New York Age
Thursday, February 21, 1907
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
As a starter the reception room where the guests had assembled was invaded the room by members disguised as rumblers), seeking the person who had divulged secrets of the last dinner. He was found, seized and rushed out to be disciplined, and in the middle of the fight, the lightning change artist, he reappeared almost immediately, as changed in appearance as not to be recognized as a member of the party, marily ushered from among them a few moments before. He tremblingly stated that he had been roughly handled, and transmuted, as it wore, and that he was now a member of their probity. He then told them that by reason of his propitiation no one else would be disturbed, and that they would be permitted to enter the sanctuary in response to the roll call.
Entering the beautifully decorated dining hall, they were directed by the letters and numbered tickets to help them locate the large gridiron table. President W. Lollard stated that a copy of the commemorative edition of the "Pon and Pon" book, which was inscribed by the club, would be found by the diners at their respective plates. He then called on the chairman of the government, for further report as to the editorial work, and was told that another and finer"edition was about to be issued to the chairman of the guests to be seated to the dining room "luxe" which, of course, was the dinner.
The magazine, a booklet of eight pages and cover, was much commented upon by the press for its artistry, typography and ingenuous composition, included the announcement, a poem on Douglass by Joseph S. Cotter, the toastata, the menu, a puzzle page, answers to the questions, a collection of cards and members and guests purposely modified in epigram, quotation or reference, making their interpretation in connection with the headlines under the title, a poem, a sturge, all of which was in keeping with the announcement on the cover that it was "a magazine of doubtful purpose and purposeful doubt." This theme was the cut of Douglass on the cover was a quotation from his "Life and Times," which made him state the doubtfulness of the date of his birth. Even courses of the history of Douglass, terms, made the more confusing by the ambiguous turn given to the interlinear quotations. The connection be-
Much merriment was occasioned by the readings of answers to correspondents' questions during the dinner service. The dinner was the parlor, pithy and sententious, and like most everything else, were susceptible of double construction, and as all had been admonished to "figure it out," the impatient student tried to make a pose. One of the questions asked by a correspondent was "Why have Messrs. Cook, Dyson, Decatron, Miller and Joiner, all teachers in Howard University, departed the Bording departure." The answer was "Milktaken about their keeping quiet. They have conjoined composed the following, which is now a classic of the campus, and is sung with the college yell." Fessor Gording, he has left us. Gone to think the matter over; Pate, so cruel, has bereft us; Howard, so cruel." This was followed with the following yell, the forty Howard graduates present rising, much to the surprise of those netted, and giving it with solemn Howard graduates don't you see?
and you wouldn't you see "Sizzle
Sizzle" on the screen." H-O-W-A-R-D, Howard, Narrative.
A. A. Howard, Varsity-tv
The school board will also offer
lawyers, doctors and others present
were all made the subject ofulp or pro-
fession.
Following are the members and invited
guests:
Members--Wm. L. Pollard, president;
J. Burtils, vice-president; Thos. A.
Johnson, vice-president; Thos. A.
Gray, recording secretary; James A.
Cobb, treasurer Henry P. Slaughter,
chairman governing board; F. D. Me-
cahn, governing board; F. D. Me-
cahn, Paul H. Bray, William I. Boards,
U. Craig, John N. Coins, William L.
Houston, William A. Joiner, Samuel F.
Daniel Murray and Robert Pelham.
Ghosts—Cyrus Field Adams, John H. Anderson, Frank A. Ivron, Fugene Brooks, John H. Butcher, J. Frank Blighburn, Jesse Ossceo, Bruce, Albertux W. Cahansh, J. R. Clark, John W. Cromwell, George W. Cook, Dr. W. Christian, W. H. Clifford, Dr. A. M. Curtsa, James H. Coleman, W. Calvin Dowling, John E. Coleman, John Dowling, Shelby J. Davidson, Walter Dyson, William DeCatur, Major Charles R. Douglas, John C. Dancy, Dr. John H. Franks, Archibald H. Grimke, Dr. Spurman, Napoleon B. Carshall, James H. Houston, Lewis E. John, Thoreau J. Jones, L. Melendez King, Judson W. Lyons, Dr. W. S. Loffon, John A. Lanford, Kelley Miller, Whitefield McKinney, Napoleon B. Carshall, James H. Houston, J. Clark, Ridgely, Dr. Albert Ridgely, R. B. Skokes, Dr. E. D. Scott, Dr. F. J. Shadd, Walter J. Singleton, Glennist Stewart Robert H. Terrell, Dr. Robert B. Tvler, Ronon George H. White, Dr. E. D. Williston, Dr. James T. Walker, James C. Wright,
Manchester Notes.
THE NEW YORK AGE: THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1907.
BOUNDARY SURVEYS IN AFRICA.
New European Thieves Have Come Into Other People's Property. From The New York Sun.
We shall have use for the German exhave no further use for the German expulsion " hinterland," as applied to large territories in Africa. The term has been used to indicate regions back of the coasts which, though claimed by one of another European power, are not definiteate governments concerned had not made treaty exactly outlining their respective possessions and the delimitation of international frontiers was still a matter of the future.
There are no more hinterlands in Africa, because all the possessions have been outlined as far as can be done on paper. The delimitation of frontiers by scientific surveys is also far advanced. The British government commissions have so August last year had surveyed 9.081 miles of frontier.
These boundary surveys have in the past four years contributed more than any other form of exploration to enlarge our exact knowledge of the continent. The technical work has been of a high order, and the British and German surveyors especially have contributed to every phase of geographical exploration. We see, therefore, the noteworthy knowledge of the peripheral zones of the various protectorates than of their interior regions.
Every little while we have heard of the appointment of joint boundary commissions. They are chosen after the governments concerned have drawn up boundary agreements on broad lines, subject in small details, to the discoveries made by the commissioners. With such an agreement in hand the commissioners meet at one end of the boundary and march along it, exploring and mapping the boundary zone. Having arrived at the other end they agree upon the geographical position of the principal villages and decide upon the details of the province, particular attention to tribal boundaries and the future nationality of the villages. It is usually important to have the tribal territories and villages on one side or the other of the line, for confusion arises if these units are divided between two governments. The commissioners then travel back along the boundary they have fixed, erecting pillars and telling the chiefs what it all means. A protocol in duplicate is drawn up and signed and each chief commissioner forwards the protocol and maps with a report to his government. The protocol is then approved by the two governments, or in some instances a fresh agreement on the details of the protocol and signed by the representatives of the governments. This brief statement may serve to indicate the various stages through which frontier negotiations usually pass.
The boundary commissions have disclosed many errors in the maps upon which governments based their international agreements. Great Britain is just now embarrassed by one of these errors. It was agreed between the British Government and the State that a part of the boundary between their territories should coincide with the meridian of 30 degree east of Greenwich. The map used in making the agreement showed this meridian as passing through the middle of Lake Albert Edward, which would give each country a part of the lake. But it is now found that the meridian is just of the lake, so that no British territory is within sight of it excepting near its narrow northeast arm. This does not suit Great Britain, and the delineation of the boundary has been delayed so that a slice of the lake may yet be secured. The rapids in the Cross River were to form the apex of an angle in one boundary line, but the joint commission found that the rapids were still more miles in longitude. The discovery was made by boundary surveyors that Lake Chind is not a great navigable inland sea, but two large shallow pools, never more than five feet deep, surrounded by swamps. The outflow from Lake Bangwoole runs in a direction different from that which suggested the Rhodesian-Congo agreement. These are in conjunction with a number of surveys have been helping to wipe out the errors that are still too numerous on the maps of Africa.
NEWARK CHURCH TROUBLES
Prebystery Appoint a Committee to Investigate.
NEWARK, February 18.—The presbytery of Newark held its regular winter meeting on Wednesday, February 6. in the First Presbyterian church. A special committee was appointed to investigate certain charges preferred against Rev. J. H. Locklier, former pastor of the Plano street Presbyterian church. The charges were preferred in open meeting by Rev. J. H. Locklier, former pastor of the church. At this meeting the Rev. J. H. Locklier presented his request to the presbytery to be dismissed therefrom, in order to unite himself with the presbytery of Abbeville, N. C. After the paper in the matter had been read by the clerk, Mr. Locklier's request was flatly refused, and a lively discussion followed, resulting in the appointment of the following committee to investigate the whole affair: Rev John E. Hutchison, Dr. Robert Scott Inglis and J.A. Burroughs, Dr. Rev J. H. Locklier, Robert Burroughs and Miss Sadie Knox of New York city called on Miss Emma Hilton recently at her brother's residence, 224 Parker street.
Correct Band Concert.
SCHUCKETTY, February 20. One of the most successful entertainments financially and socially was given February 14 by the Colored Cornet Band at Blaine street hall. A violin solo was rendered by Miss Cornelia Phoenix; a clarion solo, Mr. William Irvin. Among the out-of-town guests were: Mr. and Mrs. William H. Franklin, Mrs. William D. Jones, Miss Sledge, Miss Sarah Sledge, Miss Ross Parker Miss Avery from Albany. Mrs. George Cordill of Gloversville, Mrs. James Beveridge and a corps of Christian workers from the Broadway M. E. church, held a nursing evangelical meeting at Zion A. M. E. church Sunday evening. Our fellow townman, Mr. Ed Eisen, opened here Saturday matinee and night with Stetson a Uncle Tom's Cabin. Mr. in the tall pole, and was given grand ornamental performances. It was one of the largest house what has been at the Van Auler this season. Mrs. A. D. Childer is improving. Invitations are out for the Crescent club reception to be held March 20 at Yates' boat house. Mrs. Abby Wendell and nice were the guests of her sister. Mrs. Edward Abrams of Albany.
Worcester Notes
Mrs. Eatelle P. Clough left the city that Thursday for New York where she is to be the star singer in a concert in that city.
The Coleridge-Taylor Music Club gave their second annual reception in Good Tennants hall Monday night. A short morning was rendered, also dancing until 12 o'clock.
Mr. Daniel Gaines made a trip to Boston last week.
Mr. Benjamin Hawkins, who has been quite ill, is improving.
Mr. Mary F. Anderson has been suffering with a severe cold.
The girls and boys of the Zion A. M. P. School have covered which will end March 21 with a concert.
The party raising the most money their leader wf receive a gold wage.
Miss Maude Lea is in leader of the girls.
And Mr. Robert y is in leader of the boys.
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Johnson have issued cards announcing the marriage of their daughter, Miss Rebecca Jane, to Mr. William P. Patterson. The wedding will take place in St. Stephen's A. M. E. church Wednesday night, February 27, at 8 a.m. Among the sick are: Mossan, John Lampoon, George Littleton, Fannett Bentley, Dallas Chessutt, Daniel Howard, James Day, Medames S. Brooks, Mary Geyer, Martha Brown. Mr. W. G. L. Wyatt, chief of True Reformers, has left for Richmond, Va., to attend a very important meeting of the order and also to visit his family. Dr. James Willifon of Newbern, N.C. passed through the city on route to Fayetteville to be his will side, having sold out his drug business in Newbern in order to consolidate with his brothers in his home town.
Rev. R. Robert Beenett rector of St. Mark's church, and his sister, Mrs. M. L. Brown, have returned from Baltimore, Md., where they were in attendance upon the funeral of their mother, the late Mrs. Elizabeth W. Bennett.
From the very few new subscribers to THE AGE in Wilmington it seems that our weekly letter has not been as highly appreciated as some would have us believe. Actions speak louder than words, and with our people here it has been clearly words. Our sending this weekly letter is purely a work of love and interest in the welfare of our people. We get no pecuniary remuneration. We just hated to stay dead, unknown and forgotten, and we don't think things alive and going? Don't be thoughtless and selfish. Everybody has had a fair show, but unless we get two hundred subscribers real quick, our weekly letter will be a thing of the past.
Two Fluids in Ferrolic
PASSARC. February 20.—The annual fair given by the ladies of the Bethel A. M. E. church was a success. Over $80 was taken in during the three nights. Miss Anna Burgess has been the guest of Mrs. Martha Demond of 86 Main avenue for the past few days. A slight fire broke out in the rooms of Mrs. N. Champion Friday. February 15. 89 Main avenue. The damage was slight, caused by a defective chimney fire. also visited the home of Mr. Thomas Cullahan, Oak street, Sunday. February 10. The damage amounted to $400. Mr. Louis Tate, who has been confined to the house from an injury received while at work at the Robbins Conveying Belt Co., is now able to be about. Among those on the sick list are Mr. E. H. Dixon suffering with an attack of bicepsocky. G. M. Ginsburg conceived to come up with a gripe. Mrs. Pauline R. Maxwell, ill with neuralgia; Miss M. Johnson, recovered from an attack of a gripe. Mrs. M. Coy is still confined to her bed.
Services held at the Mt. Zion Baptist church. Howe avenue, were well attended in the morning. Rev. Gates preached, Sunday school convened at annual hour in the evening. Rev. W. H. Howerton rendered a gift. Mr. Charles K. Kingland having taken the agency of Titre. New York Aoe will supply anyone wishing a copy at his residence. 259 Chestnut street, Passarc. N. J.
Donglans Celebration.
ROCHESTER. February 20.—The annual banquet of the Men's Class of the Trinity Presbyterian Sunday school will be held March 21. Committee in charge: Mr. A. S. Morse, Jr. chairman; Merrisa Page, Cain and Eingling. The Trinity Presbyterian Sunday school is preparing for special Easter services under Mr. W. H. Jackson. A large collection was raised by the Trinity Sunday school to send to the Doughlass Memorial Home. The Christian Endeavor Society under the news officers is growing in interest. President: Mr. J. H. Rugg, secretary. The Doughlass celebration held at the A.M. E. Zion church Sunday was largely attended. Rev. J. W. Brown and Mrs. Jeffrey read papers. Mr. J. W. Thompson delivered an interesting address. Mr. Thompson was the chairman of the committee that built the statue of the honorable Frederick Doughlass, which is situated in the central part of the city. The P. W. C. Club met at Mrs. J. F. Marshall's Friday. February 15. Mrs. Marshall celebrated her birthday on that day. A delightful repast was served by the hostess. This club will give a George Washington Tea on February 22 at Trinity Presbyterian church. The product of the benefit of Albion Academy. Franklin, N. C. Champion on Joe Gians is in town playing at a local theater. A box party and a banquet was served by the Taka Bira Pie club. There is a movement on foot by the local talent here to produce the drama, "The Octaparrot," soon.
Mr. A. Britt is out again and resumed his former position.
A Newark Reception.
Newark, Feb. 18. The reception and ball given at Lymeham Hill by Prof. J. Milton Anderson, of New York city, on Lincoln's birthday, surpassed anything before it. Hundreds of people were present and it was almost impossible to dance owing to the crowd. The dance orders, which were distributed among the guests, were beautiful and the dance program was a great endeavor. Some enraptured Abraham Lincoln, with highly embossed gold decorations; on the inner pages the likenesses of Manager J. Milton Anderson, Assistant Chas. H. Anderson and musical director, Miss H. H., and the dance program. The pages were the dance programme and a facsimile copy of Lincoln's enunciation proclamation. The grand march took place at one o'clock and was led by the host, Mr. H. H. Hort street, who was beautifully attired in a bine and brown silk foulard trimmed with cluzy lace. Intermission followed the march, after which dancing continued until midnight. The orchestra, which under Mr. Milton Anderson leadership, was the best ever heard in Newark.
Friends in this honour of Miss Violet A. Johnson of Lymeham Hill, M.J. will be pleased to know that also is concurring after six weeks of service Miss. Milton Johnson will be South Sun on extended stay so soon as she is able.
THIS OFFER WILL INTEREST YOU! The New York Age
A National Afro-American Journal of News and Opinion
We desire the name subscription books before them we are planning about New York City and the
To begin with, we DOLLARS ($100.00) in Prizes of $50.00, $25.00 to the persons sending the subscribers to The Age, the prizes will be awarded.
In addition, we shall of Ten Per Cent. in this station forwarded at $1.50 a
EARNEST, HUSTLING
Regular Agents of the participate in this contest new subscribers only as a in awarding the prizes furnished on request.
THE NEW
4 CEDAR STREET
HUNDREDS
WILL
THOUSANDS
IN NEWPO
During the Jamestown Exposition Boarding House Business. I lease and sale. For particulars,
E. C. BROWN, Box 32
Newport News is just a ste
VICTORIA M
774 COLUMBUS AVE
COLONIAL M
836 and 838 COLUMBU
Where you will find a full line of Fish and Oysters at all times at low
JUST O
68 WEST 13
Elegant Apartments of 6 Large, Light Rooms
28 and 74 WEST
5 Large Light Rooms and Bath. All
238 WEST 13
6 Large, Light Rooms and Bath, All Imp
Apply Janitors, or
CLARENCE E. HUTCHIN
we desire the names of 30,000 persons on our
auction books before June 1, 1907. To get
we are planning a special campaign through-
New York City and the Country.
To begin with, we offer ONE HUNDRED
MARS ($100.00) in GOLD, divided into Four
of $50.00, $25.00, $15.00 and $10.00, each,
persons sending the largest number of new
ribers to The Age, before May 1, 1907, when
prizes will be awarded.
In addition, we shall allow a regular commission
Per Cent. in this contest on each subscrip-
warded at $1.50 a year; or $1.00 for 6 months.
WEST, HUSTLING CANVASSERS WANTED
Regular Agents of The Age are permitted to
date in this contest. This offer applies to
subscribers only as renewals cannot be counted
warding the prizes. Further information
need on request. Address,
E NEW YORK AGE
COLUMBUS STREET NEW YORK CITY
FOREDS OF PEOPLE
WILL MAKE
THUSANDS OF DOLLARS
IN NEWPORT NEWS
Homestown Exposition, in the Hotel, Restaurant and
House Business. I have several suitable places for
For particulars, address
BROWN, Box 322, Newport News, Va.
Now is just a step to the Exposition Grounds
Feb 21 8t
ORIA MARKET CO.
COLUMBUS AVE., COR. 98th ST.
FINAL MARKET CO.
1338 COLUMBUS AVE., COR. 101st ST.
Will find a full line of Chloe Meata, Poultry, Provisions,
at all times at lowest market prices.
Jan 31-3m.
UST OPENED
68 WEST 133d STREET
Area of 6 Large, Light Rooms and Bath, Hot Water Supply.
74 WEST 134th STREET
Rooms and Bath. All Improvements.
238 WEST 134th STREET
Rooms and Bath, All Improvements. Half Month's Rent Free.
E. HUTCHINSON, 5 West 134th Street
We desire the names of 30,000 persons on our subscription books before June 1, 1907. To get them we are planning a special campaign throughout New York City and the Country.
To begin with, we offer ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS ($100.00) in GOLD, divided into Four Prizes of $50.00, $25.00, $15.00 and $10.00, each, to the persons sending the largest number of new subscribers to The Age, before May 1, 1907, when the prizes will be awarded.
In addition, we shall allow a regular commission of Ten Per Cent. in this contest on each subscription forwarded at $1.50 a year; or $1.00 for 6 months.
EARNEST. HUSTLING CANVASSERS WANTED
Regular Agents of The Age are permitted to participate in this contest. This offer applies to new subscribers only as renewals cannot be counted in awarding the prizes. Further information furnished on request. Address,
THE NEW YORK AGE
4 CEDAR STREET NEW YORK CITY
HUNDREDS OF PEOPLE
During the Jamestown Exposition, in the Hotel, Restaurant and Boarding House Business. I have several suitable places for lease and sale. For particulars, address E. C. BROWN, Box 322, Newport News, Va. Newport News is just a step to the Exposition Grounds
Where you will find a full line of Choice Meats, Poultry, Provisions, Fish and Oysters at all times at lowest market prices. Jan 31-8m.
JUST OPENED
JUST OPENED
Elegant Apartments of 6 Large, Light Rooms and Bath, Hot Water Supply. 28 and 74 WEST 134th STREET 5 Large Light Rooms and Bath. All Improvements.
6 Large, Light Rooms and Bath, All Improvements. Half Month's Rent Free. Apply Janitors, or CLARENCE E. HUTCHINSON, 5 West 134th Street
WATCH AND WAIT
FOR THE FIFTH GRAND
ANNUAL RECEPTION
AND BALL OF THE
Urs' Novelty Hall, 611 Falton St., Brooklyn
Music by Painter's Orchestra, supported by
ADMISSION
H. C. IRVING, Chairman
GRAND
PATION
THE
CAROLINA CORNET BAND
611 Fulton St., Brooklyn, N. Y., Thursday Evening Feb. 21, 1907
Orchestra, supported by the Carolina Cornet Band of 25 pieces.
ADMISSION 35 CENTS.
A. C. RHONE, Fib. 86cv.
Feb. 7-21
AN HALL
DOING BUSINESS AT THE OLD STAND
Telephone 1397 Harlem
OHIO VAN COMPANY
SUCCESSORS TO THE
Urs' Novelty Hall, 614 Fulton St., Brooklyn, M. Y., Thursday Evening Feb. 21, 1907
Music by Painter's Orchestra, supported by the Carolina Cornet Band of 25 pieces.
ADMISSION 30 CENTS
H. C. IRVING, Chairman
A. C. RHONE, Fin-Secy.
Feb. 7-21
AMERICAN HALL
Bet. 41st and 42d Sts. Tel. 1730 Bryant.
TO LET FOR
Balls, Receptions, Entertainments,
Weddings, Parties and Rehearsals
H. N. Semansky, Prop. Thor White, Mgr
Under New Management Newly Fitted
Jan 17-Lyr. Elevator Service Guaranteed
Before Renting Elsewhere
See our 3, 4 and 7-room, moderate rent,
houses, newly renovated, and are in good
condition. Half month rent free. See faq-
tion on premises, 245 240 West Glast street,
or GEO. C. WASHINGTON. Jan 17-8m. Apr 24-21m.
FLUSHING, February 29. Miss Emily Jackson of Grove street, is seriously ill, having been confined to her bed several weeks.
Miss Fanny Spencer who was taken suddenly ill last week is improving.
Mrs C. T. Smith and Mrs Rachel Watson have recovered from la gripe. Mrs. Lillian Derrick, wife of Bishop W. R Derrick, has had a severe attack of throat trouble and confined to her bed for several days.
Miss Ecclina Williams has been able to take a short walk and has gone to her home in Westbury.
Bishop Derrick spent two days in Washington, D... last week
Rev, J. C. Brown, D. D. and his chair were at the Union A. M. E. church rally Sunday afternoon. Some of the young ladies are working eagerly to make the fair for the Odd Fellows February 26 a grand success.
The drama "Under a Cloud." will be given on the 8th of May.
The Jackson Clark molligh, which to
place at the residence of the bride's
parents, 80 State street, last Monday,
was a brilliant affair. The bride, Miss
Gussie Clark, received some very bande
some and valuable presents. Mr. Richard
Jackson, the groom, will make his home
with the bride's parents at Not State
street.
New Roebelle Noten.
Rev. W. A. Phillip of Row street, is
still confined to his room. Mr. and Mrs.
William Hemer, Mr. and Mrs. New
W York; Mr. and Mrs. Albert Porrese, and
Miss Bm. Wall of New Roebelle, co-
TO LET POR
Odd Fellows' Fair.
J. AIKEN MOVING VAN CO.
Licensed Plano Holding. Furniture removed to City or Country. Packing. Boxing. Shipping. Storage with care. Office, No. 1. W. 15th St. cor. Fifth Ave. New York
F. WIRE. Proprietor. nov 15 2s
Ta.phone 1798 Harlem
J. AIKEN
Former President of The Aiken Van Co.
has his office at 50 West 135th Street
Piano Holsting and
Furniture Removed
City or Country
Order Promptly Attended to
All Work Gratified
Dec 1 - 1 mo.
joyed a sleigh ride party Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. J. Howard Harper, of Avenue B. entertain a 10 a few friends Tuesday evening the 12th inst. Music and dancer were indulged in and an elaborate collation was served. Among Boston, Middleton, N. Ellis, Eula Fuhler, Carrie Brievant, Lance Iycons and Miss Anna Holman, Mussers Walter Fuhber, Fred Brown, Hugh Dutson, A. C. Motley, N. Ellis. Those on the sick list are: Mrs. J. S. Batek, and Mr. John Colbs, Mrs. R. A. Tilfordville, May street, has returned from Stanton, Va., where she sank in the river sick. Nah M. H. Murray, Lincoln's birthday with her/sister, Mrs. Bertha Snod in New York, Mrs. Eineke Coleman, spent Monday in Mamaroneck.
Dr. Kantner Dead in Liberia
A recent book reached this country of the death of H. C. Faulkner, M. D. D. P. D., who after several years as a practicing physician in Chicago, went out, in 1902, accompanied his wife, as the president of the Foreign Mission Board of the National Baptist Convention, for work in Africa. Dr. Faulkner died of pneumonia in Monrovia, H. C. Faulkner, M. D. D. P., he was one of the promoters resulting in the organization of the board of health, of which he was its secretary, and also appointed as the president of the appointed physician for Liberia College, and was also the companion's physician for the City of Monrovia, the capital of the republic. The officeature turned out in a body to pay the last tribute of respect at the funeral, Mrs. George D. Baptiste-Faulkner, wife of the deceased, has not yet returned to Africa, but his husband's death reached in Brooklyn.
115 WEST 97TH STREET
NEW YORK CITY
The leading House in the City. Per-
tained by the Traveling public from
the country. M. K. W
Allen, Ph.D. Proof.
Ag we journey through life let us live
by the way.
Phone, 5711 Madison Square.
THE AVONIA HOUSE
172 and 173. West 97th Street
Nearly Pursued Room, with all
modern conveniences. Post-room ap-
mediation by the day or week. Meals
served to order.
The Allen House
216 West 94th Street
Nearly furnished rooms for permanent
or transient guests. Meals served to
order. Quiet location; near four line-
of surface eaves and subway station.
