuus, 120d to 171th Streets, New York. .
On Friday Evening, June 2nd, 1905 ~
Music by PROFESSOR W. F. GRAIG _—
Admission, go aie Of 35 cents
. a —— MEMBERS ——
Thomas J.Twrnee Willian Vangha William yas ° Ewe Sai
Bilin on " SMatman Wogde BC tara cay ina
ee ees aay eee
1806 Amicitia, Amor et Veritas: ‘1908 o
Tenth Annual Summernight’s Festival and Picnic
Of Theobald Lodge, No. 3890, 6.1. 0.00.7
At Sulzers Harlem River Park, herd
FRIDAY EVENING. JUNE 9th, 1905
: Munlo by PROF, W. P. CRAIG wy
TICKETS, . ~~ ~ 358 conte
Eesegtien Gosinmiisiv. 08.2, Moma Johoaum, Chairman: PHC Pte hora,
ae een ete eae Pn py
Regain 6 Gal ene Ea eR T coortane re Sanaa
(Bro. Major Morgan. 7 .
ELEN Ei tty EE Ne
Sotond Annual Picnie & Summernight’s Festival
OWEN By
Miss Hallie L. Anderson
At Sulzer’s Harlem River Park and Casino
: ‘oto Stow aad Secoed Avenue, New York
On Friday Evening, May 26th. 1905
ADMISSION, - - - - 85CENTS
1+ Music by MINS ANDENGOWS Orchestea of 25 Manicinae
Duncan frum 9 ems to, ms ae
eT
WALTER F.CRAIG’S
Orchestra, S76. 33a w. x.
Don't tne tne, saeey and pattnage experimenting with afrctor Basde
; | HAVE THE BEST ’
. “Craig's Famous Orchestra”
futbe Odea, teat aod Mow Reliable, aad comtal a represetation of the beet
colored micas i tho cy. exch ove seater af the Mine Sinel Pre
fective Unio, Local 310, A. F. of M., the only recognized Union in New York.
mae tae
- In West 147th Street
Bet. 7th and 8th Aves. .
Three Houses Just Opened, Newly Renovated
RENTS ‘from $16 to $18
PHILIP A. PAYTON Jr., Agent 7
ie 67 West 134th Street
*leeoaTbee aot 8 taco ¥ ‘
. = xe JOT © socompanted Ly Ms
eH. SOS. WNBA
First Picnic and Festival
. or Tite — ;
HEAD, SECOND AND SIDE WAITERS’
7 NATIONAL BENEFIT ASKOCTATION
AT SULZER’S HARLEM RIVER PARK
16 Btrect und Secoed avenue, New York
Monday Evening, June 5th, 1905 |
7 Muslé by Prof W. F. Craig's Orchestra
TicKets of Admission, 35 cts.
Natlonat Omccrs: Frank f: Tooopeon: Rrvigants dare M. lu:tr, Vow Pema; Sanit De
HOOT at Cee A Se Vee ia Ei, SAN
Comoe Mrrangemenens, Sammy ian: ese eee TN
Ladies’ Aucinry. Nocter Med Thomas, Prevent; Men fda V, Peale, Ye
Mes Neenah aati Ee apomene rsent ote fae 8 Peis, Vet
Fre Mon fas Choe vans oe tate tities ores SU
THE A. & M. COLLEGE
GREESSHOWO, S.c.
seta eo rete tng
Hine meal aciiemem omnia
Romaine soc meeaae cue
Peoria pura
FOR SALE .
ei Da
with 2 good cigar and lunch trade
BECKAM. I West 194th Street
NEW YOUK CITY
Two or Three Large Rooms
TO LET.
Lotomlabed, lp Palate Moame at
Pateriaed iy Sotrce tcc atte
SE etre Reins
MRS. SEATON
320 Went 53rd St.
1878 A Grand Reception and Concert 1905
WILL BE GIVEN ny 7
_ The Juvenile Glittering Star Council, No. |
G. U. 0. of D and S. of ST. LUKE'S
AT ASSOCIATION, HALL. 160 Wost 29th street
Friday Evening, June 9th, 1905
Muste by Mas Hallle Anderson Concert hegine #:i0 p.m. sharp
‘Admission. 25 cents - Children under 12 yen. 15 conte
Tiere willbe 3 rites awantad a Witch, Zither and Pinge? inc, The chi bene the
higheat amount af msney over 3600 tote watch, Tbe elt ouging meee ‘Ruot eta ibe
Miter! Rechid Grvaclag cnet £2.00 net the meer rings ‘Rhe een mal ee@en ray
Hane Sthyae Spee Ait swney fee pare feturoe fo Siem, = hsdstons 3 Cctantn menor
Beton Sth dof 31h mene ;
GERICERS OF THLE COUNCH: Rath Ronee, Charity: Dury Hunter, Hepes Maine
Prgerann, Path; Haha Willcom in. Sees Ean itater, Tene Bees Santon, Toren
GUARDIANS: Sater Jaan H. Thoma Sister Mary Simiton, Sinter Hunter, Sire Armand
‘Motenbeck- Siete
7 _ og ee ae .
