New York Age

Thursday, January 21, 1909

New York, New York

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Leading Negro Newspaper VOL. XXII. No. 17 MORE VIEWS BY JUDGE TAFT On the South and the Negro—Speaks in Augusta at Colored Y. M. C. A. In South Declares President-elect Advises Them to Become Indispensible Citizens Men of Transplanting Negroes to Another Country-Only Flag They Know Is Stars and Stripes AUGUSTA, GA, Jan 15 - In speaking before the Colored Young Men's Christ- ian Association of this city Sunday, President-elect William H. Taft made it plain that he will be the Negro's as well as the white man's President, and in unmistakable terms made it under- stood to his hearers that he intended to show a spirit of fairness to the Negroes of the United States throughout his admi- nistration. During his address Judge Taft deplored the existence of race prejudice and advised the Negroes in the South to make themselves indispensable; which, he declared, would be the ultimate means of doing away with race prejudice. Judge Taft's address in part You have your own destiny to carve out. I don't mean to say that you have not obstacles before you, and I deeply sympathize with your feeling with reference to the injustice that arises from race prejudice and race feeling of thoughtless and wicked men. I know how it cuts to the quick. But on the other hand you know in your hearts that there are in the South many noble white men who believe that the uplifting of the South is largely in the uplifting of the Negro, and he is the chief instrument himself to bring that about. "When you make yourselves industriable to a community from a material standpoint, there is likely to be a specification of unjust prejudice. The reason that the South can afford to have the Negroes transplanted to some other country to me always sounded like a like. They tried that in Mississippi they were only going to move the Negroes, not out of the country to Africa, but across the river. They had a not when they tried. So, of course, that is insurd. Negroes Must Be Workers. "But if the Negro should be respected he must make himself worthy of respect he must cultivate those virtues of providence, of industry, of thrift, which will make him respected as a 'labourer' as a farmer, as a skilled mechanic, as a contracting to the wealth of the community in which he lives and without whose and the accumulative net worth is impossible. "Now, my friends, I have surd all I ought to say. I only want to tell what I always want to add before a cold audience, that you are American. The idea of transplanting you is utterly aburd. The only flag you know is the flag of the Stars and Stripes, and you are of a race which has given up their lives and mourned the ground with their blood in defense of that flag and will continue to do so. Therefore, as the President of the United States, so be, if the Lord spares me until the fourth of March, I must feel that I had not discharged my duty in coming into this country if I spoke at all without speaking of the colored people, as an important part of the South, and as Americans entitled to the same earnest concern that I hope the Lord may give me to manifest with respect to a whole united people." Praise for the Y. M. C. A. Mr Taft also dwelt at length upon the advantages of Y. M. C. A work and illustrated his point by picturing the temptations and depression of Americans in the Philippines, and the help which the association was rendering there by affording wholesome ways of entertainment for the leisure hours. It was his belief that the Y. M. C. A had brought about in this country tolerance among the various religious denominations. I think a pretty good example of this tolerance is the fact that I am elected President of the United States; he remarked INDUSTRIAL SCHOOLS FOR OHIO National Society for Promotion of Industrial Education Waste Trade Schools Concurrent Jan 19 Immediate and definite authority to local boards of education to establish and maintain vocation and trade schools, and a commission to be appointed by the Governor to make a complete investigation of the subject is requested of the Legislature by the General annual convention of the Ohio Board of the National Society for the Education of Industrial Education to conduct a semester in the Board of Trade assembly room co-users educators and la- cations that the school sys- tle probably reused to meet the needs by training for the well as college Definite advanced steps in this presented by Superin- sion of the Columbus Hawley president of the Co- Federation of Labor, charged dearth of mechanics to specializing by employers. He pleased to give members of trades the same right to give certificates of qualification as are now given in professions by representatives of the nation. John H. Morgan, in his book *Observation and Factors*, behold these schools should lay the same foundations for technical education that are given for classical education. A letter was read from President Lewis of the Ohio Federation of Labor, and urged the movement President Roosevelt Names Negro Wilson's term expired last January, nearly a year ago, and the President, then ignoring the protests of the Florence business man and Representative Ellerbe, sent in his name to the Senate, and held them on the nomination. Wilson served on through the recess and now the President names him again. Representative Ellerbe has got active in the matter and has seen several of the Senators. It is practically certain that unless a cog shuts somewhere Wilson will not be confirmed during the administration of President Roosevelt. It remains, therefore, to be seen whether Mr. Taft will reappoint him. LOYAL TO JUDGE SPEER Negroes of Georgia Petition Congress Not to Pass Bill Creating New District. ATLANTA, Jan. 19—Because United States Judge Emory Speer has always shown himself to be a friend of the Negro, a petition has been sent to Congress by many Negro citizens of Georgia protesting against the proposed plan to create a new judiciary in the southern part of the State, which would mean the appointment of another United States judge. The petition "The undersigned, representatives of the colored masses in this country, do earnestly offer this our petition and protest that you will not pass the bill to create a new judicial district in South and Southeast Georgia so as to withdraw the largest colored population in the State from the protection of the Court of which the Honorable Emory Speer is Judge. "Like the true Southern gentleman, he has been from his youth upward just and kind to the colored people. When he was a young man as District Attorney in the Northern District of Georgia he prosecuted and convicted the night riders who disguised themselves as Ku Klux and cruelly beat many of our people in their lonely sinners because they had voted, and the Supreme Court of the United States sustained the convictions. "After his appointment as Judge by President Arthur in 1885, his twenty-three years of humanity to the people have been marked by no differences between the black and white. He has had no juries in his courts except men who give to all men their legal rights without regard to color. He has decided that the laws against peonage are constutional, and he has done all in his power as Judge to protect our people from these crimes. Many men of prowess in his district have been convicted severely punished, and put under their god behavior. If this crime is presented in it will result in the hopeless degradation of the colored man. Our race needs judges on the bench like Judge Spear who will allow us only our just rights. TWENTY ONE GRADUATES Movement to Improve Training School To Rules Half Written Dollars To Raise Half Million Dollars. You are one young colored women received diplomas from the Training School for Nurses of the Lincoln Hospital and Home on Southern Boulevard and 141st street at its annual commencement January 14. Robert C Ogden presided, and many friends and supporters of the institution were present. Vhitte R Ledoux, Ph D., delivered the address to the graduating class on "The ideals of Florence Nightingale as applied to present day nursing." Six of the graduates came from Virginia a three from New York two from Georgia New Jersey and the West Indies and one cash from Delaware Missouri Missouri West Virginia North Carolina California and Hawaii. As nurses trained according to the highest professional standards they will take up their work in hospitals and among their two people throughout the country. A hundred graduates of this institution have already been sent out to carry on such work. To monitor and extend this Training School and Huse for the Negro race as well as the hospital for whites and Negroes alike which is the largest private one in this city the managers of the institution have announced that an endowment fund of half a million dollars would be raised in the name of Lincoln on the grounds of his birth. Securities have thousand dollars have been offered to start this fund in the city and efforts are being made to secure the balance within the next month. In charge of this movement are Mrs Mary W Booth Mrs A D Inullard Mrs Arthur C James Mrs Henry L. Stromson. Mrs Samuel Sloan Jr. Mrs Frank H Platt and Mrs Samuel C Van Dusen. Samuel Sloan has been placed in charge of the fund in memory of Lincoln at 475 14th avenue. Linda graduates Ella Sudonne Kel Pamela Dino Hagty, Christine Louise Helene New Geoffantown N I Mar Ha Catherine Larson Augusta G Lone G Turner Grete G, N I Posee Viola Brown Washington Del Alice Jeannette Jordan Richmond Va. Angie Luna Pullins Augusta Ga. Anna Saunders Hamilton Va. Margaret Elise Green Richmond, Va. Continued on Page 5 AN AFRO-AMERICAN JOURNAL NEW YORK, THURSDAY IN FAVOR OF WOMEN VOTING this question, participate Celia Parker Woolley, Mrs. Linn, Mrs. Stewart dent of the club was many of the women in The Douglass Center NEW YORK, THURSDAY Negro Women of Chicago Taking Active Part in Present Agitation CLAIM RIGHT TO VOTE At All Municipal Elections—Interest in Lincoln Centennial Growing—Douglass Center CHICAGO, Jan 19 — The Negro women of Chicago are becoming interested in the question of municipal suffrage for women. Chicago is now in the throes of a vigorous campaign for a new charter and many of the white women have taken the opportunity to press their claim for equal municipal suffrage. Ap- FRE NEW offers a hand in the largest January 25th, all persons s This offer scriptions under NEW YO 7 and 8 Chathan Reliab FREE TO TH NEW YO offers a handsome GOLD WIN in the largest number of new January 25th, and ending April all persons sending in subscr This offer is open to a scriptions under this offer will not NEW YORK AGE 7 and 8 Chatham Square Reliable Agents wanted. FREE TO ALL! THE NEW YORK AGE offers a handsome GOLD WATCH to the person sending in the largest number of new subscribers, commencing January 25th, and ending April 15th. The names of all persons sending in subscriptions will be published. This offer is open to all. Agents sending in subscriptions under this offer will not be allowed commissions. parity for the first time the leaders it the women's suffrage idea have been awakened to the fact that Negro women can give effective aid in the agitation of this cause. In fact, it has became ap- port that without the interest and co- operation of the large number of wide- awake and intelligent Negro women the cause of women's suffrage cannot suc- ceed. The first meeting of this kind that has ever been held in this city took place at the Frederick Douglass Center, Jan- uary 12. The Center Woman's Club took the initiative and invited the re- presentatives of the various colored women's clubs to join in a public meet- ing in the interest of women's suffrage. Among those who responded by send- ing delegates were the L B W Club the Ideal Club of Englewood, the Phi The Wheatly, represented by Mrs L A Davis, president, and Mrs Thomas Pearson, the Deerhorn Center Club represented by Mrs G L Stewart and Mrs Haines, and representatives from the Cornell Charity Club Aside from club members the other women present expressed themselves as in- her hearty sympathy with the movement. During the discussion it was suggested that the Negro women of the day were much better qualified to exercise the right of suffrage than were the colored men when first emancipated. They have not only been better educated in school and college, but have had the added advantage which the colored women's clubs have afforded. It was argued that the discipline of club work and parliamentary training have broadened their views of life and quickened woman's interest in the larger social, civic and economic questions of the day. The intelligent discussion of this question, participated by Mrs. Celia Parker Woolley, Mrs. B. A. Davis, Mrs. Linn, Mrs. Stewart, and the president of the club was present, to many of the women present. The Douglass Center, attended last Sunday by the present of two interesting visitors from Boston. One was Miss Josie F. Jones, whom recently gained distinction by her clever work in the Boston School of Languages. A year ago she won the first scholarship prize in the form of a bison scholarship in the University of Paris. Miss Jones is spending the present year in Oberlin College and expects to go to Paris next year to take up the work represented by her scholarship prize in the University of Paris. Beside her evident gift for the languages, she also shows a marked proficiency as a pianist. The other Boston visitor was Mr. L. Benjamin, a well-known business man of the "Hub." While in the city Mr. Benjamin was the guest of Dr. and Mrs. Geo. C Hall. Interest in the Lincoln Centennial is growing apace in the city and State Every nook and corner of the great State of Illinois is to witness some fitting manifestation in appreciation of the great emancipation. The Douglass Center is to do its thing toward awak- CE TO A THE NEW YORK A dsome GOLD WATCH to the number of new subscribers and ending April 15th. ending in subscriptions will er is open to all. Agents s er this offer will not be allowed. YORK AGE PUBLISH n Square le Agents wanted. Write us a Reliable Agents wanted. Write us at once. using a proper interest in this centennial celebration. Mrs. Woolley has sent a communication to the Committee of One hundred having the celebration in charge, recommending that fifty thousand copies of Ball's Statue of Lincoln in Washington, D. C, be printed and distributed freely, and especially among the public school children. It is thought that the generous distribution of this reproduction of the famous emancipation statue would arouse a deeper interest in the things that Lincoln stood for. Perhaps but few people remember anything concerning the Spring Valley Rioters in Bureau County, Illinois, some nine or ten years ago. An interview with a Mr Watts A Johnson, who was the prosecuting attorney of the county at that time, and who succeeded in sending several of the rioters to the State penitentiary, shows how effectively rioting can be punished. The Spring Valley rioters, composed of Huns and other trash from Europe, made a criminal attempt to banish from the mines hundreds of Negro miners. When the leaders were caught, tried and sent to the penitentiary for a term of years it struck terror into the hearts of the other would-be maverals. Since that time there has not only not been any further attempt at violence, but the Negro men have had the best of everything in the way of kindly and just treatment and one of them has been honoured by election to the City Council and is now one of the most influential men in the body. The First Negro In Courts. In the year 1870 J. R. Salney, of South Carolina, the first Negro ever elected to the United State House of Representatives, was sworn in. BALTIMORE, MD, Jan 10—Republicans are jubilant because the Democratic party in this State is torn up over the disfranchisement amendments that some of the Democratic leaders want to have passed in order to decrease the voting strength of the Negro in Maryland. Since President-elect Taft gave LL! AGE person sending , commencing The names of be published. ending in sub- ommissions. HING CO. New York City t once. out a statement condemning such a course there have been nothing but disagreements in order. The State leaders of Democracy are more than worried over the disaffection amendment, and some of them are actually in favor of dropping it as a paramount issue in the fall campaign. The amendment will, of course, be submitted to the people, and it is already on record as a party pressure, but there is a question among the leaders whether it will pay to prepare the entire State ticket for the purpose of passing the amendment. This view is held especially by the city leaders, but the county bosses, as a rule, are red hot advocates of the amendment as the paramount issue. The county politicians want it in order to strengthen the local organizations, and the voters want it because the Negro is more objectionable in the counties than in the city The ring bosses have not forgotten that Baltimore city was responsible for the amendment being snowed under when it was before the people in 1905, and it is in this city that the bosses fear and anticipate trouble next fall. They fear that it will be a difficult task to convince the foreign-born voters that the amendment is a good thing for them, and they don't want to take any more chances than necessary of losing this vote, a large part of which is or not directly Democratic. Most of the county politicians are ready to risk everything for the amendment and let the party stand or fall with it as the case may be, but not so with the city gang and a few of the State bosses, who have knowledge and experience enough to know that the city vote is necessary to make the State safely AGE. The bosses also know that there are men in the party whose influence is worth having who are either opposed to the amendment or, at best, will be only lukewarm in their support of it. Those men were conspicuous by their absence at the "harmony dinner" last week, and their lack of cooperation in the amendment idea was the principal reason for their absence, although polite notes of regret may have been sent. Some of the leaders think it would be well for the State convention when it meets to take a stand that the amendment is submitted as a Democratic measure, but leave it with the voters to accept or reject it within their judgment, and to pass no criticism upon the man that does reject it. This will be regarded as a case of learning some thing by experience. The light over the amendment grew so hot in 1903 that a number of Democrats who opposed it went so far in their disapproval as to vote the Republican ticket. The Democratic bosses do not want a repetition of such action this year. They would like to elect their ticket and pass the amendment, too, and if too many chances are to be taken, then, say some of the wise ones, let the amendment slide, for the "Negro bugaboo" can always be relied upon as a "good issue." The Democrats have won in many former campaigns by the "Negro domination" cry, and some are of the opinion that the passage of the amendment would kill their most effective battle cry NEGRO ANTI-SALOON CONVENTION To Be Held in Atlanta February 26 Great Moral Movement. DALLAS, TEX. Jan 19—Following a movement started in Dallas, preparations are being made for the holding of an anti saloon convention of the Negroes of the South in Atlanta, Ga. February 26 The meeting is to be known as "The Southern Negro Anti-Saloon Congress," and it is declared to be the intention to make the affair an epoch in the history of the Negro race in the South The program includes addresses by some of the South's ablest men of the white and black races In addition to the prominent Negro ministers and educators there are many noted white men on the program. The committee making the announcement says. "We are determined to prove to our worthy white friends that we are as profoundly concerned in the great moral movement as any others. It is an opportunity for our people to give the world notice that we are on the right side of every question for the promotion of the public good." UNITED BROTHERS OF PRESIDENT Appropriates $10,500 to Pay Death Claims for Quarter. HOUSTON, Jan. 18.—The Board of Directors of the United Brothers of Friendship of Texas met at the U. B. F Hall in the Fourth Ward with the following officers present: President W F Bledsoe, of Marshall; Secretary F W Gross, of Houston, and Treasurer Joseph Nichols, of Houston. The secretary made the following report for the three months ended November 30. Receipts—For widows and orphans, $11,546.50, for Grand Lodge taxes, $11,595.75, for rents, $405.00, for the sale of supplies, $186.45, for interest on savings account, $147.38, for change of policies, $25.25, for home and business fund, $3.50. Total receipts for the three months, $13,361.23. A number of cases were up for consideration, but were disposed of in a manner satisfactory to all concerned. Before adjourning the directors appropriated $10,500 to pay death claims for the quarter. The commissioners, who have charge of the Home and Business Department, had a long and interesting meeting at the same time, and made arrangements to invest $5,000 or more in the near future. JAMES W. JOHNSON PROMOTED. Appointed Counsel to Corlize, Nicola- sanne, as President, Reagan's It. WASHINGTON, D. C. Jan 18 —The nomination of James W. Johnson, of New York, by President Roosevelt to be Consul at Corinto, Nicaragua, has been confirmed by the Senate. Mr Johnson is a brother of J. Rosamond Johnson of Cule & Johnson. This is a promotion for Mr Johnson in the consular service. ANOTHER NEGRO BANDMASTER. To Be Appointed to Succeed George F Tyrrell, Transferred. WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan 19—The War department announces that Chief Musician George E. Lyrell, of the Tenth Cavalry Band, stationed in the Philippines, has been transferred to the Lifteenth Cavalry Band (white), and ordered with that organization to Port Myer, Va. near this city. This is the first transfer of this kind made under the President's recent order, which looks finally to having Negro leaders of the bands for the four Negro regiments. As vacancies occur in the position of chief musician of white bands the white leaders of colored bands will be transferred to fill them and colored leaders will be appointed to the colored bands. In June last Elbert Williams, formerly bandmaster at Tuskegee Institute, was appointed chief musician of the Twenty fifth Infantry. A short time ago Carl Gungel chief musician of the Ninth Cavalry was retired, and his place, it is understood, has been taken by James A. Thompson, a Negro, who has been serving for a long time as assistant leader. With the assignment of a Negro chief musician to the vacancy created by the transfer of Chief Tyrell, the only white leader remaining will be W O. Thompson, now with the Twenty-fourth Infantry at Madison Barracks, New York Has Largest Circulation INDICTED FOR LYNCHING BOY Prominent Citizens of South Carolina Involved in Murder Charge State Authorities Are Active in Desire to Punish All Implicated in Outrage Negro Boy Put to Death by Mob on Pake Charge of Stealing a Mule—Son ex-Statg Senator Arrested FLORENCE, S. C, Jan. 19.