MRS. P. B. WHITE.
jan 10-3m.
Prepistrone.
THE BRADFORD
90 West 14th Street, New York City
Nearly furnished rooms by the Dup,
Week or Month. First-classRestaurant attached.
With the prices consistent with the
quality of food dispensed.
REGULAR DINNER, 25 CHENTS
jan 2 3m.
John M. Bannsom, Prop.
Clantarf Cafe
AND
Restaurant
58 WEST 123d STREET.
Between Leazor and Fifth Avenues
Telephone 4577 Hariem.
CHOICE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS
Meals to Order.
WILLIAM HAMILTON, Prepistr.
dec 20 3m.
Nearly furnished rooms.
The Hotel Alpen,
EUROPEAN PLAN.
687 Seventh Ave, NEW YORK CITY.
Newly furnished and decorated. Modern improvements. Conceived by press travelers. The hotel has four travelers to stop while in New York.
Miss IRRENE JOHNSON.
nov 30 sm.
Proprietor.
New Maryland House
ENLARGED AND REMODELED.
108 and 200 West 91st Street.
Nicely Furnished Rooms by the Day.
Week or Month.
RESTAURANT ATTACHED
Meals at all Hours.
JOHN WALCOTT, Proprietor.
HOTEL MACEO,
218 West 58rd Street, N. Y.
First-Class Accommodations ONLY.
Handsofely Furnished Rooms for Permanent or Transient Guests. Headquarters of Clery and Bank.
First-Class Restaurant. Regular Dinner, including Wine. 6 p.m. to 8
Sundays. 1 to 8 p.m. m.
dec 6 3m.
BENJAMIN F. THOMAS, Prop.
HENRY HOUSE
Has Removed from 262 West 40th Street to
586 Seventh Avenue, near 41st Street.
Newly Furnished Rooms. First-Class Accommodation Only. For Permanent or Transient Guests.
Mrs. ANNIE HENRY, Proprietress.
dec 6-3 mo.
Between 7th and 8th Avenues
Handsets. Furnished Rooms. First-
class Accommodation. For Bither Permanent or Transient Guests.
MRS. L. D. LAWS, Prop.
dec 20-3m
WILSON HOUSE
214 and 216 West 21th Street, N. Y.
IHOTEL
Fifty Handsets. Furnished Rooms with heat, bath and all coooven/enches; by the day, week or month.
Fineest rooms in New York, 31 per day.
jan 24-3m.
FRANK C. MOIRES, Prop.
354 W. 36th St. near 51st Ave.
BOSTON PLAN. NEW YORK
FINE ARTS ACCOUNTING.
Prompt and courteous education. Moderate
Location convenient. The patronage of
either Permanent or Transient guests
spectfully solicited. E. JOHNSTON,
mov 2-Smoo.
Astoria Restaurant and Dining Room
Good food, quick service, moderate rates.
Regular dinner, 23 cents; from 1.80 to 6
pence.
W.M. FOREMAN AND ALEX FOOLL
Feb 14.3m. Propristion
ANDERSON HOTEL
CAFE AND RESTAURANT
790 & 792 Fulham St., Brooklyn.
Nearly furnished Rooms for Permanent or
Transient Guests.
Remodeled and under new management.
Ball room attached. Musical entertainment
every evening from 8 p.m. to 10 o'clock.
CHARLES F. ANDERSON, Propristion
May 10-19
Ted. 2000 L Harlem
HOTEL PRESS
Formerly Walker House, 19 and 21 West 185th street, New York. First-class room, by the day or week. Cash connected. Large porters to let for reception, dec 20 3m. J. H. PRESS, Manager.
Telephone Connection.
NRS. SALENA H. NALL
Boarding and Lodging House
316 West 31st Street
Convenient location. Price $50 a west and upward. All the comforts of home without its expense.
The room is well equipped to spend its 24 light and airy rooms and 1 Room by the day or week. Meals at moderate price.
Tel: 1873 Col.
BUNDY HOUSI
107 West 63d Street
Bul. Columbus and Amph.
First-class Board and L.
Work or Health. At 61
Jew 94 Green.
Immigrated People and Diversified of Common Sense and the Bad Pressure. To the Editor of The New York Am: cahy theories for the betrayment of the Afro-American people have been introduced, in the last forty years, into our colleges and schools. And there is no reason why intelligent paraphrase should colleges before us witness a branch of our place of so many useful ideas. In the things that are taught in our schools this day, sensible and clear-minded thinkers than the indiscriminate production of human beings.
I talked with a woman some age who was just recovering from a blow given to her husband, who was a slave brute, with a knife in her arms and no food or air in her arms. That woman had never known anything but misery and poverty in all her marriages. Yet the property she ability to and fatherhood is criminal. Genderhood age means an effort to prevent parenthood ability of such. Were our men and women taught scientifically the importance of proper breast conditions after a few months of pregnancy, and degree create specimens of the Negro and degree cause to cumber the earth. There is one Negro of either sex, at the age of twenty, who would not shrink from the heat of the sun, and be the parent of a deformed, diseased, insane or criminal child.
Let us convince ourselves that good care can be governed scientifically, as plants and flowers are cultivated, and upon the parent the cause of birth is borne by the world will see the dawn of a new era and the birth of a new race. GERTRUDE NORTHWICK. Brooklyn, N. Y., February 18, 1907.
DOUBLE STANDARD OF MORALITY.
This Lady Thinks That What Is Good for Man Should be Good for Women. To the Editor of This New York Asc. Within recent years the union of the American people regarding the equality of sexes has undergone many changes. For a long time the mind of woman was thought to be so different from the mind of man that separate colleges were regarded as absolutely necessary for the highest welfare of the human family. Now the same institutions with men, have entered all the professions, and have proven their right to do so.
Notwithstanding the may changes that have taken place, there are yet moral standards, by which met, and women are certain things is right for unjust. A certain thing is right for man, but wrong for woman, or vice-versa. Occasionally it happens that a man is unjustly with a lady. He has never proposed to marry her, nor has he given her any reasons to think so. However, without witnessing someone to answer the question of 'breach of promise', this compelled to pay a large sum or a term of imprisonment. In the other hand, a woman may break a number of marriage engagements and the court would not accept a charge of breach of promise. She would have ridicule the man who attempted to take a woman to justice on this charge. It is that a woman may break hundreds of hearts unmolested, while a man may suffer the keenest misery for failure. do what might be expected of him? Sickness there is a double standard of morality.
A few months ago a woman was seen smoking a cigarette in the streets of or, of our cities. She was arrested and fled, and what thousands of men all boys allowed to do every day. We do not allow them to smoke. We enmitytally believe she should not. But why should she suffer thus, while thousands of men and boys go free? If the crime for woman to smoke in the streets is it not a crime for men and boys. This double standard not only exists in thearts of justice but also in society. When a woman steps over the lines of morality, society closes its doors against her. She accomplishes the act is perceived with unmolested. Braces and goes on unmolested. Why is not the associate in the crime her partner suffering? Because there is this double standard in morality. So she will be liable for this. As good women will ostracize from their circles bad women and still retaliate to the company of bad men, it will be victim of crimes of immorality. The Utopian day arrives that our future women will be the 'golden age', consider. Beady past, will then find its real direction the conduct of human beings. W. A. H.
rd. Conn., February 16.
NIE BONITA INSTITUTE
for Education Body Needed in
Louisiana-Agent Robinson.
Louisiana—Agent Robinson.
R. William Robinson, agent for the
federal and industrial Institute, Ronita,
who is now at 248 W. 32d street, in
interest of the school, among other
teachers to a representative of the New
NY Art.
"In the Boston Institute we are encouraging to drill boys and girls so that they can be well prepared to work well. A carpenter shop is needed at our schools. We also need $4,720 with help to pay a debt of that amount. Our students are encouraged to make their way, in life. In our schools we emphasize the truth, that the formation of character of more importance should be graded if I could get the attention of Greater New York turned to the need of education there, and a Christian education is the only power that will take a people of us. About 62.2 per cent, of the students need education, supervision, mentorship and mental darkness that is dense enough to be felt by all, educational advantages and facilities with which we are underinformed, but Christian thoroughly, in practice as well as in theory."
Thirty-two Mile Drive.
don't forget the Ellis's grand reception
d concert on the twenty-second at Columbus Hall on Washington street. The acerous Hartman and G. Burrus amount of
BEAUTIFUL HARTFORD WEDDING
Hardtown, Feb. 18—Miss Charlotte A Stearns and Mr. Ralph M. Green were united in marriage Wednesday evening. February 18 at the home of the groom's father; on Squire street by the Rev. Robert P. Wheeler. The bride was attired in brown brood cloth, waist of cream net, cluzy present to wish the happy couple much joy over the life of life, were Mr. Green, Porter and little daughter Ruth, Mr. and Mrs. George Manceo of Plaiashville, Mrs. Matthin, Mr. Louis Johnston and the Misses Laurinda Wilson, Hattie Rose, Sullivan and M. Adela Arnold. The groom's present Mrs. Edwin Knox Mitchell, one dozen German lines towels; Mr. and Mrs. George Wilson, tablecloth; Mus. Elizabeth Hunting, silver fruit spoon; Mus. James Deyo, pallow, Mrs. Mirea Johnston, Mrs. Mirea piece; Mr. Capelle Morris, chair; Mus. M. A. Arnold, linen scarf; Mr. and Mrs. Green will be at after February 28, at 14 Squire street.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Register entertained a crowd one evening last week. Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. Gadotone, of Philadelphi, who told the stories those songs were given by Mr. and Mrs. Jones.
Mr. Chua, Nelson, of Brook street, has suffered greatly from frostbite feet. He has Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Robinson, of Liberty street are happy in the birth of a little daughter. Ethel, born February 15. Numbered among the sick are Mr. Mager Thompson, of Huntley Place, Mr. Lucy Carr Brooks, Mr. William Franklin.
Mortgage Burning.
Prince Bay, Feb. 28.—The M. E. Zion church mortgage burning is to a M. E. Zion church State Island grounds were acquired by Mrs. Susan Walker, a daughter of Mr. Dawson, Landis, and purchased by Rev. Dawson. D. Dawson, the church was laid by Rev. Ownes. the basement was completed by Rev. W. T. Biddle, the inside of the church completed amounted to $88.00 with interest. Since I. B. Walter has been in charge he has raised and paid $88.00. In lieu of the mortgage $200.00. On Sunday, April 7th, the church will burn the mortgage, with the help of Bishop D. D. and the help of D. D. Hassan. There has also been purchased an acre of ground with two houses valued at the interest and principle of the houses $855.00 and repairs $66.00, with a total of $701.00 bought and paid on the parsonage. The grand awakening in our revival the white
Hishop Alexander Walters, D.D., who has been visiting and lecturing in different colleges, returned home Monday morning. Quarterly meeting services were held at Bethel A. Church, Hurricane pastor, preached in the morning. Presiding El or Pickney preached the baptismal service, followed by the holy sacrament was administered, at which service the ex-Presiding Elder, Rev. Sturge, preached. Liberal collection was taken at each service.
Meadams, M. R. Franklin, of Brooklyn,
Missouri, were pleasant callers at the home of Mr.
Alexander Walters, Sunday.
Alexander adored Layette Treshybrarian
Church, preparing for a great concert
Wednesday, February 20. They expect to
have violin, cello, grandson of Hon. Frederick
Douglas, Mrs. Fanny Dooglass, who is an excellent musician, will accompany
the concert grandson of Hon. Frederick
Mr. Henry Walters, father of Bishop
Alexander Walters, who is adibly impersonal.
The body of Mrs. Louise N. Croggins, of Ravenwood, L. I., was brought home last week by the Joy Lane Steamer Larchmont. She leaves a father and mother. Mrs. Joseph A. Leaves to Mina Alice Murcer at 387 Hamilton street. They will reside in New York. Mrs. Joseph A. Leaves to Mt. Glilead Baptist Church during Rev. L. I. Twibbly's absence. Mrs. Madison has gone to Richmond to attend a wedding. Mrs. Broble is visiting in New Rochelle.
Lincoln Memorial Exercises
Jersey City, Feb. 18—On Tuesday evening, the 12th, the Lafayette Presbyterian Church, held a memorial service for the appreciative audience attendant upon the Lincoln memorial exercise, under the auspices of the church, the Lafayette Mr. H. G. McCormick, H. G. McCormick, defunct "New Jersey Courier" president of the Lafayette, presided, reflecting great excellence surrounding and upon himself for his original methods in announcing the speakers and his general conduct of the program. Mr. McCormick was presented and in a masterly oratory effort carried his honors back to Gettysburg where Lincoln made his immortal "Gettysburg
After the condition of "Marching Through Georgia" by the chore, the film was directed by the popular physio, head of the local Lodge of Elks, and foreman of the management of his people, who impressed the gathering with anecdotes from the recollection of his wife, and urged upon all the good to be derived from reading the story of Lincoln's life. In appropriate and bottling terms, Mr. Randolph, the speaker of the evening, who spoke on "True Patriotism." A participant in this gifted woman; in clear and elquent terms she drew a distinct line between the two sides of the story, to the diving line in their enthusiasm and the spiritual and moral patriotism that characterized the actions of Abraham Lincoln. War; the speaker painted an impressive word picture of the present day tendency toward war; the speaker conditions that presented the full of ancient Babylon. Her statement of the truthfulness of the actions, can be used, not only to be treated as a ward, but as a man," was approved by vigorous and prolonged apprehension. She was the truthfulness of the ports' lines: "That lives of great men set before us in the past, and that skies Showing us that fame and honor. Await for those who strive to rise."
Rev W. E. Griffiths, D. J. the pastor,
remarks on "Lincoln in the
thinly remarks on "Lincoln in the
Georgetown, N.J.
Rev. L. F. Alston, pastor of the Winnipeg circuit of the A. M. Erie connection, visited on Wednesday. He said the thirty days could be spent building the building of the South Island Church that was demolished by the storm last fall. Also he mentioned that he is meeting with the pastor of the church he has audences attending of both races. Rev. J. B. Ford, pastor of the Black River, said his family from Wacomian their home, in the near future. They will reside on Black River. Franklin Johnson is now employed among the carpenters at Prospect on the Wacomian. He is dealing in oysters should he be required and ensure the required stamph which should be attached to the vessel from which the same is sold, a tax of four shucked oysters. The tax is not placed only on oysters as sold in the cities but those vended about the immediate velvety pickled from the creeks, are included.
Sliding Parties
Mrs. Charles Elmendorf, who has been very sick is consalecent. Diphtheria is very prevalent in the city. Mrs. Elmendorf was a little daughter Hazel died last week, are suffering, with the same disease. The members and congregation of St. Mark's A. M. Church in New York are so severe for the benefit of the church. Two sleighing parties given by the young people of this city met at Fisher, on Wednesday night, where all had an enchanted sleigh. The sleigh rider Mrs. Hattie West was one of the longest this season.
THE NEW YORK AGE: THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1907.
Mr. Evans: Does Not Think Noah was bitterly Sober—And Where Was Noah? To the Editor of Tus. New York As: In your issue of the 7th Inst., we noted an article by W. R. Whartley, from The Southern Americans, in which that gentleman discusses the question of "mixed blood" and its effect upon the negro. We agree that the question can easily be settled, if that gentleman would read the tenth chapter of Genesis. His argument is that the old African bellum argument in support of slavery, in an extended form.
God never said that Ham should be a servant to Shem and Japheth; Noah said "Canaan should be" a servant, etc. Now, Canaan should be "a servant," he has been drunk, and because Noah uttered this curse upon the innocent Canaan, who was not even there, it is evidence that he was not entirely sober then. He does not say a word about Ham. He does not say a word about disapproval of Noah's course in this matter, where all conscientious people who want to understand can see it. As in direct contradiction of the effect of Ham's curse and the added effect of Ham to instruct the same (good man though he was), the tenth chapter gives an account of how the Lord favored Ham, and his descendants. It says they became the most renowned men of their time, and of such cities as Nineveh, Babylon, etc. The Bible speaks of Nimrod—in fact, this man was so good and great that his name was on every tongue. The Bible says: "Wherefore it is said, Even as the mighty hunter before the Lord." It seems to me, judging from the Bible narrative, that Mr. Whatley has deducted everything but that which will suit his purpose and give power to him. Edw. H. EVANS, Petersburg, Va., February 13, 1807.
Palestine Rescue.
The officers: Edward H. Burney, president; Miss Lillie C. Gibson, vice-president; Miss Martha C. Gibson, vice-president; Miss Manning Woonch, secretary; Jos H. Humming, recording secretary. The committee of arrangements for the midwife childbirth of David D. Mason, treasurer; Miss F. E. Vodder, secretary; Mrs. Margaret Ramah, Miss Missie Miller, Elliah Hards and Thomas H. Walker. The man, Mrs. David D. Mason, presides the president and Mr. David D. Mason.
Dixie Show at Corning.
Corring, *Ling*, 20.-Mr., and *Mrs. Rowley*, of Watkins, are visiting their daughter, Tina, at the Thora avenue. Mrs. H. P. Proderickis is ill with Tonsillitis and fever. Albert Taylor, of Ruffalo, was in the hospital when calling on his brother, George Taylor.
Mrs. Brindley, of Lock Haven, Conn. is
seeking friends in this city and Daintier
Mr. John Demping, of Big Flats, was in
the city Monday on business.
the city Monday on business. Starks, Washington and Butler build a business museum. C.R.C. hall Monday evening. Washington is pastor of the A. M. E. Zion Church.
Better Treatment for the Frenchers.
From the Georgette Baulet
The Georgia Baptist congratulates the colored undertakers of Augusta upon the officiating ministers at funerals in farmhouses furnished for the family and poll bearers. Herefore they have been putting mindful murrares in burrows while others were put in carriages.
Place, Brooklyn.
DR. ELLARSON
Dr. Elliott has been carefully educated in the medical school. Dr Elliott's supervision is in the Bariatric, Anaesthesia, Asthma, Bone Eyes, Tumors, Cancer, Composition, Ague, Dyspnea, Cataract, Droopy, Piles, Nervous Debilitity, Heart Disease, Consumption, Disease of Homes, Children, Five Day Day Disease, Suburbitis, Suburbitis which others don't understand. All diseases, no matter what may be. Nothing can cure. Dr. Elliott will beseech you if you can be cured. Has all, new remedies and new treatments been tried? Are there public hospitals, and private clinics. No trifling with human life. Call at once. Do not visit. Do not harm in parlor. In a Registered Doctor.
Beware of a man going around cold buildings, and you may be in danger. Dr. Elliason is a woman, as you may see by her picture above, and does not have a barber office, 6 Putnam avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Is now, and always has been a true friend to the colored people, and has always been a friend to the poor. Please read the following: I want to Dr. Elliason when I was so sick I thought I should be a good friend to me made me feel like a new person. I am thankful to the Good Spirit that led me to be a good friend to give me such relief. Mam. Mary E. Hammond, 472 Hudson avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Dr. Elliason can show many such things that I am in doing so, to any who call at her office.
Hopeful cares, and those that other people are especially solicited to consult Dr. Elliason.
Office hours: 1 to 7 p. m. Also by as pointment. Sundays from 3 to 6 p. m.
CONSULTATION $1.00
HOW TO REACH DR. ELLARSON
Take Potamn avenue car at the Brooklyn Bridge, op the New York side. Get off at Ormond Place, Brooklyn, and walk down to the fourth house, 88 Potamn avenue.
TO LET
Apartments of three and four rooms, also one large room suitable for office or business purposes at 8 Sherwool avenue, Yonge Street, Inquire of The United Afre-Reality Company.
JOHN L. DIAMOND.
feb 14-4t. Agent.
Elegant Apartments, 111 and 113 East 100th street, steam heat and hot water supply, $125 to $149 Apply to Janitor on premises.
Tel.: 2743 Madison, fb 14-38
A fit-stress private house, everything up-to-date, steam heat, bath, hot and cold water, elephone, message boxes, electric chair, fridge, fireplace, 28 West 40th street, New York City
Sunday School Organized.
SUNY, February 20. Regular services were held at M. Olivet Baptist church on the Lord's day. Breaching both morning and evening classes, Sunday school was held in the afternoon at 3 o'clock at which the regular organization of the school took place under the supervision of the minister, church. elected Superintendent, H. Hilton, assistant superintendent, Miss Katherine Daggs; secretary, Alonzo Johnson; assistant secretary, Miss Edna Wayland; librarian, Miss Elizabeth W. Barker; Miss John Williams; pianist, Mrs. Emily J. Johnson; treasurer, Mrs. Alda Van Rankin Teachers Rev. A. T. Johnson, Mrs. J. Hilton, Mrs. Elizabeth Branch, Mrs. Alda Williams, and Mrs.
Mrs. George B. Adams has furnished the kitchen for Mrs. R. B. Adams, the following person have donated shades for the windows of the church: Mrs. Alda Van Rankin, Mrs. lethi Brooks, Mrs. Van Rankin, Mrs. Gaines, Mrs. Fannie Taylor, Mrs. E. Eps, Mrs. Sule Holmes, and Mrs. Eva Spencer. Mrs. Gaines, Mrs. Fannie Taylor, Mrs. E. Eps, and Mrs. Sule Holmes, and Mrs. Eva Spencer, all teamed a reception and banquet to the Household of Ruth, 620, in their hall, 30 long table was set for forty couples. Post pandual speeches followed the serving of the menu and all enjoyed a can good old fashioned meal. The charging charge of the affair were: Messrs. H. C. Coleman, Wayman Derrick and Cornellus H. C. Coleman, Wayman Derrick and Cornellus H. C. Coleman, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Hilton, Mr. and Mrs. Wayman Derrick, Mrs. H. C. Coleman, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Hilton, Mr. and Mrs. Wayman Derrick, Mrs. H. C. Coleman, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Hilton, Mr. and Mrs. William Tucker, Mr. and Mrs. James White, Mr. and Mrs. Cornellus Springs, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Brooks, Mr. and Mrs. William Tucker, Mr. and Mrs. James White, Mr. and Mrs. Cornellus Springs, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Williams, Mrs. M. E. McGill and others, Mr. H. A. Wayman asked to assemble Eliza Hurd, at her residence, last Tuesday evening, for the benefit of the shaking fund of the attended, and enjoyed the evening. Miss N. B. Dawson has returned from the interpolate where she has been attending a sister who is much improved in health.
Frederick Fortune as a Huddling Orator
Sunday afternoon, at St. Mark's Lycum,
bar of schools and colleges in and around
New York were represented. The occasion
was a brief introduction in the occasion to
the large and apprehensive audience. The
programme was in the hands of Mr. Chloe-
cock, the executive programme began with the hymn "America." The opening address was delivered
by the University Law School. Other schools
and colleges represented were an follows—
John D. Jones, an associate of DeWitt Clinton High School; Frederick Fortune, son of the editor
of "New York Age," who represented
Patton Business College, and Henry Allen, who delivered an address to the samples of President Robi-
son, or the old administration.
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BRAD WHAT A CUSTOMER
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S. Rosensteck, 7th avenue and 41st street; E. J. Ward, 59th street and 9th avenue; Cbn. E. Franks, 2204 5th avenue; W. B. Riker's Stores; Hogman and Co.'s stores; J. and J. F. Grotta, 27th street and 6th avenue; L. P. Kupp, 36th street and 9th avenue; F. K. James, 44th street and 9th avenue; Glbian, 42d street and 8th avenue; Colp. 209 Bleecker street; F. W. Kinneman and Co.'s Drug Stores, 8th avenue and 39th street. Brooklyn, Riker's Drug Stores. Jersey City, Eugene Harknett, Newark, Menk's Drug Store.
I want good agents. Write for prices. Address.
D. ROBERTS
243 West 14th Street, NEW YORK
CARNEGIE LYCEUM, 7th Ave. & 57th St.
HAYES PRYOR
PRESENTS THE COMEDY DRAMA
THURSDAY EVENING
.FEBRUARY 28, 1907.
SUPPORTED BY THE FOLLOWING CAST:
Dora Cole, Rebocca Porter,
Cecil Foote, Archibald Thomas,
Rosalie Lewis, Thomas Mosceley.
Tickets on sale at Miss Dora Cole's residence, 102 West 136th street. Jan 24-5t
Dentistry
Dr. James A. Banks
SURGEON DENTIST
318 West 59th Street, New York
Telephone 5622 Columbus.
Gas Administered. Porcelain. Crown and
Bright Work Specialty. Two years with
Dr. D. C. White.
dec 20 3m
Telephone, 1622-W Prospect
DR. L. J. DELSARTE
DENTIST
727 Fulton Street, BROOKLYN, N. Y.
Office Hours: 9 a. m. to 6 p. m.
Sundays by appointment.
mar 8 1yr
Fel. 2818 Prospect. Gas Administered
Dr. Walter N. Beekman
SURGEON DENTIST
728 Fulton Street
Near Adelphi, BROOKLYN, N. Y.
Office Hours: 9 a. m. to 6 p. m.
SUNDAY BY APPOINTMENT.
O'FARRELL'S
410 and 412 Eighth Avenue
Near 11th Street. NEW YORK CITY
FURNITURE, CARPETS, BEDDING, ETC.
FRANK DONNATIN
Oldest and most reliable store in the City nov 18-19
The Brooklyn Branch of the
Metropolitan Mercantile and Realty Company
IS NOW IN THE
JEFFERSON BUILDING
4 COURT SQUARE
Near Pulton street, Brooklyn.
Telephone 6538 Malin.
Our plan leases a specified co-operation
Stockholders everywhere. You will be met
on the level and treated on the square.
I. L. MOORMAN, Superintendent.
dec 27-8m.
Telephone 3663 Harlem.
BENJ. G. HOWELL
Real Estate Agent and Broker
14 West 19th Street
Managing colored tenements and lowering
rents a mile away. I am aware of
money's worth. Private houses to let.