Greenberg's.
Ladies’ Hair Dressing Parlors
MANUFACTURER OF HUMAN HAIR GOODS
Afro-American Hair Goods a Specialty
Ait Atoda of Wigs, Brom Peous und Siwiceo to. Stock, and Made to Onder
589 Eighth Avenue: —
tees, aear: oo Street 5
ay: CASH OR CREDIT fy
ey E. V. KRAUS gy
we) 603, 605,607, 609 and 613 ae
NINT AVENUE
Northwest cor. of 43rd Ste.
| Largest and Most Popolar Foritare Pim on the West Side
. Famitury, Carpets, Bedding, Oilclot, Linoleum, Stores, 60-
_ Gants and Baby Carriages. a
BZ a. ‘A Guaranteed Sewing Ma- 4
FEEpy cbiné ‘Free With Every Pur- fa
eEE | chase—-"ipver $75. — Ps
ie aearere ee
a
i HT he
F Voice
* ay of the
Negro
WE. BORE, Rlioe
“obs inline paleo
re en Maca
ee eae hae
It you ent, to haar fora "the Cored an
ra ae
Tlie Voice of the Negro
ips ua eo te ana
a
THE VOICE OF THE NEGRO
pac. ‘Atiasen, do.
(ce
SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR THE
Negro Educational Review
Seer eS
5 eT hd
Mary Ann Haze, May 11 — Peter Salmon Garrison, Army and Navy Union, ammunition depot, all Joy street on Memorial Avenue of its and, accompanied by the memorial mound of its and, accompanied by the memorial mound of its and, presented over the following months of march to Park square, where once housed for Mr. Hope Cemetery: Joy to Cambridge, to Court, to Tremont, to Blytham and to Park square. Army and Navy memorial storeroes were held at Mary and Navy lot in the cemetery. After return to the city, the following important navy hold in front of the memorial being the State house.
REV. HENRY J. CALLIS.
Singing by Garrison, "Nearer, My God, to Thee," prayer, Comrade S. William Simmons, address, "Loyalty, Col. W. B. Carpenter, Col. Robert Gould Shaw and his brave Native Companion; singing by Garrison, "America," Memorial day oation, as-Representative William L. Reed and besidement, (Baptism H. C. Campbell and Walter J. Stevens) captain and adjutant. The Memorial day committee; Senior Vice-Commander Haymond L. Phillips; chairman; Quartermaster, Alfred Gaskin; Albert Smith, and Comrade William Tillman.
The Representative Reed spoke in glowing terms of the valor and devotion of the Afro-American men and women of our country and depicted the little that the services of those above have seen appreciated and that wrong and injustice in sections of the country. The women of Boston took an active part in the celebration and ending Decoration day. All of the churches conducted by Afro-Americans were crowded in the evening. The Woman's Relief Corps of Boston displayed the National display in every church. The Charles Street A. M. E. Church was tamed to its utmost by members and friends of the Woman's Relief Corps of Boston on Sunday night. Hanging across the pulpit was a purple banner upon which appeared in gold better than the ones on Rev. Henderson delivered the service on "The Negro Soldier and Baller." The services included the singing of patriotic hymns, the presentation of flowers, the fellowship of the officers of the sentiment Dmitri, commander; William B. Hopkins, S. V. C.; George L. Robbinson, A. V. C.; and William C. H.
The last meeting of the St. Mark Musical and Literary Union last Sunday afternoon ended these meetings for the season. This organization has rendered good service during the summer and many your people have become impatient and many your people have written as well as for public speaking.
