New York Age
Thursday, July 13, 1905
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
The New York Age.
THE INSTITUTE FOR COLORED YOUTH
ADMINISTRATION BUILDING AND PRINCIPAL'S HOUSE.
THE HISTORY OF THE HOME
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Richard Humphreys, a native of the Island of Tortola, in the West Indies, in early life a slaveholder, and afterwards a citizen of Philadelphia, died in the year 1832, bequeathing the sum of ten thousand dollars to found an institution under the care of members of the Society of Friends, of which also he was a member.
ADMINIS
"having for its object the benevolent design of instructing descendants of the African race in school learning, in the various branches of the mechanic arts and trades and in agriculture, in order to prepare, fit, and qualify them to act as teachers." The "Institute" was founded in the year 1837, upon the basis of this bequest, which amounted at that time to about thirteen thousand three hundred dollars. In the year 1842 a charter was pro-
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cured from the State of Pennsylvania for "The Institute for Colored Youth." "Slightly after the charter of the Institute had been secured, an additional sum of about eighteen thousand dollars, which had been devised for educational purposes by another Friend, was granted to the corporation. Further sums were contributed by interested Friends from time to time, and in the year 1851 buildings were erected for the permanent establishment and location of the Institute on
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Lombard street, in the city of Philadelphia, where the schools were conducted until the year 1836. Impressed with the importance of more ample and convenient accommodations, a movement was set on foot to secure them, and a lot of ground was purchased on the North side of Bainbridge street, west of Ninth, in the city of Philadelphia, where a large and commodious building was erected, at a cost, including the ground, of nearly forty thousand dollars. This sum was
contributed by a number of interested friends of the Institute. The importance of instruction in the industrial arts having claimed the consideration of the friends of the Institute, and subscriptions having been made for the establishment of this department, a lot of ground adjoining that already held
NISTRATION BUILDING AND PRINCIPAL'S
by the corporation was purchased and a building erected thereon, and in the year 1889 instruction was commenced in the trades of carpentry, bricklaying, shoemaking, printing, tailoring, typewriting, dressmaking, millinery, and cooking. In 1903 a careful survey of the situation of Negro education convinced the managers that the "supreme need" is for better qualified teachers, and it was concluded to sell the Bainbridge street property and to concentrate the efforts and
1. 已知 $a, b, c$ 为实数,且 $a + b + c = 0$,求 $a, b, c$ 的值。
2. 已知 $a, b, c$ 为实数,且 $a + b + c = 0$,求 $a, b, c$ 的值。
3. 已知 $a, b, c$ 为实数,且 $a + b + c = 0$,求 $a, b, c$ 的值。
INDUSTRIAL BUILDING.
funds of the Institute in a first-class normal school. To secure the benefits of a good home environment and some opportunity for agriculture, a farm of 116 acres was purchased at Cheyney, Pa. Two new buildings have been erected, and the dwelling house already on the farm has been put in first-class order. This equipment is believed to be the germ of a very important work for the race—more in keeping with the terms of the original request.
LIBRARY.
LIBRARY.
The teachers of the institute are: Principal, Hugh M. Browne, A. M.; History and Allied Subjects, Alphonso O. Stafford; Agriculture, Charles C. Poindexter; Primary Methods, Olive A. Rainey; Psychology—Course during the year has been given by Dr. Henry H. Goddard, of West Chester; Domestic Science, Flora H. Woodson; Domestic Art, sewing, dressmaking, millinery and hanketry; Wood Working, Levi V. Moore; Iron Working, Walter K. Jones;
Secretary, Hattie G. Williamson.
Secretary Stanley R. Xarnall, in the fifty-second annual report of the work, says:
The normal training work of the Institute was commenced in the new buildings at Cheyney in the Eleventh Month last.
These new buildings are a dormitory.
S HOUSE.
and, an industrial building. The former will accommodate about thirty young women. The latter is used for general school purposes and as a dormitory for the young men. A delay in opening of more than a month was occasioned by retarded building operations, and this delay evidently affected the size of the opening class. The enrollment includes ten young women and six young men. These sixteen represent ten States of the Union, one student coming from as far
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South as Texas. There are, besides these, three West Chester teachers who attend classes one day each week. The maximum boarding accommodation at present could not easily exceed fifty, and as the course of study covers two years a small entering class seemed desirable. Some high school training was prescribed as a requisite of admission to the class, and as only one colored child out of a thousand in Philadelphia gets into the High School, the field from which to
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draw students in the whole country is at present decidedly limited.
Six teachers reside at the school, and five of them are occupied only with the work there. The sixth teaches in the colored school in West Chester, and is preparing the way for the second year students to have opportunities for observation and practice in that school. Practical handwork in wood and iron. In agriculture and the domestic arts, is a regular part of the normal training. The
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The image shows a group of people seated around a table, engaged in what appears to be a discussion or meeting. The setting is indoors, with a large window or wall in the background. The people are dressed in formal attire, suggesting a professional or formal occasion. The table is covered with a cloth, and there are papers or documents on it. The room is well-lit, with natural light coming from the window. The overall atmosphere seems to be one of concentration and engagement.
SMITH SHOP.
special effort is to develop a type of teacher who will appreciate that intelligence is a usable quantity, and as applicable to the homely arts of life as to the recitation of definitions and formulas. In addition to a payment of $80 a year to corer-board, each student contributes an hour a day of labor to the institution.
100
The Domestic Department has been assigned to a special committee, and they have organized it under the teacher of domestic science, who is a graduate of Pratt Institute. The dietaries prepared by her and her plans for household management have worked out admirably, and have not exceeded in cost the estimates submitted by her. This cost is less than $10 a month for each person. The educational value of a daily life in such a well-managed household must count for much
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in the life of the students. This is a thought that was often urged upon previous boards by Fanny J. Coppin.
The Farm Committee has continued to work the farm so as to improve it, and already marks of this improvement are favorably noted by neighboring farmers. Eventually it is expected that the whole farm will be a part of the educational machinery of the school, but the transition to this condition must be gradual. Allotments of ground for school gardens
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will be made this spring, and some portion of the farming operations will be under the direction of the teacher of agriculture. A new barn is a pressing necessity, and it is hoped that some friends of the cause will be found to supply this need.
The religious character of the life at Cheyney has had the care of the board. A Bible class is held regularly on First-days, and right methods for religious instruction in elementary schools are in-
culcated. Each day's work is commenced by Scripture reading, and the teachers are all believed to be well concerned for the higher interests. Upon the earnest solicitation of Booker T. Washington and others it has been decided to hold a summer school during the Seventh Month at Cheyer.
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PHYSICS LABORATORY.
A preliminary announcement of this has already brought applications from forty teachers. Not more than sixty can be comfortably accommodated, and the number must be limited to this figure. It is estimated that the additional furniture and the cost of maintenance for this summer session will aggregate about $2500. The furniture will be required in any event in the Ninth Month.
A very special appeal is made for contributions to carry out this effort to reach
THE
MUSIC
OF
THE
MUSIC
OF
THE
MUSIC
a large number of schools and teachers in the South.
The decision to concentrate the resources and activities of the Institute on normal training has had wide approval. The late Dr. Curry represented Normal Training as the greatest educational need of the colored race, and his opinion has so far influenced the Peabody trustees that they are devoting their funds to this end in the South. Such technical training, however, is costly. The accumulated
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funds of the Institute are wholly inadequate for the needs of a first-class normal school. This statement may arouse the suspicion that an extravagant standard has been adopted. It is most unfortunate that the work of the Institute should appear in that light. Even a few teachers of high grade very quickly represent a large circle of influence. A high quality of work in the school-room is the only true economy. The proverbial thriftlessness of the Negro can be supplanted in no way
so surely as by training teachers who will apply a remedy in a better standard of living. A trade school near Cheyney devotes a thousand dollars in three years to the training of a single carpenter or machinist. Can we expect to train a good teacher for less? The people of the United States have manifested a pro
1
found faith in the power of the teacher upon civilization in dealing with Cuba and the Philippines. Large sums of money have been used to give several thousands of these teachers some training at our higher institutions and some contact with our ideals of living. The Federal Government, however, never deals with the Negro problem in the same liberal way. It remains for private beneficence, however, to do so. Money invested in good teachers is quickly mul-
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tripled a hundred-fold. It must devolve upon future boards therefore to enter actively upon a campaign for larger resources, if the present lines of work are to be carried forward to maturity. Your retiring board have found their faith increased from time to time in the movement to make a high-class normal school for the colored race, and the work is committed to the corporation and to future boards in a hope that a very large fruition of our faith shall be realized.
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The officers of the corporation are: Secretary, George M. Warner, No. 365 Bourse Building, Philadelphia; treasurer, Walter P. Stokes, No. 217 Market street, Philadelphia; board of managers, George Vaux, George Vaux, Jr., Francis B. Gummere, Walter Snudley, J. Houry Hartlett, Davis H. Forsythe, Alfred C. Elkinton, David G. Yarnall, Stanley R. Yarnall, James G. Biddle, George S. Hutton, John Balderston; secretary of the board, Stanley R. Yarnall, Media, Pa.
Se a a a a a ae ce ees
a a Sree Pe Ee cee Nr ie
Te ae
thereaghiy co te oar
every Siplomatic nerve
Seized the Uninc government, which
bas ‘taken wo direct part la the proposed
boycott, the initiative wring been taken
by” the ‘Cainces merceants, auder the dl
_rection, It In supposed, of ex-Minister Wa
‘Ting Bar. who cnderatands thoroughly
, the Ai 0 temper. The notice whicl
the revident has served on the bratal Im:
pigretion seeats.of the, Derartment of
rand. Commerce that they must
treat the Chinese In the exempt -clasx
with greater, reapect. and. conaideration
ghoald have its effect. Ani there should
more decent treatment -of the Chinese
Im the anexempt clane—thove In, tranalt
to other countries of, Nucth America than
the Tnited inten, for Tastance. The bar-
Baroun treatinent of these fatter at San
Franchco and on the Canadian border, an
we have witnersed it, is a dingrace tothe
Republic. 7. $
One of the commonest and meanest
pastimes of the Ainerican hoodlum, of the
man and boy sort, ix to cainp on the bevln
ahd to provéke.in every conceivable way
known to the viciourly depraved, penons
against whou ‘they take a dislike, It in.
invariably a member of nome race thex |
sdislike. ‘The Jew, the Chinaman, and
ithe Negro are thelr. peculiar aversion. Tt ia
Iagier line plenty of dt whenever he cet
into a. situation where the hoodlum
thinks le has no lusiness, In Chicago
Taat week a new black policeman wax
the object of hoodlum attack. He xtond a
lot of the Outrage, and to mwave it left
the street car on which he was riding.
The: hoodlumy followed him and their
mumbers were rapidly augmented by other
riff-raf of their sort in the streets. When
their doings became intolerable the polic=
man pulled bie gun and began to fire into
the crowd. When his ammunition way
exhausted the hoodtumis mobbed him near.
ly {o death, hut he was ultinately rescued
by* fellow-officers. “The polieman did
right. He did not “kill cnongh of. the
hoodinms. ‘The boodlun are a sort af
anob, and all mobs should have cold lead,
and plenty of it, pumped into them,
Mr, Charles “W. Anderson qualified on
uly 1 as Internal Revenue Collector for
the eecond district of: New York. Strange-
ly enough, the bottom did not drop out
of Mauhaitan and the sun did not refas
to bine on the just and the unjust. And
there were a0 frills aceyswors to the quali-
fication ceremonies None of the ent-
plorers left their einpisrnient and bolted
for the door. ‘They stuck to their dew
and to their salaries, None of the pa-
trons of the office refused to do business
at “the old stand,” but the usnal tong line
of them tomk their turn. © More-ther: this,
Mr, Anderson found all sorts of flowers
and tererntis of congratubitions in the
office when he entered it, and the daily
paper antonnes (iit there were mx many
Tokens of good will from Denivcraty ne
from Republicans--white Democrats,
mind sou! Think of that. And garry
the news te Senator. Tillman, sans bis
sort. All this marks a revetution in the
political condition of the Afro-Americans
Of New York and the North and West
The elements of it we stall discuss at
another time.
A New York judze, in. sentencing a
black burglar with a lung list of criminal
acts to hie credit, remarked, in_nentene:
Ine the criminal to twenty yeane in the
penitentiary, tat it was fortunate for the
Criminal tliat he was not in the South.
where hie came from, ax the chances were
that he would have eon lynelied, ‘The.
fin gat what was coming to him, and
what every man who bronks the law as he
did should, Tuc wax the judge within
hisceights to the lecture tee gave thee mati?
We think not. Tt was none of the
judges business what sart of treatment
thy prisoner would possibly have revived
in some jurivdicrion other than the ane
where his crimes. were committed, To |
Rugzest that Iw nity have ben fetched in |
the South suseests that the jude really
thorizht that Iynehir would be none too
good: for him even in New York, and n
fides who ean think ‘that way” is un:
Morthy to acenny a place on the New
York Tenet, and shane be dezeaded from |
bie hich office, Tis our opinion that |
Kew York judges deal tao fresly in aff
hand lectures to prisoners anshow. ‘They
Are not made sidzex, be section or ape
Fointinent, to lectitre prisoners, bat to
Matenes them when, ona fir tea, they
Rave heen convieted af violating the law.
he death of (Albion W. 0 ‘Tenrzes |
throws iste the Kinelight tho splendid |
nervicw he rendered the Republic, ann
Feners! Hiternture and the historians |
The future hy the pictuers he drew of the
sharrors. perpetrated in thie Reeanstenc:
fen perial by the maleantents who were
cinbittered by defeat in the War of the |
Rebellion and were determined ta te
trieve by murder, arson and) fraud: the
contral of the local governments whieh
thes had forfeited be their treasonable |
aeions." Noamount of slepnyeock which
alice“ Nera eatin St
Rnd dtl vomit, in worship of the men of
the South who were canspienons in the |
War to destroy the Union of the States.
by word of mouth and by appointment 16
high and responsible positions wtider the
Government, was potent Wy Wine out the
fart. that these mien, almost to a man. |
were responsible inane way and another
for the oxixtence of the Ku Klux Kish
and the failute of the Reconstruction |
policy. which #0 despicable n erentare ay
Thomas Dixon hae labored enrnttly to |
glorify. ‘Thomas Dison has written, his |
dwn fame to infamy, because he falsified
the facts on which he built bjs’ fiction--- | |
writing ‘not gor love of truth “and glors
Of literature bye for love of falsehood and
Flory of malice mpi miehiet that eat ensils
deconerts into bidodshed upon occasion. | |
Tittee ‘Prtrgee and Thomas Dixon both
ade North Carolina the scene of their ||
Gction. The one was alien and the other [!
native to the soil, One wax a literary
artist. who used facts around which to |.
enve stories that should body forth. sa: ||
Cial conditions of a specific Cini and place |
hich the historian could ateeal 40 a1th:|.
Russia has her hand« full af trouble.
The war in the Eayt, in which the Japan:
eae have won every battle on Iand and
nea since the beginning of hostilities, has
Been sunplemented all along with great dis-
content among the Hussian people, Mu-
tiny'In the navy, discontent in the armr,
aprisings among the Inboring people in
the citiea and the peasants in the coun-
try, with official corruption and-incom-
petency in all of the departments of the
Forernment and a “weak and vaciilating.
tuler at the head of affairs, makes «
rituation entirely deaperate. which’ ap-
proximates in some. sort to the conditions
that prevailed in France immediate!
materige te tee outbreak of the: Breach
Reretition, the mast far-reaching to its
‘enneequences, neir end remote. In the:
Nistory of mankind. The thougbtfal meo
pel oeaeet. - .
B witeces: oe aes, Soin bee:
What's in a name? A heap, copecialiy
whes applied to a rece ef peagly
Geocesdants of a rece of
Bes ce meg the ounlect of the prep:
0. Dix
or race desiguation, which Teethcog Sore
-discumed in the cotumse of TMB AGa-ia
the’ past, and undertakes te make us be-
ieseahen We dest ace it tke abriewes
enough. We wee it. <
And the descendants of them tn the United
Riatew are not Netrom, and, thay! and
thelr ancestors were
Nirica. and “would not be eelied each it
they should or. could or would return to
Africe, Axa matter of fact. the lowest
typeof African in regarded in Africa ‘an
the Negro tyne. Whe should. we of the
‘Afcleam race ia thle country. be called a
our race designation by the lowest tn-
ntead df the” highest ‘tvoe of African
triben?. Kecause the white man who first
“gave the title to the tce wished to .de-
neribe the color and facial expression and
Biraute texture.of the people: ince which
the race no dexcribed lias been and. tx
80 regarded by publichts and literatears
everywhere ax © common nonn; aod no
Amount, of persuasion or ‘carving “will
inke them rexard'it ax a proper nous.
We are not Negroes; wé are Afro-Ameri-
cann and will be x0 designated in the
future. ’
The people of Georgia have the lynch:
ing habit xo badly that they cannot ab-
stain from it for any connidernble Jensth
of time without a mere of reat low
to the. general gaivty of the Common-
wealth. “One day recently a mob broke
the jail at Watkinxville, the jatlor mak-
ing no xliow of rexixtance, took nine prix:
oners out in the yard, ‘stood them up
againat a fence anil riddled eight of them
with bullets, the ninth escaping as by
a miracle, One of the meh nhot was ®
white man clare! with a minor offense.
Two of. the victima were charged with
murder anil one with attempted ctiminal
asanult, while the other were charged
with petty offenses, The jail was cleaned
ont by the mob. Aud what will the
dvmagogic Governor Terrell do about it?
The wentiment of the country han net ite
face against Ivnch Inw. The State that
toleraten it will forfeit the good opinion
of the people of the country. ‘There bar.
been very little lynching during the paxt
six. monthe; there should lave been none,
There ix no excuse forvienching of alleged
criminals at_any. time, .Perhapa Sécre-
cary., Taft will qow see that the mob in
Georginy at leaxt. ix not moved # the
law's delay, but by xivage instinet,
‘The death of Secretary of State John |
Has ivan event which hak touched the:
her of the civitized world, comprehend
nd in bis diplomatic retivity deine the)
mist twelve years. The xervicws he ren:
fered the American people in the diree
ion of their diplomatic nffairs for quite
icht years, in the transitipg period of the
emublic from oan insular te oa world
perer, were areat indeed, and Are appre-
rite by the whole peeple and acknowl.
sized officially by the Great Powers of
he wird.” As the private secretary of
Peesident Lincoln Mr, Hav rendered pnb
ie Servier of a sort ae Valuable as thoa
it diploniiey “rendered <i hie, tantirer
yeni, “Ax a literary foree it ix probable
hat his reputation will ret ton his Tee
f Lincoln, done in collaberation with Mr.
Nicolay; bat he did mach ether literary:
werk in prose and poetry of a high order,
He permanent value of whieh time alone
‘an determine, A great fore: in Ameri-
ain life has dicipperred with the death
f Mr. Lay.
Secretary of War William I. ‘Taft and
n large party, of distinguished ladiow and
meationen have started upon a trip tothe
Philippine Istunds, where elaborate ar-
ranements for their entertainment, lave
pewn made. ‘The party will stop at Tokio:
on the way and be entertained be the
Mikndo and other hish Japanese fane-
fionarios, “They will alse visit other
paints in Japan. In the Philippines See-
retary “Taft will find plenty of lard work
fo do, aw he will nor find conditions ax he
eft them, the Southern clement pf the
Ainwrican colony Ipiving ot intagge xnd-
He as seen as Governor Wright took over
ie Government after the departure of
overnor “Taft, and much, confusion and
ome blood letting have been the outcome.
Seeretark Taft. will get a warm welcome
from othe Filipines. and a small seetion
fothe American tesidents, but a very
anal) part. a clear majority. preferring
hat he keep himeectf in the United States,
hey had ne good bleed for the Secretary
ven he Was Governor, and. they. hive
tone tw, "There wis wine Gaudation
or this dislike, as Governor Tate laid it |
lown as his noliey and cleaved to it that
he Philienines were for the Filipinos.
ty these Tater he was regarded with pe-
aliar affection. bevause he protected
hem in their rights and persons: from |
espaliation bys the greedy Americans,
Phese will heave a loncdrawn sigh when
eremey “Taft finishes hia job in. the
“hilimpines nnd turns hiv, faeo towards
he United States again,
Referring to the recent editerial in
Tak AGE on the appointment of Pearl
Vricht to hw the Lowisinna ineimber of
lv National Lepublican Committees, by
‘hairman Cortelyeu, as among his Inst
etx as Chairman of the Committe, ex-
jovernor F'. BL OS. Pinchback, whe was
n New York the past werk, remarked to
le weiter thagcit was Ton, Walter Te.
‘ohen who ninde Uw coudition possible
neh Chairman’ Cortelyou took advan-
ave of in shoving him out of the Com-
tite, “Phat puts another aspect on Che
vatter, But we still Chink chat Chair:
ran Cortelyon was unjust in displacing
fr. Cohen. The facets are as follows :
Keferring to the recent editorial in
Tue AGE on the appointinent of Vearl
Wricht te be the Lonisians member of
the National Republican Comuiittes, by
Chairman Cortelyou, as among his last
vets as Chairman of the Counitter, ex:
Governor VT. B.S. Pinchback, whe was
in New York the past week. reniarked to
the writer thag-it wax Hon, Walter L.
Cohen who ninde Uw coudition powible
whieh Chairman’ Cortelyou took advan-
tare of in shoving him out of the Com-
mittee. ‘Phat puts another axpect on the
matter, Butowe xtill Ghink that) Chair
man Cortelvou was unjust in displacing
Mr. Cohen, ‘The facts are as follows:
When the .National Gometltiee made up
the Pall of delegates for the Chicago Con,
vention it recognized the Cohen delegate:
and placed them, on the temporary roll of
the donvontions ‘The Louisiann delogates xo
recognize! promptly erzanized and elect:
ed Mr. Cohere as the Louisiana member
of the Committes, ‘This wax regular ar-l
could onty be vitiated by Mr. Cohen's
failure to assert hix rights in the open
convention when the list’) was called,
Whew the question of the Louisiana con-
“test cami before the Convention the ne-
tion of the National Committee was re-
versed, in as far as the seating of the
Cohen delegates was concerned, a half
vote being given to the contesting Lily-
white things. ‘This did not vitiate in the
least, however, Mr. Cohen's selection ax
&_ member of” the “National Cominitror,
When the clerk of the Convention called
for the neane of the Lonixiann momber of
the Comunittes Mr. “Cohen, instead. of
standing up for hix rights and. snnoune-
ing hix selection, allowed the ‘matter to
Inv passed over for future consideration
by the Louisiana delegation. Her’ is,
where Mr, Cohen loat his caso. When
the two delezations met to decide the
matter all of the Cohen delegates voted
for him again and all of the Lilywhite
thingy voted for a man of their own
xtripe, Under these conditions there wat
no election, and Chairman Cortelyou wan
given a chance jo fill a vacancy which
exinted. solely because Mr. Cohen. failed
to anert hi right at the paychie mo-
ment, Exesrthing we have Toat in the:
polities Of the-eountry since the war was
tin just thee was. We have onr-
selven and not others to blame for the
ignoble place to which we bave fallen in
Aniericats politics. Z
T, Tadman Forrcne.
Jee a ems Te aay
.» aeapleversay,” aay |. Maes Mpat
:Métiees te Detroit Matttiag me
- Leeper Bew- Guedese Thaw: tever—
‘Thete' Promptvete qné Rélstoncy. .