—There is considerable agitation in this section of the State over the lynching of an innocent Negro boy in Forestville several days ago by a number of whites in which the son of an ex-State Senator is implicated. The State has taken up the case and has indicted a number of whites for taking part in the murder. The situation has become more tense by the publication of an article in the Charleston News and Courier under the caption "Murder in Florence," in which the paper severely scores the lynchers and calls them murderers of extraordinary malice and brutality. Arthur Davis, the murdered boy, bore a good reputation in Forestville, and was liked by all, except one man, who hobbared a grudge against him. The white man was not brave enough to attack Davis openly, but trumped up the charge of stealing a mule. Several white sympathizers were secured and Davis was taken out and put to death State Takes Up Case. That the Negro had been foully deals with was so apparent, State Solicitor Walter H Wells took up the case and had an inquest held. The jury was made up of twelve of the best citizens in the Florence and Hyman section and brought in the following verdict: "That A. Davis came to his death from gunshot wounds in the hands of three white men—L. S. Bigham, A. H. Fuller and Dan Hinds." The men were not present at the Burch, together with J. J. Koopman, served warrants on them. They were arrested and imprisoned. were arrested and incarcerated in jail. When Solicitor Wells arrived at the scene of the lynching he found the section of the county posted with warnings by Night Riders, threatening the citizens if they took any part in the inquest and convicting any one for the crime. However, no attention was paid to the threats. Newpaper Attacks Lynchers. In referring to the lynching the Charleston News and Courier said: "Unless the accounts of the killing of the Negro Arthur Davis have been grossly faked, and there appears no reason to suspect they have been faked at all, the manner in which the people of Florence county shall deal with his slayers will test their fitness to be entrusted with the enforcement of the criminal laws. "No charge is brought that Davis had committed the crime for which lynching is sometimes excused Davis had not killed a man. He had not assaulted a woman. He was not guilty nor was he suspected of arson, larceny or any other grave offense. One man accused Davis of cruelty to a mule, which Davis denied, and in his denial was corrupted by neighbors. Moreover it is said that Davis bore a good reputation If the half of this be true, the killing of Davis by a 'few white men' can be explained only on the theory that they are murderers of extraordinary malice and brutality. If a few Negroes in Florence or in any other county had masked themselves, visited a white man at night, dragged him off and with a few Negroes should, probably have been lynched as soon as they had been apprehended, and the lynchers would not have been seriously molested. "The butchering of Davis appears to have been one of the most atrocious crimes that has disgraced the State in recent years. If it go unpunished, common murderers, not lynchers, will have escaped. Lynching is unquitous, but these men in Florence should not be allowed to abuse the term. It seems that they cherished a private grudge against the Negro and slew him secretly because they were afraid to kill him openly." JUDGE TAFT AND BISHOP GAINER. How They Met in Atlanta at Bethel A. M. E. Church—Beth Large Men. ATLANTA GA., JAN 18—When Judge Taft entered delthel Church last Saturday to deliver an address to the Negro citizens of this city the first man he saw was Bishop John Wesley Gaines. The Bishop is a large man and the President elect and the churchman locked at each other with interest "I believe you weigh more than I do" said the President-elect. "How much do you weigh?" replied the Bishop with legal cautiousness. "Two hundred and ninety-five pounds," said Mr Taft. "I weigh 291," came back the Bishop, and he joined in the laugh started by the President-elect. When Mr Taft left the church he carried a big American Beauty rose, thrust into his hand by a Negro woman as he walked down the aisle Be ee RE aT Pe rere tera haa Ne NC ROM ERENT ROM TR TRUE RRR re Re eee ER MENTS RR ee el” Ne ATLANTA NEGROES |25203 3 ethcartis [a arte Sole om oat ef GEE) to nee t Be EE ime Ot thal have a senatat Pe tat it| 3) "AND '°331 WES’ TO LET HE, ‘AR: T, ‘AFT SPE, ‘AK forty year ato, xem, peorle "were not os ive a real spirit ¢f—I had al- a ‘ I WEST BO West 00th Street — Fa iene ada | ne neater ty a Ge | SMR STREET | sRamererea ctw De . : cent, of | white all the aid and stance ‘ At Bethel Church—Large | irt,stt 2am, 70m 22 | and lhe patiy due np TO LET Sie and Representative [after si case™ fa shy swe,them. considering the circum-| Nice Apartments of 3 and 4 large | 99 wits Net PORDAN B, re sht rooms Imnnov R S roar Audience Present, [iar degra wt cae | eee eae ee ene Re tnd hea ‘made’ the anbject of a bloods | of the great inellggeat boty of hae [ove $18 Per month. Well cont — war, this country to which your for Fre 'Sou ment body of white | Rept House. 208 and 210 East 95th Ff INDU: L tunes taust alwaye be attached was re-|™" im the South i + Apply Janitor or |“ ary Street ISTRIAL EDUCATION duced, op condition "of poverty ant eee JOSEPH LEVY & SON near Third Avenne es, strafghtened, clecumatancos that It was| Pref. Anderson Visite Pref. sfmme 389 Eighth Ave; To ‘LET Urged Fi of property to live, much less those who Prof Charles Anderson, of Palace Hall, * mane ae ; Ifged For Masses—Much Credit | had uo roperty thd no edypators, and | visited Prof. Mimme at his dancing nes |, Fine apartments: of 4 larg Dao Bishop Ones Por Blg| iets Gk Senate Pea] meson Pia eur 1808 | GAT dG WOW Sa | Tome etn mprovenent " tre’ tarming-—t ‘could 1) this night Prof. Mi . i Meeting tha farming —I could give you the ata. | thie night Prof. Mimms bad a large gath-| "TU" SA Tan tubs, separate toilets, &c. Well @ost important banquets ever held in the South was that tendered President elect Taft by the Ghamber of Commerc of the city of Atlanta, Ga , Saturday aight ‘The Ohamber uf Cowuerce is umipoeed of ‘the important busioess clement of thes city, and for reeks preparations: have becugomg ahead for this banquet. It bos veeu Reralded throughout te country as. 2 CE and taters banquet,” becouse of fact that the piece de resiwtuace wus Georgia opossum, a dish the lresident. leet’ had expresyd biwsrlf as being very In the preparations Tor the banquet, the president of the Chamber of Cou mere, Mr. Aen G. Clundler, consulted Bishop Wesley J Guines regarding w npc cial meeting fur the culured peuple where Spportunity would be provided. tor Mr tt to speak tu them during bis visit here. ‘The statement bas one throughs out the country that this arrangement was canceled wrserai dujys uguy by Mr Daft. This wan due to the fmt tha Tepresentations were mule w Me Ht tcheock, charrmun vt the Nati! GCommitter, to the effect that there was disqontout "among. the Negres Wher Bishop Gaines went to Augusta, Ga however, to see Mr ‘Taft and Mr Hutch cock in’ persou, the latter siniusbatels Femoved an3 ulyevtions hie baud uate. be cause matters a uot ber properly. pre eented tu Lim and Inause he had acted woder a misapprelieusion of the Fal facts. The Negro peeply of Atianta follow the leadership af such colored men. as Bishop Game-, Hey HL Proctor, Hon B.A. Rucker, Dr HR Butler, Dr Moses Amos atid ten of that stamp, aud this fact was snpresed upen the Presi dent-elect and Mr Hiteheock net only Bye Negro visitors who went to see Bt Augwes, Gut ales by tlhe xpecial committee tro the Chamber of Com merce in chai of the arangements for the Chamber of Commerce banquet Credit Due Bixbop (alnen The meeting at Bethel Church ae 10 o'clock was one of thr finest outpourings Of Well dressed, intelligent culuced peo ple ever gathered here ‘The President Alect received a wast hospftable welcome and spoke in appowtiative terms of the arrangements made for lnm to Reet the Negro citizens of Adantn Rishon Gaines has endeared himself te im by rea gon of his prompt we how in ai nuneine for Mr Taft to. xpeah to. the wilured people of thie crt The culated penple Fegret. the erraneons statements ent sit from here “The warn: meeption however, given by Mr ‘Taft ond bis praupt ne Acceptance of the wutitatien af the cal ored Beople. when be found that matters had not D properly represented to him and Mr. Hitchcock is pleasing to al) of Pime“prograta wus ay folows: Master of Geremgnies—Biahop W.°J, Gaines. Song, “America”—Bethel choir and congregation, lel by Dr WG Alexander Prayer—Rev H Ho Proctor Song “The Star Apangied Banner" At Glo Club. Introduction of Me ‘Txt WT Matthews. Adiress—Mr ‘Taft Rene diction Mr Taft was aceompanest ote Bas Bethel Church by Precntent Chateller ant the officers and ireetors af the Chen, ber of Commerce and Mayer Matter Seats on the platform were reserel for Mr ‘Taft's exeurt and the follonine committer — Bishops Wot Gaines © oS Bmith. HM Turner, TOS Fheper 1. H Holes MK Frakin Te FW Bowen, Preadent WOH Cracman Bre dent FT Ware, Preavient EW Lew President John Hope Dp TN Rese Rev, HoH Proctor Hey WIL Weaver Rev W (} Alexander, Rew ER Car ter, Rev P oJ Rrsant Rev JN Bosh Rev HP Canady. Rev JH Parmon Rey RV Branch Hen UA Racker Dr. UR Rutter, Dr T WH Siater. Tir LB Palmer, Dr J it Patter Profesen- D J Jordan, Professor © W Hill Rev BP Johnann, DT Howard Sr Smith W. Easles, WL. Johnson tT Too \ Hamilton, Wo oR Matthews. Dir JW Madienn, Dr Moses Amos GM Holmes Dr WF Penn. Thomas Coleman A 1) Aamilten, ER Rares AF Herndon HOW Pitts, A Graves Judge Taft's Remarks In his addresa ta the Negrace Ind Taft sid he was clad to be prevent bs lore auch an asembince “Bishop Gaines. Prafescar Matthews Ladies and Gentlemen «Toa vers etint o be here in thie yeewnee Tad rte mimetanese prevented ye frat Davina an Mpartanite nf mecting me selotedd f Show Fiisenn in rey vist tes Concern Thin ce thaveht wa erent ty fortone for ne Teahonid hinges esne fed toe cet to eaten aa wit camytnle In filing. te yoet A Tart af the sierrenehan af tow an fon in whese dean aprsant ia whine, pene pa i hives fetter te P Teste the th alas Wiietest et oh cade Sein: weub teak toe fe age ok repeat ovrupatty oe teas that a ane hive seq an tsi te ssitiee tease ne ae Lat bee Dieter be ant aed De . Pade bacee Mekespats Sad ale pte Ava an V Bere se pent | ml osm fie) ee ge . Rag oA) GN EAT RGR eC Rohe nadeian Te: geste | 2 ta Wee ted Wes Hh AE AG fe MMA oe tty copeseemmiiadls. ot Ze | owen aml arell in evens war Ta ann at testa Wea ese tntsha de, Wik a EG A ioe an hee a, tre UES OR fia: wn Sine eoac rage ela eae ow ol A gosh arvsnaeini d se We AW Know Stare ON we De : tonne tee SRS ty oe nel ae ge a Bats we teat cagcesah PE rite vp HUGENE re Ee ceieken ie cen a Wheaeauae S tadae Peak be are Cream 68 today. Look back to what You were forty years ago, Xour people were not five per cent. of them able to read and mite, “end to-day you, have roached a the figure of 60 per cent. of Uterapy among you, and you must cov- alder that the conditions, and the bard rove. jment hes been yoade, — Brougl agalnat, your will, put here In condl- tloa of alavery for years and years and then made the subject of a bloods war, this country to which your for funes must alwaze bo attached was re: m & condition of poverty an turaightened cjeumatencoe That it was almost impossthle for the witlte owners of property to live, much less those who had wo, property and no edygators, and yet under those circumstances you have fone on so that today a largo part of {a farming—I_ could give you the, sta. tistics, Is fn the hands of the colored people of the South and dotted over the South aro model places which show to you what can be done when you approach jour probleme with common sonse and a | determunation to recognize tho facts that stand before you and to meet those facts | with courage and bravery. ! Argument Does No Good, | “1 don't intend to discuss rare feol ing and race prejudice, because tho dis- casein of i und the argument of it Fuever dul anyhls ny good You must tecvguize the fate and in the face of “those facts, lease they cannot keep you Joon. you" can go down (oa brighter fond brighter fugure Every one of you Hkiews in Ine heart, heeuuse everyone knows noble, earnent, ay mipatietic white men inthe South, that your greatest cand and your greatest hope ik Im KSIn: Tathy und the hel af those white mea iwhe are your neighbors. And T thank Get hat iu the South dhece i develop: Hing fast evidence of a stronger and stronger ayinpaths with the effort to up IC the rave among the white mea of the South who. feel themselves responsible tur the whole Southern eisilizatiod Your Geople have faulty that grow out of sour Siistory and vont training. but the first step and tudienton in an amiprovement Of faults ow the knowledge that vou have then and when vu read in the sermons of sour own people, an the lectures. of dour own people the coll—T want. to all at eakd heenuee it 19 not cold—but the sympathetie Put an pespeet to Faste selves gtd the gecmsittes that present Themselves to von in Nene petth upwant, hie af the giratest steps poutettihe has been “nehieved Prulnen Hooker T Washington. “You have among von tit Whe de talit tothe: eutite | iuertean ianhnod Withont hang isbentuahe te ane van pant the [ifs of Hocker T Washington ated know whit hy bas dene sithout twing proud thit war ssuntre has. pro. Auewt stich ow uan sand Day at with but ndividuons distinetien because there Vrs ahouhitless wither that dewersa sim ther Tribite, oat it Das eae te tie per Sei ty knew him and to be mesoct fest wath bi and te understand. the Warvelons pete jtion Chit he has inte the futur of Sour tice and the neces shes that are peseited Gevow in win fing tigher plier an hfe Of ceanrse the Gest thing as education, “Phe first Thing aS fw give eery man whe as te fnint ciel richrs kiowlslge enoneh te Rnow what those rights age and hw fe Sau protect himself in thea OF eaurse Iris erert mistake either anwng white nen or colored men, tr think tnt bw Hinse @ an gete a university education. Merfore hie ie better than sther poople ern a better candiniag Whether the himversits education dors him emod wr not depends upon the foundation ef char actor that he has. You need among son, as the white mep need among them, uni versity education for their lenders "sour ministers who cantrol so much of sour | pabhe~vpinfons, gor poyeiclogss and | there ought to be a great many more | of them well educated in order to teach ! the race the rules of hygiene that In the camntts are to atten widely departed from. Ais you newt in all branches , WO the peefessian Meuse vet mast have Ieulere nmone Then. the opnartunity for siting them the be teduentieg that the we TE atarde nt that tea smenrararivels Send nan her Phe great led aft! Peat those whe are ta bee the atark ches neat wether und whan t Fhesdend fee the seat heels uf gunn re fee tel andisttiay «Trenton s Hosameamaty an which wt Ive ae a! Sy mi diapeneat ie te ite prayer and otuce growth vid germspeeity that when ton have carpenters thee shall hw haneat Stuotere wha know their erat that sour blacker the wate tar tinete and all Hie whee ensace in mantal Taber skilled cr ounskited abot have the fntellscency andl the knowledge to make them as govt Ss peserhle in rend ting the sereten fae which thee are to fersive mite! vam Iw neation “New ome frends Tdnd not come here prepared to make a gpewh And wave come before an aundienes of sete rin with a grest dea} of hewkation. hie “ism sone race Ie a musiral race nnd it te n-aratarieal ener and Tam. neither eae aL nor erntore al” Bat Vidi weant a veame here heraites 1 know the hard Hope in nue road TL knew eter anes | nn while that von fall an sont knecs nd pray to God fo pehece tan fran Yo tantene that son have and | belies hat tho earession sf eipmthy teat Mot tatee penpte along it helpe mie | fave Tit an thint wey reseinn af ein WHA Pwontf net have tan far a seonone Sate the thoneht af the aute tnt + stud oA eM EN ane lat qe ee mike Fete much of erent tint the Lapt Spoke te Mierfiow Meeting Treen wae auch am mew nonin’ fede of te ahnesh that Tuten Pate eA Cees keg thlaER alee & centr hdd lia a woe | ae he shred unk kare Tae Vere nee ne note ae Re ae i 8 eae esa Eeatbel Qiao Well coptiod Inde Taft ely Orr Asari TIEN SMe Snob Men as Son Cnealinn Sen Vor Deott Wenn What ther Say an Newee Se ee as Ye SO Og ' tage x he ak €F . we he be row. Boa Fe ean 7 RO AW aE fog Re OFAN WBE A eigen soe sy 8 OR oe dg URE pe aaa 8) A ' pee gh 2G ama Fae ee te etme nO a sie We epee nee elont | Baye ps Hla tee “Tam etd ty know and heheve that eyen thace men om ther heats don't believe that, that it comes rather from, a striking desire to say tht shall have a sensational gfect than ‘it does from a real spirit ¢f—I had al- most said—cruelty toward a race that deserves from those of us that are white all the aid and all the assistance and all the sympathy that we can pos- sibly give them, considering the circum- is came_here. And I know and you know that expressions do not represent the feeling of the great intelligent body of white men in the Somth.” ‘Prof. Audersom Vinita Prof. ‘imma Prof Charles Andervon, of Palace Hall, visited Prof. Btimme at bis dancing academy last Fridd¥, January 16. On this night Prof. Mimms bad a large gath- ering and everybody seemed to have en- Joyed themselves to the highest. At 11.30 o'clock, when they were dancing the “board walk, schottische,” Prof. Mimgs stopped the music and introduced Prof. Anderson as a demon of the “dancing art" He stepped to the center of the halt emillog, anq.gecelved a tremendous ovation, which lasted so long that Prd?. Mimms called for order, after which you could bear a pin drop. Then Prof. An- cee CC ae . ; se aS PS BES a: | derson proceeded to make a neat little speeth dedwated te Prof Mimms' lass, He soviin part * It was the only dance ing class in New York Cite on Frutas nights and was clad to sew it supported so Se Shimane Colt very ante Eeatitiel to Prof Anderson for his timely mmark« Without a deutt Prof Mimms’ Aendviny ts getting. t,he. as popular. as any hatl in Greater New York = Why Beubl nat it bee Here are thre reasons Rhy wie popular Fit, because Bt Fentmaliy hentml and eas ty reach from all parts of the city Second hecanse wt rea fine hall with an excellent dancing floor, nnd all the matern convene aneeare Third, because the wav Prof Mimma, assisted by Prof John Hf Banks, com slucta this clase ‘These reasons bring a larse crowd core Prutag ment tthe Taneuia. Sifunte Palace 127. Columbus avenue, between WSHh And Rh streets —— SEE ME POR QUICK SERVICE iP you eA oO. GUARANTERD Brouwer ng onor FOR CASH JOHN M. ROYALL | 30 W. 135th st. New York Phone 2171 Harlem jan. 7-2m0. * 4 70 West 99th Street! 3 TO LET Handsome apartments of Six large hght rooms and bath, hot water supply, all improvements Flats in excellent condition. Moderate rents. Apply Janitor or @ = CHAIS. SCHIERLOH, “TTA Wnth Avenue, near 52nd , Street jant2e —_—__.. 214 West 84th Street Near Breadaay Elegant apartments of 4 largo {light rooms and bath. All saproseuonte, except steam hoat Only beuse in tdis locality with | GGlored tenants Aten, — | 251 West 30th Stecet EF Aporiwenta ot 4 tren ight room| YR Apply Janitors on Premises ' san, 2129 ¢ ' 353-55 WEST 37th STREET Desieahle Fan 1 rote apartioonisy ae cuniamence, sly ad. toate Payatie Molt tunis 180 WEST oint STREET tier Cette wand Amis tans Aseniies Kesar bu acutack Ri gut te-omapatt ents ats) Path, spartime-ate auibarn tone tig, Ketvod evte, Marntle belt wuntily SIMON F OSSFRMAN, 30 Groaé Street EE et THE SMITH HOUSE 322 WEST 41st STREET Furedet ad rests penmrenomr and sain post Gat. suum rene endne mmptesn iene sade Pager tothe JW SMITH PROPRIETOR | Coolest Resort in New York Gity SEP A CO2) CORNER IN YOUR HEART FOR BE es Tol 6177 3a 3 ee “reels oe D Ane ine [sae Noo man “ ORE EAN rtonaans rene ice ig SMT BE ooutag ‘ue dra = MSE22Y/ don’t for. Oy CURT < esih SB me . = step in thy Keystone Cafe and Restaurant 206 West 37th St. New York First clase corals served by the day or week Poo! and billiard parlor down stairs, Winer and liqoors WILLIAM BANKS, Prop. oot 8-3m USES, LOTS and INVESTMENT PROPERTIES Can save abuver money end tate ot tie eee ten et mest de sat thle property for the amount of tones tiv visite to tmeet To these seekfrg good imvestments which are alsolutels safc and which. will yield a good per cent There is nothing more desirable than high class Property in @ good locality like Rahway or Plantield, No 1 Write for map and free tickets, SACOS GRIFFITH, 46 Stroct and Eighth Avenue ead tale, Re eee | Sa cae why 329 AND "331 WEST 3%h STREET TO LET Nice Apartments of 3 and 4 large $10 to $18 per mpnth. Well Kept House. Apply Janitor or JOSEPH LEVY & SON 389 Eighth Avenue ¥ Jan. 741 —_—_—_—_—_—_—_———— 343 and 345 West 44th Sire “Fins: ee a old fashlon- Fepiadre SO egUED pete ey W.R. MASON 5368 Eighth Avenue aa 322 and 324 West 370 Strest Nice sowituinne st sta rooms with gee tant Por aon apy Janitor or _ ‘W. R. MASON 556 Eighth Avenue jan at 142 and 144 West 28th Street Between 6th and 7tb Avenues Four large light rooms hand- somely decorated, hot water boilers and ranges, tubs, toilets, private halls and toilets. Cheap rent. Apply to MR. GRANT 144 West 28th Street yan 73 ————————S___ TO LET 304 West 69th Street Cok red tenants; hor iy reno- vate: light natty newiv paloved and eek 1 BIS a moet." Hareenerorements, Se Tent apartment 3 per moath. Janitor Dee 31 4 ———_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_— TO Ler Single or double room with heat, sunlight and airy, mcely furnished private house, all conveniences 217 West 134th Street dec. 31-3 | STORE TO LET 422 West 40th Street A doable windowed store ith living ‘apartments, Moderate reat. Apply Janitor, or JOSEPH LEVY & SON, ss9 Eighth Avenue janitat —_—_—_—__ Do You:Want to Buy a: Home? Eight Rooms and Bath All Improvements, see JOHN M. ROYALL s0 W.135th St., Now York $350 Cash is all that is Necessary [$e 410 West 47th Street TO LET An elocant Apartment of 4 large, high? rooms. mich ianrorase aot yf dates lel 258 West 47th Street Finn Stor and lvlug toma treet Jan tov g R. R. LADSON 412 West Sith Street. ans 422, WEST 40th STREET. Ric Oe wages i ioe apartments of |S. an ight Sout, My saath Hose | JOSEPH ILEVY & son, : 389 Eighth Avenue. | janleat oe. t —— | SO ae | 241 West 29th Street To LeT Fine apartmeote of 4 larce ticht roma gil tmpnrementa, bot water wupehe Tome $20 to $22 per month. Apply Jamior vr JOSEPH LEVY & son 389 Eighth Avenue | ‘a dalae aime \O’FARRELL’s ' 440 and 443 Bignth Avenne ‘Meas thet Street NEW YORE (4. FORMITORE, CARPETS, BRDDING, ETC ! Wovares ats“ ddsineate pe CUSH OR CORES S omane wevmarne JUST OPENED The Kirk ttnuse 118 West zoth street Near 6th Avenue Haodeomery Turminied tome 1 tay v4 week “Steam heated wt nite cit Geni premtonng es eueteerd, Als 0 won a. FLETCHER, Proprietor Mhoue 4215. Mad ton sons EAP TRE tel ME RRR rege oi ee : TO LET acewre rao SSeS Sis JOHN E. JORDAN ‘33 WEST tore STEERT. NEW Your REDUCED RENTS ‘a : -7O LET ee 211 and 215 EAST 88th STREET { By Fine apartments of 3 and 4 large light rooms, with open-light ski Inprovemenss, Tubs, Toilets in Hall and Slot Gas. rte Holi beautifally kept and always in first class condition; also Apartmenttia Apply Janitors on Premises on. mig in 208 and 210 East 95th Streat ‘near Third Avenne To ‘LET . Fine apartments- of 4 large light rooms with improvements tubs, separate toilets, &c. Well kept houses, Rent $11 to $15 per month. Apply Janitor on Premises or L. H. cooK . 123 East 97th Streetooussm | Reduced Rents To 138 to 142 WEST 133rd STREET oe 6 rooms and bath, hot water supply, Rents $23.00 to $25.00 pe month. “3 North East Corner of BROOK AVENUE and 164th STREET) Five and six rooms and bath, ranges and boilers, all light roonea] Rents $18 to $20 per month.e e 181 WEST 134th STREET : Five rooms and bath, ranges and boilers, Rent $19 per month, a North East Corner of FIFTH AVE and 134th STREET a 5 rooms and bath, hot water. every room private, Rents $19 to p24] 242 WEST 60th STREET q 3 rooms, Rent $9 00 per month. R 118 WEST 135th STREET a Four rooms and bath; Hot water. Rent $20 : = 8 EAST 132nd S ET f Four, five and stx rooms and baths, $16 to $22 per month 4 EAST 133rd STREET F reoms and bath, hot wtter supply, rent $18 00 per month. “q Apply Jamtors or PHILIP A. PAYTON, JR., COMPANY, aq Tel. 917 Harlem AGENTS. 67 West 134th St 140 West 19th Street sm tone TO LET Ni rt its of id three conma, without improvoments | Good’ alist borhood for working prope. Apply, MRS. RUSSELL Janitor on premines nov. $3m ce 1.8 WOOO, Presiden! juowas mLLis, Secretary | ‘LEM WILLIAMS, Treasurer New York Land : ° and Brokrage Co. lacorpora'ed Thirty-two mom house to lot beautafally Tbcated a few bl «ke fro Sob Street, Subway. Ope 1 room house to let. West 40th ‘Street all improvements. Bizteen room bhoues to tet, West 134th Street off Sth Aveauaall improve ments, “Apyly to 1. B. WooD 1431 BROADWAY Telephone, 1712 Bryant JUST OPENED 136 WEST 90th SIRKET Five rons aad tath bot water, rents 820 and $22, 58, 60 and 62 EAST lulet STRELT bot edieun and Park Avenaca ree Bye story trip) flats, # ravms and bath, bot water supply.all modern I mena. Katha heated. Rents’ $15 to Bs, aie! * 911 aod $19 WKS1 119th STREET Pour rooms and hath, yteam beat and hot water, Renta $20 to $23, ; 233 WEST [Sib STREET ‘Bix rooms and bath, #team beat and bot water, Ronts $23. 129 WEoT 184th STREET Biz cwume and bath. reat 819 and $23 S and 10 WEST I85eh STREEY Seren aad Might rooms nad bath, hot water, reat $29 aod $33. TWO WEEKS 1s and 170 WEST Hisch STRERT peer Four and Aye rooms 8 v4 bsta, hut waar supply, tiled balls, tiled baths, open pl renta $1n 0 $22 Two Weeks Free : eee 907 WEST Mith STREET. § Five rooms, Rents $18 and $19. Two Weeks Frea, 72 WEST 99tb STREET Bix rooms and bath, bot water, Rent $2! to $25 32 WEST 188rd STRKET Six rooms and hath, hot water Renta $20 and $22, 104 WEST 18th, S1REEA Five rooms and bath. roat $18 and $20, Apply to Janitor op premiiace or 4 NAIL & PARKER, Agents Tel. 417 Harlem 25 West is3srd 418 West 52nd Street . TO LET Nice apartments of Five large light rooms and bath, ranges, etc. Well kept house, moder. ate rents. Apply Janitor or : CHRIS. SCHIERLOH, 774 Wintb Avenue, near 52nd Street pols. ———_—_——_—_—_— HALF MONTH'S RENT FREE 345 & 347 W. 50th St. TO LET Pine appartments of 6 large, ligbt rooms and bath. Extending from front to rear of dwelling Well kept houses, Moderate rents. Apply Janitor or E. EAGLETON 164 West 65th Street dec 3-4t LT UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT 7 309 and 311 West 37th Street ' First House From Eighth Avenue 3 Steam heated, all improvements. Chgap rent... ~4 Respectable Families Only 3 These are the most modern apartments on the West si Apply to : Mr. Crittenden on premises J 632 4 West x31st Street IMPROVEMENTS Reote $¥ tw $1 Oue half month ¢ree Apartmon's two and throe conus handsomely decorated containia. tubs, tiilete, ete tally sew! rencented Ar ply danitct or POCHER and CO. 126 West 3qth Street dee 215 SUFFOLK, VA. Tis a sage af tae Seth tha tarent Posen Meee! caine weietiae ‘ilroads foam ap taney th oe eek ans Past ins, 10H invabnta see vine of the nafeat plage fe Festa ones i vail Virgina Late toon $1090 85m), bong fre 0 84 wr $3000, For fart formation wid nsaiiuanse,” Werte thie NANSEMOND DEVELOPMENT CO., INC. 623 East Washington Street, Suffolk, Va, 4 W. H, CROCKER, Manager 4 fa ‘aammbiemietsieietm 260 West 124th Street "TO LET Fine apartments of Six large light rooms and bath Single Flat. Apartments in first-class condition. Moderate rents. Apply Janitor or CHRIS. SCHIERLOH, 174 Wath Avenue, near, 52nd: Street fants a - Open for inspection, the finest new fireproof apartments handsomely decorated throughout Elegant entrance 2, 3. 