H.J. Ficken delivered a fine address before the Y. M. K. A. Association on Shawmut avenue of the life of the Dr. J. C. Price and said many complementary things concerning the noble good education and orator. Dr. H. J. Gillen gave a good lecture and Dr. D. Price also spoke in a sympathetic way about the work which he accomplished. Owing to the very warm day the crow's nest was a very profitable place. W. H. Miller of Lincoln University will spend next Sunday, and on June 10 he will visit the University of Bristol. Episcopal Church will speak. This association is doing great good in the city of Boston. Dr. J. C. Price praised the minister he has taken in our church for which he was well received. This was the occasion of the Y. M. K. A. Association. The trustees of the Calvary Baptist Church will meet the following week in the will meet: M. E. K. A. Mini-Curse K. Glover; reader, Wm. H. Richmond; bishop; Hooper Fortune; violinist; the Boston Literary and Historical Association hold the last big meeting Monday night. Nearly one hundred people were present to the meeting, who are unhappy to treat.
The people of greater Boston adorn The NEW York Anx and a great many are reading it and praising its generous course and readable opinions.
Miss M. D. Hodge of 73 Garden street has been notified that she has passed the civil service examination on Tuesday. The first roof garden party of the moon will be given by the Young Men's Christian College in Kendall street. Miss Helen Yukon Cohen is chairman of the arrangement committee. The opening ceremony night of Wheeler's Moon will be held on Friday night. Almaden's Magazine made for appointment last week and already the Moon has had four more times in the employment of the Sloane Manufacturing Company of Sloane Street, has held three more appointments in the Moon and her preparation. Many of our employees are preparing to have the only for the Moon.
Miss M. D. Hodge of 73 Garden street has been notified that she has passed the civil service examination on Tuesday. The first roof garden party of the moon will be given by the Young Men's Christian College in Kendall street. Miss Helen Yukon Cohen is chairman of the arrangement committee. The opening ceremony night of Wheeler's Moon will be held on Friday night. Almaden's Magazine made for appointment last week and already the Moon has had four more times in the employment of the Sloane Manufacturing Company of Sloane Street, has held three more appointments in the Moon and her preparation. Many of our employees are preparing to have the only for the Moon.
Miss M. D. Hodge of 73 Garden street has been notified that she has passed the civil service examination on Tuesday. The first roof garden party of the moon will be given by the Young Men's Christian College in Kendall street. Miss Helen Yukon Cohen is chairman of the arrangement committee. The opening ceremony night of Wheeler's Moon will be held on Friday night. Almaden's Magazine made for appointment last week and already the Moon has had four more times in the employment of the Sloane Manufacturing Company of Sloane Street, has held three more appointments in the Moon and her preparation. Many of our employees are preparing to have the only for the Moon.
KINK·INE
Great Hair Straightener and Grower
Most Wonderful Discovery ever made for kinky, curly and knotty hair. Acts like MAGIC on the hair.
The class owner at Drew Theological Seminary is John A. Columbus Allen, a Dean of the Columbia University Alumni Center, and eventing the members of the regular and auxiliary choirs assembled to enjoy an evening of worship. The choir presents jurassic pastor, religious magnifications that should aid in singing of the chantion a great bower in the choirist, give a short talk on the duties of members of a choir to the leader, Mrs. Jurassic Washington, D.C. The following officers were elected for one year: Mrs. Jurassic president; Mrs. Jurassic harding, minister; and Mrs. Augustine Darwin, pastor. CHARLES ALLEKANDER
Poughkeepsie Notes.
POCKHORNBIRD, May 21.—The funeral of Abraham Garnet, who died 24 May, was held at his late residence, 41 Joy street, on Monday, May 7, at 3:30 p.m. Rev. C. D. Fairfax officiated and interment was in Rear Corstory. The "Jolly Eight" will give their first picnic of the season at Pallitt Park on June 29. Music will be furnished by Pughs' orchestra. Variations are out announcing the mirage of June 15 at the house of the bridge. Hike at 8 p.m. John Loferve has left the Morgan House and is now at Vassar Inn, near the college. Mimi Edin Vanderbilt has returned home after spending a few days in New York city. Mr. George W. Bolia of 20 Garfield place returned from New York after spending a week there visiting friends W. and Smith of Market street visited Noleau friends last week. Mr. J. G. Johnston, one Brownsburg, Nyman, was on city visiting friends last week. The Ebenezer Baptist Church, on the corner of Main and Smith arova, will hold a week's fair on June 15 at the house of the bridge. Woman is selling the most tickets, $1 for the one selling the most 10-cent tickets over 50, and the one selling the most season tickets, which sell for 40 cents, over 50 will receive $2. Mrs. Ann M. Hail is sick.
Kink-ine
Is No Experiment
It was discovered by Dr. Roberts, 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.