Jan 10-8t
Three of a Kind.
From The San Francisco Chronicle.
"Willard, you may define nulness."
"New cents is like other copperes, teacher, only they is brighter."
"My Ellen, let me hear you define nulness."
"New cents is fancy kinds of perfume whan ailt Floridia watter or Jockey Club."
"Now, Charron, let me see if you can describe nulness."
"New cents is where you learn a lot more you knowed before. People wat board in Berkeley get lots of new sense."
CONSULT
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CLAIRVOYANTS
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We can tell you all this and more:
How can I have good luck?
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How can I conquer my enemies?
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How can I retrieve all of me?
How can I settle my quarrel?
How can I hold my husband's love?
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How can I keep my husband's love?
Ne charge if not satisfied when reading
J. B. WOOD
PETER B.
Largest of its kind controlled by our people.
Appointments made by correspondence or telephone.
Address 323 West 526 Street, New York
Telephone 1956 Columbus. jan 31 1-19.
MME. ANN E. OGDEN -ROSS
PLANO, ORGAN AND SIGHT READING.
Special attention given to Techniques and
Finding Value, $8 per quarter. More $ per
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The New York Age
$1.50 THE YEAR
The Colored American Magazine
and The Age, $2.00
Address FORTUNE & PETERSON
4 Cedar St., New York
TUCKER'S
Houses and lots for sale in city and suburbs. Also fruit and poultry farms for all sizes, very cheap. Entrees taken in charge. Bents collected. Flats to let at reasonable prices.
THOMAS TUCKER, Gen. Mgr.,
2134 Madison Avenue, S. W. corner.
Telephone con.: 4405 Harlem. Jan 17-8
WHITE ROSE
WHITE ROSE
Between Second and Third Avenues.
Fleasant temporary lodgings for working
glasses with plastic handleable rails.
The Home solitary orders for working
dresses, aprons, etc. Address
MRS. VICTORIA EARL MATTHEWS,
Superintendent.
MRS. FRANCES REYNOLDS KEYEN.
Ass. Superintendent.
age 30
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GBORGE A. BRAMBILL, Ladies' and
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Doers and Talkers.
1. But be so dearest of the word, and not heavens only, downing your own salve.
2. For if any be a hearer of the word, und not a doer, be is like a man beholding his natural face in a glass:
3. For be beholdeth himself, and gobeth his way, and straightway forgetteth what manner of man he was.
4. But whoo looketh into the perfect law of liberty, and continueth therein, be being not a forgettell hearer, but a door of the work, this man shall be blessed in his deed.—(Sr. JAMES I., 22 25.)
---
The After American's Politics
In the last issue of THE AGE we reproduced from The New York Evening Post an article by its Washington correspondent on "The Race Used as Pawns in the Political Game," which covers much of the ground, complaint, anger, what not, which has been gone over, and will be gone over from time to time, by others, with opinions about it colored as their interests may dictate at the time. But in this whole question the Afro-American voter has an abiding and not a transient interest; the conditions of American politics are not and have not been such as to allow him to do as he often wished; it has been and is his sleeps aim to keep the vile Southern Democracy out of power in the nation. He has regarded this as his supreme duty, nob that he loved the Republican party or was blind to or ignorant of its coldness and indifference, often of its deliberate sacrifice of his rights and interests, but because he would give his hereditary enemy no aid and comfort. The Evening Post's correspondent, among other things, said:
Viewed from this angle the very solidarity of the Negro in politics is a source of weakness instead of strength. His pledge in this respect is analogous to that of the eleven Southern States which have lost much of their political prestige because of the foreknowledge that they will always go Democratic whoever the candidate or whatever his qualifications.
So long as the Negro remains a docile unit in the Republican party he will be at the mercy of aspiring and ambitious politicians who will use him as a stepping stone to higher things, and having used him, will pass on without turning, leaving it to his successors to do the same thing. When exigency of occasion demands, the Republican distribute politically eminent the Negro. They will present fully repatriated him to the services he has rendered either as a voter or as an issue. It has come to be that the Republican party is under deeper obligations to the Negroes in its ranks than the Negroes as a class are to the Republican party.
Whatever has been the case in war times when the Emancipation Proclamation was signed, the Republican party of to-day is not held together by a common love of great moral principles. The present Republican party is a business machine and worships success as its god. It is organized and conducted to win elections. Its sense of discipline is strong; the individual must give way to the organization. To bring about a split in the party is counted the gravest form of treason. President Roosevelt, with all his striking out at abuses and freedom from control, has almost a morbid fear on this score. The Negro is used like any other cog in the machine, but the point is that he has not been "greased" so often and so lavishly as some of the other cogs. If the so-called Negro vote was an independent factor, its constituent individuals voting according to their principles and beliefs, and as each one of them saw the light, it would be sought for and catered to like the "Irish vote." "German vote." "Scandinavian vote." and "Polish vote."
We understand as well as The *Evening Post* correspondent that our allegiance to the Republican party has been a source of race weakness from one point of view, but the object aimed at has been accomplished, as he states himself, in making the Democracy of the Southern white enemy a minority force in the politics of the nation. As long as the Solid South, based upon unpopulation of the rights of Afro-Americans, remains, we shall have a Solid North and West, and as long as that is so the white South will suffer for its outrages upon human rights by exclusion from domination in the affairs of the Government and participation in the positions, high honor in the foreign and & service. One
THE NEW YORK AGE: THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1907.
of the same progeny which the Afro-American party has held in New York and which may now be appointed President Roosevelt, in the meeting down of the established party, rule by appointing Democrats to high positions in the foreign and domestic service. Let Democrats remain out of office until their party triumphs at the polls. When a President ignores this rule be forfeited the confidence of not only his Afro-American partisans but of his partisans of all races. When the voters of this country want Democrats to hold high positions in the foreign and domestic service they will elect a Democrat as President. Theodore Roosevelt has ignored this rule, and it has done more than any other policy of his to demoralize the Republican party and to weaken the faith in him of the great body of citizens who voted for him, among other things, to keep the Democrats out of positions in the foreign and domestic service. Is it not a party scandal that a majority of the Civil Service Commissioners, for instance, are Democrats? Of course. And why should Afro-Americans be kept out of the familiar service to please the scandalous hards of Southern Democrats in it? And why should favors in the military service be prostituted to like purpose?
There is another aspect of the subject in acting with the Republican party, as a mass, ever since their enfranchisement the Afro-American voters have acted with a majority of the American electorate, and helped to make possible to the country those policies in war and in peace which have made this country great in politics and in commerce. They are a part of the great body of citizens who helped to crush the slave Rebellion and to drive Spanish tyranny from the North American continent; who helped to make the financial credit of the country among the best in the world, by supporting the policies which made for a gold standard of values and by preventing the parties which have advocated greenback and sixteen-to-one heresies since from gaining control of the Federal machinery of government; who helped to develop the agricultural, forest and land resources of the country beyond the dreams of fabulists and to cover the globe with our commerce, the surplus products of loom and field and mine, making our prosperity the marvel of mankind; standing steadily with those who advocated such an economic policy as would best stimulate the growth and expansion of our resources and commerce. They have stood with the greatest thought and the wisest efforts of the Republic for a half a century, while the Southern whites have stood in opposition, and would have, had they sufficient power in the Government, given the Republic a divided country, a base currency, an economic policy which would have filled the land with souphouses and a Treasury deficit of $250,000,000, as was the case after the Free Trade Message of President Cleveland in 1877, and would have placarded the land with infamous class legislation and strife, as they have done in every Southern State. Are the Afro-Americans to have no credit from friends or foes for this, the highest service that a voter or a body of voters can render to their country? Are they to be jibbed and smeared at, by friends and foes, for doing the very things in their voting which are regarded as the pride and the glory of the Republic, in peace and war? It looks that way, and it makes us very tired to be lectured by upstarts about it in a captious and malicious way. Such lectures are an insult to the best and a vast majority of the American people.
There have been but two parties in this country since the War of the Rebellion. All the other alleged parties have been impossibilities—the Prohibition party, the Greenback Labor party, the Populist party, the Socialist party—impossibilities which only a few people regarded seriously. A few Afro-Americans went after Wade Hampton in the Reconstruction period, but he deceived them; a few went after Watson and his Populist humbug, and he turned upon them; a few went after Grover Cleveland, among them the writer, and in his old age, with ambition to retire from private life still strong upon him, he swore he never was their friend, while one of his best Cabinet Secretaries has turned the dagger to their threats. But the great mass of the Afro-American voters have been instinctively, if not ratiocinatively, opposed to the Democratic party and leadership, because they felt it in their bones that they were opposed to them and their rights as men and citizens, and have, therefore, voted with the Republican party as the surest safeguard against Democratic villainy and treachery.
But William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt, as the vile R. B. Hayes before them, have done much to shake their faith in the wisdom of sticking to the Republican party in the future.
Is the Japanese Question Settled?
It is accepted throughout the country that the Japanese question has been satisfactorily settled, as the outcome of the several conferences of the Washington authorities with the representatives of California, with Mayor Schmidt, of San Francisco, as the stormy petrel, under indictment for graft, who may have to serve a term in the penitentiary. It is a new chapter in the history of the Republic to have high questions of state settled by conference of the President of the United States and the Secretary of State with an indicated leader of grafters.
The terms of the settlement appear to be that Japanese children will be admitted to the schools of San Francisco on equal terms with American children and the children of other foreigners, in consideration of the exclusion of Japanese laborers from the United States and the exclusion of American laborers from Japan. Americans are not bit hard by this exclusion plan, as very few of them are laborers in Japan, or would labor there for any other purpose than to get away, the Japanese scale of wages being fixed on the Japanese scale of living which is beyond the ability of any American to adapt himself to, and is but a shade higher than the Chinese scale. So
in the settlement the Japanese gain the point they have expanded for, but applaud an advantage which is enjoyed to the full by all of the white races of Europe. It is said in explanation that the Japanese Government does not want its laborers to come to the United States; it wants them to go to Korea and Manchuria, which were acquired by Japan as one of the outcomes of the war with Russia. From our point of view, the exclusion of Japanese immigrants from the United States, when Europeans are allowed to come here, is as much a discrimination on account of race as exclusion from the white schools of San Francisco, and that the Japanese, in gaining one point, lose another of just as vital importance.
But the question of discrimination against people on account of race and color has been brought up in the United States, which has a vital interest in the trade of the Far East, which cannot be whistled down the road, in such an influential way as to make no settlement of it not based in absolute justice out of the question. This may not be attained for the present, but a principle of right, whether domestic or international, is never settled until it is settled right. History discloses so much. And it is already amped from Tokyo, by way of Europe, that the Japanese Government has not subscribed to the principle of the exclusion of Japanese laborers in exchange for concession of the principle involved in the San Francisco dispute. That the Southern Senators should line up against the Japanese, as they do against the Chinese and Africans, really shows how undemocratic the contention is and what must be the final outcome of it.
American prejudice based in race and color is doomed to eat grass on its belly.
Governor Hughes for President.
The newspapers and the politicians have begun to sit up and take note of Governor Charles E. Hughes, of New York, as a Presidential factor. They do well to do so. Governor Hughes is not a politician, but a plain citizen of large experience in the practice of the law and civic affairs, who believes in the enforcement of the law, whatever the character of the offenders may be. The chances are that he will grow in the estimation of the President-makers from now on, and that his may be a name to conjure by to confuse certain influences at work to control the nomination which bode no good to the country or to the Republican party.
Secretary Taft and Vice-President Fairbanks loom large, but it looks as if they will be unable to command the support of their States in the convention, and no man will be nominated who cannot do that. Secretary Shaw is strong in his own right and in his position in the West and will make a good showing in the convention; but it seems to us that the tug-of-war will come between Joseph Benson Foraker, of Ohio, and Charles E. Hughes, of New York.
What Lincoln May Have Done.
Governor Warfield, of Maryland, is no prophet; he can neither see before nor after. In his Lincoln Day address at Pittsburgh he said:
"Lincoln would never have sanctioned the indiscriminate enfranchisement of the Negro, nor approved of the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments, nor authorized the plundering and outrages of the situation period. It was not the elevation of the Negro to a social or political equality with the white man that Lincoln advocated. It was the institution of slavery that he disapproved. There is a physical difference between the white and black faces which I believe will forever forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality."
As Lincoln had not defined himself on any of these great questions, how can Governor Warfield declare what he would have done? He would have been governed by the exigencies of the times. But this is dend sure, that he would have put down the Ku-Klux Klan and kindred organizations of Southern assassins with an iron hand, even as he had put down the Slave Rebellion.
A man was lynched in sight of the executive mansion, at Annapolis, recently, while Governor Warfield kept, and the murderers have not been apprehended. Does Governor Warfield imagine that Lincoln, as Governor of Maryland, would have stood for anything like that?
Social equality is not the thing; equality under the laws is the thing.
Ten Irishmen, who rotten-egged a play in Brooklyn because it bursed Irish life, were bound over to the Grand Jury in $300 ball for their zeal. Very good. But the chances are that the offensive play will be taken off the boards. Plays that maliciously burlesque or degrade any part of the citizenship, or tend to create riot and confusion, should be prohibited by the municipal authorities; and when they refuse to do it it will sometimes lead to more talk, rotten eggs, overripe vegetables, and perhaps to violent collisions. Afro-Americans have determined that in Lemon plays like "The Clansman" must peaceably be tooooooible, but that they must be as well. It will be so. Let Tom Dixon, the razor-faced man, take to the pulpit again and present the doctrine of "peace on earth, good will to men."
A penny saved is a penny made.
A Chinaman educated in the United States, "for ways that are dark in piety," as Bert Hart long ago celebrated in a song. One of them in California recently got a check for $ from some one in Kentucky. He promptly raised it to $8,000, managed to exchange it for a draft for $8,000 on Hong Kong, and then made for the Pteroy Kingdom and got the draft cashed before the deception was discovered. And now the detectives are hunting for him all over China. A Japanese recently collected the potato crop of the Pacific Coast, and in all of the States of the Pacific the Chinaman and Japanese show themselves shrewd business men on the one hand and good rascals on the other.
General Kuropatkin, the commander in chief of the Russian army in the Russo-Japanese war, has written a history of the war, supposedly to show why he got whipped in every engagement. He shows that the material with which he had to fight was no good, from the War Office in
St. Petersburg to the common soldier in the field. Before we had this explanation we were unable to understand General Kuropatyn's tertition, in which bases of retreat were pronounced feature. Indeed, he had a base of retreat for every emergency." The general who makes such provision always encourages the army and demoralises his own forces. The best fighters have had no bases of retreat, except in their mind.
If the Southern delegates to the next National Republican Convention prove purchasable it will prove that the white ones are no good, as they now boss the job.
It is a remarkable circumstance that the Afro-Americans of Mississippi have shown more commercial spirit than those of any other State. They control more business enterprises and have more banks than the Afro-Americans of any other State, and they have the strongest State organization of the National Business League. Mr. Charles Bana, of Mound Baye, the vicepresident of the Business League and cashier of the Mound Baye Bank, with the other wide-awake men and women of the State, deserve well of the Afro-American people all over for the splendid example they have set. And the Afro-Americans of Richmond who have four banks and all sorts of business enterprises may also deserve well of their fellows. Let the business spirit among us spread; let it be with us as it is with the Jews in this respect of captains of cash.
The case of Senator Smoot of Utah in the Senate, Harry K. Thaw in the courts and the automobile in the newspapers are things that the average newspaper reader is tired of.
Governor Edward C. Stokes is a statesman with a future. He could have succeeded Senator Dryden if he had been a common politician. But he declared that he was elected by the people to serve them as Governor, and that he would serve them to the end of his term, as he could not be elected Senator unless he should reign as Governor. Mr. Frank O. Briggs, who got the election, is a capable man, and the chances are that he will show up strong as a working force in the Senate. Governor Stokes has the confidence of the people and the politicians of his State, because he is capable and honest, and because he is no changling. When he is free to accept the Senatorship we think he can have it. If he wants it.
The last report of Mr. Fred, R. Moore, the organizer of the National Negro Business League, shows that there are now in existence 441 active loyalties, 31 banks and 82 drug stores. The August meeting of the League at Topeka, Kan., promises to be great.
Who shot up Brownsville—the Mexican greasers, who seem most to inhibit it, or the black soldier, whose lives were made a burden by the greasers and other toughs of the stinking sink? The Senate Committee on Military Affairs, which is investigating the incident, has so far brought out no evidence that does not tend to show that the soldier did not do it. If this should be the verdict, what will become of the President's Order of Discharge?
An Italian who went South to pick cotton has just used the New York contractor who got him the job and sent him to Mia Malsiapal, for $25,000. He says he received just $1 for six months' work, an dhad to put up with all sorts of privations, discomforts, hardships and what nots. And down in Kemper County, Mia Malsiapal, the dear poor white trash do not want Italian children to attend the white schools. How does the South expect to get and keep foreign immigrants when the people who are there are treated as dogs are in their labor and wage relations? The Southern white man has a great many things to learn about certain things which he does not appear to be studying at all.
An army of men and women swooped down on the Capitol in Washington last week to urge Congress to pass a law which will prohibit the sale of liquor in the District of Columbia. The Blue Ribbons should be too wise to carry coals to New Castle. The Senator or Representative who does not hit the bottle is a rare bird, and people usually vote the way they drink.
Helicon Hall, a community affair started by Upton Sinclair, the author, gets more newspaper space of a sensational sort than should fall to the lot of a well-regulated experiment of community living. You can only get into Helicon Hall by natural selection, but we judge from what we have read about the thing in the newspapers that we would rather keep out of it than get into it.
The Governor of Maryland.
From The Baltimore Afro-American Ledger
Two of the chief characteristics of the
present Governor of Maryland is that he
is a very fine looking old gentleman, and
has the distinguished honor of being president of one of the largest bonding companies in this country. He is a real little darling, and dresses as neat as a sixteen year old lassie. He loves to praise the old-time "hefo" de wah darkey," which thanks to his kindly posing away, a way he could tell of his black my," and "Old Uncle Joe," but has very little use for the present day Afro-American.
Lincoln's Birthday
Burton, Iowa, Feb. 18. The Young Men's Christian Association celebrated the anniversary of Lincoln's birthday with an annual service at the First Congregational church. The speaker paid a high tribute to the worth and character of the great commander and said that his memory lives to every poor man a heritage of hope.
IN THE PUBLIC EYE
JOHN W. THOMPSON,
of Rochester, N. Y. Built the Douglas Monument of Rochester. Treasurer of the National Afro-American Council since 1880. Member of the Monroe County Republican Committee.
HOT POLITICS SIZZLE
IN THE BLUE GRASS COUNTRY
Afro-American Veterans Set Their Faces Against Two Judges and Favor a Third—They Mean Business and Something Must Drop.
LOUISVILLE, Ky., February 15—The independence of the Afro-American voters in political affairs in this State asserted itself yesterday, before the State Central Republican Committee, which met in this city to arrange for the nomination of a State ticket to be voted on in November. Led by the valiant Dr. E. E. Underwood, of The Blue Grass Bugle, and W. A. Gaines, an catechile Federal office holder and National Grand Master of the United Brothers of Friendship, they set it be known positively and firmly that under no circumstances could the votes of the race be depended upon to support the Republican ticket if either Judge Ed. C. O'Rear of Montgomery County or Judge A. R. Burham of Madison County, were placed in nomination for Governor. Both the gentlemen were strong possibilities for the place.
Animus is directed against the judge in particular because of certain positions taken by them separately on opinions handed down by the Court of Appeals affecting the rights of Afro-Americans, when each was a member of that court, and particularly the offense is more recent and particularly the offense is out of his way in the Berea College matter, in deciding simply the legal and judicial phase, as to drag the social aspect prominently before the public and insult the black people of the State. The insult is couched in the most perfect English, and if he was attempting to parade his knowledge of that language, he succeeded in minimizing it in arousing the undying enmity of every Afro-American in the State of Kentucky. Note his language:
"The separation of the human family into races distinguished no less by color than by temperament and other qualities is as certain as anything in nature. Those of us who believe that all of this must always ordered, have no doubt of the wisdom of the ancients, and we are unable to say with assurance why it is so. Those who see in it only nature's work, may also conceive that in this order, as in all others in nature, there is unmerging justification. There exists in each race a homogeneity by which it will be judged, and in each race a territorial. Its instinct is gregarious. As a check, there is another, an antipathy, to other races, which some call race prejudice. This is nature's guard to prevent amalgamation of the races. A disregard of this antipathy to the point of judgment is another, an antipathy, and begins a resentment in a normal mind. If, then, he continues, "it is the legitimate exercise of the police power of the government to prevent the mixing of the races in cross-breeding, it would seem to be equally within the same power regulated that character of association which permits the resentment of the sideterm, the purity of racial blood."
Just why the learned Chief Justice felt called upon to inject all this nonsense into his opinion has never been determined, and particularly aroused the use of the Afro-Americans, because the opposition to the bill prohibiting the attendance of both races upon the same school was not only because the judge had been socially with white students, but that they might receive the benefit of the superior training afforded at Beresa. No one has ever heard of the courtship of students of opposite colors at Beresa, or of any after-effects of such association. The Afro-Americans have determined, however, that the same "divinity" of the separation of the races, ordered likewise that he should never be Governor of Kentucky.
The Afro-American voters of Kentucky realize that the chances of Republican victory were never brighter. Kentucky realizes that it is a too progressive State to be linked politically with the pernicious Solid South. To get rid of the obnoxious company, black voters must be respected. This seems to be the one time when they can get just about what they want.
They are as much opposed to Mr. Burnham as to Mr. O'Rear. He, it will be remembered, was a member of the Court of Appeals when the constitutionality of the Jim Crow Car Law was called into question, and with Judges in the Court of Appeals and Judges B. L. Duffy, all Republicans, upholding the law. Thus it will be seen that Republicans decided the law in favor to "the culled population" and have never been forgiven for it. A man suitable to this particular branch of the log cabin markers seems to be found in the person of Judge Burnham, a county that is overwhelmingly Republican and where the Afro-American voters elist whom they please. Judge Breaththt, of Christian County, represents an ideal candidate. Our people claim that they do not want a man who claims to be a
particular friend to the black man, and like T. R. will gush over him one minute and crush him to the earth the next. clim that the man who is an overly since deceased the Afro-American be about as dangerous as a man who is their enemy. What they want, and say they want, is a man who, regardless of race or color, feels and is competent to administer justice, does not, in his feeble mortal strength, reckon with the divinity in matters respecting black citizens. As to whether or not Judge Breathitt is his kind of a man must be left to the African-American with whom he has associated in political affairs for years and to whom he owes the debt of many a victory. That they realize that their cause is safe in his hands, is attested by the fact that they have suffered often and have never found him wanting.
The most difficult job before the Republican voters of the State, however, is to convince Judge Breathitt that for the good of the party he should consent to the vote of the party. He will consent for the good of the party and there is no doubt of the course he will pursue. Harmony before the convention, harmony in the convention, insuring a harmonious campaign, is to insure Republican victory. If his nomination comes from the party, he will of the politician will not want the will of the party to convention, then the choice will be Judge Breathitt and he will be sure to win. Just at present the Judge is non-committal, and it is difficult to ascertain from his closest friends if he will
depending on the nominee. But on one thing, the party leaders can convince a strong man who can command of all sides and shades of the file of the party, and the size of the party, be only the matriarch. The Republican cannot hope to win without the vote. The acquisition of that shade of ballot markers is an question with either O'Rearham. As far as the Afro-American concerned, it is "Zionism" them tite HORACE.
ALABAMA CONVICT SYST
President Shirley Condemns
Strongest Term
From The New York Sur
According to President Shirle
of the Alabama Board of Insp
Convicts, the system under which
lawbreakers are leased to labor no
rate contract is now
than ever before in its history. The
mand for labor in the mines is so g
that most of the convicts go to them
work for which many are entirely un
If the leased convict falls ill he is
likely to get the attention his condit,
may require. Mr. Bragg puts the matt-
blush. If the State wishes to kill its conv
icts it should do it directly, and no
indirectly.
The Legislator who would introduce bill providing the death penalty for minors offences would be looked on as a man man, yet the practice of leasing convicc amounts, in more than a few cases, to the offenders. The legislature demands the violators of its laws to confinement and to such labor as a contract wants done, not such as the convict capable of performing. Mr. Bragg wants to have the system changed and a refor in the treatment of criminals begun. The prosecutors sentenced to the penitentiary, those whose terms were under six months hired in the county of their conviction He says: "I am well aware of the fact that they would add additional cost to the State would add this cost to the State the proper treatment is accorded those poor defenceless creatures, many of whom ought never to have been arrested and tried at all." Conditions are not worse in Alabama than they are in other convict-leased States. The indictment of one might any other, the proper change is any other. The system is unjust to victim and to society.
ITALIANS MUST STAY AT HOME
Government Becoming Alarmed On Depopulation and Lack of Laborer Special (able Dispatch to the New York St. Rome, February 13—Recent statistic show that Italy's population for the five years has been gradually decrement. In several of the provinces which I push the largest contingents of emigrants out to the already outnumber the 1920s while others the population is stationary. The lack of laborers is felt everywhere throughout the country. Emigration considered to be the main cause of depopulation. Hence the Government instead of encouraging it as heretofore intends to adopt restrictive measures.
A Philadelphia Loan Association
From the Philadelphia Couart.
The assets of "Theorean Building & Loan Association" are more than $125,000.
MISSISSIPPI FARMERS MEET.
THIRD ANNUAL FARMERS CONFERENCE OF THE STATE.
Large Attendance at Utica Institute
Addressed by Principal W. H. Holtclaw
at Greatest Meeting Yet Hold
—Important Resolutions Involved and
Adopted by Conference.
