New York Age

Thursday, May 16, 1907

New York, New York

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And Professor Cook Made Members—Important Figures in Race's Life. WARINGTON, May 7—Acting upon a report submitted to him by James Brennolds, the man who helped to paint up the famous packing house cases, President Josephoveh has appointed a Commission investigate housing conditions in the District of Columbia. There are so many alley in Washington in which the poor are crowded, and husband together under most frightful and oppressive conditions on the part of the President is one of the most important acts of his administration, as it affects the Nation's capital. The new commission is called the President's Commission, and the most important acts of able and influential men in the personnel is as follows: General George M. Sterburg, Dr. George M. William H. Baldwin, Frederick Cock, William M. McBrayley, Mose Bogniman, James Bronnard, W. Woodward, John B. T. S. Parsons, Emmet L. Brennan, and William L. Brennan, representing the best in the social business and intellectual life of Washington. On the commission there are two colored mott: Krof. George William Cook and Mr. Whitley. Howard University for a quarter of a century and is well known as an educator. He has been a member of the Board of Children's Guardians of the District for several years and rendered the community excellent service as an official. Mr. Whitefield McKinley is a new man in office. For more than twenty years he has been actively engaged in Colonial and home-made for himself and the colored people a most enviable reputation in his line of work. Indeed, he has done more to blaze the way for colored men in business in Washington than any other man in our community. He has been a man who control the business activities of Washington since the first embarked upon a commercial career. His life upon the "direct" is almost romantic. In 1851 he employed in the Government Department of Colonies when the force in this great work was reduced. Mr. McKinley loved himself, like Othello, without an occupation. He at once entered upon his career as a banker and real estate agent, in which he has been eminently successful. While this recent appointment as Commissioner is the first office of any particular distinction which Mr. McKinlay has held, he has always been a very active factor in all matters booked by the Commission. He is a member of the forests of the Afro-American people. He is courageous and fearless in his advocacy of what he believes to be the right method in dealing with the many complicated situations involved in the so-called war in the Middle East. He voted himself more unsuspectily to the interests of others of his race than Mr. McKinlay. When the case of Dr. Crum, now collector of Port at Charleston, was before the country and the Senate, it was his mission that he should not support a case that should finally triumph. No one but those closest to him can appreciate all that he did in this famous case by way of effective work. For him personally there was no reward in a material war of conflict. He was not a victim of conflict. What was sufficient resentment for him. What did in the Crum case he has done in many other cases of less notoriety. Energy and time have not coopted with him when the service for him was in his blood. Mr. McKinlay has been closely associated with all of the leading colored men in public life since the days of Reconstruction. He has taken a very deep interest in the great work of Booker T. Washington, with this distinguished man in his efforts to better the condition of the Negro race in America. ROBERT H. TERRILL DONCRATS CARRY BALTIMORE. Mayor, Council President and Comptroller Have Near 5,000 Majority. HALSTORE. May 7. Though the returns from all of the wards are not complete, enclosure is known to insure a general election to day in the municipal elections to day. Mahal. Democratic candidate for mayor, and his running mate, Nurnen, for president of the First Branch of the Council, and Hooper for compter candidate for the Council, both running somewhat ahead of Mahal and Hooper. The Democrats will also have a majority in both branches of the City Council. Nurnen, the breadbread in the Republican ranks was by no means heated Friends of ex-Congressman Wachter, who was defeated by Timminus in the primaries, but the ticket despite the efforts of Wachter to hold them in line, was defeated by Timminus in a large falling off in the Republican tone. A feature of the election was the victory of Harry R. Cummings, the Negro who seconded the nomination of President Roosevelt in the National Convention. City Council several years ago. His victory, fell considerably below that given to Timminus in his ward, due probably in the fact that a good many of his own residents him for a mayor considered him a candidate he would be elected without their votes. TILLYAN TO HAVE BODYGUARD. Bryan is sit on the stage with Him When He Lectures in Omaha. OMAHA, May 29 Senator Tillman is no have a backgound of tonic cloth clothes colleen while he is in Omaha to lecture on May 14. Negroes from all over are arguing the mayor to pro- limate freedom Bryan will occupy the seat of on the stage alongside Senator Fifth other prominent citizens the way Mayor Dahlman titles to sit on the THE NEW YORK AGE. An Afro-American Woman's Opinion of the Country. 'NAN JUAN, Porto Rico, April 21.—The first tangible view that one gets of Porto Rico as he approaches the island from the north, is the city of San Juan, which rises out of the sea like a long line of great white rock piled high at each corner of the island, seeming wall arrangements itself as if by magic into huge stone edifices, over which Morro Castle, at the north end of the island, stands as sentinels. As the ship enters the harbor, this quiet old city is plainly seen surrounded by walls that have protected it for more than two centuries and the hungry waves of the Atlantic. The streets are well kept, but narrow. They are broken in several places by the presence of plazas. The Plaza of Colon lies at the foot of San Cristobal de la Vera, by which it is bound by an arch of Christopher Columbus. Another plaza is in front of the church of San Jose and contains a statue of Ponce de León. The principal plaza lies in the centre of the city. It is unadorned but much more decorated than the rest of the city, as band concerts are held there almost every evening. The appearance of the city as a whole is pleasing, but it can hardly be said that the churches contribute much to the beauty of the city. The structures that seem to have been built for forts rather than plazas of worship. The walls are thick and are made unlively by wooden shutters at the windows; the doors are large and are decorated with knots of wood studded with nails. The homes do not outvival the churches in attractiveness. Those of the wealthy are found on the second floor of the many business houses, while those of the poor classes consist of small, unventilated apartments consist of small, unventilated apartments, back of stores, restaurants and other places of business. The only relief to the external paininess of even the best homes is the indispensable balcony, which runs the entire length of the second floor. The homes are built around inner courts, beautiful to tropical plants and fountains. Leading out from San Juan is the military road, said to be the finest road of the West Indies. It is as solid as if leaved from stone and is bordered on each side by an almost unbroken succession of sandy beaches, so the seeming a well-kept avenue. As one passes along this road his attention is not only called to the magnificence of the tropical vegetation, but taking a backward glance from time to time he sees San Juan far below him; let him continue even to Altobanco, a town that crowns the western coast of the island, and again glance back and he will still see white walls and edifices of San Juan. Instead of taking the military road bet one sail norsest the bay from San Juan to Otano and there take a coach to Buena Vista. The road winds in and out of the bay, and that it can never be seen at a great distance ahead. Here it runs by a larger vine-ceded mountain wall, then, with a curve, it winds into the heart of a scene where the sun is shining brightly, boys lie far below superbly adorned by graceful molding palms and traversed by sinuous silvery water courses. But primarily the top of the mountain is reached by a narrow road, with the broad Atlantic forming a most appropriate background and enluminating the picture as its waves dash high against the white walls. The landing scene may be witnessed from almost any part of the eastern half of the island, and as the beginning of the canyon at Merro Castle announces for miles around the twelfth hour, one almost instinctively turns his face to this the Mason of Frontera Fort Tamaros. "Higher of Harvard" Presented NEW HAVEN, May 15. A three-set drama entitled "Higher of Harvard" was presented at Warner instil, last Monday evening, with sixth install, under the business of the Aid Society of St. Lukes P. E. church. On the night of the entertainment these concerned were impatient and dubious to the threatening aspect of the weather. The characters were as follows: Watson, Higher of Montana, Raker, Higher of Montana, Somers, R. Treadwell, Lorum Higher, champion of Harvard, in love with Mudge, L. A. Tenderson, Theodore Dalyplem, entitled "Tell, in love with Niggy C. Johnson, Higgins, the butler, C. Simpson, the nurse, New York, daughter, Messy, L. A. Tenderson, Mudge, Commings, a quiet sort, with temper when needed MISS C. Adams; Mrs. Babylon, the sonnet's sister from New York, Mrs J. E. Porter, Mrs. Malking Modigre, originally from Missouri, must attend the entertainment given under the auspices of Loved Workers of Kings' Daughters of Bethlehem A. M. E. church, with Mrs. E. L. Beam, lover which took place in the church last Friday evening proved a great success. The drama was varied and artfully rendered. The scarf drill in which nine young ladies took part was executed with skill and precision. To Mrs. Thomas is Ennell, the stress is the much credit for their fine work: Little Florence Ennell, six years old, rendered the do rags manly, and the Convent at Frog, Fond Land was amusing to the audience. At the conclusion of the performance Mr. Louth passion, heartily thanked who participated in the affair. The chapel was administered to a large number of commissions last Sunday evening. Pestmaster James A. Harworth, accounted nine substitute better carriers, last Saturday, among this number was Fred Brennan, the well known politician, J. P. Poinker. Rev. J. H. Simons, priest in charge of Grave P. E. mission, of Plainfield, N. J. conducted the services at St. Lukes P. E. church Sunday morning and evening, 12th hour. The obsolete of Mrs. Margaret A. Sanford, daughter of Mys Liza J., and the late Charles H. Peters, who died Friday, 10th insight, was held at Zion A. E. church Forte street, at 2 P. M. St. Mary A. Davis, pastor, performed the services. James W. Stewart, formerly one of New Hayton's well known caterers, and who moved to Oakland, Cal., a year ago occupied by his family, is home again. Here last Saturday, Mr. Stewart family consists of his wife and daughter Ruth From The Richmond Reformer The chief aim of every young man or woman in leaving school should be to reach the highest pinnacle in life. AN AFRO-AMERICAN JOURNAL OF NEWS AND OPINION NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1907 The Work of the Organization and Necessity of Agitation and Protest. To the members of the National Afro-American Council, delegates from local councils and affiliated organizations, such as churches, colleges, benevolent societies, newspapers and other race organizations. Greeting: The tenth annual session of the National Afro-American Council will be held at Baltimore, Md., June 26, 27 and 28, 1907. The uneasing energy of those bent upon the creation of a public sentiment against the Afro-American race advocates by Sonntor Tillman, Governor Vardman, John Temple Graves and others of the republic of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the Federal Constitution, thus reducing the Afro-American race to the dismissal of the colored soldiers of those who essay to befriend us, even to President Rossetti, who has said so much about "fair play" and the "shoe of hope," that he has been the dignissim of the colored soldiers of the Twentieth Infantry without an adequate trium; the bold and defiant assent of those satisfied with nothing short of our absolute justice in the meeting of the leaders of the race in an advisory way. The situation is grave and demands the exercise of wisdom, prudence, patience and intelligent effort to overcome the dangers opposing what political and civil rights Begalting the necessity of limited action of all our forces we invite the representatives of all similar organizations to be present at our meeting. In this crisis we should be civilized, jalebiasis, bickering and strife, and meet and confer together up vital questions which concern us all. At all hazard, let all the factions get together and unite a unified attack upon the enemy. We should embolden the efforts of the press in creating a favorable sentiment against lynching and the laminating "Jim Crow" car laws. It has brought encouragement and home to many of the leaders of our race to participate in the national council that is pledging to resist still battling, and will ever battle against all forms of injustice and discriminations. It is the greatest desire of the officers of the National council that the National council be represented every college, household society, newspaper, indeed all race organizations, should send at least one representative to the Baltimore meeting. We believe that it will be the largest and the best in every way that we ever had in the Rays or Mississippi. Article III. of the Constitution Section I. The National Ace America Council shall be composed of members as follows. All persons who hold life member 2. Council delegates representing daily municipal local councils Soccer Should Be Short and to the Point. Basketball of the National Aero American Council, each speaker is limited to one point. The portion of the congress presides of the country is ever ready to misrepresent the words of the Afro-Americans, all speakers must be in manuscript order that they may be absolute proof of what each speaker said. A report to the council is a good time for all organizations above named elect their allegiance as soon as possible. (Signed) (HISTORY) ADVANDED WATTERS D. D. President CHEMISTRY WILLIAM H. SADLER CHEMISTRY Executive Committee (RAIN) L. C. JOHNAN Corresponding Secretary. REV. A. L. GINES, D. D., chairman of the local committee. H.L. East Centre secretary. Holden, Mk. to whom all participants will inform information concerning board, entertainment, etc. For the first time in Western athletics the colored baseball men have an homelike position in the Chicago League. The two Chicago teams, known as "The Union Giants" and the "Leland Giants," belong to the Chicago League, and are represented with open arms. These teams are nicknamed men from every corner of the country, and they are immensely popular. From The Trebon True American, Collegiate industrial school colored youth at Hordentown yesterday, where they spent some time in going over the institution with Dr. Booster T. Washburn, the superintendent of the Board of Education tentatively decided upon improvements to "Old Iroquois," which will make it one of the finest and best equipped institutions for the education of young north of the Mason and Dixon line. These improvements are made possible because of an increased appropriation of upward of $40,000 under act passed by the legislature which includes an increase in the amount to $5,000 to $12,000; an appropriation of $30,000 for the erection of a dormitory and laundry; and an appropriation of $7,000 in the supplemental bill to be funding the school lands and the installation of city gas and water at the institution. The eminent success that Dr. Washington has attained in the work of training the colored youth and in uplifting his race suggested to the State education department to go over the ground with them and point out the number in which these moneys might best be expended. His visit to the institution as the guest of the State Board was the result. Members of the Board were the praises of Dr. Washington's ability and commitment as an educator, and although he was unable, because of a previous engagement, to spend but two hours in their company, in that time it was generally agreed that he had given them many valuable suggestions and will in all probability, be carried on. After being introduced Dr. Washington delivered a brief address, in which he explained the secrets of his success as head of the great Mabuay school. Dr. Washington took up the increased appropriation, and strongly urged the board to devote much of this to the development of the agricultural industry. He declared that agriculture presented the broadest field for the Negro, like any other race in some state gardens. He also urged the increased appropriation and cultivating the soil. He said that he did not believe that the colored man's education should be wholly combined to industrial training. In continuing, Dr. Washington said that he would place at Tuggeran, the inmates opposed taking up agriculture as they thought it moral. Now he said it is different to get them to spend enough time away from agricultural pursuits to give them a thorough understanding of agriculture. He argued that for the colored young inmates, education was far more important than an academic education. In explaining the construction that the board was to place upon agriculture, Dr. Washington, but he meant not only farming, but agriculture in culture in all of its branches, including clawing, poultry and cattle raising, garden and track farming and landscape gardening. These subjects taken up, and taught scientifically he said, had proved that he presented the greatest field of endeavor and opportunity for the colored race. Dr. Washington also advocated a liberal education in the crafts and trades, acting strongly in favor of the building trades, being to education for girls, he added domestic science and domestic economics. In this connection he spoke of the large number of competent trained nurses that had been graduated from Tuskegee Short afterward. Dr Washington appeared before the 120 pupils at the school. After professor Gregory had a bachelor's degree from Greene, son of the principal introduced Dr Washington, who then began a heart to heart talk with his hearers on the "Dignity of Labor." In taking in the subject of the dignity of labor, Dr. Washington urged his hearers to place themselves in demand by asking them to do something to help them. He referred to illness as a distrance and smoke of the sweetness of labor and tried to improve upon them if they could learn to do something better than someone else would be the best way to do it. He could probe what the people wanted colors would make no difference. Thus they would achieve success. In conclusion, Dr. Washington warned them against mold. He said a dangerous combination. These ceremonies concluded the entire sorry bad lunchroom, cooked and served by the cooking class. He left the institution State Architect George Paula pointed out a site for the new dormitory and laundry and the suggestions was thoroughly received to the town or administration building and will face the latter at right angles. The Southern Workmen, Hampton; Va. Domestic Science Advancing to Professional Dignity THE CHICAGO SCHOOLS An Aggressive Political Leader Causes Republican Patronage Dispensers Embarrassment. CITIGAGO, May 14.—It looks very much as if the new occupation, emphatically called "Domestic Science," is rapidly advancing to the dignity of a profession, and as such the leading occupation of woman kind. At a meeting a few shy ages, composed of some of the best known women in this city, there was a unanimous sentiment expressed that the "thing for girls in the eformatories and in schools for dependent girls," is to give them a thorough training in domestic science. The women who thus expressed themselves are not fadists, but women who have an intelligent insight into social and economic conditions as they affect the health and character of these girls whose future must be speedily reckoned with. People, and their name is legion, who look upon housekeeping as drudgery, and all domestic service as mental, are clearly behind the times, and are missing the new spirit and increasing knowledge of domestic school in China, where cookery and up-to-date domestic science are taught, is crowded with eager students. A recent exhibition conducted by one of these schools carried out as large a crowd as the Grand Opera. The girl nowadays who graduates from a domestic science school, and who is now a cookery tutor fully and artistically as she can fashion a piece of Parisian millinery, is in greater demand and is paid a higher salary than the girl who sells hues and ribbons over a counter. She is eagerly sought, and a good salary and deferential treatment await her in any household which can afford to pay for her skill and training. The kind of girls who are taking advantage of this training are generally of a higher type, in point of character and general graciousness, than the ones who know little about chivalry. In these women who will find chivalry, it will do no harm to people who can easily afford to live without working for pay. Why? Because the time is quite unusual when it is considered discreditable for a young woman to say that she knows nothing about chivalry, and because good reason why a speaking knowledge of French, a training in music and general culture should be incompatible with a trained knowledge of cookery. Domestic society is now being garrified by the academies. It has become popular and attractive. As before stated, this is not being advocated as a bad, but as an accomplishment that will go quite as far in securing domestic happiness in the protection of character, and in enhancing the international accomplishments. Notice of our more aggressive political leaders is coming in no end of embarrassment to the Republican patronage division. Some of them have their own political party, and faithfully fought for the pocket that won such a sweeping and surprising victory in the last contest, most that the state has traveled when something more important happened. One of these, Also Americans of considerably prominent in local politics, created not a little assistance by asking to, and even assisting upon being appointed to the position of an attorney, to S20000 to S20000 a year. Why a so-called nominee should win an office involved with so large an income is one of the concerns of Cook county politics. What should be done to help them should walk in and down these streets with an income of S20000 per year? Why are they thought of it has not only made the appointing powers specializes, but it also the central belt. It is the reason the court has kept in mind for four years, would not be to deserving of more pity than congratulation? It is to be hoped that the matter will be disposed of. Even if the court has not yet upheld a people who have so delightfully are entitled to taking political favors in homestead doses. In the postmortem we will endeavor to adjust our laws to the coming one of big things, and regard to possible destitution. VIRGINIA LAWS COULD NOT Thirty Thousand Policemen Inquired and Sick and Death Charges Paid. NORFOLK, Va. May 13.—Some previous to the year of 1986, Mr. C. C. Bogan, general secretary of the Norfolk Afro-American Y. M. C. A., had been seriously considering the adaptability of interacting a number of Norfolk's enriched talks and contribute a small amount of money until an amount sufficient to begin some business had been raised. He succeeded in interesting about twelve men. They met regularly, each week depositing a small sum. During the year of 1888, Norfolk was formed and incorporated the same year. As a result of Mr. Dogan's efforts this enterprise was incorporated as the Virginia Beneficial and Insurance Company with a capital stock of $50,000. This was an opportunity time for such companies, and was formed and incorporated as a diligent and hustling business men, Mr. M. R. Jackson and a number of shrewd agents started out. Afro-American Insurance Companies were forging ahead so rapidly, that the legislature of Virginia passed laws with the expressed purpose of business, during the year of 1903, and raise the State license of insurance companies to $200 and 1 per cent on gross receipts. These enactments simply caused the Afro-American companies to hustle more and they paid the taxes. These enactments would have brought this effect: In order for insurance companies paying sick and death claims to continue to do business they must deposit in the State Treasury the round sum of $10,000, as a security to their moneys. Virginia would have brought the Afro-American would be a gravy bar for Afro-American insurance companies. White on their route told Afro-American holding policies in Afro-American companies, that they moneys were lost and they had better join the white companies, Virginia, in obtaining insurance and, to individual put up their $10,000 and today there are more Afro-American insurance companies, with home offices in the state, doing business than there are white. The Virginia Beneficial Insurance Co. is the only company of its kind with home office in Tide Water, Va. It has issued over 90 policies in this section; paid for $25,000 or death claims; $150,000 for sick claims. The capital stock is paid up and a share can not be bought for $1,000. This company gives employment to 70 people. Norfolk should have a mercantile corporation, but Norfolk cannot be excelsed, yet, Afro-American must stop eyeing each other with suspicious eyes. The commercial advantages for Afro-American enterprises in Norfolk cannot be excelsed, yet, Afro-Americans in Richmond and other points in Maine are leaving the Norfolkians far behind. The business men have failed to organize. A minister's calling is not to promote business schemes, he is not trained for such. Do you find white ministers president of banks and other corporations, or do you find a team to form a foxy, ness league in Norfolk, or promote a new enterprise. You Norfolk men get out and do it yourself. Dr. L. H. Reynolds is a man that Norfolk cannot afford to be a minister. Norfolk would have more enterprises. Though said, Glo. F. King. AGREE AS TO THE CONGO. Belgian King and Government Said to Huey Mdee as Appointment But still, Friday, May 10. All the difficulties relative to Belgium's annexation of the Congo Independent State have been overcome, according to La Chaque, which declares to today that King Bokomis has reached an agreement whereby the interests of both the nation and the King are safeguarded and the danger of foreign competition is eliminated. The members of the Opposition are said to be satisfied that Belgium will keep immense benefits, and government back official congratulation, but it is said to eliminate from a trustworthy source. 11.000 HEREROS STARVED. Whole Tribe Trekked Away from German Southeast Africa. CARP TOWN, May 7 It is stated that the Heroes, finding in useless to further resist the Germans in German South West, with the intention of forming a new settlement in the neighborhood of Lake Ngami. Eleven thousand of the title died of sewer route, only four thousand arrived after terrible migrations. ALLEGED LANCHERS ARRESTED Department of Justice at Washington Ordered These Apprehension SOUTH MCASTER I T MAY 7 Six men alleged to be the leaders of the mob that lynched a Negro Steer on April 15, 1882, were arrested yesterday by a United States marshal, brought to the city and held for the grand jury without bail on the charge of murder. Two of them (O. H. and J. H. McCormick) ant who are prominent business men are under the guard of deputies at a booth, and the others are in jail. Marshal Pritchard reported the lynchers at Washington and was ordered to arrest the lynchers. Secret service agents asisted in getting evidence and the district judge was instructed to preside over the jury will take up the case to morrow. JAPANESE SNUR SAN FRANCISCO Noble Travelers, Including Kuroki and Fujinji, Sell by Way of Seattle STATUTE, May 10 Gog Baron Kuroki, who is now in the East, has made his arrangement to return to Japan by way of Seattle. It was suggested to him that it might be agreeable to sail from San Francisco to Seattle, but he preferred not to visit that city although there might be much there to interest him. Police and Princess Fushima, who are now in England and will soon return to San Francisco, the United States will also send Baron Kuroki his timely and will sail from Seattle. GIVEN JAMAICA $750,000. British Government Contributes Toward Rebuilding Kingston. LONDON, May 8. The government has resolved to grant $750,000 as a gift to the affliction by the Jamaican earthquake government of the colony of Jamaica THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY GOTHAM LIBRARY AND TULIPY FOUNDATIONS PRICE. 