KINK INE 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 line.
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 cts. six for $1.65 or One
Dozen for $1.10. Write at once for terms
and full instructions.
G. Lefebvre Old School—Western Academy Summer School—Susquehanna
New Haven, New York—Ep. Lefebvre Old School of St. Lefebvre's. B. Church held their second annual campionation Wednesday night at the beautiful home of Mr. and Mrs. Mervil T. Bike, 139 Dillwyn avenue. In the first part of the evening the guests were entertained by a literary program, after which they headed to Alma Johnson also made timely remarks. The promise of a proactive bride and groom added to the gallery. There were 180 persons present and refresheds were served. Alma Johnson who recently returned home from King Hall, Washington, D. C. gave a speech, followed by a presentation of the ceremonial examinations at Bristol Derry School at Midtown, and on 7 June, with the chapel of the school, Right Brow, Chamney B. R. Browne, bishop of the diocese, will officiate the chapel's charge of the Marianal School at Milford.
Herman A. Boost, Jr., the tailor, is currently ill with brain damage at his home on Garden stout. J. G. Van Loon, Jr., the architect, is home for the summer. The Union A. M. K. Genderism, which coursed here on May 17, appointed Rev. L. H. Cock of Acton, L. A. Cock of Litchfield, and Littleton, a veteran of the Third-fifth United States Industry, attempted mimics at Pitch's Goldblade Home Sunday night. May 21 involved two or three stories in his writ with a jacket-balloon. The night watchman, attracted by the naked, rubbed into the room and wrestled the balloon from the house over ten weeks ago from heart and kidney trouble.
TROY NOTE8.
Sunday School Teacher Surprise—Funeral of Estella B. Starr.
Troy, May 24—On the evening of May 24 Class No. 4 of Zion School school surprised Mim Gensner Thomas, one of their number, at the residence of their teacher, Ggo. B. Kelley. The evening was spent in games and music and refreshments were served. Mim Thomas left on Thursday in company with her sister-in-law, Mair. A. H. Thomas, and children, for New York city, where they will live. On Tuesday evening the Zion choir, of which Mrs. Thomas was a member, performed at the residence of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Hunter, in Waterloo, and presented Among the honor graduates of the Taukegue Institute last Thursday was Frederick Smith of Troy, son of Mrs. J. K. B. Smith and the sister of Mr. B. Kelley, who was senior captain in the drill team corps.
Real Estate.
PHILIP A. PAYTON JR.
ALSTATE.
AND INSURANCE
Treatment Property.
My specialty is the management of Colored
AGENT. BROKER APPRAISER
67 West 184th Street
DOWN TOWN OFFICE, 6 MAIDEN LANE
telephones-877 and 918 Harlem: 878 and 918
John.
NK·IN
er Straightener and
covery ever made for kink
Acts like MAGIC on the h
KINK-INE
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 KINKLINE will do, and to prove that it is the Best Hair Stamp in the World, send us 15 cents in Stamps or Silver to pay postage and we will send you a Sample Bottle.
SPECIAL OFFER
and superiority of our good one full-size bottle of Kink-line c. both for only 40c. Send ad address plain.
Brown and Dix street, W. S. Rockley, 6th street and 8th avenue; W. B. Miller's Street, Kinkline and 9th avenue, 53rd street and 7th avenue, Ocala, 200 Hutchinson Street, Brownsville, Miller's Drug Store, Morgan Street, Stewart, Miller's Drug Store, Lakeside, O'Farrell, West Avenue, Lakeside, O'Farrell, West Avenue, 53rd street and 8th avenue.
TAKE IN GROUP AND ACCOUNT
STREAK LOCOMOTIVE WORKS
Tell all of your friends I will send them a box of Glamourine. MINT HELEN MARTIN,
MINT HELEN MARTIN
SUMMER SCHOOL
SECOND SESSION
July 1 to July 28, 1905
Courses in History, Psychology, Pedagogy,
Methods of Teaching, English Design,
Management, Manufacturing,
Bakery, Bath, Cooking, Millinery and
Bowing.
$40 stipulation fee covers all charges for tuition and lectures. Board and ledge on University campus cost only $15.00.
For further information, addres-
Rev. John Gordon, D. D., President,
D. D. Ph. D., Director, Washington, D.C.
Miss H. L. Anderson's
Orchestra.
PROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN TO ALL
COMMUNICATIONS
316 West 59th Street
NEW YORK CITY.