From the Mew York Tribuse
One of the mest: important experiments
In the, cmplayment of labor that has ever
bere made in a Northern State ie new be-
dma worked ect in. Detroit, Michigans,
where sue ef the laraest factories in! the
city employidig female help bs filed only
with Negro werkers. The ryeult of years
of observation and study by the factory
‘owners, this experiment has now resched
& point where It presages the rerolutionia-
ing of factory life, aud opens to bandred«
of thousands of colored giris in the North
the promise of. a field of labor, hereto-
fore practically closed against jthem.
| Bince the beginning of the expericsent
‘aeven months ago almost: every, colored
airl_in Detroit has applied for a place,
wind to-day it in frankly admitted that if
the’ doors of other Detroit factories were
threerm opea to colored workers, hundreds
of employes could be secured who would
work for lex than white gitty mow de-
rd In gir of & fact, shat, the ex-
iment of Progressive itting
NE iaw ‘proved. that ‘colored girls are
peculiarly adapted for factory work, De-
trait employers and thousands of foane
women now face a problem which in un-
dunbtediy of National, interest at the prex-
ent moment. a og
‘Thix innovation -In_a Detroit factory
wax made only after an Investigation by
members of the firm which covered a pe.
riod of several years, One :of there
membera went personally among Negro!
fauilien, and for a loug time made ac-
quaintance with: Nexro women, This in-
Seatization revenied the fact that of the
7.0U0 colored people of the cits of Detroit
there were at leart 1,000 young women
willing to accent enploronnt of almont
any kind.” Many of these girl were well
educated, aml a few posnenned college adt-|
cations. “Each year the Detroit public
wchools have bien graduating colored xirlx,
but the investixation showed that after
leaving school these girls were unable'to
mcure einployment where their stucation
might be of value to them. They were
barred from store. and offices. and in one
institution where it wne propoued to bring
ih a colored girl clerk, a doren white
xirls threatened to co away. -Not only
young women of education, but others of
couxiderable talent, were found holding
menial positions which barely provided
them wigh a livelihood, aud it wax belier-
wd by the proprietors of the factory. that
if mitch young women could be brouxht
inte factory life, the -resultx would be
highly” eratifving. Soon after thia_ it
Was adverlined that a new Taetiry, jaxt
completed by the company, would emapley
only colored girls, Tinivediately hun
drels responded, and of these nearly a
hundred were chown and set to work,
At the present time the Progressive
Knitting Mills preeent a most nnustial ob
ject lesen. Of the hundred girke em-
ioved there eishts have reewived fairky
gewwt xehioal eldueution, Nearly a, score
are wither high school ar colleze srudnayes.
and only mecentiv one young woman feft
fhe factors to become n teacher at the |
normal xchoot ac Ypsilanti, The faery |
mauler nano ity anniv tw ls |
whe have been graduated in photography
ander one of the best profexsianal photog: |
raphers inéthe city. and yet who have!
een ankle to wecrire emplosinent ina
photographic establixhiment on agcount of
their color, Amenz the one hundred cirlk
there wre nearly forty wha way ap some
nusien! instrament, half ef@them beins
pinnints. En their leisure hours thro of |
these teach music. Alrendy xeven of the
Raitting Mill girls have formed them-
celvew inte An orchestra, which will soon
number twelse pavten, Twa af ther lor:
ml iris gaaploged anes china taintegs, ane
ma FoWgenoman whe. haw wen toral
fame aN a etait anaes: another ivan
Jocationist of ewsideratle nbilite, Num-
red amonz the workers aré ten girly
whe eerrsionally take part in amateur |
theatricals, and it ix xaid that two of;
these will soon leave the factors to net in i
vamleville, Fifty per cemt. tf the sirls |
tre well read in current Literature and thee |
rest authors, i
In the factory they earn, fram five to.
sight dollars a week. <The outpnt fram |
he factory has xteadily inereased, and)
ins ae peutic a paint ae before |
<pialled in the history af the Mill. At
fe bexiuning many @ the girls eame ‘tol
he factury as early ax G21 o'clock in the
gorning, Dut the emplovers did noe be
ieve that this “overpranmgtioss” would
ast, Now, however, each morning ert
olf of the girls at werk at G0 oelock.
mitan hone warlier that thes are te |
tired ty be at their tables, andesduritie |
he whale seven inonths ony two sitls |
ave reported Lite, 1
Minsinaipplans Will Have Special Pall-
eran Care ta New York.
The etter which follows, written by
Charles Banks, third vire-president of the
National Nezro Business Lengue, and a
Ereninont Nezra banker of Mississippi, to
Booker T.. Washington, president of the
National organization, will be found of
interest. Mr. Banks, in connection with
others of his Mississippi Criends, recontly
organized at Jackson Miss. the Mixsis-
Xippi State Business Teague-to be aflli-
ated with, the National Nezro Business
Teague. ‘The report of that. imecting
shows that there, ix widexprond interest
everywhere in the coming meeting of the
National Negro Tusines Langue, ‘to be
held in the Palm Garden, 38th ateect
and Lexington avenue, New York, August
IG UT and 18. Mr, Banks writes:
My daar ate. Waskinatons 1 have
the houor formally to report to you. on
the meeting of the Missixc.,..i Negto Tux-
inewe League held in the city. of Green-
ville on the 14th and With of June, The
meeting was in every way a success, ‘The
dnily papers xave “ux much notice, the
Demorrot, the lending Democratic daily
newspaper of the delta, giving ite entire
front, pnge to the first diy" proceeding
and to my address, ‘The colored press
wax Jargely in evidence, every paper in
the State being represented nt the ree
porters table; the /ndianapolia Freeman
Sent a special representative, Quite a
number of ‘vixitors from Arkansas, heail-
ed by Mr. J. E. Buxh, and from Louisi-
ann were in attendance. The total nuim-
her of delegates prenout. aside from citi-
wns of Greenville, wax abont 0. Twas
elected president’ -and Mr.” Isaiah T.
Montgomery is chairpan of the executive
committee.” Almont every Negro husiness
man in Minissipni of ane landing wax
Present or represented. I desire now to
thank you and Mr. Scott, the correspond:
ing vecretars. for the interest maniferted
in our efforts here, alxo for the timely
telexram, which wan duly received and
read before the, meeting, Twenty-five
delegnten, myeelf, were elect
to attend the New York ‘meeting. and. will
SA special Pullman sleeper trom
Sfemphin. number of Missimipnians’
who. will attend, however, ¢will, in. all
probabllity. exceed the. number elected to
go, I made it plain to the meeting that
we ocly went as representatives of the
State organization, and that apy and all
of the rest of thoes engaged ia business
enterprise were eligible and their attend:
ance was desired. Cwas, Basas...
"BR Recor ea ek oa teo de |
teed bing thats Sai
= agers Pins ghee
- 0. & CLAPPORD, Pop.
__ Orv. Argtie end Mteigan Aves
"ote To eres cot Gane
Me Smo - .
THE NEW YORK
Ladies and Gentlomens’ Restaurant
BOARD BY THE WEEK —
1018 ARCTIO AVENUE
Atlaatle City, B. 3.
opr 373 mos JULIUS ©. WILSON, Prop.
1908. «OPENED =|: 1908
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expeolally-tavited vo visit ‘and eos tbe od:
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I@IBARCTIC AVE. Atlootic City, N. J
MB. ano MRS, JOSEPH GAINES, Mere
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New York Cottage
1200 Springwood Avenme
ASBURY PARK, New Jerver
Pormencot uf transiwat guests accuiauudated
at moderate rates,
MRS. WM. D. CARLE, Prop.
jun 153 mos ee
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Boulevard and Senmerfield Avenue
Arverne-by-the-8ea
One bldek from Ovean. Two blocks from Bas.
Now for respectable lored patrons,
“poard and lodging by Das. Week ut Momtb:
30 minutes from Eas Sith Street or Plat-
bush Ave, Brooklrn 50.cents, Round
‘Trip ticket to Rockaway Heach, get off at
Hamels Station
TERMS MODERATE
Apply, Wm. Clark Real Estate Office.
‘331 Weet 59th street, City.
Pearl 8. Clark Owner
‘wm. Clark Gen'l Manager
jaar
BUNDY HOUSE
7 167 West 68-0 St.
“Near Columbus Ave.
Handsomely furnished rooms for permanent
or transient pest. Hath and all conve:
riences, Restaurant atiached, Moderate
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allies ofcan. Stephen 8, Bundy,
jan22 lye + Proprietor.
NORMAN VILLA
FIRST CLASS BOARD AND LODGING
Rates Reasonable
+ MBSR. NICHOLS, Prop.
1111 Adams St. Asbury Park, N. 3
June 23,3 mo,
The “EL DORADO’
TWELYR- ROOM COTTAGE
WITH, ALL IMEHOVESESTS
87 Winthrop Ave. New Rochelle, Nv¥.
A quict Summer Resort Fine accom:
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Terman $5 per week J. 8, Bates, Prop.
Sunday parties a specialty Practical
L caterer Dishes to hire. junl Smo
| The Whitehead Honse
28 Atkins Avenue
| West Asbury Park, N. J.
| OPEN JUNE +5
| Rooms airy and well furnished, hot and
coll water, bath, exellent table ser-
vice, parlor “games, luwn tennis, ete.
Special arrangements made for larse
families or parties spending the season.
Correxpondence promptly attelided to.
MRS. L. B. WHITEHEAD,
jun 8-3 mov : Propretrie, s,
oe |
Tod’s Hotel
(Formerly The Broughton)
South Federal and Willfans Stn.
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. |
Rooms by day or week Excellent cafe and bar
Pool parlor Chinese reataurant
Jvnsox J. Jacksox, FRAank A. FREEMAN,
junl$ 2 mo - Proprietor ‘Manager
TO BOARD
Boys from 5 to 12 Years
Scientifically prepared foods. Care-
fol home trnining ina hilly section
and a pure air vein, Write, call, and”
inspect! as to arrangements.
Home Trainer's Christian Association
226-228 Burgess Pl, Passaic, NJ.
|W. H. WHITTINGTON, President.
June 29, ht
°
Juanita Cottage
1146 Mattison Ave.
Asbury. Park, New Jersey
First-claxs Board bs the Day or Week.
Mus, MLE. Vimcit, Pror.
Juy 6-28, .
GEORGE A. BRAMBILL
LADIES’ & GENTS’ TAILOR
: 187 West 184th Btreet
Near Lenox Avé., New York City (Maahsttan)
ren Seite te Mire
Branch: 73 Congress streets ;
Janes,os—1 year, Saratoga Springs, N.Y
| ¥O- MUSIO——_NO SILK BIBBONS
But all the Comforts of Home
; tam be bad at °
Bradford's Restaurant and Ice Cream
: + Parlor a?
90 West 1360h Bivece ~~.
Meeks, Cheops, Resevite and Baleds of oll time
flyS 06 9m J.B. BRADFORD, Propricter.
ag la ga ame e ..
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pesca x hack eae spe Stems ac moans of facie ints
young wonen, Auply endowed andor the supervision, of Cours with power ta:
~ee | TUITION. FREE /
* Beardiag furnished, room, lght, beat and laundry only $10.00 per month, Address
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ewe CATALOGUE NOW READY. g
CET I A EIR OI
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THE A. & M. COLLEGE
GREENSBORO, N.C. 7
‘The fall term begins September 1, 1996: strong
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: PRES. DUDLEY.
Joatctm 1 Greensboro, 8..C.
o
aS
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ce
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Miscellaneous
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| DEALER IN -
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rtakers
ee
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BAIR WORKER. . .
Braids, Baogs. Pompedoor and €omb-
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Published by FORTUNE & PETERSON at
6 Cedar Street, in the Borough of Man-
hattan, New York.
Mr. Root Scoops Mr. Hancock
Mr. Root Successes Mr. Hay.
The President has designated Hon. Elllu Root of New York to be the successor of the late Hon. John May as Secretary of State. Mr. Root has had much Cabinet experience, and when he retired from the position of Secretary of War not long ago President Roosevelt declared that he was capable of filling any position in the Cabinet.
Queerly enough, it was declared along with the announcement that Mr. Root is to be Secretary of State that he is also the choice of President Roosevelt to succeed him in the White House. It is a far cry to the next National Convention, and a great many things that enter into the question of the selection of a candidate for the Presidency will drop with a dull thud before the Convention City is again reached.
And it is far too hot to think about who will succeed Theodore Roosevelt as President, especially so as he may be a candidate to succeed himself.
Race Biota in New York.
Race riots are too common in New York city, and the police department is largely responsible for them, as it managed in one way or another to take sides with the aggressors in the moth which is usually composed of Irish people and miscellaneous hooligans who have a grudge against the Jews or Afro-Americans who live in their section or who stay into it. Last Sunday, at noon, a riot of big dimensions was provoked in the Ninth avenue section by a white man, who bears a bad record, and who assaulted a black longhairman. The latter got his gun and defended himself, wounding his assailant. The policeman on the beat arrested the black man, after a warm time of it, and broke out in all directions. The police arrested two white men and six Afro-American men and one woman. The latter was very "handy" with her "gun," it is said. The police then ordered all black folk to remain indoors. Why didn't they order all white folk to do likewise?
We need some sort of effective civic organization in New York to protect the interests of those Afro-Americans who are assaulted by hoodlums, molled by the police and railroaded by the courts, as was done in the Hell Kitchen riots a year ago, and as was done last Sunday, as far as the hoodlums and police are concerned. Shall we have the organization? It is "up to" us to protect the members of the race who are molled by hoodlums, clubbed by the police and railroaded by the courts.
Inception and Development of Our Schools in New York.
We print on sixth page of THE AEC today a historical article from Mr. S. R. Scottron which old New Yorkers will greatly appreciate, as perhaps no better historical review has been written by any one of the inception and development of schools for Afro-Americans in the State of New York. It is to be regretted that Mr. Scottron has carried into the discussion, as far as our Fort. Fortune is concerned, an frony and sarcasm which, while being admirable and appreciative from our point of view, appear to us from the facts in the case to be unwarranted. We grant all that Mr. Scottron says of the development of our schools before the initiation of the public school system in New York State, and even that under the public school system of New York the separation of blacks and whites was not recognized in law. So much we grant.
Mr. Scotton admits that while the law gave to Afro-American children the same rights in the public schools as it gave to the children of other citizens, the former, for reasons dominating, had preferred not to attend white schools, so that ultimately their right to do so lapsed by preprisonment.
It is not a matter of irony or sarcasm that our Mr. Fortune, about 1850, in asuming the editorship of *Rumor*, began an agitation for the abolition of what had become the separate school system of New York city, Brooklyn and New York State. It is true that the Afro-Americans had under the law the right to attend these schools, but it is a fact that the right had been forfeited by neglect to use it. In 1870 the condition of affairs was as follows in the county of New York: There were two schools, of which Mr. Charles L. Reason and Mrs. Sarah S. J. Garnet were principals; while in Brooklyn, there were three schools, of which Charles A. Dorssey, J. Q. Allen, and Mrs. Clough were principals. Now, whatever the law in the case may have been, it had become a general practice that the question of, whig school a child should attend vested in the county school board and that the principal of a school had mandatory power to force Afro-American children to attend Afro-American schools, however distant from their homes, and that all superintendents did this. This condition of affairs obtained over the entire State of New York. Mr. Fortune, in the early issues of *Rumor*, began a crusade against this separation in the schools. He was met in the very beginning by earnest opposition of the principals of the schools and the teachers thereof and of the friends of the schools throughout the counties of New York and Kings, who benefited by the separate school system; but Mr. Fortune hame-
moved away at the age of 18 and gathered around him from White, Rev. W. F. Seddon, Sr., McMoore, and a host of others. With these men a persistent light was made for fair play in the public schools for teachers and for pupils.
Dr. White, one of the best, noblest and most generous-bearer Afro-Americanne, we ever knew, who was our first member of the Brooklyn School Board, consulted our Mr. Fortune on every point in developing the contention for fair play in the public schools. It is needless to say that the same, if not closer relations, existed between Mr. Fortune and Mr. T. McCants Stewart, who succeeded Dr. White in the school board.
Now, it is a fact, which will be borne out by the files of *Rumor*, the *Globe* *Freeman* and *True Ack*, papers which Mr. Fortune has edited in *New York* since 1930, that in all of this fight he was antagonized in very large part by what we might call the old New York clement, which favored the teachers instead of the pupils of the schools. In the progress of the contention for the abolition of the separate school system Mr. Fortune was personally mobbed by the friends of the teachers, who had a public meeting at the Fleet Street Zion Church in Brooklyn. Mr. Fortune kept steadily in view the fact that if the prosecution against the pupils could be done away with the teachers would have free swing in all of the public schools in New York.
We give credit to the grand men to whom Mr. Scottron refers as having taken an active part for the equal school rights of Afro-Americans in the city of New York and New York State, and give to Mr. Scottron as the successor. T. McCants Stewart in the school board larger praise than to any of the other people named, except Dr. P. A. White and T. McCants Stewart; but we do not, purpose that Mr. Scottron or any person else shall take from our Mr. Fortune such credit as properly belongs to him for creating the public opinion and fighting consistently and persistently for the abolition of the separate school system in New York.
The fact is that Grover Cleveland, when he was Governor of New York, blocked the way to making the schools by perplexing the separate schools at the instance of teachers and principals, who employed as their attorneys to plead their case before Governor Cleveland, Rev. W. B. Derrick and Prof. Richard T. Greener. It was years after, under Governor Roosevelt, that the whole system was wiped out, as a sufficient reply to the contention of the School Board of Queen's County that Mr. Cisco should send his children to the school set apart for Afro-American children.
Mr. Fortune's record in this matter is perfectly clear. When he came to New York, in 1857, the old New York element was absolutely dead as far as any effort it made to change old conditions in which they were discriminated against at every point. Mr. Fortune has this to say, also, that Mr. Scottown's dental to him of his just share in bringing about mixed schools in New York is like unto the denial of his part in most movements for civil and political rights from 1850 to the present time. Mr. Fortune cares nothing about all this unpleasant dental, as it is written in his files of his papers. We have too many fights on hand against the enemy to waste our time in fighting over that part of history we have helped to make since 1850. But we are surprised that a man of Mr. Scottown's intelligence and loyalty to what is good and highest in our life should set up the contention that he does and coat it over with the sort of irony that he uses.
---
Separation in Street Cars and Elsewhere.
Of all the asinine mukeshifts which malicious Southern lawmakers have resorted to in the short to humiliate and degrade the Afro-American people the separate street and railroad car regulations are the most provoking. Referring to the advice recently given by Turt AGE that Afro-Americans should walk rather than ride in any place where such regulations are made and enforced, the Nashville American calls it "foolish advice." and the Montgomery Daily, Advertiser says "no worse advice could be given by a Negro to his race." All this is very swieping. It depends upon the point of view. The Advertiser says:
No worse advice could be given by a Negro to his race, and he shows his ignorance of conditions in the South by ringing in Montgomery to prove that the Negroes have boycotted the street cars. If he will come to this city he will find that our cars are liberally patronized by the Negroes and that the races are practically separated. And if he could stay here a few days and see some of the Negroes who ride' on the cars he would feel no surprise that white people refuse to sit by them, in the cars or elsewhere.
And the advice of True Aunt is hard for its own race in the South, for, if they follow it, they will be the worst sufferers. To provide for them a separate place in street cars does them no hurt and subjects them, to no humiliation. It is best for both races and the white people will keep it up. If the Negroes refuse to occupy the street set apart for them, and which are precisely like the others, they will have to stay off the cars. They can boycott our street cars to their hearts' content, but there will be no mixing. True Aunt sometimes gives good advice to its race, but has not done so in this instance.
We know all about the South; we know all about the white, mixed-blooded and black people there, and for the sufficient reasons that we were born and reared there and return there periodically. We know that there are a lot of worthless, low, dirty black and yellow people in Montgomery, and we know that this is equally true of a large number of white people in Montgomery. We have a lot of both sorts of people in New York and other cities of the North and West, but we do not "show them off the earth" by class legislation or other device. We place common people of all sorts and races and conditions on the same footing in all public places of accommodation and amusement and co-
The American is an emblem of independence in a state. The Advertaeer thinks that the cost of things is immense, especially far in the Afro-Americans are compared. It believes that all Afro-Americans are inferior and that all white people are superior people. This view of the matter is not only biased, but ridiculous. There will be mixing of the races. They cannot be separated by laws of man because they are joined together by laws of God, and time, will make the whole matter conform to what is right in law and equity. The Advertaeer, published in the shadow of the capitol of the Slave-Holdings' Confederacy, should be sparing in its prophecies. The changes it has seen since the close of the War are an nothing compared to those it will see in the years to come. The age of prophecy has been wiped off the slate.
The Nashville American has the following to say on the subject:
Separating the races on the street cars should not cause friction or serious discontinuity and will not annoy the more sensible Negroes. Separate coaches or compartments are provided for them on the railways without causing trouble or injury. It usually tends to reduce friction, to lessen discontinuity and inconvenience and annoyance. The car law applies to both races alike. Equally the car law applies to both races alike. Equal car law applies to both races. If the white people do not act, why should the Negroes? Where the same law applies to both, and the whites do not object and the Negroes do, is it not an admission that the latter are anxious to be brought in contact with the former as much as possible? Is it not an indication of hostility to all barriers and degrees of separation of the races? The Negroes should act sensibly in this matter. It is far wiser and better for them to accept the law as their white friends accept it, with theoking to obey the law and to maintain friendships with each other. A new law is sometimes received with unfriendly spirit simply because it is a new law, but when the objections are observed good faith, the objections are of interest to be without foundation or reasonable basis. The way to enforce a law is to enforce it, regardless of whether it may be acceptable to every individual or class.
The American is very innocent, on
our minds we are. As a matter of fact, seg-
regation of the races in public con-
veyances and places of accommodation and
amusement is not only a humiliation, but a
violation of the civil rights which in-
here in the citizen or in a body of cit-
izens, while separation in places main-
tained by taxation of all the people for
the benefit of all the people is a rank
injustice which a weak people will only
oilate against the time when they are
strong enough to force the righting of it.
The American knows this as well as we
do, and may constitute this view of the
gather as an answer to the question it
asks, viz.: "Is it not an indication of
hostility to all barriers and degrees of
separation of the races?" It is, most
emphatically if is, and the American knows
that it is. The races cannot be separated
by law. No law should be obeyed, ex-
cept under protest, that is unjust. If
this view was not logical the United
States would still be colonies of Great
Britain.
The American knows that there is no separations of the traces made mandatory by Southern laws which were not intended by their framers to humiliate Afro-Americans and which do not humiliate them in the unequal and brutal manner of the execution of them. Separate marriage laws, separate school laws, separate car laws—dose the American pretend for a moment to believe that these laws were not intended by those who enacted them to humiliate and degrade, and in their operations do not humiliate and degrade, Afro-American citizens? These laws will be abolished. The citizenship of the United States are entitled to quality of justice and equity under the fundamental law of the Republic, without regard to race or color, or contrary laws of one or more States, and they will have it. When? That is immaterial. It is not worth a rap to undertake to compute the years it will take to reify wrongs which foster and stink on the body politic.
And our esteemed contemporary, the Nashville *Clinton*, speaking for Afro-American of Nashville, and commenting on our advice, says: "Nashville is putting forth every effort to meet the 'Jim Crow' law on the 6th of July. Every provision is being made and we are glad to say that Nashville Negroes will have no trouble in staying off the cars—We will walk." Yes; that is right; walk. The best way to get justice from a white man is to go through his pocket—refuse to spend money with him when he plays the "holier than thou" racket or strikes the attitude of the coward, and the cheat.
Panama Canal Drawbacks
The building of the trans-Isthmian canal, in which all the civilized world is interested and has been for a great many years, has been a source of infinite worry to the French, who accounted themselves fortunate in being able to transfer the whole matter to the United States, at a large cash consideration which made the shareholders immensely happy, as they had begun to despair of ever realizing anything on the investment. The United States got no bargain, and the taxpayers of the country will be fortunate if they do not have to pay two hundred millions of dollars to complete the canal.