5 CENTS PROGRESS IN BALTIMORE Expresses Interest and Sympathy in the Work of Afro-American Education. BALTMORE, Md., May 7—Dr. Booker T. Washington, Principal of the Tookee Institute, was in the city yesterday as the guest of the Negro Business League of Baltimore, which is affiliated with the National Negro Business League. Dr. Washington was kept busy all day as the guest of the schools, including the High School and the Training School for Teachers, as well as a number of business establishments. His last visit was to the office of The Afro-American Ledger; the lead in the Agror representative as an interview with Cardinal Gibbons, head of the Catholic church in American Washington was accompanied by Cardinal's residence by his son Samuel J. N. Waving, principal and Training School; and THE Agr representative as the first tenemen by assistant The Cardinal house of the work of the Catholic church among Negroes, and also accompanied Dr. Washington for his work in the uplift of the race. The president and his secretary, Mr. Scott, were escorted through the city by a committee from the Business League. The committee was Harry T. Pratt, Hebe E. Wenton, Dr. J. H. N. Waving, Samuel J. Young, and J. H. M. Waving, under the auspices of the local Ledger, and THE Agr correspondent. At night Dr. Washington delivered an address at the Sharp Street Memorial M. E. Church on the "Progress of the Negro Races." Under the auspices of the local Ledger, and THE Agr correspondent, by heart, 1300 people. He said in part: "I am much gratified at the progress of the colored people of Baltimore, and from what I have seen in the city, I am very proud of our colored citizens, and the colored citizens are doing something for Baltimore and themselves. I spent the morning going into stores conducted by men and women of our race, and it is gratifying, being made here by members of our race. "I am not fattering you when I say that the colored people here live in better houses than any city I have been in, and I have been all over this country, and I have been doing things like making the colored people here. I am not colored teachers take in the people has extended from the schoolroom to the work outside. I am not the greatest extent than any other city I have visited. The average teacher quits school when the day's work is done, but these teachers connect the schoolroom with the work outside. "I am not paused with the provision made for colored people in the Baltimore schools. I have never seen a better kind of work than is being done at the Colored High School and Training School, of which my good friend Dr. King is in charge. Continuing he said: "One way in which the Negro who lives in the North can help his brother in the South is to see to it that in every city of the North, the Negro in the largest cities of the North, the Negro in the most important, moral and upright life. "I sometimes fear that in their great anxiety to be of service to the masses of our people in the South, members of our nation's largest to give proper attention to their own needs, moral and religious condition. A large element of the white race will pass judgment upon the milk on colored people of the South through what they see of the North, and come from the South into the North. "The colored leaders in these Northern cities should let no opportunity escape them to organize and help our people in and out of those will be fewer safety and fewer opportunities in cities. The Negro in the North should present an object lesson—I repeat in the matter of occupation, in the matter of industry and economy and his home. Unless the members of our race in these Northern centres keep pace with the growth of the community in which they live they will place the masses of the South at a disadvantage. However in the South at a disadvantage average man to think if the Negro of the North does not succeed, the Negro of the South cannot succeed. I never encourage a single individual to leave the South because many are leaving the South and perhaps are going to die in the future. I urge upon the leaders of the North to see to it that those who come among them live a life of the highest usefulness. A race, grow discouraged. In the South there are more things upon which the races agree than upon which they disagree. Let us not be so much absorbed in our grievances that we fail to remember our successes and opportunities. "In the Southern States the Negro has organized and is now conducting 31 banks. He has in the United States 122 drug stores. Almost every town and city has a bank. We have other places of business. There is practically no section of the South where the negro farmer, mechanic, merchant and banker cannot find encouragement, opportunity and prosperity. In this respect, let us not overlook the fact that similar opportunities are at our door." "At a very conservative future the Negro is now paying taxes upon more than property, and I suppose the New Yorker intends to not always pay income taxes upon all his holdings. What we have accomplished in the past face of many difficulties is a guarantee to what we can attain to in the future. Finally, let us cultivate a spirit of radical pride: let us learn to be the proud African-American of the Japanse or the Italian is of his. That has faith and pride in itself will eventually win the respect, the confidence and cooperation of the rest of the world." Again, in am most Anxious—and I know every member of our team knows a very important member of our TdE NEW YORK AUb: THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1907. "what our race everywhere bear the reputation of law-abiding and law-respecting people. If others would break the law and be punished, it would be good and respectful and teach our children to follow our example. Advice Against Ignorance. "In this connection, I repeat what I have stated on a recent occasion: My children should be used to get rid of the criminal and leaping element of our people and to make decent, law-abiding citizens. "How may I think the problem will be better solved by inducing millions of our people to leave the South for residence in the North, but I warn you that instead of this being a solution, it will but to the complications of the problem. "In this connection it is most important that the race leader do not permit the children to be compelled. An combined race or individual is always at a disadvantage and loses a large per cent. of his influence for good. We are making tremendous progress nationally, particularly in higher education. We went to day mainly in the South, an acreage that is equal to the combined acreage of the kingdoms of Belgium and Holland. The Negro to-day throughout this country owns more land, more schools, more stores, more banks, has more schoolhouses, more colleges, more teachers, more churches, more ministers, more professional men than has ever been true in the history of our race. A weak man to do when trouble comes is to sit down and cry, to give up in despair and to spend his days and nights in finding fault with someone else; to feel that he can go upon it as a man of strength. The strong man pursues the opposite course. "Complaint, condemnation of wrong, criticism, all have their place in the economy of race-building, but let us not as a man of strength be the habit of depending for our future salvation on mere condemnation, cursing hysterical ravings and blaming some other man or race for all our ills. The weak man depends upon condemnation and constructive ability. Creation—construction in the material, civil educational, moral and religious world is what makes races great. Any child can cry and fret, but it requires a full crew man to create—to construct the members of our race everywhere that they must become, in an increasing degree, creators of their own careers." A banquet in honor of the distinguished visitor followed. Erternal News of the Elks of Greater New York. For a further protection of their legal status the five adjacent lodges, Manhattan, Jersey City, Newark, Brooklyn and Antonia have appointed committees on legal defence. These committees will soon organize as a committee of the whole, March 6th, there was instituted in Manhattan an insurrectionary lodge under the name and title of Monitor Lodge No. 45, I. B. P. O. Elks of the World, by a so-called deputy from Philadelphia acting under the instructions of one, R. F. Howard, a former Grand Exalted Ruler who was unsecured at the Grand Lodge Convention held in Brooklyn, August 1906. Brooklyn Lodge No. 32, holds its regular meeting May 6th, in Summer hall, with a large number of members in attendance. The lodge was transacted. Brothers Allen H. Stewart, 362 Jay street, and George Marshall, 31 Lexington avenue, were reported. Three sick-sick benefit was voted. Sickness and sick-thought between tenjin and committee. An emergency fund was created and braced in the hands of brother Williams to be used for special nests cases where the circumstances warrant such action between regular lodge meet A committee of citizens, of Bridegate Conn., recently wrote brother John W. Connors, asking the cooperation of Brooklyn Lodge in organizing a lodge in Brooklyn. Brother Connors took the matter under consideration and wrote State Deputy Jones and have received a special dispensation from the Grand Exalted Ruler to institute the lodge. March 25, Brooklyn Lodge No. 114, Presidency, New N.J. was instituted, April 21, Summit Lodge No. 115, Uniontown, Pa. was instituted. The Grand Exalted Ruler, Dr. Wm. E. Atkins, of Hampton, Va., had the lodge in New Providence instituted by authorized deputy commissioners. Brother W. Milton Tuber a prominent member of Manhattan Lodge. No. 45 died May 5th, and was buried Sunday. James Presidency service in Manhattan. At 2 o'clock at a large number of Elks from the first alderman lodge were present. Brother Tuber became a devoted wife and three loving children. Flowers and financial assistance from Manhattan April 20th, Boulder, Erica J. Hunt, devoted wife and on May 1st, Boulder, George, N. Neesons wife died. May 16th, Nesons husband, S. Ehring, married June 17th, Boulder, Michael, devoted wife of church Brooklyn, M. Nelson, married June 18th, State of Rutherford, Erica J. Hunter. The family attended both churches and New York City. April 20th, Manhattan Lodge, successful social and sender to the tenancy at their large club rooms in Association Hall Manhattan. It was grand event and most memorable. It will go down in the history of Elks. The Elks in the State of New York, Select members from Lodge, Lodge No. 114 being present. May 17th, Parkside, Lodge No. 155 of City, New York, devoted to the community a social and sport. The first joint lodges have appointed joint committees of three to the committee organizing a Chicago City. The first joint lodges will have committees of arrangements and a special train to Chicago, to attend the Grand Lodge Session there in August. The Another Tribe will descend on the Wingy City in great numbers in fall 15k as May 9th, Manhattan Lodge, No. E held its signature session and the following officers were duly elected Jas. H. Anderson exited rally John H. Anderson exited rally John H. De Forster, esteemed local knight Quinence Johnston, esteemed featuring knight D. W. Parker secretary Jas. H. Williams, treasurer Doctor Bryteryl, and Marshall Branch assistant sergeant T. B. Jones, Jr. and Charles Strosek D. W. Parker was maniously obeyed a past exalted ruler for motivations services rendered his bide show its menon. Heather Parker has been esteemed a truly Words fail in expressing all acknowledgment of its integrity honored worth to the Order of Elk-ber Parker and the writer are the two members who have been honored the degree of Past Exalted Ruler Not Safe Yet. be out of danger? you cannot still attend him. NO HARMONY IN OHIO FIGHT To Control the Politics of His State—Taft People Cozy and Uncompromising. From The New York Bus. AKBOS, Ohio. May 13.—Senator Dick ten-ight call off Wednesday's State conference and notified all the Republican leaders who were invited; telling them that his statement would appear in full in the morning papers. Senator Dick feels that his effort to restore peace in the party has gone as far as he could carry it, and has failed because the Taft people have fought it and even Foraker repudiated it. Now he is following the question. Following is his statement: "When, as chairman of the Ohio Republican State Executive Committee, I invited a conference of the State Central and Executive Committees, of the chairmen of the Republican Council, of the State State officers, and of the Republican members of Congress, to be held at Columbus on Wednesday, May 15, I then assumed entire responsibility for the call as I now assume entire responsibility for an indefinite postponement of that meeting. That a brief explanation should be made. "The conference was called with no purpose of ratifying any deal, bargain or compromise, for there was none but to secure party harmony and unity of purpose, and to allay party strife and concession. "This, it was believed, could be done by a full, frank and considerate exchange of information, and finally the adoption of some public expression voicing as nearly as might be the ascertained sentiment of Ohio Republicans. The primary intention of assuming to do more than to recommend united action and effort among Ohio Republicans and no purpose to attempt to dictate or even indorse, or still less nominate, the outcome of the war is that it "It was never meant to have the conference assume the functions of the State convention or enclose upon any rights or privileges of individual Republicans, and any arbitrary action binding the great body of Republicans and no such action was contemplated, as a careful reading of the call will show. Certainly the concession function beyond that of recommendation. "The chief thought was that 'harmony and unity among all the Republicans of Ohio, based upon justice to every element of the party, are essential to the complete success of the country, and should be ensured to insure full success to Republican candidates in all elections, as well as general, and should be secured if possible without delay. The purpose of this meeting has been misunderstood by some and misrepresented by others, and thus it has met with some opposition and disfavor, and in other cases animosity. Therefore, having become convinced that the desired restoration of complete party harmony through the election would be impossible at this time, I presume the meeting indefinitely." UNGENANTI MAY E. Charles P. Tatt, brother of the Secretary of War, was a strong supporter of what he thing to say regarding the latest developments in the contest for political supremacy in Ohio between his brother and Senator Foraker. No there is nothing to say from our side. He seems to me it's up to the other side now. Mr. Tatt was in a particularly pleasant frame of mind apparently and laughed outright. When spoken to he had not heard of the state model to Senator Foraker. George B. Cox had heard of no statement from Dick. he said when seen. He said he would have nothing further to add. The Commission Tribune which is considered to be Senator Foraker's organ here, in its special from Washington printed this morning giving Senator Foraker's latest statement had this comment "The politicians here think the President has made a grave mistake. As has as Secretary Taft is concerned with the personal affair of facing toward Foraker. "His campaign is being managed and directed by the President, and Taft himself has little to say about it. The President has present a message that Taft owes his present preamble in Ohio not to himself, but to the popularity of the President, who is his backer. Therefore he feels at liberty to direct Taft's moves on the Ohio checklist." Frankie and Mr. Frankie Mach company is teamed to the M. Mach Guild in the area of the job Mach Adley Guild whom he joined Dawndale. A vacancy in her last job Mach Adley Guild died Monday Mach Guild former Dawndale 718 Guild committed to vacant the 721st year of her Service. A vacancy in her seventh job. polluted to Yorktown, N. J., at a conference, and Rev. Generete was sent from Allentown to Paunake. A large congregation attended the event, which was prescheduled by Rev. J. Thomas. Rev. Generete is now awaiting orders from the Bishop at the residence of Rev. Wittington. Mr. W. H. Smith has resigned an organist, Rev. Ezekiel Basilist, having resumed his services for four years. He resigns on account of increasing business. Another organist is now being sought for by the trumpet to fill his place. A large congregation attended the Wednesday evening at their home, it being the second anniversary of their marriage. Miss Annie Curtia paid a visit to Mrs. Ieynolds last Friday, at Rutherford Hall, and guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. Westworth of Rutherford last Sunday. Mr. M. McCadney and Miss Anna Burgess made a trip to Manhattan last Sunday and attended the 25th church, held at Carnegie Hall. The speaker of the evening being Booker T. Washington of Tuskegee, Ala. Men's Sunday Club Concert. YOOKENK, May 14.—There was an entertainment at Music Hall under the auspices of the Men's Sunday Club, on Thursday evening. The programme was as follows: Piano solo; Prof. Teresa M. Quarterly Quartet; Prof. Joseph M. Holland; Mariana Rolls, Mr. J. F. Godman; solo; Madane Marguerite Randall; violin solo, Mr. Joseph Douglas; tenor solo, Mr. Walter Mason; jubilee, Paragon Quartet; soprano solo, Miss J. F. Godman; bass solo and chorus, Mr. J. F. Goodman; bass solo and chorus, Mr. Holland and Paragon Quartet; (a) Gayyap song, (b) African dance, Mr. Joseph H. Douglas; jubilee, Paragon Quartet; soprano solo, Miss Pearl M. Crawford; jubilee, Paragon Quartet; (a) Romance, S. O'Leridge Taylor; (b) Joseph H. Douglas. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Scott of 38 Horriot Street, entertained at dinner, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Lemansey and Dr. and Mrs. J. J. Smyer. The occasion was one great opportunity as the dinner was opened in the evening after a grand concert, at Music Hall. Hackensack Notes. Rey, and Mrs. W. H. Barclay and cones Jas, H. and Jas, D. Barclay and spent Thursday night with Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Porter. They left Friday A. M. Ger Hartz has accepted the position as against the A. M. E. Z. church Mr. Jimo Lorick was called to New Haven Count, on account of the death of her brother Mr. Avery Bykman, who died this week. Mrs. Lorick will be against other being indisposed to week. Mrs. Margaret, Hood will leave Friday for Pennsylvania, where she will spend the summer with friends. A W. H. and F. M. society has been organized by the A. M. Z. church with R. L. Holloway, the President, M. R. Holloway, Vice President, M. C. A. Tahler-Ste- stery, Miss Eveline Haves, Treasurer, Miss Jenne Thompson, A mok trial will be given at the A. M. E. Z. court. Thursday evening, under the direction of the President, R. W. Ackerman was in Englewood Sandy. Nena Nusa from Liberia. From the Alabama National Wool The news that H.W. Travis Secretary of State of the Republic of Liberia can dead flash over the Capital on Monday February 26th at 120 P M and put an expression of sadness Lenderable Lenders Avoid Florida Issue from the United States District Court. The appointment to the administration of Louisiana providing for the appointment of white men shall be permitted to vote has been deferred in the lower branch of the legislature of that State by a vote of 47 to 14. It was appointed to test the validity of the Fourteenth, Fifteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. This was regarded as a lawful action. The Court ruled that the leaders of the National Democratic Party made strong efforts to favor this result. It would have handicapped and encumbered the Democratic leaders in the House, and it would have made it will be a cable-mounted issue in the Republicans. That it passed one branch of the legislature is a significant fact. The House would be the Senate. Both bodies would argue that we deferred meant to our own way but it would have required another. It would have brought faith a decision that we have only endangered to obtain other laws. \ Growing Three-Year-Old City. From The Hitchhiker's Guide. Belle, LT, the little Negro city started three years ago is agreeing some. It was three or four dozen business concerns, four churches, a gin, a school, a lumber yard, a first-class architect and builder, a brick yard, a telegraph operator and a banker, a telegraph operator and two banks and a nice bean population of 400 people. Verik, the Negro is rising. BAPTIST NORMAL INSTITUTE AND RUST UNIVERSITY ALUMNI Interesting Events Told at Two of Middletown Premium Schools HOLLY SPRINGON, Miss., May 14—Two very putable occasions among the Afro-Americans of Holly Springs during the past week were the commencement exercise of the Baptist Normal Institute and the annual meet of the Alumni association of Rust University. It will be remembered that this place was located the Mississippi Normal and Industrial Institute, fostered by the State of Mississippi to the extent of $2,000 annually. In pursuance of his anti-Negro policy Governor Vardaman very soon after his elevation to the Governorship of the State, vetoed the annual appropriation for the institution; thus literally and actually putting it out of business. Undaunted and undismayed, this action of the Chief Executive was the signal for the concerted and aggressive action on behalf of the State and the result is that now, besides the already famous Rust University there are located at Holly Springs two great schools, the Mississippi Theological and Industrial Institute, fostered by the Colored Methodist Episcopal church and the Industrial Institute, fostered by the Baptist of the State. Another occasion of unusual interest was the meeting of the Alumni Association of Rust University, an institution of Rust fosterers, an institution of theological Episcopal church which is one most prominent and best equipped institutions in the South for the training of Afro-American youths. The experience this year was of more than usual interest because the nature of the speaker, Prof. J. Ehols, principal of Birmingham's largest public school, the Shater school, and who stands head and shoulders above southern educators in matters aggressive and progressive, was handed a comprehensive and highly intelligent manner, and although addressed particularly to Rust graduates in the soundness of his biography and the depth of his reasoning was easily applicable to the case at large of the many men and women who was prepared for them, and that in the life of the busy and intolerant man there was no place for evasions or complaints, was the unfortunate result of other things. Trust Alburn must demonstrate the great truth that he who is prepared to do something usually gets a chance to do it. We need not spend much time grumbling about the truth that we believe throughly in the great truth as set forth by Franklin in these words. He was good at making things good in good as anything else. This is no time for grumbling. These amounts of opportunities have been taken advantage of and not wasted by the rights and privileges guaranteed us by the constitution, but we have right at one's own opportunities to lay for ourselves and our children, population and sure. Our addresses were delivered by D. A. D. Moynihan, Tenth Post G W Sodor, Holly Springs, Miss. D. N. H Williams, Oro Ossmett, and D. G. Griffin G. Logan, Holly Springs, and seventy of the Foreign Mission Board of the McGovern Presidential Foundation, who is pleased to present the address. Heather D. Stavitz Tros Topics Easy May 14. On Sunday last, Rec Classics 5. Permission of the late's street servers. An introduction and a appreciative audience will occur at the installation ceremony of the members of the Sunday school. M Saturday 11. On Sunday, the students will join for the great show. A host of Philadelphia, and a family of New York, last week and was the guest of Rev. and Mrs. Charles Freeman Mrs. George Earles of Brooklyn the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Dessner with various Mrs. Sylvia Shilkey of Worcester Mrs. the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Coleman of Colline Mrs. Sylvia Shilkey serving Yankees and New York future returning home Sunday evening Rev. S. Colle of the Mt. church, brought the award of the third thanksgiving to Troy Lodge, G. L. of O F. No. 575, and Troy House, G. L. of O F. No. 575 Mrs. Jane Wallimore died Mt. B. Mr. Wimberly was buried from Zion church, which she memorialized Mt. B. Mrs. Snow is a bishop, mother and one brother A steamboat entertainment will be given May 25 by Miss R. Bam and band of children A grand memorial celebration and ball will be given of Album Wednesday evening Prize from Jelly汤 Soup Bowl Prize Zeta orchestra Newcastle England From The Philadelphia Trilogy Thomas Wendell Hebron, after going through grammar school of Philadelphia through grammar school of Philadelphia science at the Roy's high school in 1904 After making a creditable record there entered the employment of Mr. Pritson Shaw, chief engineer at the Pritson Shaw, and industry he won the confidence and regards of those with whom he was brought on touch. At the age of 25 Mr. Shaw took his examination for eng- gineer and was soon thereafter given the position of vice president of the forwarded company's building. He is also a student of the International Correspondence School at Scranton, Pa. Recently he was appointed first assistant manager in advance in salary. To date he is the highest licensed engineer in Philadelphia. To Jamestown Exposition Visitors THE HOTEL TOUSSAINT DUMAS Church and Calvert streets ELEGANTLY FUNNEL Newly built, with all modern car from all railroad and steel NO LIQUOR AND NO ON P All rooms light and airy and g modations limited to parties one and two can only secure Twenty Minutes' Ride Prompt and Courte DR. N. A LOOK OUT for the When you come to Norfolk to GRAND CEN No. 516 Bute St., corner Bute and Cue We will give you first-class acc and clean and inviting. Special attn Rev. J. Francis Lee, 334 Bank St., No. ELEGANTLY FURNISHED AND DECORATED Newly built, with all modern improvements, accessible by street car from all railroad and steamboat lines entering city. NO LIQUOR AND NO GAMBLING ALLOWED ON PREMISES All rooms light and airy and giving ideal home comforts. Accommodations limited to parties of four, six and eight. Parties of one and two can only secure accommodations at price for four. Twenty Minutes' Ride to Exposition Grounds Prompt and Courteous Attention Assured LOOK OUT for the GRAND CENTRAL When you come to Norfolk to visit the Jamestown Exposition stop at the GRAND CENTRAL HOUSE No. 516 Bute St., corner Bute and Cumberland St., Norfolk, Va. We will give you first-class accommodation. Everything will be kept neat and clean and inviting. Special attention will be given ladies. For reference: Rev. J. Francis Lee, 334 Bank St., Norfolk, Va. R. J. GOURLEY, Prop. Present this advertisement at our our $5.00 special photographs for $3.00. Battey PHOTOGRAPHY 509 8th Ave., between We are leaders in the production of Send us photograph for estimate. VICTORIA A 774 COLUMBUS A COLONIAL 836 and 838 COLUMBUS Where you will find a full line Fish and Oysters at all times at loc EDUCATION FARMING when the Farmer combines Soil The Sun and the Soil HAMPTON offers a new Undergraduate Course of modern methods. Young men without completed the Graduate Course have go Principal, H We are leaders in the production of lifesize work in crayons and watercolors Bend us photograph for estimate. Apr 11-31. VICTORIA MARKET CO. 774 COLUMBUS AVE., COR. 98th ST. COLONIAL MARKET CO. Where you will find a fall line of Choice Meats, Poultry, Provisions, Fish and Oysters at all times at lowest market prices. Jas 81-3m. EDUCATIONAL FARMING PAYS when the Farmer combines Scientific Methods with his Labor. The Sun and the Soil have no Race Prejudice. offers a new Undergraduate Course of three years for training practical farmers in modern methods. Young men without money can earn their way. All who have completed the Graduate Course have good positions. Write for a circular to Principal, Hampton Institute, Hampton, Va. AMERICAN HALL 644-646-648 Eighth Avenue New York (American Theatre Building) Bet. 41st and 42d Bts. Tel. 1730 Bryant Balls, Receptions, Entertainment Weddings, Parties and Rehearsal H. N. Semanky, Prop. Thos White, Mgr. Unite New Management North Pike jan 17-19. Elevator Service Group OHIO VAN COMPANY Success will to the J. AIKEN MOVING VAN CO LINENSED PIANO HOISTING FURNITURE REMOVED CITY OR COUNTRY Office: I. W. 134th Street, New York P. WISE, Feb. 19, 2020 FAY SHOLES TYPEWRITERS Alexander, MacDonald & Greene Sales Agents 296 Broadway for New York City 226 West 61st St. Four large rooms with improvements, only high class tenants wanted; rent moderate. Inquire of junior or S. REINHARDT 1894 Lexington Ave. Near 100th St. Apr 25-41 Palisade Cottage NOW OPEN FOR BOARDERS 10 miles from New York City, on West Shore or Eile Road. Fine scenery, driving and fishing. Fresh vegetables, chickens and fish. Place for enrollees, trans-menager. Apply MRS. N. S. EPPS 60 West 134th St., NEW YORK CITY May 8, 2015 When All Others Fail We call you by name and tell you your address, wishes, occupation, and the cause of your visit, without you writing it down. No money taken in advance. Warning to the public: Beware of palm-lets who demand money in advance. Remember, it's their way of getting money from building. My fee is 25 cents up. TO LET FOR H. HARCOURT ISHED AND DECORATED improvements, accessible by street amboat lines entering city. NO GAMBLING ALLOWED PREMISES giving ideal home comforts Accom- of four, six and eight. Parties of accommodations at price for four. ide to Exposition Grounds cous Attention Assured A. McCURDEY GRAND CENTRAL visit the Jamestown Exposition stop at the NTRAL HOUSE umberland Sts., Norfolk, Va. commodation. Everything will be kept neat ention will be given ladies. For reference: Norfolk, Va. & Warren GRAPHERS between 35th and 36th Sts. of life-size work in crayons and water colors Apr 11-8m. MARKET CO. AVE., COR. 98th ST. MARKET CO. US AVE., COR. 101st ST. of Choice Meats, Poultry, Provisions, sweet market prices. Jan 81-8m. PAYS cientific Methods with his Labor. have no Race Prejudice. INSTITUTE three years for training practical farmers in money can earn their way. All who have good positions. Write for a circular to Hampton Institute, Hampton, Va. THE AVERY TRADE SCHOOLS ALLEGHENY, PA. The Avery Trade School is a strictly high grade trade school in which Dressmaking, Drafting, Millinery, Tailoring, Music and Nurse-Training are taught with a view of pupils using such knowledge as a means of gaining a livelihood. Address All Communications to MR. JOSEPH D. MAHONEY Sec'y and Treas., ALLEGHENY, PA. Feb. 18, 0m. ARKANSAS BAPTIST COLLEGE Literary, Industrial and Religious Carries full college course, gives special advantages in Industrial Training. FOUNDED AND OPERATED BY THE NEGRO BAPTISTS OF ARKANSAS JOS. A. BOOKER, Pres., Little Rock, Ark. Feb. 18, 1972 HOWARD UNIVERSITY Washington, D. C. Wilbur P. Thirlfield, LL. D. President. COLLEGES—Arts and Sciences, Normal (Commercial, The Academy Preparatory). PROFESSIONAL SCHOOLS of Theology Law, Medicine, Dentistry, Pharmacy. NORT GRADUATE COURSES in Schools of Medicine and Dentistry. May 6 to June 15. Write Dr. Shadda, secretary, for particulars. FACULTY - 100 members; 1,000 students. For catalogue address the President or Dean of Department. 3-21-6 mo. has office at 50 West 135th Street Piano Holoting and Furniture Removed City or Country. Orderst, Promptly Attended. All Work Guaranteed. Mar 7-3m. 28 WEST 135th STREET Telephone, pay Maidem. Your Patronage Seltledet ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO Mar 28.3m. GEORGE A. BRAMBILL, Ladies' and Gents' Tailor. 187 W. 134th Street. FULL DRESS SUITS TO HIRR Norfolk, Va. Proprietor THE BRADFORD 73 WAD 180th Street, New York City Rently Free! See Us At Bee Week or Month. First-class mail investment attached. With the best offer with quality of food dispense. REGULAR DINNER. 8:30 PM 4p-12m. JONX B. BRADFORD, Prop. Clantarf Cafe Restaurant 18 WEST 1836 STREET. Between Lanier and Fifth Avenues. Telephone 4577 Harton. CHOICE WINES, LIQUORS AND CINEMAS to Order. WILLIAM HAMILTON, Prosecutor. mar 20-3pm Nearly furnished rooms. The Hotel Alpen. BURROFMAN PLAN. 457 Seventh Street, NEW YORK CITY. Newly furnished and decorated. Oral arm improvements. Conceded by pro- vince of the city. The only place to travelers to stop for meals. Mike IRENE JOHNSON. 2026-3pm Prosecutor. New Maryland House ENLARGED AND REMODELLED. 