4, large light, airy rooms, all improvements, ranges, hot water supply, tiled baths and open plumbing. Rents $8 to S16- See owner or Janitor, 214-16 East 127th St near Third Are jan 14 1831 Third Avenue Near (01st Street Apartments of 3 Houma, Tuba Gas and Toifor Kenta reduced te $10 Apply JANIION First Floor Front, or FEIST, 405 West 42nd Street jana io Modern Flats to Let. | 36 and 38 West 136th Street Tia Heh (law Motor Arartinent [usa oth ( ip ont fe 9 “aie aid bath! slang sites Rote $2 tert s yen meh 4 West 135th Street Fe semod Few rows and Bat Het ower aappie Pres Ube Ree 9 $18. t0 — 1, 13, 15 and 17 East 134th Street Teele! Me toot cae ant fake et fag $j wont IMRE STL S wis aavugwed Werme es Syne F SVMEPHIVAIE tare ee ye Lf yeas Apply JOHN M ROYALE os 30 West 135th St BASIL F. HUTCHINS FUNERAL AND SHLPPING UNDERTAKER In cane of death anywhere in the United Staten call Gees ta erranpe gery Gee Chapel Mtoceme” shun tad etepone any beara cht am dev Maw Ofce 730732 Stawant Avence Reece tober ston, was. ee Lelet te a S115 # tani J GORDON New York tunch Room Salted : 436 Went sO eet Wet saiemint 1 Ate ao Nem Nath ip Kavala Moet Disecta tiny ard otkes te lou FOR SALE ’ f se Home) ERG ER Tg ay Wien St meet fete Te me ey hn he ar SIs tere Seam Pe tenet tye oboe M A S'MMONS REAL ESTAIE UFr et 36 STFELIX STRFET GR DORLYN | The Webb-Draper Employment Agency Man removed trot 122 ath Aeeane te $05 SHO Asst tia 4th Steet temveninnt ta totend Fetccnme ae JUST OPENED 40.42.44 West 135th SURE ET Neate ve seme SCEAM HEATED SEQ Se ther ny eet bs SPH Hoth berets Nr wy wy Five Large Light Rooms and Bath Har t-omely Decorated, Cheap tenttn be atin wba Ait ‘ MR. JARVIS ‘ at No. 42 West 135th ¥ Metropolitan U. A. M. E. Church Bervival services go merrily at Metropolitan U. A. M. E. Church, and a spiritual awakening never before the church is in opening and making the retreat a success. Rev. Fernanders last week, in speaking of the general condition of the church, stated that there was complete harm to the church and that the congregation was particularly pleased at the work accomplished under his pastorate during the four years with the church. On Jan 10, the church was visited by the pastor, who was pleased with the work being done at Metropolitan church. Last Sunday Metropolitan suffered with the other churches in point of attendance. Rev. Fernanders prays at both services. Rev. Fernanders helps meet in Rev. Fernanders' makes an active part in all the church work. Mt. Olivet Baptist Church. Suffering from a similar interest in the other churches, the adult audience is considerably decreased at all of the times due to the weather. The revival pathways with unhated goal. Last Sunday at the morning service Rev S. J. Johnson the Virginian evangelist reached Rev Johnson will attend the service. He is present effective sermons and many are joined in the church under his persuasive power. Rev Johnson is being assisted by "Singing Evangelist" Rev Nicholls, of Elizabeth, I will depart the church, are joining in and taking the revival a success. Lincoln ordination will be observed under the prices of the B Y P. February 14. Roscoe Conkling Simmons of the view will be the speaker of the service. Mr. John J. Tany will preside at Lulu Robinson Jones the sopranist. St. James Presbyterian Church (Church. St. James Presbyterian Church in best 51st street, is one of the most in- stant churches in the Presbyterian connection. The church is doing good work along the spiritual and the communi- tial mission of the Rev. Rev. Burke Butler pastor is a graduate of Lincoln University. Theological School St. James He shows much ability as a leader in managing his church affairs, it is being rumored that the church building will undergo repairs in the spring. The church supports several young men in Lincoln University, the pulpit of Sunday the day the pastor. The Christian Education and Sunday School hold interesting sects. The Bethel Forum will celebrate Lincoln anniversary in February. Bethel A. M. E. Church. Last Sunday Rev R. Dr Ramson occurred at both services at Rethuel M. E. Church. The attendance was all that one could expect considering the statement weather. The usual service in the morning at 11 a.m was the best attended of all Rev Dr Ramson attended from the subject "Jesus of Nazareth Passeth By." The retreat at another space was manifest. A Rev Dr Ramson joined the church the afternoon at 1 p.m a special meeting was held for them. Dr Ramson addressed the press meeting "On the Making of Man." Mr. Glarence C. Clarke, of Denver, sang and articulated their desire to live a Christian life. In the evening the group again began the "Wild Guest Death" session. Two young men joined at the opening service. The revival will continue through the week and possibly through the month. Mercer Sent Baptist (bprsch Merry Seat Baptist Church The another effected the attendance to the greatest degree last Sunday at the Baptist Church. The revival is still going on with much zeal and earnestness and will continue through January. Last Sunday the pastor Rev Eppe preached at both services. The B. Y. P. hold an interesting session. The meeting was a praise meeting for young people to celebrate the coming of Rev Alts reports the same spiritual awakening from the revival of the other churches. He says he is particularly well pleased with the interest the young men and women of the neighborhood take the revival. The church will resume the activities in February when the R. Y. P. will resume the regular literary work. $^{1}$ Marks M. E. Church The fall gift in the day's attendance at all of the services was noticed by St Mark's. Dr Brooks occupied the pulpit at each service, preaching a his usual son. The day's service began with the early morning prayer meeting. The revival goes on with no interruption. Dr Brooks shows no strain for his arduous task of conduction of the revival. He says his only contribution is souls for Christ. The revival will continue through January. St Cyprian P. E. church Up in 63rd Street in the San Jose Hill street in St Cyprian Church of which John Wesley Johnson is pastor. Influence that St Cyprian has upon community life of the neighborhood field. St Cyprian Church nearer the institutional church than the church in the town with its religious life with religion. other features identified with the institution which is asserting an influence for good along the spiritual and moral lives of the young men and women of the neighborhood and city. Rev Johnson realizes that there are men and women in which he can work and women can be brought into the church, and as the result organized a well-equipped gymnasium where they may come and exercise, thereby keeping off the streets and resorting to other forms of nutrition not so successful. The young men have a basketball team, the gymnasium is the meeting place for the young men of the city where in good fellowship and harmony they meet for no other purpose than wholesome exercise. From the gymnasium the young man realizes that the next step will be to join the church, and the next step will be to join the church of his choice. In this nanny Johnson is doing dual work for the young men and women of our neighborhood. St. Cyprian Church is one of the youngest of the Episcopal missions and an offshoot of St. Philip's Church Rev Johnson's work commenced to the people of New York. He are all committees having for their air the betterment of the Negro Young Men's Christian Association. The first public meeting of the New Year for the Young Men's Christian Association was held last Sunday afternoon at Mt Olivet Baptist Church, of which Rev Dr. Gilbert is present, greatly numbering of young men from the association were present. Secretary J. Bell conducted the meeting opening with a song service, consisting of gospel hymns. Mr. Bell offered prayer and the meeting continued with the singing of gospel hymns. The meeting was held in connection with Mt Olivet Baptist Church, where it is an progress. The meeting was adjudicated by Rev S. L. Johnson, who is an effective address he told of the dances of young men leading lives of immorality and made a play for consolation to a nolder purpose, telling the young men that they must stop sinning against their God. Simon Rex Johnson, a city he has been impressed upon, lives life. He as an effective pastor and is assisted in his evangelistic work by Rev H H Mitchell of Eliza Beth N J Young Women's Christian Association It was a sad and as well as a pleasant occasion in the rooms of the Young Women's Christian Association in the local school, opening January 1st in local band and Women gathered to under Miss M. E. Granderson the retiring secretary a farewell reception preparatory to her leaving for the South, where she goes to teach in Spellman Seminary. Amanda G. Gaillard the principal to prepare and upon serving such an appointment and accomplished young woman as Miss Granderson as secretary when to the surprise of the association and her many friends she offered her reservation to take effect immediately. They provided without occasion the warm and coneiled regard with which she is held at New York among her large circle of friends was seen last Tuesday evening, when in song and诗 her sweet char acter was extended. The program continued with the work Miss Granderson and ended the association as secretary during her short stay in the city. Mrs. Linda Smith of Brooklyn presided, and in her address of welcome the praised and admired G. M. C. Brooklyn Y M C. A. addressed next with readings from Dunbarton. Addresses commendatory of the life and work of Miss Granderson were made by the following well known men and women Mrs. Frances R. Kessler, superintendent of Tug New York School of Tug New York Act Secretary Thomas J. Bell, Y M C. A. and Rev Dr. Ramson, pastor Bethel M. E. Church. All of the addresses touched upon the deep aggression Miss Granderson had made upon those in the hard times of Tug New York. The program continued with Mr. Dill playing another piano solo and Mime Y. E. Scott singing a solo. "Spring Is Coming," M. Venable appeared next with a selection Mr. Clarke sang a solo. Mrs. Ramson read letters of reverence W. H. Brooks of St. Marks. The program included with Mrs. Smith in choice were presenting a beautiful W W C A son specially designed to Miss Grand son Ms Smith said the Miss Grand son left with the Miss Grand son Mr Anderson responded in affective speech which touched her hearters. She told of her deep inter- est in the W W C A and hoped it would press as it would do a great de- n for the young someone left. New York last Saturday direct for Spellman Seminary Atlanta Ga., where she is to teach Among those present were Rev. and Mr. Ransom Mr. new member Mr. Thomas I. Bell Mr. R P Hamilton Mrs. Werner Mrs. R. Scott, Mr Wm Brown Mr T M Henry Mr Horace Varlock Ransomans Miss Grace Campbell R. Noodson Mr. August G. Pill Mr. Fuse Thompson Mr Clarence C Clarke Miss Ruth Batte, Miss Gullum Lincoln Baptist Church Last Sunday morning at the Union Bartlett Church the pastor was greeted by a large congregation to hear the inter- scription in honor of Sister Terry Jones. On Sunday School hold a spirited singing at 2:20 p.m. Dr P I Walsh provided a strong and well-served on "Fading in Leaf." An interesting week of power was held and a course last week and will continue throughout the summer. Dr P I Walsh at Nofolk Va. and Dr P I Walsh at dinner on Monday evening. Brooklyn Y. M. C. A. Noten. Rev Nehman Banton of the Clinton Village Congregational Church will speak at the Last of a Venue Branch of the WCC on a next Sunday, January 24. The meeting will be announced for last Sunday was postponed on account of the storm. A few opportunities to obtain cakes of all descriptions will be found at the Leaf Village Branch on Thursday. The cakes will be sold during the afternoon and evening and the Branch will be open for inspection. Mother Zion Notice Two masterly sermons were preached by Dr. M. Mcullen last Sunday at Mother Zion. Their thought and preparation are evident and Dr. Mcullen conducts a congregation service in the Sunday School united with the other services. All these all next week. Dr. D. Liberman 7 Bishop John Wesley Smith, one of Zion's foremost preachers, will preach at Mother Zion morning and evening. There will be a special reunion of the members under their respective leaders. Bishop Smith was formerly all Will Honor William H. Taft—Fredricker Dongings Post Has Installation of WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 17—The jovial character of President-elect William Howard Taft is recognized by the news reports from Atlanta anent the publication of "Teddy Bear" by the Rilly-Possum and certain postprandial utterances of the chief to be done. Those in charge of inaugural affairs at the capital have decided to procure the best of juviality and pleasure for March 4. A type of the quality of inaugural preparation is displayed by the advertisement of the presence of the British Embassy in Brussels for occasion. The St. Louis Exposition judges ranked this hand among the best in the world. It is now acknowledged as having no compers. Such tribute is but another recognition of the achievements of the colored race, and especially of the colored people of the United States. The Exposition deemed possible to unleash of the Filipino band, is a colored American, and at one time a student at the M Street High School of Washington. He is a native of St Paul Minn., and has graduated from the New England Conservatory of Music as well as the conservatories of the New York University. He deemed possible to service music from the Filipinos, because of his special qualifications. Capt Loving was chosen to direct the effort. He assured eighty old export native musicians, all of whom had little or no experience in concert works. They exchanged, however, their instinct to perform for master the new branch, and early showed possibilities of becoming famous. Capt Loving perceived his opportunity and developed himself resolutely to the task of developing his excellent material. The important result of his work was the powerful impact of his companion Mr. Philippe Gouverner Award of this impression, friends of the President elect have secured an authorization for the trip of the band from the island through Brigdener General Chance Edwards chief of the Bureau of Affairs. Private party of defrays expenses amounting to $5,000 incident to the appointment of the band at Washoe City. Why this expenditure? The playing of the band is said to be marvelous by all those who heed it at St Louis. As a unit the men have mastered all of the mysteries of music. Expression. Their product are purely liquid harmonies, a suggestion of tremors, and nearly half of the included instruments are roots. Instead of a large number of saxophones the Filipinos use four saxophones and two saxophones. The instruments are used for accompaniment alone, the second voice is carried in resemble strength, human voices or the pipe. The band can be divided several excellent orchestras and globals. This will be done while it is Washington. The price will probably be too high, or rather too expensive, the great mass of colored instruments resulting in Washington to have an festival to the cause of Capt Loving's constabulary. During the past week the U. P. Morton Relief Corps and the U. P. Douglass Post of the Republican of the Republican of the public installation Hall Capt J. G Max hand needed as installing officer for the Douglass Post, while Mrs. A. F. Crutch well offitted in the same position as the Relief Corps addresses wormade. In Valu, the retiring president of the corps, received as a memorial from the members a hand painted china loving cup. Prof John T. Layton sums "The Star. Spangled. Shining closing excerpts for the Douglass Brooks are installed as follows: Edward Brooks, commander; Hugh H. Denny senior vice-commander Christian A. Fleetwood, quartermaster Clemen A. Albert, chaplain, ace officer of the day Alexander, ace officer of the guard Officers for the Relief Corps were in stalled as follows: Sophie, president man; Nate E. Simon, senior junior vice president; Cary P. Thorpeon junior vice president; Cary P. Thorpeon treasurer Maldred H. Elish, chapman Mary E. Tucker, copilier Florence C Monsieur J. N. Leger, well known in foreign Europe at Washington, has res- presented Hattis here for many years. He is now to be succeeded by H. Pam- sann, former Minister of Education, fairs and a leader in the movement which overthrew President Neal Alves. Mr Leger resigned upon the deposition of the late president, Hattis. Mr. Green and wife of Cleveland left Washington Wednesday last for New York, where they were scheduled to sail for Europe. Lawyer they have returned to the school and the guests and Dr. and Mrs. Moorland Miss Mille Gale, a top supervisor in the absence of a John C. Nalle. She will continue to offinate in this capacity for parents and Merch. Im Lahd Chase Goldberry of Lunch burgers at the capital visiting relat- tions. The dark skinned queen Lilakokam group, is in Washington. She is apparently appeared before the Commission on Chants of the House of Representatives begging that the Government pay her £25,000 for her nupal crown lands. This is a low figure in relation with former demands in India, others the queen was accompanied by a beautiful and stately Hawaiian Princess Kalanganoa who is the wife of Prince Ionah Kubu Kalanti, delegate to Congress. andle, committee of one hundred members will soon be named to make arrangements for a reception to be held at the Metropolitan A M E. Church on March as a testimonial to Joseph Murray, maker of Ohio Artery. Arrangements at present in the hand of its joint committee of which Mr. Daniel Murray is The Power of Personal Contact was the subject of an address delivered by W R Griffin, the chief executive in Division II, the National Referees at their annual meeting holding his Friday meeting. Other speakers were R. Lee Matthew Mattes, Alice Tucker, Sarah F Lewis and Mary W. Ware were installed at the meeting. There were attended the attendance. a large force. Lyman B. Spencer is to deliver a special sex talk to men only who are members and friends of the branch of the F M C. A which holds the branch at True Reformers' Hall. His talk will be given on the night. January 11. On Thursday, Armstrong Technical High School Club under the direction of Mr. Ernest Amos, rendered several talks at the meeting of the YMCA at last Sunday, Mr. Iain C. Reed, district attorney of the city addressed the meeting in the subject, "The YMCA A. A. Agencies for Learning Crime." The reduction of crime among colored men, Mr. John forces colored actors as freeway drivers for the YMCA in accepting the submissions for a build in recently made a report to President Roosevelt in connection with two others commissioned for a similar purpose, Mr. Wendell P. Stafford and Mr. Robert C. In Law with many interested and with regard to similar conditions. The report simulates that with substantially one third of the population of the District those incarcerated in penal institution tried in alleged crimes by colored officers and eleven-thirds of those permitted for forcification are colored At Tammany Hall, Pentecosth Street near Third Avenue Wednesday Evening, February 10, 1909 Music by Prof. Walter P. Craig TICKETS. Boyen soating Grand Spermator $2 Brazen can be laid at Wine T. Hooper, 410 West 38th Broadway, 31st West 38th Street Street, and Dr. York Russell, S.Westwick, P. N. P, N. J. Hanneman, N. P. F, Wm O. Barber, vice chairman N. P. F, Wm T. Hopper assistant secretary N. P. F, Sol E. Eman, assistant secretary N. P. F, H. Brooks treasurer N. P. F, J. T. Johnson, assistant treasurer N. P. F, Dr. York Russell I. N. P. Harry A. B. Ailey P. N. P, Major Morgan, N. P. F, Edw M. Randolph N. P. F, Walter H. P. N. P, Thos. H. Lockery, P. N. P, Walter D. Elliott, P. N. F, David R. Lewen, M. P. V. James O. Storsall, Bro Wm Hanbury, Bro James I. Moseley jan 23 30 Clerk MEN'S CHURCH OF ST. DAVID'S CHURCH REV DR. G RIGTON Tector Will be held in AURORA HALL AT EBLING'S CASINO, 1858/81 St. Attn: Entrance at Eagle Ave., and 1558 St. WEDNESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 26th, 1900 W H Plood, president; J R. Hittleton, vice-president; T J. D Allen, assistant secretary; J. L. Bythwaite, treasurer; Rexonite Co. attorney; O. S. Sylvester, Bayne, W. Prifite, S. T. Myers, A. S. Boothwell, I. E. Ingersoll, An. Montovall, H. H. Smith, Jao Johnstrat, Dr. E. E. Rawlins, J. J. Boothwell the ratio in past lanceties. These fourteens colored. Twenty-eight are blacked out of a total of thirty-one compiled for larceny from the person, but grand larceny is equally divided among the races. There are almost twice as many whites having embazing records as blacks, and three times as many blacks. Obviously, by false pretenses, robbery the whites are almost twice as many, as the blacks. "The fair deduction," says the commission "desires to be that the crimes most common among Negroes are crimes of impulse or passion or petty thieving, while those among the white people crimes or cunning or larger thefts. The criminal instincts of the colored people are such as belong to the childhood of a race rather than such as require planning and deliberation. To those who believe that the Negro is incapable of dealing with the majority of manual training, the fact that so large a proportion of our prisoners are colored might be an argument against the introduction of varied forms of labor into the reformatory and perhaps an argument against the establishment of institutions the most skillful workmen have Negroes, and the answers from reformatory and prison officials which have been given to our questions upon this subject have been to the effect that shiffless and awkward specimens of this people are trained to train to competent and often highly efficient workmen. It seems little less than a mockery that members of the white race, in control of government, should declaim against the idle and vagrant character of the black people in the district (if were white), and yet when members of that race are arrested for leniency and vagrancy or vices and crimes that spring therefrom, that they should be shut up in narrow cells and given no form of labor whatever and almost no exercise in the community what reason is there to expect that they will be anything but idle and vicious?" The police report for the year 1908 is just out and those engaged in Social Settlement work are waiting to hear from our criminologists is to whether crime in New York is on the increase or decrease. Mr Frank Gaines, of the firm of Gaskins & Gaines, has instituted proceedings in equity against his partner. The two have been engaged in the restructuring of the company and may decide. The bill of complaint afflicts that differences have arisen between the parties which are irremediable. It is alleged that the court has been asked to appoint a receiver to take charge of the account. Gaskins, to account. According to information filed by attorneys Wilton J. Lambert and Rudolph H Yeantman, the good will stock, fixtures, stock in trade and loan belong from $400 to $500 per month. In the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, Lenore C. Hill has filed a suit for 15,000 against the Tenailton trainway Company. The complaint alleges that the company attempted to board a southbound car at Friendship, Maryland and that through carelessness she was thrown to the floor during severe injuries. Mr Frank Gaines, known Washington business man is suing the Arizona Urban Asphalt and Mining Company Miss Olive Jones, teacher in the Birney School of Augustinia, D.C. has just returned from a trip to Chicago, Ill., where she visited the schools and training institute. The Metropolitan A M. F Zion Church is conducting a singing school under the direction of Mr. J. T. Newman, with Mrs. Ann F. Hilliard, with Mrs. Sunda they presented Mr. W. H. Hackley, a tenor solist. The school is operated under the auspices of the chair. Under the auspices of Future Hope Fountain, No. 1647, the church is operated by the First Baptist Church, West Washington, of which Ivy E. F Ries is pastor, January 24, 1909 at S oclock. Short addresses will be made by Mrs. Sarah F Lewis, president of the board of the W R Griffin, chief of the True Reformers of D.C. Dr. Elmer E. Brown, commissioner of education, was invited to address the Home and School Association in the hall of the Normal School No. 2, at their meet meeting January 12, 1984. Dr. T. Vernon will visit Kansas during the month of February. He will return to Quindare University for a few days and also go to Kansas City and Topek. On Lincoln's Birthday, Fowler has addressed the Lincoln Day Club of Topek. Letters to memoriality, upon $500 bond have been granted to Mrs. Helen A. Douglas, widow of the late Lewis H. Douglas, the will of the latter matter been admitted to probate. Justice L. Melendez on January 13. Attorney L. Melendez King has charge of the matter. The Cuban resolution offered by Mr. Lasiter in the House of Representatives and acquiring its requisition, determined to give the Cubans another chance at self government has met with disfavor in the Committee on Foreign Affairs. The committee unanimously agreed that it would be a gross insult to the Cuban Government to allow the committee it was laid on, the table Mr Daniel Monroe, of the post office department, has undergone an operation for the removal of adenoids from his nose. Mr Monroe's looks have not been spoiled by the operation, and he is still in him. Mr Owen Taylor, A.B. L.I.B. and Mr Oliver Randolph, A.B. L.I.B. of Howard University, are publishing a short called the Washington American. If the youngster gets