The United States appear to have fallen heir to the troubles inseparable from the enterprise when the French had it under control. The first commission authorized by the Congress, proved unwieldy, and therefore inefficient, and was replaced by a smaller commission. For a year past this last named commission has prosecuted the work on the canal with varying degrees of success, as the labor problem was a vexed question, which has not as yet been settled. Then, the yellow fever and other diseases incident to the Canal zone, have kept everybody engaged in the work in a state of mind.
The announcement of the President that he would buy the supplies needed in the construction of the canal in the ones
the backbone of the Administration was weakened, and the proposed radical departure was unsupported, and will probably remain suspended until the Congress acts upon the question. It is safe to pay, however, that the principle of extortion underlying the contention, as the outgrowth of our protected and coddled industrial interests, will be forced to an issue some day, and that not remote, as the American people are mighty tired of paying tribute to the Protected interests
the resignation of Chief Engineer Wallace of the Canal Commission in the latest of the drawbacks the Administration has had to contend with. It appears that Mr. Wallace had an offer from a private corporation which gave him a larger salary than that given him by the Government, and that he desired to close with it. This attitude of Mr. Wallace exasperated the President and Secretary Taft very much, and the latter scored Mr. Wallace in ripping fashion, Mr. Wallace, in a statement, defined himself as best he could. Perhaps, as a matter of sentiment, he should have remained with the work and got his reward in the glory instead of the cash in such work. But that was a matter for Mr. Wallace to decide, and not for the President or Secretary Taft, and Mr. Wallace decided that he would rather have the cash than the glory.
PREACHER USED AX TO GET IN:
Was Battering Down Church Door
When Flock Put Him in Flight.
NEW HAVEN, July 10—Last Wednesday morning Milford was thrown into a pumice by an excited crowd, which collided the towels sheerly matched against R. W. M. Sullivan, who was his way into the First Immunan Baptist church, of which he is pastor.
The preacher took to his heels and made a escape, after battering the door somewhat.
The story goes that some time ago R. W. Sullivan was given thirty days in which to make a sacrifice, and the church is allowed that he was dismissed misappropriating the contributions of the church. The course the deacons took in the matter underscored grief, and the consequence a new door lock was put on which the officiets believe will be effective against the preacher.
Florence Dutroic graduated from the State Normal school of this city.
Mrs. Joseph M. Snow and children, of St. John's street, formerly of Tonghekep, N. N. are spending an indebted time with her mother, Mrs West, and old friends in that city.
FEMININE FISH STORY
July 4 Outing in West Grove
Meriden Notes
Miss Fields 1st, Miss Leonard 2nd
Meredith Int., Mina Leopard End.
The closing reception and declaration contest of R. Reed was a brilliant affair: Mr. Goe, Marshall Hewlett, monies. The following contestants rendered in their turn "The Old Schoolmaster": Clara Cassan, Rev. A. J. Mitchell, M. W. J. Hewlett, Harrison, Miss Emily Fleida, Miss Edith A. L. Mabel Gilliam, Miss Estelle Handy, and Miss Anna Clark, Proof. B. C. Block and Haven Prairie, the judge, decided the contestants. Miss Emily Fleida, First prize, solid medal, Mabel Leopard, second prize, silver medal.
The Jenkins Orphanage loves 'band, under the management of Mr. Daniels, was in this city the most of last week. Tuesday evening, the band was attending a concert which was largely attended. The collection was about $17.50. After giving band concerts in different parts of the city, they left for Boston Saturday. While in this city the band was in the hands of Mrs. Robert Candler, on Sailing street.
Get next week's Ace from D. Ernest Gibbons, 10 Elizabeth street, at Rollins hill, 5 Spring street, Foster's barber shop, 5 Bay Street, Toilet's grocery store, at 2 Elliott street.
SARATOGA NOTES
PETERSBURG NOTES
Hudson Notes.
Misses Molyneva Jonks and Grace Smith have been absent several days visiting in New Haven, New York and Newark. Mr. Ailee Barkalea has returned from Philadelphia, where he went to spend the summer. She ladies wiped with one another in extended hikes. The parasong of St. John's church has been put in a splendid trim for the present pastor, who lives alone, and who seems to all come for all the camera the smile that won't come.
Root Secretary of State—John P. Green
Pried—Two Lynchings.
On July 7 President Roosevelt announced the acceptance by Elliott Roost of the portfolio of the Department of State which was vacated by the death of John Hay. By becoming Secretary of State Mr. Root gives up an income estimated at $1,000 a day, earned by practicing law in New York, for the comparatively indirect salary of $4,000 a year. The Nation at the President are to be congratulated as securing the services of so brilliant a man as Mr. Root, whose appointment has earned widespread satisfaction. Area America have not, of course, forgotten that of Root, in an address which he undeated Secretary of War, discovered opulence at together orthodox upon the race question but we hope that since then he has given enough to take larger views on the mentious subject. In his new office he need to direct himself absolutely of prejudice, as much of his duties will tend to the officer races of South America, the West Indies and the Philippines.
—Attorney E. H. Johnson and E. H. Johnson, Jr. of Jackson, Miss., who were convicted by the grand and petit juries for forgery and sentenced to 7 years' service, are making an appeal to the Supreme Court, on the ground that no American were on the juries which defended them. The Supreme Court has as all remember, that "Whenever the State, through its courts or administrative offices, all persons of African descent excluded, solely because of their race and color, from service on the grand jury, criminal prosecutions of persons of African race, the equal protection of the laws is denied to them, contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States."
—On the subject of race amalgamation, the Schoenan have an odd conclusion that what is source for the rander is not source for the g霉. They have no repugnance to mixing the blood of white men and Afro-American women, but their fury over a vice reran mixture can be explicated only by the death of the man. At Dumont J. Wooden for the molatto novelist J. J. Wooden an Afro-American, eloped on July 5 with his girl. The couple were intercepted at Tampa and brought back to Dumass, where the unholy man was laked up in Jail. The next morning he was found hanged on a telegraph node a mile out of town.
—John P. Green, of Cleveland, O., who was appointed United States Stamp Agent by President McKinley, was ejected from his office on July 1. His superiors are said to have disavowed certain phases of private life. The office of stamp agent in office holders fell made good, their other revert permanently to white men are wiped out. It is a weighty responsibility to the race which rests upon the office-holders.
As Lou Board, a young Afro-American charged with attempted criminal assault on a white woman, was being released from Taylorville, Ky., to Shobrylle, in order to avert a lynching, the team which he was riding was boarded in N. Mundy by twenty-five white men, who killed him with bullets and backpack.
---
Living Statues and Millionaire Wed-
ding at Concerts.
Nonwright, Conn., July 8—Prof. Elmer Payn of New Bedford, Mass., gave a two nights' entertainment on June 25 and 28 at McKinley Avenue Zion Church. Law Day event was the attraction Wednesday evening by Prof. Payn and the "millionaires" by Prof. Payn; and the "millionaires" sent Thursday proved a drawing for Harrison Carrington was the greed. Prof. Payn impersonated the bride and Paul Robinson was the rector. A good sign was realized for the benefit of the payn, who was the rector. Samuel W. Hill is the toliter at Mr. Coulson.
Faith Charissa, the two-year dedicated director of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Donnis, last Friday. The funeral was conducted at Grace Memorial Baptist Church Sunday afternoon by Roy, A. W. Alger, who is the first death among the former bishopship since its organization five years ago. The funeral touched and the bereaved parents in the sympathy of a large circle of friends Mr. J. A. Parks of New Haven, the guest of Miss Clara Scott of Boswell Jersey, Washington of New Jersey, a visiting street mourner Mrs. E. J. Hamilton of North street, Mrs. A. J. Hamilton and Prof. Payn of New Belford were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clement last week, Mr. George Mignis, who is studying for the ministry, spoke at McKinley Avenue Zion Church Sunday.
---
Sag Harbor Nurses
DEATH NOTICE
MONDEVILLE: Alice A. Mondeville parted this life on Sunday morning in York, where she was born in Woodstock, York, in 1877. She married Henry Williams. She leaves William, and one sister, Mrs William, funeral service was held from her home on Wednesday morning. On Woodstock morrow, clock. Interment was in Woodstock, Newark, N.J.
Had Commencement Party
JERSEY CITY, July 8.—For the first in the history of the high school history, American graduates had common experience. June 27 at the Academy of Miss Etta Cannon had a paper on Discontented Man" and Mr. Thomas W. O'Neill on Equality of Opportunity papers; two papers on American graduates were Miss Steele and Hattie Jackson and Mr. Garden.
Proof. Kealing is De-lightened.
To the Editor of the New York A. C. The New York A. C. credit to Journalism. I am simplified. I really believe we are to ideal paper at least. Nothing else should be that it should come from Thomas Fortune, the present editor.
Philadelphia, Pa., July 7, 1905
Se
Lheyx re a
wo a ne
THURSDAY, JULY 49, ‘agg...
‘. .,, Sadeceipsion- Mates; ~~”
Entered at the Peas Otheb 0t--New York as
Second-Clase Matter. apa
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Vostal Union, add ome cent extra for each
{set OF PORES, .
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[nya Money Order at your Post Ofiee, pay-
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suo riders notifying us of changes in their
ikirese will please give the OLD as well ad
rhe NEW addreea,
BETHEL AFRICAN MK. CHURCH. Weswin
strvct, between 7th and 8th avenues,
Sauday ervices— 11 AL M. and 7.45 P.M.
ney Commuiloa every Are Bunday 3 P.M.
ie mevtlug 120 P.M. Bunday School x P.M.
Fryer Meeting’ 6.30 B. 3,
Wickip MecOnge:—Clam Meeting on Monday.
qusiag and Welnesday nights at 8 o'clock:
Fosver Seting on Friday night trom 8 o'clock
om :
SEATS FREE, ALL WELCOME.
key, T, WELLINGTON Hanpensox, DD.
Pastor,
Vasior’s realdence, 948 West 189ch Street. At
one from 8 10 10-4. a,
Tae Pastor cat be seem at the Church every
day fom 121037 ‘cua lyr
MOTHER A.M. 2, ZION CHURCH.
Wert Yuh] St. Bwt, Columbus and Amsterdam
‘Avenues.
Res. JH, MCMULLRN, Pastor,
sontag Servloga: Preaching at, 10:00: #.
ant 543 Fx, SébatD Achoo), 2 ym. Youne
‘copes Ce Prayer Meeting every. Sunday
yeuig at 6:18 o'clock, Public invited.
sma 93 mos
Ye TRSTANT EPISCOPAL MISSION, 177 West
eitices « i
REY INeo W.TOMNSON, Prieet in chatie
Soh stvees, Ha. ta, oad sp. up, Sunday
Set Beye te
A foRLtAL WELCONE TO ALL, 7
New,iYork City News
BOROUGH OF MANHATTAN
Mot OS Butte and Mis Florence Care
Sonek sete Martied oo Bune 2S
CO coat ch West LIEN atreet, wan
. Seay Mast ote ate
Moos eae Mugiin. of Balthnare, be the
eT ARSE estan
Wo Masta and famnlty hare eft
pS SER Tie he immer,
Mah nla, at ud stremt, Is ely:
ee Se ddtineon
Poy ng, SEN Wet 52a
9 cn Nee Renne, after a
tars COTTE snag, a
x ft asa af Saye Madtvon
foe ate TH, Ie atte tobe
Tae ss chats and the Victoria
. JD Sto Has tite! Bronx en
. Tos Mottman, af 193 West 140
STE ad Itt bopey are
Ser mowers 2
fy Coghlll, af 182 Weet TL
: state teleads ta Lang: Island
Hee Polteg and danehter are
2 Manatee duty at Whitebead
: Ta
SS Baprtet churet, 210 Bast 95th
- Stay, Pastes Anthony wilt
1
oh Mopthersen, of the Gothant
4 ar. Uehmpanies Spent list werk
2 ven Canada.
YP Manning ainda friend ett
u vcgonth’s sist ia itaflgie sand
‘ were Fal
be Teams Chih, of St. Fames
Sing af ladies ated gentiemen,
: + Stays anemone” and dotldays
2 Ghurtan In West Bad street,
fares EA, Chanutrte and ehttdren
vy SMS stand Taster were the nests
ASW, WE Wltns ot Sern
VT yh Wentworth Newton and
MM Need pent a) deitent tat
L Shue ieee party of Me. and. Mra,
Bante, oF Camden Ned.
Yo hasta ‘tyler, of Washington,
a ke UE ate week fer an
: Vist ie er datgbter, Mes. MLE
= OSE TET Weer Hise etreot,
"Af E Stametter, of TE West 124m
ahah Wi Misa MD. Sane,
20 WE Shnnd a Cougte ot weeks
: “SD \idting frends ia Sagara.
{Lf OW Garter, ating worthy, master
oS 6 Yook Taminain tot, Ty candied te
vo paltinaintial fever ac as Weat $70
MoTht Mas Rene Tackiin of 251
yl Tian late ine elty, oa July
PTS Rigen home, Hermida, where
‘ hake a visit of about a month.
He ene Sanders, daughter of Mr. apd
sO Santer of ‘Totty treet, grad:
eu Geamimie Sehoot! Son Si wht
4 castes Fearing, of Wnehington, spent
ott Me beater, Revert Peaelmg,
' nz gentlemen are in the employ” of
nur pte
Lo MEMES, Wintel Mleks, of West
Uare yjendtig tie summer at Mor:
: N3 nie the residence of Mr. dB.
Wad Miner ateees,
t+ 4D Chanater, wite of Rew, Chand
4 fan Ween Tah street, Ia cldtng
: 8 Detralt during the dactor's stay
Ping. wher he fe attending the
i al Baptint Congress
wh Se at Motel Atwen are: | Me. and
Y 2 Wwitson, Newask 2 Me, and: Mra,
ker and Mend: Mra. James
i Clg Cy: Me and” Mra John
2 nd Mee 3d Deron and Str,
MT “Fonea! Roster
2 Eiewace M. Wilder, of 169 Went
Son endiated ‘fom the Glee
r Iisa Senonton Sune i, AMtea
« stem searg old and hae tee
fo laimas tte: exetelven were
ve Academy of Muste,
2 Sak Punta 101 tad a water:
ro. ae ateinstallation nf officers on
ESE TOIg Sin the rai at 15
USavet Mea Jemma D. Tender:
e san ut the. Fountain, ‘presented
: Saft wldr avaiiver letter fle.
gee cote, Ton ‘Patent Chute will mae
geo Mondag, diy 13, te raise the
Ce fet ie eatatiidh a home for aged
M8 "stan"inen and women by giving &
fe aY'at the reatdence of the prew
we yeh ye) Marea are: Georela
Beg gel WOT, York Springteld, TH:
£, (Mp in Reangettte, Inds OOM Shack
Robot aerene Clty. MQ: Mise” Ellen
" tegitueg.-Wai Sra HH. Pat.
ya oa Mea Charles Decker, Newburgh,
Bi has y Wanted, Kew Hews.
ee
Be j a _ "9 a , Be ee ay
eo ae a et Sgn aaa Par ey ey
4 OR of whet gg. PPLE aS eee te eC ee MAG ieee Re
ret
is “a3 tit; S6 lad wont! von
eee ares
ere WF ret. 113
“ dahaten theca
the we her cousta, Mien Geeova
‘illect A.” Kemay, the: Wai 1780
minted, Tes Sis ieee eine ia
bed WIth biicus fevew 108 of the
liver, Is now able tq attend to Bis Liksiness,
Arrivals at Bundy, House: Mes, Attest
pia, Frey: George Mingiand. S ren;
she die GR Bye Mekong, Ue:
‘Sydney Jelerean, Boston? Mra. deanetic
Mts, Pailadeipata; Prof. George
Whalen, Povateburg, Va. te
Mecoud sbirtwater receptica of Anderson's
Demsles’ Academy. 110. West OSd. stceet,
Tuesday avenlag, July 18, Clase sessions,
avery *huseday. Sin a elday and. Bat:
Stay evening.’ Lait cooled by electric fant.
made re
‘Mr, and Mrs. Francis Turner, of SOG East
Axoch atveey, desire Co extend thauks to
thelr many ‘friends and also to Bt. David's
1."H, ‘abd Bethel A. M. E, Sunday schools
for thelt kindwess aud Horal tributes ta thelr
Inte Lereaventent’ of thelr daughter Marlon.
Benlor Vice Commander Carr, Junior Vico
Commander Hatten and Adjutant McKie vie-
lied. ‘Munday ‘Veteran, Medes Henaett at
Stapleton, & 1, who bas been It and par.
tlalty paralyzed for eight moathy with biood
polwontiz. . :
Old Okra Gumbo, black eyed peas and
rev, calf bead, Lome made baked leaas,
good steaks, chops, {rled chicke, noon din,
ter 23 conta. Tattle de bote, GU cents, with
hottie “of. wine.” Eyerytuing right. Nall
Bros. Kestanvant, 450 Sixth avenue, New
York elty, Adv. :
Cardy of tueltation huve teen extented to
atl the dierent coazianderies of Kntatts
Recher of New Dork, Stace te attend: the
frat stand reauloa and pleule, given le Me
Trauhioe Cobnmunilers Nu. 3, Ke T., on Pele
ay eveniig Aint 4, 1003, on, which occ
ston “Ste Gugeue Phllitps, “Rbet_ Eeataent
Grand Counpander, and his xisc will be
Pima to witness the drill of Whe famous
vaphoe dell corps.
Gn Friday eventng, June 30, 2. ceception
wax xtven at the residence of Mute. “M. E,
Terrell, 440. West Bath street. In honor of
the graduation of Mix« Grave Brookw from
the Gitle Technical igh School. Amobe
Those present Were Missa Augusta Brooks
Aue Wootton, “Madge Thonias, Saud Axes,
Prankle Marshall, Venona Young, Matis Al:
exander and Hoxalle Axes, aod Measra, Wil.
ino, asian, Marry OS. Wiles, Ernent
Jehurea, Held Wites, Williaa Johosam Jt.
Warren, Wiles, and. others, Mixx Brooke
was te recipient of uany bandsome pres
Ente,
Mr, Win, D. Mickey. who wan killed In
the reerat wreck of thy Twentleth Century
Himtted, was burled at hie home tu Charter.
ten, SC. Hite mudden and frigttttal death
fitiged Into xorrow bis many reiatlver aud
Vends there. le wax well Known here,
where Iyed ten_yeart prior to bin death,
Hensle Massie: daughter of Mra, Emma
Masse, of 150 East Sat atreet, was one of
ine tftystwo kraduaten of Publle Sehoot No,
h” Bhe recelved @ certiticate fur her excel.
tence In French, Mr. Blumenthal. one. of
the members of the Hoard of Education, an-
hiouneed. before tie achool that hie wished to
for her a schon! teacher tn ope of our putlle
schools, | She will enter Noraial College wext
September. —Ade.
BROOKLYN NOTES.
Mr. Henry Mare ts reported luproviog
fram bin aefloas hilntss ‘
Mise Helen Willams has gone to Iblin-
deiphia to xpend her vacation,
Mine Elizaberh Martin spent the Fourth
with felends In Jersey CUy.
Mere. Carle 1. Singleton has" gone te
Cralgsinnote until September,
Mrs. Ketwcea Rares sud davchter, Fan.
nle Harris, of Phtladetphia, have been spend:
Tog severnd weeks with thelr relatives,
Mins Matitda If, ‘Tayler, of Lextuzton ave.
nine, was one of the Eraduates of the itt
Hnery department of Mratts Institute.
Mr. and Mra B.S) Fleuing and sen were
the guente o¢ Mr. and Mo. dammed. Trown,
af New Haven, during the past werk
Mrs I J) Booker, of luis St. Marke
avenue. fe much Improved after more than
twee weeks Ulnesn, ‘
“Arriale at isd Carlton ayenne are: Mr.
aid Mes J.D. Axbbrook, Xt. Louls, Mo.
inl Men Wi AL Hunton, “Atianta, Ga.
Mrs. Nellfe O'Day and) daughter, | ot
Washingten, mre spending a few weeks wlth
the formers. slater, Mere, Gertrude Emery.
SC ISST Lultten street,
‘The annual plente uf the Sockety of the
Sons of Virginia wil’ be held mt Atlantic
Fark aod Castine on Thursday eventing, July
DH” Ste advertisement neat week.
Mrs. Elvie Sweeney, an aged deaennes
of the Concord. fapilat ehureh. seontinues
ih at the tesidence of her daughter and
pondielaw, 174 Willonghhy street.
Mice M.E, Mahoney, of Moston, ty visite
Ing. Mee M. Hottraok, “Miss Mationex ds a
Tiained marae, Rud Ts sald te have been the
first AfewAmeticun graduate nurse In the
United States,
Mr. Andrew Shamous wae parted from
fethel chapel, on July 1. The funeral was
Meweted bythe Hrookiu representative of
WG. Gverten, undertaker,
Ites, Renjamin W, Arnett, Jr. pastor’ of
the Tirkdan “stront Ao M. EL churel, has
teen whtteleaw fn Croan thls pastorate: ly le
father, Fstop ‘Arnett, and Rew, W. UL TL
Hatter, of Starisburg, Ta. hae teen aw
mlgned” (the ehureh.
Mr, Charis FB. Skeote, of 140° Dudteld
street, war In the elty: Friday, tune 0 Oo
Saturday be, accompanied by his wits and
Teo Hite ones, left for Morristown, where
thee wil rennin until the fall, ax the gente
Ae Me, and Mrs, Watker, of 2 Colambtn
rene
Rioting? Between Whites and Blacks
tatter Got Beat of the Fight, Sending
Two Whites to the Hospital, but
Coe Worst of Te With Pollce—Oaly
treo Waite Rougha Arrested, bat
ee CT arn nceukeniine
A rireet row between Afroamer enn
whites lant Sunday in Went 10th atreet, lee
Hees Uiath and Feath aventien, resulted 10
the shouting of a white man dud a white
Ritnan and the arrest of six Afro-American
men and "one Afro-American woman and
wo white men.
“Tye geem of te trouble,was the rentiog
ot Ne, TAT Went Toth street xeveral months
BENG, *Atrovamertcaas. ‘The neighborhood
Ietaoatig tnhabited by frlah, whe, with tele
tial iigotes. grew ruiien and | menacing
WU, the Afro-Americans moved In. | There
wed up for thelr elxhte, and met threats
wrod sniiooce. Several trivial Incidents
Pravated thelr mnitual boxtlllty.
Mee Thiers, minutes past ‘noon Tears
Herat gikuntic Diack longshoreman, ax He
Hort. see iath, street, was wttacked witht
cut provocation DF 8 ‘Mob of white men led
fe reece ttunter, who ie known ax a “hae
by Tamer rt escaped co bik home. Kot hin
mane ar and came back to meet his Sumer
revoleetaitante. He fred into them aod
flanter fell with a abot Jo his left side.
Wutroiman Lage, hearing the, shot, bee
ried'to the xeene, and fartend of dispeeing
ried to oe eat after (he man whose life [t
tne ecking. Jie arrested, Hart and thee
Wan Reena ene crowd, which, augmented
ign throng of Mawcarrivals, wished to lynch
the. Afro-American.
“nena saad of policemen arrived, and
mney, ntrangels Snditereny to the moh's of
pny, ented No. 443 and arrested Are
fennes. aceleans, Aibert Middleton, Benjamin
AfroAmercorre and.James Davis and Tien.
Tohnrimens ou the gharce that they Meee
uanicloun, personn,” | One, of these, it
Caoanicloun, Dner and the wise pollce comma,
SRA Ta fork aa & weapon ianotner we
sree nienelt and wae arrested, {t-$660)%
foe ning a razor Ip the process.
F timing eidet of the melee some unk none
een Sard tobe a woman, fred four snore
From aa, upper, window ‘Of Ko, 441, one of
from, a0 ee Mrs. Mary Donahut, & wove
Thich aero wae altting on the atone OORT
woman, OOO eae, Bbe was removed 10
site. 10. POE cupttal, where It wan maid, ts
Nincentsovery Mrs. Hannat Middietea. oe
Nui reeican women, was arrested of #08:
Diciea of having Bred the ADOT | oh aie”
‘An the (pollce, were Tmarchiog their pris:
one te eRe station the man ansalled the
qners to the shrieks. and all sorte Of mi.