Telephone 400 655 2222
1 am 5 pm
The New Amsterdam
MUSIC ASSOCIATION
(INCORPORATED)
Will furnish CONFIDENT COLORED MUSIC
WILL HANK for all functions
For large date tables
W A Riher, Mgr.
W A Riher, Mgr.
648 W 57th St.
10 W 126th St.
NE and Grower kinky, curly and knotty the hair.
Kink-ine
Read what Miss Elizabeth Jones of Chicago says of KINKINE. "My hair was not more than three inches long when I commenced to use Kinkie, 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 six inches long. Besides, my hair has been lightened and I fully believe by the end of the year will have the most beautiful head of hair of any colored lady in the world."
As a Hair Dressing
Kick the he has no equal, being far superior to any hair oil, pomade or vaseline on the market.
The great advantage of this wonderful putty paint is, by its use you can straighten your hair and home. This, we guarantee, can be done in six to twelve months time if our instructions are carefully followed.
A Word to Mothers
Every Mother owes as a duty to her child to use every possible access to hair and promote the growth of her child. Hair by her child is a perennial use of Kink-in. It keep the scalp of Babies and Children in a fresh and healthy condition and we want the child can have a beautiful head of hair when they have a young man or woman.
Kink-ine Soap.
A product of perfect purity, present
expressly for use in connection with Kink
line. It contains the highest moisture
content in best Shampoo soap in the
world; for外贸, it is the perfect condition it has no equal.
For imparting a velvety softness to
whiteness to the hands, for preserving
freahening and beautifying the complex
appearance of comethes. Of special
perparation for the firm, creamy,
disagreeable body odor; will衬
pear with the use of Kink line soap.
Special Offer below.
goods over all other,
ink-line, price, 35c, or
Send stamps or silver
street and 5th avenue; E. J. Ward, 81th
d. O'vys Bevere, J. and F. Grotte, 51th
d. K. Jaggen, 40th street and 51th
d. Dung Bevere, Amberle and 51th
d. Bevere, [Lahowood, Nm. F. Smith, 844
Bowell, 1820th and 1914th street shops,
M. Bevere, 20 West 57th street; R. A. Bevere
and the avenue and 1914th street.
ANDERSON HOUSE,
57 Douglas Street.
The Queen Street Building on the corner of
57 Douglas Street and 57 Douglas Street.
For more information, call 212-745-2222 or visit
www.andersonhouse.com.
The Long Strand and Riverside Excuse
GILBERT HOTEL,
606 West 50th Street, New York, NY.
For more information, call 212-745-2222 or visit
www.gilberthotel.com.
KEYSTONE HOTEL
206 West 87th Street.
Flat Oven Permanent Rooms by the Day, Week
WITH LAUNDRY AND CUARS.
POOL AND BILLIARD PASION DOWN STAIRS.
WM. BANKS
NEW MARYLAND HOUSE
BELLAND AND BREMODEL
202 and 204 W37th Street
Nicely furnished Beneath by the Day,
Week or Month.
RESTAURANT ATTACHED
Main at all hours
JOHN WALCOY, Proprietor
marsh ino
The Hotel Alpen,
EUROPEAN PLAN.
207 Seward Ave., NEW YORK CITY.
Nicely furnished and decorated. Modern
innovation. Occasional by press and public
to be the Warehouse for travelers to
mine like IRENE SORNOCK. Proprietor.
Beth, January 1877. Tel. 808 Columbus
HOTEL MACEO,
213 W53rd Street, N. Y.
First Class Acceptations ONLY.
Bremodele furnished Beneath for Person-
al Use. Curry and Business Men.
First Class Acceptations.
Regiment. Dinner, including Wine,
N. N. to R. S. N. of N. N. of N. N.
B. F. THOMAS, Proprietor.
HOTEL LETT:
186 West 53rd Street.
Healthy dining with five large furnished
Room. Electric Light. Telephone and
Restaurant Attached.
RESTAURANT ATTACHED.
Mrs. S. COURTWRIGHT, Fortpriest,
New York.
Hotel MARSHALL.
127 and 129 West 58d St.
Telephone: 1271 Calhoun
Address: 1271 West 58d St. in New York
Oakland, CA, 94021
Department: Finely furnished
Office space
Ballroom, 1271 West 58d St.
Karne raumkunst
BALL, 1271 West 58d St.
davis loo
Proprietors.
THE ALLEN HOUSE
218 West 67th Street
Neatly furnished rooms for permanent or trans-
portation. First class restaurant stitched.