the proper nurture with these two young men at the helm it would be Ellen Johnson wife of Joshua Johnson, mother of Allen and Frank W. Johnson, and grandmother of Frederick J. Donglaz, of the Armtright Manual Training School, died last Wednesday night at some indefinite time. Her funeral took place Sunday from the Metropolitan Baptist Church. The funeral jubilee is being celebrated among the Methodist Episcopal Churches during 1000 in commemoration of the completion of three-quarters of a century of work in Africa and other foreign countries. President Roosevelt, Vice-president Fairbanks, Speaker Cannon and several Senators have participated President Gooseveil, Bishop Hartzoll and Crayton Craig, Bishop Hartzoll and Metropolitan M E. Church at which Vice-president Fairbanks presided. La Boheme, the new Washington dance class, announces a series of dances at Fisherman's Hall on Saturday evenings. Lewis Brown and William Jones are scheduled to manipulate the ivory box and the velvet cage at Smith and Harry Lee are the dancers instructors. Mrs. Mary Harris Amor, president of the Georgia State Union, W. O. T. U., has a number of public meetings scheduled in the churches of Washington and at the New National Theatre. She will appear at an event on Thursday evening, January 28. This is the only colored church at which she will appear The term "Musso lil" is the happy cognomen of one of Washington's most popular organizations. It is, in truth, an "organization" as its name implies, of the best musical and literary forces at the capital. It has been frequently held up as an exhibition of the organization not of an individual character for social purposes. Rumor has it that now and then the Muses and the Lists within closed doors have warm discussions, which is proper. We sincerely hope that factions will not dissolve the organization, and especially before it gives its proper form. Next week Dr W Bruce Evans was elected president, being opposed for the office by Lawyer J A Cobb. The election might have been turned by two votes. It has been finally decided to have a stag smoker at the Conservatory of Music on March 6, in which, of course, only men will participate. After a brief illness, Margaret Jenkins, sister of Hayswood Hicks, Mrs It J Collins and Eliza Henderson, died on Friday, January 15. She was buried from the Zion Baptist Church Abington Baptist Church The Branch Sunday School of the Abbassian Baptist Church, 61 West 134th street, Mrs Sylvia A Harris, superintendent is progressing along all lines. Their spendid Christmas program, together with a tree index with excellent books and other fine presents, gladdened the hearts of more than 140 children. Thus for fifteen new scholars have been invited to the school this year, making a total of 185. Our Candle Roll has taken on new life, with three new members, the total on the roll being thirty nine. They were provided for made from the tree. The pastor, Rev. Clayton Powell, made an earnest appeal to those who were not yet invited to the school, eight souls were saved and confessed Christ. Two other expressed themselves as having been saved previous to this meeting and desired to be baptized. Prayer meeting will be conducted Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. Monday and 6. by superintendent and others. Don't forget our mothers' meeting, fourth Tuesday evening of each month at 8 o'clock. These meetings have proved helpful to our Sunday School. Mrs Hartley, one of our leading white missourians, gave us an excellent address on "Religious Training for Children" at our last meeting. After the meeting a social tea was on joyful by all present. Mrs. W. Wise, president of the Women's Club and Mrs. G. R. Faulk, per superior agent of the Settlement Work of Brooklyn will be the speakers at our next meeting January 26 at 8 o'clock 61 West 113th street. All are welcome. REMOVAL S. LIEBOVITZ @ CO Have removed from 463 Lenox Avenue 693 Eighth Avenue near 343 Street Both where they will be pleased to accommodate both of their customers on credit, nov. 28-35 Girl Clothing Credit Late with allroadway house. Pur of all kinds made over. Repaired and redoed. Know alltheatre used. Fur hats a specialty. Mail orders attended to promptly. Oot.28-3m SAVE YOUR EYESIGHT Beware of buying eyelashes of peddlers or in department stores. You cure corn on your ear from trady made shoes but you cannot cure eyes after you have kitted them by dyed made hairs examined by mod-method. Eyelashes supplied at lowest s. 1. L. MERIN, D.O.B. Eyeglass Spec. 361 West Slat street Office hours 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. jan74t 11 a. m. to 7 p.m. Phone 1478 Columbus. It is conceded to be the BEST BALI ROOM ORCHESTEA in New York barring none white or black. New Amsterdam Musical Association (INOORPORATED) First Class Colored Musicians Furnished for all Functions GROUPLEVING 322 West 59th Street. New York Send all communications to W.M. A. BIEBR, Manager, 15 W. 185th Street oct. 20-28 You can Prevent it from getting worse but you can't Buy it back after you have lost it. Priceless is Eyesight A young gentleman unguess if this doctor is a child or for the sake of his own spot of the contempts was taking a young man such as an and the he is doing the while coping and be ones hurried off. What would it be to be given it after you have left it? A young man possesses an robably but doubtful it. I make it a specialty of save the right. Eight years experience in active practice in alternative medicine with two of the best EYESIGHT SPECIALIST in New York (since by appointment) Mr. Connolly Adams EYESIGHT SPECIALIST. 16 West 184th Street New York City THESE ARE POSITIVE FACTS Beautiful Hair makes beautiful, women. No woman can be beautiful without luxuriant and glossy hair. That's the reason YOU, who value beauty, should treat your hair well, and keep it in good condition with MECCOOROO HAIR TONIC, the best, perfect and only dependable remedy known you can buy for dandruff, itching scalp, thin, dry, lifeless, uneven, coarse Learn to Read I A Certain R CLIO SCHOOL OF 487 SIXTH AVENUE, no THE ONLY SCHOOL OF ITS KIND IN THE No life is prepared to fight its battles with YOURSELF. Appreciate your abilities, and to succeed, to avert deceptions, sorrow, loss exactly as we represent it charge the result CERTIFICATES GIVEN Reading day and SCIENTIFIC PALMISTRY. Free a Entertainments given for church and social application by mail or in person. ADENA C. E. MINOT 487 Sixth oct. 29-3m near COLORED SKIN For centuries scientific men have been tried facial whitening, but in a natural way. At I has discovered "Complexion Wonder" which is applied. The effect is not artificial. The colored cosmetics magical. Price preparations for kinky hair which exactly metallic, helps to strengthen hair. It costs The pomade called "Wonder Uncurl" k and "Wonder Uncurl" when used together the hair is too short, as "Wonder Hair Grow" as it rillers in the corn field make the corn makes the hair grow longer breaking and falling hair. It saves what hair you have and get more too. Three applications convincing. Try it, and prove these facts. Sold everywhere, 25c, 50c, $1.00 Send money order Meccooroo Hair Tonic Manufacturing Company, Office: 16 W. 134th Street, New York City Learn to Read People' You Meet THE ONLY SCHOOL OF ITS HUND IN THE COUNTRY TUTORED BY MEMBERS OF THE ACE No life is prepared to fight its battles without the knowledge this school impairs. KNOW YOURSBLP. Appreciate your abilities, and PROSPER. You need to know people you meet to succeed, to avert deceptions, sorrows, losses, pain. Take a course and if life be not to you exactly as we represent it charge the result to us. Instructions are simplified so all can learn, CERTIFICATES OWN. Hearings day and evenings in PHRENOLOGY, PHYSIOLOGY, AND SCIENTIFIC PALMISTRY. Free advice on How to Develop Personal Magazines. Entertainments given for church and socials at moderate prices. Further information upon application by mail or in person. ADENA C. E. MINOTT, Ph., B. M. S., Professor 487 Sixth Avenue oct. 29-3m near 29th Street COLORED SKIN MADE LIGHTER COLORED SKIN MADE LIGHTER For centuries scientific man have been trying to make dark skin lighter colored, not by artificial whitening, but in a natural way. At last the CHEMICAL WONDER CO of New York has discovered "Completion Wonder" which does bring a lighter natural color every time it is applied. The effect is not artificial The lighter coloring is natural The effect on the colored counterance is magical. Price of "Completion Wonder", fifty cents. The CHEMICAL WONDER COMPANY is the best friend the dark race over bad. It has magnified skin which allows people to be the "Wonder Comb" metallic hair to straighten hair. It costs only a little a life-time. The pomade called "Wonder Uncurl" keeps hair straight and pliable. The "Wonder Comb" and "Wonder Uncurl" when used together, will make any kinky hair dress well. If the hair is too short, use "Wonder Hair Grow." This is a liquid fertilizer for the scalp. Just as it stilkers in the corn field make the corn stalks grow, this liquid fertilizes the scalp and makes the hair grow longer. M. B. BERGER & CO. 2 RECTOR STREET Will send any of those "Wonders" for Read post-office order, or money. Inform appearance we will cheerfully write you will help to advance colored people socially. Women can be obtained at the fellow Lord & Taylor, Horn, Bimpson and Gawfood, Brooklyn—Abraham & Straus and际术 2 Rector Street, New York JACOB 588-590 NINTH A Bet. 42nd Building $25,000.00 stock of Furniture Will send any of those "Wonders" for 50 cents or all of them for $2.00 delivery free Send post-office order, or money. Information book free. If you desire to improve your appearance we will cheerfully write you without charge and promise that our "Wonders" will help to advance colored people socially and con mercantily. Agents wanted. Compliance Wonder can be obtained at the following places in New York.- Altman, Stern Brew, Lord & Taylor, Heem, Bimpson Crawford, 14th Street Store and Westphal, 38th Street. In Brooklyn.- Abraham & Strain and Butterman. All other articles from M. B. BERGER & CO. 2 Rector Street, New York $25,000 00 stock of Furniture, Carpets, Stoves and Bedding must be sold by February 1st We much vacate premises by that date Every article will be sold regardless of cost This will be one great chance for you to buy your furniture less than wholesale price, and we expect to be sold out by that date, under all circumstances. Come early to avoid the crowd. ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` If You Are Going to See a Clarkyman? Why Not See the Best? If you have already made a mistake, throw away your money and lost confidence through dealing with much-advertised and self-styled palmists and clairvoyants and their obsession with beauty and beauty and consult these wonderful mediums. They will tell you frankly your condition and what you may expect; if nothing can be done for you they will not take one cent of your money. Has not this honesty on the face of it? We will tell you more: How can I have good luck? How can I succeed in business or work? How can I make my home happy? How can I conquer my enemies? How can I marry the one I choose? How can I conquer my rival? How can I make anyone love me? How can I get a good position? How can I remove bad influence How can I control anyone? How can I take the mind close to me? How can I sattle my quarrel? How can I hold my husband's love? How can I keep my wife's love? We tell all and never ask questions. No charge if not satisfied when reading We do hereby solemnly agree and guarantee to make no charge if we fail to call your name, names of your friends, enemies or rivals. We will not give you any money, nor give your wife or sweetheart is true or false; tell you how to get the love of the one you most desire even though miles away; how to succeed in business, speculations, lawsuits; how to memory the one of your choice; how to regain your life; how to make all evil inflictions Diplomats hang in Parlors. Try Gonzalez' Hair Tonic. It saves your hair and helps to get more. Four applications convinces you. Makes Kinky Hair soft, pliable and glossy. PRICE: 25 CENTS Consultation 25c, $50. $1.00. House 10 to 10, also Sunday. Permanently located 21 years in Brooklyn 236 Bergen St., between Bond and Nevins, Brooklyn. Take Bergen Street car or Subway, and go off at Nervine street. nov 6-fm NEW YORK He- NEW SRR ARENA, JANUARY 2), 1909. 8 8 989. “ ai —_— er (An Afro-American Journal of News and Opinion, eS ——~PHERSDAT,-AROARY 21,127... Katered at the Post Office at New York ts Second-Class Matter, Subscriptions by mail, postpaid. OME yEan syseesenseceengere es SL60 MONTHS «ecsesccceceseesey 100 MRBE MONTHS 20000000000.. 80 Gn the United States, and Insular Posses- sions, Guba and Mexico, Me Canada $3 per year. To other for- Flan countries $2.50 per year, Published on Tbr of every week by Tus Naw Yous Ao Pabushing Com- PE Eres E Moors, President; Jerome Feteraon, Secretary-Treasurer. Ad €reas of the corporation and its officers, ¥ end © Chatham Square, New York “Address all lerters and spake all checks gpd money order parable Tax New foax Ace Publishing Company. ee TANT IN THE SOUTH. “S only want to add what I always grant’to add betore a colored audience, HEat' zou are Amorictne, “Eneresore. Prosifont of the United Blates, 20, to Bait the Lord spares mo until the fourth of Maren, I must feel that I bad Bot discharged toy duty 13 coming inte Gils country if T spoke, at ail without Speaking (0 the colored ‘people, a2 an Ghportant ‘part. of the South, ‘and as Americans Sotitied (0 the samo earn- Gat concern that l hope the Lord may ive me to manifest. with respect to & hole united people” President-elect Taft in Georgia, the heart of the Southland, speaks thus frankly his consideration for Negro epportunity and equal citizenship. Taft an the South, like Taft always ‘and everywhere, 15 the courageous and constructive statesman In language straight from the shoulder he con- demns race prejudice, expresses ins sympathy for the hard lot_of the Negro race, and declares his purpose to help the race. Let us say to the Negroes of this country. you can best help ‘aft remove the stumbling blocks of race prejudice and mjustice from your path ty help- ing yourself Let the next four years ef your life be years of honest and earnest effort. Respect the law, send your children to school, buy property. prove yourself worthy to_be protected in your citizenship. and Taft can the more easily help to enforce your rights. The next administration we believe 1s going to be the golden era of Negro opportunity. We want you to grasp it. @he South has not changed Taft. The South cannot take from him his inberited sympathy for and determina- tion to help the Negro race, ‘We say again what we'have said be- fore, Taft is one of the Negro’s best friends since Lincoln. PAY THE MORTGAGE OFF. A mortgage of $3,000 sull_rests against the home of Frederick Doug- lass. In the common celebration on February 12 of the anniversanes of Lincoln and Douglass, no more fitting memorial can be made by the Negroes ef this country than the payment of this mortgage. We wish to urge upon our people everywhere the need and value of such an observance of the day Only thus can you express in deed your apprecia- tion of the service of Douglass Only tus can you truly show your reverence for the name of the great Negro leader Collections should be taken at every Negro mecting Every Negro should contribute his mite Contributions sent to Dr Booker T ‘Washington, Tuskegee, Alabama, ot Tae New York Ace, New York, will we promptly acknowledged and for- warded. Pay the mortgage off z ——_- “LIMBO OF FORGOTTEN 1ts9TES." ‘The battle is on Like the little boy with his arrow going out to fight the battleship, ex-Associate Justice for the District of Columbia M F Morris has started out to repeal the fifteenth amendment to the Constitution Writ- ing in the Pex American Review for January th Southern jurist makes the startling discovery that the fifteenth amendment 1s not an amendment, but an “addition” to the Constitution, and consequently never legally valid Couch: ing his language i the tN tter resent ment of the defeated rebels he gives a rehash of artelated Southern lore about “white supremacy” avd “social equality" Deeply moved in tie pa triotie concern for his conntry’s future this champion of political slavery sees in the fast amendment a “perpetual source of irritation and annoyance to all true overs of the country” a “fee tering sere” to the white race a “at uation fraught with disaster” to the black race. . When, however ex Tustice Morrre says the “evasion of the provisions of the amendment hae taxed the ingenuity of the South.” he rightly accuses the South True alen is his statement that Mthe other cection of the country hae booked with camplivenee upon the effort to nullify" The South hae done but little else ince slavery hut attempt to devine means to keep the Negro in servile place But the Sosth hae felted utterly. Dwarfed in intellect Aiietes kn industry, her energy cruelly based. the Sonith to-day stands o m Bee pg. the, body politic, ‘ames eee oo commit wanton murder and are wan- tonly murdered; when the great South- ern industries, cotton and tobacco, are paralyzed m several States by licen tious bands of outlaws, rest assured, Southern Justicethat the Nation can- not always look “complacently” upon Southern outlawry By achievements and by a general progress, demonstrated beyond ques- tion to all minds not affhicted with Ne- gromama, the Negro has proven his Fight to an equal citizenship. For the South to set any store by this nice con- stustocat’ disacton of “amendment and addtuon” is simply to waste further time For Justice Morris to talk of “white supremacy” and “social equality” is simply to present again discarded academic rot. In the eyes of all progressive and unexcited men, as with President-elect Taft, the “repeal of the Fifteenth Amendment should be relegated to the limbo of forgotten issues.” ‘THE MURDER OF ARTHUR DAVIS. The wanton murder last week in Florence, South Carolina, of the unof- fending and industrious young Negro, Arthur Davis, by the son of ex-State Senator Bigham and his companions to the number of eighty-five, on the trumped-up charge of beating a mule, reveals the depths of Southern degra- dation as well as the falsity of the excuse of rape for lynching When white men will get together, out of pure malice, because they have the power, take out black men, known to be innocent of offense moral or criminal, and beat them to death, one may feel it his duty to call upon the Christan whites of that community to put down their vicious members But when the educated sons of leading citi zens reveal themselves as common murderers, such appeals are out of order—denunciation 1s useless The Negro can and need only stop an@ ask, What will the harvest be? Have the whites or the blacks of South Carolina suffered the more? As with the more than one hundred Negroes murdered by mobs last year, far less than one-half of whom were lynched on the charge of rape, the Negroes that suffer are the families of the victims The white community 15 forever marked by the -blot of blod The thousands of the members of the mobs have been degraded The hundreds of thousands among their families and descendants have been influenced How much Negro labor will now leave Florence? How many of the much-sought foreign immigrants will now avoid South Caroling? What en example has the son of Senator Big- ham set for the vicious and ignorant whites of South Carolina? The Charleston News and Courier may well raise the question as to whether “the peaple of Florence cam enforce the erminal law” Though the Negro suffers, a hanher Negro will survive The whites may murder innocent Negroes, but a de- graded white and a reign of poverty and vice survive Slowly but surely, almost unopposed. the Southern whites, with an inherted and increasing lust for Blood. are marching on in the chadow of the valley of death ‘TILLMAN IN TRE TOILS. Senator Benjamin Ro Tillman, arch and ancient enemy of the Negro, has at last come to the bar of his own ist judgment. Betrayed. and con- victed by his own words of attempting to defraud the government of much oser_a thousand acres of land, the “Pitchfork” Senates 1s now roasting and sputtering on the fork of the President's exposure Thoroughly re- vealed, Ins power on the wane, the na- tian as virtually cid of the disgraceful Eyure in its government, the Negro of hit most bitter and relentless foe Senator Tillman 1s not another good man gone wrong, as has been sant But Senator Tillman 1s a had man just found out Long has he been given a hearing because, thengh Munthe was Hhehevea to be “ruggedly honest Tre jing to cower hte tracks hw <pectacularly ‘ehsclaiming in the Sonate last year, Tis advertised part i the steal of gov eenevent fands he peve als tisnse lan bas own true fight 1 prec ed am) hase Aapecnte Deneutemg hes es partner sothe crime on the flee of the Sen te though four dave prespously yoined in there low and unbluthing efforts, Senator Hillman reveals himeelf a morales coundeel amd an unferhng aerate Accueig the Negen of moral and an edataal uterrinty Senator Tillman Could not pont ont a Newta en de peaved and let to all meal sense of feeling and decency Accneine the Negro as criminal this mean man st ting in the seats of the mughty pant to protect his countey wrens traitor to his trust uses hie hugh offer ty cheat hig fellow countrymen of their equal share of the pablo Tand habitually hreake the Inw of the ranking pris: lege to cheat the government of the pit tance of postage A poser of purity and intellectual ipersority, Senater Tillman stansds deep dyed in guilt A greatest af grafters, the most wicked of dema gogues, in revealing Tillman President Roosevelt has freed the Negro and the nation ‘Of & millstone about their necks, PRESIDENT LOWELL OF HARVARD. The Negroc® of this country espe- cially should feel pleased in the eleo- tion of Professor A. Lawrence Lowell to the presidency of Harvard Uni- versity. As the most revered and Greatest of American eteationtt—ine stitutions, Harvard has atood for equal opportumty for all. Upon that basis of “a fair field and no favors” the cream of Negro youth for over a gen- eration las gone to Harvard and proven the merit of the race. Since the days of the first Negro graduate, Prof Richard T. Greener, 1870, ex-Consul to Viadivostock, mapy ‘names written high upon her proud rolls of scholars, orators, debaters and athletes are those of Negroes. These names include uch students as Prof. Dubois, Clement G Morgan, commence- ment and class day orators respec- tively in 1890; Roscoe Conkling Bruce, class day orator wm 1902; Allen Leroy Locke, 1908, prize student and Oxford University scholarship holder, and such famous athletes as Wilham H_ Lewms, head of Boston's Naturalization Bu- reau; Napoleon B Marshall and Wil- ham C Matthews Worthy scion of a long line of noble friends of the Negro, Prof Lowell brings mtact to his new office the New England love of justice and hatred of proscription Thoroughly informed on political conditions and an unbiased quthorify on government, Harvard's mew head has been an outspoken and honest lecturer He has been eminently fair to Negro students, with a helpful and wholesome sympathy Jor their position Under President Lowell the Negro may rest assured that Harvard will wontinue her equal opporturity— that the educational draught to the top toe Negro youth im this country will remain, open DISCRIMINATION IN NEW YORK. “A persone within the furiadiction of thie? State abatt be ntiied <0. fal Sha Squat tigate and’ Srivitewes of inne Snag Hougen” batne houses, “barber Shope, theatres, “music “hails, ‘publ fenteyances,"¢h nnd and swater and st other ‘places. of public: accommode: fibn°and Rimuverbont aubjeet only t the conditions neg iimitations, estab i 3P as appiteabio auiie fc Mebeg Oy, daw tad ePateable alls St che law of 1908 We call attention to this New York statute under whose ample protection the Green Car Sight Seeing Company was recently fined $100 for diserimi- nating against a colored patron In future we are going to call attention from tame to tome to other imstances of its violation The date is far too late for respec- table colored men and women to be humiliated in public places. In the past discrimination has persisted be- cause examples have not been made of offenders, and because, to our shame, our public-spirited men have been lax and negligent. We call upon our citizens to accept no humthation We call upon our pub- lic men and women to awake’ Eter- nal vigilance as the price of liberty’ a a Hee ae deans, \evording to the news dispatches winch come to us, the Afro-Americans mw the city of Atlanta have not de- ported themselves in reference to President lect ‘Taft's visit to Atlanta “na way to reflect credit upon the race There 15 no city im the country where ss much money 4 beng spent for the higher educaton of the Negro asin Atlanta There 1s no city perhaps where there are so many educated strong leaders It does seem that of all these men with force of character, 1n- cluding college presulents, professional men and high ¢liurchmen, some one or ones would have been strong enough to have controlled the situation, to have brought about enough unity and peace to allow Secretary Taft to speak tw the colored people in an orderly manner without the disgraceful and neediess local contentions which have disgraced them, Tn all such matters: we must learn that individuals must sink their own ambi- tron, and will in many cases, in order ty serve the highest