Mee “The horrible cry of “LVECR them:
see, Tne wan raleed, and, the omens
Lent ward fight to protect thelr prisoners.
eT Ne
JUST OPENED!
FINE APARTMENTS
For Respectable Colored’ Tenants, of six (6) Rooms and Bath,
Steam Heat, Hot Water Supply, Open Plumbing
| AT 16 and 18 WEST ggth STREET ~ *
~ appry HANDY & GRANT, -acenrs
a ; 6 WEST 134th STREET ;
|. TELEPHONE e699 HARLEM on Janitror ow peniarens .
p and wes arrested atthe Kew
Seected awd its" iabablenste Penge
had pet the polled arcived. All evening a1
late iuto the aight they’ parrelies. the block,
npprependiag ghotber outbreak, but mome oc
cae "
— i
< MARLEM XEYVS.
Se ine kee tulle amkeeete which one
must age to fully, appreciate was played
Friday before laxt by the Marlec Astorias
‘Cliat” Wilkins, managets, and ‘the Tdttle
Savoye, Jos Robinson. sapuger, at Ouvepis
Field, 136th street and 'FUth avenue.
former won by a score of 22 to 7." The
crowd im attendance, while aot lapge 1p
aumbers, wae Tull of epthusianm, and/bad a
Hbersi supply of the “areuful” to back the
favorite. Jay Gowd” was there ‘with ble
book, but went to the bad to the tune of
toute $l4wr ‘the greater wart [of which, the
Coterprining manager of the Astoriax man-
axed to “corral. *
The Philadelphia Qlants met the Man-
hattans at Olymple Field tase Nundag for
the ddth game of tlie action, “and “after
Huying 10 Innings defeated the latter by
Rincore Of 6.10 de 4.200 Interested spec:
Aaghre an a fine! game fDi,
Nite Mercy Seat Baptiet church of Har.
ten broke ground for a new ehitret, whitch
will be erected on UHth treet between
Kieth “and, Lenox avenues, last Sunday,
Fifteen bundred persona “attended. | The
exerciser were led by Dr. Epps and a
Tumber of visiting clergrmen axnlated bs
the: clio? and the Rdwanke quartet. Many
Of the tallow died amall decorated ehevets
Mut al the "arrangements passed, off ,wite
Grder and aitinfiactlon,
Charles Haul and. Robert F. Melntyre, of
AARth treet, Will go to Albany and SAra-
toxa during’ thelr “vacnttm.
Charles Illes, Janitor of 25 Weat 135tn
atroet, Who Wae Kbot In the #hottlder bs A
ftray “bullet whlle sett on a Tonge tn
Tie apartinents, Ix "Improving lowly.
"rhe New. Atnatentan MMM tary Bund 6
furnishing the musle for Noreuiu’s extitht-
tlou at Ft Geore, 3
‘At Lotig inland clty Sunday the fone
Glante played the Glouwoods a four-tunntns
FAME. The neste Wan Sto 4 in favor of
fhe intter.. The Chariesten Glanty are
open for Satuniay ‘aud Sanday games.
Addreng 14 West 184th atreet.
— +9
tinine Minmeien “Secon:
New Rocwecte, Juty 11——tev. and Mes,
Adan Jackson were agreeably surprised bY
i nuinber of thelr friends lant Friday even:
ing. Misw Georgia” Fields, of Princeton,
Nu J., nlece of Rev. Jackson, In here to spend
ihie wuminer.” There Were g xreat wany Vy
frome ta this elie on the Fourth. Kev. W.
Te Ere spent the Fourth. with. bis family
on Union avenue, Mev. Willams, his wife
and dauxhter.. of the Som Street Rapist
Church, New York, were the xuteats of Kev.
and Sire: Adam Jackson Sunday. Rev. Will:
Iams preached in the evening at Xt. Cath.
crine'’t, SLf, andeMrs. Thorntea Davai and
Mixx Florence ¥. Jones, of New York, -were
in the elty.on the Fourth viattlus friends,
Mrs, Fanule, Johnson and little son, of
Uridxeport. Conn. Were the Ruexta of her
Slater, Mew, Robert Peace, Inxt week,
Ationg those who «pent the Fourth at
the Ef Dorada were: Stes He i Kemp and
hone Mrs ang Mim E,W. Bowing and Mr.
Warton, St Augustine, Florida: Mfr. and
View We OE Hardy and Miu HLM.
Lynton, New Yorkveliy and others, Atons
tives stapplag "at the EL Dorada ate Mr.
Aud Mow AusHATHS Jackson and dnviehter,
Mr. 1. ad. Sones, “Jr. New York “elty:
Fatrick Watden and! Mies Lotte Walden,
Atliugle Highlands: Mise M. Adtsen, Brook:
fyn, N.Y. aud Master dona’ Wallace,
++ ——
VONKERS NOTES.
Yeusnks. daly tie the Messiah Bap:
Hist charel, Nugday qerning, Master Mook:
fe ptenehed an Thterssting aermon tea
inter auiienes, on Gada Covenant Wine
Nonh,” Wevenant mecting wax held after
the Sermon. The Sabbath xehool at 3p...
held a dutvrestiyg seston, The” xetitial
expects Ge lave [te anauai outing some
time next week, the date and place have
not yet boon aelected. OM the evening ser-
Mew latter a telef addres be tbe pastut
the Lord Sapper was ndininbstered to a
large number of semmunicants, :
At the AM. E. Alon etinrehy Rew, GM
Parne. af Hrocklen, prenehed In the morn
Ine a Grefoind ApH serione serum fo a
geal atidience, Sunday "school convened
BY pe bie ane after/a brief Wincusston of
the Iesenn, the veldldrenn day. exerctes,
which are te be heb aext Sanday evening,
Mere eetearsed, In the evening, Taster
Swyer hiearhed to Janes H. Ferrel Lodge,
Neo FOACM, He rehearsed In an Inter
Sating mamer the Matory of Afro.\mertean
lodges In America
Miss W. Hashrook, of Middletown, be ole
Hing her aunt. Mes. wo Adams. Mrs. Wo A
Tobe Ie visting frente In Glen Cove, DT
++ ———-
MA'cAURCESeED EL NERPTTERAL,.
Wererstrn, Mass, Joly 1o- Mies Rosella
Whithizten, whe lias teen Tl for the fast
teerk, cate ta at tp. Mra Rebecca Don:
thers nid dlauhtore, uth and Tetatries, left
the city inet ‘Thursday fur Cottage Clty,
Whee They wil kpend Ohe sammer. Mr Louts
Dongen left for Cottage Clty Wednexday,
Mise Td Htgeing, formerty af tile elts,
init new of New itaven, wit vial friend
and relatives Ie ihe elty during the reat of
fhe summer, On Joly “$a lawn party was
Bivon at Ty Belmont Street Ne Mts Fey Zlon
Charen by Bae Sunday wehoot "A neat ‘eum
Was cealized for the Sunday xchool. On the
pyning of duly 17 there wtit be a lawn party
Elven by the Afro-Amertean Hnwinets Asad.
Slatlon on thelr grounds, 17 Orchard street
Mra Agnes Seett spent last Sunday tn
Fienbirg visiting frends Mine Anna D,
When, who. arrived home Thesday from
Swringiielt, regorts a dellghefat tne, Mie
Mame Garden accompantod her to attend
the ptente and renew old nequaintances,
Misc Ruby Tgeinbariam, af Cambridge, In
in the elty as the gaest of her father. Mr.
Charles“ Higelntariam, Misa Florence
Draper, of Chetwa, t visiting Me. and Mrs,
George’ Cooper,
ee —
Walt for “Fortuse’s Poems."
PPA: SM USER Eteteh Teens *
Galant T. “Thomas Fortine, one of
ee eae ee ee
cessful publisher of Tun New York Acr,
composed and pblished quite a deal of post
ry fur tho last deere Of lin popular news
Ce ee ee ane te
Bane et St a eerste tae ban,
will far excel Tim Fortune, the Journallst.
Cafe and Restaurant
seme Ligvons: rerontEn “aib
DOMESTIC CIGARS
Meals at all hours Ne Ne. Catering a specialty
111 WEST 318t STREET
nonce egy ase mees EWE YORK
ie
Ohe Novelty Restaurant
JAMES M, POWER
436 SIXTH AVENUE .
five eee NEW YORK CITY
i x CLE
Be NS CREE en ete wr ie se
,0¢ the Pilgris Baptist church te trying
eo ralne $40 to‘complete the basement of
the church: ‘A-rally will be beld ca the
Sd Sunday in this mouth. :
Rev. Clayton Powell of New Haven,
marricd Mjas Nena Ford to Mr, Joho
‘Wright, one of the deacons of Rev. Pow:
ell church, at the residence .of -deacon
Thomax Titenton the prides cousin, last
Wednesday evening, The bride | was
owned in white mulle, trimmed ‘With
Shite silk, and carried a bouquet of roses
ag orange looms,” Bho wore, dia:
monde, Her sinter, Mins Ford, of New-
| ark, N. J., was maid of honor. |. While’ it
wan a quiet wedding the few invited
felends enjoved'a benutiful evening and «
nice collation. ‘The bride and groom will
“reatde at 30 Chureb street, New Haven,
Tow ‘prevent, were, Hey: C. OT. Marti
‘aud wile, of Ansonia; Hey J. “Thomas,
of Rtratford; Rey, Ford, Mr. and Mra.
ML ‘Taylor of Bridgeport: Mr. .and
Mix, M., Spears,Mesdames, L, Johuseti,
it, Williams, 1, Barclay, ‘T.” Taylor.
Ward, Davin, 3. Harris, Summers, Mixses.
Tiainat 1: “Johoron, Siupson ancl Mt.
‘Taylor of Bridgeport, Mr, Joseph Chane,
(Smith, Willian Freaman, and 1. Farar.
"Rico and old whore marked the departure
ofthe bappy couple.
Kev. C. fT, Murtin winhes to announce
that the rally ar hie ghurel realized 3140,
‘The baby of Prof, and Mrx. Lilly, Moae-
ty will be hlexsed by Rev, Thomas ‘at the
church Sunday at 3220 p.m,
Quite a few, enjoyed the Silent Six's
trolay ride from Ntartford to Pine Rock,
where daucing wae enjoyed tl 11.50 p.
in. Two enrlonds of people went, besides
xoine from New Haven and Milforil.
‘Mra, Ellen Chandler of West, Stratford
gave a social in honor of Mike Alice Jeter
of Park avenue, Bridgeport, on Thursday
evening at ler rexidence on Jefferson
street. Tee cream and cake were served
And inusical selectiona were fendered,
Mra, Henjathin Chandler had just arrived
Trom Brooklyn, where xhe hind. spent a
week with her husband, who is janitor of
a nitnber of large xpartinent houses, Mr.
Spears the: real extate agent. sold this
week Aa’ houwe in Smith strees, East
Bridgeport, for $2,050,
THIDGEPONT.—-A Murprive party won
tendered Mine Savannah Ashe of doffer
son xtreet, by Mixx Cora Hingham ant
sivtor. Miss Ashe wan presented with 9
handsome’ comb and bruxh and a fan and
lirnoch be Me. and Mrs. Fred Stevens.
Mra. Robert Wade of New York, is vie
iting her mother, Mrs. Martha Stevens, of
Stratford avenue, Mex, Jobo Clark, Mrs,
Mary Brewster, Mrs. Mare Styker and
Mrs. Katie Williams attended the Beghol
ALM. E. conference at Springfield, Mnss.,
inst week. Rev, George, Bide of New
Maven, presiding ‘elder of the. a, M. E.
Zion conference, preached a very fine “ser
mon at the A. M. E, Zion church Sanday.
View held quarterly conference Monday
evening, Tee, &. Q. Norton. who was
eon the pastor of the Rethel A. ME.
chute for the past two years: leaves
Friday for hie new ebarge at Buffato, and
Ttov, Jncob, who was proxidinz elder, will
he pastor of the Bethel church for tle en-
suing year, ‘
Virrecreer, July 12.—Mrs, Maria Rerry
at New York visited” her nieces, Mes. F.
3 Welsh und Mra. Allen Washington,
Mes, Oeear Ramacil of Hampton, Va..
formerly of this elitr, ty with tia again for
the summer, Mr. Deter Wools, of Allenhurat.
Nod. vinited hie deter, Mra, Lielue Jordan,
inet "Thuredas. “The bax’ énrertatanient
celen at the A, MCU. Zion chamh Innt
Ehieainy wan a erent aueces | Mie. Net-
te Willams was chairman, Mew. Siarthia
LAL Stevenneof Steatford_avende, in spend:
ing ie moms tn Le.
Erierronp.—itev, Thamae hteached to An.
xonta Sanday, The Lyecum was fairly well
Rttended, Ste, Bovhre the font estate agent
had the color Hne drawn on bim by his
Gen eae. the vather dag. THe has n
hnune fae ton Fanillow te rent te colared
feopte and three Afro-American tadies who
Mallen forsee tite about Te tert JuKt AR nowt
ie thee tong hee wne a colored man. Hew.
ie Bardcat Stratfank, preached for Ree.
©) Pawel of New. Haven, Sundar. There
je whines trond in MU ford over the mintater
Aind Tt looks ii If the tuatter inag-be taken
inte the eaurts. OMe Soenee caftice | has
tenn tuaved teeta, Routh 30, Sanford Tuite
Ing. te Room I, Tayler Bufiding, en Com-
aoe TaheAL,
Toe tegPorntshed soome for lat, tes
To isentea : aise single rooms, first Boor
ire Lindt, 204 Trird ave. near avth street
TO EES A gene Garaichel large, room
In nies fentitt. Apply. Mrs. Johnsen,
204 Sumner avenue, Rraoklen, N.Y.
TP An Ai pharieornt oF 3 regime
te remeciakies tanants. Appl Mire
Deapor, 140 West 31st street.
LOSERS furnished ronmne t tey oy ales
aweapie: moderate prices: call after 2
nud ring 2 bells, Mrs. C. Hankinson, S22
W. Sad atreet. ‘
TS TET—Finar of separate rooms. with
Inprovements for Heht housekeeping
asza Quincy street, Rraoklyn.
Penden, famed, Game pl
cL vonwenlenees, at 171 W, Gd xtreet. Ap-
ple-ta Mes. Jolin Macon,
WASTED Roney or a unturniahed
Taam, conventenres, “Brookisn: easy
reach of Montague or Fulton Feers. Ad-
Greas “Domus” New York ARS.
TOLER Paraished Rooms with alt cea.
ventences, Apply, Men Tack#in, 250 W.
oun street. fe Tulse 41
Mrz Theadore Drury will aerept onteot-
tewn engageaente for church and other on.
tectalninenis. For terms address Theodore
Treaty, 217) West Souk street, New York
elt. ‘may2h Smox,
nen sain)
T Setar neatly. furnished room,
path and all conventences, for 2 geatle:
mien, Chirk, Sz West {sth treet
Oe ee Se
TS LET Sontty Curnlahed saan private
residence, for gentlemen only. 11) East
had: atevet, NY. Sse B,C, Rusvell,
dnp a
ay
To et cNeatir ferntehed ron for to
“Oadlex ar two gentlemen, Rlvers, S17
West 30th street, New York. +
Went Sh tre
Po EET tare furntohee rane room for
inin and wife, for light: housekeeplax.
Apply $53 Teh avepue. Mrs, Washington.
ONGERS—Mra St. Cintr, of G28 oth
‘Avenue, can accommodate a few lodgers.
yore eee
Poet Parlor tearoom, muleabie for twp
PS waten Inquire Bradford, 144 West 28U
street, Tat Moor, cast alde. ‘i
mreety Tat Toor, ee
0 LET—Ter man and wife, or two Indics,
two toons, with all modern, improve:
mente. Furnished or unturntahed: | Cheap.
Apply Mra. Wilton, 439 Weat 35th street. |
Sens ie ee
O _LET—Furniahed and unfuralshed
roomm: convenient to all cars. 457
Gold mireet, near Fulton atreet, Brooklyn. |
Se
PAWNS. ui tied RES SE
fae ah SS ea eee ee ei See =,
-: REALTY.'COMPANY:-
CAPITAL STOCK; :- $600,000.00
_ _ Clacorpornced under the Laws of the State of New York.) :
Stock, $10.00 per Share, Par Value
: * “QF ell paid ond now-cssssmbie) . = e
An nvestnient that will pay 10 per cent In‘annual dividénds,
. besides making it possible for respectable, law-abiding people
to live in respectable law-abiding neighborhoods. Now is the
time to buy If you want to be numbered among those of the race
who are doing something practical toward the solution of the
so-called “Race Problem ™- : : . :
JAMES 0, THOMAS, President; -, eA
JAMES EB GARNER, Socretery and Tressurer; : c 8
" PHILIP A. PAYTON, Jn, Vice-Pres. and Gea’! M’gt;
WILFORD H. SMITH, Attorsey: <
. DIRECTORS; . — ost
WM. TENEVOK, “ JOSEPH H.. BRUCE, WINSTON E DABNEY,
RICHARD R, WILSON, WALTER EK HANDY, JOHN W. STEVENSON,
FRANK STEUART, . WILFORD H. SMITH, JAMES E. GARNER,
JAMES, C. THOMAS, = PHILIP A. PAYTON, Ja.
,
MEYER’S BUILDING; 49 Maiden Lane
"Between William and Nassau Streets .
Eleventh Fioor, Rooms 1108-6-7 NEW YORK CITY
Telephones, 8726 John and 8727 John
BaF Write for particulars and Prospectus. = vepl lyr .
WM. S. A. QUINN,
7 “ (3, EDWARD WINTERBOTTOM.) 7
UNDERTAKERS :
638 Sixth Avenue, above 57th Stree, New York
‘Telephones, 482 and 463 30tn hae at, oper ye
FIRST ANNUAL BASKET PICNIC
: Sunddy School and Lyceum
- ° of St. Mark's M. E. Church
: REV. W. H.: BROOKS, D.D., Pastor
TUESDAY, JULY zsth, x905
it A.M. TO 11 PM. mw
To Roseville Park, Roseville, N. J.
ATHLETIC GAMES = - «= GOOD MUSIC IN ATTENDANCE = - YO DANCING
Special invitation is extended other Sunday Schools and Literary Sotieties
‘ADMISSION TO- PARK cr - 25 CENTS
Directlone—Chrietopher Street Perry, over the D. L.i&,W.R.R. Traler-eave avery anit neue,
ROUND TRIP TICKET 25 CENTS |
COMMITTEE
W. E. HANDY L. H. SMITH GEO. YOUNG
Everybody knows about 7
YOUNG'S
Hal Begovating and Talleting Establishment
735 Laxington Avenue, braneh of :
334 West 42d Street
- “Opp. Holy Cross Chiureb, New York
Clothes cleaned ana repsited, The Faneatsteew and
Panama Mat Cleaning Svatem in the Ware
‘Telepbone,ay72 Plaza .
THE GRAND ANNCAL
Summernight’s Festival
——or —
St. David’s Church
IN AID OF
St. David's Fresh Air Home
WILL BE HELD AT *
Zelfner’s Morrisania Park
170th Street and 3rd Avenue
THURSDAY EV'G, JULY 20
REV. DR. E. G. CLIFTON, Rector
Musle by the New Amsterdam Orchestra
ADMISSION. - 35 cents
Mr, H. H. Smith, Prea; L. M. DeGrasse and
E. A, Bascombe, Vice Pres’ts; Wm. H. Flood
and §, A. Coward, Secretaries; J. L. Bythe-
wood, Treasurer> *
Parties from Manhattan can take the Third
Avenue “L” to the 169th Street Station, or
the Fordbam Trolley direct to the dgor.
ZION!
‘The Sabbath School of the
A.M. B. ZION CHURCH
127-131 West Soth Street, New York
Rev. S43. H. MOMULLEN, D.D., Pastor
will give theit :
on Tuesday, July!8,1905 |
AT COSROPVLITIN AME Soc ne
f Amsterdam Ave.
Every conventence for enjoyment Is of-
fered. Scups, Swings, etc,
Jobnson’s Society Band of Newark bas
been secured.
The Park will be opened at 10 4. ML
Amsterdam Ave. @ars-pasa the door.
ADMISSION,.26 CENTS ©
E. V..C. -Eato, Superintendent; Wm.
Mead, Assistant Superintendent; Mra. R. D.
Johnson, Directreas: Mits FB. FP. Calloway,
Mrs. Flossie Dyer, Secretaries; Mre. M, ©.’
Bentley, Treasurer. z
ee July_6-2t
ag OE
‘ ”
“The Gross and Crescent.
A Highly Interesting Lecture will be
siven at
ODD FELLOWS: HALL,
160 W. 29th Street, on
SUNDAY, JULY 16, 1900, -
E BY
REV. H. M. JOSEPH, M.A,
Cambridge, Engtane.
Vocal and Instrumental Music will be
2 Rendered. ~
Room 6 will be open at 3 P. M. Sharp.
SUMIKCT!—The Cress and the Crescent.
‘FOR SALE
Flats, Tenements and Private Houses, also
Suburban Houses, all
On Easy Terms
RENOLD LIGHSTON
- 150 Nassau Street
may25 3mo0 Sulte 1103-4-5 Tel. 322 John
nue a ee
MISS P. BURGER
513 Eighth Avenue
Between 35th and 36th Sta,
LADIES’ HAIR DRESSING PARLOR
AU kinds of Afro-American Hair Goods in
Stock and mado to Order. Your patron.
age solicited. J8ly6 pare
ee
STORE TO LET
- 213 West 6Oth Street
A Gino store with plate windows, suitablo
for any busiacss, Good live neighborhood.
RENT, $20 per Month
funto at Apply Janitor on Premises.
Hotel Brandywine
140 Union Avenue
ASBURY PARK, N. Je
Neatly furnished rooms by the day of week.
MEALS AND LUNCHES SERVED TO ORDER
: Orchestra Music
Mo. Rose Keyser = = = = = Penpricteess
Prof. A.B. Witton = - =~. Manager
ee eee
The Alphe Beneficial
Association
Leading Negro Insurance So-
ciety of N. J.
ENERGETIC AGENTS WANTED
Can earn from $12 to $10 per week
A. R. MAYO, Manager
94 Van Horne Streer, Jemey City, N. J.
July tye
FOR SALE
Ten-Room Lodging House
- IN JERSEY CITy -
5 Minutes from Ferry. Owner is called away
* from the city. House ey furniabed from
top to bottom. Address, “G. C.” care New
York Age, 4 Cedar St. N.Y. City. jelyS ot
ELMS! . ELMS!
: Doo't forget the
CREAT PICNIC
We beg to state that on” "
Treredeg Evening, duly 201%, 1995
we will giveourSesend Ansusl Picnic at
Atlantic Part and.Casino, Ralph Avenue
and Prospect Place, Brooklyn, NY.
to which wo attend « bearty javitatlon to aleer friends
Brooklyn Lodge, No. 32
4. B.D. 0. Bits of the World
7 WM. P. MOORS, Chairman
On bebelf of the Committers,
TICKETS - = PRICE, 26 CTS
COROCOA, IL., July 10.—The city schools, much to the relief of teachers and pupils, are closed for the summer vacation. It is gratifying to note the growing interest of our people in education, as is evidenced this year by the hundreds of colored children who have passed from the lower to the higher grades, many of them bearing the coveted honors of their respective schools. Indeed, from every school where colored children are pupils, come, pleasing reports of the general good standing of colored children in their studies. There were also large numbers of graduates from the city high schools, and a goodly number of these are preparing to pursue their studies further in the various colleges and schools of technology. In addition to the hundreds of colored children in the public schools, colored students may be found in every professional school of the city. In the schools of law, medicine, dentistry, music and the fine arts, manual training, technology and domestic science, representatives of the colored race may be found diligently preparing themselves for the higher calling of professions above mentioned, is likewise true of the two great universities of the city, the Northwestern and Chicago University.