300 and 300 West 51st Street. Nearly furnished Rooms by the Weekly Meals. RESTAURANT ATTACHMENT. Meals at all Hours. JOHN WALCOTT, Prosecutor. dec 20-3m HOTEL MACEO 218 West 53rd Street, N First-Class Accommodations ONLY First-Class Training Rooms Permanent or Transient Guest Junior of Clery and Business Men Junior of Clery and Business Men, Including Wife, 4 p.m. Mar 7-5m. BENJAMIN F. THOMAS, Pro- HENRY HOUSE Has Removed from 265 West 40th Street 586 Seventh Avenue, near 41st Street Newly Furnished Rooms. First-Class Accommodation Only. For Permanent or Transient Mrs. ANNIE HENRY, Propriet Between 7th and 8th Avenues Handsomely Furnished Rooms. First class Accommodation. For Either Permanent or Transient Guests. MRS. L. D. LAW5, Prow. Mar 21 3p WILSON HOUSE 214 and 216 West 21th Street. Fifty Handsomely Furnished lounge with heat, bath and all conveniences by the day, week or month. Fine rooms in New York, $1 per day. jan 24 3m FRANK C. HOLMEN, P.O. The Long Established and Favorable Known EUROPEAN PLAN. NEW YORK. ACCOMMODATION Prompt and complete convenience and moderate price convenience and convenient The patronage either Permanent or Translated guest spectively solicited E JOHNSON JanM-Smoe Property Astoria Restaurant and Dining Room 43 WEST 1320 STREET Good food, quick service, moderate rates Regular dinner, 25 cents; from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. Neatly curnalied room WM. FORMAN. feb 14-8m Propriete ANDERSON HOTEL CAFE AND RESTAURANT 700 & 793 Patton St., Brooklyn Neatly curnalied Rooms for Fermant Transient, Transient Remodeled and and new management Ball room attached. Musical entertainments every day from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. CHARLES, ANDERSON, Proprietor May home without its expense. The space is respectfully invited to specify its 24-hour or week. Meals and bath Rooms by the day or week. Meals and t moderate prices. April 13-18 Tel: 2904 38th Street First Class Board and Lodging by Day Week or Month. At the lowest price. STEPHEN BUNDY. Jan 24-6mos. Propietor. Will open April 20th for colored granite only Large, large and ally room; rooms for improvements; anyone coming to Jan- feb will do well to apply for rooms; ceilings are accessible by cur- line; automobile service; apr 4-5mo. THORN, HARMON, Prop 212 West 130th Street Nearly furnished room, be first and all convenience. Fine surrounding W. Kalez Recipient day 13. After a most harrowing day, extending over from Wednesday morning last till Saturday afternoon, the Baptist General Association of Virginia has adjourned. The members of the association were held in Raleigh Mount Zion Baptist church, the Raleigh Town pastor. There were present at this town many of the obliter Baptist ministers of the State and the papers read and sermons preached showed that for erudition, research and general practical knowledge, the ministry of Virginia is in the forefront of the great march of intelligence. The Rev. Dr. G. W. Goode of Danville, president of the association, presided throughout the session of the body. The first day's session convened at 9 o'clock. A. M. After devotional exercises the address of welcome in behalf of the ministry of Richmond was made by the Rev. Dr. Evans Payne, payee of the Baptist Baptist Church. Payne spoke in a most felicitous speech his welcoming being characteristic of that old Virginia hospitality, for which the State has become proverbial. Miss Blanche Kenney extended a welcome in behalf of the Rising Mount Zion Baptist church, Captain Carlton McCarthy, Mayor of Richmond, welcomed the association in behalf of the citizens of Richmond, and the Rev. Dr. Hephurn in behalf of the white Baptists of Richmond: Mayor McCarthy spoke in part as follows: "I shall not be formal or mechanical in extending to you a cordial greeting to Richmond, because of what I know of the great denomination which you represent. Being a Baptist myself, formality is no part: the saving of souls, the preservation of society and all government whether municipal or national is my responsibility. He congratulated the association that there was caught of politics in the gathering, nor as for that, their denomination, as there was no mixing of religion and politics. Politics, the speaker declared and everything else, should be dominated by religion. He regarded the ministers of the Gospel as the greatest power in all nations, whether in time of war or time of peace. He spoke of the forty years in which the God-fearing people of this nation had been struggling for life and purity in the last years that the people had gotten back to first truths, that these lessons of truth and honesty as taught to little children round the heartstone and in the Sunday school were the bedrock principles upon which the perpetuity of the Union rests. He said it was the reincubation of those principles into the hearts of the people that were teaching them to know that however highly cultured a man may be if he was immoral and untrustworthy in his personal life he was unfit to be a member of public treasures in He and his children, that it mattered that he highly might rise in the intellectual scale of being, if their lives did not conform to the laws of God, all their work would count for maughn. He said his welcome expressed the genuine sentiment of the decent, self-representation element of Richmond's population, for they were all pleased to have such representative bodies of their colored fellow-citizens, to gather in their midst between them, to gather Richmond so far as possible, good and respectable who smoke also of the faithful black race, not only to the white but to him, asocial in individual. In return for that success which would ever have his affection for drivers esteem. He impressed the blacks and educators of Nero young to tell those things which they profess and teach and if that was done right, all race problems would be solved. The address of the Mayor was listened to with rapt attention and was most enthusiastically received. The response to the addresses of welcome by the Rev. Dr. J. M. Armstrong of Portsmouth in a moment and forebable manner. At the conclusion of the response, the president of the association, the Rev. Dr. G. W. Goode, read his annual address. After congratulating the association upon the hearty welcome which had been extended on behalf of the citizens of Richmond, through their mayor, and their white and colored ministry, and the numerous circumstances attendant to their gatherings, he requested that the work of the association from its organization, as it appears to the present, be distributed in particular upon the work accomplished in particular upon the work accomplished in the year just ended. The association's field was not Virginia alone, but Africa the farther, and he hoped the association would prove the great lever by which Africa would be lifted from its darkness of suspensions and impoverishment restrained for God. Among the recommendations contained in the address were the establishment of a peace agency through the Baptist Board, the organ of the association, the training control of the training administration of the agency, and the compensation of a fund sufficient to complete the compilation of the history of the colored Baptists of Vir 1 During the sessions of the association several excellent seminars were delivered by the visiting clergy, and there were many strong addresses made and scholarly papers read. Mrs. W. W. Johnson, president of the Women's Social Educational and Mission Society, and Mrs. W. P. Burrell an active member of the society made excellent addresses also Mrs. Magie L. Walker, president of St. Luke's Penny Savings Bank William Ellison Esq., representing the Southern Rivers Association and the General Association of Virginia, both which held editions on Thursday, bringing greetings from these two bodies. Rumors from Virginia Union University, Hartshorn Memorial College and the seven schools which the association holds to support, were present and spoke of the work being accomplished by their schools. Officers were elected as dent, Rev. G. W. Gooden, Vice-President Rev J. Hurge, Rev S. R. Holmes, Rev C. H. Johnson, Rev R. R. Hardy Rev A. J. Summing, Record Secretary Rev A. A. Graham, Corresponding Secretary, Rev D. R. C. Quarles Charlesworthy, Statistical Secretary Rev Dr. W. H. Stokes; treasurer, Rev Dr. A. Ringa, Jr GEORGE S. JULIA STEPHENS Social Equality in Athletics. In answer to an article published in *The Dhana Journal* upon "The Negro Problem in Cornell Athletics," the following letter appeared: **ITHACA, N.Y.** It was stated that the "presence of Negro players of cognitiv with white athletes in athletic games, particularly in accordion Corpely increasing accordion in this direction." Those who hold this opinion have evidently lost their sense of humor, for it was remarked above, that one of the Negro players had pitched, a winning game against one of the strongest colleges on the hill. Surely Cornell cannot win and be successful. ```markdown ``` It is also feared that the presence of Nerges in the campus games will lead to their admission to Varsity and class teams. What of it? Cornell has more of Matthew of Harvard, Williams of Harvard, and other co-educated ath- letes? Did not the Irish-American Athletic Club of New York, recognize J. B. Taylor of Pennsylvania, and unanimously elect him to its membership, because of his "reputation for squaresness in the athletic world?" If Cornell is "rapidly coming to be the university which attracts all the blue-blooded Southern youth of fine old ex-slave-holding families," he should be the sole author and preached for the perpetuation of the Union and the abolition of slavery. It has come to a question of principal. Will the spirit of 1818 bow before the spirit of 1807? The admission of Southern Negroes to Cornell does not lessen the number of descendants of blue-blooded ex-slave holders, since blood still runs from grandfather to grandson. The spirit of the broad-minded founder should be present in a centennial at the changes in his plans, for surely he would not be attacked by an acute case of "Black Fever." I know nothing of the campus, teams to which Negroes belong, but I do know the spirit of the men of both colleges so well that I believe they will come stand to the 1920s and understand that they helped to bring their teams to their present state of perfection. Unfortunately, the Negro race is still in a beating position. What it asks for, however, is only fair play in all contests, whether civil, athletic, in college and in the larger world. HALLEE E. QUEEN. Ithaca, N. Y., April 25, 1907. STAR OF BETHLEHEM AND ST. MATTHIEWS M.E.CHURCH SERVICES Fraternal Societies Hear Annual Sem- mons: Social and Personal Notes OSSINING. May 13.--Services at both the Star of Botthehom and St. Matthew's M. E. church were well attended. At St. Matthew's M. E. church, the pastor, Rev. Morris, preached the annual sermon to Ossining led, No. 5484, and St. Katherine Household of Ruth, No. 1914 G. U., O. of F. O. There was a large turnout of both of these societies, while the congregation was unusually large. Rev. Morris, the pastor, Dannon and Pythias in reference to the love and brotherhood of Oldfellowship, and of the love of Ruth in reference to the household. Miss Lacy Magget provided at the organ. A large collection was taken up for the Old Fellows' home. Mrs. James of Mt. Vernon, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Prime on Wednesday last, and was entertained in the evening by them at their residence. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Peterson, of Proton; Mr. Clark, of New York; Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Jackson, Frank Thomas and Earnest Fagz, of Ossining. Charles Magill, Arthur Thomas and Malcolm Nickelson visited White Plains on Sunday, and while there called on Mr. and Mrs. William Regers and family. Mr. and Mrs. Emmanuel Pupend and Mrs. Robert Pupend and Miss Ann Purina at Lincoln hospital on Sunday, May 5th. The Mozart literacy and social club met and was entertained by Miss Rosa Brown at the residence of Mrs. James Robles on Durham avenue. They gave their secreth and annual mask and upper dress reception at Red Men's ball. Central avenue on Tuesday evening, May 21. Flower Shower. Prosperity in Nyack Nawak, May 14th Sunday was Old Fellows' day, and High Cliff Lodge No. 2914 celebrated the day with appropriate communities. The services were held in St. Philip's A. M. E. Zoon church in the afternoon, High Cliff Lodge, Golden Wreath, Household of Ruth of Nacka A.托arge delegation from Lincoln Lodge at Honehold of Ruth, Post Grand Master Honehold of Tartown, and clerger Lodge of White Plains put at the Lodge Room at 230 P M and marched to the church in a body in dress regular At the church P. G. M W H Mers acted as master of ceremonies. The of official program of the order was performed F. N F W. Puts read the law calli ng the meeting: P. N F R. A Rhodes read a brief statement of the financial condition of the lodge after which EN D Chardhamia F. W. Brooks of New Lodge of Tartown opened the duties of Old Fellows W. G. Master W. A. Hatcher of Tartown, was then introduced and delivered in an address. At this meeting Rev. R. B Page of White Plains, who was to have prescribed the sermon, arrived and ex- plained that the disabling of the elec- tric are between White Plains and Tartown had caused him to miss the ferry from Tartown to Nacka Notwithstanding the fact that he did not arrive in time to attend the large gathering present at the event two people were present. The report read by Mr. R A Rhodes showed the lodge to be in a healthy and prosper condition. Mrs. Gregory and Miss Ressie Johnson of Tappan, were in New York Sunday, also Mr A. Edger and several other friends of Sparkhill. It appears that a streak of prosperity hit New York for there is not an abliment to be found who will, and want- work. Rev. W. H. Rowland, Pastor of St. Philipse, is very busy getting things in shape for the New York A. M. E Zion Conference. P. G. M. W. H. Myers will be delegate to the District Grand Lodge which meets in White Plains the second Tuesday in August. Mr. Rinech Riche of New York, visited New York Sunday. Rev. A. W. Neel of Pilgrim Baptist Church, preached an able sermon in St. Philip's A. M. E Zion Sunday morning. Conference Week. PHILADELPHIA, May 14. The session of the Philadelphia Annual Conference of the A. M. E. church will convene in the Rebel A. M. E. church Sixth Street below Pine, commencing Wednesday day morning, May 15, to continue a week. It will be composed of 200 ministerial and lay delegates who will come together Eastern Pennsylvania and Delaware. The conference will be presided over by Rt. Rev. Wesley J. Gaines of Atlanta, and Rev. James H. Division of the Conference,宗廷委 and the rearranging of presiding older districts, and six ministerial delegates will be chosen to the next general Conference. IRRIGROACABLE BENEFICIAL SOCIETY'S ANNUAL BANQUET. Missouri Baptist Church at Blen Church. demeer-Odd Peltwe at Blen Church. PROVIDENCE, May 14. The annual person to the church of of the people held at the People's A. M. E. Zion church, Sunday afternoon. The members assembled at 1 p. m. and marched to the church. They were under the marshhip of W. M. Major. The services in the church were under the direction of Officer of District Grand Lodge D. G. M. Thomas L. Brown. Deputy James T. Allen, Chaplain of the day, Orlando B. Jones. Word was received in this city Monday of the dearth resident of this city. He died in the City of Mexico, May 6th at the Catholic hospital. He leaves, two sisters, Mrs. Lewis Williams and a son and daughter. Miss Maud Pool of Dayton, O., and Miss Mamie York, sister of Andrew J. York, is here visiting for a few weeks. Dr. John Birch has purchased a new home on Garden street. Miss Minnie O., Kerry formerly of this city but now living in her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen O., Kerry. The annual banquet of the Iropeanable Beneficial Society was held Friday evening, at Gobb Assembly rooms. An informal reception was held preceding the banquet, after which all required to the banquet room, where covers were laid for sixty members and invited guests. H. Harrison, in next room, welcomed the New Members and Andrew Boll. The members then enjoyed a ten-course dinner, after which cigars, music and short addresses were enjoyed. The Charity Ball, on last Thursday evening at Music hall, was a successful affair. It was held in behalf of the Old Ladies' Home. There was a short concert preceding the ball by several well-known artists. Mrs. Laura Rathbone, the historian of the Indiana Rathbone, had been admitted to the Old Ladies' Home East Transit street The ninety-fifth session of the New York annual conference convenes this week: at the Union A. M. E. church, at Rt. Riv. J. F. Ramssey, D. D. broadening New Bochelle Nets. The death of Miss Bettie Shaw occurred Monday last. The funeral was held Wednesday evening from her late residence S2 Winyah avenue. Interment in Alexander, Va. She leaves three sisters and one brother to mourn their loss. Mr. James Wilson was buried Sunday afternoon. Rev. Charles Landrieu officiated. Mrs. Alice Murray of New York, was the guest of friends here Sunday. Mrs. John Thomas and the Misses Sibbie and Eliza arris of New York were the guests of Mrs. Sadie Fountain Sunday. Rev. J. W. McCoy of Mamarsocke was in town Monday. Mr. Henry Junior has taken charge of the Westchester Building. Miss Amanda Billips spent Sunday in Larchmont with friends. Mrs. A. A. Stevenson spent Sunday in New York. Miss Mary Holmes of Petersburg, Va. is visiting her aunt, Mrs. a Kite Parker. Loughkeenale Notes. Miss Bertha Putter is out again after a brief illness. Mr. John Miller has accepted a position with Mr. Louis Etting, Chathurst. Miss Bertha Putter is with Ruben Goldberg on Main Street. The Rose Leaf Lodge, Grand United Order of Old Fellows, had their annual sermon preached by C. Fairfax, A. M. D. B., in the Rose Leaf Lodge. The Ruth was also largely represented. Dr Fairfax selected as the subject "The Heart and Home." The sermon was thoughtful and eloquent. The bishop presented him with the sermon. With "God Be With You" Till We Meet Again" The last quarterly meeting before the annual conference will be held in the E. Zion church with assist the pastor and Wakefield will assist the pastor. Love feast will be conducted by Mrs J. A. May, the Conference Evangelist. Mrs Rekert returned to Hilderton. Connect with Wakefield please. Also attend the Love feast will be conducted by Mrs J. A. May, the Conference Evangelist. Mrs Rekert returned to Hilderton. Connect with Wakefield please. Also attend the Love feast will be conducted by Mrs J. A. May, the Conference Evangelist. As the time for the conference draws near the members and friends of the E. Zion church at Hilderton for the return of the pastor for the ninth year. The Days Bring Light. Only about $160,000 of the millions devoted greatly by Rockefeller was to go to colored institutions but following closely on the publication of the statement comes the news of the gift of a million dollars by Miss Anna T. Jeanne, a Owakemee of Philadelphia, as a fund for establishing and improving ruralcolled schools in the South. Although at the time the Negro days being light,new friends and brighter prospects God has not created a great division of the human family to be deemed to hopeless despair, but for nobler purposes. How It Unpacked. Green "I was the victim of a lynching party in Arizona once" Brown "You don't say so" Green "Face" married the widow of a train bailiff for horse stealing "Chicago Daily News" TO LET A furnished front porch, third floor, front hall room, 24 floor, Mrs. Landt, 761 Third ave. near 45th street INDUSTRIAL LAND AND DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, Inc., of Virginia CAPITAL STOCK - - $50,000 STOCK PER SHARE - - $5.00 Investments, loans, agencies, real estate rentals, insurance, profits sure; decide now Home Office, 612 Church Street, Gliden Savings Bank Bulldoing, Norfolk, Va. TO LET Luxury apartments of three large, light-filled rooms, balconies and tubs, house newly renovated and in perfect condition, rent $100 to $140 per month. Apply bachelor's degree. YOUR LUCK IS IN YOUR HAND Consult the best Chirvoyant Removes evil in influencers brings quick results. Positive satisfaction guaranteed. MADAM JULIA, Australian Gypsy, 388 Sixth Avenue, near 23d Street Fee 25c. May 41 PICNIC AND J. MILTON AT SULZER'S HALL 126th and 127th FRIDAY EVEN Music by Miss Hailie L. A. TO 42 W Five rooms and bath, 2376-78 OLD Four extra large light $20. 165 W Six all light rooms and floors, rent $25 and $26. 306 EAST 122m Three extra large room 7 W Five lovely light rooms SAMUEL 363 L Phone 4213-J Morningside Half Morning Nos. 49-50 A Six-story House. A Hot water supply. RENTS $10 One-Half N BEFORE RENT OF THESE B MENTS WITH Nos. 24, 26, 28 Between 4 Six-story Apartment inches wide. Has 4 apartmen and bath and two of 4 ro RENTS $19 Nos. 24, 26 6 Between 3 Six-story Apartment wide. Has 4 apartmen one of 5 rooms and bath RENTS $11 These are "New- rented to our people. blocks in Harlem, and the These houses have and electric lights. Re The steam heating and and are guaranteed to gis is of the finest sanitary Large open courts make ful and healthy. PHILIP A. The Committee reserves the right to exclude any objectionable person. How to Reach the Park. Cross over East 34th street ferry to Long Island. Take any car that goes through Jackson avenue, get off at Skillman avenue. Drive to Park. may 9-31 AT SULZER'S HARLEM RIVER PARK AND CASINO 126th and 127th Streets and Second Avenue, New York. FRIDAY EVENING, MAY 31, 1907 Music by Miss Hailie L. Anderson's Famous Orchestra of Twenty Musicians. Admission, 35 Cents TO BE LET 42 WEST 135th STREET rooms and bath, hot water supply, rent $22. 166-78 OLD BROADWAY, near 131st large light rooms and bath, hot water, 165 WEST 133rd STREET light rooms and bath, hot water supply, fi $25 and $26. EAST 122nd STREET. near Second extra large rooms with bath, very light, rent 7 WEST 133rd STREET only light rooms and bath, rent $23. AMUEL A. KELS 363 LENOX AVENUE -J Morningside Or Janitor Half Month's Rent For pos. 49-51 East 133d St 7 House. Apartments of 3, 4 and 5 room supply. RENTS $16 TO $22 PER MON Half Month's Rent MORE RENTING COMPARE THE R THESE ELEGANT MODERN A NTS WITH ANY OTHERS OFFERED 4, 26, 28 and 30 West 1 Five rooms and bath, hot water supply, rent $22. 2376-78 OLD BROADWAY, near 131st St. Four extra large light rooms and bath, hot water, rent $19 and $20. 165 WEST 133rd STREET Six all light rooms and bath, hot water supply, first and third floors, rent $25 and $26. 306 EAST 122nd STREET, near Second Ave. Three extra large rooms with bath, very light, rent $14. Half Month's Rent Free! A Six-story House. Apartments of 3, 4 and 5 rooms and baths. Hot water supply. RENTS $16 TO $22 PER MONTH BEFORE RENTING COMPARE THE RENTS OF THESE ELEGANT MODERN APARTMENTS WITH ANY OTHERS OFFERED YOU Nos. 24, 26, 28 and 30 West 136th St. Between Lenox & Fifth Avenues History Apartment Houses; each house has 4 apartments on each floor; two and two of 4 rooms and bath. RENTS $19 TO $28 PER MONTH 24, 26 @ 28 West 140th 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 $19 TO $28 PER MONTH Nos. 24. 26 @ 28 West 140th Street Between Lenox & Fifth Avenues ory Apartment Houses; each house is 44 apartments on each floor; one of 6 rooms and bath and two of 4 rooms and bath. RENTS $19 TO $31 PER MONTH are "New-Law Houses" of a class of four people. They are situated in two carlem, and the rent is within reach of all houses have all modern improvements, execl lights. Refrigerators, Dutch Dining heating and hot water plants are of the guaranteed to give thorough satisfaction. The finest sanitary construction, with porcelain courts make every room in these houses healthy. IP A. PAYTON, Jr., 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 $19 TO $31 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. Telephone 917 and 918 Harlem 309 WEST An elegant apar bath; range, hot and kept house; first-cla Apply janitor, or WEST 119th ST TO LET elegant apartment of five large, light large, hot and cold-water; all improvement; first-class janitor service. Moditor, or 309 WEST 119th STREET TO LET An elegant apartment of five large, light rooms and bath; range, hot and cold water; all improvements; wellkept house; first-class janitor service. Moderate rent Apply janitor, or CHRIS. SCHIERLOH 774 NINTH AVENUE The MIN Friday Event AT ODD FELLOWS' H DOORS OPEN AT 7.30 PRESENTED FOR THE CARD OF GOOD TALENT Miss Joia Harris Aina Townsend, Miss Leathee Margaret Goodwin, Miss Carrie Barker, with the Famous Walla Miss Alice Randolph, accoun A. Boyd, financial secretary; $ NINTH AVENUE, NEAR 52d STRE MINSTREL MI Will make their second appearance Evening, May 24. FELLOWS HALL, 158 West, 29th Street, New W AT 7.30 CONE ARD OF ADMISSION, 25 CENT 774 NINTH AVENUE, NEAR 52d STREET The MINSTREL MISSES AT ODD FELLOWS HALL. 158 West. 29th Street. New York City DOORS OPEN AT 7:30 CONCERT AT 8:30 Miss Eola Hartle, Miss Marianne Sippe, Miss Ananda Miss Locale Ford, Miss Myrtle Dancy, Miss Hazel Ain, Miss Carrie Robinson, Miss Therese Bell, and L. Pimoua Wallace Sister. Repubblic, accompany; Sister Hattie Messer, Diane federal secretary; Sister Audie Plummer, W. C., and ins TALENT Miss Joel Hattie Miss Materiel Nip Miss Amanda Lockson Miss Margaret Goodwin Miss Cyrle Robinson Miss Michele Bell and Little Miss Vetta Badger, with the Famous Wallace Sisters Miss Little Mercy Gentry Hue William A. Woolley Ripley Secretary, Sister Amelia Plummer W.C. and instructors. 1896 WHEELMTH STREET only, rent $22. Y, near 131st St. in, hot water, rent $19 and STREET per supply, first and third near Second Ave. every light, rent $14. STREET nt $23. KELSEY AVENUE Or Janitor on Premises Sent Free! 133d Street 4 and 5 rooms and baths PER MONTH Is Rent Free! ARE THE RENTS MODERN APART. IS OFFERED YOU West 136th St. each house is 37 feet 6 inch floor: two of 5 rooms PER MONTH 140th Street ch house is 41 feet 8 inches one of 6 rooms and bath, rooms and bath. ER MONTH of a class never before rated in two of the finest in reach of all. movements, except elevator atch Dining Rooms, etc. nts are of the latest type tisfaction. The plumbing , with porcelain fixtures. these houses light, cheer- N, Jr., Agent 67 WEST 134th STREET h STREET Large, light rooms and ill improvements; well-vice. Moderate rent R' 52d STREET L MISSES May 24, 1907 St Street, New York City CONCERT AT 8.30 25 CENTS Dance Miss Angela Jackson, Miss Good Music in Attendance A. B. DR. ELLARSON Dr. Elliason has been carefully educated in the medical school. Dr. Elliason's success in wonderful in curing Paralysis, atotism, atotism, Sore Eyes, Tumors, Cancer, Constipation, Obstipation, Tape Worm, Liver Complaints, Dearness, Catarrh, Dropy, Piles, Nervous Debility, Heart Disease, Consumption, Disease of All Diseases, Colon, Kidney Disease and all strange and unpleasant diseases which others, don't understand. All diseases, no matter what may be. Nothing but honorable treatment. He hospitably helps if you can be cured. He hospitably helps if you can be treated. How many remedies and new successes. Has had ample experience in public hospitals, and private clinics. No trifling with human life. Call at once. Do not hang in patrols. In a Registered Physician. A NEW REMEDY FOR RHEUMATISM JUST DISCOVERED. Not a illnment. Hopeless case and those that others cannot care for. Do not hang in patrols. Beware of a man going around selling corn cure and representing himself as Dr. Elliason. Dr. Elliason is a woman, as you may see, in picture above, and does business outside, office 88 Patam Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Is now, and always has been a true friend to the colored people, and has always had a large patronage from them, and had a large following. I, Dr. Ellarson when I was no sick I thought I would die. Dr. Ellarson cured me, and made me feel like a new person. I am happy to have been able to find there, and to God for pointing me to such a good friend to give me such relief. Mrs. MARY K. HARRISON, 472 Hudson avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Dr. Ellarson can show many such as the above, and will take pleasure in doing so, to any who call at her office. She is warm, and those that other cannot cure especially solicited to consult Dr. Ellarson. Office hours: 1 to 7 p. m. Also by as solitary. Sundays from 3 to 6 p. m. CONSULTATION $1.00 HOW TO REACH DR. ELLARSON Take Putnam avenue car at the Brooklyn Bridge, on the New York side. Get off 13 Ormond Place. Brooklyn, and walk down to the fourth house, 85 Pleasant avenue. Dentistry Dr. James A. Banks SURGEON DENTIST 312 West 59th Street, New York Telephone 6022 Columbus Gas Admisteried Porcelain, Crown and Bridge Works Specialty. Ten Years with Dr. D. C. White. Mar 21-8m SURGEON DENTIST OFFICE HOURS 0 A.M. to 6 P.M. 66 WEST 133D STREET, sundays by Appointment. NEW YORK apr 18-3m White Rose Tooth Powder a one of the best, known preparations for whitening and cleaning the teeth. CHAS. H. ROBERTS, D. D. S. 42 West 53d Street. NEW YORK. Apr 18-19r Fel. 2818 Prospect. Gas Administered Dr. Walter N. Beekman SURGEON DENTIST 790 Fulton Street Near Adelphil, BROOKLYN, N. Y. Office Hours: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. SUNDAY BY APPOINTMENT Jan 10-3m Telephone, 1833-W Prospect DR. L. J. DELSARTE DENTIST 797 Fulton Street, BROOKLYN, N. Y. Office House—9 a.m.—6 p.m. Sundays by appointment O'FARRELL'S 410 and 412 Eighth Avenue Near 31st Street. NEW YORK CITY FURNITURE, CARPETS, BEDDING, ETC Houses, Flats and Apartments Furnished Complete CASH OR CREDIT FRANK DONVATIN oldest and most reliable store in the City nov 19-1y Mme. Germain We can also supply our customers with ready-made garments. Give us a call. Telephone: 5491-33th Street 356 W. 37th St., New York Near Ninth Avenue. Feb 14-3m Atlantic Servants Exchange Fifty canvases for Cooks, Laundries, Chambersmalls, Porters and useful men, nearly summer reports, nearly winter reports. Mar 28.3m. P. N. GRANT, Proprietor CONSULT THE GREATEST LIVING CLAIRVOYANTS MEDIUMS and PALMISTS If You Are Going to See a Childvoyant Why not see the book? If you have already made mistakes thrown away, you need confidence through dealing with much-advertised and self-styled palmists and clairvoyants and their cheap, clap-trait consult these wonderful mediums. They will tell you frankly your condition and what you may expect; if nothing can be done, you may not take consent of your money. Has not this honesty on the face of it? We can tell you all this and more: How can I have good luck? How can I succeed in business or work? How can I conquer my enemies? How can I marry the one I choose? How can I marry well? How can I rival? How can I make anyone love me? How can I get a good position? How can I remove bad influences? How can make distant ones think of me? How can I settle my quarrel? How can I hold my husband's love? How can I keep my wife's love? We tell all these situations. No charge if not satisfied when reading. We do merely solemnly agree and guarantee to make no charge if we fail to call you by name, names of your friends, enemies or rivals. We promise to tell you whether your husband, wife or sweetheart is true or false; tell you how much love of the one you most desire, even though miles away; how to succeed in business, speculation, lawsuits; how to marry the one of your choice; how to retain your business; how to finance your business. Diplomats hang in Paris. Please to not write to LADY GONZALEZ, but call: owing to our large office business we have no time to do business by writing, or even to answer letters. Consultation BSc, $60, $1.60. Hours 10 to 18, also Sundays. Permanently bequested 20 years in Brooklyn. BBS Bergra St., between Bond and Newton, Brooklyn. BBS Bergra Sweet and Newton, Brooklyn. BBS Bergra New York address off at Nevins Street. J. B. WOOD REPRESENTATIVE The Metropolitan Mercantile & Beauty Co. P Largest of his kind controlled by our people. Address 533 West 53d Street, New York Telephone 1905 Columbus. Jan 31-1yr. Miss H. Anderson's Orchestra. PROMPT ATTENTION COMMUNICATIONS. 216 West 56th Street. NEW YORK CITY. Telephone 4332 Columbus. Mar 7-8m Walter F. Craig's FAMOUS ORCHESTRA 321 West 59th Street NEW YORK. Phone 1479 Columbus. Feb 7-8m The New Amsterdam Musical Association (incorporated) WILL furnish MUSICIANS COLLORED MUSICIANS for all functions W. A. Riker, manager, 843 West 57th Street, R. F. Douge, secretary, 10 West 134th Street, Headquarters, 816 West 59th street, Mar 14-31 The New York Age $1.50 THE YEAR The Colored American Magazine and The Age, $2.00 Address NEW YORK AGE 7 and 8 Chatham Square, New York WHITE ROSE Working Girls' Home 217 East 90th Street. Between Second and Third Avenues. Pleasant temporary lodgings for working girls, with privileges, at reasonable rates. The Home solicitors orders for working dresses, aprons, etc. Address MRS. FRANCES REYNOLDS KYBER. Superintendent. Feb 28-8m GET INSURED D. A. GREENE, Insurance Broker 47 Albany Avenue 4 Cedar Street Brooklyn New York SPECIAL! SPECIAL! When Troubles of any kind knock at your door, consult the Wonderful Man, A. R. Se Bastain. All are better for knowing him, Puts' all on the road to success. Re-unites the separated. Removes all evil influences. Consultation $1.00. Office Hours: Wednesday and Friday evenings 8 to 10 p. m. Sunday, 2 to 5 p. m. MELVIN J. CHISUM MELVIN J. CHISUM REAL ESTATE BROKER 300 West 119th Street Fine apartments to let at all times in desirable locations Telephone, 6055 Morningside, oct 25-1y peng ben et Tt VE BS get a eh nbetes rage wee ae wee See a oo i eRe Ce es 1 ys . [HE NEW YORK AGE: - THURSDAY, MAY 16,.1907. - en THE NEW YORK AGE] sway otne seins Yr sod make | sh Sass seven we new hs ago erty | DEATH OF TWO OF LmomA's | wate mun i concoxaxe ; TORK usually ‘combine against lm and make | of the Niagara Movemsatt Or are we | be secured the ‘passage of rewvlation | DEATH OF TWO OF CALIFORNIA'S WHITE MEN IN CONGOLAND. a ’ posnile the, nomination of a dark horse. | to understand by Dr. Wilkins” statement | Weing Cousrem tn relmbure the Erved i , - - ic ia | eit powtors: by this fexialatare MOST PROMINENT MEN | sumeicnge They iTatict and Radure Au Afve-Amectoan Jonrnal of News | It may be that way in thf case of Sec- | that he haa sor De. Weshinetin convert! pring democratic this wflurt of Mr. Xmfth — : | ‘race te Get Mere Wealthy _ | and. Optaton. fetary, Tate state alvine. Tite "Neg the tine be | setiened to ew’ cen fens coe kestr | "ta protons we wee Peemons on teeta Eat of E ceOnelmm aeete | is fair to say that Jeeretary Tate [Tuan RIE Tee Oe ite it me | tute hi counityente omine owt eumonwe | Cqage teres ere Preweran om Oe Tt a a hot ote a asda: T 7, MAN 16, 1907, ( mud the-Niagura. Movement?) We #1 0 the depot to welcome their leader eee 2 I Haliehie wikditine oC: theein. Bot oks __ THURBDAY, MAN 16 tic__J has many elements of styfuth which noo nowy fr thee whole painowe eb |" Matte Gitte utc ae vf cle it ace afte allow! rng dt Sage tao i 7 other candidate for the nmination pos- | coped in an obfuscation that knocks the | weitde upirit and. aly something vt he | wOFtml ing to execute his mission, vues | cite or, wie man amet ha Hneone Rhuerva at the Poot OBiee at New Tort) coccee, He has a great big personality | veapivation out of nlulation, loon pret Romneint gan for corenfa | et Newel dae Lot Be Ab te ta ea Hele es fof his own, . He has fad large adminis- —=—— ~| [te subieei ie a generous character and | HMDS OLLUINER PANE the way for the ae Ktalian, Norwegian and Dhyteh adven: Sapsortpion by Mail, Postpaid * | trative experience. He is. better in-| Aoki Sinith, the execrated new Govern: | hue deniomatrauel the fret when he senve | forties few while wane wre wucconsful | (Heys tik Meck to, the ble fing of ONE SRA Goof cesccrtertety: SES | formed than any man in the country on | or of Georgia, hax xot_back from Fie [0 Chrbamiw tre to 1 pone aad reed | by retwan Of superior environment. | Oc | Aiventare, ss REA} Ceenrs Ay MRR Ors ETE “BBY ne insular conditions of the Republic, rive: Plenty of we will be. dianp- | Heonte of My cls. Om cue accaaten | Visninal and vetiowed. ith the. dines, 241 Mtr tale te paral two thoy oeage to foreign cquotriee added: 4, | Tine native Filipinos: love him, because | tinted that he ad nat die in Burope. | 095" church th thks cits. Hin, gene | MMEH Of benevolence, rium i ADIEE CEihs iy che qunee at Whitehall, London MN SE Ree re tase’ <Sepen? | 30 Governor of the flands he vas thee | SN polite hyenns ne he dvervo oth rat Ue wat him eRe tes he | ecunig™ n'est ite ine thek Pm win muon, the review eto TUF anu’ Contam Bavare, tn the Borough |. oa ing -af their follow-vitizenx but excera: | rites af cood fellows." Man. af tis fest | Martmlty. Ft while wince thete sine extent be able tO KEamp the frMe | of Manhattan, New work. friend, and "is their friend. And the] 1 They none toe the weindie eed, HA big iphive until he gots the Azure one | A" Armee from among TH te dhe high | Trineiiiew of the. Congo" problem, it : ree ~+ ==] people of the United States believe that | Hum, Ae thes wow to the Mind ant | iy" wited "bwfure the cipher. then he It | feat gi one object: the betterment of | NOUHL be a motley rextient. 