good of the whele Atlanta so far as the Negro clement we te conerned Lay not deported asclf an the manner that we had hoped What is the need of enllege presidents and college professors af they. cannot South stud tuations TE Present elret Late Sad deatdet ee Fey mn tes fut ante the Contes ty chlres 0 Ne Gee andberce the dealers an the comnts would have gotten together amt have verredd ues 4 common program that wouhl have been satisfaetory te all Ter one race am Atlanta begin to think about their action, EDITORIAL APTERTHOUGHTS fisis Romanos Sum Tam a Ro Han ane was Me preentest boaet af He Ramin The Gillet compliment pid wreatest enoaurgens nt ever given fy Negrae we theee wats are thate Ff Peecaber ees Tate t You ate The Somhwestern Chesan Adve tte coming to the defense af the wenn Neges quotes the New York Times ta the effect that the property holdings of young Negroes in Georgia had wereased from $14,196.25 in 18Rt to $27,760,219 in 1998, while the older generation had increased thelr property holdings from $5,183,308 to $12,322,003 af: papier yt Nea MA Premmneeneataer, to pecer eepeer for’ the Bhaeipeod, wet euppoie. We would remii® Oar contemporary that while Sgures do: not le, figures may be made to say almost anything — ‘That Pitchfork Ben should sputter —eentid-—-Aaproughly—done ashe roasts on the fork of the President's exposure is perfectly natural. Not to console, but to remind the dying glad- tator who never lost an opportunity to prong the ea alee ye measure so shall it be ma ‘unto you again” “Zeke” Moore, the Creck freedman and ex-convict by a decision of Umted States Circuit Court, Judge R. E Campbell, in Muskogee, Okla, regains session 120 acres of oil mine Rea rich Glenn Pool district and, 20 per cent. royalty from al ‘cofspany connected with the Standard Oil Company, will soon be a millionaire. Zeke was tainted, but taint for Zeke to be tainted more, Architect W. Sidney Pitman wins ‘out in a solid field of Caucasians and receives $2,000 as his fee for drawing the plans for the $85,900 public school building at Garfield, District of Co- lumbia Despite his famous father-n Jaw, Mr Pitman seems to be the archi- tect of his own fortune Tennessee has granted a charter to the Pythian Bank Trust Company of Shelby County, This bank, together with the beautiful seven-story temple of the Knights in New Orleans, show that the ‘Pythians are making initiations 1m finance somethipg harder even than the floor of their lodge rooms Fol- lowing suit, some of the older orders of goat riders are apparently taking notice The Farmers’ Improvement Society of the State of Texas, with a member- ship of 10,000. contemplate opening their second Negro bank in Fort Worth, capitalized at $50,000 Now. for a Negro organization to have two banks, and one with a capital stock of $50,000, seems pretty big, but let me tell you that the president, Hon R 1 Smith, 15 a big man among men Bishop C S Smith reports that | since the barning of the churches and schoolhouses near Albany, Ga, the white people have united with the col ored people as never before to rebuild them. May the good work go on, but an ounce of prevention 1s worth a pound of cure. William D, Neighbors & Co, of Chicago, is reported by the National Negro Business League as conducting a building and loan association, capi- talized at $100,000, and being one of the biggest and most successful real estate firms in the West Moreover. this Negro firm are neighbors to some of the shrewdest men in the business According to the last statement of the Solvent Savings Bank and Trust Company, of Memphis, Tenn, estab lished two years ago, the company has had total deposits of $80,041 42, and 1s wn a healthy condition. Until the bank chahges its mame we shall always assume that: ‘There are twelye Negro building and loan associations in North Carolina, situated in Greensboro, High Point, Durham, Raleigh, Fayetteville, Wilson, Rocky Mount, Littleton, Wilmington, Asheville, Newbern and Goldsboro. To note the building the Negroes are do ng throughout North Carolina one would think there were more than that / The picture of Levi Colburt. the At tanta Negro, run im so many papers as. the catcher of the Taft ‘possum. shows that the Negroes are indispensable not only in the industry, but in providing the necessities of life in Georma ae well ATLANTA NEGRORS GIVE THE LIE. ‘Biack Voters Bolitied to Routhern Ap- Preclation, anys Nouthers Josraal, “The Negro voters of Atlanta ure Sdehed ta ake auasetGin nee “The Negro voters of Atlanta are entitled to the appreciation of the pul-he for the img ‘sense of eutizenehip they exhibited yesterday 1 sgpporting Me Muskiow and the caute of goed morte Tic an evidence nf thee teeny an weds Mar heat element ot scr gusty fren halls the ities ot citizen ebay ate! + qeewera regard for higher cite ated Tomest adeale” . Vines hugh praise of the cototest votre 1 team Hoke Smith «tv wefan the Attista Ga Journal and apy iret we dreely after the recent mayoralty clehnen an that ety? his Tenrnal is he same newspaper whied nto the malian influence of Governor Simtle had been for months previa 65 the Auctewchnsement wf the Newen Isa November dwelling an the cite revel we tet From Negrs shonin ston Dnt froan Negra attenubanns at the pot Tt Wrought ant all the Fuvstir atgunars Yt the neceesrey dnt name nf Or white race the ungelialuhte wivean amd general unworthiness of the ty k man Yet when at came for the Seer ter each his lat vote hefure hevng ote franchised, the black voter allied him self spunarely with the ref sem elements and alted te efratinn free ser toon the deinkard who had heen Mayor for some Pime past Tf they were all that the TAurmal has pated them the cal ore) nzens of that city would have voted Bverwhelmingly for the defeated candidfe TE the Georgia Negra disfrarkhised now he has, at least, had another \chance to give the lie to the hypocritdy white politicians who, far their oh base ends, have so often maligned him and his entire race -- New Yprk Evening Pest Frederick Deugiass, L A hush te over all tho tooming ilets. Aba (hero ie pause, e Sroath space in ro ateiter A apie Seato une passed boyond the And apere that obscure the aun of tite nd ‘Bento agra, torn ~ Seemrerer ire~pecsing-rotrbee—aebieet Dorn, 1 tue woope for bin a mothers buraing Sho loved him with a mother's deopent Ho was her champion thro’ direful yen, ‘And held-her, weal ail other ends above. “Waan "Bondage held her’ Sleeding ts wat Ho jaised. ber, up,, and whlepered, Hope ‘and ‘Fruat mt On, Douglass, thou has passed beyond the ahore, But sti °tRy"voloe te ringing o'er the Thow'st taught thy race how high her bopss aay soa, And ‘bade hor wook the heights, nor faint’ nor fait. She wii pot fall, sho heeds thy stir. ving cry, : She knows iby guardian apirit will be oth, ang. Hung, trom beneath the «uaxten ing 704, She stFetches out her bleeding bands to' God! =Paul Laurence thunder WHAT THE NEGRO PRESS HAS TO SAY ‘The news that President-elect Taft will vlat ‘Little Itock soon alter his Inaugu: Patton 16 those gratiestoK [tewidek glen ing him one of the moat progressive citiew fo the country, we will show bm a clty that contains ‘the most thrifty ‘and ad- FEnced Negroes in” the” world.—The Mosaic Guide Doubtless all our readers have made golts a summber of good resolutions” for the New Year. “Add these: {shall lay axlde something fora rainy day. If not ‘a bome owner, I shail start to bus one. 1 shell keep my word: 1” shall he hoa ‘tat and teutbtul. "Tapall pay wy" debin ‘and “especially “my subscription for. this [paper ‘Thr Omaha Enterprise A white aaa goes into business, the fret thing hie does Ie to let the public ‘know where he's located, and will there: after keep bis business before the public by adverting A Negro man goes into busines, lie soon decides that everybody kaows bi aod where be ts, and. nine Umes out of ten be vite right down in lus store upon that decision, aad will go out “ot buntuess Looking for trade Et chauge Kespecting poll taxes, citizenship, citi ten rights aod that kind of thing, The Freeman avers that if there were’ {rom 10) to 2000 qualited Negro vote in Houston who were prepared to vote at the ensuing city election and the eubee- qurat elections io 109 that the Negros in Touston aa a class would be reckoued with and in the same way as the Negrocs Ia Atlanta, Ga, were inthe last city election. ‘To do’ this, however, it 1s nec: eusary to pay our poll taxes ‘now —The Peres Freeaan Fitting Memorial Proposed TT Nie ven Not Dear Sir Kandy permit me the Mery of Meese wat be ask vee fersonal witereet ant cae geet em real Ta Nes Vows Age an the bavepese af the marwere of Dine In Tspirat amd Plame te rave an et Aewment fund as a memorial os SUES anit Aah lance weg T de tke anetitntiance® whut the heme And teaming eelviol Co puters have al sorve een cunt wall sheave confine Tevcalety fr the Negen tace The method whieh hae heen adopted yn neler to anterser all elacere ts the free Arcteihurion of dime coin cases ol which Tam sending you a few with the eter which accompanies them 1 fape te hee the pleatute at weet {ing you on Thursday, the 14th inst, when graduating exercises for a class af twenty-one nurses will be held in the chapel at three o'clock. I would ask, alto, that you will send a re porter for Tue Ace, a paper which as the largest circulation among col- ered people throughout the country. Me Raber t Onden nil gresule- The ‘managers will appreciate and thaik you very warmly for any assistance you will give them.” Yours ‘sincerely. Mary W. Boors, President Jan 14. 1909 ‘Tribute to Pythian Temple Builder. It 18 a peculiar fact that the majority of the Negroes in this country as well as other races of refinement and culture count it a high privilege to shower bou- quets upon the caskets of their loved ones after the spirit of life has left the body and the soul has taken its fight to the God who Ris a . This method of honoring the dead is 2 grand and glorious custom, most espec- ially i our Southland, and God forbid that any one should do or say anything against it But we were impressed witl the idea that it would not be out of place for us to digress for a moment {rom the lung-established custom of “All Soints' Day’ oral offerings to the dead and for once let us toss a bunch of flowers at a living man in order that be may enjoy the sweet smell of the roses once in his natural life | The man whom the common people would thus dehght to honor 1s none ‘other than the Hon ‘SW. Green, Su: preme Chancellor of the Supreme Grand Lodge, Knights of Pythias of ‘NUA.LS ALE, A, A and A, and ‘also Grand Chancellor of the Grand ‘Lodge of K of P of Lousiana. There 5 .p9,man tn the State to, whom the peo ‘ple owe a greater debt of gratitude than what 13 due to this man and his ad- ministration In our estimation, as well as many of the business men of the State, ath white and colored, he stands second to one as a leader of his race When we take into vunsideration the disadvan: tages. under which he has labored, the trials he has endured, the victories he has won, we contend that too much Praise cannot be given him. If for no other reason, he should be praised for his honesty. probity and judir:9us_man- agement of the finances of the Grand Lodge of K of P of Lousiana. And then again he should be praised in his accomplishing the hazardous task af erecting under his administration. the commouious, beautiful and magnificent Pythian ‘1 emple. He has not only reared a monument to the honor and pride of the Pythian Brotheghood of the Pelican State and the“ public in general, but he has for- ever redeemed the good name of Louis- tana’s colored sons. Not only has he torn into threads the charge of incapability and unfitness for busines: accomplishments that is so often lodged against the colored man ‘of the South, but he has convinced the nations of the earth that there are yet men in the State of Louisiana of the Negro race who are as competent to do business as there are anywhere under the sun In plainer words, he has placed the colored men of his own State in the front ranks of the leading men of ro ve What ikes this man greater still, position, money nor honor do not seem to spoil him The door of his home swings on hinges that open day and night to give welcome admittance to all who desire to enter And he seems to dehght himself im mingling with the common people No honest man would be ashamed of him as a leader For generations to come even the chil- dren will rise up and call him blessed — Rev A L. Reese, in New Orleans Picayune Maryland Not Alene, Mr. Taft Mr ‘Taft's apecific condemnation of the proposed Maryland amendment baw called fresh attention to the fact that the very similar echemes for disfranchising illiter- ate Negroes, without dufranchistog illit- erate whites, have been operating la Lawiviang ond North Carohna for aub stantially a decade without the slightest check from the Federal court.» ‘The Louisiana amendment war adopted about 188, and the North Caroling amendment in 1900 Several efforts have been made to test thelr conetitutlonality, yet counsel for the Negroea have never been able to frame a case 60 that the United Btaten Supreme Court would be forced to mest squarely the constitutional inue Such decisions ag have been tendered have traded, to give support to these devices for nullitsing the fifteenth amendment to the Federal coatitution American judgen appear to be poxneased with a de fire to avon! testing the constitutional question, their hidden motive, apparently. reine fron a belief that ne a penetival onli Vineudt the Sonthere atuftanchive then a omit time The Springhebt ie A solution uf the political aapecte of the race question at least for the. time being ‘The future of thea achemea may be Lmblematy yet nothing ahort of adverse court devislons are likely te overthrow them In our Cue —The Spiogheld Ite bathean SENATOR FORAKERS BATTLE, No Juntice for Mack Soldier If He tnd het Take to Pan te Senator Foraker battle for justice to He Viner tose Sitters ate alien the: Press Hewt ot the Dratet States set the Pram of unfamey mudd tletast than the whines Bestar atin 1s tie cade as wath ta the coy Ge the moEAT stare au tie ged Tt the genie nun untalte ering ssnranee ob ene mete De tectelatien ba whe gue New hall be done Cancrmes wid aotnn mane Na ane tat eve the Daeantent Wee Dag te wooed tail ae te the ond ont prevent at Teas eharie teria af Mie Kewmegett Sheet gt teh at et te he stent engng. ah Mh Ne tone eater pte MP Ser Rig tee gt fs Ivtest fh wee per rasectig ety IOC oe the sagrtanee mtn Ce FP ake Mhoteee (6 meld lente sivurmbd Whe ans Ane thar at Me Tascake tat anit tents fan eeve dns she te wits aia, fo remeeion Cysteek ana bee hetyel se dee wae) Wave bean mesettel ty the feuntrs we Sitideatie Me Mors ot qed Srcr tne Mie Senate whe ha) bate fat the tighte af entemgal teen meminict Poth gene an) ponte mage td dentin fhe There wend te om gus far ie ree bes Mb ake not taken np ther enuse an the fae! lela at yume Th appear the fort ene i Mepoe Me stort teneat mie pe set Keginisoe’, otitiomted Vac: beabite. ay ceetig ancl wet: dnttang 6 steer ft Lut the sone tonanead thats erat a rane Nad When dene Tn the histary at ws Gaeorninent if nat an the pr wale + Jariaprndenre there has never heen al fan example of high courage ant mnstor fal intelligen:» in defense af the ci thie of arhitrare power New York Sun WEEKLY HISTORY LESH a JOUN BROWD AND amns, aeMe tie Kogves Fegt Saray : (See in Rochester 1 chanced to spend might and a day under the roof of man whose character and conversa and whose objects and aims in iif made a very deep impression upan mj mind and heart. His name had b mentioned to me by several promin colored men, among whom , were Rev. Henry Hyland Garnet and j, ¥ Loguen. In speaking of higg, be voices would drop to a whisper, ia what they said of him made me wei eager to see and know him. Fot nately, 1 was invited to sce him int own house At the time to which’g now refer this man was a respects merchant 1 a populous and thrivigd city, and our first place of meeting ws at his store. 4 “It 19 said that ahouse in some me ture reflects the character of its 00g pants This one certamly did. In there were no disguises, no illusions, make-believes Everything implied st truth, solid purpose and mgid econe I was not tong in company with i master of tus ‘house before I dise ered that he was indeed the master @ it, and was hkely to become mine af I stayed long enough with f Certainly I never felt myself in Presence of a stronger religious fluence than while in this man's ho In person he was lean, strong, sinewy, of the best New England maf built for times of trouble, fitted grapple with the fintiest hardsb Clad in a plain American woolen, tn boots of cowhide leather, and wes ing a cravat of the same substanth material, under six feet high, less ¢h 150 pounds in weight, aged about fff he presented a figure straight and sy metrical as a mountain pine. His b ing was singularly ‘impressive. Hf head was not large, but compact high Has har was coarse, ol shghtl, gray, and closely trimmed, grew low on his forehead. His f be smooth-shaved and revealed strong square mouth supported broad and prominent an His og ‘were bluish gray, and in, conversat they wer. full of hght and fire. b jon the street he moved with a lon ‘springing, racchorse step, absorbed his own reflections, neither seelang, Shunning *conversation. Such was i man whose name I had beard in whi pers; such was the spirit of his lg and family; such was thenboused ‘which he lived, and such was Capi John Brown, whose name has nd ‘passed into history as one of the m “marked characters and greatest het known to American fame vt 8 ® He denounced slavery look and language fierce and. bite ‘thought that slascholders had. forfed their right to ive. that the slaves bi the ‘ight 10 gaun sheir berty in way they could. didnot. belfeve moral suasion would ever liberate slave or that political action wo abolish the sistem * °° His pl as it then lay in his mind had much commend it It did not. as some 1 pose, contemplate a general uprisia among the slaves and a general slaugl tr of the slave masters An insurrd tion, he thought, would only defeat i object. but his plan did contemplate creating of an armed force whi should act im the very heart of @ South” “"But_you might be surrounded cout off from your provisions means of subsistence,’ I pagecsted. H thought that could not be. done they could not cut their way out, 1 even if the worst came he could hut, falled and he had no better use his fe than te lav ot down in cause of the clave Ir observed. th T right hive noticed the. simple neriin which be tved adding thay had adpted this mothed on order Save money ts carts eo" Ine pUrpes This wae cand in tia feastfal tone, be felt that he had delved already. Tone and had no pon t+ boast. eitht fof Ine real or Ine <elt dey al Had om men made sich displ ot rigid vis Tshonld have revevted ye ae false hypocritical but ain tela Rrown 1 fd Moto be as reat es tron or eran Feney ttas onteht nent wth Jot Mown oe Sarre Tt Mass tl fetes avery) tos ye a1 the Tess Depefil of to pee etel abolition Meo rtteeane rs Bec une are amd me sae tha tie ee ye tan ‘ we a ag é “ Sed Lee cheats © ue golt am whats tok be ty lee ekan een OM frei ae Ae eet ' ' No’ eee “ay a inde UN hee: - nsentiol fe teenie, io +10 ! 2 nattid wae 2 “ha a = Ne Rin : ii oR oa oo) oh Sisk Shee, fee ‘ Sate Ss gat Kose” he ence : eee Chee ee fhe Cat AN Tooke oe trendy ee \ RS CSO LIS PYLORI ROR oe parma ui ne poe Ee 2 ENS ORI A ee AY TAMER 26°" 1909, ' en Sn en RI LF ee ‘ == = = eg TH HOSPITALS a peated lectin ies ich wae rferet CERT AND’ MUSIOALD qed a ern as serie in} a5 | Bae bee 80’ er Swan eepeciaily ie, Ma creat | Neanty One Taeweane actenses—meet Sage Dake idee race 3 5, Harlen, MONEY | s.c8. 85 coats five, cairns of ing’ of Bethel Preachers: fran tn erste eats oe hee ee | WANT the House Commfttes, for the success of | Batrimone, Md, Jan. 10.—The con-| Nesatstite than et Behthent gy oe ff r these Sunday mento $f, and mualcale ‘whlch took place last | manor born 3 ee 8 a Finance and Securit as ireparatignn ary ‘Beiog iano by the| Hriday evening at the eld ataiory, over) Mga, UE cu Asks For Yearly | Est #84 Ropat Court ‘ot" Ladies, aa | the Itenwoud lblarnet, wan {a overy way | Ait lee Tose, of 28, Wrest Lanvate | ccerercat cor ft Lowe of fc fh of ev tert Each Asks soule Order, “for grand entertalameni |@ great succes, "Hotwesn elgbt hundred | Suvttaaettittgaam, fom, tends on, lest Paya e yourly dividead of tan pproprintion-From 1st. pg leoans, fine Jota | tod lead pony vor entea | Breet of Brest, 3. “Me ROSS eh ee Court at that time and deliver a lec | lowed was one of the greatest enjoy~ ha. clean Mond i er mt vas : Ea das aa ep Be os ou tr, Pennsylvania fia oat astieais Bact death | ets” anny Sat Baers as | feo wan etre by 8 ee ot cae ts scucrally wil be tavited out in casting full force, and in a Diese} “"attes Biorence Carroll, of Di ie ute LOENDI CLUB LECTURES | e+ on she, Burt Sand" We B°G202 | Soot Rowe prota Sere. “Mrtaus ies | atenun snlertsoag ate frejoCik tes| | ROBERT W. TAYLOR, 35 Broad Strect ing, of the high eateom tn which bo le Jeter Chow finihinn, Miaoe A Haw: oe Bonday @ number of friends, | saremmsnssicnssssssstassssussssstsessssses — ins, Heber E. ‘ton, Harry T. Pratt, las Addie Credit, of 1002 Division ‘The many friends of Mr. and M: De L R tt terniog Moses Sang He | nS SE Ne] Ie Yea ate | Meets Mei eects... _ HOTELS, RESTAURANTS 30s, eotme | He Bate : Bvery Sunday Afternoon~-Dr. | Anrn Burton, is cntalesig + o | Willam Et Wesnt, Danial G Biowe:| ton ot Ue bates anole °° |The ALLEN HOUSE| Rew : ees Waser: mesa James A. Page Reads Paper | 144 Flavel street, E. Ey is seriously il | ley, Alesare. ® Bernacd ‘Taylors Oarricg: | neetyl@mls EL Murray entertained on | Removed from 411 West 48th Street] BXLARGED reeks a5 » interest had temporarily sul- aided 1a tbe matter of the Negro citixens qstablisbing a hospital io this city, but at this writing ene of the principal topics Being dincussed is. "Shaul Mieabure ince ceptale batgare bus reeeadly entered the Geld ‘another hospital, said to be called the @arnegie Hospital, which is seeking an ee oi heise ihe Saas penne of ibe, Moker saat ie orpaeteae eich ts trea also asking for an appropriation fro the State. 11 is soubttat af both tostituceus See 2p pire Seana ere” esky eg ee dary Ke 4 of that institution hes fasued a cali for ao important meeting to be beld at a near date at the residence aed ht Shake Beni the first meeting beld for several weeks lg Ue at's Sopa tthe Sri 8 car umm roaiaat wones po pre aap ray ‘ago, secured a charter and purchased a TE ea Oe Sreatory, free Dane oe tasorannen BENS, erat. enemies Hospi ah XSna Fring Seat ed eas about fifty members. Things worked ee Seen 89 ee eet Earmonoaly atl eh aude that seater tel Le eicenrenens from the State Efforts were then made @ secure a State appraphat ee for the Booker T Wasbington Hoxpital lofer Behar Tremere ori ae ecasiiered reliable sources, that the State would not appropriate ta two Negro how ped sprog ae gr Oe Riste appropriation would te for tbe two pire pve ope ge hospital on the north side ix koown as the Carnegie Hospital and Nurse Train tng, Bchoo! Fete ease a6. ch talk of coo: ochre ES M5 Bah tat oh Soe respondent made efforts to ascertain the ole pe was interviewed, but could not give any eer eee ae tee Mea reines a eeraton cites eae, tne ee le Si IO, Sates he he described as being deplorable When asked which of the hospital movements he was supporting, the doctor laughingly declared. both “The feelings of envy and strife shown by some meinbera of both Se eee oe ee iter hae than both associations are trying to give Seat ete eee ee Cesare es ee ep eg ea tend tard to believe any body of intelligenct a a Page further remarked that he knew sera ap cognate feat” bospfals aad, expressed the’ ba es fe ag oh ree : eae ae wat fr aul ‘have had years ago. tile efforts were made to leterview Attorney W. H Stanton. who Ia said to be interested in one of the boapitale and at whose office meetings in the interest of comanlidation are reported to have been Prof John 1) Mahoney. representing ane Sarto Honntal oa eee ie eee in charge of the Avery Mission School Se fees Nines bed tne che eee: solidation of the two hospitnix, Mr Ma- honey replied that his organization had ie hon at for ha re St SEL eae ort feats (2, pean Booker T Washington Hospital This Pe cond ee re ne Sealing Ve one hii hae te seanehatitce seer chien we bn bce have $125,000, and are receiving {rom the Serenata ore Teac free the Tt Je the consensua of opinion that the Booker T Washiorton Hospital iw the | only chartered institution of ita kind in the cite and had they continued work bave a house furnished amt full af pa sere Hear area ae ol a Pe the Ebenezer Raptint Church one of the: strongest churches in the sits im anid | sree femmes mh cA. saad sparta neg a talent Sresulnstan allel cy fare ho Sen hate senna art, colette he no Sa Eterytndy te haqung far temewrel energy | ‘The Torndi Clob bas adiled to tte use| falbeen te the city and race in a manner ee crt merle atts ea erean ar pe tN so Raine tod Coats bee af the «Int whieh bas recured a charter ted aevral boca ef datiae Te ek a bead nee ar Se EH Sea IRL atlas hiisinews im A mADMer that will gis any, ee arr ae The fies nae abbaered he \stornce 3a Wiltroat Vadew ater spike an the © AN eae eg Samy a lass 16 Rice own NU eee ocr The Neven te the worlle ak wan St ae paalie te mm Dj hetaeehe yt ethane pe phe tan tan what te ia hee ae EO ascetic stromental selection which was tyra, aloe colo by Ales Saale Boe ler Swan onpecisily Art, Mash red te due Mr George Milton, chairman of the House Commfttes, for the success of Meee Sunday mealogr, Preparations are Sting nade by the Eaot End Royal Court ‘ot Ladies, Ma sonle Onder, for a grand eatertslament fod ‘reception in June Noble John G. fore of Caieagey-will—vlals-sbg~ endian Court at that time and deliver a lee ture While ths tecture will be Ju the Interest of the Ladies’ Oourt, tho public Cory Se FG H. Bolling Is doing a nice prac tice ‘on. the, East “ind.” He’ in. desery. jog, of the high cateom ta which bo. Te 6 ‘The many friends of Mr. and Mrs James Young, of ths Saat Bnd, will te Joice to kaow that their little sun, Weorge Aaron Burton, ie coavalesciag ‘Mra, Hoss, wife of Mr Chas, Le Ross, 144 Fiavel street, BE, Is eerioualy ill ‘Mr. George Sipson.” 