Utica, Miss., February 18.—William
H. Holtclaw, principal of the Utica
Normal and Industrial Institute, and
president of the Minnesota Negro Farmers' Conference, in delivering his annual address to-day in the Institute chapel to a large concourse of farmers from every part of the State, attending the Third Annual Farmers' Conference of the State of Minnesota, said:
"I congratulate you, gentlemen of the Conference, upon your success in being able to gather together in such large numbers to discuss matters touching your occupation. To you the State of Mississippi a dot which it will be difficult to pay. You are the backbone of our believed commonwealth. I take for granted that every farmer here is struggling to better his conditions. As a member of the race I am proud of this, for as you succeed in the struggle every man in our State will enjoy the benefits of your success. You must not get discouraged in your efforts. You must be discouraged and hold hardiness and goodwill and make yourselves good citizens. Don't let any obstacle discourage you, but work, work, work. Every honest effort will bear fruit. Don't get into the habit of going about with your hands hung down, feeling that your lot is the worst of all men living. Brace up and look the world in the face. Here in Mississippi we enjoy many privileges along with our disadvantages. If we show a disposition to get up out of trouble and fifth and third of despair, we can for sure find our own standard of living, there is no decent white man among all our fellow-citizens to discourage us. If any of you present has the money and want a home you can easily find a white man who will take that money. Just here let me say that you must get property. No people will be tolerated long in any country who are simply hangers-on. Make yourselves a part of your little community, wherever it is. Make friends of your邻居, white black slack thememen, go in world affairs working six days in the week and sleeping seven nights. There is scarcely a single man here who has not lost enough time hanging around town on Saturdays to buy him several acres of land if converted into money.
"Just one other thought. Here in our State we have special railroad cars set aside for our exclusive benefit. Let us see to it that so far as each of us is individually concerned these cars shall be free from expectoration, peanut hulls, orange and banana peels, and other items attached to the train. Not only in the cars, but in all public conveyances, hotels, on the street, and wherever we find ourselves, be the most decent and self-respecting people there to be found. Carry these ideas into practice and in the future Minnesota will possess a class of Afro-Americans that the civilized world will respect and honor. The Conference through a committee composed of W. S. Pleasant, E. H. Patton and Thos. J. Johnson:
"We, the members of the Farmers' Conference, of the State of Minnesota, desire to go on record as follows:
"We urge our people everywhere, the majority of whom are farmers, to plant their whole case on the ownership of a home. Purue this object by a dedication and a dedication until it is accomplished. With the acquisition of a home will come many of the cardinal virtues."
"That our teachers of the rural school show, at least, as much strength and foreight in the building of good school buildings as our preachers have shown in the building of church houses; and that our people everywhere set aside some portion of what they earn every year to lengthen the public school term and help to make a better system of schools throughout the State. "That we are unalterably opposed to all crimes of whatever nature, whether committed by the police, the police will be on with offices of the law in the apprehension of criminals of every sort among us. We also urge our people to refuse to be used as tools to commit offences against the law.
"We are opposed with all our souls to the violation of the person of women of whatever race, and will do all in our power to bring all such offenders to justice. In this connection we condemn lynching as us-American, un-Christian, un-American, and unjustifiable to the foundation upon which our social system rests. We believe that all patriotic Mississippi will agree with us that there can be absolutely no necessity for lynching a poor, trembling, wretched, beautiful Negro who has committed some heinous crime because of ignorance, especially when all the law is in the hands of the very men who may do the lynching. We beg the makers of this law to recognize our for race. As we come to see the light of civilization more we will aid in this respect.
"That we take our white fellow-citizens in perfect faith when they tell us they do not desire social equality. We beg them to accept our declarations in the same good faith. If we do not seek to force himself into close social contact with any other race than his own, it is the most degraded member to be found. Intelligent Negroes scorn the idea of forcing themselves socially upon any people. If, therefore, white men are forced to be consummation of their desires by helping to educate the Negroes.
"We crave, work, struggle for better relations and a better understanding with the white race among whom we live. To this end we suggest that meetings composed of members of both races be held at frequent intervals when all questions affecting the interests of both races can be discussed and settled satisfactorily. We are ready and willing, yes, anxious to meet our white brethern more than half way. That we have unfailing faith in our race, we believe that what we see we accomplished is only an imposition what will come to pass in the future. But whatever may be the results of the future, we urge all our people to so live and work that at the final reckoning all must acknowledge they have done what they could."
Helpful addresses were delivered by Prof. L. J. Rowan, President of Alcorn A. and M. College; Prof. E. H. Patton, of the same college, and elder Higgins and Pleasant. Prof. Rowan declared that no matter what discouragements face us, the good white people of the State of Mississippi are our friends. It was the greatest meeting ever held at the Institute.
Lincoln Assembly
Newark, Feb. 18.—The first annual Lincoln assembly and drama given by the Young Men's Cooperative League, Tuesday, February 18, at 10 a.m. A large crowd attended and enjoy *lining up at the straits of Smith Broth's Orchestra*. The drama, "The Man from Maine," was well rendered and received. The Tuxedo Dancing Class will hold its first annual souvenir reception, Friday, February 22.
Joseph Douglas and Wife President in Successful Hospital—Social and Personal Necessity.
New Haven, February 18.—The arguments, in the trial of Samuel H. Knox, who is charged with shooting and killing Frederick M. Kelly on New Year's night, were opened in the Superior Court before Judge Case last Tuesday morning, the 12th. Assistant Attorney Wheeler opened the argument for the State. He followed by E. I. Kelly who opened for defense. In fact, the actual arguments in the case were made by State Attorney Williams for the State and Attorney Jacob Goodhart for the defense. Mr. Goodhart's argument to the court and jury, though direct to the jury, was in part as follows:
"I am not going to take up your time by talking any racial prejudice. This man has a black skin; we have white skin. But as you go out to-day you will see hanging from the pole across the street and from every other patriotic place a flag that to-day files in honor of the birth of the man who year ago puttten all that that man had done to him. Also Lincoln it isn't necessary for me to dwell on any difference in color. Lincoln said long ago we are all equal in the eyes of the law and you must agree with him." He referred to Knox's story on the stand in which he had said he shot Kelley because he had to protect himself and wife. "That story is ringing in my ears as if it had been told only five minutes ago, as it must be in yours. If you think he told the truth, please consider it." Mr. Goodhart furthermore argued that it duty to tell the truth, deprive this of his liberty to set an example. It "will be a far better example for you to declare that a black man can walk through the streets unmolested."
"You know what trouble these people had and have still in many places. The law of the land says they have equal rights with all men and in making an example you must consider the law of the land."
Mr. Goodhart finished his argument at one clock, then the court took a recess when appointed, Attorney Willingham closed for the state.
At 12:50 Wednesday the jury filed into their seats and announced the verdict. "Guilty of manslaughter."
Judge Case then sentenced Knox to Wetherfield for not less than five nor more than seven years.
The extreme penalty for manslaughter in fifteen years.
Samuel Knox is a happy man to thank his humble and profound thanks to the court, jury, counsel and his friends were unaffected.
At the Bethel Church star concert, last Tuesday evening, held in the auditorium of the church, Joseph Douglass, the greatest Afro-American violinist of the States, and Mrs. Douglass played the star role. Mr. Douglass gets out about everything the instrument has in it; the expression the feeling and the passion with which he played was simply great. He is an artist with grace, charm and splendid technique. The program opened with a piano solo by Miss Effie Grant. The home talent were: Miss Effie Grant, Lilian M. Lynch and Pearl Brown, and Messrs. William Griffin and Arthur Smith. The support of the home talent was never better rendered. By request Miss Grant sang "The Swallow" charmingly; reading the "Tremolo Stop" by Miss Lynch was well received, as was also the singing of Miss Brown. The music literally packed with people, which gave the committee an unqualified success. Rev. Wm. St. A. Lynch, D.D., is the pastor.
Some of the members of Bethel Church with a party of their friends formed a sleighing party and met at the residence of Mrs. C. C. Grant, 12 Edwards avenue, last Tuesday evening, and rode to the residence of Miss Louise Fowler, who was sitting in the enjoyed elaborate spread. Miss Manning is a young woman of congeniality and a graceful entertainer; she is a devoted and an elifying member of the above church, which she grew up in from childhood. Those in the party were as follows: Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Hickman Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Johnson Mrs. H. Johnson Mrs. John, Henson, Mrs. W. H. Ferguson, Mrs. R. H. Jackson, Mrs. Emma Benton, Mrs. Thomas Ennell, Mrs. Anthony Whittington, Mrs. Fatio and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Douglass, of Washington, D. C. The Ladies' Parish Aid Society of St. Luke's P. E. Church, gave a Shrove ten Shrove ten Shrove ten Mrs. T. S. Douglass, 29 Ashmun street. A large number were present and an enjoyable evening was spent.
The services at St. Luke's P. E. Church, Rev. Engene L. Henderson, rector, during Lent will be on Tuesday and Friday afternoons; children's services 4:00 p.m. at St. Luke's Church, 7:45 p.m. at the united Lenten services, at St. Thomas Church, Wednesday evening, February 27, the presacher will be Rev. M. George Thompson, rector of Christ Church, Greenwich, Conn.
The annual fair of Bethel A. M. E. Church will open in the church, Tuesday evening, the 26th, and continue until March 1.
A WEST INDIAN WONDER
Without Legs or Arms He Done Heaps
of' Thrills—Two Hospitals.
PHILADELPHIA, February 18.—There are lots of men with no physical defects who are not as happy as Randion, a legless and armless West Indian, who has made this city his headquarters for some time, exhibiting himself at the museums in the vielity. Although he can travel in a suit case, Randion declared emphatically that he always paid his fare on the bus and chin he shaved himself and cut the hair of Sparti, his West Indian companion. As he was navigating near the left ear Randion looked as though he was about to anzease. If he had, he would have cut his throat. Sparti gave Randion a stern look, and the half-formed maze collapsed, thus saving Randion's life. He rolled a cigarette with his face and tongue as cleverly as a Spaniard; he threaded a needle, played a game of hide and seek, and knocked the ashes from a cigar with a marble, played a tune on a brass flute, and did many other astonishing things. His greatest trick was that of making a tidy with his mouth. He folded a piece of paper with his mouth, then cut the creases with a knife. When he opened out the paper with his mouth it was an artistic jidy. Randion made the flute on which he plays from a bit-of brass pipe. He gave mage to the museum and collections for he laughed heartily when he had finished. Randion weighs 57 pounds and is 32 inches in height. He has a wife and two children in the West India.
The new hospital, "The Mercy," corner Seventeenth and Fitzwater streets, was opened to the public on Tuesday, February 12, with auspicious exercises. The building committee of the Douglass Hospital has awarded its contract for the erection of a modern, up-to-date hospital on Lombard street.
Disappointed by Conditions in Liberia, on the cabin passengers on the steamship Majesty which arrived Friday last week Bishop C. S. Smith, colored, of Detroit, Mich., who is on his way home from an inspection tour through Liberia. He says he did not find conditions there in as good shape as he had expected.
THE NEW YORK AGE: THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1907.
VIRGINIANS MAKING GOOD.
THEY OWN COOPERATION IN PROPERTY AND HAVE SUPPLIES IN BANKS.
They Own One-eighth of Total Area of the State and Are Still Buying- Healthy Condition of the Four Banks in Richmond-Spendell Shipping as Effect of Charge of Allied Thriftlessness and Criminality- No Lynching in the State During the Past Year.
RICHMOND, Va., February 18.—It is amusing at times to hear some of the Afro-Americans' "best white friends" in the South tell how abflent the race is becoming; so much so and so unreliable that he is going to the "bow-wows," and that white labor of the immigrant class must be imported to take his place.
I do not know how much so that shiftlessness may be in States further south in Dixia, but if what is said about the Afro-American further south than we are has more coloring of truth than what we have of Virginia, Virginia Afro-American, then the Afro-American of the South is grossly, wilfully and maliciously lied.
I feel safe in saying that in no State in the South have Afro-Americans shown more real enterprise and thrift than in Virginia. That we are law-abiding to an unusual degree is shown by the fact that as greatly strained as have been the relations between the two races in the South during the past twelve months, and when Afro-Americans have been lynched for "any old thing," oftentimes for nothing, save that they are Afro-Americans and a mob of booze-frenzied, race-prejudiced, barbarian, quiet and determined people, running for Afro-American gore, there was not a single lynching by the mob in all the State last year. There were, no doubt, a few judicial lynchings, though.
At the close of business, January 20, 1907, the four savings banks operated here by Afro-Americans filed their quarterly report with the State Corporation, as required by law. The Savings Bank of the Grand Fountain, United Order of True Reformers, have resources valued at $380,000.34; St. Luke Penny Savings Bank, $64,339.97; Mechanics Savings Bank, $122,514.71. Figures for the Nickel Savings Bank are not available at this writing.
GEORGE ST. JULIAN STEPHENS.
TELEGRAPHY IN AFRICA.
Cool Rhodes' Big Dream Soon to Be Reallied.
From The New York Sun.
Wireless telegraphy is to take a part in the opening of Africa. Its services are invoked just now to complete the line of overland telegraphic communication between Cape Town and the Mediterranean.
Fifteen years ago, while Mahdiam was still rampant in the Soudan and before Cecil Rhodes had lauched his scheme for a railroad from the Cape to Cairo, that financial potentate declared that he intended to stretch a telegraph wire from the Cape of Good Hope to the Mediterranean. The work was started at the southern end and all was smooth sailing till the wire crossed the Zambesi and got into the barbarous regions beyond. Then the line could advance no faster than friendship were formed with the black kingtia, who were subsidized with beads and brass wire to assure the safety of the line in their respective domains.
So the line pushed on through forest and jungle till it passed up the east shore of Lake Tanganyika and finally halted at Uijii. This Arah settlement is famous as the place where Mr. Stanley one morning lifted his hat to a feeble old man and remarked: "Dr. Livingstone, I believe." There the end of the line has remained for about 20 years, for the reason that it is German territory. The old and mountainous region to the north is difficult for telegraph construction and the white rulers as yet have had little to do with their subjects between Tanganyika and Victoria Nyanza.
Meanwhile, the line from the north has been pushed south clear through the Southern and Uganda to Port Victoria, on the shore of the greatest of African lakes. A gap of only 450 miles remains to complete the transcontinental enterprise. Preparations are now being made to establish wireless telegraphy across the ocean, the project being completed in a way that Rhodes never dreamed of when he grasped the great idea of stretching an electric line between the north and south of Africa.
JANITOR HEIR TO $25,000.
Drops His Job and Scoots When He
Hears the News
ATLANTIC CITY, February 12.—Discovery of a deposit left by his father in the ruins of a Washington bank raised to-day John Webster, Negro janitor of the City Hall, to the moneyed ranks. The bequest will amount to between $30,000 and $50,000, and is to be divided between Webster and a brother who lives in the capital. Delighted at his good fortune, the janitor threw up his job and has gone to claim the money.
According to the story received by Webster from the brother the money is the accumulation of a smaller sum placed in the bank twenty-seven years ago by the father, who is believed to have received it from a former master in the South as a bequest some time after the war, the old man continue along as employee in the Government buildings and up to the time of his death, a few weeks ago, none of his relatives knew of the money, which he placed at interest immediately on its receipt.
STATE DISPENSARY TO GO.
South Carolina Legislature Decides in Favor of Local Option.
COLUMBIA, S. C., February 12.—The Gurrey-Cothran bill was passed by the Senate to night, 25 to 15.
This means the abolishment of the State Dispensary and the substitution thereof of local options, as between county dispensaries, as the bill has already passed the House, but will go back on amendments, which will be adopted without doubt.
Real Estate—For Sale and To Let.
ELEGANT FLATS To Let
Handicare Appointments with all improvements at Moderate Boston, in
THE DOLLY-MOUNT, 211 W. 60th St.
THE SARATOGA, 200 W. 60th St.
THE VINCER, 210 W. 61st St.
THE DORIN COURT, 217 W. 60th St.
Above houses have First-class Janitor
service and are always in good condit
ion. Apply
ROBERT CARTER,
200 W. 60th Street.
ALEXANDER CROSBY, 217 W. 60th St.
MR. HOLYARD,
210 W. 61st Street.
PHILIP A. PAYTON, JR.
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
My specialty is the management of
Colonial Trespass Property.
AGENT BOURKE APPRAISER
917 W. 56th Street.
Downtown Office at 56th street.
Telephone: 817 and 918 Barron.
JANUARY 19
P. Bourke, 22 years with J. T. & J. A. Parley
Tul. 5205 Riverdale.
Palmer Bourke.
George T. Bourke.
J. P. Bourke & Sons
REAL ESTATE AGENTS, BROERS AND
APPRAISERS
All kinds of preparation for sale, rent or exchange.
Fire Insurance.
12 West 90th Street. 26c 6-8m
Artistic Homes
Model Cement Buildings for
Long Island Towns
A new company has been organized to
manufacture cement block and brick—the
coming building material. This company
will build scores of houses on the island
and the land of the city. The building
of "Portland Cement." Buildings
range from $500 to $5,000. Stock $8.00
per share. Houses built upon easy terms.
HORACE RANDALL MILLER, Promester
ST W. 184th St., New York city.
April 30, 1917
WILLIAM HENSON BUTLER,
Real Estate Broker
58 West 135th Street.
Tel. 202-830-1111.
Houses and Apartments For Sale and To Lot.
Also Lots For Sale.
Aug. 1, 1917.
J. H. Adams & Son
16 West 132d Street.
REAL ESTATE BROKERS
Houses for Sale and To Lot.
Honey to Loan on Bead and Mortgage.
Call on us when you need apartments in a
good locality.
jan 31-3m
MELVIN J. CHISUM
REAL ESTATE BROKERL
208 W. 119th St.
Pine apartments to let at all times in
destitute location.
Telephone: 6655 Morningside.
Oct 28 1y.
Cleanest and Cheapest
3-ROOM APARTMENTS
FOR QUIET PEOPLE
174 East 77th St.
Apply Janitor Dec. 6-31
HOMES! HOMES! HOMES!
For My People.
LOTS on the EASIEST AND BEST TREMS ENOWN can be secured of The New York & New Jersey Mutual Real Estate is making rapid success, because it is by the people and for the people. We will build on any lot owned, clear of incumbrances or any person in New York or New Jersey, and we will comply with the liberal terms offered. We will sell you a lot, or locate you anywhere. We have lots in New Jersey which you can buy, and we will pay down the lot $10 and $1. per week. OWN YOUR LOT! WE WILL BUILD.
Call on or write to the Business Manager,
Dr. E. E. Jackson, 09 Sixth Avenue.
New York City
Jan 81 46
WILL OPEN MARCH 1st
An elegant 5-story double flat, near 7th
avenue and 135th street; with six large,
all-light rooms and bath, hot water supply,
all-light rooms and bath, hot water supply,
all-light rooms and bath, hard wood finish
throughout.
Apply SAMUEL A KELSEY
243 Lesox Ave.
Telephone: 4213-J Morning. Near 128th St.
Miss H. L. Anderson's
Orchestra.
PROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN TO ALL
COMMUNICATIONS.
216 West 80th Street.
NEW YORK CITY.
Telephone 4852 Columbus
dec6-8m
Walter F. Craig's
FAMOUS ORCHESTRA
321 West 59th Street
NEW YORK.
Phone 1479 Columbus nov8-8m
The New Amsterdam Musical Association
(112 West 59th Street)
Will furnish COMPETENT COLORED
MUSICIANS for all functions
W. A. Riker, manager, 688 West 572d
Street, R. F. Dough, secretary, 10
West 14th Street, Headquarters, 210
West 59th street.
Dec 18-8m
Olley phone, Anna Gustardt. - Rm. phone, Jeffs Col.
J. DOUGLAS WETMORE
Attorney and Counselor at Law
Roxana p.j.h. to Temple Court
Nassau & Boothman Streets
Lease and Real Estate New York City
Sept. 14 19
WILFORD H. SMITH
COUNSELL, LOR-AT-LAW
AND PROFESSOR IN ADMINISTRY.
120 NASSAU STREET,
NEW YORK.
Room 905-6-7. Phone 5074 Bookman
novi-ldm Damage Suite a Specialty.
CAPITAL STOCK $150,000.00
SHARES $10.00 EACH, PAR. VALUE.
This Company has an its principal office the better housing of the Nugget Tenant China. As a result of its operation for a period of a little over a year it can paint to the central of twenty-five (25) New York City Apartment Houses, valued at over Nine Hundred Thousand Dollars (999,000). Nine (9) of this number the Company own, and the other sixteen (16) are held by the Company under long leases. These houses rent for Ninety Thousand Dollars (999,000) a year. This fact will tend to indicate the expanded possibilities in the way of Differences in store for stockholders in this Company. What this Company is doing in New York City it intends ultimately to do in every large city in the United States where its people are found in any comfortable number. Invest now and help this great movement own.
Bennett J. Scott, Joseph H. Bryan, William Ten Rych, James R. Gerson, Mike
ward R. Payton, Stephen A. Bennett, Sandy P. Jones, Henry G. Pashen, John R.
Nall, Fred R. Moore and Philip A. Payton, Ja.
Temporary Offices: 67 West 134th Street NEW YORK CITY
One Month's Rent Free!
TO EVERY FAMILY RENTING AN APARTMENT in any of the following Eleven Houses . . .
Nos. 24, 28, 30 and 34 West 136th St.
. 4 Six-story Apartment Houses; each house is 37 feet 6 inches wide. Has 4 apartments on each floor; two of 5 rooms and bath and two of 4 rooms and bath. RENTS $20 TO $29 PER MONTH
Nos. 24, 26 @ 28 West 140th Street
Between Lenox @ 5th Avenues
apartment Houses; eat hous
ments on each floor; one o
both and two of 4 rooms are
$20 TO $32 PER M
"New-Law Houses" of a
people. They are situated in
and the rent is within reach
have all modern improvements.
Refrigerators, Dutch D
and hot water plants are
to give thorough satisfacti
nitary construction, with
make every room in these h
3 Six-story Apartment Houses; each house is 41 feet 8 inches wide. Has 4 apartments on each floor; one of 6 rooms and bath, one of 5 rooms and bath and two of 4 rooms and bath.
RENTS $20 TO $32 PER MONTH
These are "New-Law Houses" of a class never before rented to our people. They are situated in two of the finest blocks in Harlem, and the rent is within reach of all.
These houses have all modern improvements, except elevator and electric lights. Refrigerators, Dutch Dining Rooms, etc. The steam heating and hot water plants are of the latest type and are guaranteed to give thorough satisfaction. The plumbing is of the finest sanitary construction, with porcelain fixtures. Large open courts make every room in these houses light, cheerful and healthy.
Nos. 2227, 2229 @ 2231 5th Avenue
Cormor 156th Street
houses with stores and basement
3 and 4 rooms and bath.
S $14 TO $23 PER M
9-51 East 133d
. Apartments of 3, 4 and 5
S $16 TO $22 PER M
A. PAYTON, J
Harlem 67 W
3 Six-story Houses with stores and basement stores suitable for any business. 3 and 4 rooms and bath. Hot water supply.
RENTS $14 TO $23 PER MONTH
Nos. 49-51 East 133d Street
A Six-story House. Apartments of 3, 4 and 5 rooms and baths. Hot water supply.
RENTS $16 TO $22 PER MONTH
PHILIP A. PAYTON, Jr., Agent
Telephone 917 and 918 Harlem 67 WEST 134th STREET
OFFICE OP
P A. PAYTO TO LET D 62 EAST 133d ST
PHILIP A. PAYTON, Jr. TO LET
60 AND 62 EAST 133d STREET
2 private houses, fourteen rooms and bath, all improvements.
Rent $1,000 per year each.
Apartments of 6 nice light rooms and bath, private hall, all improvements. Separate entrance to bed rooms. Rents $20 to $22.
Apply Janitors or
PHILIP A. PAYTON Jr., 67 W. 134th Street
2376-8 Old Broadway, Near 131st St. and Broadway
4th floor, 4 rooms and bath, every movement known . . . $29.00
3d, 4th, and 6th floors, 5 rooms and bath . . . $23.00 to $25.00
Half Month's Rent Free.
Apply SAMUEL A. KELSEY, 363 Lenox Ave.
Phone: 4213-J Morning, or Jauitor on premises.
pat ee a ee
——
WEYBOSSET LODGE CELEBRATES
@ (TS THARTETH ANPEVERSARY
Many Drathe on the Larchmont, Causes
Gleom in: Previdener—Tribute fe
Fiera Ratesa Berges. *
Providence, R. 1, Feb, 18.—Weybos-
eet Lodge, No. 1834, 0. U. 0. of 0. F.,
celebrated its thirtieth anniverssy_ on
che Sth instant im the Trocedera | The
affair was the most enjoyable and’ suc-
Fgcatul Je, the, nlatory of the orgers
formal celebrations, ft commenced at
4.20 p.m and continued until 1 am
George 1. Prout, chairman | District
Grand Master Thomas L. Brown made
@ short address. Mr. Andrew Bell, cat-
SESE athe, loses: Mee, ML Taylor
Mrs. Wiliam Walker, Miss J. R, Fails,
‘Bosion, attended the celebration,
‘On, Friday. afternoon, the Sth, at the
reaidence of Mra. Washington, 203 Lip;
prt atreet. Leestwr, gon of Baral and the
fate Thorias Phillip, was found dead.
He was ‘twenty. years old. | Fuoerai
from bls late. residence, Tuseday after.
noon, Rev, kK, H. McDonald, of Olney
Atreet, Haptiat church; officiating, Mr.
Phillip has beon residing | with bis
grandmother, Mra, gusan Thompson, 9s
nion avenue, Brooklyn, N. ¥., for ‘the
past few yours, and had only “returned
to Providence ‘a few days, where he
dled.