In a former communication to The ACM, mention was made of a little sensational episode at the last convocation of the Chicago University, when a Southern man criticized the University for conferring during the following week, when the commencement exercises of the Northwestern University were held, one of the speakers too, occasion to congratulate the University that it had never been narrow enough to draw a color line. The differences between these two great schools of higher education are interesting. The difference that especially concerns us is that while the Chicago University sends its representatives throughout the South to secure white students, frequently invites men of the Temple Graves, type to deliver convocation addresses and an employ Southern graves at Northwestern University of these things. Still, it is a curious fact that there are more colored students from the South attending Chicago University than the Northwestern or any other college in the North. The Chicago University draws no conspicuous color line. I learn that there has been concession, but out of all the use of the formatories, but in all the use of our respects our students, according to their own testimony, receive an equality of treatment in academic opportunities. There has scarcely been a year since the founding of this great University that colored students have not been of them. Mr. Moreno N. Work, R. R. Wright and J. G. Lemon, all from Georgin, received master's degrees.
During the summer or vacation months there are perhaps more than a hundred colored teachers at the Chicago University pursuing courses in pedagogy or other branches. Our young colored men and women, who are serious seekers of the art and culture, are not afraid to meet Southern white men and women in the class room. Hundreds of these white students, coming from the South burdened with race prejudice, are in this way afforded their first opportunity of learning the intellectual capacity of the Negro race. Some of them have been taught to read and write they have been systematically devolved as to the ability of the colored student to acquire more than the rudiments of an education. In other words, Chicago University has become a fruitful missionary field for the benighted white Southern. It is safe to say that when he leaves his University he will be invited to lecture about the Negro's innate inferiority.
The spacious parlors of the Appomattox Club were the scene of an interesting ceremony a few night ago. The occasion was the unveiling of a large portrait of the late Walter C. Proush, presenter of the distinguished jurist. The principal address was delivered by Judge McLeen, of the circuit court, and short addresses were made by Hon. E. H. Wright, Dr. A. Wesley and S. Laiang Williams. There were of both races. The portraits of many of the most distinguished heroes of freedom now adorn the walls of the home of the Appomattox Club. This club is the successful result of many years of untiring effort to establish a law office to be topped on the high road to a position of great influence in the political and social life of our city.
With the advent of the summer vacation months, the social life of the people is taking on new activities. The first and most brilliant function of the season was an afternoon in which the given guest, a Council Bluffs man in honor of Mrs. Graves, of Council Bluffs, a sister of the hostess. The beautiful parters were resplendient with flowers, beautiful women and summer gowns of rare beauty and elegance. One lady remarked that the hostess should be regarded as a public benefactor in thus bringing together so large a number of friends, whom the distance and taint tend to separate and almost strange.
In the Boston Guardian of recent date there is an editorial that surpasses anything Jules Verne ever wrote for utter lack of fact or truth. The editor has written that the Long suspension of the Chicago Conservator was due to the machinations of Dr. Booker T. Washington. Mr. Wilkins and his associates on the paper must have read with amazement the Gapflint's porary lapse. I know it to be a fact that Dr. Washington has had no more to do with the ups and downs of the Conservator than he had to do with a paper published in Torsin. He have some perversity in the unfounded assertions that brought the Conservator to a standstill for some time, and I have also a personal acquaintance with both Dr. Washington and Editor Wilkins; and with this knowledge, I have no hesitation to is without even a semblance of fact.
I have been informed that several Chicago men have been invited to attend a conference to be held in Buffalo during the month of July. This conference has been called under the leadership of Dr. Boise, Dr. Wise, Dr. Boise, E. E. Wilson, Dr. C. E. Bentley, Col. John R. Marshall, J. S. Madden, Lawrence Jones, ex-County Commissioner E. H. Wright and many others. These gentlemen are members of what was once known here as the Equal Opportunity League, organized about one year ago. The most people who are making decided interesting and uncomfortable, for the managers of the "White City," a magnificent summer attraction recently opened here. The managers have undertaken to exclude colored patrons from the restaurant, known as the "College Inn." Several suits have been started and the managers will be made to pay yet dearly for their experience and liaison. FANNIE BARRIER WILLIAMS.
It seems to me a not at all unreasonable expectation that some future writer will edit the editorial columns of *The New York Aux* and the speeches from time to time recorded by the following: referrals to the period between 1875 and 1895:
"About this time the city of New York was fortunately visited by two very much alive colored citizens, one from Florida and the other from South Carolina, T. Thomson and his wife, who found their colored brethren not at all awakened to their best interests, careless of their civil rights, wanting in energy, having never been moved with the seal necessary to accomplish desirable results for the uplifting of their race. These new citizens finally succeeded in bringing the city of New York and neighboring towns and villages, but in the entire State, where it would appear that no colored citizen had made even any effort to accomplish the opening of the public schools allike to white and black children. This was accomplished by the first mentioned minister, whom he had succeeded in inter-
The foregoing, should it ever appear, would be fairly warranted by a paragraph that appeared in The New York Ann of June 22, 1905, in an editorial entitled, "Industrial Education in the North," as follows: "Governor Stokes concurred in this view to the wisdom and justice of the theory of mixed schools for all of the children of the State as is Mr. Fortune, who created the opinion that abolished the separate school system in New York State, being assisted, of course, by such men as Dr. P. A. White, T. McCautte Stewart and others." If Mr. Fortune were applying for a patient on the thing, and were to make any change, the committee would return it, to him, for consideration, considerable modification, that is sure after examining the records.
Nothing and no one could preccele the Creator of anything, so far as relates to the particular thing created; Therefore, to tune the very embryo, inception, beginning, of that sentiment which finally closed our colored schools, or rather made mixed schools possible, and committed our students and commenced its work right under his hat.
But this is not the fact by a great deal. Therefore, hoping to catch the future historian who may be inclined to record unwittingly an error, permit me to offer following facts: the TAEG as they have to the children; the TAEG as they have to the children; only he lacks (gully thirty years of as much personal knowledge and experience as I have had in the life of this city. But what has passed under my personal observation and which I may record of as of my own knowledge easily praised or by others heretofore living at this day, who can finally confirm or possibly refute what I say.
No far as any record of the schools of the city of New York, 1550, the boroughs composing the present city, is concerned, we began here with mixed schools one hundred and fifty years and more ago. The first schools on the record were those supported by the several churches, all of them absorbed in schooling the children they were mixed schools, whites, free blacks and Indians all together. This was trug of the old Dutch Reformed church in Bushwick, of the Dutch Reformed Church in Flatbush, and like churches in their earliest history, followed by the old Sandys Street Methodist and by those of other denominations for a very long period, only schooling had beenColored children contained in those church mixed schools.
The first separate schools for "African children" hereabouts were attempted by the Quakers, who became what was known as the Mammission Society as early as 1754, immediately upon the passage of the first national emancipation of slaves. These good people had been largely instrumental in freeing the "African slaves" hereabouts, and they at once set about opening schools to be specially devoted to these newly freed children. They imported an annual school at a salary of $300 per annum; but since the colored people avoided this separate school and stuck to the church parish schools, he was able to report an average attendance the first year of only twenty-six schools, and the population was the employment of a colored man teacher, whose name occurs among the first now on the roll of the African Mutual Relief Society, they succeeded in increasing the attendance and the number of schools until at the time of the Public School Society, which had been established by John Jay, DeWitt Clinton and others, there were seven of them in a fairly flourishing condition. Nevertheless there was ever complaint of the difficulty of keeping the seats filled, because so many colored children in the districts were admitted to white schools.
On the Brooklyn side of the river the schools remained many years longer in the charge of the churches. Among the earliest names recorded on colored paper were that of James C. Morell and William J. Wilson. Morell came here from Philadelphia and was first employed by the white people out in that district, which in his day was called "the white colored man known familiarly" as "Jimmy" Weeks, a powerful and noted character. The white people, first employed the very able Morell to teach white adults in night schools, and their children in day schools—a mixed school—during the day but not on his school became a distinctively colored school. William J. Wilson strung
many other schools in the state. In a district where he was a long time, he kept little schools filled, because so many colored children were admitted to white schools, through the friendships of school principals, or the influence of Graham Fully, who was well disposed and did not allow colored children walk miles in the school district, while white schools more accessible. Find the number of colored children who were admitted to Mr. Bush's school, to Mr. Mervin's school, to Joseph Ryan's school, and to the school that is now No. 18, leaving out the score of others, and you'll have a list of the students who were all former either Mr. Fortune or Mr. Stewart came this way, and some time before Mr. fortune was born.
Superintendents Bulley, Cruikshank and Field were well known to all the colored people as friendly and as opposed to putting colored children to great injustice. They were the colored schools. Superintendents Kiddle and Jaaper, on the Manhattan side of the river, were mixing the schools so fast that of the eight colored schools formerly organised there. He had given up the struggle to teach the colored children two more flickered and went out, as did all except one before any attempt worthy of the name had been made to close the colored schools. In fact, the real struggle, and the only struggle, worked out by the name, the struggle of the colored teachers to keep their classes full and their positions secure.
It is true that no historian who attempts to give a full and complete account of the activities of the past decade, hereabouts, can do well if he does not mention Fortune, but he must stop for short of crediting him with the beginning and "creation" of the public sentiment which led to the mixed schools of this city and State, a thing which cannot truthfully be crossed to any single instance. Fortune, in fact, took from their inception to their maximum, a period of about seventy-five years, and then there came a gradual and positive decline, a melting away as of tea and snow exposed to the sun, until they died a natural and peaceful death in the causes were: First, the gradual decline in the proportion of the Negro to white population, the fewer and fewer colored children in the city proportionately, their spread over so much territory and the habit of mixing the children which were colored with the white, and theinking the extreme of maintaining the separate, colored schools so very, very expensive, terribly so and second, the very large increase in the foreign element, who were indifferent, all except the Irish, to American color prejudice, and who were very likely to be a white child beside their children in the school room. S. R. Scottrox.
Brooklyn, N. Y., July 1, 1905.
THE RACE NAME.
An Argument Which Proves Nothing Worth.
To the Editor of the New York Age:
I have read much concerning the name by which the race and its members should be called. And I am of the opinion that the word "colored," or that of "Negro" is more specific and comprehensible than the word "Afro-American," which is a word far more specialized and confusing to the ordinary mind. The Age is right, though, in contending that when the word "Negro" is used, the letter "n" should be a capital.
Now, a white man having been born and reared in Africa is an African, as well as a colored man thus born and reared. Therefore, should him imitate a white man, he would be a citizen of this country, he, or his posterity, would be Afro-American, as well as the colored man-born and reared in like manner. When we say "colored man," or "Negro" everybody knows what we mean. It rather seems to me, that the word "colored" is soft enough to be accepted by the most fastidious. I am aware, though, that in some sense, neither black nor white is considered a "color," but not entirely. We are well known in this country, J. O. Nixon, Wilmington, N. C. June 28, 1906.
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Horror and excitement in unlimited quantities were created in Mississippi's proud capital last week when it was discovered that the State Uniform Text-book that had been betrayed into giving it formulas approved by an arithmetic that contained no mathematical, any malignant attacks on the South, the originated, of course, in New England, and, coming from such a source, it ought to have been examined with anxious care for the hidden evidences of the plotting that naturally to be explored in that paper was supposed to be even New England was not subjected to truly internal ingenuity as was required for putting antagonism to the South into an elementary arithmetic, and so the attroctions volume was examined rather for its mathematical, accuracy and lucidity in the moral and political teachings, and the Mississippi alone adopted it for use in the State without a thought that they were—well, warning a serpent to bite and poison a whole generation of brave boys and beautiful girls. Terrible indeed was their after they had adjourned, also. For some students into whose hands the sample collection of an arithmetic fell noticed that on page after page slides of blank paper had carefully been pasted over certain problems offered for solution, and when these slides had been moistened and removed a truly hideous tale of the problem, it must have been told of the problems read: "There were 290 white children in a school. Every tenth child was colored. How many children were there in all?" Another related to
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—The New York Agg writes down Editor W. M. Trotter a book and Rev. Saint Thomas Dixon a knave. This is because both assail Mr. Robert C. Ogden most violently, one charging that he is against the Negro and the other charging that he is for him. It may be observed that forces are rallying to the public support of Mr. Ogden which will surely in some degree neutralize the deadly influence of Rev. Saint Thos Dixon and his hall books, provided his vanity will induce him to keep up the fight.—Afro-American Presbyterian.
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From the New York World.
WATKINSVILLE, GA., June 23—Goves
Negroes and one white man were lynched by a mob just outside of the county jail before early this morning. They were hosed to force posts and literally shot to pieces. Hundreds of shots were fired at the eight victims before the infuriated mob was content with its night's work. Not many of the bullets went wide of the mark, for the harring was done at short range and the hundred or more men were for the most part experts with the rifle and recoil.
The white victim of the mob was Leon
Lewick, and the Negroes were Rich
Claude Elder, Lewis Robinson,
Allen, Nandy Price, Eugene Yearby
Robert Harris. The first three named
were in jail on a charge of har-
mored Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Hol-
lain a few months ago at their home
Lewick also was supposed to have
implicated in the killing of the Hol-
lain was in jail under death
Price was there under a charge
Insult. Yearby was under a charge
insurgery, and Harris was charged
shooting two other Negroes.
Louis Patterson, another Negro prisoner, was taken out of the jail and lined the laden volleys with the others. He was not securely lashed to the laden foll with the first volley, simu death. He received only slight wounds and will recover.
The mob was composed of about one hundred man, all heavily armed and armed. They formed in a line of march side of town about midnight, but camping town had no inkling of what was on until it was aroused from by the terrific firing within 200 yards of the centre of the town.
word was spoken by the men in march as they made their way the streets to the county jail. they lined up at the jail door, they were met by the jailor. With rides looking him in the face, they up to deliver the keys door and cells. The jailor surreptitiously keys without a protest, and then a minute the mob was in possession of the prison.
one the cowering prisoners
out of their cells and their
behind their backs with long
the nine men were marched in
out of the jail with the mob
in and keeping them un-
of their rifles. The Negroes
time had come and they ut-
a word as they marched to a
two hundred yards from the
they had been chosen for
the white man pleaded
life and declared that he
has innocence of the charge
him if he were only per-
fair trial.
wash was in no humour to lie
it passed with hardly a
was lished to a fence post
of the Negroes. Half a
passed through his body
was valley that was fired.
was done in the most
minute. As soon as the
securely tied to the
the mob gave a common stopped back a
crate aim and fired
command from the
on escaped death in
is remarkable.
skipped the knots of
to the fence, and,
dropped an in-
heen taken prisoner by
he could not give the
is compelled to witness
the prisoners. The fir-
few every gun in posses-
had been emptied, and
armed with magazine
about thirty seconds,
with considering its work
dispersed. They ran
action so as to foil any
right to make to follow
a hurried examination
and found that eight out
led to the fence had been
the bullets. Patterson lay
he was saw the mob had
surrendered to the jailer
to his cell. His coat was
widest and the post to which
he was spintered by near-
holders.
minutes after the firing
he was in an uproar. Hum-
ness hurried to the scene,
to late to catch even a
the mob that had done the
Axford met the mob as it
stopped the streets toward the
and begged for the life of the
Neville Tailor Crow also
for Axford, but their pleas
The leader simply said:
take the trip with the others."
which was continued.
called cause of the lynching
attempt of the Negro. Price, to
Wadden Dooley in the out-
Workinville last Tuesday. The
assured to have been done by
the family who decided to
the jail completely while they
the members of the mob is
it was he who gave the several
and his voice was recognized,
theories refuse to make known
until they are ready to begin.
They say they will ferret
members of the mob and prose-
failed to get one prisoner in
He was Edward Thrasher, a
used with a misdemeanor. He
in the holding of his cell and
has a new railway station,
of the finest in the South,
is treated to something
management. "At this station
allowed to enter or pass out
door." We have been all over
we have noticed the en-
discriminations against
but we have never seen it on
before. Negroes must go to
side to enter the station.
How can the Atlanta Ne-
titat?—Southwestern Chris-
Miss Portia Washington.
Dr. Washington of Tuske-
gah a diploma from the exclu-
sion Academy. Haverhill.
Miss Jessie R. Fauset win-
t honor at Cornell, our Ne-
tare proving the highest men-
for our gentler sex and
listener honor to the race.
BICHMOND, Va., July 10.—The Richmond alumna of Howard University are deeply concerned as to what will be the outcome of the trouble at the university between the president on the one side and the Afro-American on the other. With not a single exception the alumni here condemn the course which the president pursues, and give it out, that in their opinion the future usefulness of the school depends upon the retirement of the present head, and the election of an Afro-American in his stead.
Our public schools have closed for the session. In our high and normal school there were 28 graduates in the high school course and 20 in the normal. One young lady, Miss Juliet Belle Morris, made the highest percentage, 90.40, ever attained by a graduate in that institution, and was highly complimented by the president of the city school board when he presented her her diploma. Misses Ida Frances Cowan and Ethel Garland Bowler, graduates, also made excellent records in their classes.
The city school board elected teachers for the session of 1905-06 last Thursday night. The old teachers were all re-elected, save six, who had tendered their resignations to become housekeepers. These were Misses Virginia B. Harper, Nena F. Brown, Eva Jonafhan, Mattie C. Tinsley, Miss Mary Willis and Lena Logan Jasper. Misses Lillian L. Moore, Annie C. Augustus and Eulalia Whittle were elected regular teachers, ten young ladies pupil teachers, and fifteen reserve teachers.
The Fourth of July was generally observed here; and while there were no public demonstrations, there were a number of private outings at the various nearby picnic places. The congregation of Sixth Mt. Zion Church unveiled a beautiful monument, which has been erected in Union Mechanics' Cemetery, to the memory of the late Rev. John Jasper, founder of this church. The program, which was a lengthy one, consisted of speeches by the ministers of the several Baptist churches in the city. The principal address was made by the Rev. Dr. Z. D. Lewis. The veil was drawn by little Miss Maria Glover, granddaughter of Rev. Jasper. The church choir furnished the music for the occasion. Rev. John Jasper was a tower of strength, religiously, in his day and generation and had gained a world-wide notoriety because of his famous "Sun Do Move" sermon. He was a truly devout man and the highest type of the consecrated Christian minister. The monument is Rot a just tribute to his worthy services for Christ and His church.
This June broke the record in marriages among school teachers and rendered obsolete the old saw that "teachers never resign, die or marry." On June 7 Miss Virginia B. Harper and the Rev. Robert C. Judkins were united in holy wallock; on June 15, Miss Cornelia E. Brown and Mr. Charles Munford; on June 21, Miss Mattie C. Tinsley and Mr. L. B. Benton; on June 27, Miss Mary Willis and Mr. Helen Willis; on June 29, Miss Lena L. Jasper and Dr. A. B. I. Bowser; and on June 29, Miss Eva Jonathan and Dr. James Lewis. Madame Kumar has it that there are to be three or more of the teachers to marry before the opening of the schools.
The Rev. Drs. W. T. Johnson, W. L. Taylor and A. Binga, Jr. have sailed for London to attend the World's Baptist Congress which meets in that city this month. Dr. Taylor was accompanied by his wife. While away the reverend gentlemen will visit many of the places of interest on the continent.
Mr. Edward Ellis, Jr. is acting president of the Grand Fountain, United Ordeal Church Reformers, while President Taylor is federal.
Dr. Dr. Webster Davis and W. P. Barrell, Esq. have returned from Toronto, Canada, where they attended the meeting of the International Sunday School Convention.
The Afro-American physicians of Virginia met at Miller's Hotel on June 27 and organized the Old Dominion Medical and Surgical Society, with the following officers: President, Dr. Charles R. Alexander, Petersburg, Va.; first vice-president, Dr. W. E. Atkins, Hampton, Va.; second vice-president, Dr. R. J. Roland, Romako, Va.; third vice-president, Dr. Albert Johnson, Alexandria, Va.; journalist, Dr. E. R. Jefferson, Richmond; treasurer, Dr. R. E. Jones, Richmond; secretary, Dr. A. W. G. Farrar, Richmond, and corresponding secretary, Dr. H. L. Harris, Richmond. Steps were taken looking to the appointment of committees for the meeting of the National Society here next October.
Miss Ethel Branch Ramsey, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. P. B. Ramsey, died on June 27 after an illness of several months. Miss Ramsey was a young woman of most lovable disposition and of high Christian character. The funeral was held at the First Presbyterian Church and the remains were taken to Petersburg for interment, her previous home, where she was a teacher in the public schools until her recent fatal illness.
The Richmond Negro Conference met at Leigh Street M. E. Church June 3. A class of four was confirmed at St. Philip's P. E. Church last Friday night. The several literary and art circles have discontinued work for the summer. The Coronellos, of which Miss Zipporah Jackson is the president, closed with a literary and dance; the Friday Evening, Miss Julia I. Stephena, president, can out-ouse tooodle the Hyncinic, Mrs. Forresto T. Watkins, president, hold a literary and dance, and the Narcissus, Mrs. Nannie W. Turner, president, a literary and social.
The City Gun Club has opened the trap-shooting season and there are shoots every Tuesday at their ranges in the west end. Some of the men, especially J. C. Robertson and the Rev. Dr. W. L. Taylor, are making fine scores. Mrs. N. R. Brown, wife of Editor E. W. Brown, of the Reformer, continues dangerously ill at her home in North 1st street, Mr. W. S. Blackburn, editor of the Damnelle (Va.). Mirror, was in the city last week. Mrs. James Orbison Forster left the city Saturday for New York on a visit to her sister, Mrs. Luna G. Washington.
Meurs, Christopher F. Foster, Charles T. Woodson and Andrew J. Walk were added to the clerical force of the Richmond post office on July 1; Meurs, Edile Lewis and George Gilliam were appointed regular carriers, and Meurs, Walter P. Johnson, Edward W. Stephens, John F. Rose and John T. Woolfolf were appointed substitute carriers. These are pointers are all Afro-Americans. Mr. H. O. Stephens, a carrier in the Richmond office, who has been quite sick for several weeks, is again on his route.
Mrs. L. L. Stanford, the accomplished
A timely member of Richmonds will
serve as the Negro Conference
which meets the purpose.
Mrs. Ellen Trent Runsell, wife of Mr. Charles T. Runsell, instructor of carpentry and cabinet-making at Tuskegee, with her little daughter Olae, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Clarence S. Forrester, of this city.
The Bachelors and Benedictus will give an outing at Jonesboro on July 18.
GEO. ST. JULIEN STEPHENS.
Southern Outrages May Be Evaded by Emigration.
From the Pacific Coast Appeal.
The Negroes of the South are now brought face to face with the question as to whether 'tis noble in the man to wand and face these new difficulties, or go in search of new fields, where he will not be longer hampered and bounded at every step by a bitter and relentless prejudice that is determined to work his ruln.
This is the wise course opened up to the Southern Negro. Let him seek a home in California and other points of the West, where there are thousands of acres of good, rich land waiting to yield boundfully to his labor. And those who have money, and are competent and industrious, can settle in cities and secure work and business at better paying wages than the South offers.
California has a mild climate. Oregon and Washington have climates much less severe than are to be found in the South and by far more uniform. On the Pacific Coast, colored men and women are in demand. Here there is the same law for black and white.
Industrious and intelligent men and women can soon become independent land owners and enjoy freedom as they never can in the South. Here their soil yields a bountiful supplies of fruits and vegetables of all kinds. The hills pasture thousands of cattle, and the mountains yield gold and silver and copper in unlimited quantities. Let all who will, consider.
The overcrowded condition of many local businesses in many respects. Labor supplies are greater than the demand, and as a consequence labor is cheap. Moral and intellectual development is retarded. Health conditions are rendered bad.