5196 Dauphin aurea, 2 T' who wae, erriously turaed while’ at work ‘at Wood and Figno.sev- eral weokt ago, in improving. ter Willie Duvall, of Orabge, Va., bax been in the clty conducting seilval’ ser: tices at Hodman Btrret Baptist Church, Within. tep days forty members were added to. the church, Mr ‘IL. Burchette, proprietor of the only blacksmith shop in the Fifth Ward, Res sold oot end left the city. for ‘the vent The Mederous dining and lunch room, 158 Frookstown avenue, E, Ey le grow: Ing io popularity cach’ week" Mew it FY Uedeemme in propritrens, aud.” ber daughter. Stine Tedcroms, tx In charg> of the uliaiog room “The entertainment of the Mercidvs chub" Peiday’ evening, Jaausty 8," 100%, aonb pael sascees ‘us a ram) success - 7 SENATOR BUCKELEY, THE NEGRO'S FRIEND. Keney Park Laongry Started by Youns Hartford, the capital of the State of Connecticut, bas bad a busy and exctt: ing week at the State Oapitol. "The con teat "hetween “United States Senators Brodagee aod Representative Congress- yan Hil, who rus for the United State Seoate ‘Senator Brandagee was reelected for ‘nix sears by 120.) Tt bas been «bard tight between the friends of the two gen: Memeo We are proud that Renator Huckeles. whose term does not expire for four yearn has returned to the United Staten Senate, for in bim the Negroes bave'n alrong frlead aod «man who will alwass ntand by the rights of all men nike” United States Senator Morgan G Ruckeler was a strong supporier of bis friend Rrandagee We will say of Ben: ator Buckelos that be Is one of the fineat and noblest gentlemen of our State. and has alwass been a friend to our race and stands as a peer io the United States Senate to defend the rights “of the col oral mao ns a citizen of this country Governor Buckeley, as we know him at home here, we, the colored people of Hart: for. simply love him tor bis goodness and his fairness and the interest that he tatm in our people His private mes: neager is one of our leading colored men fn the Acton Life Insurance Company. Mr Charlea W Custus All of the jani- tore fo the Aetna Life losurance Ruild- ine are colored He is the most delight: fil gentieronn and we are proud that me have two auch men as Senator Brandagee and Senator Huckeles io the Calted Etates Senate to stand by the rights of all mep. alike. Twill say that there are no appoint. ments of our race in any department of cur present Lerlslatare:: perbape there is a reason for it, That remains to be seen. ‘ of our enterprising young men, in the Yast few woekn bave organ ized’ business enterprise known as the Keeney Park Laundry. 1034 Martie street Mer eweliya Davis, president | Mr, Jobs Rodsers. vice-president: and Mr H. A Campbell, secretary and treasurer | ‘They do all kinds of Iaundry work, Including the finest lace curtainn and draperies. Tt Je'n moat landable enterprise and we wish one new company much succens Me Tiorace, Hitchings, janitor of the Vhoenix Lite Torrance Building. one of the mast respectable colored gentlemen of pur ents, was atricken a few days ano with paenmania We are gind that it ie few thought that he in ont of danger Wo aempathize with Mr and Mr Hichiner in ther bereavement, for onbr fn fom weeks nco bis nephew was no cnt That no-one, theneht that he contd tice Int wa are lad that he is ont Gilling tem pecans’ the place of him ance We mentisned in Inet work's Ieqne the promotion of Mr dtolmes ta be bead Kater of the Hartford Club We are proud that Mfr Tolmes bas anch a fine ter af voung men to snatain him in the Tine whieh he haa to peprfarm at the Hartford Chat Lincoln, Tatitote Noten. Jerrensow C1TT, Mey Jan 1 —Mon das. January 4. found faculty aod atu denis of Tuncola Tontitute back $n thelr pinces "endy for work after @ round of fwivlay pleasare. Ntany ‘new students have matriculated with the bexinaing af the new year and are now hard at work ‘The Minsourt Legialatnre tn tn seenion and many. legislators with thelr families and friendn have already come ont to vintt the inatitution TE in intereating to note cts the gages used in the Sonate and the Hmse of Rep Feenintives were anude bt "soung men In the, Mochantal Department. were frresetited he Dye Allen And received tt (eit TTeusem with hearty nppinage Tn fet nothing lt cont wurde are heart fin nil sudew fram the Ieginintnrn rolatiye vi the eqvellont werk that in beng done Mh Lancoley Tastitite Man at te eenbuntes of the inetite tooth Whe ape nate tens hohe were present Wiig uant teachers, nee inion aesetn el in Ramana Cats ' Tenaton Schwere h, alninnas af “08 nee a etalon #9 the madien) sapartment Mi Harvard Teniverats. made highest av ceagee inn tines af ane winded and Nr hat ung recent examination Heterabars. Va Vives de tan Te “There ane ba ars WOMEN hist Benny mieht ‘ia Rte meets packed sNiwewuel ee at Moe Waltons TE feditate twine te siiiveseine “the teste were Hes OV Traced ates Take dLarae Hos Tne a an tte Che Se aed Beak dee TD Pathe “Pls Pe nL apuenere wesw eH te A Mtg tote sie pentte ate snl Wee etit ete ange te tee cathe Ae rN ice Maes baa reco Tbe saig thee te Be alenabe ine HCD ite thee nade ie hall so the cette he pradantion oc rwes tthe tmatatetan a Panne tase Pane Tae sooudent fade ni teas ee trends “ieee banty ' aurne NG OT Deed one telat Fe nee Bees Te pesca Bc tege, tokacton bee wired wetland Vane as The head af tte ihe eaters wn abst verter Fahne Ae laa acbeca tae he all the pedir Nensiay { Mopetor Hiram Waa vor house damaged be | hat there cyrtane? ; AB a CONCERT AND’ musioate Nearly One Theousant fan od eta pate ted—Mont> Baurimon, Md, Jan. 10.—The con: Srlaay evening ae eels arorane? cat e ‘at the old araiory, over {he AMlchmond SMarket, was In every way success “Betiveun elght hundred aad @ thousand people were erideatiy. in lowed was one of the greatest eiloy- ment to-ail who tind pleasure in that di- fsctlon | Boslety,seeaiod to have turned out ip dasailng full force, and In @ blase of, Slory, beauty and’ ‘attractiveness ‘Among thon provint were. Mr. and hire Jour Chew Bauchws, “Masos A” Haw: King, Heber E. Wharton, Harry T. Pratt, Deniel H Murphy, W. Aahblo Hawkins, Her 8. Cunuings, J. 1H. Smith, i HL, Boule, Dr aad Mra B. Grant Scott, Willie ft. Weight, Daniel “0. Brown. William T. Carr end Edward J. Wheat: ley, Messrs. B. Bernard Taylor, Oarring- 120 Le "Davia J. Edward Lanses, Job H. Murphy, de, Joba H. Hampton, Ros- coe D. Price, Truly Hatchett, Alsses Marie Coleman, Georgia Crane, Florida Sleco, M. “Louise Raith Eatelle Cum- mings, Emma Bright, Edna Mason, Au- rusia ‘Rohoblt, Mamio and Florence’ Lan- soy, Mary Hughes, Augusta Valeatine, Mary 1c Brags: ‘The affair was for the beueit of the Morgan Uollege Fund, Bnd no doubt a goodly sum was realized The masic was uoder the Wirecuon of Prot. C. A. Johnson, leader uf the Mont meatal Ureteatra 5 ‘A most interesting paper mnd dine slow wa the theme of the Hele! prea ery" pieeting on lamt Munday Ite Dr Daovel fil, ably" treated the question. “Methodist Traiaiog “Ay 1 Kelates to Sulvauon” ‘The ewasiet outlined Meth Odison as set forth by Wealey, aud thea contrasted the present-day ututude of the Church toward the eaine "The mect- ing wus Inteavely ioteesting and enjoy able. AC the Ministerial Alliance to-dey, composed of all the city clergy, the tev. W. "Edward Willaus, pastor of Grace Presbyterian Church, “prevented a wost heipfut paper, which wan warmly die- cussed. by the Ureibrea prevent ‘The Ministerial Alliance is composed of the various pastors othe ity. “hay pro. tioted a large amouut of good. feeling fod. fellowship upon the pact of the ‘bretbeen, and ty dope twucd Coward wot fying the forces pf uur people for al ‘good work Toe fter Dr. Jobnsos fe'the able aad efficient prriinaent secre: ay lof the Alifance ¢ popular pastor of Troty AM E. Churche the Rew Dr A Ts Gaines, bas beea quite sick, but i gow auch. tm: proved and ‘able (be about bis work. Oo Wedueaday eveoig of ‘thie week, 1o- fa} Rovgbte of Pythiae wilt tender a ban- Quet (0 the prouinest attorney and Pytinan, Mr’ Thonias L. Jonva, of Wash: ogton. LC, at the renidenre of Sr Somab 1 digi "aga rad ll avenge jee, Lor Geo F Bragg, pastor of St Jaies’ Church, Sunday uioraing peached fon the nubject of “Marriage wad Far ily Life" He ported out maoy of the efile of auch marriages ax are Rot coD- tracted “reverently, discreetly. advisediy, soberly and io tbo fear of God” He welt upon the sacredness of this early igetitution of Almight God, and the utter human. follg of attempting to “ihieeolve™ what Gel “hath joined together” Co Quextianed losalty to God. he pointed out fv the only cure for the evils emanation foun “unhappy dawestie. Mle Mr ‘Thaditeus Copeland, wha is a0 well and gacrall known ay) the suresaful Upbolstercr god. mattreas tnoufa: turer has recently added another line of busl- nes He bas openrd a atall fo the Belair Market with a full and well a5- sorted supply of fine hams, shoulders. bacon, pork, and lard He is the ploncer fa that partioular busines fn the mar. kot. "In the Lafayette Market, io the ‘Northwest section, there arp eleven Ne- goes engaged In the market business, five Of whom are, pork dealers. Mr W. Fi DePardeleden, who came to our city from Montclair, Nd, to as same the secretaryship of the ¥" BC ‘A. io meeting with much favor, and a moat generous welrome He aeems to have the right practical ideas for such expansion of YOM CA. work on will faake it. more tbab simply a. praise oF Prayer meeting, but rather en earnest and Regressive effet to reach men and care for their phsaical and ethw al neste ‘The prospecta fora helpful future for tbie Thont neeesnary work re moet Wright ‘The Helping Hand Ascariation. and Catholic Clute ie an organization of, ea pred women tnembers af the Itaman CAtb- She Church in thie cts Tt haa doge @ food mark mn rendering nssintance to Fhored priests. of that particular church, and aloe in awtinting theological students Preparing for the priesthood Mrs Marr Jackson i the prenideat of this ormniea- tion and Mew” Mary Doreee. in secre tor . Fre Provident Hoepital af this city. han Ferentis. eatallichel’ 1m ennnection Therownth a free ispeneare. for the bene fit of the wick and poor of the city. De Hares 8 MeCned and brother at- tomer Wiltinm C. MeCard, have. pe tamed from Rockford, Til. ebither ther fave heen to eacort the remaine af their Inte mother, Mira. Ehanbeth ©. Mf-Cant tho departed this Tife fn. thrs vty nt the Felgong ot her mon inery on” New Fence anv The generat neont af Tue Aap te Chatios Cageat ge 1TH Deud HTt ave Meyer 12 a saving samea hers an Ss ripe taste Anata Bhare foot seal ap Inline seacon nnd vertnenie the ensing The toon fmiGtad with. resyet tate [haan stetucs nfl the Neer Paes ing af thsee cae brated shovens ters 8 a tetany Mehrctal, peeve thmevstente AA Tic ita Nmru nt stene” msn ae Mine! Tail! tiaeant Cacti for mane CARE fin teeing hte eat enor tothe Tiled tee pie nf that As a pales angrereate Wwe nie sented fue sytem and Meee enelce ta weapon the cece reat fenalere jen Seger prrsaners tevmeht inte sent Net anh thee at when eee tn ‘Cpureetonty. proarntisd at 91 an Taieviw an the sale papers. fe hn gunge peor Tis att he Near), Tteeeutte angina cnucel Sywath the goonbe ane tin Todge-Diaty a demete Hip alsd sarved 1h aettoe Siete fants Sage Dab eae B aE the old rope Sa alent Recaatite lane’ Higiglanico to ‘te re ene GE (lee Hele of 2S Weat wale sunt cata, fae! oe, ant Saturday fa of Biss Minnie Brooks, of Md. Mise Brooke Troat delight tay hers desing kTce ‘tme she was entertained by a number of friends. a Mita Florence Carroll, of Druid Hill terealnad at volo Gn feat Sanday a number ot fea Miss Addie Credit, of 1002 Division in Philadelphi uraore Mra, See Miss Lille Mae Mt t tion of the bolkdSyd ts nstocha POP Mr. Lewis HL ‘Murray entertained on New Year's Day @ nt r See mem- bers of bis gymnasium cufture and dancing class, Ales Beosle jton, fo rly of this city, but now, Fate Oy, J has been spending some time in the city. i eee Cocumeve, 0. Jan. 29.—Zachariah R. Jackson, one of the ‘best known colored men of the State, retired Thursday, from the position of messenger In the office of State Treasurer which he bas filled con- Nouously for the past 18 years. During the period the records shows that he has cutrivd $10,000,000 from banks to the treasury and In the tanamlssion of that Sant num ot one wingle penny was ever nuplaced. Mfr. Jackson waa’ appointed by Treasurer 8. Ne Campbell aad reap, yeinted by, Treasurers T, 8. Cameron and WS. McKingo, and, including Charles (Green, appointed fo fill the vacancy upon the death of Mr. McKiagan, bas served oder four treasurers, Ho has 8 wide acquaintance: Dubllc men an Roanciers throughout the tate. fe hes been sigaaly honored by bis people, hav. ing served four years as grand master of the colored Odds Fellows of Ohio. TWENTY GRABUATES Continued From Page 1 Bessie Ethel Davis, Amherst, Mass.; Anna Gertrude Papino, Ossining, N. Y, Maude Louise Cross, Summit Point, W Va ."Etlen Maud’ Patterson, Jamaica, West Indies; Margaret Louise Raker, ‘White Plains, N.Y; Anne Charlton Taylor, East Radford, Va; Adele Estelle Oliver, Richmond. V3, Mary Fhzabeth Boyd, Saratoga, NY", Jeaonetie Ophelia Myers, Salem, Va. Della. Cregier Cott®h, Greensborough, NC. Libbie Victoria Jennings, Los Angeles, Cal. and Marie Antoinette Glengennin, St. Thomas, Danish West Indies. e hae DR. THOM Specialist in DISEASES OF MEN ‘Teo suprame soccess which has attended Dr. Thoms “trestment ef BLOOD POISON, LOST VITALITY, BLADDER and KIDNEY TROUBLES, STRICTURE and CON- TRACTBD DISBARES places hin ameng the foremost American Speolalist in that line, From the very bagianiag ssc patint, i teeta wy br thom peroualy end ie sit sooerd with his partieular needa.” Thare te 50 Flam rerks—no oxperimanting the raiment ‘secarate and indlvidaal {a every tastance. xy raa i ia epcial lectr Tight ang ray apparacas, be can instantly detect treat’ the moet obwtlaate onsea” Hls eloro. soropio nnd chemioal examination of the blood and ine eatablish an absolutely correct diag- Doeia which makoe coures coleatlfo certainty, ‘Do not consult further with these who have failed to, care or uaderatand your case bat call and inventigate for yourself, ‘Why not bave the service of bigb class specialist at Very Moderate Charges oR. THom 1632 Ave Acer. 86th Street Hours 9AM, to 1 P.M. 4PM. 9P. M. Sunday 9 A. M109 P.M. 88th Steoot cromtowa oars pass the door, Get oot at Avenue A. Sos / 4 H tee i a / aw, | Be aa Be 2g 4 Consult the bee: Clairvoyant, Removes ev! Indoooces brings quick reeulta. Positive miisfaction guaranteed, MADAM JULIA Rostrallan Ofpay, 429 Gisth Avecueanar 280° Avent Poe de dea 34 WILLIAM A. KENNY Has removed bis old Established BARBER SHOP Prom 1768 Third Avenne, where it has beso for over 29 years the leadiog up town abop. > 209 Bast Soth Street The patronnge'st hn pubtiie Hind soloited ceee nee erred tN aalnsaer | F. G. MINSHALL PURNITURB, “ARPETS, RUDY Baye, #Pieture Premge taace'te order 110 8th Are. Me of 48th St, New Tor (May 81 ty ie. . an Ea - The Alpha Finance and Securities Company rect oe am ot tt . Cpt t2neense 7s 8 yoaly dividend of tan par oes Shares ste Dllng 40858 tok axl forbes notion and - ey Speer teerrcsorne st $ebe potters down, aad Gity canta par share eech mouth. Wor farther infermation address: % ROBERT W. TAYLOR, as Broad Street, New York City I, HOTELS, RESTAURANTS, ETC. VICTORIA MARKET CO, 774 COLUMBUS AVE., COR. 98th ST. COLONIAL MARKET CoO. 836 and 838 COLUMBUS AVE.. COR. 101st ST. American Hall © dhnwee foes weraayy | 644-646-648 Eighth Aveoue, New York Bet. 4st and 420d Sts. Tel. 1730 Bryas | TO LET FOR wine pin, Sritimens HON. SEMANSKY,. Proprietor | lela Joe Memnernent. Mowly Pitted. Large. oo ‘Theatrion] Performances. jan . ‘The ALLEN HOUSE Reeoved from 411 West 48th Street 10288 Weet 47th Street Between Broadway and Righth aveane Neatly fwalahed rooms for permaneat of mms. vB, WHIT, oot htm, ‘Propristress ee WILSON HOUSE 216 wo 118 West gen Ot, HY. HOTEL Fin, daoaontly Forsiahed Booms mice neat, bath ead ail ‘ognventonoss, by "tse Scope onary “Fine one i ew cotta PRANK @ HOLMES, Prop THE LAWS HOUSE 243 WEST 20th STREET Betweoe 71h nd 8th Avsnwes Handsomoly Furnished Roome. Fira: class Accommodation. For Either Por ‘manent or Transiont Guests. MRE. L. 0. LAWS, Prep. . Sept I7 9m THE PARK HOUSE IIgs West S3rd Street ear Colum! Avenue ee, Sealed rooms, with a and al) Pega ting mt aera pan Wert MRS. B. FP. JOMNSON Ape 23 Se ‘Prepristress MRS, STEPHENS, Prop. ‘415 West 25th Street _ Neatly furnished rooms by the day, week or fete se ie FURNISHED ROOMS 35 West 133rd Street. wei melee eters See ee ae seme Sick parlor, eultable for phyeician o me Apply MRS. C. TURPIN, Proprictress. eee | ‘Tol. 3593 L-Harleo | For first class accommodation, step at HOTEL PRESS FORMERLY THE WALKER HOUSS: soiree et Siem ne |. H. PRI ie wis ok H. PRESS, Manager Telephone, 2525 Morningside HOTEL ALEXANDER Cel: ALEXAN FIRST CLASS AOCOMM@DATION ONLY Handeomely Furnished Reoms see ee 4. T, ALEXANDER, Prep. juli 36-3 ROCHELLE HOUSE 230 West 17th Street Niosly furnished large sad small rooms swith bath and all convenenoes. ‘Por perman. St ‘or cramelont questa Convenient to all Gare." Gueat receive che bost of attention. B. J. ROCHELLE. Proprietor sont . Tolaphooe. 615 Columbus HARRY'’S CAFE + HARRY REINSCHMIDT. PROP.: 349 WEST 59m STREET Pool and Billiard Parlor. <Pirat_olass to stramoatal and vocal taleatfuraluhed fer Beat Steak Partien, Stage and Private Batertala: mente, july 9 lyr Mead January, 1807 Rel Me Volnmboe HOTEL MACEO Zio West dura streuw, N. ¥ First-class Acconmédations ONLT. Handsome, Steam Heated, Furnished Rooms fer eee oe Tesnaten Gone Head- Epo to to Bae GaN Kates PoRMOMAS, Pe dec 73.0 Tanarnonn 2659 Hania F. S. GRANT'S Atlantic Servants’ Exchange COLORED HBLP A SPECIALTY 6 WEST 134th STREET Near Fifth Ave New York eet “eeitaeer” Rew Maryland house SXLARGED AND BEMODELED, sates Gt te et Sr coe hai HBr peracumm | tomn WaLSOET, Prtbateten ‘weit =e THE BRADFORD 73 WEST 134th STREET, New York 2S ae lar dinar in town for 35 conta. “Puralaed rooms to let. JOHN E. BRADFORD Proprietor oct 1308 a’ Whe Lous metanjisnes and Paverabiy GILBERT HOUSE Ty BS Bt near Oh are, muudBedn PERE OF HS Ar8 on Prompt 05d Seer BETH a Serconvenient’ TMT ores eee Permanent or Transient oy iepetelly conse, ‘Prepetetoy. Phowe 1105 Colambas Strtotly First Clams een Baropeun Plan 7 FU Clam mi. HE WALL ment furalahed aad deoen Tore 1st lp ot neo doer: Rcloved ines Sal genet Se "Yer Weta Suret, ame Slath Avance M488 IRENE JOHNSON, Prop. 4 a coe THE VIRGINIA 4. GORDON, Proprietor 141 WEST 49th STREET Betwroon 61h and 7th Avenues, Now York City Fumished (rooms by day or woek Cea Never closed. "All couvenlebers” "Tatet rearonable, “Aug.20Sn0 Telophons 4650 Merninguide WOODS PALACE 409 WEST 133:h STREET Beaatitally Purniabed Light Roems To Lat pier wdttoxt Board. By the Day or Week poy Lonokeoas or Dinners MRS. E. WALCOTT Manager 008-$m0 : 3 BURNEY HOUSE 412 WEST 40th Street | asar Niath Avance} | Handsemely Furnished Boome with Bath, Steam Heat, andall Modern Convessncea. For Permanent or Tramelont Guetta, Conveaiaat to all Oars. “Mederate Baten, MRS. N. L. BURNEY, Proprietress= WILSON HOUSE ANNEX a6t West s4th Street Near Bighth Avenue} Handsomely Foraiahed Rooms Por Par- manent or Tranmiont Guests Board If de ‘tired. Reoms §1 00 por day, upward. “Ag we journey though life, let as live by the way.” FRANK C. HOLMES, Proprietor Rov 13-808 HOTEL PLEASANTS 555 MOTT AVENUE, BRONX At Subway Station Nicely furnished rooms by Une day or weak Rxoelleat table board. Moderate rates. Cou: vealent fr rallrond ton, MRS. S. PLEASANTS Tol 9115 L Melrose — dec.2J-tyr fntanabed 108 Te ooh Te THE 1781 THIRD AVENE tet tn a 108m Sie EW YOR Preneripins Ace My Specie A Fal Lin of rags, Casaicats set Pate tdicoss 4 Pater Prices. W. E. PAYNE Propristerand Manager SARACO TOOTH WASH tering the wis aad paling Eee Price 5c. Bold by all Draggista. Made by BAVIB BETTS ROBINSON 1705 PARK PLACE mon, or Oot 164m Real Kemee—for Sate acd To fon ELEGANT FLATS . To Let. Gentoo Apartments with all egret: “Be ban eouer hy opm eh sass ae oor. oma LER 1 wan ome om Se PHILIP A PAYTON, JR, 60,, | “Sagetee ane cease AGENTS BROKERS aND APrRAtaoRD "Phone 917 ie ‘ioe! eB y —___——____ sn MELVIN J. CHISUM “ahr Pine eas to let at oD tes op eleohone, 6055 Mocningwan oot am ee SS Ameer ao of property for Rest, RE LENOK AVENUE ‘Telephone 3345 Harlem = nov bon Ted 4487 Merzings'de c Si JAMES A. JACKSON seas ‘Appraiser. 472 West 133d St, New Youle Brooklyn office ‘Tenens setae ean on = ey oN 554, 556, 558 and 560 West 126th Street Bandsome apartmeatsof four large, Lighe Feoms, ranges, hot water supply. All in Pes Bact Tocly near Broadway. Beata te ‘80, $18.50 and $19.00 por month, Apply Janitor on premises oct eam Cleanest and Cheapest 3-ROOM APARTMENTS FOR QUIET PEOPLE 174 East 77th Se APPLY JANITOR patan GET INSURED Ben't be Bureed Ox and Have Nothing A 3-Year Polloy fer the Furaitare ta yout "ob KDA compa D. A. GREENE, Iecurance Broker 47 Alsany Avenue, Brooklya, N.Y, bely Sly a Se eee E. A. JOHNSON Attorney and Counselor at Lew MOBTGAGR LOANS 154 NASSAU STREET Room 732 Tribune Building Phone 4908 Beekman WILFORD H. SMITH ano PROCTOR UY ADSMNALIT, ee es Rooms 00641 “Phone 6876 Resamen, sorties Daman Ouite © Rectan Telephone 991 Main Room WALTER W. DELSARTE | Atiernty and Counselor al Law Jefferson Building, 4 Court Sqx, BROOKLYN, N, Y, _ epet-ly FRANCIS F. GILES Counseller-at-Law OLRARING UP OF OLD TITLES A SPECLLLOT fee 21.22, 40 Poem, JEFFERSON aRILONae SESS SORT SQUARE JAMES L. CURTIS Atiaraey and Sounsafer at baw en 141 West 98MD SL ores, 322 west Bled BL ‘Pees 87 ears ‘Phewe, 6122 ab NEW YoRK ; ot 03 mo —_—_—_ GEORGE A. BRAMBILL, Ladies and Gents’ Taller 57-59 WEST 138TH ST. Full Dress Suite to Hice —_—_—_— JOB PRINTING of every description done on the shortest metice NEW YORK AGE PUBLISHING COMPANY 7 mad 9 Contaain Square, Hew Tort ‘White Rose Working Girls’ Home secret Cod SPH trem Seiogen, EAE. Ey Ne ne EEE my meee EES . “S tov oo, osm paasiecammeme ayaa a : SST SE AS aaa r ORR ACH ATOR eena ys: TANUAR 5 a JHE NEW YORKMGECTHURE TY JANUARY 25, 1909, = $ . q + veg5 § | Music and the Stage w) - if fis, at, Ce BO) Re bY ey ne cal et ; : heme mene: Ee ' ‘ et | Bs ae. THEATRICAL COMMENT ‘OW we are being inflicted with an other would be sensational dance —one even more disgusting than “Salome” While the popular hfe vf “Salome” was short that of the now dance will be even shorter It 1s called the “Apache,” and has been imported from Paris, where st 15 said to be a tel among the demzens of the lowes world Two peoele are required to dance the Apes e"—usually a male and a female- and it paies into significance the “slow gre” The “Apache” made its New York debut several weeks ago in a must al shaw which was severely handled by every newspaper crite in Manhattan, vet it seems to be emioving popularity from certain quarters, because of the vulgir Suggestiveness attending each perforin ance, one of the features being the “Apache” ‘The new dance has already entered vaudeville, and while its initial gppsatance as not accompanied by the lowing of horns as was “Salute,” at 1s here, nevertheless fora very jamted en gagement At one of the ‘ruling variety uses last week the Apache was pre sented. and at the fish ene wonhd have dmagined he was citing in a Hoboken flat at 12 o'clock at noght—se qmet was the theatre Just why mamigers instt en burdening the pubhe with sah oh moxious dances 1¢ a mystery There 16 going to be someting dang before long in the vaudeville world that ig likely to a’ter the comple xt tet things considerably To use the old adage. “Where there's so much seke there must be fire,” (or words to that eat can be rightly apphed te the presen vaudeville situinen Fryers day ont bears an interesting accoaint ot seme new com bination being formed- and the writer believes new aliinces are boing mole it this writing Insteul of mercy osh Hshing a chain of theatres to be ultimate- ly gobbled up by the Umited Booking people, as was first presumed would be lt, William Morris 13 going mer- "on baying more playhouses afi es- lishing a stronger circuit each week Last week he attracted attention by pur chasing a house for vaudeville in Chi cago, and deals have also been ciosed for theatres in St Loms Kansas City and Indianapohs Rut the most ctarthng piece of information that has been mul: public property, (althongh tect an th: usual confidential marten) is the rep rt that Martin Beck bis le ate toe tr ve the United peop'e and fora a combie tion with Morris—the sive Pat Casey to go along with them Vant he be came a full fledged bor king agent 1 })s own hook Pat Caves was the right hard man of Wilham Merrs, and tock ana tive parton the adimmistratr mcf the Morris offie when the firm booked: for Klaw and Erlaneer at the time the United Booking offive and Kos and Er Janger were at warm vandesie thas been known fer some time that Moran Beck has not been catisted with hs status in the Umted Booking office, anil has been desirous of withdrawing the pret Grpheum Circuit from the