7 Charles K. Hughes for President || 6 ic a atrone brave man. thoroughly | WOuld get all the whirlwind there is go) something, Mrs Smith, a cultured. re: | ihe canditions under which thelr race! -oxt of the men would’ be bearded or Jt has been announced that the pur- pose of the Roosevelt Administration to boost the administration of Governor Charles E. Hughes of New -York has boon’ repulsed by the latter, ax he docs “now think he needs any boosting by the Roosevelt’ Administration. Very good. ‘Lhe citizens of “New York will applaud the manhood of Charles I Hughes m standing ‘under his own hat, He dees “hot need to play second fiddle to Theo- dore Roosevelt, or any other Republican individuality jn the United States. He is hig. enough to stand on his own bottom. As President Roosevelt insists that he does not want: to run for i third term we see no reason why he should dictate what man should suceved him in the White House. If lie wants the job that pwill lead to more talk, As he says he te not waht it the pariy should be left : to select his successor. The Na- “tleaal. Convention is the only proper poaie of accepting the policies he “has “denpored_upon the country. It should be Yeft free to pars judgment upon them. Th hg does not Want the nomination why shouldbe be altowek to impose upon the party a dendibate of be selewion? We do not’ want iin Ohio candidate. We do not want a candidate of Pres- | ident Roosevelt's selection. We want a candidate selected by the Republican. party in its collective capacity in conven- tion. And Charles E. Hughes of New York would be a safe man in the Pres- idential race. Goreral Kuroki Thre American rvople all over have been busy the past week entertaining General Kuroki and his staff, and we are bound to say the distinguished Japanese soldier who displayed so much genius in worsting the Russiin forees has been tréated as befits his high character and achievements. So far he has found nothing to mat the pleasure of his com- ing among.us. ‘The anti-Japanese senti- ment has not found vent. ;But General papecki®fiows that American sentiment, in large part, has no good blood for him and his race any more than it has for the Chinese. He showed what he felt about it when Re’ refused to come or x0 hy way of San Francisco. The Japanese are a remarkable people. The writer learned that on the spot when he went through 2 part of Japan a few years ago. and because of the good treatment he received from the Japanese people with whom he came in contact he will always think well of them. The Japanese people treat all Americans visiting their country with distinguished consideration, and it would be better if American visitors to Japan would treat the native institutions and prejudices with more consideration, The rudeness of Americar travelers is re- sponsible for much of the bad hluod that exists between the Americans and the Japanese and Chinese. ——~—_— wame Fe the fead: ‘There was great news from Obie Last week, from the State where every mun ‘ts a politician snd thinks he should have ati office of sume sert, and raises Cain when he fail to gett Phere is alway political news of pith ane moment from Ohio, which breaths such as tw Hight: ning and the gale breathe claritication ef the air atl health ints the nostri. of mankind The newspaper reports fave it that George Th Cax. the undisputed master bi the Republican psluies of Huanitten connty, has announced thar Seeretacy Witham Howard Tait nsast fave the en dursement of the Republicans of Obie fur the Presidency, Int te this pre nouncement Senater Fetaker does net eoneur Tt appears that ea a hie up fof thee sentiment in Obie thy Keputdiean Towders came to the esnelision that it tas possible, to get the Bresideniey for % again, “provided the State would ce Murse the candidacy of Secretary ‘Taft, BON that elle te snpettmnine tes ae vnc would be oonttay toe all of the Aeaditinns af Onis Repitbeas pel ties im the wflice absorbing Intsintess, ant the warring factions. with President Kewsevelt's Inge stick swinging over ther Heads. Tike the sword oof Dionysins of Syrocise over the courtier head ei Tiimvsctes, aot tewetiier sad decided ti unite wit Secretary Tait as the Candidate oi the State Hut the-leaders reckoned withaut the Foraker faction The Sen ator will none ni is The Vait pes ile are not conceding anytiing, and may dhs what they can to keep Senator For ker ont of the Senate yen te cones up for-re-eleetion next year But even with the Republicans of his solidly. behind him that dees not ensure the nomination of Secretary ‘Taft Me has got to get the National Convention, Other States have favorite sons. And it is convention history that the favorite scidom bears the palm of victory away. Ha tato the convention a certain : B. opposition candidates usually ‘combine against btm and make ‘possipe the, nomination of a dark horse. Tk may be that way in thf case of Sec- retary Taft It is fair 10 say that fecretary ‘Taft has many elements of strdhgth which no other candidate for the "mination pos- sesses. He has a great big personality ‘of-his own.’ He hae fad large adminis- trative experience. He is. better in- formed than any man in the country on the insular conditions of the Republic. ‘The native Filipinos’ love him, because as Governor of the Islands he was their friend, and *is their friend. And the people of the United States believe that he is a strong, brave man, thoroughly equipped for any public service. Afco-Americans have a right to he suspicious of all Ohio statesmen. K. 3. Hayes, James A. Garfield, William Me- Kinley, as Presidents, must be" held re- sponsible for having sacrificed the rights of the Afro-American people, and of having plced them in the position of disadvantage which they now occupy— Ikeause the average Ohio politician niever is anything but a politician, seldom rising t statesmanship. .Sceretary Taft haw not shoien in his conduct of the War Office and the policy of the Government in the Insular territories that he is dif- ferent from other Ohio politicians in bis estimate and treatment of Afro-Amer- Scab, The Gift For Rural Schoot Educa- ‘tin | ‘The gift of Miss Anna T. Jeanes for rural school education in the Southern States has awakened a wider interest among Afro-Americans than any of the “gifts for Southern education which have gone before it, hecause Afro-American public opinion is better informed and more active than in former years, and hecanse of the peculiar and crying need which the fund is intended to assist. In another column of Tue Ace to-day gt correspondent questions the part Dr. Washington had ,in getting the fund. That ic natural.” There are a’ large number of Afro-Americans who spend a large part of their time swinging the interrogation point at everything they cannot do and do not do. Mr. Hamlet wants proof that the gift was secured “largely through the efforts of Dr. Washington.” The. only proof that would satisfy Mr. Hamlet would be a signed statement from, Miss Jeanes at- tested by a notary public, and he is not going to get that, The fact that Dr. Washington is left with discretion to se- Tect the trustees of the fund, and will select theth, and from what we know of his efforts to secure the fund, because of his devoted interest in the rural schools of the South, ix all the proof that is needed to. canviace honest folk that the sift wae made fatgely throngh his indtu- ence The Brave Hereros of Routh Afriva. | The story is told of the Hereros that, st they were Gnable. to stand op against the Geemans in German South- | west Africa, they trekked northeastivard, [with the intention of making a new set Htloment in the neighborhood of Lake ONgami Of the fiftegn thousand whe left their tribal country to start life anew only four thonsand reached the new comntry. ‘The eleven thonsand died af hardships en the journey. New, this is a new eshibition of the “Miican charweter whieh we fave net come across before ‘Te Bight the enemy us long 3 there was at chatter of ete cess anid then when all seems hopeless tt get ont ef the native Jand and seck a name in a new countey--this is not, as wy inderstand it, a characteristic of the mative Mrican character. When the British whipped the Duteh Beers ef the ‘Veanseaal and the Orange Free State a Large number ef them went away ia a strange land aid started in anew ty insite a frew countey of their own Te fe the risght spirit Te is th spiris whieh peopled Areriea and has heen poopling, Hever sinter, the spieit that would rather ste with independence oof foreign demi nootiets than sivfanit tee alien rude ft is the prondost and best spirit in the life uf wsankind, cand ses Means a8 it shaws itself anywheee iit the wneld, teranny nl the vile appression whieh underlies tyranny NAP always Sind ieelf balked of ite pur feose tee degeraehe matikine AW heaner tothe berate Heretes May Sheit tribe annltiply an Vfzice Muay: the fone thos sand of hens that survived Cie Recneets af the hesgita Gs ineeese that the time will come when they will be chy tos inflict tspen the arntal Germans Mote hhatters of retaliation which stead come tes then Vo pweepte ach + Sul not gesent tyranny, wie wail ee Bic faek when they are steak, whe sill net heal when they are eutraged, are mn xonel The “Miro Americans sibinit ir AL setts of wrens, mete fren one phir Ditien te anetiver, eae? Fike the dete whew they are oppressed, Init neither hit Back nor meave away when they are wronged ‘The kicked ene whieh neither irowts ner bites when bie is kicked, whe cates: boot elon Mas the deanes Karat Setowl Patel Loge mnittions pared at its igpesst te Frepate at the beettoa the neglected bhick thvidien of the Soathern States, tle are Monied air efficient vmanien Sclival eduen Hon tor shiek their parents pig oqually With the whites We te anthenities of He Southern States, : Having eanverted Hooker ‘Ty Washing: ton fram the error of hit ways Editor Witkine uf The Chienaa Coneeriator, in as Ippps nea clin at high tidy Rat we wad te know if Dro Wilking ie tit x wiebes “Ta anol and cravlat standing” ie the Nlagars Movement? Or are we to understand by Dr. Wilkins statemeot | that be tian xot Dr, ‘Washington convert: ea. that. while he wan in Chicago, and cwittiot xiving Tue AGK tbe tip. be Jolued the-Ningnrn, Movement? We want to know, for the: whole businens ix ea veloped in an obfuscation that knocks the respiration out of ululation, —<——— . Moke Sinith, the execrated new Govern: or of Georgia, liax got back from Bue rave: Plenty of people will be. dianp- pointed that he did not aie in Europe. Such political hyenas nn he deserve noth ing -of their fellow-vitizens but exccra- tions, ax thes sow. to the winde and should get nll the whirlwind there ix g0- ing. For ane, we want Hoke Smith to undensnnd that we despie him ‘ae we would a mad dog and that if he were dond we would gladly: stew big grave with flower. ‘The, Columbia (S.C State wage: “the ‘buxie principle of Democracy is principles, of means. not men.” Very good, Now, will The State toll we what cikakseivtabain aaed= (TE appears. after all, that Mayti was “iepresented at the opening of tbe James: town Exposition on paper. nnd that her Auval representative was there but made hw exhibition of himself. being a gontle- tun: but the newspapers have hind noth. ing to my. that we luve xeon, about it We learn indirectly that the proprittor of Chamberlain's Hotel, which ic on Gov: ernment rewervation ground, at Old Point Comfget. wax given so mnny minutes by the Americnn naval commander to make prearrancoments for the entertainment of the Tlaytian sets og hiase his place done up. We mre gtd 4 hear that If the Democratic party would nom nate William I. Donglis 6f Masanchae setts for President there would be thins ding, +” . De, S.C. Mitchell sage in TAC Sowthe ven Workmaie that ‘the South te rich in religions wentiment, It constitutes our chief asset.” Now. we are alae to know ity bat. enndidly. if that be trae, what ie “religions sentiment,” and what does De Mitchell mean by it? A cable dexpateh, from St. Petersburg sass thar the Russian Government hie de cided not to xend ans warships to the Jumestown Exposition unval pageant. ax “it ennnot find any snitable ships” Sure not: there's on penn. Rut, hanes, couldn't the Cyar's covernment borrow ‘i shiny from somewhers, and send over one of ite ewliant and heroic” ndmirals? Jujiak salabt apate bee due. NEW BERN'S SUCCESSFUL ‘ CITIZEN AND HIS WORK jhenciien ws ean comes hot inane He Smith, Pros tite neem eke ee A gee | Afra: Amerient Should be imine with the Siirit of the dollawing’ nee Reeemie Tia ives aru tows mint soni enter the djiuee as he beene tetmube ne cathedral serdsionte nll ite dave ta bape Ae wept tian "the AfeesAtmriontie teh eka ut promivenite ae mative Mette foe the Sihewtal hove te lente all fear: oe a iyi tives and patients nan alonaly tent mboeat te, ork that ial heat | Meaty Winn for thenm clabene Wn Teolee cence tint” thew ane oot ih Steet sect Ge cenit ie | felionc' an tbe lie ening” le’ brine Neras ne theme Mice wevetes ai ener Iisa’, ite” tarnging visncls Wee tite af abe liter ie Meine ease HT Tipe titere ke dance Commie. Nees Mas Pai hoan teh mente fren the eral toe REC ie mente hic ane SAGE, Tice GuMtolinERIS. arene vaoat crontios ee sama ee Ufo ith Its aim Nes atagcee &ctinhl pe 2 UW Wai Wins ih wale top conte ite walked anrvis me pe aaa id fine peatasuece Reins ale tact TA Malan Aas RMI Antec sae ak Ameetitie: Metco teat: Bion Ta ae Oe Soe Meme eae sincatin fete ee Ate, itis ube bs AUREL Sreneticine fe ney ie Sate GAL MMLC RSAE to Fle MSN tLe mega listers Tle EAR carey. ten We f SS us anbite. CialUhaGs. Neal uly hue Ae Ube halen Ste et ene AbearRite cnk ant SE Ther anaes Nil aid pie at Nude vite painted, ine eto Tie Gk iuaeeae Eaaieiane em erate,” Nive sini sonnei Mahan tn ge ots Tiecaante naling the hone See eee ae ha aad sete at a with aI the nite” there ie ckectont fie etn ie Bava fn ny, toamnanig be ema hans ah miottae tight’ iw Caen it se an, bial one he Sail wee mating acocntlonn se cee ef the taseseea ftatbling i faran atc tye Dione wf Btpoetee tt ceil Vewathicin, mich sibapted eh vig conmnvending Me Minit or hic zeal crs and eres a hie terre iaear it Sanhs Dn Sennen oe hae! AiShetom. abe Cenven Coane Steputdients Convention iif the sunnier af S508 hom | ‘nated hin far the State Ioeklatuee, Be: | ing wo able, nid. logical seeaker ata leader of men ke peewived a handsome | Le ee a yavite tke were he secured the earenge. of a rewolation Urging Congres th relmbsime the. Freed: men's Rank depodtors: by this legislature Ting democratic this effort of Mfr. Nath waa a masterly one. When’ Mr. Smith returned to New Been from the ‘Ieginin- Hire hie constityents caine ‘ont sume to the depot to welcome their leader. Ainan must cultivate each day ao un- solfhde apirit and do something: that "he fiocn’ oxime ineint eal for cereale ‘ete. Our gublee’ ie 9 geverone character and che denionat nace thie fret when he gave ca Chriannive tree to the poor and ged Heople of his city. On one. aceanton ne thtertained the cuits conference of the A.M. EB. church in this city. Hin gen- Groat Tian wot hin, thi title: “Phe prites of good fellows.” Man, at his est Wn big cipher until he gots the Azure one (x wife before the cipher. then. he ik something, Mrs Smith, a cultured, re- fined. Indy, and aie po-eweuning cammercint qualities, his been an indixpenanble fie: Corin the lite of Me. Stuith, ie hin Tite fener, Hep parents are anione the old Reistocratie famnities of ihe ok North Ruse . Mr, Sinith ie nn wotive communionnt of si Csprit B."R chagch of thie city. ‘hence Hines are only indecex to" other aver achievemonbe of the Hon, taaate TT, Stith He Inne dediewted atl af hie dass te hope wn aspiration. Gro, Pix. New Mteny. No C.. Mig 1, “The Odd Fellows ‘Tlrgnksaiving was appropriately Miserved At St Voters Pe awd ME Bs Ze Cine Sandys BT. ME An insteuciiee Sermon wis delivered by “Rex. Hichard Satever of damee City. No oC. Grind Tepnty W, W. Tawrence ached ine maxtor af ceremonies after which the “onler Sintsdptlted bye VOR We Attn, marche {eithe cemetery to epasit wrmthie upon the departed mensbers tees An Ge Dav, D.D.. Pastor of Esenezer Prabyterian church, pronchl Sonday morning, after whieh the Mole Cranmnanion wns giveit. Phe Sabbaths Schon ie repiily developing “under Si beriptemtent mud ‘ascistant. Inwyer Tt. AW, Willinnison nd Mise ‘Mnein Martin. Mike Com Styran. a zradutte of thee eins Of OT. frown the State: Novnal sf Elizabeth City. No OL nerived home Inst week, Mier, Sutton, dbuckwon and Roel are working hard tu give New Dern 1 enick Renae tl ngerexation iHtbe. eenwo ‘Fhe fret zane uf tye seawon will bee on che Home grand with Galdcbors “rhe cling werent wf Teens N.C Werks ‘aelimil, roved eanelneively that Die fawulty ald ie, principal are work ing xealualy to toring He school ayy Co te iistwst "Standart Vr, J. 1, Anderson has miurned home fram ie visit tm thie Now erway! Ca tenene ae the A. MTZ ebureh ieee, WG Aeant had to minke a ting iv ta Wilmington. UN. UC. this week revit to deaths iy his fannily How. Tnaae 1 Sinith wae tendered 9 reception hy tlie teniling. citizens of Ienleigh. nwt werk, inthe dining toon of Stace Tnivensity RAY STANNARD BAKER. Amd Win Articten tm the Smertean ‘Saceaeahine: ‘Te Mr, Ray Stannard Baker. Dean Sie Will you atlow mie to have weed with yon? Te mny net be aut of Biase te exptnin that Pau merely a Ne fre woman. a niedjorre predict af the Toeat patie wehools, and as Twn madd: ated before the conte of study contained fe"many ologiee nod ane TP emtmer be eapeeted ta know mitch. 1 know enough. Bewerer, to understand end be grateful tag any atteayt at fair treatment from « white pore towned any. people AVE vont allow. mete “aa sen for your artices published in The Umenean Manasine? They are the fairest amd most Danan ware T lave read foe some Hime, Tat aly if wo esi enly make von Atuderstand, we wea thonmizhly under Stitt Haat “the difference betwee tie Faves is uimeedy che external ate wf fot tire. oof Tur texte. of pigment, alive Siportunites that indeed land iy veath “Cad heathy made af ane toed all uatiets af men ta dwell an alt the aes af the feet” “There je ne real dffersnen be Feeety Mee henielited matssns of anne pestis Pal the eaele Tetons ae we nel af the thiety we Hat inv bowen any enter wath Aterinan eivttization SO tears. we Will Urvlaatdy taaye aliseetoesd as titel of it as SEL The Hrtians of Tongan svilization, Whheves iene reat qlffenence betwen tse ar ge iehte have Ide salinars soppesrti Whee aia the same Clase amen the Slee Hae connbh tatt mike Gott tea. tie janterst id sind vcknenctedse these Myers Taege qeart ef Ste publean™ wont ln advo Afesnatube we faves one addsamtge, if se lmae bee tagarebed “we kha vont People fom start te timish 1 have Hote thonnglit that oie atidersconding of Seo meas Toe anStit tives ie bs aes exanplete Taye watider Met tlie anager of inte: fanepe seem tee atorstane as. Se Tithe Ty the stieet care or any other Hae oe sat falaie gediite! recat eset beet readily aw if sua were dabetied We felted that the chet w tngube we great dis Haitetioas feebaqeon the qaiadig” atid "peso Wilde tosh owe ake thes satine titig, ity Dye Uistinetinnen we tua ate Bitter aiid sous salts. Whee tamies (at at an ane the ateediwsend shaute tel front tie we weiteed jetineaent sttad enttiites And a Te Sthepe aitt iss as stent tities apetisy ot Tunatt eof cstuparatine oretnetnent int wiints, “Wwe “nadereranel sind ajaptes kate Hit tae WEY canter tate pepe ake Me seni Tenet Eins ed timate he ster swcaey bined befor Mee staat btn bs sesttoen face TEP ere thet miobloning 1 would be easing tee sew Mer iMieiat aay the vba Ave tnt fe and etediy. thee person af he songgiev ion! witly wanplalitios. saber wee the tyes Joweeneend ag tte Dike TE eva ste gttatnige Ee eote we biter Friends Soest manversatiy fall ite that etrer hae Biinghiely frisiols cane Neither friends reat (viele Pomwean, all make the same fnistinhe Tle wath ae Peterome at ator file gten teddies uel clissativations ate go kien set well that mane af ile Ev iioet etn gtd Westnet EEE ty re mayne antic Newt ats apt etativw satel Head Mestre vation satel abe Eat as thew Pecos acschonit a ates af white Mew, We J rse tes ict big) solve Thay asta w Mate Uitont stuukd never as fae ae ampearnnens fees hws a a toatl aap igereitited Wer See Mea da Locaes Torutlies elaerer- thie eents ae ai aniard Blew the ehubden (si despan son themselves evens Sievele ij nemupdenioay and overt teqtaine at fous Thaw the: tage clatidvets ane smety fam es anerve white: few tnd sutseystetet ecenting tee the: infers, greater: ability Tinewe tlw akuekee ates? Taras, antud te feed oie fay ae. abilite ie ctiennned the SCekee af the ptpesttion ie soften tre, te tte teat eteranaene sehr thane be nig awl, the fair ehilelton be cone pat fee et akutker alfsprine, aid the reverse, HE what salve tek, ate salistinetions rites ath cent of mata Chie valor qmint Dho the whites of the Siathy teats viatal truly believe Tat we Tesine sein equality. ar is i wet nether AP vane a fwlitioa bemngiabine and a alee fa thes nner eoaeienees” Kwtas MnUte? TEow see Sudha: twee de Fareed? AVE ale tat tive i seit muyseloes, Wee five Social inter cheese als withy theses anon We 81 are Stovall companionable there ean be heeal eunithity between those nly whose Mos and ideals gee eqaaliy elevated or iesvaded "Vie self rengweeting atid pence neti amen nie de Net convert with: the fivinis sind Fawlese We judge and select nie companions by their wards and wayy | ther than hy ontwrd appearance. ant te desire to he wy judged. Very reapect: WW. DEA AMON PRNDETON, La ca pale ty DEATH OF TWO OF CALIFORNIA'S ‘MOST PROMINENT MEN TB. Morton and 7, A, Brown Pemer Ful. Puctors wa wake Praciees ce ibe coo inraely dpendy-upon hin ability, te Ehow “opvortehaye: the faltnres of” th way offhines pave the way for the mot fortunate few, while some are succomful by reason of xuperive environment. Oc- i coxdonnlly. however, seme brilliant mind. iimpired ang "vudowed with “the. dieine xpurk of benevolence, triumphs in xpite OHaivene euvironment and” Inek. of ‘ob jarieaalty. Bie ® ehort rae ee pare re reioved from aulong 4H to tte high: oe life two. mea whove encbifen were focaed) on one object. the betterment of the condition. er” which thelr twee tates tien lease the very oppesite of each other in temperament, experiency, fon! pln’ of netion, yet dextined to. work iv harmony and to: arrive by different biten at theie destination wlntont-siant Tamera. The gue infctnte aed ule bending as the one foreeta and ret Cum, ogee ateiving hy seme bold counts jus, effort te uplift his race. hy mature {inmatitenty endewes_snentalty” aii NHy¥ Cally-oue friend and brother, ‘Theaphits | 2 Morton, Phe arbor gentle mel obs rasives quictiy yet effeetively ermobling au woftening the: henvissof hie fellow, fun Up. tenmon of iw onermtys ayn: fisthyy aud sweette of" tampertiuette: Snes foie aud cheatber, “Fltieng A. [Titwivn, We would wot honor their meine ey bs aerial io. with ic (helt chives | tncaa in juiithes’ aca. axioeea, ier Mscbe mnminie te mari tise one thawte: ue welfreimamerntion. se megrane | Aieemtats “The-frulta af thete faint Tabor tog taser Ipuee wil oe eral yates for ich water thee tiauted, Mee tna ser wake Geld eich fequived eva Ser selGahinegation and personal saeritiee. For this parpose det as select ene’ inei- fies da the hfe of teh yaa Oi arriving in San “mci about fontnen feats, neo. Hinde As Teron SE he cite at iene vollncnre Rich auake: (oe tie uplifting of the: ence Meranetes tine vine utd the hays A litte eurdnewaemen nul he wom have eas Chetan: artes m_ het exter Tie was mo ontinistagt incu monk of ae Internal eters ith whit be waa cliched tere die upnregaity: tear Bee State where tne etibited hie twee and Tinton foe te priweaptes be hind Sanwa, Hie enter af Rights af Heth Sanang tie faeee in th Renitt State Ns, Seneeceuted in San Frnicins about Teltee tens gor hy a ftttestrwesti tha ar ok Oe act cemmbete oe thee tha tases yeane. Cee Here TO ie ha eee eften twine the ee ferment ned” pee! wnbion tne. feat be ee tneaee nb fy" hie tote mal se Sint trrenethenine Ue embers Tis Siioraliy: munected (het Wat. far hie ely Fane Tie totes, setuid hese expired and fhe penance ef ihe onier. om the. comet Sea Geer tree cine at lenale fee crite arches terse awake he sone aby sie Tee Atneton,: tiedt orth Right. Phe ibe pnt mn rarest ie hatin CAS Meee, de teva feat tn any Which bene ten Fhaated Mayer Mkewtloe teceome, feulttal Tree Nan nly thie. be pinwted te, Ane Af Peetinaniam hes the! eetiaee tthe Tada stincss (oe. tiie tees inner Svein Patghitsteal 9 hole i" Anstralin: igh acheter thu ranntry No greater mane Havent uc ule momar can be pected ne He hectane Seen te ar anionic ate table arte of his. Ttrathee Troma fre SE a oumtortal! mingeey. aah ate colon ter stemplliice wt tie sonnel tne Die ioane wae aches murrameek ae wee earns ti a fowlts far many at his Tate aie arriees Runst ter atenteate te se atinlnced wononiey. The Ie heart Sr ae rie teatlinmage Mt eaten Rieu ai ete with btm atre: eear ree be than he in "repenans siuiser SMeseed age the abel whey ie Mn te Laws foe thos res fen ued aber Mone weenie’ Tales tees The foes ae gece Tee Morton: ith be seat Te aie ag ar IS ofr ge Fiieatty fatal? af hi races the tot Be ste onltetiear tie that oes se datenfeant wile cies DANE Sh a Sit Suietk ante me waa tae Ih Sener the Gin Gain. tee We crate Recelgan Heiner cirviteccm deactoe Tee eee ainliitige Bs ese a CuPeTMNa: Rio: Ne “ekcie Ay Ui detetmet ine torte deuess te Ga setaiisisal fore ties euler able Pas nui Micky: aieek teats. jel Se enc automat ene Tle Ree anc cine eee Tee aM tal wedi Up teens Monin ASA dete atlas Whee, eee ilet nin Bic aes Cunaten Pe oth letratiat hes Pongal ro aoa, bas ewe Su ica and Goria onl wetccee ME areh ue AaIRIEGE Dee Ue hea aed anak eseaen Vek be Td Gat Tuten Ne aaet metas! went wien keljedt ttt gi Sa Ta Hie Uileen a8 Taman Te Marty aie oot we atid ERE it cad er alee aeRtn tetera See ie tnlae hecen one Ghee Saleh ht tine our tno eat canoe ay bing estoatapdean The oath Cee iter die then teen: ob. Fhe cial WAT Hie wae UE sy iatinsina straptan Was cane be Se eae ee ee cel gan iter mts cucnaiie tie tee ery abel teuanead eal ies (rane ned aitedeciteanal ic suas of siset eal sierra Ee es slow sees aun ualitll | cant ee eee hy ae Industrial Wulldiag Dediented. Haren NOC, Mag The new dn dosttad Haibling af Shaw Universite Hedietiod tte Late De HE ME Papper. Tatutersof Shaw Vitiversity. yas dedieat SEMIN Sth, at whieh tine appropriate Bhereists were hele One uf othe trit Chal Specrkers a this memorable ana Linn ens Then Tanne TD State ef New Tier. NOC the leadites Afr American pesiness wan nf the State Tis thonie dare Sagano” BS spieely teas “enh Staged amd foareotal Pie caer ana nee entlinsiastically mpplindot him dar: te his apeoek. Me Smithy ig the hargest sunewbator to die luitding fad of thie eave atrnetuee, aid there isan iiseripstien fa thie effect atm tablet ju the baikting, xaiior Wilkina’ Opiaten Fron ‘The Chicago Canmevator We recnive each week more than (6a hundred newspapers at our exchange desk, and outxide of less than a daxen the whole Inch it’ not worth the time it fakex to ‘wana thea: WHITE MEN IN CONGOLAND. Samfetenge They /lefict and Hadure ta Order te Get More Wealth. «The vale of Riey Leopold cin *Congo- ; lund hax produce ‘hot only x dividend- | producing wildetnent uf, tragedy, bUt ano [8 tse of white man almont aa incon | vente ie the AE vale Btatadl, Teall Men of all “nationy--French,. Belgian, Ktalian, | Norwegian and Diytch adven- I turers-—have forked to the blue Ang of [the Bree Stnte in mente of trent aid adventare. Tf it were poxsible to, para two thou- “wand of the Belgian King's Congo off “cinis inthe nqunre at Whitehall, London: Ferm who mtiontied the “review would to sane extent be able to keanp the frat [Princes "of the Cohigo" problem, it Wout ben motley: regiment. Mot of the nen Wottld be beard or -unadinven. long-hnited, unkeinpt, and Unie formed: in anything from # half-auit of tainly palénise ani: ap wndetviet toa tinenged mirvival of an ancient suit of vachsmesdowii. . “A few would. be in xpottows ducks and woite pith helmet —thew being the civil tticinds of the government and the: dap Per clerks ®nd under mecreturien frou Minna. Motadt nnd Lavopodvite. “he reat yronld: dee military inene=aficern of ‘te. Borew Pubhgue--arrayed ia renplendent iniform of hue nad gold, BUC all the ren wonld be pale of faev and emaciated: 1 fenigite, tabwnirhy-tooking. batid, Inek: ine, gunparcntis, the vers. rude af robust nr ‘Their thin ene’ wanl bent teks, their sickly" selline-white fagon and” nervoue Skinay inoue would cell of Hive spent in the midst of nota ea pore dail matlariou itngles Puede resttecedemennar woutd fhe ite siznitionnt of habitual alertness a Nafesuaed ngninnt wrprine, Ene wate Of the company woukl be ai adven: tiiers who bine freed andl exeaped dent 4 Wnitilew “tines. And "every. man. would fain cortain seine tw a here: some of the Hever would Iw devibn, | Thorors, hentia any” man who fe Fived | in Congolund ix of proved animal cour. | ‘ree on nat brave ant strong ami fail of neiue, "Fhe, wher aurvives the teneibhe fnevbeal of the life wre ruth then of the Shun Nit won Mexicn for Cortex inthe Sings of Ue orinipotenee: of Spnindy hive atts "Serong naa eruel aa Silly daring, “Pie Congolew atheinke hive xoine, af the qualities nf the ihting plogeer aid he ehoklese direaleiitee of the waldier of fortunes Rut many of eur rege band Would. iw found bieking in the Reeater inities of the civilized wariog Con: ‘ets with feartal dunger. hn entirely: iratatized nmny whiwe very romrmce i Int the wuteanie of a total Tnek of tng anton: atid the peewscion of power tine deatroved the hutunpity. at tmne other wlio, barn ta serve, haves been free te Jn Vow tte mew thes men whe re ia Hamenbund A epinsie of thonennil at them tent in aninjvetion something Tike, 2110000, Ona jeune Te 'shOuhd not te imagined that th the natives af Central Africa inte docite. ate feannhines ereatnres. nf ehildliie gente: pews, Mane of the hinek men. are war Tiare und wane af warriors. tnieht Wnt: Cre etn ann geeanetemved) to fantele nm hartshiy. AN of theny. hte the white man si ties sore hit, However "one ine ‘hate the methods enploved in Cingniannd, whe met to some extent admire. the ewlownl eonrage. the ineroie inwntonee wf thee 2000 sahijocts of the Congw savercign. ‘They are not sieked wen Kren does iat send the fiererat, Wer ennitale. Yo the suiiocorehed Naetes nf Eanatorial frien. Vet, how: cee weak the white aan anny: Ive been an Eurape. in Mfrlon hve mnwt tad me | uh exantnie af aneatyierniie eatrnes synth nf irom nerves Hf he faite in this, ic far ame, muement te atlagse Miisell te las heteavest inte nm wahibition af Nore ian bee adwcnne Te Congabsand the shite mest rales oily je rieht af oi2it te lark mat ate Me avdites ati the white, inant hntes. the are ine Tamale ree Seaie 5 jail wf hitternsee and diwconte dy Tenzin Bye lifecthexe achite. mien Hive vivtunw one at enn in Nie at in the eet aaiie thw wark af Hs ‘savoredem wed Dict this. amkemps anshaven ctiny in ie pegs yim sit with Hittcacree bic knives diranting deems te nani auc, cannibals, Foret iow tae aot werk thee heathen, foringins iiencrukder ats ish wt vars Thoin the sve the sain will bsze dawn ay hin witty the heat se? at tamzye a | Mange feo st nwecat fiarnaee; he tect wate will tortyne hin besand educates, sw) the thin air. mocking its tangs, will wake ine get fer, breads Tike wacky Maveamaytiee AL night the Macks 8f Te feereet md the fetediness of his dnt | sit ting doaines te hint the hotter ot Me | Sietian ecw hang fr hye ctf stingy amtn'syaresoniee i Whit ee dope Ds vei teeth | werent 3 ttunetntal es ach tanto: it | voi a haere bean seserigtion. His nut Se Mee win teat nore ioral ef SO aiier Sattjecte ewamibad tack ten | townie vancivibens, Tomatalized nnd eat: athe j TH chase te Rites and be takes tis! ite “anal witches at ietinenteal matiee | ciovehs tied aries that his fete attgeke | Mob Viste ‘Thete Victim's Home nnd Rent Mie Family. + Veen Cae May 5. ON speeial tes the Herat tre Dearing "Gite says Chek Tareis a Near farmbond, whe Sestanbay “Shiat sund Serianads wormed Tasiden Pearson a pewninent faraier Ae Tite bead face might he agate af abot Souty tinunasked men THis beady wate Fill: Mood watt Dattleds Phos nna then visited thee Negen’s hates seventy wihhipped nem hens af tos tails an gave them a bret Hine in Nbiele te get cant af MeDuttie Canes Deteaet, whe lives nee this five srs evtunnetestting with the Negra heat poue wen k dene on has farm, when Harris dire a deaatver sand fined sea erat ete ate hn lewd Ao genes Wake anmeadiatedy rzanized ait deqdanad the Negen Te stueted Teawanide Thamisatt inat tecen gat thramghe utente swomnte whit wd tor tae tossed fe get fete Phere ins very. Tittle et SHement snd awe arrests have eon made ‘rhe fayeian Navy ie om the Jon. Has ee Voalitaae ook: Fe Nae Nook Aart ve New Vr woseapanes fat Tae es sonny Vaueneaetng ther Heston teeter wens aes iol teat obec Ate Hee ie aiken ie ie wrenationeet IAGin Ne fciy atta adage by tin nave (gdee sah ake bg Arak at Haut ea! Stnte that te Renta fone ns far ge seer ne woman ante “Heard Adee tthe fatter the Ashi of Admiral tees : THe steer sth: Hlastiun se tent abas hen Sporto ae a fielaine stage, we leah Sipe ote the tienda Pie foe aching ‘alte tes ne ers tay tt in "Fhe remarks tos the erento he nin ‘aoe gitlantes af th aes ind ot Ma i oye one tee ng tha Hast hae ma a Noon Venki Gh Vininaria Xeaen. tues, (au Dally prenehad aL both sere. se caare Raat thn a Mieuangen "AE dhe ele OP ie, odd forviee "Rev. Nntton, ‘fOrleaw “addrewed ino, Mate fe Se ere ite of Rew SOW, Mitchie ark Mitemell. WHITE cr¥et FURS; etc. as LL Moral. excciivuf, STRE Bl finsine being able to four TY. onstruct abi. but in the SMMBent. with or in, feature of Show life is the convertion finets.” ‘The life whieh dwome n portion, wend neglected quantity is evidently. In- far hort of the hutinu to way. pothinoe of the moral ideal “And lianviig somed te ite proces af evolution an afleeioe the material xtandpaie that any clei Fated Tei Aas etanat aka ae tenn lower hirharisns that! that. which there te found aa instuuce of outenge of ix not for the adopters of civilization» vader the stress of a texehing bropght home to bim in hiv own treatment. and be “hinks that tere ie no need to add tee mun otliene whe sacrifice ee gos of thant: jie Somele to gels oy iaaatinbte rt for gold. Awd le the brute ix amee able to sothete not ao the scold-thunte gy whone jnorgingte greed kapws no bounds ® Inu Mactares, the Author, Dead. + From The New York Sun, Th the adden death of “Lan, Mac Taren."