We would not advise our people to be cowardly or play the part of weaklings in meeting the ordinary difficulties of life. These will be found everywhere. But no people are called upon to remain passive and embrace forever the wrongs and persecutions that are heaped upon the Southern Negro. Emigration has proved a boon for other persecuted races and will no doubt prove a blessing to the Negroes.
How to Get to Pittsburgh for Convention on August 21-26.
Persons attending the Knights of Pythias Convention at Pittsburgh on August 21-26, and coming from the North, Northwest, West, Southwest and South, should secure their tickets via either the Wabash, Pittsburgh & Lake Erie, Pittsburgh, Ft. Wayne & Chicago, Baltimore & Ohio, Pittsburgh & Western, or P. C. J. & St. L.; from points in the East and Southeast, via the Pennsylvania, B. & O. Buffalo, Rockster and Pittsburgh, P. & L. E., West Penn, or Allegheny Valley. Information as to rates can be had after July 15 from all local railroad agents.
There are several river routes on which packet boats are run with fair regularity; a trip on which to Pittsburgh would be an enjoyable experience. They start from Cincinnati up the Ohio River; from Morgantown, W. Va., down the Monongahela River; and from towns along the Kana-wha and Muskingum Rivers.
If a party of five or more travel to together, just before starting telegraph K of P. headquarters, 1225 Wylie avenue Pittsburgh, Pa., something like this: "Five will arrive Pittsburgh, Monday S p. m., R. & O. dep." This will ensure members of the reception committee meeting you at the depot to look after your luggage, pilot you to headquarters, and secure you rooms and board.
Real Estate-New York
To Let
Handsome Apartments with all improvements at Moderate Rentals, in THE DOLLY-MOUNT, 211 West 60th Street.
THE SARATOGA, 209 West 60th Street.
THE VENICE, 210 West 61st Street.
THE DORIN COURT, 217 West 60th Street.
Above houses have first-class janitor service, and are always in good condition Apply
Why continue to pay high rentals? We have a beautiful line of cottages for sale or to rent on moderate terms.
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
128 Evergreen Avenue
Corona, L. I.
New York Office, 602 West 22nd St.
may 08 1948
ELEGANT FLATS
Handsome Apartments with all improve
meets at Moderate Rentals, in
THE DOLLY-MOUNT, 211 West 60th
Street.
THE SARATOCA, 290 West 60th Street.
THE VIRNICE, 210 West 61st Street.
THE DORIN COURT, 217 West 61st Street.
The Claremont College Advisor
service and are always in good condition.
Apply
ALEXANDER CROSBY, 217 West 60th St.
MR. HOLYARD,
210 West 61st Street.
448 West 54th St.
TO LET
Nice apartments of large light rooms in well
kept house
Respectable Tenants Only
Apply MRS. TALBERT
un22 4t First floor
HOTELS—RESTAURANTS. Sto.
THE CLAREDON HOUSE,
118 West 47th Street,
NEW YORK CITY.
The hotel business is the city. President of the hotel is Mr. J. W. H. B. of New York City. A lawyer by profession he has to live on the way.
ANDERSON HOUSE
57 Douglass Street.
Bell Court and Smith St., BOOKELIN,
Bandroom Purchased Reqts, with Bed and Cold Water Sash and Portable or Window Air Conditioning. The Locale 7000.
Officer Admiscntation. Board V desired.
GRAB. F. ANDERSON, Prop.
The Long Established and Powerful Known
GILBERT HOUSE,
52nd West 52th St, Near 6th Ave. New Bath.
EUROPEAN PLAN.
FIRST CLASS ACCOMMODATION.
Providing an ample and comfortable interior,
convenient and moderate prices. Located
everywhere. The patronage of either Perna
number Trusted guests respectively solicited
R. JOHNSTONE, Proprietor.
may 1 mo.
KEYSTONE HOTEL
206 West 37th Street
First Class Purchased Rooms by the Day, Week
or month.
WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS.
POOL AND BILLIARD FARHOR DOWN STAIRS
WM. BANKS
Proprietor
June 29, 3 mo.
687 Seward Ave., NEW YORK CITY.
Nearly furnished and decorated. Modern
improvements. Opened by business.
He be to the "only" page for travelers to
stop while in New York.
Mike IHENE JOHNSON, Proprietor, June 2m
ENLARGED AND MODERELLED
202 and 204 West 37th Street
Nicely Performed Rooms by the Day
Week or Month.
Mumbai, January 1977. Tel. 302 600 Columba
HOTEL MACEO,
213 West 53rd Street, N. Y.
First Class Accommodations ONLY.
Handcourt Furnished rooms for Perman-
ent or Transient Guests. Headquarters of
Chicago, IL. Restaurant. Regular Dining, Including Wine
Rifle. 4 M to 8. Sundays, 1 to 8 P.M. 486
Jun 8, 05 noon
R. F. TROHMAN Prod.
Hotel MARSHALL.
The move Up-to-Doe Hotel in New York
Cuisine unsurpassed Finely furnished
Room with bath. Have reasonable
BRALL & OE. BRALL & MARO
Proprietors
Neatly furnished rooms for permanent or trans-
ient guests. First class restaurant attached.
Meals at all hours. Quiet location; near four
lines of surface care and subway station.
Mrs. F. B. WHITE,
Proprietrees
July 6 4t
HOTEL LETT,
186 West 59rd Street.
Neatly equipped with first class Furnished
Rooms. Electric Lights. Telephone and
Messenger service.
RESTAURANT ATTACHED.
Mrs. B. COURTWRIGHT, Proprietrees,
jun20 5mo
THE ASTORIA CAFE
CLINT WILKINS, Prop.
Choice Ales, Wines, Liquors and Cigars
2275 SEVENTH AVE.
S. E. Cor. 134th Street
Tel. 2739- J Morningside ___ jun29 1 yr
CARLTON HOUSE
456 and 458 Carlton Ave, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Newly furnished rooms for permanent or transient guests. Board if desired.
The largest and best appointed house in Brooklyn.
MR3. LEVI NEAL, Proprietor.
June 29, 3 mo.
Chinese Restaurant
333 West 59th St., bet. 8th and 9th Aves
Ground Floor. Open All Night.
jun 1 3 mos
Musicians
Miss H. L. Anderson's Orchestra.
PROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN TO ALL COMMUNICATIONS
816 West 59th Street.
NEW YORK CITY.
Telephone 4833 Columbus. 1666 tm
The New Amsterdam
MUSICAL ASSOCIATION
(INCORPORATED)
Will furnish COMPETENT COLORED MUSICIANS for all functions.
For terms and dates address
W. A. Riker, M.'gr.
M. F. Dewan, See'y.
562 W 87th St.
10 W 124th St.
Headquarter, 316 West 59th Street.
W. Sidney Pittman
ARCHITECT
817 Sixth Street, N. W.
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Tuskegee Inst. 07 Drexel Inst. 00
Tuskegee, Ala. Philadelphia, Penn.
June 29, 3 mo.
Fetsoh's desirous of purchasing stock in this Company can buy same for $9. per share, ONE DOLLAR LESS than they can be bought elsewhere. This sacrifice is made because ready cash is needed. Write or call
EVERETT T. CHAPELL, Counselor-at-Law
335 Broadway, Manhattan, N. Y.
Jun29 4t
Piano Playing Self-Taught BY THEODORE DRURY
Do you wish to better yourself? It is not too late to begin. If you cannot afford to take music lessons, this book will teach you to play. The book seats the reader at the piano, tells him just where the white key for middle C is, then the one for F, and so on. Within five minutes you will be playing and by very easy steps the player is led on and on till simple melodies become easy. Another advantage is the much shorter time it takes to learn to play with pleasure. Anybody can learn to play by this simple and easy method.
Sent by Mall on receipt of One Dollar.
GEORGE BELDER'S Music Store.
10 EAST 17th ST., New York.
may 25 3 mos.
Northwest cor. of 43rd St. Largest and Most Popular Furniture Firm on the Furniture, Carpets, Bedding, Oilcloth, Linoleum, St Carts and Baby Carriages.
and Most Popular Furniture Firm on the Carpets, Bedding, Oilcloth, Linoleum, St. Carts and Baby Carriages.
A Guaranteed Sewing Machine Free With Every Purchase of over $75.
WE GIVE GOLD TRADING STAMPS OF THE BEST PREMIUM OF THEM ALL.
S. WORRIS, LL.D., D.D., Pastor. WM. H. T.
Bryssinian Baptist Church
Sunday School
will give their
ANNUAL EXCURSION
Sunday, July 20th,
CUST CROVE
which is beautifully all
Island Sound, 22 miles.
Largest and Most Popular Furniture Firm on the West Side. Furniture, Carpets, Bedding, Oilcloth, Linoleum, Stoves, Go-Carts and Baby Carriages.
A Guaranteed Sewing Machine Free With Every Purchase of over $75.
WE GIVE GOLD TRADING STAMPS
THE BEST PREMIUM OF THEM ALL.
Rev. CHARLES S. WORRIS, LL.D.
The Abyssinian
Sunday
ANNUAL
Thursday, Ju
To LOCUST CRO
Rev. CHARLES S. WORRIS, LL.D., D.D., Pastor. WM. H. TAYLOR, Supt. The Abyssinian Baptist Church and Sunday School
To. LOCUST GROVE
This grove is beautifully situated, and is replete with every natural advantage, including excellent basking and boating beats, nymphin lumines, etc. To these have been added excellent carousel swings, restaurant seating 1,000, bowling alley, and every requisite for visitors' comfort.
The committee having this season's excursion in charge take this opportunity of informing the public that they will strive to make the environment more pleasant than ever. The greatest care will be exercised to insure comfort and safety to every one attending. The beautiful and well-equipped steamer "Valley Girl," with accommodation for 3,000, has been chosen for the committee. THE COMMITTEE RESERVES THE RIGHT TO, AND WILL EXCLUDE AND ALL OR QUESTIONABLE PERSONS NO DANCING OR GAMES OF CHANGE WILL BE ALLOWED EITHER ON THE BOAT OR ON THE GROVE.
The Steamer will leave foot of West 37 Street at 10 A.M. Sharp, a from foot East 33rd Street, East River, 10 A.M. M. sharp, returning will make the same landings.
Tickets 50 cents. Children under 12 years of age 25 cents.
Sold at Deck by Committee only
Music by The New Amsterdam Orchestra
COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS
Samuel R. Skerritt, Chairman; Wm. Ilians, Secretary; James A. Porte, Assistant Vice-Chairman; John P. Wii-Seely; Wm. H. Carter, Jr., Treasurer.
50 cents. Children under 12 years of age 25
Sold at Deck by Committee only
New The New Amsterdam Orch
COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS
Arritt, Chairman; Wm. I. Hans, Secretary; James
Chairman; John P. Wii- Seey; Wm. H. Carter, J.
Tickets 50 cents. Children under 12 years of age 25 cents Sold at Deck by Committee only
Music by The New Amsterdam Orchestra COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS
Samuel B. Skeerrit, Chairman; Wm. | Iiams, Secretary; James A. Porte, Assst.
H. Pride, Vice-Chairman; John P. Wii- | Seycy, Wm. H. Carter, Jrs. Treasurer.
POLICE COMMITTEE
Cornelius H. B. Brown Clof; Samuel Brown Capt.; Joseph A. Carter, Robert L. Murray, Alfred C. Carter, Thaddeus O'Tallan, H. S. Pickenpacke, Frank C. Allen, W. R. Jones, David Johnson, Jerome D. Harris, James Ranks, Peter Williams, J. H. Pige, A. L. Jordan, Henry C. Parker, William Baird, Leon W. Pleasant, Lathar W.
Brown, Cliffor; Samuel
Ph. A. Carter, Robert L.
Carter, Thaddeus Olla-
packe, Frank C. Allen,
Id Johnson, Jerome D.
Kes, Peter William, J. H.
Henry C. Parker, Wil.
Pleasant, Lathur H.
Smith, Adolph Lonet, Allep
Booker, William H. Junkt
ham, George A. Marshall,
Jr. E. A. Billippe, James
Ward Walter, H. Robert
Henry C. Willis, Robert S.
Smith, Henry Cunningham,
REFRESHMENT COMMITTEE
Mrs. Lucy E. Carter, Chairlady; Mrs.
Charlotte Lawson, Vice Chairlady; Mrs.
Theodolia B. Dell, Secretary; Mrs. Geor-
SODA WATER
Mr. Luther Smith, Mr. William
1898 EIGHTH
Summernight's H
Carter, Chairlady; Mrs. ieg Mitchell, Asst. Soc'y;
Vice Chairlady; Mrs. Madden, Treasurer; Mrs.
Secretary; Mrs. Geor- Mrs. Julia Ryals.
SODA WATER AND CIGARS
other Smith, Mr. William H. Taylor, Samuel H. Br
EIGHTH ANNUAL
Summernight's Festival and Picnic
Mrs. Lucy E. Carter, Chairlady; Mrs. gie Mitchell, Asst. Secy; Mrs. Margaret
Charlotte Lawson, Vice Chairlady; Mrs. Madden, Treasurer; Mrs. Joanna Smith
Thorndonia B. Dell, Secretary; Mrs. Geor- Mrs. Julia Rvals.
Note: Third Avenue and Sixth Avenue (via Fort George) Electric cars pass the door. All cars transfer to 125th Street Electric cars.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE—Mr. S. K. Govern, Chairman; Miss Mary Stoed, Vice-Chairman; Mr. Pedro Calderin, Secretary; Mrs. Mary Douglass, Aasl. Secretary; Mrs. H. H. Williams, Treasurer.
FLOOR MANAGER—Mr. Joseph F. Thomas.
ASSISTANT FLOOR MANAGERS—Mr. Alexander Henderson, Mr. J. W. Solomon.
OFFICCERS OF THE SOCIEX—Mr. John A. James, President; Mrs. J. W. Solomon, Vice-President; Miss Anna M. Moore, Financial Secretary; Mr. J. W. Solomon, Recording Secretary; Mr. S. K. Govern, Treasurer; Mr. Wm. Anderson, Chaplain; Mr. P. Calderin, Sergeant-at-Arms.
SEVENTH GRAND ANNUAL CUBAN AND AMERICAN Summernight's Festival and Picnic
OFFICERS—Alfredo B. Alfonso, President; Alejandro Rodriguez, Vice-President; Abelardo Valdez, Financial Secretary; Carlos Cuevas, Secretary; Bernabe Coll, Treasurer; C. M. Rios, Assistant Treasurer.
FLOOR MANAGER—Thomas Clares. Assistants—Ruperto Ferrer, Francisco Ochoe.
GOLD
TRADING
STAR
GOLD
TRADING
STAMP
Furniture Firm on the West Side.
Dilcloth, Linoleum, Stoves, Go-
baby Carriages.
Good Sewing Ma-
with Every Pur-
$75.
TRADING STAMPS
PREMIUM OF THEM ALL.
D.D., Pastor. WM. H. TAYLOR, Supt.
Baptist Church and
School
live their
EXCURSION
July 20th, 1905
WE which is beautifully situated at Long
Island Sound, 23 miles from New York
will continue stamper "Valley Girl" with
recommendation for 1,000, has been chartered for the occasion.
THE COMMITTEE RESERVES THE RIGHT TO, AND WILL EXCLUDE ANY AND ALL OBJECTIONABLE PERSONS. NO DANCING OR GAMES OF CHANCE WILL BE ALLOWED EITHER ON THE BOAT OR ON THE POKE.
The Steamer will leave foot of West 25th Street, North River, at 9 A. M. sharp, and from foot East 25th Street, East River, at 10 A. M. sharp, returning will make the same landings.
older 12 years of age 25 cents
Committee only
msterdam Orchestra
ARRANGEMENTS
Bianx, Secretary; James A. Porte, Asst-
sery; Wm. H. Carter, Jr., Treasurer.
MITTTEE
Smith, Adolph Lenet, Allep Mason, C. M.
Booker, William H. Jenkins, Albert Graham,
George A. Marshall, Oyerton Miles,
Jr., E. A. Hillips, James T. Taylor, Ed-
ward Walter, L. H. Toller, Isaiah Sheilhan,
Henry C. Willis, Robert Swan, Thomas J.
Smith, Henry Cunningham, J. Adam Bolln.
Grieg Mitchell, Asst. Soc'y: Mrs. Margaret
Madden, Treasurer: Mrs. Joanna Smith
Mrs. Julia Ryals.
AND CIGARS
H. Taylor, Samuel H. Brown.
ANNUAL 1905
festival and Picnic
the
Gold
Mint
Gold
TRAUING
STAMP
“2 ee Ge pee
re See Set eee Se ee
SeSeee tet rns the seta
the Clty oficial, th attempting to Introdoc
“Sim Crowiam” ints curtain, afaira, Geors
- Li Randidge some time aro gave a um 0
money to the city of Boston for the Durpos
o aording 20,000 children an outing ever:
quminer. It appears that the mayor, In pro
viding for the chlidren, Ms wet anide » par
ticular day for the AfroAmertean funda;
‘schoo! children: and jatt Saturday, was tira
Gay. Although preparitionn were made fo
falty QUO only. 200 took advantage of th
fexcurdion (o Long Ialaed, It ty underston
that the reason for the ton-participailon o
_ the Afro-American children fe that the at
tempt bay been made to draw the color tue
and our cleraymen resented It.
(Oa last Saturday piorsiog Kev. Benjamin
W. Fatrls, pastor of the St. Paul's Daptint
chureb, the oldest’ colored Baptlat. church tn
Kew England, wok his Sanday school schol
fare {o the atéamer, apdumong them were «
few: white: chitren, “the uwu aypotated to
sifefintend’ ie excursion ante iw te
‘Calidren to: stead nalde, se Uuey could not xo
Sa the excursiod Iu coupay with colored
‘Shdrea, hut Her, Parris funtated that eltber
hey. taunt xo of uoue of ble Suaday schoo!
ould take eoy part ia the adair. be
White children eu
Nev. Benjauta W. Farts, Of che St. Paul's
Baptist cured, whi delirer the annie) wer
Bon to the Tur Meforurra. of Waterbury,
Gonn.. nrat sunday evealng ‘ut tHe Grace
Baptive Thured, of whieh tev. LW. Merves
Tepantor, Ar 1, Se callly won, a choline”
shi" a0 bioghanion teh nchoal Tley er
Titles” bina to a full_courte at Cornell Unt
Feimliy' tad pontorrgluate’ courne: “the
Eavted hy clecles. act manos) rally, wil,
fake place at Columbus Aveaue A.M." E.
oe, Sheen wees iE 2 Calllas Bear on
Soadsy, doiy 1h, lie 3. i. NeMuiten,
DerD io dormer pastor and he oriaatner
hig “society. ei ber froueng: ad preach
Beth orale and evening Sr c. Roriger
Sones, of 17as-Fourth erenue, Hitemiloghar,
Bia e Giaitigg felons at Tie kiwyee
airSeathonon Mes ted, Pooneys chaplain
SERisxegee fies? vtle-and dean oF the lilbte
Fealaings Selon, ce Toweurt bn Hake 8
Zourse fo. theology at the Harvard munuier
School, “Stusalark's Cweeeyational cure
Of which fies, St. liiywa Ie paxtor, will
aoe Tea Cammy png on Sul at cate.
Dian Grove, Went. teoxtures. Mian Minnie
BeAvber gate a recent: mower” of Sine
Hosa Ih Chilis: of Wadhtuxtony D.C. on
‘Thatedis éeeniags Joly Vie at hee home, 17
Greenwich: street Hentury, Maw he ett
plop ot Heer ist eagle ete
ourenaimdah plenis at “Amory Aero on
ly oo the rand Lats, Knbchte of
Thee we Mavenchuiwette aust. Khede Ian,
wil Fun tt4 nomial excursion. to Hocks Polat
Fad Fevteds om Tuexiay. Anaat Ne “the dene
Eine Orphan Hens Hind tad Sevblien Can
cert Company 6€ Chariton. S.C made ity
Bret peagnareat Caluotne Acne NE
Elon church: un Jury 12.3 baewath ame be
frees. the iveralies of Mallen Nid” the
SHloies ne Wee Sovrtan will take fee ‘an
Soig 2 nt the Codar since rounds, New ton
Center.
The Cornmonwcenith Wend af Moston, sn.
der the ditection of Me-Whilinaa Ay Sintth,
Dlaged the fallowine progeara for Iie muste
Eoatnutaston vol the city Teneton an July 4,
AL the corner of Cliandict rtenet ae Calin
Bin avenue, from ct tj. ta Thee program
Wan weil recelvrd by the larze audience pres
fat: “Star Mpancied Manner: rumech: weer:
fre, “stvon_uigete:” waltrs “etn of the
Midatent seni" setvetion, king Inka
bactione win “A Che la Marte? descrip
Clone Snare af ah Skeitoners ehwrarter: |
iatic, “Ravana overtures "Yatmtapled © |
waltz, “Rilhinetie swore. fron kml
land: overture, anodes, Hinge Away t|
march, snd “Amerie
“The funeral of Feannett ami, lome a |
reeldent of the West Eri ted. piers Sunday
Rrtermocn AUT oretork In Ste Andrem's| |
phreh. Chambers ‘treet, Wee. S. Stanbes ||
Rearing condurted hie mevicen. Th imucteal | |
noinbere were gicen he's qsttet conection |
nt Mfc Betelia Pinehuy CHumciy, Mex tien
mrinve Taree tirarge te lute aid Wistinen | |
Richinesdenin, af cammbrilst. Tie all hearers
mecrstlorace, tras, of unbehizws ehactes |
Fainjos, af thvicca! Suneene Murray, ot | #
Rareecton, aad forked bes ae dhostonne: thee |
tera wae tn. the fautiy, Wwe sae, Wand | |
aie Me. Hot tad a hist of ewretriems |
Mail pagie othe wmsgters amd thy eral |
THbstes apeoke ehepwentiy af nie nett eared | |
iss Hea Heong, sauedter of the ston | 4
sade i We suites Hteaketne ef thee erasure
Wastilogton, int wil netive fi Boweonh
RT MS Mnarh bie soa wth es thr aie: |
Pe Mtee ich Fata Mies
Harker ottees, easubeice tee sty. weeks
eee Ht fennel Te, renee tie |
altiat avril neeqniotir wed hve Waele
Girwet Ao MAE chant sundae oveitons
prot, Amst Atoerton, wee toes. that | 4
treet. Cantntdae, Ite wollte aie adbaietioe
Ketel afte Ate Anerivacy gradvates. of |S
farcard Calversites inde Cor tee die maine 2
et uit Alexander's Mazavlne The tutests | §
janeting ines wilt sive ite nrinvial outing on |
iy 21 In eabinbda itv, Teravidemens tet |
ic henitne Ak Kaki. a eat” at |
werfiree Universite, and git a stile
(medicine atTacunts Titverstty tn eean’|
gi insta far a fe ace Mee |
set ty. Marr, teegaiter of tie Savlenat
wegen’. Tiusinese tesigw apd ne nf tive | 3
tact relistie boeinece nin sf the sate ware
scontie piernted with a magultiennt wate | f
nacan Me ties festa odaee a qeewmnd at
Ne aptondld wervicw whe he ha romdeecd |S
mat organization far the ast twenty. years | >
she reas, i a
Ne papular Crawford Heaters, tow econ | 3
anifaetiters, whe pave fern tented an | je
Ambridge siteet for gutter a. namier at
mes, Mave nine ta Oe Sremant atrewt | T
hee thee hrve dete aa wees ateraerte |
Peroamn ation Me. Wit, Vintec tn aati | 2
Sn ta Mie tw cont'd fermicuins ‘stares haw
need aha tiiaed had at ze Ametsionth |
font, where he ke dalng' tarisins: testuves, |
Str He Te heweia, nn Ae Nrnerican wt |
inated, ‘Masen a wractzen® cngineey of [ 2
nay gears ewirinnte, tae tavenead. thee |
atte’ Sake’ Reawenter” hte. tention | ah
eahened welnarity for tor avertennt ot |
eatceodt nnteanne ‘Nive Geeatioa | jp,
Joke evinrumers ee mote wie ows wieder f ft
Ppeosenting” cave, at ee eon 9
afew nf expense ta “operator ant wainiatn, {a2
Winn teal ta Weswenh tha eitbnnee a ee [oe
ae eaipin “Tle deviews wt the ent | 4g
ey, aati to effeet a fuel seewomy whiten | oe
sees apnarint nevoeine tte esc |
cere aul ae Ite artion memes enue | 20
sion ft alle steaim making. the Towle | 2
fee ig exeerdinaiy elms fir eonerrartton, |
Ahias. na compllented parts ne seates 4s | 2%
ont at orien ar tapi, teomire Tt 1 | 9
0 tee tne rattan Ye |
& Incaetion during ther tia we eins
F had a ta tatiana |
Shovel egn nce MMe Twi te one | ise
RMT eres heer acon |e
J ooequerted by ait gonl ctivens. dite pate | Ap
remus ty Seine ronan ia
nent A A. Thorne prineital mit fountor |
the: Miaite Renoat ar Gearsetiwrn, Done | £6
a Ferltish Giilann, Saute America. wh, | £y
fin In ogtan inet mumner.ccotelbitedn
aher of articlew te the fioctun Prenint
racing dating witht eocint game
nic condition of the mative black people
Tettiah. Grinan, cant whe heonghe watt | >
nat the dnmer: Atioeal newaynner witen [ani
ated A maliciana report Concerning these | nie
icloh $e bis wali ted whe decton toe Line
mete Bain an a ‘o.
|). Mishte Kew ‘ts Bp tween.
|. Pacrroasce, 1, 2 Pater ters
| was celebrated ore with he womat plenls
‘poiala, ball “gumen ead: pilgrtuangee tet
Seashore, The Kast. Side alse peaze
agetart tbe Boston Potters la the morta
‘The ‘Nine: of Diamenda, ef which Altre
Williams 1s mazeger, wou 8 game trem
picked wine om the Denton street grodess.