Seaside Hotels
Local and Long Distance Telephones
Coast Phone 738 Electric Bells
HOTEL BOSTON
W. S. STAFFORD, Prop.
Cor. Arctic and Michigan Aves.
Atlantic city, N. J.
Choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
Music Hall Attached.
BOARD BY THE WEEK
1015 ARCTIC AVENUE
Atlantic City, N. J.
apr 27 3 mos
JULIUS C. WILSON, Prop
Additional Dining, Sleeping and Bathing
Rooms, Rate Reasonable. The public is
especially invited to visit and see the adva-
plages offered by the management.
1012 ARCTIC AVE. Atlantic City, N.J.
MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH GAINES, Mgr.
apr 27.3 mnd.
WONDERFUL
DISCOVERY
Curly Hair Made Straight By
TAKED FROM LIFE
This wonderful hair pomade is the only safe
product of our brand that makes hair silky or
easy to wash and scalp, prevents the hair from falling
over the hair scalp, prevents the hair from falling
over the hair grow long and silky. Hold over
the hair grow long and silky. Hold over
the hair grow long and silky. It was the first preparation ever
made for this pomade. Remanbertha: Ford Original
luxurious, Remanbertha: Ford Original
civil est. cents, and only in Chicago and ny.
U. R. A. is printed on the package. Do not
use in any good-bun already instillin with getting
near the hair straight, soft and hospitalized.
It is not so much distressed. A toilet necessities for
every person. Overseeing the hair and lasting
performed. Overseeing the hair and lasting
performed. Overseeing the hair and lasting
performed. Only 20 cents. Sold by drugging
and dealer, or sold as 20 cents for one bottle,
and sold as 20 cents for one bottle,
paid. We post all packages and express charges.
Please visit www.openied.com for information
guidance of this product when ordering.
OPENIED ON MARBOR CO.
LOUIS A. LEAVELL
Attorney and Counselor at Law
Office 104 West 50th Street.
Tel: 201-2 J. Madison NEW YORK CITY
Special Hours: 8 to 9 A.M. 4 to 5:00 P.M.
Princeton at 100 West 50th Street.
mor 10 3 p.m. Printing in all the Counts.
The New York Realty Co.
430 West 50th Street
NEW YORK
Real Estate and Insurance Agency
THE WESTERN SIDE OF THE CITY
Kentucky College offers the International College of Business Administration. The college offers a variety of programs in the areas of accounting, finance, marketing, management, and business administration. The institution is one of the largest and most prestigious colleges in the state. The college is located in the heart of Louisville, Kentucky. The college offers a variety of programs in the areas of accounting, finance, marketing, management, and business administration. The institution is one of the largest and most prestigious colleges in the state. The college is located in the heart of Louisville, Kentucky.
Over Twenty Years
J. DW. VIN
FUNERAL
638 88
Bldg. 20
G. EDWARD WINTERBUTTON.
Telephone: 631 88 50, and 631 88 50
George A. Brambill,
ARTIST
LADIERS & GENTS TAILOR,
187 West 134th Street.
Near Louisville Avenue.
Ladies and Gentle High-low Garments a
BULL DRESS POINT TO BIRK.
Work called for and delivered to any part
Bronch: 73 Georgetown S. Sorority Spring,
New York.
July 17
BROADBORN, CALIFORNIA
New York City. One of the
most important offices in
the city of New York and
one of the largest in the
state. It was founded in
1801 by William W. Brodby.
BROADBORN 1801.
Over Twenty Years on Sixth Ave.
J. EDW. WINTERBOTTOM &
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
638 Sixth Ave.
Bell 8th St. and 9th St.
TON.
and 430 8th St. No Guests with
Crambill,
TS TAILOR.
LADY GONNE
MME ZANK
Brooklyn's Public
Park
UPPERBAKERS AND ENBALERS.
Telephone: 5146-800 St.
JAMES O. THOMAS,
UNDERTAKER & EMBALER,
493 88th Avenue,
Berkshire 610 and 57th Street.
GAMES CRAFT TO BROWN.
Be sure to contact the advertiser as we I have no connection with any other firm.
march 1977
TEL. KIT E. COLLISHER.
W. DAVID BROWN
HIGH GRADLE LICENSED
Undertaker & Embalmer
Funeral Parlor and Chapel
146 West 53d Street
Between 51st and 53rd Avenue.
Lady, attendant at all Funerals. Camp Chairs and Gauches to hire all hours.
dec88 1900
Tuckerborne Cyl. 1438 53d Street.