* uthor of m grip af station en: Uiled “Htouide the Ronnie. Brier Bush. ene of thousands of whole-sonted, -asm- inthetie ‘readers of Bpglish. fool "er- cnanal Tw. Conyiieativels few af" them Inve ever soon "ar htaripsie Mews Jobn Wateon. and perhaps a ists are hut inte noses tat he WB eld imminent nines ae a Sealidee, Weterinn twiniste what ts yer ie thine» dozen vege ago ” Titite Citlage nn alse caib. Hreate upon them” igh Jelight caasing simile nd tees, ee yA dieie seve of Invivan “brotherhood. ging Chen renin Whit ie reall. scorthMite in Hite “howe, Semtuthy. tenderned connices charity for mters ‘Mis De. Watson slid, throngh Wie Nineotenitions stories. ITs readers felt is hed, genorone spirit in erere sitnation, in evry characters thee were Teeitted,” “without knawine, whe. We hie Simplicity “We mtteranes. | Barninately. for ihe waeh at Tree there fem Taree tne ff” eoclers inf evebs while astral mp fneogtion of wheat be gion nin Tose in Ba iteve wheter Inne fea est mecifior seh Helens ne grateful toe deh Wateon, Te Check Went Indian Riots, Hanes May © Te the Homan af Caaninte tadan Winston Churedil, Pp ee idan” Soortape. stated that, bn View i epvent wennte wntareing. ter tlie BOL Ey she Mand wf S80 Tower ote Aa tients sone ‘shont foe sete a ational Seniieg Gor temparnary. sory ine ia sh Waet Thien ‘elated: Plnakgheis Bick Sekkin amie. 2 Fe SENS Ohana ie Tar ta talk abaor eanaite of eitie Scowshiny is Ame sonated. “8 Ina pind for jtathing tan witaent wien snes we em Prey ta ten sate Wore fare te ned the seat nf the hustling seideawake farine: Pain sere thers” cour ine veate en all the Ftvceditintis. ie sto wneld want make the aad far nating wri his cand Gea hn PS sake ts Se unieeree) base to itn sich bath <M etree, AS genta Fhnessnee niet the stataed Gar a met fo Neat sited mywsienre ante TRS hn Sine ieee TE yee yc at cat bee fie “argest wabhase, cet th sont een iad Qoest enktii ton the oct had xen sett thers wawhl be nun Heved af toes ASlihotione tie wey stay Wet Soend fOr frond che wewwtigtar todK toute Ginn Heng teilling and wortdess wnt set an seein waidinth make ie we, Sa with te” Negi rae, atttee te iceh te be StGItA Seeitee eaergetie tor tal vss bn dale Fen tee tie the Mt fart ty thes sent ed Suansrese itgelf vacate take fro fants calle: fer Clerks Who Should Revetye “thelr ‘Wiithian abeve: ge we ON Te eS oe The Deon iad Nive Howeoter is 8 enti there fey atest the scerke a te Nave Depeartiient ate sengtsce cy tte rate ew nf ue tives fe se lors Fatise Ratate We 'Puleg a Neate! it summits, hae tw agente sect Heater charges that the os ieee Lloro, dpe tel geiliseed gee ted oo ines! Dreciont Mote» Had te ihe edinege deans! oi fe eentiae, bt Beye i AER tee Tnirtiethte seitap ae tie oo Fat gon encore © Net oinstiwnts. nd hges * Files Ths edijeedionn soe Toss ts tor and ovmetooring atlstee © o Fuat onan Bisnis trheds Tso Soto tte Se stead tniate fe eaydwesd aes eTrust ise the a Neetsitiony ine the B Terk ite the aaplite Na Diepmetitet ane tone toons tse te Aly nttwr, Men shen te ogee Mie wathing funers The oom Ubesion wean) tind ts cst eS Mieke plows remem Rattorn Nace Teowhles of THEI Onn. From ‘The Seattte Sie Sus : Rear af ah Poneond 28 a ta be hnving trmabbes ewes of bce oun Eitan deli reer ates oie fuente fe aerated ad nt a oe tenvbing. ne he said for te onrpeten Of Fixenieting, mingles | Comedy | fslonins Chose stirring vurhis Psion tect of Ne New Ae ix coparied to ove teen Reanead’ by hic wife for inthbelts. They Took Nothing for Granted, but Plugged Away Until Victorious. WASHINGTON, May 10.—The following is a synopsis of the eloquent address of Mrs. Mary Church Terrell to the student body of Howard University April 30: History teems with instances illustrating the fact that men, both wise and simple, have failed utterly in their attempts, have forecast the future by inhumane insults, have benefited in the happiness of the past. Indeed, the fool's prognifications are often as reliable as the savant's. The strong man is he who does independent thinking. No advance in science, art or literature has been made except by those who had faith in themselves and refused to take for granted the pessimistic prophesies of those who foretold failure. The locomotive engine, the steamboat, the ship, the car, the man who dared to work independently and set at naught the wet blankets thrown upon their endeavors by obstructionists. But it is impossible to deal properly with individuals without first taking recourse to history and noting the application of the same thing to nations. Throughout the span of time conceived nations have arisen who fondly imagined themselves foreordained to superior places and regarded other races as inferior with respect to opportunities of progress on equal terms. In spite of the fact that time after time such peoples have been overthrown and their places taken by those whom they despised, the world is still prone to accept as valid that foolish, vain and wicked doctrine. A close fresh in the memory of all is that of Japan and Russia. When the dispute arose there was no lack of military and military experts who predicted that China would clare that the buoyancy of the Caucasian would quickly show itself and that the darker race would be destroyed in short order. But Japan took nothing for granted—was skeptical as a scientist in his laboratory. Even before, when the disruption with China occurred, the self-appointed prophets of China said that China would do well for a white but could not stand China's continued reinforcements and would give way under the continued strain. Experience, as all know, prove otherwise. After Japan's victory Russia entered Manchuria, and, breaking all faith, remained there in defiance of her own promise. Although Japan was more intimately concerned in the withdrawal of Russia than any other nation, still felt a deep interest in seeing the law of nations obeyed. The only question was, Could the Japanese coerce the Russian bear? The ever present, expert came forward and declared that it might brown men and women and that their fleet could hardly cope with Russia's injured sailors. The speaker showed herself a master of satire. By voice and gesture and facial expression, she held up to ridicule the fool's motion, that victory was certain for Russia because the Russian was the Japanese gained a decide advantage at sea. Nothing daunted, the prognosticators claimed that Port Arthur was impregnable and the Russian defenses as strong as Gibraltar. The brave little Japanese, still taking nothing for granted, pressed on and assume complete mastery, but the British left the battle, but the Russian's second defeat at sea finished it. The Jaws were victors. The Revolutionary War is a case in point. The undisciplined, poorly provided for raw recruits of George Washington, discouraged by their follows at home and by all seeming combinations of circumstances, drove to defeat, the pound armies of the French, and the British, disciplined and fully supplied with all the implements of warfare. Had the colonists taken things for granted, America today would be a dependency of Great Britain. Many other instances of similar nature might be cited. Toussaint L'Overture is a character that commands the revolution of all wars. This man, through whose veins not one drop of Cottonan blood flowed, met and successfully withstood the great Napoleon, famous as a military genius whose equal is hard to find in the annals of history. This general, Toussaint L'Overture, showed himself a match for him in all points save his treachery and doctot, established with institution the ideal republic, given its constitution and maintained with it success. Many can predict better than they can think. Few individuals stand out more conspicuously than Cyns W. Field, and no achievement is greater than his mastery over nature and man. This treptip inventor believed that he could lay an Atlantic cable. Fools and wise men and the wise man can understand that the fool is bound in, however, the secured money, spending all of his own and much of his friends. Failures did not discourage him, and after twelve long years his success was complete. Mrs. Harriett Beeson Stowe's great book "Uncle Tom's Cabin" did much to arouse the consciousness of the nation to the dreadful evils of slavery. Many told Mrs. Stowe, nevertheless, that bad land and further agitation was unmissable. She needed not the counsel of the Grand United Brethren of Do-Nothings, but published her book—which a competent observer said did more to abolish slavery than any other single agency. The Negro's progress since emancipation has been so great as to be unparalleled. The Atlanta Constitution said recently, that he be unparalleled. Atlanta has as large as it was just after the War of the Rebellion. Statistics show clearly and conclusively that the Negro has decreased his illiteracy from about 100 per cent, to 64 per cent, in forty years, and the per cent is still falling rapidly. His wealth is the creeping greatly in the rank of an institution out of many is the fine painting entitled "Raising of Lazars" by Henry O. Tanner. This picture stood severe competition and was purchased by the French government. It hung on the walls of the Lazyebee of Tolstoi uttered in a language of philosophy of philosophy at a people one started on the march to greater heights will never stop short of the goal; no more can they be checked than can the current of a great river be held in restraint. In spite of injustices in many places and discrimination everywhere, nothing can stay the progress of the aspiring individual. Her Terrell at the conclusion of her splendid address was greeted with prolonged applause. The Florida Legislature has decided not to repeal the Fifteenth Amendment. So glad. Now, if the Florida Legislature will decide to repeal itself it will, he will. SEARCHING INQUIRY ORDERED AS TO CRUELTERS TO PILIPINOS Action Taken on the Practices to Exert Confession from Prisoners. From The Eventing Post. WARHINGTON, May 9—Searching Investigation of the alleged practice of cruelties upon Filipino prisoners to extort confessions has been ordered by Secretary Taft. The secretary of the New York city recently called Mr. Taft's attention to the publication in newspapers by Horace White of a letter from Dr. David J. Doherty, the representative of the association in the Philippine Islands. In his letter Mr. Doherty recites the use of thumbcrews on prisoners, by the Filipino president of Tolosa, to extort confessions were thus tortured until the blood was taken place in the presence of an American army officer, who stood by and did not stop it. In the same letter Dr. Doherty cites the case of an American army detective who was alleged to have beaten a chained prisoner to force a confession. Another charge in the Doherty letter is that prisoners were tried in large parties, and were not advised of their right to demand sequential release. When the letter of the secretary of the association was received he was informed that Secretary Taft had already enabled to Governor Smith to institute an immediate investigation of all of the charges, and to call upon General Wood for an inquiry into the charge against the army detective. This investigation is proceeding, and the evidence of facts are obtained. It is evident from the vigor with which Mr. Taft has attacked the question that it will go hard with the guilty parties if the charges of Dr. Doherty are sustained. There are no American officials in the municipality of Tolosa, with the exception of the secretary of the council; all are elected by the people, and all without exception are Filipinos. In the absence of the Governor of Lima, the Governor of that province has been galled upon by Governor Smith to investigate the whole affair. It is charged that Governor De Veyra had knowledge of the conduct of the presidente of Tolosa, and if this charge is proved, the Governor will probably lose his office, as it was clearly his政务, soon as the facts came to his knowledge to have placed the guilty on him. Dumb is expressed here as to the accuracy of the charges about the trial of prisoners. It is said that every defendant on trial in criminal cases is represented by competent attorneys, who are either by employed by the jury or experienced in the past has been that the attorneys represent the defendants ably and faithfully. In many instances civilian prisoners have been discharged or acquitted, some of them having been proved innocent, and others, because of their youth, or because they were carried out wrongdoing. Where joint charges are filed against the defendants in criminal cases, the prisoners are said to have invariably been supplied with three or more competent attorneys. Until Governor Smith makes his report to Secretary Taft, comment is with respect to the charges of the Boherty charges. It evidently the intention of the secretary to probe these charges to the bottom. John L. on Cardinal Gibbons and President Roosevelt. WASHINGTON, May 7. "Cardinal Gibbons and Theodore Roosevelt would have made good blacksmiths. They would have made good artists. They would have succeeded in anything they undertook, and am are they would have made more triumphs." Such is the opinion of John L. Sullivan expressed today. A Prairie View of the Prairie. Sir: At this hour, when the people of the Nation are seeking to bring under the control of law the greater industrial and financial combinations, the thought of the dangers of an unhealed and irresponsible piece of work is occurring more and more in the past and has worked have in the smaller democracies, is taken in the smaller democracies by the newspapers of a certain class. Who knows but that the criminal record of the United States, according to such life, is among the savage tribes of Africa, is due in great measure to the wonderful but disreputable prominence given to crime in the sensational passes? No youth are more intelligent or more susceptible to impressions for good or ill than the American youth. Yet they are made familiar with the various institutions. This knowledge is stored in the brain, and becomes the sure means of evil suggestion at critical moments of passion, resentment or temptation. The power of auto-suggestion at certain moments or brain conditions is almost overwhelming hence the growing record of detachment, moral adventures, suicides, and not Why should crime be explained in the daily press that reaches the home? Would it not be better it be telegrammed criminal reports were sent to the police headquarters of all cities and published in special bulletins for the information of the police and detective because of the country. That is why all such bulletins while the law force might be put in the general press without sensational flaming headlines. As the city, the State, or Nation protects its men, women and children from infection or contagion of yellow fever, smallpox, and the like, so should the city, the State, and the Nation protect the south from the filthy contagion of the sensational press, and the malaria and mismaje of the criminal court record. Every copy of the national police report is intended and maintained to every informed, unfortified mind. Surely, there is unawareness in a policy on the part of the State. is organized parenthood that spends millions in littering its youth for useful citizenship, that allows, or even houses, agencies and institutions like the son of a criminal, a child of a gangging debt, and the brothels, which are hostile and destructive to the character of its youth and to the purity, honor, and tactiveness of their citizenship. E. L. BLACKSHEAR Prairie View, Walber county, April 27 Another View of Southern Labor Problem From the Charlotte Museum There is a deep feeling throughout the southern states in the hearts of the white people, in favor of immigrants coming from Europe and Ireland and the South is handing out every inducement to them which is no more than right, if the Negro is not willing to fill his position as a man and a citizen. When one views the situation correctly and looks matters in the face, he cannot help agreeing with the spirit of the southern white man in his effort to太阳城. The North has always been able to pay higher wages than the South and it is handing out and has been for some time higher wages and better treatment to the Negro than the South. In consequence of this, the North is asking the South to take the trash and vicious clam, ever keeping up strife and confusion between the two races. THE NEW YORK AGE: THURSDAY MAY 16, 1907. THE ARKANSAS LEGISLATURE The Legislature Severely Scored When It Legislates Against Interests of Whites. PINE BLOOP, Ark., May 13—The Arkansas Legislature, which is estimated to cost the State $150,000, is giving the Negroes some hard and fatal blows. We shall present cold facts and few comments in this article, but let the white Democratic newspapers and one white Republican paper endorse the Negroes. Arkansas Legislature. The Legislature passed a law requiring the sheriff of every county to purchase blood-hounds to run down criminals. Of course it means Negro criminals. The Senate of the Legislature endorsed the resolution passed by the legislature to prosecute for dismissing the colored soldiers of Brownville, Tex., and the Lower House rejected it. The legislators, for fear of running out of an excuse of prolonging the session, are introducing bills that are already the law, and repealing it.—The. Ark. . . Montgomeryian. We are of the opinion that the Legislature could have done all the necessary work in less than sixty days. The memoirs of the late Senator John A. McCarthy, a day at home — *Hunfairte Republica*. Senator Wingo presented a resolution memorializing the Arkansas members in Congress to urge the repeal of amendments 14 to 15 to the Constitution of the United States, which would disfranchise a Negro voter. Senator McKnight intended to amend the Constitution to commit the aim of which is to prevent Negroes from waiting on white persons in hotels, restaurants, as barbers and also porters on trains, and to prevent whites serving Negroes. We are suffering from too much legislation. We believe that most men will be better off if this session of the Legislature had never held *Monticello Advance*. A resolution has been introduced to further extend the legislative session until the 10th of June. But for the sake of desecration and a suffering people, we hope it would be seriously considered. It would be little less than criminal. The Monticello man. The penitentiary committee has recommended that the Legislature bring all of the white convicts from the farms to other places, bring them in out of the sun and mud, put them inside of the prison, and train them to the chinery and learn them trades of all kinds, and let all the Negro convicts work on the farms. The Legislature has made it a penitentiary offense for any one to carry deadly weapons concealed. This is meant to trap hundreds and thousands of Negro men who like the thousands of white men go armed and feel the need to rob weapons when white men get angry and whip out nugly weapons for business. The Legislature, with only one dissenting vote, that of Senator Legate, passed the bill introduced by Judge Martin, repealing the entire civil rights chapter of Kirby's Digest, which has been a dead letter for thirty years. This statute of law guarantees to the Negroes equal rights with those in hotels, salons, theatres, railroads and public and massive places. The State Republican of Little Rock, Ark. says. While the churches of Little Rock are raising money to send missionaries to the savage heathen, why not appropriate a few dollars to send a missionary to the savage? There is a talk of extending the legislative session another month or two. Of course the members want to put off going back to work as long as possible. The Legislature of Arkansas has recently established a State reform school, which opened the under the Penitentiary to boys and girls under 18 years of age who need discipline and correction. The new building for the whites is ready, and the white boys in the penitentiary have been transferred to the school. The Little Rock Ark. District says that "the boys that he will not be ready for the Negro boys for some time." Certainly not. Senator Jefferson Davis, who until last autumn was Governor for six years of Arkansas, who also wants the "14th amendment" passed, says what is needed in the United States Senate is not Senate reform, but a constitutional amendment and that as soon as he gets to Washington next winter when Congress convenes, he intends with such trusty blades as Tillman, Varsadhman and Bob Taylor, to start one in combination, federation and agreement. Representative Quinn of Garland county that the not squared on the head the New Yorker, and that he is changing the motion of the State from "Roman Populus" to "Roman Populus" came up for action by the House. Dr Ruff moved to amend by striking out the Latin and making the mottagged "The People Rub." At this point, Mr. Quinn suggested that they had better confine themselves to facts and say "A Gang of Christians Rub." The State Republic. It is amusing to say the best to motivate the contemptions reference to the county press by some of our present legislators in their discussions. Each and every one of these matters seems to think that themselves solid with the "other people." Now it were possible to convert all the gray matter processed by these spanners into church; there wouldn't be enough of it to move the bowels of a hummingbird *Lee County Courter*. It depicts the mature time of 1805 was the moment that the present session "at no one will charge that it was as savage and ignorant" Governor Hayes "recorded the average Arkansas Legislature when he called it a "zoo" and the members a "bimble of ducks." Among the many frighten messages considered by the legislators, a bill to prohibit outsiders owning property in Arkansas, and a bill to forbid Negroes waiting on tables in hotels or restaurants. "Intelligent citizens are disgusted, but as long the people are guided by the yellow dog in politics, so long will these conditions be put in the State." The State Republican The bill introduced in the Legislature to imprison for debt will probably become a law. Nearly all the white counties are evacuated from the operations of the bill, the black counties being left to bear the brunt of the law. This bill is neither fair, nor honest, nor constitutional. A bribe to imprison a person for an debt is not permitted, nor to imprison it if committed in another county, is the rastest kind of class legislation, and reflects on the men who issued the bill. Of course the object of the measure is to imprison a Negro who beats a debt, but to allow a white man to beat his debts with impunity. If beating a debt is wrong in one case, it is wrong in another, and should be punished accordingly."—State Republican. The Little Rock (Ark.) State Republican says: "The Arkansas House of wild mice on Tuesday when Representative Foster of Cleveland county, hurried an inkstand and glass tumbler at the head of. Representative Quinan of Garland, showering the innocent bystanders with the heavy bottom of the glass as it glanced from the lobby railing. Wednesday morning Representative Foster started on the warpath a second time, and had a lively mix-up with a representative of *The Arkansas Democrat*. Several blows were struck. Foster hurried to the door, where he struck which struck a pillar and broke. A lady who was the guest of one of the members was thoroughly bespattered with ink, and a new Easter hat was ruined. Representative Quinan insists that Mr. Foster should buy the lady a new hat, but Foster didn't "dishbaked" if he will, as the Legislature isn't no place for a woman, now. The Arkansas Legislature last week passed a bill to compel the attendance in the public schools of the State of children between the ages of 6 and 14, but exempted from the provisions of the bill 40 counties in the black belt where the Negroes are as plentiful as files for the reason (say the white law-makers) that, the agricultural industries of the State would suffer if the Negro boys and girls were not in the white legislators, says The Arkansas Daily Gazette, who represented those counties, were opposed to forcing education on the Negroes. The Legislature had before it a bill, called the "Negregation Bill," to pay all the school taxes paid by Negroes to the support of Negro schools, and all paid to the support of white schools. A bill hot with prejudice and injustice dismissed all the fair-minded white citizens. We clip the following from the Memphis (Tenn.) Commercial Appeal: "The Ministerial Association of Little Rock, on April 15, 1907, composed of all the white schools in the city, met to day and adopted resolutions opposing the negregation bill passed by the House last week and now pending in the Senate. The resolution follows: "Whereas, This act proposes to deprive the colored race of about two-thirds of the maintenance of their public schools; and "Whereas, The public school system of America is at once both the safeguard of American institutions and the teacher and inspirer of American childhood; and, Whereas, The colored race most needs thisigious influence, both for their own good, as well as for the public safety; and. "Whereas, should even an emergency exist where white children are indecently supplied with school privileges that such an emergency could not be wisely met by this proposed law, for reasons in striking the exceptional case the law would reach beyond and work confusion and disaster at many places and. "Whereas, The Southern people are committed to the doctrine that you cannot elevate your race by degrading another; therefore, be it. "Resolved, first. That to our minds it would be a public column to emulate this bill in law thereby setting off colored race from the fullest privileges of public instruction, and at the same time putting our great State in an unfortunate attitude hard to explain beyond our borders. "Resolved, further. That barring the question of the constitutionality of the act, the bill would outrage the public son and would be divisive, generous people, and would be a proof of prepared to harm our State." "Resting, therefore, under the steadfast conviction that the bill is neither good wisdom nor good politics, and believing that education is so interwoven with a people's morals as to justify this good wisdom, part of the ministers, as therefore respond to it, should be the Hon Kie Oblath and the Hon James Hammett, to use all honorable means to defeat the segregation bill in the Senate." The petition is being circulated among the ministers of the city, and so far no poster has failed to attach his signature. The poster has above ringing publications and thunderstorms that courageous white ministerial association and other leading white papers and artistic citizens have upon the members of the Arkansas legislature: "The Latie Rock Down Gate! He the leading Democratic paper of the State gawks as follows. The Senate killed the segregation bill, even waiting to hear it in the real. The Senate surprises is that this measure should have ever gone through the house." Despite all the above legislation to oppress and crash the aspiration and progress of the Negroes of Arkansas, The United Tuxedo Press says, "The New York Times has published a Treasury last year for real and personal property tax $200,000 besides $20,000 poll tax, making a total of $10,000 paid to the State treasury by Negroes as taxes for the year 1906. According to the census bureau at Washington, D.C. the Negroes of Arkansas own $20,000,000 worth of property. This vast sum of property is in cash, in cash and in cash bank and saving accounts." Bishop J W Smith. Ohio Voter Aggrieved at Congressmen. From: The Columbus Congressman Longworth of the first, Harding of the third and Taylor of the twelfth congressional districts are certainly in bad with the colored voters. Their manifestos, in behalf of Secretary Taft's candidacy for the presidency in a election on their intelligence and immorality, is a well-known fact that the colored voters have nothing in common with Taft or his friends. Taft is the most likelied man in public office to day with the exception of President Roosevelt, with the colored and labor voters of the country. Labor organization throughout the country demands that Rob Roevelt be vengeance. Secretary Taft will fare no better should he be nominated for the office he now seeks. Secretary Taft is an enemy to the colored race and his public career will bear out this statement, but in the face of it all the above trio are working overtime to win the election. The colored voters have a grievance and will even up matters with them in the text campaign. Icec in Washington From the Indianapolis Star All quiet along the Potomac to-night. No sound save the tread of Dame Rumor. The typewriter rests and the sentry's alee. The Big Stick's again in good humor Secured by This New Union Order—Grows By Leaps and Bounds—Started Five Years Ago with Nothing But a "Principle"—Now Has Over 400 Subordinate Lodges and 36,000 Members. Over 30,000 homes of our people have been filled with joy, because of the Production of a great and powerful Union Order, which is using its strength and influence to secure better conditions for our people. This is the first and only great Union Order in this country, holding an International Union Charter from the Courts, which gives a full Protection and Benefits to our race. There is no color, race or sex discrimination in this Order. The negro has an equal standing with the white members, and can be elected to hold any office. Every effort is made to advance the condition of the members, by securing equal opportunities to work with other workmen, to learn the trades and to have steady work at high wages and Union hours. The Grand Lodge donates $100.00 for the burial of each deceased member. A fine monthly Journal is published. A Membership Book of the Order is recognized by all Lodges everywhere. Distressed members are assisted. Each member and Subordinate Lodge has the privilege of buying stock in the Order, on low monthly payments, said stock paying 8 per cent interest, guaranteed. A Leading Negro Deputy is wanted in each locality, AT ONCE, to form Lodges, sell Buttons, take Journal Subscriptions, sell Stock and act as DISSTRICT DEPUTY ORGANIZER. This work can be done in spare hours, but many are devoting their whole time and attention to it. Big money is made by good hustlers. Write at once. State name of this paper, and enclose 10 cents for full information and postage. Address THE I. L. U. GRAND LODGE, 34 to 40 Canby Dayton, Dayton, Ohio. Real Estate-For Sale and To Let. ELEGANT FLATS To Let. Handmade Apartments with all improvements at Moderate Rentals, in THE DOLLY-MOUNT, 211 W. 60th St. THE SARATOGA, 208 West 60th St. THE MENICE, 210 West 61st St. THE DORIN COURT, 217 W. 60th St. Above house to the West. Monitor service and are always good condition. Apply ROBERT CABTER 209 West 60th Street. ALEXANDER CROSBY, 217 W. 60th St. MR. HOLYARD, 210 West 61st Street. PHILIP A. PAYTON, JR. REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE My specialty is the management of Colored Tension Property. AGENT. BROKER APPRAISER. 