Mra duroke Howard's oualight matise
aud ogclal at Columbia hall wae large
Attended; with’ vieltora: fro Bostog,. Re
Bedford and- Newport, : Meaars, - Paine
aud. Talver lield thale” usual aapual oct
{a'iue vrealuue at the atame ball: The fos
was crowded with, dancers for whom. ts
Bay ‘Telia “orcheetpa. foraisbed must
The gayettes coutinued until 2 aim, wil
Sutatioun pomple were-enterteteed duis
| ueottown, poo rentertateed daria
the day by Peintlven and frien
‘rhe ‘color ling haa been drawn At Roc
Polit, Which Bae bora the. only sume
Tear hereabouts where -Afro-Amorteat:
/conld. dance ‘The mew. damee ‘halt at the
Font hae tera wublet to the Brigham Stay
fig veheatay ‘andy te Grpanteation, ha
fefuted ACTo-Aimericana peraafeaton. to date
inv the hall aud hasspelated ‘alyaa to. that
eect extibited. aint the ball Beveral a
Sue: young ten threates $6. make’ tea
Sie Thad, the Ciel eighte Faw of ise
State. People are wontering “What. will
fnhpen oi Auuat tom whieh da am
tniat" outing Ie mally” Meld: at tee. Polat
Wye AfrocAihericane "oraing tF0m ait "over
New Bingla
Sic. Moves. Bell, who bax been tn New
York State for a. loug white, ‘baw: returned
(atte city, Mewern, Gon, Wilson. aud. tea,
Watterand Sten, Ticket, of New flaven, arc
Tiere for tho wibiunees, "Slat eae “Sanders,
GE Welt xtrywt hon Fetuened from, AtiaMttC
Chy te the xmomen Stra. Georwlane
ieastoy, nee fiysn, haw rewiened from New
Sony the aoa of Stem Wale daiaen
of Wachingtan street. afr. Neboon onan,
ne Wace Meueldences haw. been drawa. eek
Sage for Pagvinen COUMNye ne
i Hent Sunday” wehool auttog of the
donwun was hwhtoon July. 6 ‘by. the Olver
iter’ Napuiee church Suaday” Sehooky ot
which: ewe-Sletwoald tw banter. Fhes ett
mae A. ty on the ‘ateaiier “Tontiac.
ithe Juckaa "Kowale Nand wae on board
aun ttewaned thie with eink muste, he
iunting wae Wt it, Mope Marky at Tistetol,
where four hours were allowed for dinner
said engusent rhea thee aalte t New ort
inne and ne hn whith the reach
net pe mh The chmmittew in ebarge were
Wert” Miah whairman AL Stores Deg
Morar. (Wy ohne ent Re A. Iw
The Heth ACME eureh stinday: Sebo
wiih xu to dilghtin Park on duly 2, Hee,
Win, Thuninas fe ator
‘Tu Huninesk Men's League hetd It» month:
iy “meting on Wesnewiay evening with
reaidiast fiaet in the chats, Stuelr rons
cians wae iapatchet anid At wae wnt
posi avaieantlon tir the New York meets
ig the ‘Nationat ‘League on Augtiat, 17S
i Senn aiws nee) fatal the mein win
rote: poesiuiy get nwa from their work
chnuld gato" the. meeting me. feew taljcrt
ire tiselne and Mesers. “‘rernloet “and
Rtaetrong ete aman tie xpeakers, At
hiwer nesting wilt toe held tn tw wnvkes
Mie, MCA Seerton,. of 1 Van Toren
treet, Wy nee td ine bern ardeodt tothe
nites far atte,
Mes. Moneieton Swot, whtow of the Inte
sarin Niet, nd ony aly. Ge nt Naew oa
chr she hid reaided torte ely a hall
wnitiry Siw had eon th form long. thn,
fim funeral wae repducted Santay ats
aaa nt the Sarwerad Hayter etter
lags Weaten” There were A inrge qmbee
rivids amd retavives’ present whe house
ranchral tributes
Vairyrive party vas given Me, Thomas
tinwiler of Mtunitinds om Duty hy Mies
ine Montwe and flonite. A warty front
ore went aver wonelettig “at "Alsen
ving Stores, attic Winans Manel Snes
ma aneubye? Mees aMenmres Ateetea, sharon
Wet, Hewes, Hawa wind athore, Munir,
tncin, gnmira nn retreatment ae te
mins enleanbhe :
Tenant Mra” Winter eave a etnm.daxe
utuiave at Miele reatebew Int Hhvwrshte
meiai" persone feat here went wren awl |
sia gon tine
tht Suntay the arian churchea sore {
fawty attended Vere We ibatlnnste at |
ron Meapict chr proached nenientiy
fy laren eeancrnuatinn in haw tucked
Me Nein Eten, anttnr atthe yt ||
N° vatiding, wae resented weg tek: tat |
Inver nae : :
There seociwe rience Nansen the 1x |
[Mor tend aml Etat Seckenms ee ite
rieat, ‘why fine retnbilened ten hatate |»
me ina'e nnd ane fendi Te te honed |
ae thks friettanattt coon ond rhe Tse |
tar hand. wih chee a tmecnitcter sant ta] |
retorts stenitni #4 Rw Laat far Mane
atin date ee Mie Sahnan ts awaneezee | 5
‘ine wach fa Papstiat niieston te koe | |
E tares crowds every ceerite !
POUGHBEEDSIE NOTES,
Danctag Club Given Reception Little
Misa” Seeibiiair' aces,
Poresanerests. sate EE The Bol
Francie eBhm ace A Hepa ne ly
white ate se craity nid unstvelatty va
pene” Maly “then Rinzstan attended. Uh
dont prizes a Siaina Wedges wate eaprtoalt
Miss iii i” Wat, ee aay heat ey
Reuter nn duty 28, Mea Mf Maweklties
Nemhorgh, Sas inthe sity tise seek Me
thd Adee" Winn Eure ode tS RTSHRAL
ly Vand vlaited Stout Hoacome Mrs
Winget iceook, Sat Ataritade Coan te ciel
le hte tnethinge Mee A Bhi wt
Nook Cahntan ire. Stee antes ite Hae
Geneon Sati Chiat stpeete opie the
Henican with hire bacaaned at Honea Mie
Ulta Hoamckas adit Ags. acre Me dota
sie beet oat duty Ttae ravtaontee, ILL a
Sent Sig cites or spuind Soyer werk Ate
and Mea Wan, ake evtekented thelr, 20
Anutorrsaey sai dale tay gist a well
dHiunwr V4 rw started Cehater AS epee wn
Sistas inge™ Nae spent Men at atyetadee
wont ave oe Mes te Regufard, ‘peat the
Titonti there OMe” Lafover is “Spunating
tye ier arek tact with The ae
ea hints at tetra Camp, Suttqicat?
Wai Miss Tithe ‘Stuth, aissnehtse of
Srvc Ge Sintth dt was tenitesed a het
Fp ee hee ath
InPHudass She ontertaliid twenty tees ttle
sttie'froin E untdt yeu ay dere Cather
iteee ("Re eecatvel seseat jresentee AT
ti hte} Intiess hank nor tec Mle:
jy litt. ta tenieene on Sandy wernt al
idenizh ite" sine prewted ‘a5 Interest
fig Seemann” AY ugha after a nppeaneat |
seimiin, the Lone. Super wast diate
are :
“Ths yantelortis eomert at Zion eteely an
Moniiay eeontnic. duly cide was ene ot! the
inch ever Tied heres nnd ecereesd a Iyrset
vuillenen “Phin amine ine Miveoe Casita tack
voi, Fett Amdorsea sind Me oeysc nites
palate reedzaions wt Mise (2st pean
ind Mice Hnwkling were Very: worthy.
ie Pattie and tnmliey Mee Tek. Wit
inmns, of faetones, aunt Mires S. Welt
ied a jateacant sting: at Kingston Mice
ilo, hin eniertatsed. the Diautiters
iil Sane af Teen on iacreday evening, head
fe, Valet ant fankty nw hen spoetat wits
\iontivanin haniiiet wea seca af it a ee
reithanks wae fendered Mice Allon he her
esta tee Meit. Farier, Aitaarial gent
ie Livtazstort Caliege, sisttod Pactar Tig,
ae and eile) pot Mie lel felons het
New Brunswick Notes.
New Uarsewiex, No, duly 1 — ar
and Mrx. Charies Vann, at Hamtttan ave
une entertained friciile nt thelr realdence on
Mhe Fourth, A apiondid time waa entored,
‘The Vocal Moiste Cnty eH hale tte magna
plenie ‘at Biscett’s pavilion. on uly. 20,
Mies Manil Rilve wae the guest of Meat
Rend taut week.” Mive Tnien Marsh enter
tained Mra. S. Adame, af Trooklyn, on the
Fourth, Mev.” Eetelle Peters, of Cinindent,
pent the Fourth with her parents, Ate, nnd
Mra B Hopper, nf Pam street.” Mtr and
Mra. Walter Robinson, of New street, Slit
Weave thle wook for Ambre Park to. epend
the reat of the summer. "Mise Tanrn Mach,
of Mamilton utreet. went to Tenakisn, Rett
Urday to slalt Mra "Adame." Afinees Geach
Weoley and Rube Thampoon, of Eltznbeth,
were the uente af Mine Lavicgd Danghory,
Af G8 “Weekott atroet, last Sunday. Me,
Georme Ravater, “of Branch street who Whe
heen ciaiting relative at Triaceton, hae
returned after a pleanant tacation,
——+-—_—
Hativates in Vermont.
Reriayo, Vt,. Jule 10 Ming Carrie’ te
Keese, nt Rendition. . Ctx mpending her
Biolog je relant wien hee seather y
Reese, wha te connected with the Rutlans
RR.’ Company here. .She ik a mtudent at
‘Tuskegee Tnatitute, o
Tk oe me By tt \ haat
»| . Tapes? -m—sene FP. Green Fives
|] . Reqular. Correapoddence of THs, Ags.
\y . Wasnixgron, Jute. 10:=/The co-operatis
| Mercantile and Investment Company. Ineo
porared March 17,1004, and begianloe bes
}] Beet June “ZB of thé eame year, ous mad
(| ite Gree eancal veoorts It bas Gevlered .
|| Gividend of 10 per coats which is Indeed
| excetient: showing fdr an intent enteryr!
| Tse company, deals Ja ‘coal, wood, Kindita
| Rood caauee feed and ice. tt ia capitallae
} 8t $20,000, at $3 a omare. Ite «itice ans
Sala yard are located at 1201 It “street
N. W., where the stables, borers and ve
icles “are also located. The uBlcers Are Mt
Frank: Gaines, president; J.T. Lowle,
freaaurgr; nod’ J. Weight, stercinsg.<'T
Board of directors ‘are Messrs. William
‘Brannan, J. tt, Winelow, J. W. Mathews
ac: jongroa. of Wemaka a, Saskian
Lat joore, A: Us Wateoa, J.C.
Witter savor, Richard Watts and B.A
jenkinn, : ‘
"Thr Kea’ of the establishment of the. com
panycoriginsied with MF. Ciatoge, ho, fel
that Werhingion clty, wlth tte 00,000 Afro
Awerlcans, wight (0 Keep abreaet with those
at the cities ‘where (he, vopaiation' It, wot
w large; the averaxe tutelligence not a
Bick aad We amount of money spent Hot m0
Tare. He begun to talk the matey up and
‘over with hin {elends aad acnuatatances and
We wax not long before wore thaw there hun:
red pernoan hind autacrlved 0m stock. The
copay was Incorngrated der ihe, 1a
otithe Dintrict aad beeka tinioeey by Pu
Hug itseit ia touch with’ the operators of
fot miaes, whalcaste Teed and Gour dealers.
the Hoard of ‘Trade and other focal. muancl
Atlan "Itty nyt the’ beat pricee: Bere
Obtained and full knowledge of the. markers
And ductiatolona neenred. "The company
funduets tw own biainens, owns. it tenme
Sm carta wod wagons and 291d and Welle:
Great Tant tall, winter ant xping, more. Than
She banded arlene of cam which Tm pur:
Ehnsed at the miner at the beat cash tater,
‘The woud nnd kioditog. te buughe froin a
colored whotesute ull retail denier Inwood
Shilctaed the eredlt of the conpmay In acl.
tive nuh tM: lle XS teow at Tea
guler” Springne Va up Judah tone the ule
Me sehnie of ans at Lis ehtoabtes tenchers
Ue Sean horn in. Netwan’ County, Vice rome
Attetheee year ace And came to thin elt 10
carly youth fe araduated: tron the. pute
He fetioats in TSx2 and tre the Mpencer:
fan Tiunineat Caliege n Year tater, In 183,
Ie ene nuptated nelueipal ef the sunnier?
schools whic position he held wnt 19d,
futon ihe made mipeenisng peng
The "tenth division "nd the. illite. mlnsabe
Hie wan puiiicspetied and ‘betopced torn
numberof avclal aud sreeet orders. ie
Rae interested in the Munensae. tndugtelal
Scion! and rerved ae chatroam of the exec
tive. conmitioe for ne aumber af “yearn
Howas a iizh maeon and a roomier af the
Nachinton dingrd of Veade at the. hme of
hie death.” Hite faneral tink plage from the
Toh Atreet” Maptiet chnreh, ake whieh he
wae traning, on Samuedny, Sly 7," He was
tiaerted, tart ett a hisad af detente amd
retattven to monen. ie demtae,
‘The Caplint Piencire Club ie Booked for
an muting and plenie at roe Whine
Wark Anacnstin, ‘on’ Amsuet dc hte. as
net ona thine’ hy hniven © Bea aments
are: N. G. Stebinsun, president: John W.
Wititaine, Ser. verenidesits Ba A, Wiles, Bere
ines she fe Rare, teeacaeee, il” Bred
Maiiing. werseant a arma,
Mist Lenntin Cardwell: ne of the pomatar
each at tha graded schon of Charlotte
ere neetewat in tie ety Inet weeks te sien
ie Sumumer with ithsinp and Stee. dW
Smt
Hisham ¢. WW. CHlaton, who attended the
niernntional <1. Convention recently At
fairiminre, spent two days here Inet week
Meo Hinies! tf thealag a abeen tend aie
Httan Ia the wien sf ‘Recorter int Toate
Ie it wgraawate af Htarvnrd Cafe,
se dloniker T” Washington spent few
mire inthis eis Yet Thursday
Me TW. Htewiett, al former letteg.cor
tir te nae an anleriy me the fikiriet
Nir, Goapse Lawrence Ail accentalty the
onitinn ‘uf ctotiageanhee aad txpewttier te
euniney Willtwan indalt at they Pagtetet
ating
Prat WHt'pm 1. Mlehae de, a member of
ye faculty uf Towne Tw Sohoal and br
‘hhet af International iaw, will xen ite
nation tn Hvcton. Me. Richards he bee)
neattan im Hnston, Bie. Ricans hae bern
Aid summer outing hae teen angosneet |
vriue” Amani thew Caw tar Rarantay
enn Ih Ba te Stemi Jaen Sto
Fhe venmnitdtor tytn hemes ee ta
py: siont titmae re Chennterst
Snatel anette imag he wlinessesd any
Sune atone Deuncuivania avenise Weve Te |
cain cittite when two Aten Ament |
sine with zaliare awd sured vetesee men |
Tt the Satecttian’ Aruivy ae eigceriatnime |
we tutti inattentive, idee aes |
so Thivcrel “tne! adenine at te Me ate |
seen "Be atene ne tae Swe |
The” rene taetwn, frmorty at the |
inating, Ae Wn where tee he dedi os
i poeaettion wf le Meeteccton Srl
sre PPTAD advan, Unevomnamtet we ter |
titer ertente, atid son FE Tea an, see |
ne for Niazaea’ Palle on Salt to. rhee | |
Pia tatt New Yorke Hugin and Phataded
1a Wetore verarning,
Fe Sune, ttentster ot athe | f
snstig, “hae Swen teited tn alelheee na
an ivatton addreem at Feeder, Mi, |
N story whtely reads ike a romance tas | Hl
ihe te ithe weller at a yaune mane sted
be! Tatars neces Saat the |
mara Metivat Scant AE Pager
wheat. Ms way. thiols etiouds etine en | +
‘sea TW an vaptincas tallliwers. ‘ectaiattel
‘nt vie wan ag alt works Auwaz the re | H
Wea af thee Mein Wie’ Mi Hdlame wife |
Satur Tanks win reurnconte a Weeteen | A
ste Aiea Maa nherreeed theca
Vtndbintee nf wong ‘Favtor when elie. |
me "pareve ind valle te Sante at |
ito te hint Nowe Senator telank ovens |
ote ther they srg tettinetowy |
Tie Weak Tt hae mtomt secrsaltsue: tore
rasan thet Senta seh hh ttt |
taste Mr Taxher and make aint for
Inutaretnw The resale tnteretee |
<itat Tie “Tavtor wilt love dns the enete
rn er by Mech ht where na ne 2
mi rtesizet hn “Sogtor” Haan mt a wet
Hey te tan abinetot nf thie town ME Tae | ot
afew seureaicwe tame, wn wu
chute ad Trew SA ceo |
aghli # fatngad acehient Inet Wowk’ bx |
tn ftom "a wctivtows Inte ant mies | 2
haa et Soflenshe i hee, ay | it
he Tatt purty whieh walled for the Pan |!
five fat atirlag froin San, Pratl {se
Arica (eam the Seva] “encom ine fokios | 2%
eet ante agit harley ‘aang wtth tte |
Jon uikey, of tralinnas nu mmtos | 2
the Hane ot Tenrecaninttens, aeeame | ft
lel the marty. ta the atten Gain ay | de
Thera’ shivreaed od
eh BSE sSectt, manatine cont nermte | tn
ste at Asa Ulin attest” he'afne in | Ms
Ning Vincinose. Beale colionting reat | wh
‘nates lin thas added a konreal eoitertian |W:
news, which onnhtes ion tw ghee santo
Hea manner Song ten ae
iF dames Thomas, the enterprising | ff
Vink! wimteimer ani atuloetaker’ enemy | Ee
ve tag Tiere inet avant the eemataea | Me
Sonday and tak In the fuftato exeur {8°
on IOS Mnchback has geturned | 82
1 New Vark. whither he Cane tet raed Sn
ay , s ey te
MH thew ‘dates aes
one a ae gy, of re
ra C. Colembad, O., ts viet
ete ee YRS raat
The C Cooperstive Unto
Gutchesed -fwolee, acres. of lund hea
wood B.C whieh it prowoare toes
Sg. tate (0th fot Saliding Purpcere st
obicers of ae, See oe bean sehe
som Treaident De We" keloe, gecre
gai Tranauter, and, W. ‘Roverinie,"Uenera
ager. : :
Des tumner Taylor, a. recent mraduate
the Howard. Medical féehent, will teave’ tes
ths Weet soon to begin ihe’ practice of hi
Piprivate Hillery B.. Holmes, a member ot
the ih Cavalty, mow wiationed at Tederecn
Beryacks Rt Lotin, who. shot ast Ai
Genrme Hell lant month, wha acquitted, ty
ie srorowet's Jury. lant, “Thureday. The
Eilon eqs dont, To, self defame, :
Mand sits. 1.-A Clarke, of 11¢h: and
streets, chaperoncd’a party of vlaltors. a
Felende ont m dellgbttal street, car tide an
Jat, we, party took” tn Tee Loo, ck
Gretk ‘Park andChery Chase Take, it con
sisted of Mees Re Cr aad Harry Bearden, of
Charlee Scr Allen Beate George. Rime
fer Ree Mee AE Anton: Charlotte,
Sy Sik Minne atone Greerstarn,
& :SSulen' Heawne bitzabeen Clie Se aad
Miex Blanche dinmon, Molneen, * 4." 0
Mecide dackson Dontalle of S130 treet,
eR nccenatul eatinet maker and. whol:
dioror! le-cuntomere are ani to be Mears
Ai whute. peopie, :
‘rhe Chmatenke Ray Clu wilt condice
an chenrsion to Taltisione ‘on “ihe Steamet
Bane Mosetey, 90 Sule ai Mr tntte Jor
feraon in president nied Sr. Ad, Gnade te
Treannrer of the chit
I" Cniored Young Women'a Chetetlan tne
sostation hae been “argnnised” ant twcarparn
tee the olgeet of the axnoclation in te
Dromate ihe temberad, toental. octal. 1aneR!
Aid spleiinel welfare of Saung womes. The
incovaratore "are Mra. Hetthe on Frapris,
tennis of the public menonte: Miet Baran
ETE TateredtRipereiting’ néinetiat "amd
Mew ninette ie.” Pawson, the weltknows
We RUS aticocate,
‘Phe Monra ‘nf Dtutriet Charitie hax in:
nugurngsd a number at retarwa ia. dlapene
tng chaditien tn: the indigent pave ine the
atom hoplinis ‘of the elit. PAmone the
ema which affect the colored “ole. ats
ie fottawine ; :
SHfeeestuen'e | Hoxplini-Bor Yenre and
treatiment of ndaltny £40. pine dae bation
hairw In tastitutton, 40. conte por day seh:
deem rider tre pears 8 Con Rar ans
ihe uhole amount pull sunt to weeeed: Ree,
a Puli wot to exceed
“the Natlonal Aveoctntion for the Rellet
of Dmatliate contared) Wamen nna Chir e
Hur cart anil malntenaien i ehiiren 80
hr werk the whole aqponne pal nat tone
Sea gash one
Re andy. for the..cottactar of THe AA
wha heventinon vais thie weeks
Miss ola Johns, teacher of muste tn
he pubte schools, hes gone ty Asbury are
Pe tae “the. asiminer
“The Misses Anute aad Fila Cusherd gate
y elitfemusient Thiireine evening, Sage
wiMt thede oy Romie, SOV StH meee
A llttle dune-stimere. spotted what wan to
wy rack gauge uf base halt af the Aimer.
an League Park. Inete Ratublay. bare
hin Midian Section’ tHantas vet Mattie,
fit the Rastern "Eimptees’ att tale ants
fr. Joe Gans. captain and first haspmain
site en fron Tatthore nm apecdal eee
serpin teen Strom and they wet mate
wiking wet nt fallee the? snare RAN Te
inva duty “Te
Mise Haertee 8. Give: danchter af Hon
(OWE Gillet itt Hoe ANRe, ty Fo
nny odth Mine Aue Wilinme of Tawra
iveralty.-aniied for Teatam Engin ae
tne 24” Thee wii don Karle mand aan |
sinte iif tutetest mtn Continent Woe |
inte i the" hireatdent ag, sie Weaning |
uawnrvatare nf "Atuie Ain aleeereee ot
‘ise inthe qibtle wehwke nie
Dr AM. Crete wilt aellvar an queens |)
foro Sinn’ Ttamnton | Sezen™ Congertnn {1
RUTZTE at Tinmneon. va the aneet |
"ite addeecs te “Fubereuboete Amon ey |
narod Wenge = ,
minis KGa, |
MCHLEPICS IN TARRYTOWN.