eith - Proctor- Hammerstein - Withams. combination The writer predicts that announcement will be made before spring of a new vaudesiie cirent om which William Morris wrt he a commanding figure. There are mony ether rumors Joat, such as Po’ contemplates giving his New England houses over to Morris for booking. and that Perey Willams and Wilhe Hammerstein intend to book together, but these reports have not nc- easioned the same amonnt of theatrical gossip as has the probible Morris, Bev k sey alliance Cleo Desmond and Rachel Bailey at fone time members of the vandesille toon of Harper, Desmond ind Burtey, have formed i cister act ved ate new appear ing in vaudeville as Desmond and Hailes Both of these young women are atirut ive in appearance and oriented and when thes mike al timber ef changes in thetr new shit they ehenhh Save one Of the brst sister ats an Cie business Tf they are rot faved with 1 large amount of booking in the near fatire the writer wil Me very amie anys aed Ut is to be hoped shat the team) wall net find to onecessiry te bel themselves as the “Tun Creoleagtanis “the ‘hr apine Beauties” nor ‘pate for white” on the stage, as we would like to hive ane oud sister act in vaudeville known to the public as being a strictly cr'ored act dt Fect from ith erect Howreer of the managers get busy and cerk ty show them that it will he necessary to appear other than as members of the Negre race—for business reacons then thes had better heed such whale and een the other cide se tar as there pe fessiona’ life is concerned Chose man agere are a strange Int OF late, the majonty af colored women whe en cessfully appear an vandevittie mins po are tel) te Sent ant’ ther ficial dentity, while on the «ther hand the game managers are forms g mans blak face acts in which they make the white women use cork and curl ther hae Ant we guess they know what they are abent But the new Desmond and Raley at Tt is strictly a singing tkit without any undue attention heing given te dining They know fll well that with ey many good dancers in the business bad judg ment is used by medincre dancers taking themselves seriously as dancers The opening and closing numbers are excep ne] , an Ie co! { tionally good, and the costumes used In | Pe bonnet—1s partuuvarly pleasing — Mon- slay evening, at the Cduinbia Theatre, Brooklyn, there were several stage waits, owing te the inability of the stage hands to get the piano on and off the stage in double quick ume No matter how guud an act Is going, stage wants are bound to decrease terest and make hard work for the perturmer itor 4 bad ade, How, hese a plane an one,” ay does Miss Destiend She as competed to sit with ber dutch towind the andience and wnly those seated an the boxes ate able Pesce Wer tee He the at was dene aa otall stage’ at would bea different matter ASat isc singing ugh we would suggest that Miss Desmond sing the chorus of “Happmiess.” instead of talking Mowhih weal be more etfeetive The acts dressc mees and the tive young women are peculiirly fitted for a suc cessful sister act coe being small and Mavacious and a geod singer of coon sens whilo the other as tall and chie. ind possesses an excellent soprana vote fer the reedoen ot high ciass numbers ‘a fe 3 ae _ Eee Se / a 7 \ A e/ WHERE: THE Bie SHOWS ARE. ANDANS OLAS tei Northern heune en ae es BED MOON Sonar th Opere Meuse, Pitetitee Be SMAB (SRE Asenay theatre Tensside RY REACK PATTI phot porns. Lefayente Ten dan dS New Liberia, Man 9 Crawler dan fe Jennings Jan 21 take Charice Jin 32 "te ment” Tex. Jan 23, Heuston, Jan” ct, Gatveston, Jan 25 ‘THE “RED MOON'S" RAYS. Cole and Johnson and their company in "The Red Moon’ opened their sec ond return engagement. at the Grand Opera House, Mi adedplaa Tanuary 1s tee Tite and appreciative ambence T Rewind Pelton cave that of all the chen. ekperted an geen chewime by the Res Stihs oc bores Toles eb ope RoE Men oc npory were fs obe corcantatet art eee tas pewer Four at wookb he oc ah te eperat: ae base power foes car freen che Peeorx te Laake rents Phe Ihe sept wy Sa TH Soeiens swans’ Prins bo Brewin Leas Mitel Hestert Ste Prark De Teens Rae Phlps val B bbs Yoong we the fastiom sete. om Ete Red Mean" socal rh! somerbimg new and sarthing very werk Les have forced the diss sug te that extent wherein ore af the Swamrrwa Grouch Club rembers exclaimed Hew 1 long for Ne goed old days when father \dam Tied and tr esers grew on trees Paul Priver pant a feng veut te Cole and Pobnson on January U4 Poh Coles cobtagny Now ay the winter etocote discontent mide glorions summer by landing. the season's sec- eese ard now ainste | oof mounting—- he Domean inetd of ansing fren ur goad warn beads at 609 a om on AoW pity merene te catch a tram te some eerie) stand, we snugly das abed hstenine te the’ Tiscivtetes énor we ofa contented Thesprin in the ad yorrang: apartment Qeg benrsed) mem eres and wonkled temper. re hung Poder oenment sed new Dr takins hae cay AP the fowekl eather © th Wet Mecn Mem tes Ci Bee tere Veessin Pr be shed he ryenihers pres rt Whariea lil, lie bao ay sure wis free Me Feank Brown wh oe detres a owe Notely one trie ee oer ote abhere ant eats BE re he E peeel one whey dete 8 be , ous on olaw way cated oa de re tenets Ve cote Vagher ton ba gee oe Moanbiness utd meatness than bs ove clothes One wha tre te Var amb beese Phe oe Daly ned sever willing to behave and ant bke one” Ge abe Wet Tdear Conner (Sambo re ctl cond ara othe ities uw. taliang “bout hiny Then Bantes ag plemeng fa his mew sone “On the Raad te Monterey” ve te wae Oe the toy Damera” Arthur Tathets (Tbr Tewdag) has We Wer amd gttonee + legitenate pyrt eqn wegeiee Top gy Vigo pee Lie WE Oe Cher weds toe ae ae Hethe members of The Reb Meet Read next week's isstie of THE AGE In which prominent churebosen wall dis cuss “The Charch and the Stage,’’ in- cluding Bishop Alex- ander Walters, Rev Reverdy C. Ransom and Dr W. H. Brooks TROM BANDANNA LAND. The following bit of news from the Bandanna Land Company reminds one of an_official bulletin sent out by the Red Cross Souety from the seat of war: Bert Willams 1s suffering with throat trouble, Alex Rogers did not the-firct—porteol the msek dus to throat trouble, Jesse Shipp 19 suffering from rheurtatism, L. H Saulsbury had an operation performed on his throat, but has returned to work, Wallan Spedick, trap drummer, 13. recovering ftom an operation performed in Kansas Cry, De Wilham Johnson performed an operation on Mazie Bush for appen- wets Monday at Provident Hospital, Maggie Davis was quite all far two days, but has returned ty work What next’ Witham Tyler hay rejoined the com pany as sole violist Mane Burton. of Chisage bas jgomed the “Bandana Land © ampany and ts singing the “Red, Red Rue” The Musica and Literary Socaty of the company Rebb ats tirst mecting last Tuesty atternoan on the Grout North ern stage TC Was a sort at experienc: mecting Papers wore reat and: shore and long talky were inorder Mrs Lotue Walliams wite of Bert Woithams sin Chtcage as as Mrs. Moers George Walker's mother So far the company has been playing to capacity at advanced: prices . Several new nimsical numbers have heen qatled imluding ‘Meet Me Down Among the Sugar Cane.” which i go mg big The Gotham - Attucks office im the Sherman House is being largely pa tromzcd ly theo prefession > Wall Marion Cook as in charge | Among the recent visitors were Maud Tilhan Beers and Drank Moulan, Sam Bernard Barry Carter and mupy others of prominence Ac number of the members of the company were entertuned List week at fa terrapin Supper given an ther boner sO a Bat oe aS fe ets a Pans ae est Sie pe et ee ae : LS IRE to 63 "a 5 s Ne PS i " . a as ll Sati Ae a G Rese: all 3 B iets ects, a claallie: : & Ce “Se: eat ; Cpe cd ee : ue ee teres A. ‘Saar Sect Be ge Meese | Te eee ia Pee i Tar ae Ste 5 5, RRR See Nm atc a 4 DEER SE aR yt a F Se ers, epee ncaa ean ag P pa ees Pe icine ; eA ree aad : hn al i | F me, THEO, PANKEY ef ‘The Red Moon"? Company . by Mort Shorcraft Bert Wailhams and | Park — Several Ne’ Mex Rogers curred off first hots | number of Washing Others present were Charles H Moore, | terested in the pros Attorney Anderson, Hr Wesley. and re Haery Griffin y The Tom Fletch One evening hist week Jesse Shipp | Oh servile, Mass and Jim Lightfot met Charhe Wilson, | Pletcher, “the big t Ditney and others from New York | much stronger The recuit—an attempt to make State] ad street resemble New York's "Gay In Sunny Afnca Wie ae! nffering presented ai THEATRICAL JOTTINGS fe CRE aby ai PUR Sek. Haver Conn Morphy aed Prancs area the How wel dee Mass | soaees po debn Raker is plawng at Pantages Son Prareasea Cal Does Peg oat Deac are this week at the Orphen: Reston Mase The Revlferd. are ar the Seen heat Hartherd, Conn Brick and Tenes ars plaving at the Havmarket, Chicago Hl Avery ard Hirt are one of the hits wethe Colemat thre week Te Dive Musial Spillers are at the Ob tepe Theatre Chicago, Tt Aritercon and Gomes are at the Grand Cpere House Pattsineg Pa The Watermelon Trict ie one of the Mae atc the Vemery Einghamten ca The Rripkleve are at Lerrys Thea the Rowling Green, Obie The Five Musial Spillers are at the Hasmarket Chearre Chi age, IM Stater amd Ragers played the Reo wns Theatr Brooklyn last: Sunday Frnest Hogan and Hurtig and Sea- mon ate producing vaudeville acts to- gether They are handing a number of small acts—white and colored. The \, mpslcantitte ee) sig or eat tage Wake trio for vau of Walter Usher, Mamie Fuster "and Midget Price. sy The Brittans—Joe and Sadie—are at Keith's, Portland, Me. —egok—amt—S ao Cook! Opera House, Rochester, N Y, and are duing nicely. The Majestic Tno is in Los Angeles. Cat This 13 the act’s third week in that city Irving Jones and the Golden Gute Quintet are among the acts that have left New York to go over the Pantages Careunt ‘This 15° Brown and Nevarro's last wick ingireater New York They ate at the Greenpoint Theatre, Brooklyn Cooper and Robinson are pleas: then i there act at Hammerstein's this wok They have a number or now sengs Tatward Denton and company of cot ored players will appear atthe Panuily Theatre in Harlem next week, present mg a musical play entitled “De Cider Man” , the Robinson Trio, with Dan Mich ach, has completed ‘its seven weeks’ engagement over the Mozart Ciremt amd +s now domg Shay's time This week the skit 1s in Bayonne, No J Montgomery, Bass and Creed seem to be getting plenty of work, which is an evidence that they are making guod tm vaudeville Last week the act played South Norwalk, Conn, and 1s an added attraction this week in New Bedford, Mass, and Fall River, Mass There 1s some talk of Washington, 1) C having a colored theatre this summer, to be located in Washington Park Several New Yorkers and a number of Washington citizens are in terested in the proposed venture. The Tom Fletcher Trio opened 1 (ab versville, Mass, Monday Tom Tleteher, “the big noise,” says the act sts much. stronger — | "In Sunny Africa” was the musical offering presented at the Eancoln Thea- ‘tre, Knoxville, Tenn, by S Tutt Whit- ‘nev last week’ The entire performance ‘ave the best of satisfaction Baltimore is to sean have a new cor cred movsng picture theatre Tt wall be lated at 2211 Pennsylvania avenue Moving jactures and illustrated songs Will he the features of the program WOH Ray's Creole Belles close 1 Sttorday mght at the Casino Hoboken Nf. after a successful gun of cyht weeks Next week WH Ray will leave for Savannah, Ga, where be will remain two weeks returning Pact te reopen at the Casine George Archer has deserted the Kath Proctor: Williams - Hammerstan combination ahd 19° hoooking te “Chocolate Drops’! with Wilham Morris The act opened Monday at the Lincoln Square Theatre Tt hac not been defimtely deculed when Billy Harper and Company will Tere Cuby There is a possibility af there time being extended an addition? four weeks TE Stewart hae written’ a plaviet en hited “The Follies of Down Yondit” which he hapes te present in vaudeville atacnear date He is negotiating with the firm of Nolan & Maguire, who con template putting the act in vaudeville fevturing the author Ro © Mppherson, of the Gothany Attucks Mg Publishing —Companv made a Avi isit to Springfield Mice several day: olin the interest of the firm We While playing on the Pantages (ir enit the Citman Gisters were suddenly summoned to their home In Atlanta, Ga, on acocunt of the serinus illness of their mother. The act was playing in Denver at the time they received the news of their mother’s illness. Ac- cording to a report from Denver, the sisters had some trouble with the man- ager of the house because they wanted to cancel their engagement ‘They are mm Atlanta awaiting the result of their mother's illness Cipannaie We, ts te have anew colored theatre and twill he called The Pekin A company has been formed known ay the Pekin Amusement Com pany, OF Which Olhe Dempsey is presi- dentoand Woo Sith, Lite manager ebthe Pekin Theatre Chicage, TE ts kenerab manager Teas the intention ot the Gompany tecoperde my yung pastes Mtheatres mother cites Phe mew thea [te wall te tecauted at eae Wet bart ste mt a baw doe bbw pour den the binkbiy, it wall open tor Basie ss about bebrases 1 Wetkinen Paty sy putting the gdace ak stage The bib will comastiet nos pastures wie listeed songs Qihe Dempsey as Saomatiye at Cancimiaty and ters) heen Pancaged an bustie soe nuiuler ot years WoT Sunth tae deen nlontegd wath lee sDieray) Veasagies care Se! Ba Be le hes SD Me SL hk Hate Imsy putting the ple at stage {Uhe bal will comast et te ot pasties wid isticed sens Ouhe Dempsey ts peo mative ot Cuncinmmaty und has been [waged on basin’ SC nmuler et years WooTE Snomth: dae Deen dbontega woth pte stew basa. bn sonnet BE ; SHOULD JOHNSON DRAW COLOR LINE? ! OULD N bette coma i hack | Johnsen would ge Cit ante hin head | bedthow the color line and re tuse Pto bght any white man oa det oaer [ceutes 1oveat Vata at would be amusing tere members ct the cetere | | race. Dat te the white hghter. amd truce | trends a weald be regarded ast caban Vay We de net know of any Jaw that Peis fate tyghters the right tt Htuse te meet colored aghters, aud, can the other hand, fakes a compulsory tor Ne ns be tight thor white brothers of the pugiliotic world whenever the latter see fe be Jootisan wants te create a seit satten, “aad eccopy at amyn, positon patmong the tyghtors ay a wortd champion, let hitn at ioast temporirily draw) the Feolor ling, and give the watte nyghter a Ptaste cr das oan mediane LC wend be Pagreat pectids te stg Jeffries tollow ing Johns av at aired the Peru, tying te get fae a urash purtealarl atten he has Been such er ardent devotee and sup Porter ot Gate vetworkedd oltesthut = the solor line (Judging ton tee shay rantvags an the me Wepapers Lick Stinson s vitory aver Plerais Boa onus Pave ankad beens piiest beter arab ddtter ge yj Dter yer at eur tdl yw owls Mriertoats twill w Ate te wt de ed te ttreve that Pep Swe WH pt ceed tnd ag ong Pea tat Me te the Esuyy Le conuvtiive Ptheuertss To ter Pas meyer bean Mar st coat ab teat on Negtes bere campeon te rd Phe en Tepe th Cetera scene te be cane teed Dan deta nournte the rang Hors te cals wa mah whem at rs thought bas a feck a with dotasen Ay Une tesm't Deas teccavnag te carats atte Miers vat: atl dos trom every pomt vith Uae Seca win he ty asked ta bok Ohne st pce reenter the Ha doe k ters De Khe title to Ue white race Up te tas time Jet fies drome ebebdarite ant refises oehec ethers cots te war ter | theres sake However be asan tran dae and we wentd not be surprised to hear before long that he has decided to forget lus strong preyudice against fight- ing_a colored man and make a match with the Negra champion — Providing such (match was made, there would probibls boone nit ior atleast a year Th othe test phice, it wenbl take fete fries meaty ax months te aget ae oeth | Woe ts Pak Pete on att be poate Vee Pla anak ot Hee vem rts an sing onthe Deng sume ei meties oe emiake anebas ni entg ats the stow basen ss Test Pow ort srteet De pe toe ae ar reads be Metermared te street ot bak Meo Nalitle ah rs many tated a tw dass Track obs attngtit West beat bok where et thy net thee Pains treme howe tras tery . Tiere pf reas why with a six montis trammag he st onttnt agit be img Sie Phaser atectenye TW whapgeed Bares 0 have nore: tthe followin caine nr wats a wt ‘fighter’s atand on the eter line To be summed np ri a tes words when be P(the white etter ts chempr raid ae vafrand of a Neg: contender for ths on Fors he at cence hecnmes preg ties fated idraws the car tine Hut when the Ne bers secnpirs the honored postion be as “walling tect reer abort the caber lane i Chumelnate Prmsett by baetrg wath a Neate, and tike a chaper ane ming ont first het ama Tbe water be Nieves that Jeffries 1 non dee a train bang stunt te determi: af in pes othte Ver Dam te get ante: fsa tht et gt: jeonditien te me ht Pre Te he be comes canvine dd that be can patup + Feand fight the paps wilt shorty fer Faldo tig typ bers te Reenter Ring MG te eto mars whit hebtere Veter. yg toc oadent et wheprm Ft Vee a be tet t te ricee the ot noe en te ow Soups he Foros Bnowte Ne Ne gare ther wee Uaig ogy ay oe han dor . ‘ ee thee yee 4 Tas wih tye 8 + athe certs Ae Be ta quay iy (Faas vag BE . SUES IS erat Fag = None Vetere Sore MeN ey aed Tare Marsat. ote “ ' oh eempouranne elves ot ee at maw tet Na ee Pec wood Ba Ge ol Dipame eb Bary Hoa Be Dy age ty «ot we meas Va De me Yoon Tp ue eee VEN i ecg COP aR! Shae! Sly Sw A in vere tee et Nat pe gh & lie ees ee gaa wert tea hee om Pernt + a ETRE OFFICE. OF The Gross : Catering Co. —— 219; West 134th Street Haw York Caters for all first-class public and private enter- tainments, weddings, din- ness, collations and musi- cales furnished entire. ong '8-6m Bi i , Family Theatre .. #20u22"2, Week Commencing: Monday Matinee, January 25th, ~ EDWARD DENTON Fe sree seen SR SENTS mom ee ss DE CIDER MAN : A MUSICAL COMEDY With an Aggregation of Comedians and Dancers MATINEE DAILY or}; PRIGES: (0c, 20c, 30¢ & 50, .. PRE-LENTEN.. AT PALM GARDEN Ssth Btroet end Lex ngton Aveoue, N.Y Monday Eve’g, February 22nd, 1909 ABTISTS— Move. Eo Del yrs Leconrd, Lyre boprape Mire Balle Meare, Pianiate; Misa Virgivia Moor. Vichine@ Mee Bertie betes Crag. hes ter, Ble Wily Legues, Treoor, Mr Melville Chartten, Acccopanet Walter I, Craig's Orchestra of Twenty Musicians ADMISSION, $1.00 PRIVATE BOXES, $3.00 Hoxve and Beats can be aecured Liane € Cine OFir, S21 B Sih Street, New York; Tol 2267 Columbus, Residence, 443 Haneeck Street, Bros blyu, NY Tel 5226 Bedford. DUORS OPEN AT 7 8u RECITAL BEGINS 8:80 DANCING FROM Ver. MOIOSA M Steinway Panu Usedvat thie Recital Wait ror This - BROOKLYN'S PRE-LENTEN FARCE and ASSEMBLY. The Tis eume Friday Evening, February 19th, 1909 The Place Jefferson Hall, Court Square, Brooklyn, N. Y. Given under the aupskes et the SUNDAY SCHOOL OF ST BARNABAS P. B. CHAPEL For the Henefit of the Koilding Fuud Admission, 40 Cents Children under 15 years of age, 25 Cents Curtain rises as % precise Partice coming from Manhattan take Lean Avenue Faperss (suvmny) to Borough Hall, Brooklya, Jeflersou Hall te one et art blo from station yen.14 68 ————>—>—>—>—&—&—&—=&zx=a—iA——=_————————————— Are You All Ready to Attend Rabe a . IT Is ONLY VIEW DANS OFT Next TUESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 26, 1909 Pg eR Ne |e ae as a ae yee oo fi" , P, . ws 7 a yhin eS) ex) s\n’ f aH * ope Reece © Sa gts i od Pas Se ia ae oo a: ee 3 7" f ed 7 f if — a AT GRAND CENTRAL PALACE, 44th St. and Lexingten Ave. Twente hve pieces of the Now Amaterdan Or Vetta will lout attendance Vrdoby forts preee Dbave ro laotaste ns none ADMISSION. - INCLUDING WARDROBE - 75 CENTS For those desing Vox peats ceortecin! Hatorene pr see weil Le given be ompetent sod impartial judges. Ore to thet osteo ic lreed, ata one ty the lap! frie t Cossed. Prof Joba He Ranks Charmen of Ue tennitter [be Coumte crag of the Metropolitan Dancing Awoctation Hokivo J Heffnen Weeb Wet nH Beoks, Fone, New York Willian H Veugtn Checes H Aréenen Nore Xone e Otters onthe Committes Arthur Harcnwe, KR HM. Cuteten 1909 The Best People on! Farth 1909 SECOND GRAND ANNUAL RECEPTION OP Of the Improve Bene- volent and Protective — Order of Elks of the World OF NEW YORK TO BEHELD AT MADISON SQUARE GARDEN CONCERT HALL Friday Evening, Febuary 5th, 1909 Music by the Popular New Amsterdam Musical Association co tree Pate ae ec Med A oe itawedy Shas Sh Mea fete SuBStRIPTION : . a $0 GENTS FOURTH im nat ANNUAL RECEPTION AND BALL OF THE . PULLMAN PORTER'S SICK AID SOCIETY OF NEW YORK CITY Formorls American Asxoniatina of Railay Fmplovere At Manhattan Casino, ave | THURSDAY EVENING, JANUARY 21st, 1909 MCUBIC HY ALF NEW AMSTERDAM ORE UESIRN a Oeegd March at 12 o'clock sharp Admission, = Including Hat Check == = 50 Cents Boxes Seating 6 Persons, $2.00 Aelveater Reewn, President J. Rdward Rreenan Bloor Perec 1 Feark © Fane, Chale man Committee of Armpgenent. = THE LIFE AND BATTIFS OF Jack Johnson (The first Word's Catored Heavy HANDSOMELY ILDSTRATED Prke, 10 Ceats Postage. 3 Cents eine EA * FO PURNI , JOB PRINTING... of every deacription executed In Up-to-Date , Style "The Moore Publishing and Printing Company 7-8 Chatham Square New Vork PERFORATE Sek Pee oe Fea Ree rtd sae eae aes CORON BA Do aR aCe EI r Bee eee oh EE eee erate pee ee eee ee ee = “seaman ihe ee een SCL pence Coke eit’ © a tetiiate wm © ‘a oer dee Te = t FS ee el al ee op yee WS OF GREATER NEW YORK; Ky ¥ = a ay a : : ie ' —_—_. oo t X. | Opbie Well Mme, Emma De “ | @ANBATTAN AND BROW: Coble Mechart GP Sattbontiis, Fis ond| __ TineT sucomss ov vases ; — Mies Ray ‘Ticker rendered voral aid‘in-| Ball Given by Art_end Smbrotdery ren mest jerrumental selections, A dainty repest | steouettan Casttety the luce wh gn apvaarising, MATTER ost |‘Sos errved. On Thunday evening the| , Menkettan Cusiny iy the plus where eT, Tee age omes not inter pase eod groom recelved guests at wbicn | Sue of the woat notable social functions Restor a tHe time {he bride wore a cream wessaline | ef New Lork Uity are held, but tt ia gate : min the current | quinn deimpire trimmed with real lace. | [°. eS ug Hae never held (8 ose wl i mone REwe Ma a * sArrtraternt-tho-Hotel Maceo are—Mleat sie ty ey oy eco ee tahoe meee Kies cach Peesday by U2 nes | Iicjen Kare, Syracuse; Mr. Geo, W. Hot | of the Progressive Art asd Hiabrelde nian, Mt. City, Tenn. ; Mir. H. 8. Stokes. | Siub last Thursday evening, January, 14; Tia ABE "Phone Ho, is 3458-Worth | Piladeogte. Mr, pod aes Wont, Kani | Tul reception, elvan by thls club of ranbe, 2 es r . ins, js He | Somerset NT Me, and Bt Gittens, felon, easily, copes, te Bellierey Oe jane must be pa this| Kldgerood, N.J: Mr and Mra. Henry | Lycoum, end proved to be all that had |All correspondence See Ty eventag. | Jones. Asbury Park, N J. Mr Clarence | yeen anticipated ‘'he affaire of this or- etes no inter than Tucedey events.) Vinton, Waterson, N. J., Mr. J. E Hall, gonisation ore always lovitational and oo Gh ecvertisemente must also be Vicksburg, Miss. this occasion to euter the ball It was @ aoe cham Tucaday evening: ‘he musival and literary entertainment | caso of present your favitationa The For human hate guads By ott oth |! dere Ady Auk 3-9! : Dire. Ethelyn Gregory Henry of De, | trolt, Mi b, left the city on duouary 3); heb eluted aver her trp Phe Hyperion Whit Club started 1s | aval gue for the Winter on January , Food wax entertained ts, the presullt RA “Gregory. Tee Went Lith atreet Me and Mrw Hebert Ho Diate of 121 seen Held xtreet entertained friends with: Viget ‘Thurwday eveotug Mr KA Dirauty, of Grange Sd attended tiie Vit and Lanbroadery Tule stupa. Thunday eseniig, guests of Rin Cramp Bre Martha Riiues eho has heen 10 tae Row York Hospital for the Tast seven the hes is now heme be ts tat whe te sang pet bat wnihl be pleded to Bee Sexinome friends at hee Festeence, 150 Fest Sith street : The hata for wnvetation for the angual mig Winter sinner af the Her atten CLM eels ctr sot) Bedsrniaes 2° nie new age nce vee nnd at ny nfo: te soy that Cee Bernal wall Far eases thee mapyls ies Charles HE Xndte evant» Mestol ay antttndenctes setting alc ne outs Ree rale Sc amutte asst ata att Fate i ea that, wae a bese Miss Bere ae tantt mote tee sors tte 1nd drums Mls Sunday evening Junsmry 20 there will pe aearred concert creo at Bethswsla \ Re Chun ne Ls West 1:bad ntreet Ma RB. Selden and Mr Jesse Mer will Bannge the coeert Bes SL. Re onold= pastor Al) ave welome Dr Samuel b. Courtues en munte last Tuesday from the meeting of the Natigual Negro Burinexs Lengne Exe nove Com mittee at Tuskraes, Alabuina, te brs home Bh Rosten, spent few hours in New York Gity and pant a pleasant vist to Tie oe office When shopping step an Natt Bree Resturant, dae Seyi avetn Med thy Sean retat dune best cov cents ie See er betes et matadase, feed pimmc sees em ee LOS Beemktaet watt fone ny ated “tot folls, 30 venta -Ady Mrs. Geo. Petenon, 144 Lagunzten avenue, Brooklyu, gave a Tuy beon Jan Sry 12 in honor of her sister ao law, Mis Haguatus Peterson, of Murqéstte, Mut Those preseot wen Mee Vere Marts gon, Jawes Authony, Floretla Hargraves Francis Lansias. Jewewh dru, Watts Douge, Willis, Chas Moore, Gare t Pucker aud Mes Geo Petersen ‘A glorious welwme awasted the guest swho ‘attended the tat hein © of” Mes Gharles Stark at her rysidense Wy Ook atroct, Jersey City, Chureday afteruvor of. iast week from 4 unul d o'clock. 