67 West 14th Street. Downtown Office: 334 West 59th street. Telephone: 917 and 918 Harlem. jae25-1y P. Bourke, 22 years with J. T. & J. A. Farley Tel. 5205 Riverdale. Palmer Bourke. George T. Bourke. J. P. Bourke & Sons REAL ESTATE AGENTS, BROKERS AND APPRAISERS. All kinds of properties for sale, rent or exchange. Fire Insurance. 12 WEST 91ST STREET. mar 7-3m Fine Apartments of 5 Large, Light Rooms and Bath. Rents, $19 to $21 per month. Apply William Henson Butler, 58 W. 133th St. TEL. 3003 HARLEM aug 31-19 J. H. Adams & Son 16 West 133 dStreet REALESTATE BROKERS Houses for Sale and To Let Money to Loan on Bond and Mortgage. Call on us when you need apartments in a good locality Jan 31-31m Temperance Winning in Kentucky. From The American Baptist The recent decision of the Court of Appalachia affirming the constitutionality of the County Unit Law passed by the last Legislature of Kentucky is a deigned victory for the cause of temperance and will enable the advocates of reform movements to secure the suppression of the deed in the county may operate the state. Under this decision when the voters of the county vote in favor of the closing of the saloon then no city, town or precinct in the county may operate salons contrary to that vote. Under the old law the saloon has been wiped out of most of the counties by carrying precinct litter precursor but in some counties this is almost impossible and under the County Unit Law a majority of the voters of the county may adopt local option. The voters of the county may adopt a careful progress in Kentucky and its power for good is being felt more keenly than ever. Additional legislation is necessary to make the present laws more effective and in the selection of members of the legislature this fall this issue will no double play an important part. Same Sort of Blunder. From The Christian Recorder Greater contempt is seldom shown a chief executive that was exhibited by the labor union forces in their mammoth parade and meeting that took place last week in New York. The President was hissed whenever his name was mentioned, the chief reason being his condemnation of the criminals in the lead and alleged criminals as "undesirable citizens." To have arraved the labor forces in opposition to him by impetuous and unwarranted speech is of the same sort of blunder made by the President in branding the colored soldiers charged with "shooting up" Brownville as guilty of shackling an officer in response to evidence of their guilt, added. No great is the threatened outcome of the President's impulsive, and prejudicial statement about the labor leaders that he has already given the assurance that they shall have a fair trial. It is to be hoped that he will take a similar step in the case of the outraged militants and the wrong afflicted upon the million of citizens. Perhaps he will if they show signs of resentment as the organized labor of the country. This Company has as its principal object in Close. As a result of its operation for a period of the control of twenty-five (25) New York City A Nine Hundred Thousand Dollars ($999,000). Nine owns, and the other sixteen (16) are held by the Co. homes rent for Ninety Thousand Dollars ($999,000) and indicate the splendid possibilities in the way of Divide this Company. What this Company is doing in New York do in every large city in the United States where its people able numbers. Invest now and help this great movement on PHILIP A. PAYTON, Jr., President and General Manager. EDWARD S. PAYTON, Vice-President. FRED, R. MOORE, Secretary and Treasurer. DIRECTORS: Emmett J. Scott, Joseph H. Bruce, William Ten Eyck, James E. Garner, Edward S. Payton, Stephen A. Beemett, Sandy P. Jones, Henry C. Parker, John E. Nall, Fred R. Moore and Phillip A. Payton, Jr. The image provided is too blurry to accurately recognize any text. It appears to be a grayscale photograph of a person, but no discernible details can be made out. THE DOOR OF DESTINY Is Now Opened Unto You. Do You Want Luck? NATURES GIFTED MAN! Miraculously Gifted With the Hidden and Mysterious Occult Powers and Forces of Both Mind and Matter. Your Life is an Open Book to His Mind. MIRACULOUSLY GIFTED WITH THE HIDDEN AND MYSTERIOUS OCCULT POWERS AND FORCES OF BOTH MIND AND MATTER YOUR LIFE IS IN AN OPEN BOOK TO HIS MIND. Hundreds of the Best People in the World Walks of Life. Are Crowding to See Him, Play and Night. If you are in trouble you can go to Proof K. Solomon with, perfect assurance that he will give you that tingley aid that you so much need. If your domestic servant is sick, he will give you something to see him, as hundreds are now going to see him, at A Special Notice: This Marvelous Hinder read for the family of James J. Gould family of New York. He entertained the West End Ladies' Republican Club at hotel Astor. He read for Win. James J. Bryan and for Gorger Cleveland. His last entertaining night he gave a short talk on the Orient and read many hands. He consulted the Prince of India. Prof. Solomon has been in all the lands of the earth and he is now able to fascinate you with any one you wish, and also will enable you to rule and control the minds of any one you want. He removes all evil influences and will sell something for good luck. If you are far away and can't call, write and send stamps for reply. Mail received from all parts of the has passed away but his work will live forever. Dr. Adnan, editor of The Life and Works of Paul Lawrence Brown, has written *Roosevelt's吻*, I was a great admirer of his poetry and his prose. "THE LIFE AND WORKS OF PAUL LAWRENCE Brown" is just off press. It contains a complete biography, all his portait books, his short stories in one complete volume which will be sent postpaid to any address for 10 full pages. It contains 450 large 625% pages including 59 full page illustrations. 500 MORE AGENTS WANTED Agents are coining money. Mr. J. C. Williams, Iowa, just writes: "Have received my Dunbarouf, and in eight hours sold eightteen copies—proceeds only 10 cents. I will send you a one-half day's package $72.25. Start now and get first choice of territory. We pay bigest commission, ship books on credit, and send OUTPUT FREE. We are the sole publisher hence soign exclusive territory." Telephone, 917 and 918 Harlem. 219 West 42d St. Advance." Roemerell us "The life contains a in one com- only $1.75 full page ill Agents are received my $19.00." C one-half day We pay big We w J. L. N pe oa ie ew YORK AGE: THURSDAY,'MAY i6, 1907 - < ae . eget me = atacles weg, abd still are, in the way, Tee Boutkfccustomed itlf to denying as condition “of democrat goveramen@#during the dayx of slavery ; and the ‘nce of the Negro among us Gren bow Peonciies tnang. to thin abuor: mal state @ thing Younger Southern: ‘ere, toac severally: have recoguised Tine Re floration of abwointe freedom Stepecch ed of. the prem in the Gent Meaowad the smanciyation ot ‘our section‘ from the trammel« of a bygone Ben opening of cles hat 13 en represent opposing sides of import- sing questions she feteand Fou, ins sion dn colteys clases of even the “forbid. fea subject of ponsible ‘nice ainalganra- tion, and the publication of maguzines and’ nemrpaper ation bye "Ieee the Forme af tht work. Fe Gurdper Murphy of Afabminay the date Chaneelior Hl of Sikorg Prof. Andrew Sledd of Florida, tot Beet. doh Spencer Bamett of North Carolin inte. bev the leaders of thie Sumer sthonl of Southerners. ‘iiiie tore than tea Sear aKo_pub- ticreckoute forall were wot Popular ia the eran tate suche foe example oe Rae andthe Caroline Some Beate tence amis soume. men from Baltimore, {rei feom ‘the German Uai- Feritiens d:twara Ee 'Sheib by mime. be: Jan in'Launanin no Neitation for tet. Be public whouls, “andor. the traininz A PRE eee ain tecstonal edt gorlatns “Ihe eauvamesd the Stare coat Bee tonnee aul aroused av enthninn SeaScen witch mperid tor wile, States, Sad ene lone togdhed hee schwie Somtie RMesccrly-‘tiea ‘ke Diss Aidersmun an Nelyer crvataltised thie zeal for improve: ent Gate yernmpat forum, “The. nami iatration of the Peabody funds wan all the while wvailnble, api everywhere tae sefib” such wintore’ that it wae Dot dite Beale for’ outnide. philanthropists to oF. Fantse in the falnem of time the so-called Bren movenent. The. college” which Rad an a rae Bild aloof aon" mobilited their forces and contributed to the new tate Speakers and eaters webinar Bans | ste toden throurhout tive inn Torn: Salable ood han tocen ‘done. Wealthy Spon hace heen vague for eouteyiate Ber mectmaey tania, “nd Southern Moola amt wallegew have. bern) put wom Tew footing: every edurmior of thin great Sectiog’ of sar common rostey incon the Fature with, contdencs, Tnivemal aoe gation iv now popular: compalsore school Geen no lonate prods Mideoun: bight: thurs Inthe fad of country Yxinlntorn Thonn aecoud beerien ta. out prORTet bas been broken down, a SES Rie segerlic, churn, the Wrethodiet nod the Baptiat, have felt the force of these mew teachings. aidigions pores, have ceased to. demand a rixid ad: eaeate to oskworn sieeins Wereny Hunt Tag ist no. longer a. jopuine ovenpation: we ecPehe asoet itcral views a mts ere of creed new ops. the fret Mik Ge ae te See ian the Hho M. Vines of Norfolk, Va.. and Dr. Joho Fe White ‘of Adana. Ga. At the" Inet Fence ‘sieeting ‘of the Southern’ Mfetho- Fin chor tee Birininghnuy the lihernt movement within thin jowertsl organiza: Ten ee forme CAC emitter Wan ap: polated after m mont ‘cacournniog debate to nminre the heliefe of the chur is Micka way as (0, Briag. ite sos inte Racmone ith) the bent tots of the Ben the” more, venues iret The Epmcopel “wal the. Peebetertnn though eaitoe, no mblie stam are. mot Ie Brofoundly ‘reaponnite to the tmodern roar But while thewe stromata of retey gremion” hive. bern taken, oilers “have Free erected hicks vee gist we age ein aa even ore isidindy tars om iadinal apd county, hoeres. Por wnore the forty sear ste soit, haw elconied the dneunbine wapitalist. Heat King whine’n jouer ane eacrtel it ma aioe ition Whe four sillion nlaver eee hat euaexntrgted wealthy tive Newt ors TSMR wfeered_ every encibte, ine dnc eae froin tht aut, and iri Riubwpse. Atonopolies of soxny. kinds hare hao frogig: setod ty, ameumpceting Petites The route a newer and miihler forms of wlaverss Tw beneliciarten er orn emaiona have warmed, (err way nto the ateeriBg committees of the two great political parties, have found Niaceg an college: boars of control, ani Mine Theenten ith Tersiator ant teacher milo, speak the truth nboue their doines In Vigeinin. the. aamen of four. enilwas | fonacelfors thigh rank ayipenr ‘on the ral OF the ‘execative committer, of Ue Riemorratig parts ia Noth Caroling the American Tabacco. Compas: sem nic. te aug the delegates to the: lant Keyublt saasatienal Congention rand in anier to | feeb theta of 34, Starz on Gre | er Faateal wing of the tanenntie arty eit conatrained Co aypent enee aki ts ie evereprewent race intred. ay a colibee pretident of oud standing | euttige aside Well. ont, ning ts what they choome about tlie encrouch: | nents of corporations, 1. for ane. shall | NN eta the aut in) two taege | ektg Saitgtions with whieh thw veriter ee ee atimcaritiy ang interent whines | A ree im eben content: | e protemer wad outright that be did | Razr eth he ety incerta | Neer ate tor hin ta atte hig cumvies A Yretpaate for aim vig Senthern { mc, between ie tun atl the Malgenippis a chair of Petitienl seieare | i Wore inerent in soft straction on | | iTtigal aubjects inenepvenk tune there is | wo nshtntion: nogveticry for thie establish went AP ward epartnpats: | Nia ite: encore a | te coe er Gmdeny intiaenee andicectiy fmournr yee ite Nap ane nf the callers || LR Hie Ni ahee ane aneseaent one whee Stnethtn tliat ite Se, Sacra Nie gee ie sng ay manana eno of ae th Sa majeeta Ng eceedient inatitntion Te Eng lat copcetul eeaphinels an ie anal feathton at spines oh the Me dante bet ewer east word ot | ie’ deanaelons tesbery nnd sxrammieal Bante at cortaie woree corperitionn ope | pntng ier in wretch eit | rane teiaeiy atte: Sothern twnenzime { ceontiv refined to, publish an. mrticle | | fom one at ite “résular contribntors | Re rejited miannstrint seas nm arenzn: |. ME AT hrternt initrint ataiens ithe { fouth. ‘The General Educational Roard of New | ‘ forR and the subsidiary Sonthern Edn: ative "Board: provinim the geentent frre: ation Board prociaim the greatest free. oa =f opty watreaches cechion "There {therm oomditions ; ix cal: “img to thew the authec’ dene ma are freee f lang fa a “i Teatte Move wo este Gilg an academic ireedoss im America, and there are pot. 8 lew who openly sesert that such ia: the case.” Hat im the old. Bouth, where such Trmarkable changes are taking Wace smd ro'ntmofately swornttal in the. face of ox Taordiaary aibicaltion, it dose baves teat ail-one fortes making for progress might te tafe ins the great cate, Uandoti-Macon Colleres Adana, Va, Annas. RAILWAY. EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION HOLD ANKIVERSAKY SERVICES Re atyeeaes Sence and Weene deers. Jeaney Cry, May 1th On. Sunda: night, the Str instant, the Pullinan Cn Porter “and Railway’ Employees” Rene ficial Areociation held ite ninth anniver wary services at St. Mark's cliurvh,. [ev Bail preached a very approprinte. set won, Impression wn all the iyportams of the relationship borne by railway. em ployee to the transportation interents 0 the country in xeneral and the traveling publig in particular. ‘This organisation fe ‘primarily benevolent and hws don: much work. of that uature among. it embers, binding them together until i ix almost connidered in the lixht of [fraternal bods.” During ite exixtence it uw disbursed something Tiki five thon sand dollars in death and wick benetite A creditable xhowing, “indeed, for men tound only” by mont, obligations. Tring fant Fetter to Tite: Agr. pibliehed in the bene of May sith, bad penman: ship caused” the following tspoxtuphieal freon: Referring. to the object af the Afro:Amerionn, Women's Industrial Chub. Toe alert ate primnrily. the improve: ment of the individual, sevondly. the home, whieh means the eventnal improve: hie of the community, “They are con: Centrating ici norte. toward. the estab Tishment of aa. industrial hom for its Quoting the editorial of “the Paterson Call, relative fo the conference, the wont intellectoality shoud. have ayienred is stend of intellectability Very rently Ter. Mr donee well known throughout the “Bua ns a, Ste cowl evnnaelint, prenehesl at the Sales Kaptist church, Hrther Jones ix tamil intly known ay Prophet Janes. wwing to big ability te xinseafully foretell foming events, whose shadaws somehow Meri ta he mceuratels cant betote hes Ninian Those wha hace followed his fawer for tmnuy Senne chia his predic Hone linve “never failed ta uphold his reputation and’ was tot noticenlly in the Coneimnugh deluge at Johnstown in 1880, "Hin prognostication» are sid te have heen xo anoying 8 to eather his wing ordered from tbe cominuaity. In his kermon here Mr. Jones reuinrkes! Cat Ie heard there wan to ben Dall at some tthe following might: ‘pon Tearnitiz he wae correctly. inforihel the Prophet Narned All ta stag away. siying: Mood Soak be shied "Sone cone he sie, SD ge then but gill be brought away in an ambulance, “Phe: ball reterred te wae the entertainment given by King Solomon's the local Masonic lodge at Phenix. hull on “Thursday. April 10, AI went well until enrly Briduy morn ing whea «commotion was boned ou te stnire: # Wittle. Inter i policonnin fouud a Souing. ian Taying an! the xidewnlk. in front af the hnil wy Sindly gabest with = razor tha! he could not “spenk. After summoning an ‘atabuhaner and sedis the vietinn to. the city. hospital the atfiert funni the encting results from at atet iene it the bal One gain the irophet wile unather to hie long let of predictions. The Oni Kelley. af Jersey City enn priniue St, Mark's. ani Hvidsot ledges held thie “Phankesivihe everest the (rafasette: Pest terian clined sit Shi sycevening. fost ME “ens Cheat ant SESt0 Maks fore was “minster of cere inonies “After te Crater apenitg ee stereo the heathertima. Mise Dea! | Craw fond and Mis Donde sag heath iia Me Chwstthat thea intevedsier! | ye Htos WW TL, Aare, poastat pve tone if lye white who diwetesecd frasa the feat "Lave the Hawthettwad the: Heat rind twee A metniwer af te rather ood was entidiel ta delive aut appropriate se ft Ae desu SWastonezton ett he 8 Hie wercises with a sole Gilhert Fred erickey te rwwik lie slat his Wife ol Qpeid 28th, 46 twas swntinesd ont tlhe eons sein awaiting the eto of tlhe ein Fuury hineged. eth nando, the stetiva sl vie watinely wrath having. iSti thoe ity hospital wt Monday. Inst Rewsse Benjamin Flat Avedon | ines Hawes retro to he earn | mes Rictnnond, Wn one aay eternded ait ee thear pacents, | Heanor Quing Cole, the infant shamsh | er of Mr and Mes. Mintel ales wits faptized at St Philips. P12 etanen, | Ninhattan Sunday cavenine, | Ps Tntiears mere: Mzcatnd Mite Wet, taint Sr and Mes, Mannuel dwekwon, seal wwiiwe, Tw the afternoon Mr, sted Mis, | “he witertninved te fallow ing at inves | Mi aid Mis, S Inekwon Mr niul At Duin, Mes Win, Anderson Mis Gene Skinner, Mr, Wk. Equi and Mice wnint Horie Cesta. alee infant | fuighivy of Mr amd Mis stamies Pov | cis ise haptiant at Ste Phaliyy's. last | jiday. ‘The sense were te ean | witlies. Mase Atuatita Snes sae Mes Tarold Coleann, of New rnusen Tho: five americans Womans Liudastri’ | bile belt ita teaiiiar monthly hisiness yretinig at the tesidenew uf Mrw ION ‘ale, i Oak trent. ott Monday. exeaine: [is 6 ianportant ianniness. bene teane eid. after whieh tlie twinbwees wet | itertnined: at finichewn Wt Mes. Cate He efuls will gee ean a sowkal on Mow | ay wvening, May 20 ut the teculenee | Mes Cale, tev which alt the teieads ave} ivited, A nunaeal program tine bon | cringed, Mes. ty Walters, wf 28 Oth} free. antat Mew, (3, MeWillinnns, ot Was | ites ater Beatle inotisporsd. Hishioyy ADS | iuler “Walters left Saturday might fo hoegtetidt t2ipy soantis it prinedgeatty | "atten the Centennial wf Livingston | jlloge, whieh tnkew wee the iatter past fine week, i The tenateos nd members af Cie Oak | reed Bethel AL MOE. church, Mew. Jorrisey. pastor, ate planing far $1.00 | Te Satwdyge Mg TS OAL the sine tite | wey are wreyarii, to Teal the tay ing | te earner atone af their new Lnwenient, thick Will take whiew nest pan. AIL the nha atid well-wishers tte invited te end the services Mamaroneck Notes. ! Sumday was Women’s This at AME, cat hein he Gadd elke te vaio Ls rnteleay wits Monnens Thee ne ok. ME. Os. Zion churgle. “Phe pulpit wns in charge fe Thea, Mise Senury Hall af Trooklen Ty the afternoan Mrs. SP Mubbert af Now Vark. gate an adlows | Seripture Teiwdings I Miss Toniey derman [ie the Seanipe Miss Tatuey Cramp and Gussie I, Gres af New oeheltes estate 1 des -regeam Musie. utder the direction, of Me. Cate, Mrs. Lena Allens orznnist 850 was easel Wittame and Walker. Miramar, May 14: William and Walker will appeae in Candewitle nt thee Chostine Street Opern Tones, commene: ing Monday night. at an exhorhitant mal: ary. They will produce — their” Intest Comedy creation, “Om the Road to Ran- dane Land.” as plased before King Fal- wart at Memdrinchain Palace, when they qete te Berepe. @ TARRYTOWN LOC GES HOLDING Qe . MANY ACTIVE sesseores, ada Set an aH pat A tes Ag A cll al _ Dusteren’and Serial Life, Tasarrows, May 14—The member Y_ Lincoln Ledge. No. 4429... U. 0.9 Orv bed” fis “annual | Thankagivin oye mace |Runday ‘eveticg. Wo elaborate r ‘war reudered by. th order, Hew 3. W seer The ligekmeng the Thoree: the theme " is" t a ‘be financial rage The lode wa reed by Me Jo Bdwird nap, 2. 8 Excellent music was jrendered. by.” the choir, ‘Men. My C, ‘Déatenian, . organiat “The Odd” Bellows’ grercines Weta very interesting; Mr. WAlinm F. Kingkind N.C acting fan fiaater of ce - The micmbers of ane Silver Spray Juven) woclety, No. 995, Arpab Hourehold of Ruth, No. T34¥, aud Pant Grand Maxtere Council, "No, 380, GU. 0. of O. F. turned out fa full drene regalia. A col: ection amounting £0 340 wax rained, for the chugeh and €10.35 for the Axel Ota Fehows Tome Fund. Muny friends were rived to hear of the death of Mtn. Betty Woods. “who dived Inne Sunday morning at 1230 a.m. She wus an, warhest Christian aud 9 inember of the Shitoh Raptiat chiireh. Mra. Nani Hobinson and “her two chil: dren, “of Vermont, are visiting | her pirate Mr hind Mea, Te. J. Govern, ‘AU the Inst texularniveting of Orpal Uouvehold of Heath, Mine. El Hatehor wenn elected regulitt delegate wind Mex, OMulie Gentry. alternate to the. bieanin seeion “af District Honshold of Ruth Bone GEO. of vk Be, which con senieg itt Suratogn the 2d of September. AUN prize, waite Held in the room at the “Utxington avenue abaneing. clas, White Tnins, ‘Phiradny evening, May 2: Mrz Nathattiol Youre won feat prize. a gentleman's cane, amd tuba A. Winfield, Srominl prize. lmtideatine, cap aad. Sune Min tinexe Webb, dr. whe be confined it the Tarestown taspital it inueh time Proved othe members ot 8S. Dudles Inge Neo td. Fe mal A.M, will hot Their reception at Music’ hall, May 20. N delegation representing 1". 1G, MC, NS SNHY Tincote bade. Neo 42: und Oeyak Ttossehold at Heath, “Ne, 1310, ete OS OE OLB. journeyed ta Nyne’ frau Sanday anid partiespatent with High Cia budge in their annual Thankssivites he teal of Rabaul Tinuneny ewe sat left duitee Moatehonse. “Phealay, #vet foe tinmmangy wie eld te await the etion af the acs jes. fe assault in Tee vsoud shes, Lior was taken i the White Plaine il Nbant 3 avers have: applied fo ewinpetis in the Crit Ser Be Ahtninattinn for letter sverriens for ere Tiers town shied bakes pies: MM Sth, MME sagt sttiones nist ean ie Mae a AE thoes Statoh Maptist | Finaredy Ist Saul, wots gram rally ay 5 tev Sasiwel Haga, pastor af NM. BS Zion chavely vt Cornyn, SY. sttiesated | fe ithe catiernimn, Tn thie eyeing, Res PON Soir enebesd att excellent fratter dunt sctstnt, Pl ssn ook SLU was Yin diving flues. A bate nunaber attended tiie Titerare meeting last) Wesknowainy Tey EW See eiTl esas a sermon fe tie members af the Wrand Ara of re Me iidie Teck sa Sumuiay evenini,| May 20 Ate 1 Milton Marto tle: great | bamarist wf New. York ity, will appear Ae Shih Baptist Taterary. on, Westies Toy wwenineg, May 223. tssistent by talent | (sane thee Literary ; At toe AU MLO, Zinn olaneety hase Son Auge Rew TRON. Teakden porvaeled a set Hwa Cuil of Evite need age AS. thie bs thee oning. af thus wanfervnee ewe. te Iucctot and feabstecee sare mating oa erent | Mart tir inet the inuletiteadess af the chute. The bile study ehies, fetta Cre impartant sand ittructive meting | wet Mouslay exeninig, Aventis entitle SN Piente in” Baie Laid and srawning ! Mf the Mane Queen will be emudeeed By * te unis ots Tranias Society at Union | pers house on Thavesae ovening, Mae 2 fae thw benntit nf thie AM TE Zann New Rochelle Noten. The New. Ruclietle Cacaquerntion Tas tiess Teenie will hives the having of th Miner shane cof theie new hath oan Thewh iinet) New) Taehette NOY Mae te Master laf Ceremonies Me ROY Fate ot Tenkivn Rea WT Briwstee pastor sO St Mark's MOE harsh. New Vork ete. wil Tee the tevineinal steal ‘Phe geatd odes nd staff of Beant AM Metsente with Ciisted Master af tlie St af New York Me Mae \ Shen ee uf Bow Bares NOY actisted fo Mn Bagene Platine Brand eaminateber SOM be present ty Lay for reneqee stone Phe: punvaeles will stort Fenny Retheoets Phoptiet elasreh, Avene Te Sasso) The lav inne af thes corns stone will bee pevnastte at item ON Tardeid ingitatieat ie extended tae thee Tide tevin in anaking This at aba af a So Viv envneet oF, Sate prassend thine’ the nity ne few alate age euceaite tee Tes esres fran New Vaek, wlimes be tant boot Ieattendiaties tive tie Barentive Coca into "oF thie Narionsal Nees sien Phe Rivtneds Literary lube stone | fa an interesting actress ant last Tha Dy eatinine | sabiecd AsTiteetuee Mies tena do Canageee Pie paneer ABaonissed hy He tetnbers of ie tes After thie atiseassinny af very peasant te Nie Charles Ateginnlen dina aie fempintar nf Meeaniler’s Morsazine Jovceral Hhivontehe thas ete a few dines ste Mhivante te TEseeianat “Tenn lier het Tacadeligee tlie evsisnenie cient saat Tha Willie Tine and left Mast Bs day ts attend the distor denominations? Stavla School Cungeese at one Tiss antettints cto. s bait tee bet Kane eit Abend Captrin Charles Yann, ef ‘ts Ninth Casalee gf the Vnited States Army isdn the sity thie giet af De WT. Teed Mie EMA Tackhiet ot Selina Ney tekehion an the tab te sc i het thing he fi tee ih aresanaking at Mee 0 Charkies! Training Sehoat = Tian Grange TE White of Dhitatet phn spent at few days in the ity bit Meck "Elie Borsa nese Sle Sesipien skits fos Siva an awaday the ithe instant Peete Watton oh New Yorke, whe bist “Tiyinaday in thee rity | Lawyer Deis Richardson and Calle sulstuitted heist beiet ite the. Francis fe Ciusstor Uae aztinst the school bear on Peis: Helied te (tee Camere: VivecuMate: Mae i | Mars ce Sir nines, ne pacted tothe Firat Heanets City Camel, ast Pucalay ly S00 ms jority, "The! Mepaldicane elected seven fit af twenty fare inembers of the Piet Branch Mr Chanincs. rerived the lnrgest=anajerity of ane Republienn Mir Cannings hae previously served threw tonne A Die City Canned, Hee be native af thie city: ie educntion was Feived in the githlie sehoote and Taineoin Thiversity. After geadaation from Tin cal Tniversity. in USSG, Mr. Cunnmityes Tegan the aids af Taw: aud in. IS8r wae graduated Grom the: Vniversity ot Maryland Ease School, He att the tare Charlee W. Tain are the only colored graduates af thie school, which Inne Teninesd the wiajority ef the Tenders wf the Marvlac’ bar. Th 1904, Mr, Cummings delivered one of the addresses woronding the naininn- tion-of Presideat Roosevelt at the Repnty Neaw” National Convention in Chicnao. ‘The position pase $1,000 a sear. COMMENCEMENTS IN RICHHOND, Pubite scbest Tepehevs Mort and tete ‘te Good Thingn. » HWHMOND, December 13.—This is: th commencement week at Hartabora Mem crial Collere and Virginia Vaton Univer shy. Yeuterday morning ¢ urea sermon before the two Institutions wa Bitches Coburn "Hall 'by’ the Hey . Judson B. ‘Thomar of Chicago. « Friday eveping lam the annual’ publi Axefeings of the Bociay Burdy Club: wer held. “There wan an address hy Dr. J B. Simpeon, pregident of the club, and Baper by Mtr. JT HM, fr. “anbiee “Richmond Monies.” Muske was Tarniahe by, the University orchestra, ‘To-night the graduating exercives o the “academic department takes placy ‘The young inen who will receive’ the diploma are Charles H. Lewis, gonn \ Martin, Grorge L, Nigkinn, Seba D. Pack 4. W. Poole and’ C. €. Robertaon, Tomorrow the mnniigl busine: meet ing and dinner of the alumni society will be held and at M o'clock the mociets will hold public ‘exercinew. Wednenias evening at 8 o'clock. the commencement exervints will -be heli. The candidates for the degree of bacnews ur stim Mle Leroy Gilmore, William J. Green, Ups ven 8G. Jones, Philip J. Morris, Wil Tinm E. Hiddick, Jamey W. ‘Shaffer, Rott. B.Watts, William 1. Whiting. Candi fate “for the deztee of bachelor of neiener Randall i. Tampon. Candi Antex for the dexter of bachelor of divin- ity: Willian P. Maen, Je, Robert 2. Johnstone, Marcellus Co Hux, Simeon A! ‘wns. Joeph W. Tones.” Candidates for the degree of lnchelar of theoloxy: Wittinm 1. Carrington, Daniel 8. ‘Tate, Robert H. Thonn. : The commencenwent exercises of the cok lege preparatory: claw and nocmal chs of Murtshorn Memorial College will he hold Thurmday night next, The graduates will be: College Preparatory. Claws, Mice desir V. Wilson: Norranl Class, Mths Mary E. Brackett, Virginia T Hyrd, Mury M: Cutter, Estelle. Graves Namoi So Tavrix, Esther W. Morrin. Thoda T. Thillins, Goldie MO Ragland, Heneiettn Rectan, Ines Feayuhuin, Heatrice Woods, Friday inerning the ‘owamese mectine of the “Aliwinge Association Will fe heh Tn the afternoon the alumna dinner will he vk andl at nicht pnblie exercises wall be Tedd “Phere will be an madres by Mrs. Mary C. Revnolds, of Boston: reel ition, Mise Virginin Ta Crocker, Suffol : ai sdloe hy Mes 1B MetWillinane ‘An snthitingtie mecting Of the Mel noon “Axsoeiation of Colored Teachers was tld in Maker Sehwol last) Mondus afternoon, "The meeting wan. presides! aver by Professor Nelson Willintn, dr With Mise Gertrmbe Vo Taeehie ne see retains. The Kelation of the Pabbi Sched ‘Teaehore wf Aiehanem te the Conauunity wage the satyeet mnuler die ratssivit. abtrofewar Willintiye lee the dis: Vaisctnt sid wae Fallsaved hy Prats QOVO Nerd Mrs. RD, Towser, De i Webater Tavis amd Mr Ai, Mor tan, The Wdiseinsion took at “ewnpretion cise vinw of the help nud Nindeatiers to Stuwwaatal teaching: Wit pstrtielar rai Phase was paced upon tie dignity wf the bacher’s salting, ine hs teat aif ost effective means be whieh pmcents atu puypite tay tbe beenighit toa trte rent ization wf vhis fet cand Ie taneht to watk in perfect Tiarminny aud award with thee tewelter. Mr Georse St dndien Stephens, a former teacher, was prewent and was ite Vitel by. Teveident Willinnis to saya fox wails wf ehemirage ment. watch ws dete Plas" atsie tions decides to bab Asien’ Mewting May 28 at Bist Uaatiat ehsirehs Sunday afternous next at three a'elock 1 Fient Taptiet cliueek. the Pene Be faranwre’ osehtnd Nutswr’ silt hold sett Hal wervies to the honor of the menor othe tate Mee MA. Lane, toate iectiter wf the Satithern Grand Divisian Ne mragrann will be as falls Tene inal vations. Mev, WT dulinaen, pte isi,” Grand Keuntain elite fitiadnetion uf Mex MOT Holmes poset apteniiterl Pevtnarer, sels will pre ile Mew ME, Murrell siddrewe. *M eS artes ae ay Prate Iteformne rs Reows WW. Te anton 2 WooM Sake, “Daan Kindle light” Mrs Fannie 2tagne Walker Mis fane ae a Mather, tlt tober wit, Exits addiess, Relations te Bra wrnal theaniratons” Mr WT Rar AV thave tninate: talks | Mrs Lane ats Cont ant St kee side, *Sitver send MST TE MieWithaann abtneon Ais Laie as a Chaistian Character Hee ME danse nasie Grind Saunt Chait = We tesliet oh The TDoanten Literary ail Hest ieal Ssrivty Weld sell strated musoting hat Privarbay eset itn thee chapel lasts or SF Dltiges stones “Pe tuesiest pete {ate qetaertin wats ater thos adieestion f Mes! Plizabetly To Stamard ane wi Vell tendered Miss Lasts Th Nelune rene aed writen nied interesting paper ott Marta Te Delaney Use andl Vintses af Vaiittvats ats the: the sition Yi pater i Tir DY A Revenant Wistert is tex ave: ot sive Raz ae fel WM sion Carlton MeCavthy. Tt SiN tae af Mie sith et innnting, Hine rast inl Tos fine Got fates, at wat ats G76 Tats thgesee pongwor shams reeset oot, Wiest ttle ciel wits that fringe ed the sine oucctevint aie thee Wve amid wat Dems hat faith ite we wile Waving an easly In the alivetae shield,” qainted wt ens Celcom in tee quiweste IS cael cited tines Pein Va Peete AN aaa BRE MON ATL E aant ee tqeatten ke Pte tea ne ilie tinge slilehl abewwe: he antesborats bathe Weg aviies the eats Slate bused Doel thic a tval tote othe white tere Hus, wae Pee Tic Mag is toe toe goed ote tbe: bon tt dee etch ate Thee selva hatte onesie sree jesdive static, cits hall ant oe wanes nna haldngs Onn pantie Pinion fessades at SAE fe te Is saat tie Se yaks: mis devatt linen | Taonet chailelien etd satlisn wana songinten Mit abcctintns Meaty af Toston cioy inves tt wevedinl Werks Will tothe whee hue this weeks. Me TY Eetiest coral days Eat Week Cust TE Lanes OUST TNS oe eee ga eae ee te + Sot mn In Made. 8 Phys Gasbing tine cat seo thnk tte pat te niente! eae ene Caml en Nap exgerty st vs nant mye ndeonent, To shonit smy 1 we Taagastas vere Pant The Henman Why. Feet cathemn “Tht yen eateh ie auailer? ‘Steand Patteonan No" SAlhiat wae a fine girl tn the ean” eee eee ee eR Tae tiaedony. KINK | Ee ‘ | Py ° i i y 5 " r Most Wonderfu Discovery ever made for curly kinky. and knotty hair. Makes hair grow long, straight soft. and si'ky; cures d srdruff and stops falling hair. Kink-ine acts like magic cn the hair. HinB-ine le No Experiment. 