Glantn 3. Lane Sirs @ two Micrele
een Suneile Secu
Teaky tows, July 1 Phe Coieedt Clafts
Jonrnesed to Wook on duly tan. wer
defeated Ant samme sf Sarsstanll hye thee Lone
Sines ating 4 herd foseht hattle by a. wor
SE tw 8 The Chante tatters was, Prank
Racin, peice, aad Nathaniel gud Attest
Yorns, eatehsre
Mr snd Mis Within 1 Kine teat ere
ee gies oe Mr and Mes Amie” White,
White Paine, on fisbepomb ine ms They
W Etec the etties ot The Exetslor Lawn
Tenute Chie i tis neers and acterted
2B otor su lad tn the evvaling ay tte ect
Sletiea OF Mt ath Me oP AS ley
Mra Moses Whewtor aunt diangheee May at
foment 188" inanriage at Mee eather ies
fava Wathen nid Sie Witten Moti
Stites at Steam Prestytertan church ht
Tivoiva on! Wednesdays ments, disor
Kew" Wiitiatn “Atevandet’ pacter ct dive
stittet, amtetatedt Nite Whesten wits att
cata nite brkaeamate
A Meveta ee frei WHttinen Rockotatten
fos the gitle ta tie wooneter’ Monseaind Petipa
cau AsV foe ative achahy danatod 6 the
Reckefonter eutsiatres, wae Non hy Se TNE
fer techie Mathews Was scene wad eh
ves tte
Miss Votty Ttevst, at Manhattan wae nye
gator the Mises Villian cue te Sates
Tateter ag tate Ae ts OS nae te
fereabied Mb ot sad Bowl anal et hce
Hall Mise €1, 12, Curtin, of Now York city ttn
Atv 4. att “goont ay dencintnt afierninn
wet a "party af tetends wi the takes fete
inal 'lating eames |
Mp Gevrge W. Mssaphees was a witness
Bt the Test saver Ue ale at on anki
lle the Gatteesd tack Meats tie saith
wrt hte thenat eae. a ede Ta. hig heen ate
Mis Tae Maken. "Paves then ‘eaetfed the Es |
ured inom avitise the stvent ad acted
Fie fees sansa” i eta Mk |
Hunn hex. wis ha arandonead Inthe fee Kee
tested "that he heard baw eeionne, ae
Sine ate In pain ietw eri the benny ine
ad 2) mm, indole hie Intarel shat
ied Teal at iymae nvter” tedng teen are
eepltal.. The qaltes think he etthae ee
from n montane feelehe thaln me wae Pati
Healt Sith,
Mise Cottle amt Mra. Hout, at Mantar
A. Were enterinten oa private dies he
Mr anil Mra. doh We hvaana tt auaie 4
niet thee niet 2 ueinher ut ust ant
Washington anit Tarretonw
ALHmintie Meeele ree fram pie Pharoten
Letet ry Hrogeiway ta the feyntatty tn Toles
Fone: ‘nd tenth ocenrzid ih the afterans
Fils 1 Me Thott, whee wen the these wen
winededl a sliver “medal, “Me antsy wort
amin a Serond prlee. haste Sipepaed
sas Med and Zot ties Gounrtts Charles
Shepard Aesnrvew teat credit tor ewe te
bird. after having tliden tw ttle with
amietured Hew a
Mise Maul Saxton. of tt Vernon. who te |)
w Imparter of funekinvemmets ftwenn Taek |
ta New York. Was the ateut at str and |
few, Willian E. Kingwin tnt Sontag |
jhe Missa Lilian Hortis'and Lattian and
ville Hatehor attended the anting given mt |
claue's Turk 1 thie Moreemakers af Weel [!
buster, aunty on Tule RAMs, “Phamay |!
MN wae the Euest of Mire $5" camnpelt |
nt wenk. The Relghit Olive Fainentn wet |
vid tts tirst ananat-ceception in'Yandorhit |
milding an Wednesday evening, aumnet |
Interesting nervicow wore held -at doth |
marches Inst “Sunday. “Hew 3. We Seen |
reachiod an exceltent eermon atthe: Shine, |
antiee churcl. At the A.M Baten | 3
meh Her. MW. Auguatuia Fitch's vaeriann |p
a spirited and ennetiine.
oh oe ae
( Fatere Americans Will be Yellow,
“From the Detroit Detender,
Mr. James MM. Noddy, In’ Tue New Your
Act.” showed “Nery convinclasty tame oe
‘Tan sre avcrone hetmeen theo Nene ght
the white ‘man, And we ante ances” gain
hin. Two or three thousand years from
Domine Caled Rigion will" conic Make
seen People om arin seas. me
we the lereatent country. ome ponte
iil bev about the same color of the preseae
Iscenes
EE ee Si. oF OF
“araoey rine. be 11. Mover bee
cae popeber “Woitcbncd thous enloyed
F aor ing ian Saat om th
Fpreag of dour wl ‘Siuered in the eenece
an the ie it aft mere
tert and wien 7 tof atted
‘Bates as ae fevit ‘etucators from
ail paris tthe ‘colored. and
white, decked to Asbury’ and taxed the
capecley of all the covengen.
Srvat were ibe oqmande, upon, the
Whitehead Hocee (Wat neighboring ‘cottas
Screg called tate reaylsttton, to, meee the ce
Rana,” Everything Wat could paatbly, be
dome to, Incréann the comfort, Bappinces and
caloyment of the guests was’ called 1nt0.ser-
fice by the host and bostess, Mr. apd Mrs.
Witeheads “Gueate began to flock to their
hunting ‘on July, andthe, coming bax not
Jet ceaned. .
Elshine nd crabbing parties, sutomotitie
rides, carriage aitvens card, parties, trolley
Hides’ aad’ Rien. Wewala xumee were. tame
Sa suig 4 Shot res. with, lal
uly. 4s dioter yas served, w
aeate conttare® “Po fnertane the villenrs et
tellnace uf the iwanaea chet wiih. a metry.
Pallian repmtation far’ cookloy baw been add
Riitecthe sin inthe eveoing a bop wae
Ciera, ‘to which geste trom the water cote
faxen'were Inclted. Turing the week OL por.
(enti "wax frinished tn the educators. from
Ail panty 'ot the_country to meet one auather:
Ant tai, sae <
"The Tultywing guonts ‘wore persent: Hrof,
Arthiir 1. Tanzaton, Vrot Some K |Gor.
dome 'Stive Helen Dytriell aid “Stsea FAliian
Wandering, oat Laila: Profi, W. Gel
ham, Kanan (tty; Stra, fad Hae keawaetly
and. Mise" ola | Johuson, ” Warbiogton ¢
Mice Mariie'i2, ewiae ida Herbert and
Prieeiiin Herbert, “Erenton? Mee Fr, Fat
cure, Mee tet thtenndes Mine Be orig
Feria ond. Me. nivel Sen. Juin’ We Tone, htt
ailenitia: Mea Amdecie We Meneses, Misa
A. Melmver, Ate. aad Mrs. Me Kennard, Str
WV. 'S Reonart, afr, BA, aenh: Sine iadna
x. Thompron. Mina MC. Thompsons Mee
Hivttie Ke Brown, MrT. 'sainaom Sas
Malet Irowe,, Mies’ May Muttord, Mie, Tle
germ, Laweer ALK Cyary, Men As ity Came,
Mir nid Mra. at. W, Tinkraa mul Mins AS
Vr Saundern., Sewarie! tanger do 1 Cais,
Mir WW. Ponraat, Me. mod Meet NAT
oseloe and Caralls. Mian Marin MMilier. Mex.
A.C. Fleet. Mr. Walter FE. Handy, Mr. San:
Ie 1 Jones, Mr, Francia 8. Grant, Mise fo
rsuinn Sea. “Suartng “Witla ahem
Mare nad dnucter, Mise I. barker, “Mra
rx, Williama, Mr. Meney Sohaan Ste. Ww
F Twtyns Mes, Ue, G. Aemories Sire A. Te
fiondoraon, ‘Mra. CC, Tuanghty, Mr. CV.
prthan, Mr. and Mrs, J. A, Thomax. Str.
“Corbin, Mir A. AL wWhiltame Mee iW
acknin, Mew a. te. Hiutleder, Mt. Theodore
Neues. Stra Ida ie eine, Mee, fs Kmaith, Ste
WW Cheenman. Ste. A. Me Raley, Mic TE
Us Hives, Milan TEM. Stewart, Mr kod Mex
Ee Pinner, Mite Tillie’ Haie, Me T.
chofietd. Mr. C. Ut. Ries, Afr, and Mee ik
Iarshall’ and. Mleg Ke Grisnwond.. Sew
‘ark city : Mra. WC Ulces Sttenen Amanda
Kemp, Anna R, ‘Keattvan. Gertende Hem
+. Nara de Pengaon and Tin Chariton, 1,
Sa. Fietenctes ‘Mine ‘Mdelaide Tena Mie
tarnce Chatitan, Mra. GA, Taniics atid
nughier, Mr Artie 1 dnckson” Mrs Mt
a nnd Mr. BUR, Tenet, Menken: Me,
oN. Uaekean. Mrs, Mata Nasa wird
she. Mion F. Hirown, Mei, 3. Sime, Mien
vbingtin aad Mice A, cena, Jeruy Cite?
ee, TM, Wentwrortiy and Mise Edaah Wil.
mic. Gadaale® Mba Le 3. Dongiges: Viet. |:
rite MiaeFahinn Beam Laetife 2 Mt
N. Mevescrane: Jnmateny S. Not MIF. and
re a Ra Rrkdcemaden eet |
fave Marah. Maca ant Ac atitttenn, ||
ranze! Mee. Nitldrodt Shneare, Kew West,
ine and Sto- AL A, Fawn, Coinmine, |
Watt Pane. Nog’ gules voscarrieals af
2. Matenpmitian Tintel, Me mud irs, te |
vara, nemartatare ares Charles Fe tiles, ||
Mia ThecTiMow nnd Robert Fe Elna, af
nehtncton: Me. and Mee teorae Medten, |
dinonpatla: “Mea” A. Green ands Mes tw
nmin deare. Cie: Genrer A. Ranke, |,
newton Mire and Mrw fe franck at ¢
IW. nnd Mra. F. Sainient, Rrnakten,
Sur ny Tak, Tule tc articaie at the | y
ve Yurk Catinze for the Keieth ween Mee, |!
He Hoerlderean. Myre, Carrie Daughte. Me |!
ank «Anion, Mee ain Mee Waker aint
fe Walker, nf, New Yank, and Mee Raites,
Treoklyn . ,
i a ‘TROY NOTES.
Tu, July Tan daly 4, the Took
fyyees bth gave ie inte fente” at ah
Maus. The day wa pleisantiy: spent.
Mise Leanora M."Iazraed hme returns
atten “spending tie Fourth with relatices
fa New “Yur elty, Meu Theadare’ Janes
PMR wae the ‘eho nt ie sete,
Mrs. Heney. Klug. an the Gantt Mts
Stara Detning, af Canasahnete, be the coect
of Mrs Cattertan ‘Taltet, nf Cyne Pray
paki Volon howslail toain of “ray tre, hewn
formect by “ane xenng sien, nnd ts sun foe
ppeakoments The aifieere af tlie chit ape
fouhn Jordan, cavtinin, nice J. Calder lave
wanager. “Phe tear wat a tea iunius ovens
eu TS 4. sad wl play the, Sehwenectaty
ln: Sar Ty” BH, Tn Shoots
Mise Htertha Walton wf Wachamtn, te
Hoe gest af Mee Mitre Chew ued funlee
“Lhe natinal “egeneatan uf the A ME
los einzeds wiit take griaer att Wovkneseies
Mest 20 ten Bnerens Park Phe ehncch
Sth et be ba titan welt Teeaet A Me Te
sere, af kane. this Meat fant WH Sto
at Adcny for! tye. waneenleus ae Fie
Atuaniana wh wish ta ‘artend
Tray TMeatechat) of Wath teas Cavaco at
We Inst suerte wth a vtstt feet thie aie
let € niet ctl grand entneaee. Mew
Mette de Foosenann ant the wictesce heey ley
teow i. Eabwmnd Hemet. Liccioe mete seen
fected ain “sitive Lactate “tinny Messe
het, New St was presen tn beeen nats,
ap, Wile also tember of Phllaewattient Loudest
No TIE and Trog Tada, Noe seas
Tressine veers msde a vlelthne inamiore avd
Vo SoW atts Uretiaet wie septed Beate
1 Man Yuren Was lected te attend tte
Steatitel sewstan “at thie stiateler honentynhhy
we he Meld dn Tieakivn ie test Moga 18
“The Mewuhet Vetee Talwenaete, Na, 11S,
ester wf Moses, bins Weave He ath oa hie
ener wf Stator ane Baer sterols dak a teey
Mf grate? an WIE Inkee peceechan |
Qngnet D
a |
WHIT Praisscxoree *
SP gTe MENS. taly Vie Mr. aad Mew
Bo Jute were the guests nf Mess token
sein's uation wad tation ad Watsbhtnetoat ite
| 4-1 work, Mtserae Ievenpoline ail Teneion Ste
[10 sind Messen I Tage and thapios Masti
Rene the suegta wif Mites Latter esers tee
week, Mr nnd Mex. Kinshee, n? ‘tarrpaetnt
eeisted Me cat Mex. White an daly
Mrs Btikles ama her son aad ieee, at ae
Biting Me ited Mice Nn ithatens oF Santy
Hrvadivav. “Mra, Hosier ‘Holingile, of eit
Tae aavenine. entectalied A fee filet nL
fer temic on thee Grit, rhe econ ware
front Mabini and gmnes, abter whch ies
fresh enty Were Served Meu Te, The Beas =
fad Mrs S Taran, whee have heed atte: He
fe eunvalearing. Mrs. daha We MBSMor, at
Now! York, “wan due giest at har eceant,
aver Sumday |” Me aud Mew. Re takaccn
spent Feline evening with Mra ie Sinner,
ALM Cernan. He. Reed, at Wadia sol
fesse the Ladtew Literary. Sache tect
Peblay wvontng. Mise Tuite at Ate Vag"
wt, Meas tle Seneat at Mts R "Teeter tet
Munday. A “party. of Glande tidied “Set
Favs feestv ale home In Silver Lake Park
Tae "erctar and matron took great, jlewste
io showing Theny” atent the conde. wie
fase, . There’ 'are “mang ‘enliven tn, the
ro tn diements Rod a tare maser ae
‘beetoa wet eaonth. Mr. Riskea af Stay
jad Conn, spent Sunday win Mics ty,
Bares Mra. Willem Ireing. wha has Meer
wilte GH at the home af dive matter In Soe
Yorks fe tune improved, Mr and Mee ts
Wack Callen wi Mand the ansimer Wn Te
Rockaway, Mrs, Rrooker, of New Fark. hay
taken nd her tealdeucr here sf, Tediwell
nrenched In Samnranick Silay. Mise Mae
Haw sry. who ting tern candied ta"hee hate
far vovaral dase, fe able ta, he ont azatn
Rev. Gardin and four af the childsen nt
he “Hawned. Orphanage eaten snered ‘can,
vert “Sanday ty Wethel Tantlst shuren ok
acre conrest will he cieon Sunday. after
inna he elilldren tn the Second MTs cheieen,
ire. S Nash seniertalned frlenils from None
Fork onthe Bonrth, fd. Nawh ie eieitlns
ile sister in Now Iureny. :
: ——+0-___
JAMESTOWN KoTES.
ho hat heen appointed be The meine
who has heen appointed’ by. The. conterenel
to be the pastar af Jamestown Cor the new
son. preached “Sundas" inthe evening. ee
Attended” Suinsas” achool tn the afternonn
There was a large atteadance, bath tm, the
Afternoon and evoning. Misa’ Lantne Vue:
fon, af Procidance:. has arrived In. damon:
fown for the seanoit "Mra Annie. Meh. of
Patladeiphin, hae aerived in Inmeatown, tor
the season,” Man” Talla. Netter entertained
Mr. Murciit on .Ratnrday crening with sinR-
ing and piase dlariog S
ao) ROMS wRectOR Bac,
Ainether! Yoar'et A. M. i. Church. whe
{ Bovtha Toung: ew Agen ur 1
ALsAMY, July UL The Hered A a,
gherch 9 bappy Ja the retmen of tes}
Proctor ty the conference for auvai.: at
A petition ‘for ‘bie reappolnttivn: oe
eat down to the conference ai... ot
We preached « tiagoidceat ert ss oe
day morning, and was ween
thuslastic audience. Min beart yy
te the work, "AC algnE he pores’ gt
Chriggtan Ministry” to a sod siete se
tbe “Shicte sang appeoprinwe tsar.
Somes Tey “persone were iene: | Me
burch mewbership aud tive tei <a
‘sehoal. . “
My. Kintiery. the maw who ean’ ay
sreF Corn on Sule 3 hae ia
leh aeaute in the necomi dear St
Sader a BLtiid band, Ser s a)
compinitinn Rave deen brovight’ ve. S2
is Deixhlors on recat ee R
outing at targein Inchie task cobs yt
Dish, whose. bialiasd We tina = MS
sed ’sh Baw a9 lagen danahiec
Sopported hee family by taking iy ”.30
Sow oshe Herself wiht ot be a 6
(oie fiamilion rect “chures
ie flamiliion street “ehuredy 2 = oy
doatie ite membership this sein) = 3.2
diay mega held the tant nerefese fo gS
week ane the chureh weit be Set
Reo that period wiillesrepatie 5!
Ila planned. to Deautiee thy ys fs
Fete laahont enough maniy vin fos
ay the cont of tie Tinytevenner= oe
money wan rulsed Wsrehe “Supe * ok
and ihe sthuay Tiews*
"Theveonerrt given Dy Wot, Wor oot
New York clive wawen stout wires yt
prograin wan fendered hy ueleetn) ©.
July 28 our townanan, W. If. ts ae
give a concert which Prinhiies ine AE
srost ‘celtient.
Bin Adi ean Yoo nd 96 Meow sy
Voting, Of Si Bient sitet ty}
fet f0E Aaratora on "Welinessts g
cummier, “Sen Vonne wii worse” te
ibang agent of Tha Ace.
——
IDENTIFIED ASH. STnovn,
Philadelphia Mam Killed hy Nahe tox.
prese—X-Glamtn 9, Atinatle (ies 5.
Atiaxrie’ Crit, NO da duis 1 jy
Afro-Atmerionn. who was kitted ty 2
oxpresn Sunday fine ters Iensirot «Ye
HU iy Strong, of 10g enyiaied oe
Mittadeiphin. Wie son ciated sa
which were Interred here. Vl. yi
mangled to ntimberlost pleces nts. 3,
taker whapod them ge lest he eo! fo
canker
‘The complete census rettirns for \e sss
Cit were lent to the Conene Tey.) scst
‘Thieslay by Superba Donec ts Vit
out that the “reeort haw an Ati Ao 3
Population of Rxod, white tie whos. =
ber 28,200,
‘The ‘Cnbag X.Glante-croated tary ose
Aa AE talet Ravel ark Sans °c
elding was done hy both siden iss.
catch of New'n ative In the xis: wee
wan the feature st the game ih. oS
Wan 9 to 5 Ip favor of the XeGlanes
Mica Magele Morton, formerly 0! Yt
burg, Va.. bub now ‘reiing i Nev ia,
te ihre for the summer,
|. waack™ "Tohnsan. the well knows te
American heavyowelcht borer, Is ty". “ss
Ing. Tle quarters are at Mike tec) cn
toon, Pennesteania And Mediterrsn. <=
finea. “To Ie tn hae two Bien emo os
dolphin, ntl tine challenged "Seeies = - o>
champlonship ett. "Sef he se sto,
Arrange ncn av be drawe the |. se
Fetnson ten tall heastly balls fat y
aud booke ae ‘If! mtemishe ters os =
Miu wowtd Weak a “hower tm haces
Mr Chan (itkerson, af Peters +2,
Ie “sponding the simmer here»
TE Mabry Ba Ana esas,
ean he fond ag 2th Narth Tease. so
Nive. Maes Howard, af Penson itso
nue, who hae been Mniiispecnd, je ot
proving
9
Knights of Prthiae Lends Secret rete
dim thin Make
Tie ame peered ster thet see tte
Heading alt attiere on tee Syst sit ne
Hoe Rintshte ag fete Pai Red
State seems ty be Sas gente oe
ator In Momtmnstitye cick stsheseacy
order Js wspmetaiiy stzong in Nutone ts
neswre sand. Gienrsia, whine tho ether steve
Age making eomuends ie aictie tee
State the “annngt essen she ue
week at Savannah aud ay fste eo se
antietuated. Savannah te ttt es |
BHAING OF the old fastiioned Pott 8 oe
NIL Nae fortnnate dnabeed ile eet es
within thie wate ae the Vorect eet ood
Petiinn wok there ase a |
hy stletingntetied vet atid cos ‘
saline “Grand Chaneettoe «Ts
Wives aw dom a nineht tes bis | et
Mhe fronts WH It des tesbovead
for nthat Tikth aife. ptehicers
BY satin a Tarot the moet pts =
torn nf Tine Tnude ON geenaitng
ect whch satieringe wt hls
Aizo Amerleans Te tie taet
clale “femin tte gawernue ail :
to tale allivors niseaea. Hil 2
Hresent and sdellyer were ts :
rainenraseient. They ate atws
‘ievttat” anit wometines, witty
rhews and are wade ta fect * 26
“Ivon to thea and {0 the we! te
iM. On the aeegston nt the *
ne the mayor nt Savane a et
\llrwca af waenne ta tye ‘
MHIE ie restated ta foe oto 3
ristts. The spied wf! 2
wer tade the apie ai) aa
iven Weral sitqyiiet + is
toe wetting all wy fr oaan
sab.
sex
NOW it NOTES,
eM, Ryle set eet oat
Raniee hineedy oat os
yercare dining 2). ite 2
Rimay <Ahanie phot te
Diahghtere fernittedd oem
seach wating aah sg fe Ss
iain Phe chennai os
wanted Pantha nek ce
rere ing or as
Chelsie anid Monee S
Seseral tow manatee
Ae etch, the pactors wot
St SH Hatha eh es \
fod: MeKintet abontie Zs
bene Service, Bae FE:
Now! fiaven: eae afer preaes
ihe chteh Bee Metiog ites >>
Misktne tor praca Ne
Tetatend in” ae events
sia Bute tye Echos
giant head netightta
Mra Letttia Watkor, wt ©
Denne Witker, ied Sais +
0 hetet “inns:
Mra’ Dore A Miter. £ \
here don the Sng ine
chert Marshal, wat Sion
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