Mr. Charles Wext, an old-time poll-
4iclun and co-worker of, the late Georne
Downing and George Henry James Jet
forson, died during the past week. “His
foneral waa held Wedneaday, tho. 13th,
Rey. A. DeLena officiating.
Memorial sorvices wore held Sunday
‘at 3 p.m. in tho Bethel A. M. E. church,
ih behalf of Flora Batson Bergen, Short
Addresscs-were mado by prominent per-
sons who Knew her in life.
‘The forty-third anniversary of the or-
er of Knights of Pythias was celebrat-
fed by, the Hhoue Island Lodge, No. 1,
gna Mount Nebo Lodge, No. 2) at the
Olney street Baptist church. Both or-
ders turned out in large numbers. Past
Chancellor William 5, Lee was master
‘of ceremonies.
Providenco has been « city of mourn-
ing ‘tho past, week owing. to, the sad
dinanter of the ateamer Larchmont of
ihe Joy Line, Among the number dead
are: George James, Moses Fontaine,
<lem Fontanta, Marcus Jones, Dennis
‘Thivean and John Nelson Scott all of
whom were employed on the boat. +
gaved a Life.
White Plains, Feb, 20,—-A number of
young. men “gave ‘their young lady
felons a leigh ride on ‘Tuesday even-
ing of ant week through the neighbor-
Ing towns, returning to this village to
enjoy an ovater aupper, given by the
Zoune ngice of the purty. Kev, Ris
Pare ip connned te his home with 9
‘spell of sickness, Early Friday ‘morn-
Ine Mr. Thomas Moten was the moans
of saving ‘man's life on Brooksfela
iréet, who win found nimost Croxen tO
death: Mra. Bva” Bmanuel und her
daughter, Irene, who huve been quite Il
for neveral weeks, aro able to be about
Again, Mexars.. Wilitam Henry and
Wilken lowurd were in town on Mon-
Guy evening, of lust week. Mr. Thomus
Moten of thin village attended the mas-
querade. In Ossining. “Tucaday night,
Minn Irma Hatield, who hus been con-
fined to her home for the past week, In
Improving, tev ICA, ‘Lyle, pastor’ of
Mu Vernon A. MF. Zion church, will
preach tn the A. M."E, Zion church’ on
Sunday, Peveuary 17, at-3 Po M.<Ado-
Ration for the. beneft of tev. Co Re
Moody will be given in.Bently’s ifeti, on
March Tt. Mra, ME, Newton, who has
deen quite I at her home on Winches-
Cor ntrert for several weeks, 18 able to
Ge nbaut again, The Gro plghty enter-
cainment, including the Valentine driti
Sng ‘nuppiers wag given on the Udih ang
sth ‘of uxt weeks TUwas n great suce
cone. “The funcral of Mr Juseph Magi
fas held (n Ossining MF. church ott
Sunday luge, Mev TOA, Lyle. pastor of
the Mt Vernon aA. MCE. Zion churen,
Preachéd an inspiring wermon at the
Ateatenester Avenue eiureh on Sunday
lant. Tew. Te i Page, who. hax Deen
confined. ta his heine, “ix improving.
Mink Bea Emanuel iw xeriously Ml at
her home on Winchester street
rex Seebacainens
Teor, February. 20.--Rey. Coe. pues
me" AE MeV Bom church, “preachel” ve
Wty “ntereatine. sermons Sabbath toraine
Jad ctening. She neat meeting af the
Benvyterian’ t_zcenm ‘will be held February
2 corer Wachingtan's Mrthday. The
Riis, Tbe, King "Dseromned “or Spring
Uielory™ will be. presented "in the CrenGy
forian cmon, Wednoniay evening, Februacy
SF Hor'the benedt of the Miue Team. of the
Runday ‘schools Stree Willian Tnaday te
Eaptnis. of tye tent, Ani Mien Til Tinton,
Guoagers Mire Sainee eittanentertalned
fhe Home Social, of whiten abe ie a member
Wher homes Tid ivers trent.” The tone
oe TSharon Teun Sire Cie arian
Zintaine wail kee a munieal and itera ey
Shhettnlament, alto. ‘Pom Thumb wedding
wre AE Be ioe etmurehs Tueniay evening.
Bavtnty £5/a0 creelieut program wil be
farntohed “with” taient rom SAtbeoy ad
Fray Mew” omphiie Homa In. matering
from sondliers fire” Marion “tackenn Ie
finch froproved, Mra Wiltant Mahone and
dine returned t0 tear one in, Yereey Clty
Mite" mending a. detiehttnt tiie with Nee
unther Mee ie Ee Binoy, ‘Mew JE
Wiitintie he erturaed hte after apenitne
ninitaeant thine to New Work ely we
ted noamtera were. recived att Liberty
fiver Tents terian “ehurels “last” Sunday
Etenibg, Thin maken morn new members that
finer doen ondded. tothe church aimee. the
antornt af iter. Chavies efoeaiaas Str
Ritter Callby son’ of ites” Chilise pastor of
TR cam chuesh, Thintone pense
cheowt: roy’ en route ty Teton’ er visit
his parente
aoe ‘i
Raucci, Febemary 10 ue cat
ene a Mie nt ates, TE, Thu gh
wean Mets wae the scone nfm gift
Sealine, Wotan sui ot mien tins
Tithe Caines "ine tuarhe “anda fe
fame the ity of Mee Etauk teu af Yer:
ioe Ses as Benth ee eta
tint Koo eae nn See tee! ti
Eoin Napkers Tensteter, the tet mont ee
a nt He aa Me Whigs, ae Hee
WE SSE attoots, Na yore dled het nes
Dy seume ut vorameeta ae abe ager
oe ste aad “Mee Fahn tatteke whee oe
ha heen bonding toe Cie hast sewn
oie emtte eat ust aan
HON Teeter detec Me Wh
Bite Minur, fees Miroch Te ath see
eee Mea betel nied sont tans
hie en idgtened Mr eta barter
ae aga eae tauttoe take at tee
ft en chiro inet weeks was gute
Pattie A eel ca ene ae
Gnarian™ contorted of Uetnssione Coltege
aaa the Cannieraare’ al tie wieth. af tee
Bete eee Neto A ae BB ite
Piimaer was, seteteatea ai Min "a. Re. 1B
Floa cheek Rusmine nfierhtons Retake ta
faferencr’ to, te ties td congncter oF Te
Ennneat lender” were onde be oe
Stacia, M1 He partee, Me Si pnt
Mx Sie: Ine Funct Ste Heed teed
Rina Paar Becton and Mire Ning
Hentai, Pay ite atetniny pean
SAAT xaniny. stiertind Me Gee toe
Bien. aie, acti Metra,
Seite ant sinie atast Sta Reh ee
prorcat ge sen sommn gery (inet fe
Rd “the, prefect are that namsthtee Yan
Bie IR ee oat in the ara Canes
Fine mas of inns edt A ne NORE
Praia sinensis pete ath When ae
fee the eat acehieat® eallhie gts
seine (nical ekirsee: iar eed ad te
are a tintaer This MR CIORRTE tae
Whe mrenibore wind filewhe at Mt ive
Iaptter thee tandeect a. Vrtitay ae
Weert thle actor fee, 4. aT tSeebenn
GP atentines sight, ‘Quits a number ae
Fisionted Stow. inacoh Senet Pe
Sei trine atete: Wesklaer eitte ve hart
Pe a a A
Sate Ek et anatte‘ iy Heute” bie hams
: ee ;
M1 the Calvary Stapiist church Ree. G.
we itally “prenehed | Saudae. Sabbath
Semel convened aa sun with om Tiree at:
fendanee, — Muperintendont Ts, Tipoker
Keone th be inuel enennraged “rite the
Stents ‘pragreet af tie school. Mex Ah
Ble Hotiion, toneher of clase No, 6, han te:
irae fram W megeal manthn telp tn Ket
Cen NCO ACP Minatonary: Cleele hetd
thet “teofing. - The Tanghters of Zien
fre peepating. for n 4 welock. toa creey
Thorstuy afternoon. “Marguerite, John
gon, daughter of Mr. and. Mra. Nieker
Tohnson, at Webster piace, la neh. tm:
Beet ey ay ates. oF North
iaindeld. tm aeill sick.
‘Mr. Charles R._ Miller, of 214 Went
Fltey-acrond “aterst, hae heen appolated
from the head of the eligible Het ae a
stenographer aod typewriter In the board
of water supply at © salary of $1,050 per
oan
RENBOTY oF FieeD SuT reams
Mevine. Ky Feb. 3¢.—One of the
lst igeiteat grostaime ihat bas bans
fisecataa icy Sunt ae Gad
; 3 i
lows’ Hall for the pene of the
Tere cates Grewal os Roadie
eer teed Boa oe,
tees Sa rice as
Kees cen cena se faa
Eepaduie aig at tod tat yeaa
TG ait par of ae prabet
ete or
be Sele Ds aie tees Sie
oe ets ae isis
Seih aie br A a ahs
aucieat praing. a a eaves
Be eis Bet, ce eal ae
Heitatieny fae eee Hedi
Acta lacie dna TatABe
ous rea in “Speak UR. Ike,” Misa Nan-
aie aR ea ge ee aes
Water damece ant gate
Rates Seti ibe tine oats
SCataline's Deaance.” by Harriet Hock:
satis Dante Redinsy ic
iEintn nar et aEaTE atta Uy
erates Smee
Eovhnti eke Uaaniet alge staat
Eanes, Wale nopnetea anor a
ioe appairtace thd fast etic
that rieinaced uy Cane Low's, ana
firmed twelve persons. Miss Sophin
Ministerial Ansocintion of New Jersey
Meets,
Hed Hank, Feb, 19, An entertainment
was given tit the A,B “Zion Churn
Int) Thiuraday eveultag,. mid wenm largely ate
fended, They’ cleared “about 815. Atha
Nora" and Cordelia Wlehardeon. are “con,
Saiencent. ‘The. Ministerint. Ansociation ot
the "'Now Jerae Annoal Conference scons
Xened on Monday ne the A, Mb, Zon
Chien. Thete iiecting was Interesting,
Mews Day series were held atthe
Kaeatewn A, SEE, Zion Chureh Inwt
Simdny. Tt was inrgele attended.
Tew A. Wt. Jaekson. perched the anera.
mente! Sermon at the Qharteri# Meeting at
Palehaven At night the dew, Sinknes
renee tie ie peentng rider of the
thel Canterwnee of New Jerry. Mas:
ter Preston Vaaiderveer lun recovered fruu
Iie tithes:
Mee Ktobert Andermn ta visting tis she
tof Men “Naniwtte Woah ra
Fhe valentine mupper xiven in St, Mark's
fone ReChntech Bean "ptendlatiy” ionttom
Prof GA. Morin, of Newark, N. J.
visited tir city on Tuesday last
Vounn Mea, Get Us!
Doursxorrn, Februare att. - Rev. J.
Frapels Lee, <M. of Norfolk. adirossnd
the YOM CA. nt the Haltimore Uaton’s
Unit. Sanday, “February 17. 8 large and
enthwcnstie. bedy" nf omen were present.
‘The ladie@ auxillars are planaing © Colon:
Jal tem party on February. 220, Vader the
ble management of Mewiaties Noreurn,
Jones, "Wilson, Misvea Jones, Gibson and
athers. a plouant time and snccmetal out.
come te, asad. The Cenoanreleet Clk
Grganized Inst Nugust by ‘aly bachelors 01
this elty whl offer another of Its members
fee the xbeliye in the person af Meo Georze
Witthias, | Mr Wiliams nnd Mise “Essie
Walke wilt be married Apel 2, at North
Street ALM. EL cline. Only two more eft
Mr. Clarence 1. Murray, of Leesture,
Va. “has reported for duty (ax clerk In
the" Naey Yard Me uiteceatas Mr. T.
Clark of Lanievitic. Kyi Me F Willtan:
Jackson ts dolng mgood work in tralaing
a class of young bey in Zion Raptist Sun.
day rchiole Aa a rule sovng sen gut
Ationding Suniay "school, ax soon aw thes
ate nid cunt ty decile for” thenmalves,
but this “ete has a hirse attendance of
young men tn all the ehucches. There tx
foam for more.
“The young inen of our elty are tacking In
one tealt vir? Get up. | Ht tw a deploratie:
fact Mist net one Partamenth man ar bow
[represented ‘on the clerteal force of the
Navy Yard There are 12 Afro Amertenn
clerks mad alt nee xtrangers within her:
gates” “Phere ten eitiiant opportunity
Ge Thy vottnger ones to Iecome apnrentic ©
fe varies trades and where there sti.
be a hundred there are scarcely twely
AM see the nest ofan Industrial education,
vit “many are paving hard. carned cash
for tt. ut here ‘the how learn the trate,
and getecpatd ta Tarn tt DP greatiy font
Mise WHE See rig pelvis tems Inte:
‘The muvte lovers mf tin clty are pram
feed on rare treat on Reteuare 26, Meo oe
Trengiase. the violinist, aecemnpanted “Iby
Wis “tntented “wife, Mis. Fannie Moward
Dongtaw, will appear nt Zeon Bantist
church on thac date. Mes, Mattie Besa,
the papulae School toneker, Iw iL at lee
hamne th Colutubla street Beiends la tre
city have “reretved news ef the agri.
bf 'n Witte gtel in the home af Peat ant
Mra Awgres ines Doulas of tits cit
at flvingstons College. Salisimey, Ne
Mrs. “Heatle Drew. Holmes, the secretary of
the ortamonth division of the "Tene Me:
formers. lewvee Mondas fer Wlehcomt
wheres abe will be In attentanes at the
Koa tnd convention, Me. A. Stunies Cur
ney sill present a, comedy. “oA Misia
Feuposal.” at Alon Baptlat church, Pele,
ary 2S. Mr. Carnes will have a” tratned
Chorus pf sixteen valees, Leaner vane tints
At G40 Carroll street, or with Clarence
Niehtsan, Bort Tae, and ‘Pras At wil
be brought to you,
igh CLM Lodke Reception.
Nyhek, Feb, 39 The funeral of ton
Wisin, of “rarretenn, furmerty et Ne
gehen renee in Se TNH Cth
ree Felghe ne hay te ty Me Wathen
diet tn Parevtown ath was Tprcht to
Nvaek for interment inthe fasty. plat tn
fhe Cuneketincin Crayton: ees IN 8
Rieow allchntent, gelato hye thee Rew! Ww
FP owen. astor nf thie chuteh, oy
Fondo stein wt the Carestown a ME:
Zio Calirelis Tews Reatte fevetod te te
(oye Charen. Tarratuwhe nud iter
Mien peter cat St Chines ko st te
Zhan Chee Spark nih
‘The “tecetition tit ating af Tanouty's
Rlettatay ent he Htgh. Cue Lodge, Ne
PE Rohe Oe Benrames 13th
Soe a Sura. ihe Titst riot Grand: Master
Avd Gennd Awditor af Whe Ste Mon ites
pc Timwerane and. the Distelet Grand
Seoretaty. Hine, We David Brown, wer
Tat ome mid Meltvered ndleesees
Shien Were pooled sith auplaiee. Phe
Senna minted wow Fel tre de C2 MF Tees A
i" Mtytee nnd At IN. Ge Steter MJ. Dug
gre "The eonmttive, of wie Men Puna
Clee wae chialeman, dexestn mien ereatt
Mee dG wittisete att, fetond, ME,
Mowe, Slee A. Jackson ‘and Mt. Perkins,
of “Tirookism: “Mie be Wagana. Stn. Te
itrown ai aten . Carter, of, New York,
aitigided the Ond Fellows’ reception. on
the? wentth,
Sr." W. "N. Myors walked acrone the
Hudson“on the lee Sunday to attend the
funcral af the ex-Dintriee. Grand. Master
JAR. Magli. which wan held at Oseining,
Me. Digger, nines Metnrning home
trom the urlal of hin’ mother, Ades. ha.
che! Dmgxer. ‘of “tauranceriiie, Va Baw
been somrmhat indiepnaed.
Me. “Oawell’ Harriman, who ban been
confined ‘to bis bed for some weeks with
paeumodia, fe eo as to be act naeln.
<THE NEW YORK AGE: THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2:, 1907
mans | oR. WILLIAMS OF CWICAGO, ee
a, AT TUSRBOEE INSTITUTE | ome tissten 0 be Ramen’ Coereh. TE
7 beeh| nakeo a Preseastossl Vist and For = Rasen ee, ae oS eat
#| “terma Some Oporations—Serpeteed | Sissions iter cost
Be oes] a Teeeee Wem Ret coed abe mote. Be
beet tal-] Tuskeone Anerreare, Ale. February | Collrge. Atlante. Thee rho) cppcared
city. it] 18—Dr. Daniel H. the vst -* a et ee asx.
ian. and | colored phyuician and -eurpese. of Cal | Siarunvar Lagregaie vtoitetst sed pianiee!
ye great] cago, spent a few days at aati | rs. David Senith's Boy. Once: Mies " ‘
propia tate recently performing @ number, of | Kiliy'“U." Lembert. cy eee)
" a5 | Seticate at the Institute hos: | pune Balth five-yeas reader: Cathe | putt aise ir
fseiuses] plat. All"ot the operations were per | fine Vo Hurvin af Gain, reaaet!_ Srvaie
ashtora:| Formad fu a highiy skilful manner, with | bird, “reader? Prasce, accompanist, | $1.80 f
rancisce, ree De Joka A. Keaney, | sesisted oy ir,” Wiliam Speight ewer | All iron bed
By "aise|seient payeclan of che, fattate nn | age pt Rex, Ropiad. Control sie’
Feading.| Dr. H. Brooks, interne, and the patients | ine services of brotessse Rely Milice te 99.80 f
‘Bumor-| are doing well under the nursing of the | sadrecs the members of the Congregational | Punt sive 1
ina Nan-| (rained afck nurses and student nurses at | Ciub'at ibe Fond Busing Rescasey Tite
= Sunet | Oe hema iy tn; [ot eda tat prtang fo be seeesgcs | rtegutar ti
. | While-bere Dr. Williains thoroughly in. | of Ite days, (0 be atten ou
t afecie-| gpected, the work ofthe bowpital ‘ami |i it TeROuMEAeE eouenea ag ict| All the «
ya inis| Nurse Training School, end was greatly | town te prepering to gre nim nvaainy| The pur
ger” by | surprived at the-extent and thoroughness | weleoaic, "Die Price's, Girthday was cele | prices
numbers! of the work being done. Iie made many | brated wy Kev. Dr. Callie at the Colombes |r. axe ti
Prot. W.! suggewtions that will be of value to thoac )Aveaue A.M. Bi Zica ‘hareky February 11th,
eee Tae aa rae work dius oc: Juring, sigvaretion Mer" Units tose’ | falta
re were ree rm Thetptul amiv tat Dr. Price was the greatest Afro-| Aigo full et
‘and in-| tures to the nurses were very helpful aml¥ Atcican this country crer prodeced.
amence-| instructive, and his ralk to the teachers At Kev. Dr. Ransomu’s parsonage, before tresses
vere) of| aby student body in the chapel was one | we tome Mistonaty ‘muclety next Weawes- snattres
=. Buu! full of hope and inspiration. It i very | das, dward w. Wright will reed a
eof ths] gratifying to note that colored wen in tbe | wiper, on “Home Ioformatles Conceraing
tage, in feta of medicine are Fecoenisloy more and Usoprisie: jelopment and Mant a:
¢ Rouse! wore the ability of members of their own | Of Clotu tre serves m_ aplendid LY,
romotne| face and are calliug upon thew wheu | qiance at tae Maryiead. bitesen, 121 Dart: My
aoe "Sr Sei donee nace oossed « reen-| |
sinuses, Gicsisks Wcaouak: eth Century Kestaurant, at 45 Camden! | (Bq
SASTHsRO. Petre ary egy marethe
munity wai anocked ‘on Bridey. mocwing
when the bews was. recelved. teat, Josep!
i iStagilt of “this village “bad died at
qarty (four on Friday “morning. February
15. ‘at ble late residence, 23 Sarah wtreet
‘The “cause Of death was Bright's disease
and aa Mr, Magiil, who bad deen employed
iw chlef of the White Mains Jail for the
baat year, kept-at bie work up uptll Tues:
tlay evening, February 12, no one dreamed
Rie ‘the oud of bis useful gareer wee,
gett. | Helwan wall known among we Og
Fellows, ‘Masons. Patrlarchles, Households
nud’ various other orders, ‘and wae. the
Supervinor ‘over Weatehester County lodges
apd. houvelolds ; and from these be will
Ueryreatiy mixsed.” He leave a wife, two
daughters and two sons to sourm ‘thelr
louse. Funeral services were. conducted at
ie toum “op Sunday, Rebtuary, 17h.
1p.m., by the Rev. lassard of All Bainte
Pes church, Brlar CU, and. from St.
Matthews SL" B," church ‘a 230° p.m.
where Hey. Page, of White Plains, who ts
an Odd Fellow, delivered the eulogy, after
whic be banded it over to Dintriet Grand
Master J. C. Desverney. of New York city,
and ‘hein tura banded tt over to St.
Veronica ‘Hourehold of Ruth. No. 1014,
GUL 0. of 0. B.. of which the. deceased
wan ‘x ‘mont ‘devoted Tormber and. they
{urned It over to the Past Grand. Masters
Counelt who flaiahed ‘the tmpremdve {uneral
ceremonies, Mr. Andrew White, of White
Vinton, rendered ‘the solo. in a moat
fecllag and. (oucbiog manner. The Bowers
nnd ‘set plecen were beautiful. Jamen Ke
Lewin, Robert .” Wasblagtun and Clarence
Miluch, reprewenied Roar tent “Loder, fa
and Site Sonrte Wye. of Darcas Iteunchold.
SX, “all of Poughkeepale, “itenry Moahter:
Wiliam Alaire, Samuel Stevenn, Pevkakilt
Hodge, Lincols lodge, Oral Household.
ot Fateytown White Viaine lodge. Wheat
ivy Moneehold of White Cains: delegations
from Nyack. Yonkers, District G. Lao. 2
we New Work elty :) Datrixrehies “Council:
Morningudé Lodge, “Brookive, and strange
tw aay there were ouly two members from
Vhilomathcon lodge, New York, “present |
nnd It in thie lodge that Jourph’ I Magill
had tech a mont faithful menier for ove
enty senrm and set not even a flower
was ment from a lode consisting Of over
Ses oe re 8 eee SOR eee
Death of Edwar V. H. Petersen.
Votteustlle, Feb, 14 ty the death of
Mette Ae Petereat, who ‘denarced
ints life on February’ Sth. Tottenville,
Do toxt® tte tient promislis. youne ial
Mir “Pecerson wan a expert eleKinyer:
Me Peterman mnetied. Mine Lult Tends
Inte mer one sear ne: tent sear hee bult
wotlhe eoteage Une Vaught wenie, oe OF
the "“pramtient “avenwen atthe’ villaxe,
where be fextted. He wan Hked ands fe
Speeted by AIL of bbe uelghborm, ax Well nm
fers ane whe cage In euntact with hin.
Me Pethexan war a thember land. aecre:
bry at St Sohn Ladge, No, 2. BO ane
Siesta tei aucutier” of ging” Sam
Chapter. Royal “Areh” Masons, of Manbat-
tant Nien farts inetitiers Of tbe order
attended the fuhernl. He died after a
iret iilnesn of. typhold pneamonin: aged
Deenty-dve yearn. Hitn fineral took pace
wn the 1th ar the Mt, "Zlow ME. ehureh,
Hons Ite. “Tere Joseph Ht. ‘Jeaking, of
Hrooklyn. officinted. —aseinted by Iter.
Louie Monch, pastor ef the church, and
Heew.” 1 Te Walters, The, Maxonle ners
view wan conducted ioe Warditnfat Manter
Sunn. Willinine, of St. Jon Lodge, Ne.
StF and AL St, nmnisied. hy) Worsbiliral
Master ut Che}aea’ andee, No.3. and Wore
slit Stantee oe SME ollve Thode, | Ne
iit New Fork. “Great nrapmthy’ wns
simi Wy te Mirge niiaben uf beauthtul
Hwrat pieces thnt were weit te the funeral
Intermwnt ab Zhen centers, Rossville,
State Takaind.
Seuuckie Maawe:
| a RANI, | Pe brMary 0.-— Coen penitasy
Lyceum celebrated EAnoalns. Tirta
fa R” moat ptowdate “manner Then
ote a Tnege Tnndience “oa hand. Ti
filiowing “peagram was Fndered: Tn
Cieations Hew Stngheton: singling. |My
Gamites ris! nt Thee" wweleame abbr
buster of ceremonies, Heneg Eater:
Hineuln's acoadnege to the Segre Iew
Coie: Unghie. Star Spangied tanner:
SA Rising. Lutiienen” hy Tanats We Thos,
singling, Glory Tanelugidees “Laneeda
tay for ong werk.” be BN!" Taretsy
Anuchig. aid then benedtetion,
tere wujerable sehselde parte twish
bien Git Mutoiey events, alent Ss Head
Eathersad fo0 the ncenctt
Are Tenatts Peterson surprlend her tine
Land Witte ss bounelue babe ale Tie bate
Stars Wtsetall late bekd thete anneind cles
Hon of oMrera con Westhesiny seventng,
Vebeuney in nt Win Cen ay's pester
The fellow hing saltiewess were sbesteds tea
per Crawford. peesiien: Win Tnpdes, sec.
Heesftent stati Went, sereturys | Win
(lavage iesistunt sretstares dee Deter
sate, eensterer ctntens Detersan sergeant
Miieme: Baile Tews, captain, Mealy Hd
Poterenn, amnnacer
“Hye Tone Stars hues weganiged a esket
teal “feats Sohn Hatteliinmwen te eaptalny
The Lavon tentered i the prowenie ist
Sundays Gander thee teadershtye oe Peris
Teta non
Me hid Mee Ansell Dnt, af Bovis
Keeps Was Te tne visting Mig, Duis:
miather and father n few age IAN week,
Mise Evenson, wf Tronkisn, ts Melting
her daughtee. Mee.” Taples.