Might Calls promptly attended to.
CHARLES H. GRAVES,
Undertaker and Embalmer,
Orrison, 319 West 41st St.
Between 51st and 53rd Avenue.
Residence, 215 West 404th Street, New York.
Every request for Mortal Funeralized on Reasonable Terms.
aug88 19
The True Reformer Burial Co.
Licensed UNDERTAKEN & SHELKERAL
in one of the strongest and most reliable
Understandings establishments in the State. We
provide our services to all our
Proceeds only committed to us.
90 West 124th Street.
Telephone Call 1188 Stark
mary 17 HBTB & BROTHERS. Friarsterr.
corresponders.
Telephone 612 Media
FRANCIS I
PACKER AND
of China. Glass and
any other
14th Floor
Not connected
with any other
firm.
Rev. Robt R.
Mont's services
can be had for
Hokkens, Funerals,
Preaching and
Marriages,
at any hour in
the day or night
R. MONT,
Embalmer,
Maryne
FUNERAL DIRECTOR,
350 West 53rd Street,
NEW YORK.
Permitted with the late
JAMES L. MATTHEW.
Tel. 2812 J.Main. Calls promptly attended to
Cornellius Parker
Undertaker & Embalmer
388 Hudson Ave. Brooklyn
Near Myrtle Ave. Opposite Fleet St. Church
NO BRANCH STORE
may 18 Snores
P.J. Drummins, Mgr.
Mrs.IdaWhite-Duncan
Wirs. Brida, Bange, Pompeyne and Simpson. Winsor, Bange, Pompeyne and Simpson Treatment champagne, Hairdressing, Fawn and Bange. Winsor, Bange, Pompeyne and Simpson brunch. Hallmark normally attended. 666 Bloomingdale's, 666 Mountaineer, N.J. J. D. de Cimo
nts.
ATS
Improve
West 60th
Street
O'FARRE
410 & 412 Big
Near 21st Street
Furniture, Carpets
Houses, Plates and App
Complete.
CASH OR
FRANK DOR
ELEGANT FLATS
Handmade Apparel with all improve
Handmade Apparel with all improve
THE DOLLY-MOUNT, 311 West 60th
THE DOLLY-MOUNT, 311 West 60th
THE BARATOCA, 209 West 80th Street
THE FARRINGTON, 209 West 80th Street
THE DOWNOOK, 209 West 80th Street
Above house has First-Class Janitor service
are always in good condition.
Abby
ALKAYANDER, OBGEBY, 217 West 60th St.
MR. HOLYARD,
210 West 61st Street.
January
554, 556, 558 & 560
West 126 St
TO LET
Handcome Apartments of 4 Large, Light
Room. Req. Hot Water Supply.
Finely Carpeted Halls, inc. Good Jewel
Service. Rent
$10.60 to $17 per Month
Apply
D. JOHNSON, JANE
JOHNSON & CO.
CONTRACTORS
REV. ROBERT
Underwriter and
800 West 62nd Street.
C. FRANKLIN CARR.
Flats and Apartments.
To Let
No Connection with new business may
migrate.
ILL,
LADY ZAHRETA CONZALES
MME ZAHRETA CONZALES
Brooklyn's Celebrated Chairperson,
Palmist and Spirit Woman,
information for which you can contact.
Information for which you can contact.
grant aid for business, law, in research,
health, travel, change, marriage, divorce and
migration.
Their vast experience, years of study and
remarkable psychic power, puts them especially
to use in the field of psychic healing.
AN HOMESTAY PROPOSITION—(You to be full)
and you to be full, you to be full,
to make MAK NOUCHOUGE if we fail to call you by
name in full; names of your friends, exquisite or
band, wife, or sweetheart to true or false. We
must deal, even though miles away. In act
will you tell you every hope, fear or sanction
belling in one word, and if you are not absolutely
lucky, then pay no money (you to be full
lucky).
During the year our record for successful work includes 258 marriages, gained the love of certain ones 10%; made many rich through advice in our book; and 100 other cases, such in business, agriculture, law, medicine, and the arts. Unlike impostors and pretenders, we take money in advance and positively return to accept our money on our own or on our office personal indebtedness. We have on line at our office personal indebtedness of the world. All business seriously confidential. They tell you what your troubles are as they understand them, and help you help disarmed persons and have been made RICH. HOPE AND HEALTH THROUGH their prizes. Bred LADY GONALDRA 18 cases, and Bred LADY MONICA 18 cases, questions and describes this paper, and you will be given short Fortune, House, 10 to 18: also Sunday. Fortunately hosted at 236 Bergen Street between 236 and 238 N. W. for the past 19 years. They are graduates of two colleges, large diplomas in their parlor price.