1 was discovered by HR. Roberts, a famous English chemist, -who has made a study of the scalp of colpred people for the past $0 yeurs, and who, after much time and experience, Ute pres pared thie great tonic for the colored people, Thia chemist says that hie experience and study have (aught him chat the scalp of the colored people requires ‘ spectal troatment and after laboring and testing these many sears he hae discovered the grentes HEMEDY the WOIGLD hus ever known for the HAIR of colored people * : KINK-INE Will make the batr GROW from one {o three Inches per month, If the directions and instructionsare carctully followed out We have many cases on record where the above renulte have been obtathed, and me 20 nov” heektate when we make these claime KINK-INE Is the only sate preparation in the world that (n guaranteed to make the half straight and make ary ‘hatr smooth and stop tt from breaking off and falling out; takes out ull the kinks and knot cures dandruff, makee the hair soft and silky, and by nourishing the roots gives i( new life and vigor, restoring tt to natural color. READ what Mise Ellaabeth Jones of Chicago says of KINK-INE: "My hair wa net more than’ three Inches long when I commenced to use Kink-ine six months ago. Ive used It atoudlly since that dute and thas grows om an average of two Inches each month and it is now more thn fifteen Inches long. Meriden, my hair has become simont ateatght and I fully vellove by the.end of the year I will huve the mont Deaullful head of halt of any coloroa Indy In the world.” . SPECIAL OFFE—Te prove the quality and superiority of ur goods over all others, we will sell one fullatee hottie of Kimk-ine, price 36 conte, ome cake of Kinkeine Soap: the best shampoo mud Toilet Noxp tn the Worle, price ae cents Beth Cor waly 50 cents, or six Bottles and aix cakes ef soup for 8200, Special oer geod omly AU the felloniow: atorest - SM ~r . S. iROSENSTOCK,. 7th AVENUE ‘AND 4lst STREET Sethe nO eee RE ae: SO Gs ee EEK Ga. GP th ck” «Ee ce ec ee ‘ cokes SE AMERICANS IN THE CONGO. | OFFICE OF re), coemennetal mapsotcieae, martin | TON . Somer Bream vere! pr ry A DAVTQO yy ieee. Se ee eee oe | Bavssnss, May S—Atterhavins | epant acversi weekn in Europe arenicine ithe detailx of organization and equity j meat, the memnberw of the Ameriran mrerciel expretione (othe Caonee bre i Feate for theie field ‘of netion in Atrien fon May 9. ‘The frat party setit out hy j the American Congo Company will con- tat OF Me SP Verner ant Me, Te Seer tbe latter of whom wes n comnies: Sia apeat for the, Rawal Comins several years in the Congo. They will BeTfotlosad by ber agente of the Amer Kea Gouge Company "ou Siu 340 incl IE Mr: Bertrand, w Relxinns who bas hl fourteen years’ experience in emnmereil development in Africa; A. HK. Pope, whe finn been engaurel in railway. conntrietin tn esters Canada ani ioterented the Thober buniseee im Mexico, nti Mencre Rndrewn to Gillix, American nnd” el gina revpectivety. each of wisn have Bd Schniderghie cxrericnse in the rubber tars Teen Bewilee then athet agents of te , Pomiaay eit” probate. tall ese, The gefoclyat weettion af the Tater national Forestry und Mining Conypany is Saqected to leave Aniwerpean. Mls. i Tig wit te tinder: the lendomdhip ate: De Stain and TL Taal Stee Msn Sai Ametienn Conn! i the Congo-at snr Tinwe-nod alr an ethewr tn the Cong tae Cement, atm later dates UA, Hall. the TaN gestoeiee at the expeditions ies mer of the Cited Seaver tcastorteat Rites, Heian tir ttre will hee Ad Ro Mloter af the United. States. Grits! Fai Survey, wn wecrral thee erolerst ne Immature foxethee eile Miser Fa Filey apie teceeplore thee pet art of tie Remeal Valleys iw sun Perhin. diatriete trim whieh Mee Lerner Sreteec Seetnioe af tntncente ti te Sat Stable tnceitage ewer seat tio, he Part at the Rowen) Caley aie ses Prted ta, eatiie hits Ye eaplats! Sadetendcinnes” ved tm. Varios paete Ringtone Camesm and Wiens maven the aise espe unl poor ete starinels Verdier, Feetenn neal cn Hat” Wibelgonont aeereenhy the met ets tainly scell serow a nd te pio He dlae's Ractienteh tomy ae ine minetae Span States elite sieanee tre leew corral Tet le RMN GE aleane Ae hin de wed Tee ietetitag atten ian te the se ee Pad Sa tetaee the araraven Lair Tents feo the uments were hee Gack eke nail a Se ee Vedas, solaris ee Me Sagan wei cu ajnapies wth Saugieed sail “speri: Get teresa ee ake cot 4 Tes teat of titteber in thes forest please | dat Soatotintie iter se pase ab aE ee senha We (3b Armuiok| iioadgeat he: alfanaguichead emis whee sant cuiy his ares ater Llanes. whi MIRNA terewet tine Coons ed atc recat Heaters ot tle ies iar Ft Ne ee aE ee the ee nee chettacuiclend ances Mahe Radian artnet 11 ance gatie tte Hater oni ee ERE. Concany te ene ait at the Claes tata eaten ad she suelote ttenera itunes Ceasane Thar contralto Sou Van Met pack ati tie Ka ahi a aantnant i Mie Sttessae Fe Rema an eccled"iutine gir ea 38> Cen Te ane A Genteene Mlennton, Poca: ‘Phe Pentoonemene Set Phe serene nserai set Mies deanes. piace Uhcik oseee at TS Vaeieipin es Len een aad eee nadine Sancta te Sha foe a Newasegs, sates hs Foon Saitee en TS Tnsteniseg at TURE epeoees one Weal aon t:qcanree wale tn gues veed et iiss tees Tedpe nel Fee ena i eancosens cond Se Hes Selity aaet tial octane Dips, Raaker TO Wat tac. at Hate BR Briasell re Setenpad ow teeters fea ths Pind in fae Fhoccene edhe btvse Be ated De adsey st Eritagteal, Ievinaise itis hatelly tnvaileie tu il ine thee sc bobe Soot te tee sea were Hharunehle, tasted fn tte: weds at Nets Alco atin eta these tus aleatingtshed Nei Wan From Kentucky. Hinctue, (te Inte omttent, who te AM wath eephoid” teverv= “Tibia ie tenet cased ApPhinie water vow have dtuak., When did Sou ant take seaie Yatlent Abenit thee years ag, T tise" dant ochnwe PHILIP A. PAYTON, Jr. : TO. LET A Number of Stores and Basement Stores, Suitable for Any Business 19 WEST 99th STREET Third floor rear, 3 rooms, $14. | 29 WEST 99th STREET a Fourth floor east, 6 fooms and bath, steam, heat/and hot water, an improvements, rent $29. 46 WEST 99th STREET Fifth floor west, 5 rooms and bath, steam and hot water, a improvements, rent $23. 227 WEST 62d STREET, First floor, west, rear, 3 rooms, $11. Second {floordkwest,_ rear, 3 rooms, $11. Fifth floor west, rear, 3 rooms, S11. | 30 WEST 135th STREET Third floor, 6 rooms and bath, hot water supply, rent $:0 31 WEST 19th STREET Fifth floor cast, 4 rooms and bath, steam and hot water rent $22. First floor east, seme house, rent $22 * 307 WEST 147th STREET Second floor west, 5 rooms, rent $19. Apply Janitors or PHILIP A. PAYTON, Jr., 67 W. 134th Street Tiss ae Was We Sack t Ba kane, Bi PSN SS EINES Tee’. Vigntn atl ester tiie esonnthe. tee 92% feo feewent, “curnest, deste td gtatetil SGGaad Bless MISC Anne “Pe dations Piste the hearts ot Neste men, Seuen ash chiletven for ler tilde Sift ter the eater Mitac nvbieation af Neste ehildter, | Ter Sits te anes that sence at ae tne wet tal ts stely geeled far” Negros vented Selnweds Hen the Seateth de wey af Hee Sei qiratte Sintthy Cagvlitan thie nary Selene thar Negros stot heitlen ugete than Botte "The otncthy at tye tert aeeranes ‘tenis theres tute anal the teweher's Sages Loin ten taehe te tunes dal Die nee aueatie. eeanpetent aint trithtal fete ines gyno eltlyeute tev soba ines thew “a antttewety an the Sonth san Nutter cewctnmente tee basses Posed Ue eadue sation cof ath the ethno ay. bene Tapcthe best yoittereste af tee Slares teat abbear ta belive tht Negi ede ation 5 dary. “ate caut apoet frst tie Sages Wate tee sts eatiyeae stad ter he Sale duty the States sitad the, sper tive Soveeteaiettiet ae multiedqaad sc eagunnn ition re attelhy eee fe thee Ne-gtan me ine anne fe ivientianis be the cabbie itn anf ie nates hte foe tiateelh pars. tie tages Foor meas satel fate bemee tee tle webaeatinne of Whe cite Aime tn this etibe st tant fee sngeatiatie ty gecgien wallet munya Maite ona escape abate test woe seen flaws the: Necerae, bess iad: ona Teesated altars sesiet Tey Than fon ect rte went Senet the celine ser anent fone tS hal ane Tien weve alt that wars past la Ne give grew ter tte at wank stil be Fuadesiiets anal wee hte raise hae ey nevis <tteat ane gable. wetmany Shite feat Ne Qk tes tine estadsictunart ef a fost thar with Tielye tae ake it peecsibole foo Nesre ohilfens. te sence ate bast in Clemente eduction. Weinte chad roar Die Washington and Brine qed Price, ot Hamgaon. ott tee Shen gneaBe wah Elo Vitisten Hest tah sad we coresinge sg Ieee, snipe ssitng towne ate commenticas therewith hes Rie te | Ponte vf thee Neston cetel eal sew ttnat tee Se Nal Gi rie Demnernta Moke tupolntinent, Feo The Wester Lintertatten 7 Verte, Cal, Mas a. Deo SX. Hat, AC prominent phesieinn and surgeon ef Tovette stl a aninber ef tae eget iso romunition at tie tsdatitabe Segre, Bote News Paces Tate teen “appainted tlic» Siocon Ina Dei canis cnbettsiaypst ee Te is repatted that the eighteen han dred colareg vaterc of Pachle “under the fenrtoas and able leadership of Lawyer W. Ta Taactivend aitmanibed af the Kepnblican manneets better recognition for the col: oped sate, which haw for inany_senre been ho asecestinanneds four Cie Mtoahiot ticket. and upon being notified that thee cud not reveive the recwznition demand: A thes foctued a combination with the Democratic nominom, wha were anceres Ail in the revent election, and Aw a rexnlt the Puchle colored eitizene are rejoicing hear the splendid recognition af this ery aide \@aieuian,, Vay Queen Winners, Mivttirews Mie 1 Waste Vaan Haren pte al Satebae aneeesane a the Fist Avreme MTS Zest conch att AL Sotig Was isin teak Ta thy wong otal A choir yoroziacn was peunteted be be ister Leni Mlvetstontek ated tess soared Hwee singers. The stent apni tee et ADU oss statist Mise Macy Hees agent AS paesttod at the ecgan PF - Sune Wath Selinst was Well gt etided be toa Wan, presilert vt thee Metehants: Necatcad Tank ware present intel tanneht tie Tete elise. atte sebieh We auudeessed ties sonal Me Corwite love kitul y concetteet ow net fis tyeeraten ont the: « feavely Its ace tel Whotes or the paste Wenites tee pat hits VIMO ae atectation: CGenrze I Datbek, ate sos any Gsiteneb nat ahd Mise Bessie Wertiit Galeare wen rdonted by the selew i atelewate atu dthernate to thes Motirsovers ise anamtty, "Walthasu Tae Bronk! leet oot ale Hated At keved at Mentigells, wit ets tie a twee weoks, Sacatian Wits edly witht fae damy partecqeted any delishatal tip with tie Hueter Tov: ie Osmegn Prides ated Satyntay ed Set weeks Miss Sco Vint Hatin woe ve surat ma Meo Any Tha doko Penta Warner i visiting at New Verh ith Mis dloseqy Coonklit hire teen aati a Mes, “duit Garter ae staushten Wisse, atten ec aistberalele: sick ieee sete cates ter att enn eignte by Saag Mie Gases Sieben aia!) Seseraeen EM Matt Woertier wont the wate in, te eat fet hel ast wry anid was enamel Menon af MAC che tpwertead STE, Mise Tertia Pinte wig seretad and te Seived Che Bibbs ateted by the Pastor. Thee tsi seeaiy Taide ates tae be mn: inbul toa thea seleny werk Aw ett Hertouminent will bes gion worn Dae Sudh"Uhinisdas betwen thss, ated the att nal Centeretee Net Susnkae t's mnt ig satfeet Wath toe What te cP. Nate? Haein Sows tal Reapana "Rested rie Nb Voit AGE it ate dee sae sie Siew ha at Se Pisce unions: Fort Kichmond Noten, Neste ME Seated sof Seas Vouk was dhe sect nat pagan eg. the ane r ABT Ae seek Cine, tie fr woe that seqinty quiets waned ty “Kote. deg’ sete Wee iikneed) MMe gunttion fer sane better tas Want Steet! Noa York, Ae Tietine Sram tens whe tas bee voy nord ta hee wot for" @uare than Ete weeks, SAI! utes tedng ate Mae "Niamte: Aemeteath diol” Monday after 4 Wllinews! wf inure cthan k. eare. Dating Nee ung sickness che was rcmnekatie i totes ia ite wax sue nf eetuinese, Ane foe neg aldo “eharmetet, "self aaetifetng Shae in ministering te the eames af the hte dauchter whlet Shi ratsed seh has teen Sand ati “yenmnine tere SleK Mrs Con Tinges. ine ng slaughter, sures iacmetru her ties he hae the egmialine Aa acne ot apeng eee bes THE NEWS OF GREATER NEW YORK. MANHATTAN AND BROOK. Step at Lobster Cottage, 1718 Arden Avenue, Atlantic City, N. J., 467-90, 8018 The Age New Phone No. in 8018 Words. A pretty wedding of recent date was that of Mist May Hirsch to Mr. Engelbrot H. Horrell, Thursday, April 23. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Erik Hirsch, a longtime friend of the marriage all repaired to Natalie's side where a magnificent luncheon was arranged. Among guests were Mr. Robert Lennard, Mr. and Mrs. Fountain, Mr. and Mrs. Abono Russell, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest A. Sorrell, Mr. and Mrs. Edith Fountain, Mr. and Mrs. J. Q. Jarauer, of New York, are spending a few days at the Wright Cottage at 225 West 90th street. Mr. and Mrs. J. Q. Jarauer, of New York, are spending a few days at the Wright Cottage at 225 West 90th street. Mr. Erik Hirsch left the city last week, after having spent an extremely pleasant social season this past winter, she will have few moths with friends at Long Branch. Mr. Lizzie Woodson, of 61 West 133d street, wishes to thank all the friends who have been a great help in her illness, both of church and society. On Saturday evening, May 10th, forty members of the Alpha Physical Culture Club gathered in their new gymnasium to celebrate the success of the last reception. The decorations were beautiful consisting of flowers, plants, flags and the club's colors. After the reception, the table, which fairly grasped under the weight of the extravate repast prepared. The supper finished, each member responded to the questions and announced that the shower baths would be installed the first week of June. This will fairly complete the equipment of the hand-cranked shower baths, some of his past experience in the form of a "story." The celebration then concluded, such a promising to do all within his reach, with the club the finest organization of its kind in the United States. Young A. Harvey Recognizing and Tailoring 4447 Bryant—adv. to 21:30m. Miss Harry H. Johnson and daughter, Miss Emily Gladys, of 1705 Drummond Hill avenue, Baltimore, are the guests of her husband, George Foster, of 227 West 40th street. Do not miss the plenice of the Manhattan Lodge of Elks on Friday, June 7, at Sutliff Park. The social event of the season. Mr R. M. Lee, of 215 West 29th street, adelaide, the latter part of the month and on his return will be accompanied by Miss L. John, of 215 West 29th street, Mr. John T. Finney, Jr., suffering at her home, 234 West 33d street, with them for the first few weeks, is slowly improving. R. F. Thomas, of the Hotel Macook, took an automobile trip to Keystro, N. J. and landed in Keystro at 150 miles. On the return this automobile was covered in Gore boots with R. F. Thomas at the wheel in the early morning. Mrs R. F. Thomas, N. J. Anchorage, Mrs Julia Anderson and Mrs. Douglas Thomas. Chief Edward L. Cotterell, of the United Democratic Party, took business for the organization. Clarence H. Hutchinson, of the United Democratic Party, George R. Cotterell, of the United Democratic Party, West 131st Street, on May 7, 1924 at 134th Street, on May 26, 1924 at 123rd Street, on May 26, 1924 at 124th Street, and on May 26, 1924 at 124th Street. Dr. McKinley the former president three weeks as Matter Zion Presiding Day in the Fortress, and at the conclusion of the Presiding Day in the Fortress, from the soldier, the law and Truth, which is the The Progressive club an organization of Saturday evening led by Mr. Hubbard. Thomas being the regular nightly night the sub was previously announced for discussion, and the club took up and handed in mastery fashion, resulting in the information. Resolutions cond of the late Mr. Nex Mondeau (meen) were passed. A senior written by him on this special subject was read and was answered. At the time of writing Mr. Mondeau was in arrest and health his death was confirmed to be his many friends and acquaintances, in whom he was highly revered. Mr. Immanuel Association met with gratifying reverence, is very encouraging to the making efforts to cheer the association affords. In the presence of a congregation which completey sympathetic to the needs of the congregation, W. Johnson formally set apart a chapter of the girls Friendly society on the Sunday after Ascension Day, led by the Right Rev. Lord Bishop of Lichtheld. After presenting each member with a medal and a medal of the National Society, the Rev. J. W. Johnson delivered a special text Axiil XII. 13.14. The sermon was pronounced by mong who heard it as a masterly one and an earnest Rev. Mr. Howard preached an excellent sermon, his theme being "The Duty of Christians to commit acts of kindness to the sick and the holy Baptism was administered to adults. The music at both services by the vested minister was well rendered. The Rt. Rev. Dr. D. Ib Green will visit this congregation at 8 a.m. at 8:30 a.m., the services being held at St Stephen's church West 90th street Broadway. A large class will Last Thursday evening the local branch of the Afro-American council held a meeting with the local branch of the charge. Addresses were made by Lawyer Atkins, Mr. Roscoe Conkling Simmons, Row W.H. Brooks and Mr. Whithey. The meeting was attended by the charge of the meeting Sunday, May 10. The annual concert of St Mark's levee is under the personal direction of Mr. A. Whithey. The concert will present the following all star artists: Mme Rose Lee Taler, Mr. Adler Mr. Adger, Mr. Bainley, Mr. Charles A. Wilson, and Mr. Gorilla. Mr. Charles E. Holmes of the firm of Farmer & Holmes undertakers has been appointed by Governor Charles E. Hurgham. The Sunday afternoon meeting of the Young Women's Christian Association, in their new home 142 West 250 street, was attended by the work. A most able address was delivered by Mrs. Lena Trout of Pittsburgh. Ms. captivated her audience by her publicity good and interesting speakers. The work next Sunday afternoon at a clock. Mr. and Mrs. William Lock announces the coming wedding of their son, Annu A. Eckhoff, Mr. George W. Williams on June 11. Broadchild children stock and Sibs gift of attention in experienced chef T A V obeis. locates in gratis Sny of children dishes from 2 to 10 in instant. New Brothers restaurant. Ed Sny stock. BROOKLYN Don't miss the athletic games and basketball game at Ulm Park, July 28, under the windows of St. Augustine's Chloe Guild. Hosted by W. Russell Winn and manager Andy May 16th. The Games are at M. George G. Hall, brother of Mr. M. George, took place from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Parks Avenue on Wednesday evening last year. Mr. Hall was well known in Flintshire as served on the police force in that area. He also served on the beautiful final pieces from the friends of the deceased. Interment at Evergreen Cemetery. The Rev. P. V. Gummis officiated. The skyscraper anniversary of the Upton A. M. Zoo Zooath school will begin Thursday evening, May 16, and end Sunday. The Bristol Bristol speakers will be held at the Bristol Bristol speakers' ballet singers of Williamsburg will take part in the program. Also, Rev. Renshaw will preach his first sermon evening at Ulm A. M. Zoon churche. Mrs. Sarah Burke, who is taking with her daughter Mrs. Robert, of 69 Tenopawassee, Mr. Walter E. Johnson of Brooklyn who has been reeling in Bermuda for the last two years for the benefit of his health, served on the staff of the severe operation at the Bermuda Nursing Home he is now convalescing and ex-convicted of. The Bermuda Whist Club and Masseyou played a series of games at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Watkins which the latter was by E. Gibbons, the son of 157. The first耐霜 won by Mr. Rewawan and Mrs. R. C. Oles, and the second by Mr. M. K. Oles, the son of the North of the Massachusetts. The selos on the Torquemate side were won by Mr. J. D. Watkins and Mr. W. Holton. After the耐霜 after which director was indulged in Muddy Young's orchestra, the耐霜 will be held at Fleet street church Sunday. Roy E. M. Jacques preached last Sunday evening. Roy Watkins pronounced the penance. The Zeno made a few remarks which are on THE NEW YORK AGE 1 HURSDAY, MAY 16, 1907. TRIBUTE TO MINISTER FURNISS Dr. Washington Affairs New Yorkers a chance to Meet Enjoy to Hayt. carrier where wore were laid for twenty. The descriptions were simple but attrace tive and the lifelike portrait of President Roosevelt, together with the symp- tate on the mined, beating down with struts on approval on the proceedings. An opining memo was discussed with keen best and appreciation, and theORKs of the Apollinaire's bottles popped with such vibration the instrument, as he招提 the organs were reached the flood of post prandial material was set loose by the Hon. Charles W. Anderson, Collector of International Revenue who provided as teet- ser with his wanted tenacity of phrase- sion description, new quantities of Biblical manuscripts, new quantities of Biblical manuscripts, most of which the "Old Guard" was most fortunately con- sented by a Governor P. B. N. Bookbook of Louisiana who returned to the apprentice with Dr. Purnell while the latter was a medical student in Wash- ington, and obtained the qualification which he obtained and diplomatic service. He also returned to the starting times of the last course of Reconstruction in which himself had played a part and announced his readiness to serve as a new member of the present. He abolished that no man is in the land also abolished either between the towns or spies. A. David B. Dutton Attorney, Lawyer of Bristol B. David B. Dutton address expresses his belief that being present and having a standing obliged to be early to attend the Rev. D. F. Wellington Bristol Attorney, Lawyer of Bristol A. M. E. entered into an arrangement with the family of the late Robert B. Dutton, with the family of Dr. Purness while he was in the pasture at Indianapolis. Then the host was called upon for a new remarks and in a speech he made he emphasized the necessity for the use of emplosion no progress or its opportunities rather than its failures and its depressions. Dr. Washington also told of the following emblem in connection with the apology of the late Robert B. Dutton was related to a high official of the State Department. When the post be become aware of the official charge of the records of the cannibal system was called upon with the highest record for efficiency in depreciation of promotion and the number of Dr. Purness, then counsel at Bristol was presented. Tans said the speaker was probably the first time that a candidate for the post was selected solely on Mississippi Forms responded to the call upon him in suitable phrases, expressive of his apprehension of the occasion. He also sought to retire some of the privates who had been in the Department of the Hartian Government and the frequency of revolutionary outbreaks. Perhaps the ontological gem of the evening was the impassioned historical outburst of the fully named Rosso Cooking Sims, who was the author of chapters of prose and postes of verse upon the host and the guests of the evening. Others, present, who contributed brief remarks, were Fred R. Moore, John R. Smith, James C. Thomas, Fredd R. Watkins, C.M. Hattery, Jerome R. Peter, Samuel R. Scotton, Anthony Mc Carthy. The evening closed with a flash light photograph of the company taken by Mr. Hattery, and all with a new inspiration for struggle and achievement. Astoria Notes. Mr. and Mrs. Webster Smith attended the tunneled, of Mr. William Washington in Brooklyn Monday and they A. J. H. McKinney in Greenwich Woolley, W. H. Green and Mrs. Elizabeth Jones, of Almond, Va. are visiting J. M. J. Madison. They are enroute to Saratoga. Miss Mattritt's Monde for Saratoga. Mr. and Mrs. Webster are on Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Madison Sunday. Mr. Eugene Shephard, who has been unable to work on account of a crushed finger, is now able to resume his work Mrs. Mary Lindsay of Springfield, is in the city visiting relatives, Mrs. Hannah Gillam is quite ill at her home on Shrewsbury street with pneumonia. The Afro-American Council will conduct a debate on May 23. The question to be debated is: Resolved. That the mental health of the man. Misses Harriette Shannon, Mamie Lennon, Josie Broderen, affirmative; Memes, Robert Day, Louis Domine and Edward Jones, negative. On Sunday the mental health of the man. B.W. Swain preached the annual sermon to the G. U. O. of G. F. Integrity Lodge. The lodge had as its guest the North Star Lodge, Household of Ruth of this and Emerson Lodge and Household of Rith of this. Joseph Wright rejoice over the arrival of a bouncing baby boy. A large delegation from Worcester attended Durya's funeral. Misses Bertin, Anderson, Ephrae Tolson, Bertha Storms, Grace Johnson, Mrs. Walter Scott, Miss Annie Barber and Mr. Charles Storms, Mrs. George Brown very suddenly called to New York Monday on account of the death of her sister. United Workers Realty Company Incorporated under the Laws of N.Y. State, Inc. in New York City, and Par Value, $5.00. Lovely workingman and woman should buy at least 5 shares before it advances to price. Cash or installment. Cash or installment. L.W. CORNISH, Trees. 1811 Broadway Phone 413. Col. Near 65th St. N., Room 218 HELIGIOUS NOTICE METHEL A, M. R. CHURCH, West 10th Street, between 7th and 11th avenues Sunday services—11 A. M. and 7:45 P. M. Holy Communion every first Sunday, M. Class meeting 1:30 P. M. Run- ning 2:30 P. M. Trayer Meeting 6:30 P. M. Weekly Meetings—Class Meeting on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday nights at 8 o'clock. Prayer meeting on Friday at 10 o'clock. No school. BEATS FREE. ALI. WELCOME. Rev. T. Wellington Henderson, D. D. Pastor. Fairstor's residence, 248 West 12th Street. At home from 8 to 10, A. M. The Pastor can be seen at the Church every day from 12 to 3 P. M. 10 to 12 years. MOTHIK A. M. K. ZION CHURCH. West 89th St. bet. Columbus and Amater- diam. Jan. avenues. Rev J. I. M. M. Pastor. Sunday Services: Prescribing at 10:45 A. M. and 7:46 P. M. Sabbath School 2 P. M. and People C. E. Prayer Meeting every evening at 6:15 o'clock Public Invi- ted. ST. CYRIAN'S CHAPEL, PROTECTANT EPISCOPAL 177 WEST 63d STREET. REV, JW. NO. JOHNSON, Priest in charge. Rev JW. NO. JOHNSON, Priest in charge. Sunday School 300 P. M. A CORDIAL WELCOME TO ALL. Joe 11 yr. UNION A. M. K. ZION CHURCH. 220 East 89th Street; Rev J. I. M. C. FENANDERS Pastor. Sunday School, 12 M.; Sunday School, 1:30 P. M.; Preaching, 8 P. M.; Holy Communion every third Sunday 3 P. M. Weekday years, Weekday 8 P. M. Class Meetings, Thursday 8 P. M. All are welcome. QUINADE The Ideal Quinine and Vaseline HAIR POMADE Manufactured by CODY & BERGER Pharmacists 470 Lenox Ave., near 133d St. FORD'S HAIR POMADE Formerly known as "OZONIZED OX MARROW" (None genuine without my signature) Charles Ford Point 153 E. KINZIE ST., CHICAGO, IL. Agents wanted everywhere. Just Remodeled and Redecorated 138,140,142 West Private Houses in Rear. Rents M C. E. H., 5 West 138,140,142 West 133rd Street Private Houses in Rear. Rents Moderate. Apply on Premises C. E. H., 5 West 134th Street 129-129 West 133d Street Handsome flats of 5 large light rooms with all imp steam heat and hot water supply. Call quickly, as th ments are renting very fast. TO LET 118-120 West 134th Street Elegant flats of 6 extra large light rooms and bath. CLARENCE E. HUTCHINSON, 5 W. 134 Handsome flats of 5 large light rooms with all improvements; steam heat and hot water supply. Call quickly, as these apartments are renting very fast. TO LET 118-120 West 134th Street Elegant flats of 6 extra large light rooms and bath. Apply to CLARENCE E. HUTCHINSON, 5 W. 134th St. Telephone. 2454 Harlem Mr. S. B. Stay spent Sunday with some of his friends at Newburg, N. Y. The funeral of Mrs. Diane Jones was very large and relative, a sieve, Mr. Robert Johannes. The provisions of her will have not yet been made, like Mrs. Butter-Is on the sick list. The collection of her personal collection takes up. Mr. J. Anderson, of Jersey City, spent Sunday in town. He gave the Mrs. Cobbock. He is carrying the collection of his collection stopped with their car to visit in this city. A birthday party was held in honor of Mrs. B. Stay's birthday at her home on Pine street on Saturday evening. Miss Curtiss received many congratulations and a number of valuable presents. The funeral was on Sunday and Tuesday in New York city, the guest of her uncle, Mr. Benjamin Meyers. MISCELLANEOUS WILL. rent reasonable to greatwoman a meetly furnished, sunny hall bed- room, 10' x 10' room, until until 10' m. ; reference exchanged. 122 East 11th street. may 9-14 TO LET—Nearly furnished large and small rooms with bath and all合居. Apply W. H. Hared. april 4t. 514 street. april 4t. TO LET—Nearly furnished room to all conveniences. 876 avenue, Brooklyn. WANTED—Cooke, chambermails, house-workers, laudresses, elevator boys, waiters and bell boys. N. F. Drew. 236 West 20th street. Telephone 1600 4t. Apr 25 4t. N EATLY furnished rooms to let. by the plboard if desired. Mrs. Henry Johnson. 611 st. avenue, New York city. may 2-8 m. O LET—Nearly furnished large and small rooms. Apply Mrs. Johnson. 20 West 133d street. april 1-4t. O SUBLET—Apartment of 4 rooms; furnished. Apply care of Mrs. J. N. Brown. Janetress. 47 West 66th street. OR SALE Small house in. Newark. N. J. on Murray Street near Broad Street. Price $1,500. rental $1,500. Address Richard L. Johnson, Custom House, New York City. ILL, rent reasonable to gentleman a neatly furnished, sunny hall bedroom; excellent light, hot water; elevator until 10am. Clus Williams, 123 Earl 110th street. WANTED: Ladies maid for small invidual Willing to attend in light housework country. Apply Zanzinger, 215 W 106th st. FURNISHED rooms, with all conveniences use of kitchen, R. L. Weight, 1479 Ber gen street, Brooklyn N. Y., may 16th. I O LET Agreement suitable for two three gentlemen. Manning, 132 W 536 street. WANTED: A middle-aged man to be head receiver man and manager in a new building. Manning, August 19 or September 13 must thoroughly understand the automobile business and be a partner with more than one make of ma- nufacturer. Address Brooklyn Lok 115, Attleboro, Mass. MRS. ST. CLAIR, of 625 Syth avenue, has a full term to run. I O LET Desirable furnished rooms Mrs. Brown, 2176 Old Roadway, near 133rd street. FURNISHED rooms to rent with respect to family, 110s Schemetady avenue, Brooklyn. I O LET New furnished rooms, 148 land in Brooklyn, new Mad mount street, Mrs. Jenkins. HOUSE TO LET 210 West 134th Street. In good order 210 East 134th Street. Apply to W. HANTHONY. 127 West 134th Street. CHARLESTON 8 youngest and best all accented room cook who has won a summertime cook-off. Apply to 8 Thomas Jackson. 29 Benafall Street, Charleston. 8.4 ENNISHED room good man or man and wire light housekeeping, heat and conveniences, privileges. 