A Teri hiw been aii un ty Poms
tit for the pant week or tere, be the
Kev, Mee Ante I. Heown, who iy know
Hernghont ‘the country.
Vine Hickw. Jee eave a parts tea few
of Juin fetoula jini Feta) eventing’ at hte
reahbence 5
Ming irene Peietsan entertained the
Mise Lis, UKs, Battie Hutehiiyenns aus
Harry, Conway. and Caleb Petetsun last
Thiraday evening
Mee Rants Fe Etrown Ine been stants
atthe Mise Gertie nnd Gusae Craw ford
featdence on Madden street,
Wee usgei Atenza | Worthan and
Henry (Mower attented thee faneral uf
TM Mets, ak Ghauhalase foodies,
Middletown Noten,
A heme Sochit wil be gtven weekly tn
he tiyerest af tlhe raid rally etart of the
Hat "Aentie Church. te cbse Miurete 17th
Fie ntti nutter save held Weduestae
‘ontfig nt the feaitenee nf Leet Hashranen,
tind prragedl @uewinjuete mileceee Alok, Sow.
fhe af Newark, enjeyed at plensant. state
Sith’ Chaonecy “West und” Gumlie. Mrs
Aha Wilting Plosd Muller atl foxep
siankin en qiite lek, Mra Teale Tet.
halt, Mee BM. Trarper, Mtlew Mitel War
ner and George Wagner ace raptilly ep:
Snheming. Bes) Washeonck attended te
Sunation at Gremnw ie, Conus and reperts
There cemlosntibe trip.) Dues enone bas
i think Mle ttewe Warener, formerly of thie
phe, feck the heble at ne Brew
‘at reshting at “fonmtawitie, 001 ste
Clunnees Garner, after an” abaence of
henrie 15 senee, ie Mc town the senent ae
hie dianghter. Mrs, “Hallock, Tharsday
ceening the Finughtors of Conference, Minn
‘Thereen Tartan, president: Meas betee Ware
ner, goaedian, “will give an fluatrated en.
teriainment. tn” Zion Church." Rpecial
features will be Uncle Toms Cabin” and
the singing of a number of illmatrated
wines. Aereice at the Bast Avenge Charen
Sunday were well: attended. Pastor Van
Buren, preached at hoth services, ined
Miller, who la very sick was admitted in
Zion Chnrch @ member In‘ fnll at bie re-
quest. Mian Lottie Neal, of Clreievilie, en:
joyed a vieit of eevera, days in this city.
Meme Missten ot Br. Ransom’: Church
Booten, Feb, 32 —There wae an exeviten!
quietest: ander OS tt
Sere ommttie at i
rch Poereany srenig, at
fad. was doeated tothe Merri: Brows
Suite, "duster Hace’ ES" appecre
Ke ine’ were, Maar yaw,
a BAe Ree ath
aruba i wooislse snd punalat
Mr Dard setae Bop. Ureaenget i
Exliy Uw Leber baby eon daer
thine suuueearegrapad esadee! cater
Hine” Vivifatrin “of ii, freaet!_ ett
ina, Viegdet slg Frasca, "ecompaniae
Setied oy ey Wills “Boetehin tomer
Saat or Kew imagined” Orservatser,
"Phe American. 7 i econ
ing tserviges “Of brotecsor’ Relig" Milise te
Sdaatas the’ rembors of the Cousregations
Uige'at, ths Fora Bubding ebreary Tita
Weovuary- lara monty tall’, Hesabe
ot ifs deja ‘bat (promlare to be terns
ig ‘ts Rppetttat for” Botfontnt Hen
ot all, PRR Seales to Boston and’ te
tiga Daepering © rec aie 2 eoly
eelcoate, "BE Reka Gitkaay" wha ae
Grete'ly shee, Became gt sz Soleus
rte X.MCK: oe tharehs Beseany Tit
During ‘Bia oration, Ker. Galits ssecrted
Gat Br. Pelee wae the’ greatest Aire
Rivericta {Mls country ‘ever prodeced.
At Kev. Dr. Kansuin’s parsonage, before
tye ‘Wome Missionary, ett weases
oS hae wreaths weoaee
fabee ‘a ome’ taferSaties Coottranat
Worle, Development und” Manutecter
sro etie!
sive “Eraeat Waters, serves a, splendia
inane at"tae Mawsiond, Tieken, 22F Dare
‘Burr! Sid Jones bare opened. a ““Twen-
eth Geutory Restaurante sto" Camden
Meee, :
ARSC installation of the oficers of Kan
‘Circle, King’s Daughters and Mons, was
Be etrgarty a ela ate A" beet
ties" epant’ wast atten woetee weakens
Mil guester "Bins" Sauce, who was
eee reader (oe he Sale ieee
Saniprcsented witha Seautifal old chats
Brake cee
rhe omeers elected were an foflece:
Tis, Goarlouie"Ebetnces tcenee ie:
vulifs Sidwetds ice Teateet™ Mine’ Stee
etlty, Modest vies wesaee! atte rth
Fecmas, nancial secretary? Mrs Nes
Sader, recording” secre; ine es
Gales" corrempouting: secretary, ‘See
SAGNe psughasbeactistant Soreeoposdent
weretagy? rw "Manat Beware titan!
Sheri Min Ghesatine Coltert Treaster:
SL! hdartha Bayt chapel
Tiagng’ tiger Whe. sedretecd the cles
wire Mint a ante of tenbelace CER
TE Guba ones Backs Mee Sans
Alaoitoreae' cigars”
"the" Christian ‘Bedeavor Roctety — will
old evansellale ameetiagy at, Charles. strove
Seuteh aoe" cat ate eeeene‘bertatag’ Bee
Shas he the eiceaty eases er
iia Mtv hurd SH matt on Tae
ne Pepenecy Seer we Beste” Te
Sedna Bounane sha wite Meee Finnie NE
Douglass are ieaonen gece. fuer
nee stevplne AC Mrs und Mra" Gilbece, More
the, Ai Warwick nisert. Mee Douciaas. wii
Cinihaet tae Geol Re camber at elves
Wapato “iyetday” eveaite, ese
we tea era escort a
Be te No Ree nape larch
Weducnday, February, 2. user the auspices |
egnereey: Read Merbanet eit
of Mincdepbin eae Whiten
Gamilions aestpauit’™ Me, Sistine
Heat ee ti Mt ean
Tene estan MG Aedbnte wae
Hier CoM crates Mite Ne
Theodore arte ¥
Emtertained by the Mayer.
Satnbridiee, Cob, a. Tae dumps exer
recltnt at the St.Paul enurea We-ugBe om
Li xtrong autience fteiradar plant Mew
Snclann presented sir, Seraut te ibe Wak
ee Remgona esi
“rhe “Cambridge Men's. Kasam gaye ae
entertainnuent foe Whe. teach “oh abe
Samalta eaters, wiles tie aussneen
Mee bie, “Ruedas, “teeter oe sive Pan
MN en Htants a Santina, ow tae Sth
aeettreanes.
Prenidine “Bhler Simson war at St
rau litre Monn
The (wenty-aig anniversary of the. gen
eral “Christin Endeavor Society. wan "ob
Served lant Suniag. evvbing tye the Allen
ismgae Christian Endeavor Sortety’ of Kt
nafs" chaceh, nen Racing delivered an
Addrenx on the hixtory wf the orgautaation
Trott Macthsnali of Multatelpoie, tenor,
antl Mine Si. ie Denby. mopman, will ete
piholte"nane evince at SU"ERe ebdres
Redirues 3s,
Me MLE. Hamife, prenident of | the
Yontic Mews’ Korum, tiie! Iangewt orgaptaa:
ion ie ine kind inthe vielnigs, waetenter
Inined at allnner by Whe Hon Walter c,
Wniwell, nasor, nt Cambridge, lant. Sun
Ang afterioen the Forym will eelotent
Tey aunicepeaty op the Sth “of, Fetbrutes
IY a'Waogoce: Hila honor the mayer wilt
US flenent al adrews, the nswcrtaiee Gas
Shale will be’ prewent amd nyse, eh oe
Treo tinue, Tare hte Tinntal we. atte
Inet Eeealdeet’ Stetemt, af tess caus
thon? Preatient Stetenns at thee donc
Chamette Game Wott) Acres tees De
feameamn, eee, St, outed aid, Troe
Hiwant’s Wright, eho will give a dre:
aati remit.
Bee TRE Gatos, contentin, wong wlth
erat effvet at thes Linevite iletining. cele:
Bratiog wi Ste Paurs chur a fast Sunday
ening, "Febriare
Rathiont Harlin: of the Young Men's
not De Cox: atcotiicer se the: sams pnb:
Hiely tian fthe' Age" for what’ Pheg
Terined the Intelligent weivenpa tt had
Eitartnae weuckns und Cambrtage mewn
in ceneral
sire Chrey Tian, of 30 Market ateect,
han teen Vers Mot eri, “bent Edward
RM tips beeedre an fine esptetinnl Evatos
ton of Man. an. How He Attatued to ble
Hetkele iMeavof ods" precipitated. the rae
Treweet “Miteurstint ste Rurntn bee yee
citewn
Font Sunday Mew, Mannaty Smith. of
sachs, sane loetares tn aati Dats WHR k
thoehital wager, entitied el Lindrances. It
Chun Hieetogagnnt Mes, Sautgie was Sere
cae Pipa whe toptied tthe aber
wo pest Hie” Shean’ dnenean Sina
Me ante Mee Stowe haga oe
Simpson, Me ‘Harele and Ate AW Clerk
a amew Henry etter, of ME
oiive Taprist church tit peefeeumeat ane
ine ae yaar “Weegee aerlaae et
meee SRS e Sattat the “Mtnreting ‘ve
se nd tae nuited: three hondred sat
nut ewnpies during, x pasterttes, The
Sapte “vekesh, Witte tad "ak mateimaets
inne’ te pane, wre, Were: avgnn Sea
rial Capahy A euathagwe Teun anes. a
je i aie Wiirie Towntenie man
fame Wea Yady, Mare Ann Jones aid
el fe cg
Corona Noten.
Mra ttutier, of 20 Fark avenne, and her
danihter Mist tesa ‘are aniined "tthe
Howse. wath ba teippe. Mean Mew Cae
her eave a, sarprier parts an Afr. and Mre
Hettetsen “Thane pteamat were. Mire and
Mra SG.) Snowden, wf Sew York: Me
and, Meg A Te MeRnight, te, ant) Mew
Sey Srewtnete Mew Ae te Wititanis, Miss
Via Genter nd “others.
Faretra Family 11,
Glen Cave, Feb, BoMe, George Janen
spent! several dnyn last week visiting
Tice "in Tevoxea”
Tie Welt dtuiler heb quarterts con:
ferener at Calvnrs AL MMe Churet on
Wetomdny. Pebraney 1th
Teevs and Mee Ite derives, also thelr
stnmaiens Mile Helen “Perea, Inee ‘cune
Rival tucthinte home, with, the. Kelpie.
Sirs!" N0U RS Stace” sutvrtalind a munber
wher feieaie wat Weduemiay eventing tent
IY hor theme
Miss "Hlennor Faretra spent Sunday tn
Renkin, tine koet nf Mian Alvin. Janes
ties’ Heater Paceien wenn tine nest oe
Mie Stary Prince at tem Sthaay, February
Mes, Wm, Rorroushe spent Sunday tn
New York” Mle Mmuair ‘Thompson. of
Se clit te quite Mat her heme. Mr.
nea) Daughesre visited. New. Vark Sine
een eae Merely Rit preaehed ae Cate
Vinee an Sundae. Meo Janie Mekellory
Shett "Sanday ls ttosiyns ste. Willams
Carbentor te guite tit mt his home near
Ser Ca Me aonee Make viated Glen
Chive Subang, he guest of WI parents,
ib eee. sims ala.
and Mr. Jeffrey, Mra. Florence Johnson's
Contractor W. J. Pryor gave @ alnea-
be tg Tie Bae Fact CU
iene Aen ee Pee Se ares Sette
sed ee as oo
tion wae, raced te teem oy re. T
in. the History of New York City *
=n
Full aise tron beds with curved brass top rails, 11-16 Inch post, regular priee
All trom beds, 11-16 inch post, regular price $8.80 f6F....0..cecccccce ess ORD
Full size beds, 1 1-16 Inch post and one-inch twp brass bar, regular price
Full aie, 11-16 tach continuous post, scroll design, with brass spindies, regular
Price $10.00 Or... eee cecesseesetssteeessacecetssseeseceetaseeeet es SRD
Regular $12.00 beds for 947. Regular $17.00 bede for oaTR :
All the above beds are enameled in either green or blue colors,
The purchase of an entire factory enables us to quote these extraordinary
prices, .
‘To make this'page more Interesting we offer regular $2.98 all iron springs
FU alge, LOE. eeeeeeecceeesseestssesersstansenen cfecssseccesarees: BLID
Also full alue pure cotton mattresses, worth $5.98, for $40) but on the mst-
"tresses we reserve the time until February 26th only: after that date the
mattresses cannot be sold at that price.
Pan Par
WZ ‘Thin Coupon is good for One Hundred Extra bay iy
Gold Saving Stamps ons purchase S Sag
Gols of 83,00 oF over, besides the Gold Saying Stampa Gold
Raber a itl a oe oa
mg) | at ot are om ited to on your purchase ie
EDWARD V. KRAUS
603-605-607-609-611 and 615 Ninth Ave., cor. 43d St.
——— EE Eee OO
1905 “ Amicitia, Amor et Veritas” 1907
The Twelfth Annual Ball and Reception
| THEOBALD LODGE, No. 3890, G. VU. A. of 0, F.
At TAMMANY MALL, 14th Streot, between Third Ave. apd Irving Place
Thursday Evening, February 28, 1907
MUSIO BY PROF. WALTEK F. CRAIG 5
Tlokets, incidding Hat Cheok, 50 Cents. Boxes seating otght persons, $2
Box tickets can be secured from Willjam T. Hooper, 410 West 96th street; Dr.
Yerhe RuegitsSuf*trent Batu scwees, Walter Warvin 168 Went Sid revel ot Tames
EXECUTIVE GOMMITTER—P. NF “James I. Sanders, Coatrman: P. N. vy.
walter. Smith, ViceCuairman; , 'N. FL Willing E. Hooper secretary ebro: Waltee
Beanies aati Seasatee he bee Mere oS Nee eae poems
Brows,’ No F. James 0. Biovall, Pr NF. Oscar Btotra P. WN. W. Gestye W. Terie,
Bro, Wiliam’ Hansbury.
——_——————————
Present this advertisement at gut atedioe and you are ealltied te ove Gum of
our $58 fptclal ‘photonrapin' ror $5%00, Fatephese’ asic ze
Battey & Warren
| PHOTOCRAPHERS
| 509 8th Ave., between 35th and 36th Sts.
een gI'= 84% leaders tn the prodaciion of lfesiee werk in crayees and water cslers.
Gand oe are eases 1s. the regs
| THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF
127-131 West 89th Street, New York. Rev. JAS. H. McMULLEN, D.D., Pastor
ANNOUNCE THEIR ANNUAL ENTERTAINMENT
An “ALL STAR” Concert of the most noted Home talent, in this and
adjacent cities, will be gtoen in the Church
Thursday Evening, February 28th, 1907
| followed by a Collation, in charge of « committee of
caterers, chose cuisine, will please the most fastidious
oF a et Nh Me RSET ame ie a ee Te Sem
ETHEL RICHARDSON
A semneeat vhecvtnan_ 0: Min Attwate: Totnes 96 Ssewanh, Mi Js, send: Na speetinn
amt ta tte Mime Rewath oe digg hea ie Seetet
der aun ave co ay, ten orca, Se Hl be supported fa ber cay
Callin cece af Me men Mito!’ ie ie Maes, MEGS SHE
ARTISTE sites Tietige. terres. Organ alg: ame. Marte Randall, Mew
raat Cag ae ing ety ae sia NENT eS Rentini NAS
foiae ee Alig ites 2eetey es an Mite ie ice eines: MOa Pane Be
eae ae ear cireinin emroeas ner, Sears, AG. mer, eis ane
Tavid EO Klong, master of ceremonies; Mr= Minnie 8S, Jabason, accomphoalar.
General Admission 25c. Children under 12 yrs. lc.
rege Tlexcin cae ta fhe Tasior. Travees and at the Auailavien of te
NINETY-NINTH ANNIVERSARY
ABYSSINIAN BAPTIST CHURCH
i REY. CHAS. S. MORRIS, D.D., LL.D. Pastor R
At MURRAY.HILL LYCEUM, 160 East 34th St.
THURSDAY EVENING, MARCH 7, 1907
was aT wine TIME THE —
Thay Makers’ Cantata
PIES WA 2 WILL, ne PRESENTED BY THE ~—
BAPTIST YOUNG PEOPLE'S UNION a
fre, OMe fess Mpuees, Sageny errr A inchs eombictor J
oe MUSIC HY NEW AMSTERDAM ORCHESTRA,
Admission (oon i a ihe ie. = 50 Cente
EXECUTIVE COMMIPYPEE Mr. Tho gas J Sitt). relent: Mee Carrie More
ciel SETI a NNT Mn Bana dM a Oe Se
OO MTUSTO COMMDPTEE METI Mage and Me Atbert De Aney,
—_ SN ne eee
CO “ag PF
~ Greenberg’s
Ladies’ Hair Dressing Parlors
MANUFACTURER OF MUMAM HAIR GOODS
Afro-American Hair Goods a Specialty
589 Eighth Avenue
ang lyr = 7 au NRAB SOTH STREET
:
MRS. IDA WHITE-DUNCAN
Hyp Beeaeott tt deraey C15, Ny 3
“Witin wonKeK
cored ahaa ete te ane Neat eA
Seah ercadarnt, mpating ioe
Hier” race Sinan, "Anite Cle
Bite combina” wou at ede
Webnte® steet Sew state, Conte “Mem
| JA. Tehnon, Agent. {dee 34 3m
C. H. KING and JOE YOUNG
Seeceaners tet ta WILLIAMS.
Barecr shop, 142 Weet Bad Burret.
ence tate Colt Bathe,
erere, Menage Core Rew vand Body
Magievre ts attenganse ;
qertae Fee Patrenane soivaees,
MACY RE :
Hatr Reaewer and Dandref Cure
"partered ite ciaSterpen rte acute to
« Cady "Sedition ercsared “by
100 ween bite meee Rew Tomy
ms
vatrere Brain Opn eal egy
ya ae
MME. S. BOFIRD
vnunet
oan
Sar Ania OS + tn ee
arta en
W. W. HART
Successor to R. H. Bundy
ete ee
Hygienic Toneortat An. Vibtatlon
MME. GEARM;
we * * Grower and
me” ome |b
All Be"
207
207
THE NEWS OF GREATER NEW YORK
the Hight fantostic toe af Professor As
Aierwontes AGadCaay Te West mines
aireel, “on Linco Birthday aigut. ©
at ing largeat entering 0 puplia’ sees
at the Academy during the present’ season,
he “acndving’” was, Weantifaily. decorated
Sith fea white aud bine streamers, whit
open of xream fern tatermaingiea with en
Rafire “etectrie lights leat brilianey to. the
teenm, “Misa Anderson's Orchestra playes
Bil the ponmiar aire of the seacon, and al
Bhalah Enjorabie fine.
Mise Mamie A..Wigging, formeriz of New
York City, but now. of Troy. SN. Ya i
apendings# week's. vacation at her home
No."nes Weat Bixty-nrnt. ntreet.
iF. Broa, M. .: Sf Waxblogton, 2.
Cu in ‘paylog’a’ brief vinit in the cfty with
Seiattven and Friends,
The services at Union A.M. F. Charch,
Ree sic, Pemmaners, Bator, were al
Mell attended. "The Sunday school exer
Cisee were Sery_Interenting’ At & o'clock
the sacrament’ of the Loni’s ‘Supper wa
Administered, the sermon being prenched bi
Bishop Jacob Ramses D. Di. hf Philadel
Dhin, preeidieg Bishop of the’ dintrict. “The
Banlect “of hin discoutne ‘was “Calvary.”
The sonny people mecting at “To-chac
ar fall se "innpiration, — At the. evening
Bersice: the. Bishop avin very. loxleal as
Sell ‘an eloquent ‘dlacourae, Several were
Bekenhiso full membership: by the ‘Bichon.
Heated tn. the altar were, Reverend Allen,
Pieree aud Deaveraay. Appropriate muni
San rendered at emch service, muter tbe
Gitection of Mr. William. HL." Niuor. "A
Erection an tendered fo the “bon on
fonday nixbe riot to bis departure. for
Palindeipbia. ann
Old fashioned Southern dinner at Hotel
Maceo “Monday evening February. 25.
Music, dancing. re Tez
Baptint Temple bad % good day. Sunday
and the. members rejoleed over the. cob-
Serta gained durmg. the previoun “week,
There Wan m large nttoudance of members
at the communion service, nod with equal
iy ‘tn tinny frieade W€ -almiont” filled. the
rpsciour "auaitoriam, "Aes "ord’n” gag
the Literary. noclety, whlch mects at 6:90
Peas SiiPeonduct-« praise svrvice gn our
Tevival Te till In progres. Hers, Brows.
ShivAnthony assiated Peator Chandter thie
week,
Mr, Richard M. Lec. of 215 Weat 20th
street, eave m birthday. party at bin bome
Tent Saturday, niet. Rebrunty 16, o¢ which
irgyone od whe feiendn were present” Tae
evening was apent.picarantiyy Ate. Lace
fecelved inany beautiful presents,” Iftn
Biothes, 1" Lec. anelnted Ib receiving the
guests,” Mew. A. Toe, his” mother, cated
Ex heaton, Pino “uate by" ade, Carter
The" pinked the agp march, aasinted. by
Bee oho “Me Tee and bin mother
Ate at home Stindaya from Z until 8 TM
Menara, Vanghn and Harrix, Entre Xous
clase cucry Wednesday ereniag, 118 West
Finy-third street.
The Valentine patty given bs the meme
pers of Oriental Cadet Corp on Thursday
evening, February 14th, “atthe realdence
gi thes president, Mine "We 1. Morton. 44
eat MEd sitet, mm iargely attended
Dy mapr friengn “Among the guests
were’ Allen Ge Alston and A, Murphy. Ste
J. Robinson, Mr. J. Brown, Mr. 2. FL
Scroggins, of Brooklyn, and others.
Last Sanday at the Retbel chorch the”
mhird quarterly meeting for the conference
eat was held by Presiding. Hider Butler.
fie Butler ‘preached rer able ston
nnd the webofe congregation. mean deeply to.
terested da dtn delivers. Tbe sacred con:
crt'in the Sunday Schoo) rooms wae, con:
jucted. by T, Arthur Hebbone. "There
were magy very saceliont numbers.on the
osramune, ail of which were mura cn:
yea Dr. ‘Henderson at the nit scr-
ge. delivered. n mont able silsrwuree to
he order ‘of the Tenefclat Star. aa or.
fanizntion formed among the wouen more
an twenty jenrn ago, and. which. te Sery
cuag In numbers aud foance now. Ail
wees much, plenned swith the" practi
pen npaisy rich the, abject was acu
Bee’ Guatterly’ Conference will be Deld
Rriday ini. Great, prenaration “in “be-
ae made for the cighiy-eigath anniver:
ary, ehich commen the Sear April With.
Rig berlin, of Ste, Vateitine “nnd, Mew.
Feorse Bell were. both at Wethel for the
rey and rites. atthe mame time damtSun-
ay. The. ‘Couterenee rset Mfieetonary
eicty of tie Sew Work Conference will
id lin, tuled quarterly teeting me Ttethel
atch Tee mortar reeedted na letter
aying Vint fhe Turners welKt. wie
ra Frnetuedat Wein fathom the dee, Wook
ne well nad wilt nonn ber enticed heated
ike “Yuunss Wemence Chrictian | Ansneta:
fon Hit hold a pnblle weettaas wt Herbed
burch nest Sumas. Infternean | Hed
clock. :
St Mark's Chureh reanion will be held
a fhurmiey treniga, Sine 21, ac Grand
eatral Valace, Forteetaurth wtreet ani
exlugion avenue. ‘Tickets, including sup
cr Soeeatn. advnfeb 14 Bt
‘Through un errar Ht was xtated tn test
chin Tenue of Five Ae that Mra. FI
anki and her sister Airs, Stacie Moore
fre voccupaats of a. tox at. tbe Hotel
slimenss Feerbtion neither were, 8x Sines
se death of theit mother they have fot
tteuded ans entertainments.
Arrivals at Hotel Maceo arc: RE.
once, Rew “Orieane: We'it tosan. tious:
on "icexas: Mire and vsire, We te Jonen,
mst Oraeke: Me. and MraT. L. Aiexander.
Mimond’ Vacs Me nad Men “oka it
(euro, Boston; Clarence Lea. Hye. SY.
Dr. Willam F. Lawton, of Cleveland. 0.
a Ure tlige the vauest. of Stem MTS
ain, Of 140 West Bad mtreet
Mie. Sand. Mrs J. Wnggold tendered a
<wpiton to Mier rang fiends lant Sun:
mePevening gt thelr residence, 131) West
SS Street hes were anninted by Mine
clly” Jones _
Mr. Thornton Hall was married to Miss
yorrace “Shermag "on Feyruncy™ 6.) Kew
Marien’ S Mortis of Auyneufaa Baptist
rarch” officiated.