25c., 50c. and $1.00
mard 100
MME. ROSE, 516 State St.
Clairvoyant, BROOKLYN, N.Y.
Made to order by our department.
Hand to hand delivery.
The price for these items is based on the
quantity. Fill in the price box to be re-
ceived by the dealer. The price is not to be
received by the customer. You have to be
signed. If you have been
signed by others call on me.
Signed by the dealer. Signed by the de-
signer guaranteed.
feb 17 th
Telephone 661 Madison Square.
FRANCIS TURNER
PACKER AND SHIPPER
of China, Glass and Household Goods of
Every Description
419 Fourth Avenue,
8, N. Cor. 30th St. Basement, NEW YORK
Rates to the State of New York.
Packing Paper, Excelsior and Twine
for Sale
Ladles Hair Dressing Parlor,
727 EIGHTH AVE.
African-American Hair Goods a Specialty,
also Hair Straightening.
Your Patronage Bolsters
GET INSURED
Don't be Burned Out and Have
'Nothing Left
A 6 Year Policy for the Furniture in your Flat
Only the best Fire Insurance Company.
D. A. GREENE, Insurance Broker
© Alaryne Avenue, (Coral Street,
12345)
WILFORD H. SMITH.
Myer Building
49 MAIDEN LANE
NEW YORK.
Rooms 110 to 116
let 16 to 16
DAMAGE OUTSIDE A OPENSITY
Your own Material made up at Reasonable Price. New Bard or Binding, 25 c. Panamas marked 30 c. Cleaning and Dysing. married 14 mo.
O'FARRELL'S
410 & 412 Eighth Avenue,
Near 11st Street NEW YORK CITY.
Furniture, Carpets, Bedding Etc.
House, Flat and Apartment Furnished
Complete.
CASH OR CREDIT.
FRANK DONNATIN.
Oldest and Most Reliable Store in the City.
2019.11
THE CENTRAL RESTAURANT
COR. OF HICKORY AND PERROW STREET,
Orange, N. J.
Meals served at all hours: Prize Ice Cream,
Polar Bear Waters, Citrane, Candied,
DINNER PARTIES_AND_WEDDINGS_A
SPECIALTY.
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HAND
A.
To 761 Fulton St., Brooklyn
DR. ELLARSON
MARVELOUS MEDIUM
and TRANCE CLAIRVOYANT, can do it
you that JIR, she did, and ha
Rich, Happy and Successful
in all their undertakings while the above elect Dr. Eliason's advice are still effective knowledge of chemistry can improve the effect of all treatments and will be a friend to all patients. Has the secret of winning the advantage opposite sex. Has the secret of Spiritualism the secret to many who claim possession. Beware of such and expensive gifts and give spirit reading representations to Dr. Eliason. Dr. Eliason does not of the above, not Fulston, New Y. Dr. ELLARSON understands the importance of it, is now and always has been a friend to all people and always a friend to others. From ELLARSON.
Please Read The Following:
Y. ARLTON PARK, NEWARK, N. J. MARY,
COLLEGE, SUNY, NEW YORK
I wish to add my testimony
of one's marvelous power. By some myriad
influences, I have been able to speak,
or move, or band of feats. Elanor,
I was made able to walk around
the deaf, Mr. Thomas Marian,
14 seventh avenue, ML Veron, N. Y.
BROOKLYN, MAY, 1995. I thought I would die.
Elanor cared me and made me feel like a new
friend, and I am thankful for the pounding me to such
a good friend to give me relief. EARL HARRIS,
183 Myrtle avenue, Roxlyn, N. Y.
NEWARK, Sept. 14, 1995. I wish to state that I
have trouble and dislike for a long time,
seemed to understand my case, and meant to may
be the matter. None could do me any good.
Dr. Nicole, the last few years, I thought I would
call to see him myself. I found Dr. Shane
Fulllen stred, Dr. Elanor, a most kind and a
pathetic friend. I spent time curled me so well,
I can truly and heartily recommend
to all those in sickness or kind. Mostly I
A new remedy for the malignant skin
of the face is the application of
others cannot cure all conditions of
perfect and radical cure of skin
folks. It is the least male parthenia.
RUFUS HURBURT
Select Employment Agent
Good attendance at all times for reliable
work of all nationalities. Tel. 500-600-600