226 West 134th street. Near Eighth Avenue. Allison A Cottage and Laundry with 8 lots for sale, at Greenwood Lake, in Ster- ling Mountains, Orange County, New York Apply Mrs. Etta Lyncer, 191 W. 134th St. May 2-41 West 133rd Street Moderate. Apply on Premises West 134th Street opened at 133d Street ent rooms with all improvements; Call quickly, as these apart: LET 134th Street night rooms and bath. Apply to JINSON, 5 W. 134th St. Have You Wants of Any Kind? We will put them before the Readeras of The Age and the Result is sure. SPECIAL RATE POINT Two Libraries, or 14 words, 10 cents a line of 10 You can advertise anything positive assurance that it will of interest. Address, THE NEW 7-8 Chatham Square Under J. EDWARD WIN UNDER Wm. 2. J. SPECIAL RATH FOR WANT ADVERTISING. to Lincn, or 14 words, for 26 cents per insertion, 10 cents a line of 7 words for longer ones advertise anything you want in the Age with the france that it will reach some one to whom it will be Address, THE NEW YORK AGE Batham Square - New York City SPECIAL RATH FOR WANT ADVERTISING. Two Libra, or 14 words, for 25 cents per insertion, 10 cents a line of 7 words for longer ones. You can advertise anything you want in the Age with the positive assurance that it will reach some one to whom it will be of interest. Address. THE NEW YORK AGE Undertakers WARD WINTERBOTTOM & CO. UNDERTAKERS Wm. & J. A. QUINN, Manager; Avenue, Above 37th Street. New York 4641 and 4631, 38th] Telephone, 1955 Columbus C. FRANKLIN CARR FUNERAL DIRECTOR 350 West Fifty-third Street First-class Work, Prompt Services, Reusable and Reliable C. and Camp Chairs for Hire. 200 St. C. THOMAS ER & EMBALMER nth Avenue and 57th Streets AIRS TO HIRE Telephone Call 6414 Chains. TURNER & HOLMES Funeral Directors 208 West 38th Street 638 Sixth Avenue. Telephone: 1641 and 483 (2818) C. FRANKLIN CARR 493 Seventh Avenue Between 59th and 61th Streets 1000 WEST 59TH Be sure to address address, as I have no connection with any other Firm. marsh-ly Office, 310 W. 41st St., bst. 3 and 9 Ave. Residence 215 W. 40th St. New York City. Every requisite for Rural Fur- nished on reasonable terms aug 24.1y THE TRUE REFORMERS BURIAL CO LICENSED UNDERTAKERS & EMBALMERS is one of the cheapest and most re- tailable Undertakers' establishments in the State. We guarantee satisfaction and terms to suit all. Phone Calls promptly attempted to. 50 West 124th St. Tel. 1853 Harlem Branch 225 W. 62d st. Tel. 2001 Col. mch 31y EPS & BROTHERS, PROPS. Orlander L. Daniels FUMERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER 100 West 134th St. Fel. 1025 Morningside New York City Prompt Service and Moderate Rates. 10:31-1:31 H. Adolph Howell PUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER 21 W. 133d St., New York Good Service. Moderate Rate feb7-1y Bargains for Smart Dressers MRS. C. L. WASHINGTON FASHIONABLE DRESSMAKER and dealer in slightly worn gowns, taller- er dresses, and other outer wear. Gowns for entertainment a specialty. Sales private. Open evenings. 201 EAST 36th STREET, N.Y. Telephone: 833 Plaza. apr 25 13t 366 WEST 126th STREET Three rooms, range, tubs . . . $13.00 Two rooms . . . $10.00 21 LAWRENCE STREET Three rooms, range, tubs . . $15.00 Five rooms, range, tubs . . $18.00 Four rooms, front, range, tubs . $18.00 Small stores, plate-glass front . $19.00 nquire of janitor or M. MORAN, 366 W. 126th St. TELEPHONE 8100-8044 Telephone Call, 430 Bryant. Telephone: 3892 Harlem. TO LET 2 Doors West 7th Avenue, New York City Prompt Service and Prices Right THOMAS W. TURNER CHARLES H. HOLLAM jan 10 15 Bowne Oak and Devon Avenue Lady attendant at all funerals. Camp Chairs and Coaches to hire at all hours Dec 12-1yr. Telephone 2178 Column LADY IM ATTENDA> Rev. Robert Mount's services can be had for Solomon Funerals, Presching and Mariages, at all hour in the day a night. Rev. Robert R. Mont's services can be had for Sickness Funerals, Presbyterian and Marriages, at a hour in the day on night. REV ROBERT R. MONT Undertaker and Kenbalmer Rose St. W. 130th St. Tel. 5350 Harlem. Mar 7-8m vices of Rev. Wanwright cawn chained to the house. No day a hour of the day or night. Feb 7 a day. PHARMACIST 2251 Fifth avenue, corner of 180th street Reliable Stand For Pure Drums, Proscriptions and Fine Caller Artisan. Moderate Prices. Feb 21-8n F. G. MINSHALL PURITURE, CARPETS, RUGS Phonographs and Bicycles, Trudeau and Bage, Picture Frames made to order. 719 8th Ave. North of 468 St., New York Cash or Credit May 21 13 CLAYTON'S EXPRESS and Moving Vans 201 West 634 STREET Telephone, 1773 Columbia. Franks, Please and Furniture Carefully Removed B. Lee Clayton, Owner. F. C. Howlett, Man. aug 16 13 Election of Race Bishops Question of Meeting Would Lesson Tension and Advance the Church Interests—Resolutions Well Received. PHILADELPHIA, May 13—The 123d annual convention of the Protestant Episcopal church in the diocese of Pennsylvania, convened last week in the Church of St. Luke and the Epiphany. The greatest question that came up before this august body was the election of Afro-American bishops. What was considered noteworthy was that the champions of the cause of the elevation of an Afro-American to the episcopate were Southern men, the ones who convened for this precedent was the Rev. Henry L. Phillips, an Afro-American priest who has been rector of the Church of the Crucifixion for about 33 years, and as he completed his appeal the convention burst into a great appliance that fairly shook the building. When the question was presented, the congregation up to the dawn, upon which sat Bishop Whittaker. If there were any negative votes we never heard them. Dr. Carl E. Grammer read the report of the committee appointed a year ago to make inquiry into the matter. Bishop Whittaker was the chairman of this committee and was gathering evidence were Bishop Condijor Mackay-Smith, J. Thompson Cole, Ier. Henry L. Phillips, W. W. Frazier, George Wharton Pepper, Major Moses Veale, N. Duboile Miller and John E. Baird. The report emphasized the fact that the election of a missionary bishop would lessen the tension thereafter. The report, that to unpliff a race it must be trusted; that the question cannot be treated with diocesan resources, that is one for the whole church, and that the Southern bishops ask for such an Episcopal office. This was read by Dr. Grammer, chairman of the committee, in conclusion of the report, the committee convention by moving the adoption of the following resolutions as the summary of its conclusions: Resolved. First. That a copy of this report be sent to the joint commission appointed by the general convention of 1904 on the memorial of church workers among colored people, as the expression of the mind of the deceases of Pennsylvania in this chapter. Second. That the diocese of Pennsylvania memorialize the general convention so to amend the constitution and canons that missionary bishops may be consecrated to have jurisdiction over specified races, and lays before it the following amendments as legislation that would effect the kind of organization of advancing the interests of our church among the colored people. George Wharton Pepper disentitled from the report, as he was afraid, he said, that it would introduce schism into the church. This feeling seemed to be shared further and the sentiment was voiced by Francis Lewis, who said that the question was of such moment that he wanted more time. Accordingly he offered a subservient rejection that the report of the committee should be presented to the general convention as the findings of that body and not an expression of the discus- Two colored boys, sons of tribal chiefs in Equatorial Africa, were passengers on the American liner Westernland, which arrived in port on Monday from Liverpool. They were in charge of Henry Phipps, the ship's captain, who has spent twelve years in the dark continent. The boys attracted a great deal of attention among the other passengers, be branded on the forehead with a crown, a mark indicative of their mark at home. This is in Southern Liberia, near Cura Palmas, only a few days north of the Equator. They are boarded under the simaples of the cut off when he was struck on the head with a bale of hay. Thursday, was performed at the Pennyvania Hospital the same evening. Ellis was at work load and the nurse was with him and his teeth were locked shut upon the tip of his tongue. When he was taken to the hospital it was hanging by a small strip of membrane. Holding the almost perforated portion of the tongue place the finger, flaned it there with fourteen glitches. The Friends' Society has, for several years supported the work of the Day Nursery and Shelter for Desitute Women, at No. 716 Catherine Street. In this building a large charity is housed. Here any applicant from the street is given bed and food, that immediate aid which no often the deserted or bournese wife may afford, or the cause of the delays of "investigating committees." This help is given and then follows the investigation to see what other aid should be rendered. A bath, a wholesome meal, a clean bed, are freely here who asks, irrespective of color. Every corner is clean, fresh and wholesome. Sunlight and fresh air abound, for windows are many and large. The big building is built around a central courtyard and other modest ways. And in this same building four rooms are set aside for Afro-American children which are kept up by an endowment fund left by Rebecca White, a Friend. Here they have Afro-American instructors, and school is held daily. In the kitchen garden the little ones learn housekeeping; in the kindergarten they are taught mod; cling among the other work; and for pupils in the school they are taught in which graded classes meet. Two evenings of each week a cobbling class is held, teaching the boy how to patch and mend and make shoes. This department has its special rooms for baths also. The next venture to be fostered by a Friend will be a lying-in-hospital for Afro-American women, for the benefit of our nurses. J. H. GRAY. DR. WASHINGTON AND THE JEANES GIFT FOR SCHOOLS. Mr. Hamlet Seeka Information About It To the Edition of Tom New York, Auck. To the editor of THE NEW YORK AUCTION, The editorial on October 11, 1982, the Rural South in your last issue was a very good one. But it contained an assertion which surely stands in need of some proof. You said that "the money was secured largely through the efforts of Dr. Booker T. Washington," then, using this as a basis, you proceeded to erect an imposing structure of praise to Mr. Washington. We have seen printed copies of this bequest, but there is no evidence in it that anyone solicited or "obtained" this gift, Miss Jeannes made the donation of her own free will and put the disposal of the money in the hands of the presidents of the two largest schools for colored people. That seems to be all. But it isn't that I believe the statement quoted above is unprobable. That is not the reason for my writing here. I am not sure why it is seen the proof of it. Surely if it is true, it is susceptible of proof. And there are many others who will be glad to see this proof. So you will be adding to your own already great prestige and to our fund of information if you will furnish the proof editorially or otherwise when you publish this letter. Yours respectfully. New York, May 4. H. H. HAMLET. SOUTHERN EDUCATIONAL BOARD. Its Methods in Dealing with the School Work. From The Southern Reporter. The above clipped from THE NEW YORK Age puts many to thinking. As a Southern Negro engaged in the education of the race we would like to ask a few questions or for Norman K. that the Southern Negro educator have all along been left out of the meetings of the Conference for Southern Education? Surely, it cannot be assigned as a reason for our exclusion that the Southern whites would object to our presence. The better class of white people in the South do not object to educated and worthy colored men visiting their educational and religious gatherings, and to the story of the struggles and victories of the race and making known their educational needs. The intelligent Negro representative would have been welcomed even by the nineteenth Southerners of the recent Conference held in North Carolina had the management shown a disposition to give the Negro a chance. Since Negro representation and education of the Pinehurst meeting were realised, the Education Board inquire if that is to be taken as the complete elimination of the Negro from the benefits of the General Education Board. Is the poor Negro, in whose behalf the funds of the Board were largely contributed, finally and completely out of it? Is it the plan of this Board to extend little or no aid to Negro Schools common or academic in the South and to educate and elevate the Negro Board to educate and elevate the Negro Board to South by educating and elevating the whites? In view of the hopeless condition which now confronts us it is hoped that some one will answer our nests and satisfy us. From The Colorado Springs Enterprise. For many years it has been the custom of the Methodist Episcopal church, as well as the church, to discipline to make no purchase of property and no improvement invoking a large expenditure of money, without at least having half of the purchase money in hand for such purposes. This is a most wise custom, and it has acted as a check to those, whether minister or layman, who would plunge the people into a mountain of debt which they had afford to pay. The time has afforded a halt must be called upon any proposition to purchase property, without half the cash being secured in advance. Our people cannot, in their present condition, afford to pay exorbitant interest upon a load of debt which may keep them financial slaves for years. If people buy with half the money in hand the result is (1) They only pay one-half the interest. (2) They have a sufficient equity in the property as to be willing to pay for it. (3) They can get the best bargain at the cheapest price, and at the lowest rate of interest. Evolution of the Racc Voter. From The Rockland (Ore.) Advocate. It must not be forgotten by the candidates who are nominated to day in the primaries that the victory is by no means prophetic of like results in the general election. Every man must be reached and voted for or against. Much, of course, depends on the colored vote, which is no longer a fixed quantity. It must be reckoned with not in any gone days, when it was led, bought, or driven to the polls by constituted leaders for the colored voter now reads and does much of his own thinking, and is growing more independent, and is prepared to stand by the man or party that stands by him. This is as it should be. If the Republican party is to hold them, it must lengthen its cords and treat them as citizens should be treated. Eough. "Do you consider a chauffeur worth two hundred dollars a month?" "Won't the hot one I have ran away with, and you have my wife, old THE NEW YORK AGE: THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1907 And Senator Foraker Says, "Me Too" — Chairman Brown's Statement of the Case. From The New York Sun. CINCINNATI, May 8.—To-day's developments seem to indicate that Secretary Taft will receive the unanimous endorsement of Ohio Republicans for President. This endorsement will be backed by Senators Foraker andick, George B. Cox and his lieutenants, Walter Brown, chairman of the State Republican Central Committee, and all the other lesser Republican leaders who have looked to the Foraker-Dick-Cox organization for direction and inspiration. It is the purpose of most of these leaders to include an indorsement of Foraker for another term in the Senate and of Governor A. L. Harris for another term. How the original Taft boosters will take this second clause of the proposal is not entirely apparent. There have been murmurings already that the Foraker-Dick Cox people already are the street, and that Foraker and Harris must take their changes. State Chairman Brown of Toledo, tonight called a meeting of the full State Committee, the chairmen of the County Committees, the Republican members of Congress and other leaders, to be held at Columbus May 15. At this meeting Taft will be indorseed. Foraker and Harris hope to be. George B. Cox was the first to speak. There had been rumors from Washington and Columbia that Mr. Harris was looking to an agreement between the Taft and Foraker forces. Mr. Cox was persistently reported as the one conducting these negotiations. "As far as I am concerned," he said, "there is absolutely nothing to this talk. I know of no such deal and would not take part in any such negotiations. I have retired from active participation in politics and I am absolutely re-contacted to advise with friends." On being pressed for his views on the Ohio situation he slowly said: "I'll give you my views—my personal views as an individual and a private citizen—and then I want to be left alone. "In my judgment the time has come for the good of the Republican party that something should be done. We are on the eve of next fall's election. Nothing will happen. We will party party. If you will recall, two years ago we had factional differences in the party and our ticket went down in defeat. This, I hope, will not occur again. "Our differences should be settled within the party and we should go forward as one man, which will mean victory all along the line. Ohio has a great chance we will be great men the gaud and have great men now. We should take care of them. The nomination of good clean men for the municipal offices means their election, and party success next fall will be the foundation for next year's work. "I would advise all my Republican friends in Ohio to take the matter into their hands and adjust them with our interference by individuals or factions. It is my best judgment that this would bring both harmony and victory. "We must not forget that we must carry the Legislature next year to elect a United States Senator and get much needed legislation and must elect Governors and other State officers. I believe, in all Republicans to put their shoulders to the wheel in their several neighborhoods and see to it that none but true Republicans represent them. Our watchword should be 'Success for the Republican party' and to achieve this we should support Hon. W. H Taft for President, Hon. J. R Foraker for United States Senator and Hon. A. L. Harris for Governor. What about your personal differences with Secretary Taft?" "I know of no personal difference. There may have been some political differences, but they are things of the past and will not be permitted to stand in the way of the party's success. I would repeat, Republicans, let your watchword be 'Harmony and success.' My friends, I will be for Taft for President, Foraker for Senator and Harris for Governor." After Mr. Cox had given out his interview a call on Senator Foraker brought forth this statement: "I have just read what Mr. Cox says. I understand him correctly, he makes a specific recommendation addressed to the Republicans of Ohio as to what their action shall be in the convention of next year. I am not sure it calls for any response from me, but massasu as you seem to think it does, I will repeat that I do not want any political honors at the hands of the Republicans of Ohio except with their hearty endorsement. Therefore, if what Mr. Cox suggests and recommends should meet with their approval in one will support Secretary Taft. Editor Charles P. Taft, brother of Secretary Taft and the Secretary's political manager in chief, when asked the evening for his views on the developments of the day said: "Mr. Cox has taken a broad view of the matter. He evidently is imbued with the ambition to add another name to the list of candidates. His stand is broad and unselfish. We are satisfied with the condition of things." The seemingly sharp and quick developments of today are the result of course of careful, calm deliberation extending over many hours, if not days. The visits here several days ago of Chairman Brown of the State Control Committee, Brown of the State Control Committee, Monday of September 4th were of course, moves attending the solution of the most difficult and perplexing political problem Ohio has had in years. The much discussed question of speedy primaries has been settled to the satisfaction of all concerned. The Somotori question that was made a form of the rumple will now be settled probably without serious strife. Porturo, Ohio, May 8. In a statement issued to night announcing a call for a meeting, Walter Brown, chairman of the State Control Committee, comes out flat-footed for Taft. He has set Wednesday morning May 14th for a meeting to be held at the Buckeye Republican Club in Columbus. Besides the State Central Committee, the meeting is to be graced by the presence of the State Committee members, the chairmen of the various county executive committees, and the Republican members of Congress. The conference will be for the purpose of arriving at a definite conclusion so that the decision may be heard in record to the choice of the Ohio Republican the city for President and that matters may be of Pr. adjusted that harmony may be no Nationa. the position payd how the harmony end was and what his personal MAIL OR PHONE ORDERS RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION CHAS. STAUBENMEYER, Wines and Liquers, 794 9th Ave., Bet. 52d and 53d Streets Telephone, 1,777 Columbus Greenberg's Ladies' Hair Dressing Parlors MANUFACTURER OF HUMAN HAIR GOODS HOMES! HOMES! HOMES For Our People This is the style of house we build all complete for eight hundred and fifty dollars. We have a large office, and taking the opportunity offered them by the York and Jersey Mutual Real Estate and Improvement Company, by securing their shop tours in fields, by our people helping around and securing home. Every nation on earth is crowding to New York, and suburban towns, and if our goal is to collect this great opportunity, they will go my, in five years, that they are homeless. The Company has added another tract of land and flats in the city. This offer only for three weeks. Call on Dr. E. E. Jackson, Main Office, 12 Sixth Avenue; Branch Office, 99 Sixth Avenue; Property Manager, 99 Minute Ridge on train from Land high and dry. Many are buying daily Agents of this Company kept busy and more agents wanted. Dr. E. E. JACKSON, 99 6th Avenue Residence, 12 Sixth Avenue. TO LET My Flat—236 E. 85th St. Formerly occupied by white tenants, is now ready for occupancy for respectable Colored people seeking quietness away from a crowded neighborhood. Five extra large, light, airy rooms with bath, ranges, stationary tubs, hot and cold water, large yard. $25.00 a month. Janitor on premises, or further particulars from the owner. T. F. KAUGHRAN 120 West 79th St. Mayo 1:1 If You Desire a Private House you can get it by calling at B. G. HOWELL'S OFFICE 14 West 136th Street From 9 to 12 rooms, $75 to $05 per month. 3 to 5 years' lease. May 9: John B. Moseley 164 Montague St., Brooklyn, N.Y. REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE Brooklyn, Flatbush and Long Island property our specialty Easy payment apr 4.3m Neatly Furnished Rooms TO LET To nice quiet people only, with or with- out board. MRS. HENRY JOHNSON 611 Eighth Avenue New York City May 1st me The Douglass Cafe Mrs. Chas. H. Moore, proprietress. 102 West 30th Street Strietly home cooked food; quick service; moderate rates. Regular Dinner, 25 cts may 9.30m views on the matter were Mr. Brown decided the following statement as explanatory of all the mystery that has surmounted his recent movements: "While various party leaders were urging the wisdom of a primary election to be conducted by the State Central Committee, a member of that committee who might be required to assist in formulating the rules governing such a primary, selecting the judges and clerks of election, fixing the polling places, deciding contests and canvassing the returns, in arranging himself on either side. "Now that such a primary has been definitely abandoned I am very glad to cut an old aversion to the State Convention. Since the State Convention in 1905, over which Secretary Taft presided as chairman, I have believed him to be the logical choice of the Republicans of Ohio for the Presidency in 1908, and I heartily favor the movement to secure for him an unequivocal endorsement at this time. "In my judgement the meeting of the party leaders and joint committees at Columbia next week will result in a unanimous expression in favor of Secretary Taft." Said Harry R. Kirkland this evening: "Pleased to hear the news. There is still come on the tail end of the brind wagon to take the train. I whack at and compromise looking to the return of Foraker to the Senate." First Notary Public E. D Hatcher is the only colored man who was ever appointed a notary public in Montgomery county. He was given his commission as such to be Governor Corner. Among other alliances to be recruited, he was given directly, or indirectly given or accepted, or knowingly carried a challenge in writing or otherwise to fight a duel. As Well One as the Other. A young clergyman in a remote country district wrote, "last Easter time, to Bishop Potter saying that he was about to take a wife and asking if to save some other clergyman a long and weary journey he must and who would be happy to reply was marvelously conclude. It said, 'Could you bury yourself?' Washington Star. Suoessor to R. H. Bundy 107 WEST 398 STREET Hygienic Tonsorial Art, Vibration Message, Manicuring, First-class Artists. Popular prices. It absolutely cleans the head of dane drum, producing a heavy growth of hair that is easily molded and held in place failed to produce hair on a bald head Office, 95% Main street, East Orange, NJ 07020 Wigs, Switches, Bains and Pompadour made of natural hair; also made of combi- nga. Hair, Dressing, Manicuring, Sciss- Treatment, Facial Massage, Shampooing and Hair Straightening a Specialty. Com- mage bought. A Ladies' Dressing and Tailoring Establishment will be opened at Lady agents wanted all over the State to work for this Company. LONG ISLAND INDUSTRIAL ASSOCIATION 57 West 134th St., New York apr 26 Iyr. MRS. IDA WHITE-DUNCAN 19 Prescott St., Jersey City, N. J. HAIR WORKER. Wigs, Braids, Bangs, Pompadeour and Combings made up in the latest styles. Face Massage, Face Massage, Manicuring, Colored People's Combings bought. Mall orders promptly attended to. Branch Haven, Conn, Mrs. A. Henson, Agent. Mar. 14-13 C. H. KING and JOE YOUNG Successors to L. L. WILLIAMS Barber Shop, 143 West 52d Street. Hot and Cold Baths. Electric massage chair and Body Treatment of Rheumatism a Specialty Manicure in attendance. jeb 7-3mos Your Patronage Solicited. MACY RE Hair Renewer and Dandruf Cure PRICE 25 CENTS. It restores hair and keeps the scalp in a healthy condition. Prepared by MMR MASON. 198 West 10th Street, New York. Hair strattened, combings made up, from padonna, Braidla, Wile, and Manlouine. Agate Wanted. Date 14.38 MADAME PRICE Manufacturer and Dealer in AFRO-AMERICAN WIGS, SWITCHES AND POMPADOURS Intr Dressing and Scalp Treatment a specialty. PARLORS: 516 Sixth Ave., cor. Stat St. Apr 18-1yr Henrietta Bowman 24 West 140th Street NEW YORK CITY May 24 TAYLOR the TAILOR 172 Willoughby bly N. Grooklyn, N. Y. Invites attention to his new store of hat and Winter Wearies for adults. Proceeds and Overcosta. Make your money count of the Best Advantage Phone Call on TAYLOR the TAILOR 87691 feb 21.8pm Office phone, 6222 Cortlandt, Res. phone, 4633 Col J. DOUGLAS WETMORE Attorney and Counselor-at-Law Rooms 208.3 10 Temple Court Nassau and Beekman Streets Loans And Real Estate New York City sept 20 14 WILFORD H. SMITH COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW AND PROCTOR IN ADMIRALTY, 150 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK Rooms 905.67 6th Floor Damage Suits a Specialty. Tel. 5122 Col JAMES L. CURTIS Attorney and Counselor at Law DAMAGE SUITS A SPECIALTY 322 West 53d Street, New York Res., 59 West 91st St. Phone 666-611-1111 may 25 The OREGON 75 West 134th Street 1. Up-to-date newly furnished rooms; by the day or week; electric helium in every room; pool and billiard parlor attached. W. H. WILLIER, Proprietor, may 947 ```markdown ``` Cut out the following coupon and bring COUPON "This coupon is lig Stamps, no m or not." These stamps are worth more than the c look at the beds. E. V. KR Furniture, Carpets, Sewing Mach 603-605-607-609-611 and 613 NEW YORK ON THE W Annual Summer METROPOLITAN ASSE of DANCING MAST MANHATTAN CASINO, 1550 Friday Evening, Music by Prof. W. F ADMISSION, OFFICERS JAS. S. WILLIAMS. Exited Ruler JAS. H. ANDERSON Ex esteemed Loading Knight JOSHUA H. WILLIAMS Ex esteemed Loyal Knight HOWARD C. MILLER East d Lecturing Knight J. S. B. PATTEN, Reporter D. W. HARKER, Secs T. B. JONES, Jr. Assistant Secretary S. P. JONES, Treasurer D. W. TAYLOR, Inner Guard JANIEL GANT, Tiler W. R. BANKS, Chauplain 1906 Grand Annual Manhattan TO BE HELD AT SULZER'S HARLEM RIVER PARK 120th St. and Second Ave. waving coupon and bring it to our n SUPON "This coupon is good for Fifty Dimeps, no matter if the l or not." worth more than the car tare you V. KRA carpets, Sewing Machines, Pho 109-611 and 613 Ninth A NEW YORK CITY THE WEST Summermnigh METROPOLITAN ASSOCIATE DANCING MASTERS N CASINO, 155th St. a y Evening, June Music by Prof. W. F. CRAIG 1906 Grand Annual Summ Manhattan Lo TO BE HELD AT SULZER'S HARLEM RIVER PARK 126th St. and Second Ave. coupon and bring it to our store. "This coupon is good for fifty Gold Sav- ing Stamps, no matter if the bearer buys or not." more than the car fare you spend if you come in W. KRAUS Sewing Machines, Phonographs, Etc. 611 and 613 Ninth Ave., cor. 43d St. NEW YORK CITY THE WEST SIDE Summernights Outing POLITAN ASSOCIATION BUSING MASTERS CASINO, 155th St. and Eighth Ave. Evening, June 7, 1907 Music by Prof. W. F. CRAIG 85 Cents May 16th 1906 1907 Grand Annual Summernight's Festival Manhattan Lodge, No. 45 TO BE HELD AT ALZER'S HARLEM RIVER PARK 4th St. and Second Ave. ON FRIDAY EVENING JUNE 7th Nineteen Hundred and Seven Cut out the following coupon and bring it to our store. These stamps are worth more than the car tare you spend if you come to look at the beds. Furniture, Carpets, Sewing Machines, Phonographs, Etc. 603-605-607-609-611 and 613 Ninth Ave., cor. 43d St. NEW YORK CITY I. B. P. ORDER OF ELKS OF THE W. Music by New Amsterdam Orchestra at St. Pius X. TICKETS THIRTY-FIVE CENTS EACH NEW YORK S REMOVED 18 Chatham S NEW YORK We do all Sor- Work. New Work. Re- Charges :: NEW YORK AGE REMOVED TO Chatham Square YORK CITY do all Sorts of ork. New Type. Work. Reason- charges THE NEW YO HAS REMOVED 7 and 8 Chatha NEW YORK We do all Job Work. N Good Work. able Charges THE NEW YORK AGE HAS REMOVED TO 7 and 8 Chatham Square NEW YORK CITY We do all Sorts of Job Work. New Type. Good Work. Reasonable Charges TYPEWRITERS ALEXANDER, MacDONALD & GREENE All Makes Machines Sold, Rented, Repaired, Inspected and Exchanged. Typewriter Ribbons, Carbons and Stationery. 296 Broadway, New York City Phone, write or call. HOWARTH PHARMACAL CO. 1754 Amsterdam Avenue. Dept 5 NEW YORK apr18-4t JUST OPENED 1984 and 1986 PARK AVENUE, NEAR 133d STREET Two five story, triple flats. THE CHEAPEST Rent in New York City. 3 and 4 nice, large, airy rooms, and convenient to cars. Rent from $10 to $13. Apply SAMUEL A. KELSEY. Near 125th Street. 1984 and 1986 PARK AVENUE Two five story, triple flats. THE CHEA 3 and 4 nice, large, airy rooms, and convenien Apply SAMUEL A. KELSE Phone: 421343 Morn PARK AVENUE, NEAR flats. THE CHEAPEST Resi- city rooms, and convenient to cars. MUEL A. KELSEY. TH AVENUE, NEAR 133d STREET THE CHEAPEST Rent in New York City. ams, and convenient to cars. Rent from $10 to $13. L A. KELSEY. Near 128th Street APR 18,17 The Brooklyn Branch of the Metropolitan Mercantile and Realty Company IS NOW IN THE JEFFERSON BUILDING. 4 COURT SQUARE Flats To Let Two and three-room flats for respectable colored tenants only. Flats with all modern conveniences, $0.00 and $1.00. All surface cars one block and one block from Subway station. Opposite Fort Lee Ferry. Recreation Pier one block west. Apply to insurer on premises. TRUSTEES DR. A. KELLOGG Chairman H. A. Jones. Geo. Banks James H. Williams George W. Campbell Harry Phillips J. Frank Wheaton The accompanying illustration represents a regular $10.00 bed which we bell for $3.96, use brass scrolls and brass spindles, continuous post, enameled in either blue or green. Other beds, regular $5.00 beds, for $1.98. $7.50 beds for $2.98. $8.50 beds for $3.49. $12.00 beds for $4.79. $15.00 beds for $8.96. $17.00 beds for $6.79. $20.00 beds for $7.98. Only a slight advance if you want to purchase one of these beds on credit. RUB-AWAY Rheumatism and all Pares LAWMAN'S RHEUMATIC OINTMENT The Greatest Pain Allayer on Earth Instantly cure pain of all kinds, such as Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Toothache, Lumbar, Sedation, Sure Pain, Colds on Chest, Hip Pain, Stiffness. All pain will be without it; worth ten times the price asked. See the driptress or by mail. Near Fulton street, Browning Telephone 6538 Malvern Our plan is one of extended Mrs Stockholders everywhere. DRESS MOORMAN ST. 10