‘Anderoon's Dancing Academy, 118 West
sd elecet, Every Tursdar. ‘Thurnday end
Rturday ‘evetiings. ‘Special attention te
Ssinuerm: private, lensons. gtven.—-agr-
Mes. Alice Davin dled at hee Rome to
neon, Gna Wednesday morning. Pebruars |
setae aoe. murtive hers bindsay and |
meph “Diavin, “of Rockaway itench. and
Iafenee, whe was mt the bedside of hie
ther “wien, sie explted. Mtr. Joseph
cele Toft at nce “fore Nwcone bit Sr. |
fodany. wae ‘unable to co owing to. sick: ||
a ta is familys, “Mix. Tomes wan 48
ata vot ‘ace and’ wae member of” the |
et Hinetiat chareb of Macon: !
The “Colored Republican club will give |!
puniie reception in. honor of Mr. sles
feels. King the needy nppetoted: acayst:
i augierinteadent vot she Wail attert
tach pact attire, on, Saturday evening, |
nugry wi. CAN ares Invited ‘
Wo AL MB. Misalon, known as the [1
copies Nicaea, wax well tiied om tat |!
ida AC a bem Mr Teasamin. poke |
ght Ree TO fi, Pawn, parton. | A
Tie her inay be found nt sea Went |!
a Mien Bek Te Cth, Dineen, 1
Mien. Utugatos. “ptoprteter "of the ||
adwas Koller Skating. Itlaks has moved |
(mink to Imperial. Lvceum, Sth mteect
a “Tnicd avense, and han’ taken ana |§
finer in. the husinest Me. J. ‘Albert Yeob: |!
tn Those gbhtlemen will run an up-to {¢
im skating fink at the nore addcesn and | |
fe ta hace the patronage. of allt sor: | ¢
Me and new friends, ite ik. the intention [|
“neem to open. & rink in. Dronklee n,| |
ei hear! future, ‘alto one In Newnrks Se J] f
Natl Bros.’ restaurant, 450 Sixth avenue. | |
THE NEW YORK AGE. 1HURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1907.
No. 1, with the Ladies’ Protective Unioa
No: 5, the Salooamen's Protective Usten
Noa. ‘i ana Sas. theit guests listened. to
thelr sanual. sermon.
aondey” and” Friday treceptious) aigater
‘Monday a
Tie and 118 West Vitty.tbind etree. “Oar
hew ‘daace,-“the Grenadier,” also the Oz"
ford Minuet.
‘The funeral of Willlam Wallace, JeBer.
son. age 06, was. held from Mather ion
ase S5taay: Bre achluilen™ o@etating. ie
[was B member of the church E84 of Une
claea ‘of Cuaries Ii. Brent since 1875, Iie
leaves a widow, a mother, a sister, several
Telatives and, 4: Rost of friends, 1S. meara
Bin loss, “te was a. BN, Fe ot the Has:
Titen Tages 7 At 0. of 0. Bad of the
Howehoid of" Shete. °W. David. Brown
tad charge of the Avneral acceoements,
‘The reception tendered the Dew mtm-
bore of tbe church by the pastor of Mother
Fron. “bre Stealuli, ear a brbHAaRt,shecese
Velcomiag apeechex were mei Mee
Milieu aud’ Steanre, Ee. WoC, Eato. and
James Av dopuian, "the refreshinents. were
aerund ‘hy “represeptatives from the. many
Rusllineive Connected with the chure,
‘Arrivaln at the Clarendon House, 115
West Stun street, New york: J. -Willlams
and. wife, Charleston, Vac. Mr, and. Sire.
Gohcson, Glen Cove: J. 1, Wille and wife,
Titheg Sir, tad lie) “mhomae Boston?
eR Fiaatoa “and wife, Boston; Wed.
Inckwon and wifes Washington’ We Le Wii:
inan and wife, Danville. Tit WE. Brooks,
Auriin, Texas: Frank Tolls, Madison, Wir.
OM laiumgad, Su Auqustiog, Fins Mes.
Course, Ambixrtile:
BROOKLYN. “
Min. Oxcar W. Fulcher, who wan called
to Newport, R."1. by the death of her
aunt, han returned.
‘Mr. and Mra, Johnson. of No, 769 Fulton
mrest mere enterininéd at the Gaeric
entre and atterwnrd at anpper by Mr
and Mrw. ‘Teadeny. of Glenridge, N. 2
On Theadny evening. Febranre 12, Mra.
C. Lamar. of No. 1.281 Atiantle avenue,
cntertalned ‘the ‘TFarguols Whint- Clab. In
thelr fourth nerien of amen, Thone preaent
Were:-Me. and Mew. ‘Charien Comba. Mra.
TWicke, Me. E. B. Wath Mr. and Mrs, John
He Watkins. Mra. Co Hudson, Mr F.C.
Staupers, Mise Butenh Lamar: “The next
nericn of eamen will be played at the real-
dence of Mr. and Mra. C. Coombs, after the
Lenten tide. ;
The recention given hy Profewmor J. Mile
ton Anderson, at Wele” Hint, cm Monday
evening. February U1, wae well attended,
Thin was the feat recention given be Me,
Andormam In Trnokiyn for Kome yearn and
mane of tix farmer tutrons. who remide. In
the borongh were peeaent. The alate wa
Well conducted andthe ananngers deserved
the succons thes won, Sa
“Mra. Samh Hrown, one of the Mauch
oliines Me the Concord Raptixt church, han
heen confined ta her bed for the past ten
dnge with an nente attack of the xrip.
Son, Nancy LaMotte, of 2 Flot Place,
in Mowiy recovering after an Mncan of
neveral weeks.
The regular 4 o'clock meeting for men nt
the Carlton Avente Hraneh of the Young
Men'a Cirintinn Anrociation Inst Sunday
Afternoan, wan well-attended. Prof. D.
E.Tohinn, a sounk man with, roctoloxteni
bent.” delivered in vers, helptal addrona,
tating an hin mubject, aks Mother's Te.
Ugion" "The xddreae wan. reminiscent
and portrayed many parental xcenca and
Mrought to the memors of {he ‘men Many
proverbs told at the Areside In early youth.
The Rible clan period wag occupied bY
the Rev, THI, Gautt, neting pastor of the
Nazarene Gongecgational chureh inn
thoughtful paper. upon the “Tife of
avid.” At the conelunton. of the’ session
n"commitive nt Jadien served ten and
Tonehicon to about thirteee men. whiten
was no mich appreciated that the inten
tad a afivers Ming when the men teft the
tater "The monthly public mecting af the
Franch wilt be hold nt the Meldee Steet
ALM Eo chureh next Snndar afternoan at
Pojetock with. Meo W. TD. MeCinie. of the
NewYork Theological” Sentinnry. © as
mpeaker.
Mra, Samuel Stevens, of Ossining. NY.
was the geet of Afee Lath Rutlock
And Mee JOM Stout, at 304 Fulton street,
on. Friday of last week,
The regular monthly miceting, of the
Tntan Tiesren Chamber, af Reankten Db
Usian of Genwd: Fenbue, United Order af
Yrne Reformers, wae held at the hath on
Miamtae tenting atd was attended We
Mont siXte Aves members. “Chief James
Th raw tee nrestited aid was estate tn
ceiving the degree. te the ekeht eandidntes
Iie Mise ME Tail and Miss Marin
Thewell as. warthy deren nibst remnes
There wit ben special sermon prexehed
te the diviste an Sundas event neat at
ihe rites Street AL Mt E ehareh be Dr
A Canper. Mire Crawley. ma attecoed
na I atkins phe week nt aperatton nt
Ravehore. Ne Ya and haw a thriving foun
tay there, “whose mnetbers far convent
cuee wert at Bubyton.
Interesting services were held at all the
churchew Inst Sabbath snd were, well at
fended. Ube nldition nf Chase recently
coneoried hax Infiimed meen: Tite Inte the
membershin innde manifest ty the spiritual
nilft of the eharches. Trldee Street &
ME church, Rerenn Wantiet, | Bethany
Raptint, Hate Printty Mantis St. Phillie
Pe Mieton have. all helt special ner
‘leox whieh have. not only benented the
Individual ehureh “aw such. Wut. the com.
muinite in whieh these ehilrehes are loa
nd The Canrurd Raptist chureh fe retit in
fhe tldat of one of the tant atcee anf
revivals held there siner ISR Te. Dison
a prenching wroncincing — ssoepel Merman
with creat apleitual power. The Sunday
Scho hie heen arotined and some. fae
fen oF tore eeholare hnve heen canverted
After the regulur preaching wervien next
Sindy night Faxtor Tye wilt adminiater
he ariinnee af hanthan te all candidates
who have united “With the ehdreh ap te
hie prevent tie axa reaalt of the revival
‘aT Vatentine Party was given by. the
Miteoe Texete Fisher, Anne ONeer and
Chameinin Fisher nt ihe residence of Mrw
ce Fisher. S81 Waverts avenue, ‘The
adios ware fnner Arewes,
A pleasant home wedding twok place Inst
Sindae evening at the fraldetfor af Mew.
tattie, Hounds, 2470 Someh Thtra warren
Phe remteacting partie were Mee "Mand
Miisame nnd Mr. Augusta ‘Tennkins
Me. and Mrs Martin. of 278 Putaskt |
treet are reoiclog over the Meth of al
{tiie san
Mise J Mason aud F tawson of Snack |
A vistied Meee EG, Daniels of Dexeane
Hieet Inst Satugdiy evening,
Deamn at Carneuic Lyceum,
The Jiteie Saet vomedy “Avaien. Satiiies
same tte ja iroaentead at carnegie. 3:
carn “inteaday” eventngs Fenranrs, SR
Phamieee ete d fore sat and nosed
Meat Ate alte Te iervee anion whore
Menton thet Tio Haye Soeaers. comeert
Me een Uvere Mprings te presenting. th
Menno the esthe mupnried he te fat
tween ast” Tout Gales Howls tame
Hteteca Son tare Reneat Petey. ‘Thoma
Moseley, Arenthaid Thomas. ‘thix tx the
Aett tiine ae atten has’ ieee mate. tn
fice Av purcle, deamatte production at thi
Batnn, nt Carnegie. Lacoume Wn
fuavement in *ne are ‘aiceetion And “ihe
Masses are nevaily’ raconroged to see. te
Pha niic’ "ta fultsegmostiee with thes
Stork sue” sot abe benkSealanee ‘wil
fainter thee aleeesten 2e brah Baran
Troxintent. 'Serserions, with tee iayed be
ate ike pertngmance and hetwees the meta
Tichets” dan ee etrured at the bor ome
at Eibnegte: eeeurh on Wedgendaye Fete
tte a herweey anda he me’ one tie
Moning’ of the peetormnnct, ir by” adden
Ing” Mine hora Cate 108 Went 188m street,
Die.
PEPNO—On Wednesday. February 13,
10 ne the. wealdence at ‘ner parenta,
Kathine Taniten ragngent wauckeer of
Eiatien Dy, land Teontine Pedro, age fone
semen Ave: natin
MARS Annie widow of the tate Wil
tam N Maver ts vine etree departed Yale
Mfe February 23, 1907, aged @9 yearn
Funeral pereicen were held et St. Dhliipen
church. Saturday. Feorniary 48." interment
a Espirene Hitig Cemetery:
KINNER--On Thoraday, Febenary 7.
rene. Min Bitaa "Rinmets” tate, residence:
Lon’ trout” atin Vateoete aepatted thie Ne
inthe arventietn tour of Ree age, afters
long itinees: the’ wae a Mmemiet of Me
fier Rabel iten Ehe” evamed
aren twon eons, Tout” daughters,
thildren anda hoat ot ‘riecde to Sowre
ihele lore The tuneral, service wan held
at Mt. Olivet Bagtiet church on Swedey,
the Ith, beieg attewéed" By. many ieee
Rooney Pore. Nod. 'en old amd reopected
ee, Redon
frivsd of the fomiiy.
SPECIAL NOTICE,
Mr, Mimms wishes to congratulate the
Palestine Whist Club upon ite iret aanual
Dall, that was held best Thursday eventhe:
the "14th, at Imperial Lyceum, and aslacere-
ly hopes that Tt was a grand succres. The
ladies looked elegaat aad the gentlemen
ee eg
2° sag . te TA
3 Py oe 4
, <a .
he. ; ,
i: say
ee "ty ee
Bs 6 as ty Page
: a
ag Br
ot es ed
. Cee
: as.
al ie
ee
ee ee he :
sn, WS 3 fob. 288
SE ete
ee
caqnally an well, He anys that xo fae it
was the yrandext ball he has attended this
weaxon. He alo ‘winhex to potify the
Patrons of the “Recherche Dancing’ Class
that It wilt close untit ‘further notice dur:
Ing Lent. :
Virtuene Mecial Club.
The Pre-Lenten Reception given by the
Victor Soctal Cint, held at) Croaby” ball.
gn Lincaln's Birthday ove.” wan "a grand
mucceny, In xpite of the zero weather. Early’
In the evening the crowd Dexa to ansemble
and the Inapiring “xtrainn af munte” kept
the gueste In au whirl Into the email wee
hours, when “Home Sweet. Home” wan
played. “The outof-tewn guests were from
the followhng places: Foughkerpate N. Yet
fee So Yor derey cltye Ned, and Newari,
The following clutw were reprenented :
YM. C. A! Dramatic club, of Sew York
City: Dunbar Sociat’ club,” of New York
City? St. Christopher club. of New. York:
Spintters, of Newark. N. Ju: Elite TSterary
Club; Young "Matron. Daughters of “New
York. Vhilomphean Whist club and "the
Rewiiontial Sevtet, of rooktyn. The club
conaints of the ‘following raung men:
UMivees © Wellington A. Senlth, preaident
1 Hovert Atpookr weep Ment! Aagizon
S eqliatles:, Secretare : Oma |e GC. Hrintel.
corresponding secretarr: Jante W. Lrneh:
Jr. treamurer: Prof, F. K.. Pine, miixtent
director. = Members: Jamen G."B. ‘Ine,
Yorticr eB Mtaucts, tenes P. Fwsber,
r. Joseph A. Holmes, Chariex FE. Holmen
Arthur I, Comlttar,
S¢ Baby to Cutting Teeth.
Max. WINALOW'R Booriina Srrcp bas been
ned for over RIXTY YEARS by MILIIORR
of MOTHERS for thelr CHILDREN
WHILE | TEETHIXG. with PRRERCT
SUCCHRR Tt ROOTHER the CHILD,
NOFTENS the GUMS. ALLAYR ail PAIN?
CERES WIND "COLIC, and ie the” beat
remedy for DIARRITOEA, Sold by Drur-
gletx-ln every part of the world. Re anre
and ask for "Mra. Winslow's Soothing
Rerun” and take o0 other kind. Tweaty
ve ceats @ Dottie.
RELIGIOUS NOTICES,
BETHEL ACM. E CHURCH, Wert 25th
Street, ‘between ith and Sth Aventes
Sunday werviees 1 ALM. and THis P.M.
Hoty Communion every ‘text Sunday, i
TM Chis, meeting 100 PM San.
fag: School 21M Prayer” Secting
ato PM
Weekly" Meetings—CInga | Mooting an
Montag, Tuemdny land Weduewday” bighitn
cat Surelock! Fraser meetiig on Frida:
oleht from 8 welock te Mvn %
SEATS FREE. ALL WELCOME,
Rev, T. Welihigton Henderson, DD.
Pawtor.
Tastorn residence, 248 Wert 120th Street
AC hate ‘trom & to 10 A.M
The Puxtor enn be xeon at the Church
every day from 12 to 3 PLM. oct IZ dye.
MOTHER A. M. E. ZION CHURCH.
West sOrh SG. det, Colambne and Amster:
dam’ Avennen,
Itev JH. MeMullens Paator,
Snudlay Servierw—Prowehiig at 10:43. A, 6
and 745 PMO" Sabbath School 27.” AM.
Young Trople'x CE. Prayer Meeting every
Sunday evening nt 6:15 clock. ubtte tn
vited.
ST_CYPRIAN'S CHAPEL, PROTESTANT
EVISCOPAL, 1277 WEST 6d STREEY,
REV, INOW IOTINSON, Ertent In charge
Sunday servives—11 AO Mf and 8 P
Sunday Seheal 2°40 P.M
A CORDIAL WELCOME. TO ALL.
suit 20 Ayr,
EMON ALM. B. CHURCH, 230 Baat Rt
Street: Rees IO) FERNANDERS Pantor,
Sundny xervices: Urewching, WA. AM
CinewMerting, 12 MiSundag School, 1d
POM: Vreaching 8h. Mor Holy Commun
fon every third Sunday i iM” Week-day
kerviees. Lycenm, Wednestay, 8 Po Mf:
Clase Mootlags, Tharadas, 8 P.M. All ace
welcome,
JUST OPENED
A 16 Room Mrivate House,
208 West 40th Street
Completely furnished, hot and cold water
fan overs Moor, steamy Neat, bath, eeetrielty,
Ens. telephone nnd messenger ent Twa
Benes’ Tense or tecrent by the month, Taw
iertor “Xpnty
can, (WATKINS AID & REALTY CO.
200 We ttn St Phone 4774 Bryant.
ALT, Anderson 0... M. Reberteen
ANDERSON & ROBERTSON
Uphelaterare and Dealers io
New and Slightly Used Farnitare
28 WEST 128th STREET
Telephone, say Marlem, Year Patronage Solicited
ALL eamene PROMPtLy ATTENDED Te
CLAYTON'S BXPRESS ¢24.¥or%
GR «201 WEST 634 STREET
Telephone, 17¢8 Colambos, =~
‘Trunks, Pianos snd Furniture Carefully
| Removed
© lee Clayton, Owner. T.C. sent MR,
—————
F. G. MINSHALL |
PURNITURE, CARPETS, RUGS
ager Peres Pramse mace to onsen,
110 Ot hve, Worth of 460 81., Mow Yor’
Oneh or Crete .
May 81 tv.
ME Witlcaghty St, Brockira, B. ¥.
tavitee eteentivn to bio new stock of Pull
and Winter Woelene fer Suits, Treesere
amd Overcents. Mahe your money count to
te Bret sevanenge. i
Cal on TAYLOR the TAILER treet: inom.
oor On. ~ 4 te
') 2 ¥ Let — large treet ‘roem with ali cvs
vealeacee (or light heoaskerpl cs
Sunivan: S17 Wat Sota treet” fon ft
SOLER NGI SNA tenes on,
TO LET—s oy. ture! large * anc
i occa any
| mire: Mra ‘Retinora, G88 West Use mir!
|| Sacoad aoc Sense
: GO LE1—#isor, anfurnished with oii im-
| T vements, ‘abza Quincy surest. Broek:
ue, O°" 00 Ta
So
TIO, LeT—Nicely furniebed “amall and
Totes regme with bate onan al one
| sgaigncee. “ire” Jotason. 20 "Weer 34
| Breet." Fer 74
|; URNIBHED rooms. to let, all conven-
Ls Wrignt. 1478 Bergca ‘etkett BES:
right sete Baye:
rate eerste 15%
383 South a street. Brookiya, near
383 Wiitlageburgh Beldge. Five-cent
fare to any part of New York. First floor
Provement” Newly decorated: Who" apply
Fovemente, » Newly decorated: $18.
Tapior and Bex, 43" Broadway. Brooklyn.
Fen atti
© _LET—Private House, 6 Jarge, rooms
| Oana"tath, Hot water’ suppie” fagnire
Basement, 42) Wert 1434 atrert
Te LBT—Two nicely furniched room« to
respectable peopic, 858 Ninth avenue,
Henderson well. :
WASRERGRe, 5, brighe, “snark, goune
irl a place aw a typlat or orice, ‘work.
Adaveine Me De AQuiner mec WOOK.
FO Ler 2e, 20 anil eo Went 001m mere
4c 5 and’ Q) roome? nteam heats hoi
water! and"bathy “Renta: 825" to $3106 Alwo
Two very. desirable ‘stores on Both ‘ateret,
Inquire a1, I donen, real entete antl employ:
nent omice, + Went Dory streets
Peesenee, room for ope or two gentle-
Ton, Ae Went Goth attest, hewlhe
Younes lia Renovating end Tallorlog
Eataiitenment, 24 Went 42a street, hone
Suef Brynn cade. ped BItt
“MYERS. —Atter’a short iineas, Rosanah
1. Miyons, beloved daughter of Besjamte
Myers "Sunday, Februney 17, 80
Xe eat. .
shin for inainene “Apply” Mes. "Shep:
perd, 103 Wert 29th atreet.
{PO LET— Pook acd unturntshed rooms.
Appls 140° Went 53d rect
LARGE furnished room: man_aad wife
ear (WO men. 11; Wert 2zth atveet
Daolel,
TO LET Furnished front “room, hall
entrance Fal third aveatie, Top Aor
TLET—Unturniahed floor all improve
+ TO phanter wien Taree taraiohed roses
Utica "avenue, Breokl ye
Dr, Roberts White Tone tenth powder
In lane ‘of the bent "knomn preparatioge ter
Mhltening and ‘Cleaning the teeth Charles
Bh. Roherinn iD. R242 Went Hd RFE,
New York city.—adv. Feb21-4t. =
A_ RESTAURANT
Having Good Trade and First-ciann Equip
mentat at- Moderate. Teter.
CALL AT ANT TIME,
B22 West 41st Street
{ (AR Enst 100th atreot. near Lexington
avenne. Re iange, Han tomes Dot water
Shpniy', nth Elo takes Apply" an prcen
J.P. BOURKE & SONS, 12 W. 9th St-
Peephone 520% iver )
WHEN ALL OTHERS:FAIL |
CALL UPON UBADQUARTERS
Palmist to King Edward2Vil
He ttle your Name. Ovenpation, Relieton
‘and Widnes Without Gueetione Ineaeees |
Teh nducneess Pies Se ects i
UD Meeconet, 422 Sixth Avenue, oene fern |
Street NOY Veh ST a
containing 6 Large Rooms and Bath; |
all improvemente; at 46 Ravine Avenue, |
Jersey City Heights. Seven minutes |
from D. L. & W. Ferry.
Apply for Key, 48 Ravine Ave.
WANTED Colored Domestic
help; good wages. Lodging to
working girls, $1.00 per week.
MRS. L. V. COTMAN
Southern Help, “Phone 3811 J Main
127 Willoughby Street Brockiya, N.Y.
Joseph Karlinsky
. PHARMACIST |
283 ¥ifth avenue, comer of 13uth street
Reliable Btand |
ier: Work Deven Hresctisrions: and Be
PPO0%000 000000000000:
e FORD'S .« ;
HAIR POMADE:
Formerly known aa 4
“QZONIZED OX MARROW”
J 9 :
STRAIGHTENS
INI of CURE Natit cup bas
EOE HEL ge tet
oveetsr. ASM ERT ktte!? at
shown above: les use waive the most stabs
Biiablovang canny es combs three regs
Bata AEs corte teen Tas
Be etn ote Romer cedetaiae
See Line inca ta sane
She Rita ise ltechitiernpeece
Bidet tes arse eit esentt
Ber patentee Pauses
sate anegaaatias, alata CORRE
PE ome ise arte ie
Seog sraancaice SOARS ae kas
pes een AE RSE
Se tates ee iets
ear ena hele
SEE Senecio. Rams
ean ie tatnageead wae Rs
Seat pepeeceicie Shee pre
Be Fe Rn oe. aly 6 eee:
Set oe aseker stun nan seroly roa, be cok
Pear See
ES ty hae pets BT
Ripe pa Mere CET Rees
Bree Se Wa Se St
The Ozeaized Ox Barrew Oo.
UWone graatas witheed ary ngrestmre)
Ve ‘TO Webect ve. =
Ageaee wemecs oreeyetres
I Phieaalogical .-Entertelameat cree
Mamreted by Stereeption Views KARI
oak amo py]
Pro: Adeas C.E. Misett, Ph.B., MS. . FET) )
‘At BETHEL a. M. 6. cnyacn ea | Lh :
eewere Tos tha Sok Aresiee pe ay 1)
THURSDAY BVENING, FEBRUARY 213 SS) “4
Sublet — CHARACTER ‘Beanine FROM io Gy :
MISS M. B. LYON®, Chairman. ua
FREE DELINEATIONS OF CHARACTER ‘
. ‘aT CLosB.
eattngy geerebterd. “bam ‘etttioee y :
SHEE fee mare etecem eases ’
OFFICH—487 Bizth avenue, wear-29tb at, a
‘New York. x a 7
WHAT,,1S;, YOUR CASE?
CIVIL OR CRIMINAL?
Domestic Difficulties Adjust.d. Husbende made to support their wires
. and children. Debts, Wages, Inowrance Collected. 7
ACCIDENT CASES A SPECIALTY .
Contracts, Wills and Leases Drawn. Discrimination in public places ea account of
race of color vigorously prosecuted. oo
JAMES L. CURTIS
: Counselor at Law
Phone $122 Columbus 322 WEST ‘534 Si.
ee ————————
The Fad of the Town and the Greatest Sport of To-day
So Fall in Line at the
e ° rp?
Imperial Roller Skating Rink
IMPERIAL LYCEUM, ° 9% SyEGes Neen n>
Sessions es and Fridey Evenings of Each Week. Full Orchestra
in Attendance. The Best of Order Guaranteed.
Admission s5o0c., including skates —_- AUBERT, ROBERTS. ana
ee ORB Dee 20-3m0
Have You Wants of Any Kind?
7 ' | {LET US KNOW
We will put them before the Readers
of The Age and the Result is sure.
SPECIAL RATE FOR WANT ADVERTISING.
‘Twe Limes, or 14 words, for 35 ceate per imeertion.
10 cents = line of T words fer lommer omen:
You can advertise anything you want in the Age with the
positive assurance that it will reach some one to whom it will be
ofinterest. Address, 5
| THE NEW YORK AGE
4 Cedar Street - - - NEW YORK CITY
SIE EEEEE eee
WINES AND LIQUORS “xatu'u="
Q Medical ‘Use
1a ere otemallquanlen, Ale line of Beteg Beers,
‘iailor"Phowe erdtre eccive prompt atiections
CHARLES STAUDENMEYER, 794 Ninth Avenue
‘Phone 1477 Columbus No Bar.) nctwecs sidand sy. Jol 28 bye
ee
-‘Undertakers
J, EDWARD WINTERBOTTOM & C0.
UNDERTAKERS
658 Sixth Avenue, steve 37 sie New York
Cc. FRANKLIN CARR
y FUNERAL DIRECTOR
a) Cc. FR
v7 FL
350
v Pirt-clase FW ork,
————————————————
TELEPHONE s1¢0—0th Bt.
JAMES Cc. THOMAS
UNDERTAKER & EMBALMER
- 493 Seventh Avenue
Between 96th and 87th ftresta
| ‘CAMP CHAIRS 70 WIRY
ae raoanecticn with ony elker Fira” macseTy
Telephone Call, 4531 Bryant.
Night Calle ‘promptly attended to
CHARLES H. GRAVES,
Undertaker and Embrlmer
Office, sip W. «rst Bt., bet. Band g Ave.
Residence, 215 W. 40th. 8t, New York
City. Every requisite for Burial Fur-
aisbed on reasonable ‘terme aug 24-1y
|
i
| N (cree tots
THE TRUE REFORMERS BURIAL CO.
Licensed,
UNDERTAKERS & EMBALMERS
Is Be, of the cheapest and most reli-
adie Gertakers’ establishments in the
atde Prareatere cmaviuniraein ane
Sats os Saf eal has ke Geol
Teta
Bestia ot rok teen marten
Brant i 26 ot. Tol 2061 Cot
mens iy & BROTHERS, PROPS
mente _ Abra 8 SROTERRS, PHAPH
Orlander L. Daniels
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER
100 Weet sqIe Ft
Tel 1008 Morningside. New York City
Promo? bervias abd Raderate Batre
. . av ita’
Telephone: $302 Harlem.
H. Adolph Howell”
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EWBALNER
231 W.1334 St., New YorR
fedi-ly
=
eee
7
‘Telephone Call Camp Cenire ane
W416 Cheleee, Cmchet to Hire
TURNER & HOLMES
Funeral Directors
203 Weat 20: street
2 Doort West 7th Avenue, New Yerk City
Prompt Service and Prices Right,
Tuomas W, Toaxen Cranuae 2. Hovacme
fan 1017
ee
Telephone: 2454 Harte,
Tel. 83034 Columban
W. DAVID BROWN
HIGH GRADE LICENSED
UNDERTAKER 4x) BMBALMER
Funeral Parlor and Chapet
146 West 53d Street
Between Sixth and Seventh Avenues
Ledy attendant at all funerale. Comp
Chairs and Coaches to hire at all hours.
ec 18-808. *
: Tenphowe
| S78 Catan en
LADY Ewateee
‘i ATTENDANON
Ro. Reber R.
Monts services cam
be had for Sicksens,
‘ Foncrale, Preeching
nd Marriages, ot ay
‘ hewr in the doy
3
REV. ROBERT R. MONT
otcimer eR ae
Ren TTI. t534. Tel: guts R bearalageice
Z Desens am
retirees
Rev. &. W. Wainwright: £. Parkes.
WAINWRIGHT @ PARKER -
UNDERTAKERS
4 Lawredice Street, New York.
ihe servis ee her” Watwright can be
tC .
for marriages, alcaess
Soe NSS oe ETTiggs, sicknems or feneraiy
ORGANIZING NOBLE WRITERS OF HIS VISIT TO THE VIRGINIAIR.
Norfolk, Newport, News and Richmond Leading the Prosecution, But Business Figures Are All Along the Way—Blue Hole Hue a Hospital—Phill Watson Burry With Approaches—Hopeful Business Outlook—The National Meeting.
The new made a trip through Virginia and West Virginia during the month of January. His first visit was to Frederickburg, Va., which has a colored population of 1,200, a large number of whom own their homes, are thrifty and are on friendly terms with the whites. A local business league was established in 1910, and it is named by active and energetic men. Frederickburg took out a charter.
The next visit was to Newport News, where a most enthusiastic meeting was held; and under the leadership of the Newport News, K. O. Brown, Matt Lewis and Mr. Coleman, who is the owner of an up-to-date drug store, new inspiration was given the people to become more in-prices and making the league a useful instrument in the development of race pride. Newport News has many worthy business establishments. A charter was taken, and a new executive interest of Major Moton and Capt. Washington, it was my pleasure to meet all of the business men of Hampton. After a most pleasant interchange of ideas by manliness a charter was taken.
My next visit was to Suffolk, where the colored people turned out on mace. The hall was unequal to the demand. A most enthusiastic meeting was held, an organization was effected, and it was voted to the election. W. H. W. was elected president, and he has the reputation of being a hunter. He is in the contracting business and is now buoy perfecting arrangements for the State league meeting in March. This meeting promises to be the largest held and will mean the future of the Negro along business lines. I next visited Farmville, Petersburg, and Norfolk, and had most satisfactory results. Norfolk, although hitherto inactive, has caught the tever, and with Kev. W. W. Moss and C. S. Carter, who is the most active business man conducting the business, furnishing establishment, will be in the fore front of business leagues. A charter will be taken. I met with the Baptist ministers on the following Monday, and after offering the prayer I urged upon them the importance of practical support those engaged in business, and a rising vote was tendered me.
My next visit was to Richmond, where a large meeting was held and most helpful talks were had with all of the representative business men and women. The meeting was stimulating larger support of race enterprises. The latest business started is a confectionery and dining parlors on Main street. Richmond is a beehive of business establishments. The writer was confronted with big headlines in the aftermath of the shooting through the South defending the action of the President in the removal of the soldiers, which report he branded as false. My work was in behalf of the Negro Business League. The next trip was to Lynchburg, and a new meeting took the council, and Dr. A. N. Lushington, the president of the lea, will hercaster direct affairs. They will take a charter. Roanoke was the next place, and I got in touch with the leading men, at the head of whom is Dr. Burrell, the owner of the business, and the co-operation a league is promised. All agreed that one is very much needed.
West Virginia, where we have fewer leagues than elsewhere, was visited. Bluefield was the first stopping place, and a splendid reception was given me. The church in which the meetings was held was called to order by Dr. Jackson, who has an established hospital. A most helpful address was delivered by Mr. Fowler, the president of the leading bank, and Mr. Simmia, a leading furniture dealer. A league was organized, and by unanimous vote a charter taken. A group of business men, and left with them the plan of organization. My next jump was to Huntington, and there a good meeting was held and a live league will hereafter exist. Charleston was the next visited, but owing to revival services it was not possible to get meeting. I was invited to the people together. I found Mr. Phil Waters busy at the State House getting the appropriation bills in shape.
At Hinton I found the people awaiting me, and a strong league was established. A charter will be taken. My closing visit was to Clifton Forge, where I had been a strong effort of Dr. D. T. Connor and the pastor of the Baptist Church, a splendid audience. A league was organised and a charter will be taken. I returned home feeling encouraged that success had attended my efforts on behalf of the National Negro Business League. Bear in mind that the annual meeting was held at Topela, Kan., August 14, 15, 10. KRED R. MOORE, Organizer. New York, February 18, 1907.
PROF. DU BOIS IN CHICAGO.
Predicts Race Will Equal All Other Races—Urgers Higher Education as Solution of the Race Problem.
CHICAGO, February 11.—"The Negro knows that he is a part of one of the world's great historic races, and that the time is coming when that race will play its part in the future," he said in side with the other races, and not one whit behind." This was the prophecy uttered last night by Professor William Edward Burghardt Du Bois, of Atlanta University, when he spoke in Cobb Lecture Hall in Chicago University, on "Sociology and Industry Southern Education."
His audience was made up of the combined membership of the Woman's Union, the Political Economy Club, the Commonwealth Club and the Sociology Club of the university. He was the force of superior numbers of the white race is keeping the black man in social and intellectual subjection. "The seventy millions of white men may succeed in crushing the ten millions of black men, but to do so would be neither nor kind nor civilization. It would be against humanity and Christianity ideals."
The professor plead for the higher education of the Negro as a solution of the race problem. He urged the government for the construction of high-quality classes for discovering the talented tenth which are the leaders in the advance of every race. He declared that the Negro problem is not one of petty crime or of industrial progress, but of human aspirations. He said with confidence that it is possible for the white citizens of America to murder the aspirations of ten millions of men, then America is not yet civilized.
New Vagrant Law in Alabama
From The Huntsville Journal
Dearest, we are grateful law the burden
of duty to be defendant to prove his
homicide. We thank. Otherwise he
had been guilty. Our penalty to
be imposed is a fine of $1000.
THE NEW YORK AGE: THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1907.
Mr. Henry Clow, the Scholarly Financially, Discoveries on "Tainted Money" - Public Spirit of Money Men in War and Peace - The Philosopher, thresher of Corngrove, Stanford, Rockefeller and Others.
Mr. Henry Clews, LLD, the distinguished financier and scholar, contributes an illuminating article to The Wall Street Daily News, on great fortunes and corporations, from which we make the following extracts:
"The Socialist and yellow newspapers have quickened and fomented this discontent, and raised a loud outcry against the large capitalists and the industrial combinations called Trusts. They have denounced them as hostile to the interests of the people, and a source of grave danger to the country, and even to our republican form of government.
"In the same spirit, the donations of some of our rich men to laudable public objects, including schools, colleges and churches, have been branded as 'tainted' and 'unjustified' by the wealth of the donors was acquired in business. This was the result of a narrow and unjust view of the matter, for money not stolen, but made in trade, whether by questionable methods or not, does not carry a taint with it when given away. It is indeed purified, if purification is necessary, by charitable and philanthropic motives, upon worthy institutions or persons.
"To criticise and spurn the offer of surplus wealth in this way, from any source, except the proceeds of robbery, is to help to dry up, or check, the flow from the fountain of charity, which is never too abundant for the demands upon it. The ary of tainted money is therefore to be cut off, public service, for it is discouraging to benevolence by both saints and sinners. An old proverb tells us that we should never look a gift horse in the mouth. I have spoken of tainted money; in connection with that I will tell you a good story: Two Irishmen were talking about the Standard Company. One named it 'tainted John Rockefeller's money is tainted'? Yes, I do. Pat; it has two taints on it—'taint your'n and 'taint mine.'
Those who talk about such money
become the ones who know
lust and just that these two
lusts
"To say that there is peril to the nation in large individual fortunes and large aggregations of corporate capital is to imagine a danger which does not exist, in the country there is no law of estate and in the country there is no law of aggregation of anyone is soon distributed after its possessor's death. It takes to itself wings. There is no eldest son to inherit the estate so as to properly maintain and add dignity to the family name and brothers and sisters are left in comparative poverty. We are here all free and equal."
"Moreover, rich Americans spend money more freely and lavishly and live more luxuriously and expensively than the people of any other country, and this tends to keep down or reduce large fortunes. Our rich men are also enterprise-minded, commercial and industrial ventures, and generally equally so in their ordinary business and speculative operations. This does good, for it not only keeps their money circulating, but gives employment to labor, stimulates trade and aids in the development of our national resources. We have a special exception to the rule of extravagance among the rich, because he was one of the plain people, a plain man with plain, economical tastes, and his rise from poverty to great wealth made no difference in his tastes. But even he kept much of his income on a circular basis in his business as a money lender Wall Street. There was no danger to either the people or republican institutions from his possession of so much money, the latest estimate of its amount being $70,000,000, and now that his widow was inherited his vast fortune she had to support her business and benefactions. It will then be practically thrown to the four winds of heaven.
"The profits of the trusta, of course, find their way into the pockets of their stockholders and enrich some of the largest beyond the dreams of avarice; but the benefactions of Andrew Carnegie and Andrew Dickson Bell have enabled the wealth derived from these corporate combinations, these much-abused trusts, may be used for the benefit of their fellow-citizens. Leland Stanford, of Stanford University fame; D. O. Mills and many other heavy stockholders in large corporations have been equally public-spiriting and dedicated to the treatments to promote the public welfare. These large capitalists have shown that there was no menace to the people's interests in the wealth they possessed and that there was no substantial foundation for the socialistic cry against the money power of great millionaires any more than the money power of great corporations when they are honestly managed in conformity with law.
"When we hear or read smeers or distresses against our very rich trust millionaires, let us remember that Andrew Carnegie has already given away sixty millions of dollars for popular libraries and other public purposes. There is no danger or means in this, not even to him, for he has probably more than three times as much left.
"Great wealth, indeed, naturally makes all men conservative and invests them with a sense of responsibility to others and to the public that insures their being good and law-abiding citizens. It makes them practical patrons and upbuilders among rich men and no radical political extremists even among very rich men.
"Wealth in good hands serves good purposes. The richest men of the Thirteen Colonies in the American revolution were among the most active and self-sacrificing of American patrons. They included George Washington, John Locke, John Knox, John Johnson and Robert Morris, whose names are imperishable on our national roll of fame.
WORKERS OF THE AGE.—No. 3
O
Divinity School of the Protestant Episcopal Church Secures Prominent Speaker on "Hogre Problem"—A. M. M. Milkhorn Meet.
Philadelphia, Feb. 18—Dr. Bocher T. Washington began a series of lectures on the Divinity School of the Protestant Episcopal Church, at Holy Trinity Parish House. He was greeted by the largest auditorium the Bull course was started a few years ago. He confined his discussion to the economic value of the Afro-American as a slave, he said, gave him an industrial his descendants had a great influence on his descendants.
Webster *Ballinger*, Eq. a attorney for the A. M. E. ministers' Becting, at No. 631 Pine street, last week to urge the A. M. E. ministers' hand up and fight for their property rights.
Mr. Ballinger said that he had come to the conference to show to the ministers the conditions that existed in Indian Territory in their reins.
He went on to say that many years ago a grant of land was made to the Choctaw commission was appolated granting to every full-blooded Indian a plot of ground, and the commission tainted that of the Indian such taint forever debarred him from his property rights. That one little drop of Afro-American race, and that one little drop of Indian Territory, a conference that even the Government imposes upon the Afro-American race, and there is to-day in Indian Territory, for example, an Indian no tainted with a full-blooded Indian." This state of affairs exists in the Southwest it is only a question of time when it will affect the Northern States, and Afro-Americans in the State of Pennsylvania into and stop, lose their property rights.
"Only a short time ago a committee was formed by the Secretary of the Interior, Mr. Browne, to investigate, reported that these Afro-American talented Indians should be given the house but the house was put before the House it was defeated upon the ground that it was new eight years old. The governor gave to the Afro-American his rights was promptly crucified. All I ask of you, gentlemen, is to inquire into this matter. And you put your city before the President."
When asked by one of the ministers what good could come of that course, Mr. Ishakian replied: "We are American voters in the State of Massachusetts and thousands in other states, and with this weapon in their hands they should be able to take control of another minister soldier." We already have one code in Washington—our soldiers—and with this in view it is it we for us to take control of the matter at this time? The Afro-American of this city feel that they have a man in the Presidential class so arbitrary, so unnatural, so unnatural that the task looks like a hopeless one."
It was sharply decided to place the matter
of the Committee on Political Direction,
The next time that Willson D. Park, an company street, hands out two genuine $50 exchange for a $200 Confederate note, he will vote himself a fit subject for Norrisha before Magtrate Eisenbrown, at the Central Station, that he just longed for one of his prized possessions that divided to Samuel Mitchell, of No. 1,256 Fine street, and Robert Struthi, of No. 1,256 Fine street, and Cecil cens, they told him that was easy, and the exchange was soon made. Park's eye fairly belied when he saw the crap new census required, and the required treasure was absolutely worthless he threw a fit and had the "film-film" required treasure were each held in $200 ball for court.
White Plains Lighting.
A party of fourteen young people en-
joyed the evening at the public plaza, the
evening of elegance, bridal gowns. The
mime party are preparing for a trip to
New York to the Hippopotamus. Mimi Lee
POSTAL DEAD LINE CROSSD
ALKE, G. KING MADE ASSISTANT
SUPERINTENDENT OF WALL
STREET STATION.
Appointment Made on Recommendation
of Collector Charles W. Anderson—
Appointed has Served Fourteen
Years in the Postal Service and has
Good Record—Member of Colored
Republican Club—Has Charge of
Eliminator Sub-Station in the Country,
With Force of 165 Men.
All records were broken in the postal
service of New, York City last week by
the appointment of an Afro-American as
assistant superintendent of a postal站
station in the person of Alexander G. King.
Mr. King has a record of fourteen years'
service, and his promotion was based on
merit.
His case was laid before President Roosevelt by the Hon. Charles W. Anderson, who presented his claims for promotion. The President having called the attention of Postmaster Wilcox to the matter, that official cordially agreed to the appointment, which was made at once. The Wall Street station is rated as covering the richest district in the country, including the large banks and financial compsun. Mr. King is a member of the executive committee of the Colored Republican Club of the City of New York. This was a peculiarly opportune time for the breaking down of the deadline which has hitherto prevailed against the promotion of Afro-Americans from the ranks in the postal service in New York City, as the postal appropriation bill for the current year will carry increased salaries for superintendents and assistant superintendents.
Mr. King entered upon his duties as assistant superintendent on Saturday, which gives him charge of about 105 employees of the branch post-office.
Weybosset Lodge Recruitment.
Preminent Citizens Dead.
Mr. Henry Hause, of '72 Chester street,
Brownville, Brooklyn, has been co-
fessed at her home for the past four
months with a scarce gold, is convalescent.
SOME FAMILIAR FARM TALK
BY OUR OWN FARMER
"These Educational Followers" Are the
Those to Help Only An Educational
Instructor
In the light of that which has just happened in the educational world; namely, the magnificent gift of Mr. John D. Rockefeller to education, the writer jumps two articles in this series in order to bring this all-important subject to the minds of his farmer readers and discuss the importance of teaching them and their business. He also records this suggestion before he drops this most maniacous gift: That this great Education Board, to which the gift was presented, send out its field agents and let them locate the most remote and the most coveted in the black belts of the various colleges; and many; then select each year from the graduating classes of Hampton, Tuskegee and similar schools, men and women who have been trained for the purpose and who are willing to sacrifice themselves for their people, send them into the schools being sent to the school into small districts, and let them instigate the children in fundamentals of living and the rudiments of education, no effort being made to establish great schools in these places, the object being simply to establish feeders for the parent schools. Living being been sent to the parent school from the教室 of the school, united there, the student would be sent to his district in turn to take up the work. the salary of the teachers being paid by the board until such time as the district is able to support itself. The writer predicts that under such a plan the illiteracy in the race would be reduced 78 per cent. 60 per cent. present time, within 10 years, perhaps a little less.
Another man having purchased a farm was asked where he had acquired his knowledge of farming. "Oh, I was born on a farm." Now, there is the rock on which large numbers of farmers' crafts were built on a farm. It is possible for a man to have been born on a farm and still not know a great deal about it. This farmer in question has been a butcher since he was a boy. He wants to sell his farm. Why? Not fitted for the job; he is a butcher. The average farmer hangs up his hat and coat and takes his seat behind the stove at the end of harvest, when work is "done," and there he sits until spring breaks in on him and arouses him from his pipe-dream. Why? Is this? Simply because he has a farm. There is hardly any day in the year that the farmer can't find something to do of benefit to himself or his place.
Now, then, there are some fifty schools in the United States where farming is taught, and the writer has personal knowledge of the fact that some of them are offering all kinds of inducements to farmers' sons, even going so far as to offer assistance until after graduation. The tuition is free. Still they are not taught by the farmer. Why? Because the fathers are mostly like the farmer in the first example in this article who said the boy knew enough to spread manure.
We may as well acknowledge that a few of these orthodox farmers have made a little money, but suppose these same farmers and been trained in some school to work in the field, that they might have done better? Still there is a question in the writer's mind about some of these same orthodox farmers. Let's see. Once a year the "agriculture fellows" come and hold meetings in the district to show the farmers how to work in the field, a nice place and is out of debt in usually found in these meetings, absorbing all that's coming his way; but the other fellow, with the tumble-down farm and a mountains of debts, "Ach," says he, the fellows are just telling a pack of little boys that he is going to that fix it." He steps in a saloon and gets full of agriculture, corn and rye. So after all one has to concede that where there is a progressive farm the owner is trying to keep up by visiting the farm meetings and reading the agrarian reports. But never would he however, can never hope to compete with the scientific farmer.
The farmer boy and the girl, too, want to leave for town just as soon as he, or she, is able to work for him or herself. This is the main cause of the farm help problem. Why should he be so? Simplify the problem. Will his children to take their proper place on the farm and perhaps succeed him in the business.
Farmers, educate your children. Let the education you give tend towards the farm, not away from it. Therefore, educate them in agriculture schools. Give them a chance to the place. Make a kind of partner of them, not slaves. Create in them a love for the stock, farm machinery, nature's products and all that appertains to the farm. If these things are done, it is the earnest conviction of the writer that their false life will be arrested, if not wholly checked.
As long as the repressive methods now in vogue are used, farmers can look for scarcity of labor. Just about the time a boy gets big enough to help about the place, he lights out for the city. Education in the right direction will remedy this evil and incidentally make better men and better farms.
"A FARMER."
Hogins, Pa., February 18.
NO EVIDENCE TO IMPLICATE THIS DISCHARGED SOLDIER.
But the testimony tended to show That They Had Nothing to Do With the Raid and That the Shooting Went Down by the Townpeople, Nonmilitiam Grown Up, and Unspoiled of Having the Troupe Withdrawn.
WASHINGTON, February 18—The Brownville raid has been under investigation by the Senate Committee on Military Affairs for two weeks and the mystery as to the identity of the men who were killed before the inquiry began. As far as certainting the names of the guilty persons, whether soldiers or civilians, is concerned the investigators have been able to come up with some or Inspector-general Garlington.
Twenty-two witnesses have been heard, and every line of testimony thus far adduced has tended to show that the surrender had been had absolutely nothing to do with the town, and that an injustice was done them by discharging them without honor. It should be borne in mind, however, that none but the discharged soldiers themselves have been acquitted and naturally have sought to prove themselves and their comrades innocent.
Practically every non-commissioned officer of the dismissed battalion and several privates have been heard, and all have been accused of being the victims of the night of the real. Each one has strenuously denied being implicated in the shooting and has disclaimed any knowledge concerning the identity of the guilty men. At the same time a police officer has been asked to show indirectly that citizens of Brownville, Mexicans and cowboys, shot up the town because of prejudice against the colored soldiers and for the purpose of having them withdrawn and white soldiers killed. In a course, there has been no direct testimony offered to show that the people of the town did the shooting, but this has been the expressed opinion or inference of those who have testified. Besides, there has been no circumstantial evidence tending to cast this reflection upon the townpeople.
Senator Foraker has studied the case carefully from the standpoint of the soldiers. He has conferred with them and known in advance just about what each witness was to say. If their statements were correct, the officers of the men of the battalion were properly accounted for when the call to arms was sounded on the night of the raid; that the guns were all in their racks and accounted for; that on the morning inspection, the guns were not being inspection showing that they had not been fired, and that no ammunition was missing; that it is impossible to clean a gun after it had been fired under twenty-five or thirty minutes so that it would pass inspection, and that a gun could be fired without the presence of this has tended to show that the soldiers were not implicated in the raid.
Furthermore, it has been testified that when the colored troopers arrived at Brownville to take station they found a large number of empty cartridge shells scattered about the barracks, that Maxi and boys and boys over the garrison picked up these cartridge shells and clips, as well as cast-off uniforms which the soldiers had thrown away; that the soldiers had at Brownville only reduced range ammunition; that the police and many people of the town wore khaki similar color to that of the soldiers; that mixed, and, judging from the sound came from Winchester, revolvers and six-shooters; that it was directed toward the fort; that bullets were heard whishing in the direction of the barracks, and, lastly, that there was great prejudice among the people of the town, particul-
The principal feature brought out to the detriment of the soldiers is that the attempt to place the responsibility for the shooting up of the town upon the citizens came as a suggestion from represen-
tationists. The soldiers was a sort of afterthought as far as the soldiers were concerned, for their statements in this respect were not made to Gen. Garlington or Major Blockson, and they only remembered these things after Stewart Gilchrist had had a conference with them to sign a statement. This much was brought out by cross-examination of several witnesses by Senator Foster.
A line of inquiry which has been once or twice suggested by Senator Overman, but which has not been pursued, is that teen men who were on guard the night of the raid. These men all had their guns, and, according to the testimony, not more than four, with a non-commissioned officer on hand, any one time. Their posts were only about 250 yards from the scene of the shooting, and the question has been suggested: Why could not the shooting have been done by these men, who could easily have been killed? The garrison was aroused? Also they had plenty of time to clean their guns before they were obliged to turn them in the next morning. The garrison was made to this that the firing was, in progress while the call to arms was being sounded and even while the men were forming in line. It had ceased when the roll was being called. Furthermore, it is asserted, all of these teen men who were on guard a gunminton when they were inspected.
Abreast of the Times.
To the Editor of the New York Age
on behalf of our readers in the issue of January 3rd, entitled "Abreast of the Times." It is the most graphic literature in the history of our present advancement of the Negro, from his inferiority of the Antebellum days. The Illustration is full of optimism. It is a celebration of the past, and it brings vividly to my mind a contrast; mediocrity of the past, increasing prodigality of the present. I picture the outward march of a race from servitude and dependence to freedom, independence and prosperity. The Illustration is in our hands in our nation as a "Child Race." I thank you and I congratulate the artist. Yours respectfully,
M. D.
New York, NY, January 4.
Bishop Walters in Bath.