4 feheatiaded-pogram of snficient noselsy. and wwaricty was given and was voted by al ” fpretent a most twiltiant affair No ex Penge wab considered 10 the preparatior PF tbls affair by the fais hwstoss ity sli far surpassed her former ne lneveneuts Those prevent were Mrs NA Beatles Mee dy de Madewer, Mis hes Dix Mrs, WofT Sisk, Mrs das Arius, Newark, Nod Mee Win teeta Mrs War Scott, Mr J Th tas ate Mis A Welden. A sumptuous Japaness shtiner wa served at the het ot Mr and Mrs Wat Handy, tiJ0 Herkimer sireet Japenry in booor wf Me atl Mas Peter Werne: of Middletown, NY \ seal ween Fras spent altermanis a cries Ute Tatton, Cates Ctessitis tie Kaba ont Mr George Audenan, of Stare Colle Dover, Pel prime mete by Mise Egha Soung. wf New Vurk City teueste at ti dinuer, Mr and Mis Wetec Warner 1 and Me kM. daewtea Mind Me Waddell, Mr and Me Ho Lavlor Mr Peter Warner ts a mister nf Mee Wn Hardy Mr Geo Aderson a sou ¢ Mr War Hanly Chief among the rocil events of Ia: seek was the dome and Pate Supper which Mes FL, Menlurs= Lave ath Dome 124 Wo soil attert, Satueday nneh Everybody unites in the ojamen that | (owas the most artiste nffsr given in Tong while Souvenirs in the shape: ¢ small lenther calendars were given Those present were Mr and Mr Chas Starks, Mr and My Wan Toy: Me and Mme Fo ‘Tayi Mr nnd Mr SSA itentley Mr cand Mrs Win Abe Bathy Me agd Mrs Tent Abernath Mrcand Mer’ Thoe Dizon Me _and Mr Robt leanings, Maw Bo Carter, Mest Fo Sineine, J Wathanse X Brauh, _ Starks Co Van Allen Gea Urelier Fay Riwime 8, YN the Vipdie Mas ea) Civ tunre Chile heb ate unten) sb eth At rteetate teenes, a West Lolth sto ‘Afiee a spuitedd ee htest ametiy hes fin, wally jerked had toes? Mb isistiete Rabson atten Thre or tered Po Naty ee ps a tas TE Met tame tan at se fons Bet bent oth osuer Bet SM Martins ae ptm Vo a4 ‘ a FONE ag ae ee ee ee) oy ty gen 1 oh 2 : et ae oe am He Sy, 4 : Met Bia ah * et Ds (tas Be pnt ; ” wae ft i t . ne 1 tort i Ne 1 toro. ep ' ete TNS Me fee te ne ee a “ . Gee et fi | ¢ SW ost i tO pe Tpdinloueah a oay a ! Opbie Well Mme. Emma De Pont Lesnard of Seettonvilie, Bia, end Miss Ray Tucker rendered vocal and in- airumental selections, A dainty repast wos served. On ‘Thureday evening the Bride and groom recelved gueata at which time the bride wore a cream wessaline aati dempire trimmed with real lace. ~ Arrtwhree-the-Hote: Maceo are—bies Helen Karr, Syracuse; Mr. Geo, W. Hoff- man, Mt. City, Tenn. ; Mr. H. 8. Stokea, Philadelphia. Mr. and Bfrs. Wright, Kost Oninbe, NoJ.; Mr. and. Mra, "Perkins, Somerset, N. J.: Mr. and Bre, Gittens, Ridgewood, N. J.: Mr and Mrs. Henry Jones, Asbury Park, NJ. Br Clarence Hinton. Paterson, N. J., Mr. J, E. Hall, Vicksburg, Miss. ‘Yhe munical aud literary entertainment to be given for the benefit of the Altar SNeciety of St Philip's Church, Friday, Junuary 2, at Spm, In the basement of the church, 161 "West ‘Twenty-ffth eirvel, protives to be a most enjoyable jour The program will Include a very Tuugtable. sketeb. entitled “How's You Vacle * The cast consists of amateut _perfurmers of well known ability, and the [ruists who are to take part Jn the musi Shand: Hterary wortion of the progran ace of more than decal fame At th | vet listen of the program supper will Bi aervedd at reasonable fates Cards of ad Tanai 1 ceute Mess Nannie Burroughs of Louisville fv walt xponk In the interest of th Ye Vat the *Abyssinia apts Chatty Bander atteraoim, Sonuary'S) Ms Warren Logan, treasurer of th Tushe tes tnatitute, visited New Lor Le wevk utd wag a caller at TI As tthe Whitten the city he ait shun nang soveal courtenton by (ietnde Aft Visit te Boston fee agua tetucnest New Vouk spending n day, leusing £6 Lishce MaVuMtAy elt Maphattan Lincoln Day. ‘The a Gutter having. in barge the Tancoln celebration at Rethel AM Chareh ore making good progress The jregein so far contemplates Ivving as qin (hal speaker Hon Ralph Wo Tyler fe when an imitation hay been extended Cher shenkers will be Governor Pinch tak Lawvers Carty and Jatnyon, Rev 1D dienes, and Mr Geo Wo Haris, of tae Wek OMe Robt Wo Pavtor ste ead the | Emauerpation | Peclumation Kev Revers Co Ransam will peeante AM sPerhea and organizations are m Viied te crapeente Program and. full jaitwulacs wil be published later Mutler Houhnnon Wedding. Qn January 3. TH09) an elegant wed: sing touk place in the rectory of Se [hit Hus POE Church AUS 30 the contract: the parties, being Moe Kate Boshanun Nf Washincton, DC. and Richard Bat- Ir ef thes eity he ceremony was per fernost by the Rey Hoskensen Bishop Mr W Shioshen gave the bride away fink Me Win 0 Slinghen was best man Mrs Bane sLewis ber sister, | as dentin After the) eereueny the “Hetde nid groom were entertained at the faulenen of her sister, Meo OW VNtutehen 21 West) Bortith street Aber eeyimg a pleasant repast the Werote niet green petite to ther Tomb shies 422 West Farneth street ‘Thos twit were Rex Win Hill of Peters ware Ve Me Chax Phithpe) Me ane Ais Piont Wanton Me Geo. Colms Mis bonny Lewis, Mie Elma Cunning Cam Me Wat ©) Shushter, Mrs Eve Wes autivany Mes Anderson Entertnion Whist Clob. Mre Charies Wo Anderson entertained the Weluralay Afternoon “Whist Clob toe ive att six Wai last Wed- nvsday, ‘Mra, W. Walter . BF oTisiot ae He quest OF honor Phere nara full attendance of the members, and the function formed a very fitting close to the round of entertainment given LOAGS Me npson's honor during Wer Va Fe free Tine feet tment ith ter crise inneieal progeam was. render Tove iter Tt Rnetotgh, hari gd Me Marre A) Wallintos, tenet) Mr Tur fate same Severn} of his latest camp's habe) pompesitiens, and Mr Willias is ces om site cof rene amt Spans Sopbe | They ales rendered secerad dae ts tre He peanctpal eperse. ‘These present hOehaes TE Lansing Wes feeorge 1 Wibercan und “re Vda Phe pean ME Re ett Aleem Miss Tleh Beeston Wea Gmiee Nut Mire de Menn Westee Mire Stephen T Heacks Mire Pe rmenne Tersifer Mire Gustave Thendenen Mee Witham (0 Greene Mrs Henee TD henn Mee It 1, Cooper Mrs Tames Worsley Mira Predernk Bo Wat kins Mra Tnooa Mo Batter Mrs Libbic Alxanier, Mra Dnies Ballard, «Mrs Tame Reoth, Mrs Witham Hackley, Mrs Fesie Johnean Mra: Relgard Veneh, Mrs Engene Gregory Mee fl T. Griger Smart “et Uefeats Alpha PC Nettsianding the blizzant-lke con tition =f the weather, a goodly crowd of Pickett enthusiasts assembled at Pil- vem Hall Brooklen, Saturday evening, Tanunry 18 to witness the two basket: tall enmen nner the nusplcen, of the Sunrt Set Athletic Club Tt proved. to ho the think doublehend vietary for the Smart Set within a peried of ten avy, and was quite remarkable From several Standpernte Accarding ts sehedibe the preliminary game wae te hate been faved Py the Saneey Ret Tuners and the Se deen Diners of Traokivn tn wT nan appearance af the St Vi eatine Tater othe Smart Ser dun Pes ceed i moped to play the St Ve ostine Sonmene Great eer atement secatad dhranghant the teat bat as fia the diamiore were mene” than be hete sawte seninst the Senter cr eat tee meade an tae halt CO ined SO Gene Sanne Set Tan Fre Vrs eMoin eof thee serene poettenl . foie a tie beth teame ploy ine OES We tase thos Sanat Foo ie te ceo ahs tay opm antss me bie mx & SPN scane 4 Cc on ry Vw oot roe ‘ ine “i oe WT a no fh PeMeat , 8 Ee ye he PM ee Ate Bg Ey NW hoe deel tae Po ed Pea ewe Meee hes eat eed ata Ig eee OT 2 ete ee ge vous ea ee a leo tet . He See See eS ee ae Mew ce DTP i sing x Nae ee NT est ate A Pe eater the ane St ba ee eae . Soe we Poser sient Pateee referee Wel 1 Se) Petia te eerer 6 Peo teedeepere A Tohneen and € Hooter gente fron fiohl Pattimore 2 Scitren Ut Wentwerth 1 Manre 2 Panne 2 gante from font ‘Thomas 1 Lattinare % co Ball Given by Art aad Embrottery jak. Manhattan Casino ty the place where sume of the woat notable social functions of New ork City are held, but st is ante fo say it hos never held a finer gather Joy of the city's social elite than on the of tbe Progressive Act and Kobrelde Glub ast ‘Thursday evening, January, 1b ‘This reception, given, by thls club of ladies, eaally eclipsed io brillluncy thelr firt dale, given a year age at Lmperial Lyceum, and proved to be all that had been anticipated ‘The affaire of this or- gonisation are always invitational and on this occasion to euter the ball It was a case of, present your Javitations. | The hall had been artlatically decorated with the club ‘colors, blue and gold predom!: ating, alvo the club initials, VA. 1 C. wore bung in colored electric lights over the orchestra with the variegated culors of the ladies’ costumes, many of which ero exqulsite creatiovs of faublou, pre sented w strikingly brilliant some” The gentlemen were faultlessly gruoimed and fully sustained the dignity of the occa: sion Everything in connection with the reception was planned on gq generous neale, the members sparing neither time, work wor money to minke it a memorable Muccens, whiell ¢ wa despite the inelem ent weather Suciul organization gen ernily could hive recenved one valuable pointer uy te the conduct of a ball, at ae inuch ue the patrons werr Hot molested by disteibutord advernsipg ewig dances [SWC good diner mugs is Seldon heard ts wate pinned by Cen « Ore hentia leash ig Tet Walter Fring 1 The toot “was sander the dates tan of eof. WOH Vaugta and Janes A An Fderion Bees were hell by the tallow: ing Hex 4, Mroand Mew Chas Jen tangs, Mins Leta Whvatker Mr Whitaker tuk pwety. Hives 6 td S Guests of the i Progresive Act Rinhrodery Cob Bos Se Sinenolig Secu Chat Me nud Mos 1. Bunn, Mr aud Mee Win tose, Mr ve ducksen | Bos H. Me nud Mrs Dautel Vi Raster, Mroand Wes deta Hindwin, Me and Mrc Stout Boy 1 Palestine W hues Chub, Me Lalwand Hiieney the | Mibases Shaw Me Tlarris We Nareis Williams and party, Boy 1. Mead Mrs Bland f audepariy” Hox 1S Yr and Mex Chas Trevan, Nivonnd Mev, Lewes. Meat Mine dames: Pondetter, Mr Vrtiur De van Box 16 Mr nnd Meet We Lar Hien, Miss Ethel Ebucusen Mr and Mea ) Erank ‘Taylor mint party, Hoe 1s Me Gid Mex Edwant Hunn Mere Marior Suitth, Box 1s, Mise Lenora Logan Merv Togan, Mre Niwore and purty. Hox 1) Weleaine: Socal Chats Mise Me Payne, th FMisses White Bey 20, Mrs Inte Corbin Mr Mare Sinusher, Box 21, Me Flurry Austin, Mage Lanter dickson, Mis Oda Jackson, Mr ‘Theodore Hell, Miws 2 Wither Hox 22 Mm Mary’ Thoma nnd piety Bex Zt Mes Lawes dine sot Po Mrs Enma Crusup amt party, Box 25 JOM WS Hara and party Tex 2t NOMIrs Gallings and: party, Box 27, Mi Saud Mee Win B Gross Bow 24, Mn Wie Bame vod party. Bex 29. Lvanhe Commanders, Mr Jehn Wo Smuth, Mh Walter Wiliams and parts, Box go” Mr { Birch, Mra So Bright” Box $1, Mr an 1° Mrs. Anderson Bex 2, MrT Grenel Mo Mise Lazze Nicolls and purty. Box 2 6 Ate Fo Wathor, Miss Mo Falke Mis “) Ela Fowler and friends Hox ih. M May Mra Wo Tehver Mr and. Mr Foster, Mr Osan Bac, Mise Garp foand Mise Mo dae Mow i Mir tha 8s Stewart Mere Tee Miss Aste Mr UStuth nad party, Bow t, Mr and Mr ' John Hangeil, Str aud | Mee [tobe Bj Hucless, Mrm Nethe doves, Hox 30, M ni] Chas. Bell and parts sb) ‘The company adjouraed in thew ‘small houre congratulating themselves « Rj being so xvoerously and magalbcently. ¢ tertained by the Vrogressive Art and Ei r8. | uroidere Club The officers and membe Bk lore Mrs Frank W Stewart presiden OP Migs Antometts Betters vice promden UN Mrs AC) Latte secretary | Mra. EW kins assistant see retary M ML Vy Tuckeon trois r Mee” Willy Wl pepunae isstst ah tre nano enters Mc Walter Walkaws, Mh Maa gunmen Mee WoT ieas, M Noa Bondi, Mis HE 1 Teter, M eee dat ALS WO otter M So Ataea oSinuehter Mine Lazzw Mass BON Fil Hand Mrs Cheat WN Se Mee Willey Trem Mee 1 Wa Cartan Miss lige Sehanck and M Siete Pleads 1 i “ Re Vrot Mimma eceatn Subscript FS Ttowns an a redingly atorms night a re ota tia nurpeise, when he entered the ¢ at sin at TL 10 p om, the hall was crows hie to ite capacity, and looked like ar ro tluwer garden ‘The handsome gow [ra worn by the Indies, and the eontlemen rs in falldroes hnd uct a ciel effect tl for while towne in dreamland Af T returned to msenlf 1 proceeded tot + dressing room, where T prepared mys an: to jain in the festivities After reve ‘af dances T wna holding a conversation w pile Mr it 1. MeCutehen, of the Tmper ne, Ledge of Elke, when an anknew a evn! fot onan CL auppesey inte. raytel and. asl the where was my fall drm T toshed h to over and as he det ant tok wre a the tect PF ompese fed hun avesvedineds ve mid that ne wf the Jadies ned 4 PG pe ; a. ae See | - a - i ae pet Re seberre wb iteerrt son ane ern eM Dnata Pett PERE OO Sie ult: ae er row ' pee eet ' ie pe Fate et | woman 2 sad re tity cag: “eats aN D . ne tet nee an wad ne Me Ma te Pew tet ard tbe rb we ee a Minehead PAS Pa erp ted wath te seam Dt ta nt dbase sob ane tre Dar tae a Dd SOW OE ag OE att Poe Pt hee ta wettest ky eh tee Poobe tne a rat ee MR ce rhetng my AST, csene tte thie ease sesiys verte ree ME Mevuine obese 4 Neawhiva Notes De PE nt Se vee Rewke fen ena Glad te aver thew ing an the penne of babys Beton 18 pag WD at tat time mnt pines Trooklente ene great event ta te given fem te the Te ter aenson will he helt What ie it ta tet The Pre Lenten Farce and Aweetlt “Her Ruay Day tock Cralactadle 9 td bak EA nae woe thee CGoniralary? wah elena tage F9Re Uae ae ane OUR Seti ie Ls eum eee Fen ‘tench, entitled Peddie ~You Own ing eran ae ee peat inst oar. In to this the 8t,Brancls’ Olub will pee te short suslch, entitled "Night hol on te Bowery,” which peosiiese te be a mn _plece to the farce afd will be uch enjoyed. Milss Mary Mathewelson an extended ft to relatives and friends in Rich- nyt Fotarsed Trem : t viait to friends in Peekskill. treater J Guster who gen an: Ported fo, begin. inlaslonary, work, here hia. month, renorted to be seriously Mat Olarkaville, i» Where she has been laboring for the pest eight years. On ‘Thureday evening, January 14, at en pee tale aa ron jo L. Blair tnd Louls L. Garter co MARRIED Mise Florence 7, Groom, of 988 Brook ave, to Mr. Geo, Wert Bennett, of 39 W 136th street, Jan, 43, 1909. | Mr W. H. Vanoleaf, of 112 N Ohio ave, was marripd to Mra. Hannab turner Fromley, of New" York, by lites W. H. Batoblor, Dec. 22, 1908 pp a Aan ape! at td The annual meeting, of the stock- hgiders of Tho Now York Ago Pub- Mshing Company for the election of inten Sdirectore for the ensuing year, wad for the transaction of auch other Iinntes ar ay properly ‘carne Uerore tha inceting. “Will be held at. the office At’ the company, Now fand & Ghat: hum Square, in the borough of Mun- hnttan, velty of New. York, on the fvgeth day of February, 1909, at 8 wide fa” ute afternoon’ Tye Pere Rees: orgiary Treasurer Bee an sete \OUNG'S NEW TAILORING ESTAR. | LISHMENT. LADIES’ SUITS TO OR- DER, 335 W. 58D STREET. SPECIAL RATES FOR JANUARY, _—_——_————— MISCELLANKUUS, 3 rooms, range and tubs, $13 2 rooms front, $10 Inquire of janitor or W. M. MORAN, 366 West ra6th Street te LETO1361 Park ave. near 1uzd Mtrert, “threa and four room. apurt ments, $12 to $16, tubs, gus und. hot water z Sans 2i-at 10 LET—Furnished room, ll am provements, Ladies or "gentlemen irma. reagonuble, Mra Walley, 400 WaFtn street eeu iat ty Lei—Apartmenta of 4 lure roms und ath, With all tinpreys nents, stew heat. ands hot water Kents reasonable. 87° Wo 1ZUh Btreet “ee Jane gt 10 LET—Furnished roms for gentle ine, retied Surroundings und= con panigiebip. 6S W. 1Sathestrect ‘10 LET—207 W. 60th street, 6 large toms, bath,” hot water. Houms all light. Rent $22 per month. Jun. 21-40 Te LET—Furniehed room; man ond wits on gentleman “Lewis, 47 W. 66th stroot. TO LET—A neatly furalshod privace room for rent cheap. R. Mack, 29 W iisth streets fu LET—Highest-toned “location in SY Apartments fresbly decor sted Swe ett etrect dun 1st TO LEI—Three and tour rowms, aly Mioposeimenta, Tit month tree 308 ATED Street! “Apply “Janitor. fees App SMM yan _ 21 3t WAN thie “Yanitor, eolored man” wath simdl family on 8V. GOtb street, for related houso; with’ reference." In- Taro Plumber store, $210 3d avey tear atreo! To LET—Furnishea room for geniie- { "suum onty Bite L. Stannard, 431 W. | sth etreot San 21-2 iio Let Earge private, stdam-heated | “rooms, suitable ‘for men or couples, ‘permanent of (angiont Board if de- juired. 126 W. 186tB treet. Fraser dan ee TO TET—Mrs, St. Chat, of 628 Sixt | avsiue, haa a furnished hall-room to rent To “LetT=Neady fturniehed room ter gentleman OF man ant. wife eon sentent to alt learn netz OW ttcth Street ground floor West ret FO THT Four large itght reeen- in Heepertable Rouse Nod ‘ty Ui lebece tact Laie ana totter tn house" tear $14 CEivonth' Apply fo Janine ot prc Pe BUR ateeet San th Bins Fe LES Furnished or unturntsted | “rou Mee Wastington, Wo 1234 Lie Pe Elegant “oparrment ay large lught, alts rooms nnd hath, Font dow penta Tt mattere net what [ie Sie tn thie ewes ive asin ONCE pat! yin ti Temes “ae LT ia tem mtaatee wt bat Wa fe nin ne Nine Ween PE vated CTL tefier ence terntt poomte te Tact itaeget the Mamber Ths Ww ES atrtieti” premises iP ee Spi : te OTP Barntangd on ue aie 1M ront ena ginal, winter aL cat Det tT te tat ates Saw gn 1) 10 1216 Be BGI atreet 7 runs Vane gaa atoves, Font $1400 alan fur qahed tonne, daniter Jaw Vea bev LAT 388 “So ath treet ene iazie elegant. exclusive. modern Jadwit acdornted, Croom “apartment ‘ eens jan that be Pht Apiremen, two linge ich fle wtenme heat and. bath ont VT block Anterson 7 wn etet top fone eo PAT = Nently furninhed darge an, ce Nil Leeann, DAtH Rad conveniences ‘you Men) ‘fackiin, 26) Sent 201 wy gee HOPED Nenthy furntahed tree at Ph aamm wae bath athe neenh LTR Tauae Ans Mtrt yo NN UIRRT rereat 7 net Tee Siagte private porn ele vt Ceunntthoa, Mt reapet fete set boty Dayson, $17 Weat Shins dere HOPE Neatly forninhed caen far on ew Sademen” 5 "Gay ar ont he COAL I Place and Chetstephe neve Thee 72 SUED OM Park aye near tas Sere uneee and tour ream, apa POT TES HED cuties gi an he Dlaill u eee and Poe ttt Nemtly furniened roene teat (ah CL canvealenees peteate fee Apple Ina" Wear 17th treat tan | ONS SECOND AVE Tier open te re Teta eniaend tenante teres a foe {nrue Tighe ronme tents fevn $4 we Inn 4 OS PO LRT AJFive some nad tae Nt water, rent ¥210 $22 ana $22 Ny Chaat Titth pteet Bow Fork Jan 7 re TPT Nontly tifntahed raain team bent and baif. top Moor} Sowa Duh atest. Ang sraon Tan 7” © TO TET Apartment, Gree tare room olin rewpectable haga ang netenhar } hand “Rent reasonnhle. “Wanted ama ~ renpactnble family Inquira Grimaton 24h nat $24 wteqet. San 7 Neen ee ee fe te See ee Se Saati mane aed rent Ia ‘Wy, 1¢th street. Dee $1-4t BROOKLYN. TO LET—BROOKLYN. Dean street—ist floor, 8 rooms......$12 8. Mark's ave.—dtn’ floor, 6 roome find bath : ee AAS McDougall stroot—two-atory house, 7 rooms and bath ‘$30 Wear ~r803- FenTON ‘TREDT, BROOKLYN: TO LET—Feur rooms, tubs, gaa, tellet; $10, monthly 688 "Warren sirest, Brooklyn TO LET—136 Ryerson street, Brooklyn, NY. nice furnished rooms and bath, large ‘and amail TO LET—Large and smait rooms to let suitable’ for man and wite or lady or gentleman 191 Chauncey street. jon 1e—at TG TET Furnished Foon, light house- Keoping, with bath KL wright, 1479 Bergon street, Brooklyn, ‘Telo- phone 3708 W Bedford "Jen 7-4 TO LET—Second floor, five rooms, all improvements. 689 Marcy avenue, be- tween Vernon and Myrtle avos., Brook: yn N Ye Dee. S14 TO LET—Top oar, to small quiet tam. fly; use of bath room and tubs: $16 Mrs. ‘Laura McKinney, 418 Waverly ave, Brooklyn Dec 81-8 ake 189% # - FRONT no. BRT Organised Deoernber Ist, 1804 . Incorporated Angast Sth, 1995 The Fifteenth Annual Ball and Ladies’ Souvenir Reception —OF THE — — mmm = B Hotel” Bellmen’s Beneficial Ass'n At GRAND CENTRAL PALACE Lexington Ave. Bet. 43rd and 44th Streets, New York, Friday Evening, February 12th, 1909, H.B.B.A. Branches from Phitadelpbis, Wesbingten, Boston and Chloago will be represented, MUSIC WILL BE FURNISHED BY MISS HH. L, ANDERSON'S PULL ORCHESTRA Grand Marob of the Assvolation at 1, A.M. c ADMISSION INCLUDING WARDROBE CHECK 75 CENTS rv Boxes seating 7 persons $8.00. Reserved Seats $1.00 ‘Tickets on salo at tho Hotel Bellmen's Beneficial Association Rooms, 495 Seventh ‘Avena, Newly Elooted Ouicors.— Thomas H. Alston. President, Geo. B. Hawking, Vice-President, Wa. A ‘Neos. Finaneial Seorouary, W. W. Chapman, Assistant Pisanolal Beorotary; ad Williamson, Recording Sroretary; Joho 8. Wilson, Assistant Recordi: Beoretary; W. Terriel, Treasurer; W. B. Jackson, Assistant Treasurer; Berry L. Hicks, Gorreependicg Becre~ tary, Lawrence Turnor, Chaplain; Chas R. Anderson, Chsirmsa. Admission Committee; W. He Robinsoo, Chairman Sick Comuittoe; Geo. 8. Joboson, Member Board of Directors; telah Be Miles, Sergeant-at-Arms; L.Q Lookhart, Assistant Sergeaat-at-Arme, J.C. ‘Thomas Under taker, K.P Ruberte, Medical Examinor; Julian Nelaon, PH. Riobardson, James Hawking, ‘Trustoes, AGRNT8—AGENTS—AGENTS CANVASSERS— — -CANVABSERS —-——- 801.1C'roRs ——_— wanted to take subsoriptions for THE POLICE GAZETTE, together with handsomely !lustrated book of the Life and Gavties of BASE gL OUNS ON the fiat ootored hoavyweight champion of too world, alav many other prennums, otere colored barber, astoou keeper and sportiog man wan's a copy. YOU MARE $1.00 FOR EVERY sAbscriber vou seoure. Address. RICHARD K FOS PUBLISHING HOUSE Frauklin syuare, New Vork Chey EEE — LLL = 1803 1909 cos U. mm “We Caro For Bick and Bury Our Doad” (te —H Y Organized, April 15th, 1863, Iu, Sept. 17th, 1871 fe —\ The 46th Annual peer 3 Fr) «RECEPTION AND SOUVENIR BALL a in SS Hs Will be given by the WAS A y Saloonmen’s Protective Union No. \ + Sey, OF NEW YORK CITY Wine AT MURRAY MILL LYCEUM Sg 34th Streot, bet, Lexington and Sd Avenues, N. Y. THURSDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 4th, 1909 Music by Walter F. Craig's Orchestra TICKETS, - Including Hat Check “ 50 CENTS 03 ix persons, $2.00 Exclusive of Adalesios 0. is 1 $3.00 Berge ae Ue Darcaavos be appigion to W 1 Wilton. t1s Weet ed Stivst ead Sass Be Marray, 121 Kast 97cb Street, New York. : Bxeoative Commltvee —Ge+ W Nickoos, chairman, Goo, E Tbompson, vice chalrmans Robert Wynkoop, socretary Joffereum 8. Combs, assistant secretary, Peter Williamson, treae urer; Edw W. Auderson, Fred’k Quince. Jag. A Musgrave. Recaption Cam atttes —Jaines HH \lutray, chatrmaa, Fraok Graham, Walter Castor, Walter Laws, Joho H. Harris. Je. John E. Mortia, Ploor Committees ~Jobo (. Sevilic, chairman; William McKenzie, Leroy P. P. Coles George Deas, William MeManscell, CF Prime. jan 21-2, jan7-2t HELIQIWUS RUTICKS, BETHEL AM E_CULRCH, West 26th Street, detween 7th end tb aveaues, Sunday pervicee—11 a m and 745 9. Holy Commualon every “Oret. Gunday, 8 BP cnc, meetiag 180 pm Gan: Gay School 2pm Prayer meeting P Weebly Mectings—Class meeting on Mom Gay, Tucsdae and Wednesday nights at 8 o'clock rages mering: oo Friday page from 8 o'clock to 8 3 eats FREE. ALL WSLCOMR Rev fC Ransom, D 0., Pastor Pastor's residence. 248 West 129th street. At bome trom 8 to 10 am. : The pastor can be eern at the charch every day from 12 to 8 om octlz-lyr BT UCYPRIANS CHALEL PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL, 177 WEST. STREET. REV JNO W “JOUNBON, Priest tn barge. Sunday Services 33 a m and 8 Dp. m. Bunday Schoo! 3 soe = A CORDIAL WELCOME TO ALL. Juo20-1yr UNION AM of citvucu, 230, Bast @5th street. REV JC PERNANDENS, Pastor Sanday Servicce Lrvaching 11a. Ciase meet tog 12M. suacer. ‘School, 180 p. wm. Freachfog & p ‘ws : tloly Commanioa every ining ‘sunday. 3 to Weekday sereices ‘Ly-rom, Wednesday, 8 Dm. class meetings, Tharaday, 8 pm. All are welcome aap sist ST JAMES PRESBYTERIAS CHURCH, 257 West Stat street, New York City Panter, C LEROY BUTLER, Realdence, 436 ‘Went 83d street Office hours until 10 preseting sti nd 8 Prayer aching at lia: m. and 8 p.m mpesting Wecneadey evening at 8.16. Ban- day School at 1pm Y. PB CB 7 p.m. Bukdays. i Holy Communion first Sunday tp each month ats Pa A CORDIAL WEICOMB TO ALL. _ __ warlo-lyr_ MOTHER AM 8 ZloN CHURCH West 80th st, bet Columbus and Amster- dam Avenues Rev JM McMULTEN Pastor Sunday Services Preaching at 1040 4 m2. and-745 pm Rabbath School 2 pm Yung Peopte'e GF paper meetiag, tren Bute ercnlng at 615 o'clock — Pupite torited “Resldence of pastor, 144 W Tooth at, Partoc ean be seen at home from 9 to 1] every day AIL are seelcome Roctetics deatring dates will communteat with the paar mare 13 AURROGATE’R NOTION. IN PURSUANCE of nn arder of Hon ABNER © THOMAS a Surrng ite of the County of New York NOTICE te herebs given to all. persona haying cinims Againet the estate of PHPT ALLEN inte of the Counts Of New York, for JJoughar Manhattan deeenaed to prenen Mie Raine wIth Couchers thereat ta th mibscribera at thelr pince of Ceannnct Ines business, Teams $08 2-10 No | Heckman strect in. the City of Nes Fark on of before the 10th day of Maj next Tinted New York November 3 190% JOSEPHS McLANE, WULIA’ HAKTIS Administrators ; J NOVGLASS WETMORE fT Attorney, for adminintratora, E 5 Reekman Street. New York City. Se ees CONCERT AND RECEPTION ST. ANN'S BENEVOLENT SOCIETY At Lyric Hall, 42d Street and 6th Avenue, N. Y. City WEONESRANG EVENING. JANUARY 271. 1808 gue? D Pursbaand! row say uf the uifiver of at Stenodiots Bootory, 264 Woat FA ~ ew. T. ML. Okesfe, Spiritoal director and treasurer. Mrs. O Mayhew, President. 316 West 59h Street. Mra. U. Sarads, Se rectary 324 West 53d Street. Miss Hallie ‘Anderson's Orchestra. —[_—«—<—=—————_—_z_~>_—_——_E_=_=___=_E]")"_= +. New sry corner §tst Street and Seventh Avenue, N.Y, "Phone 6714 Columba oe To Let---For Balls, Parties and Receptions : ton cdots ates sateurzOre fem BES NF OP RN” MISS HALLIE ANDERSON'S DANGINE CLASS EVERY SATURDAY EVENING Anply to R. HARPER RICHARDSON and HALUE L ANDERSON, Proprietors, deo.1T-Sm MATINEE, BASKET BALL GAME AND RECEPTION Under the Auspices of ST. AUGUSTINE'S YOUNG MEN'S GUILD From ato 6P M. Saturday Afternoon, January 23, 1909 — At Clinton Assembly Rooms 1s Atlantic Avenue between Court and Clinton Streete, Brooklyn ALPHA PHYSICAL BULTURE CLUB Archie E. Thomas, Manager é versus % ST. AUGUSTINE'S Wm. Russell Johnson, Manager James S. Kingsland, Asst. Manager — Nimrod Jones’ Orchestra Admission, - - - - 35 Cents Parties from Manhattan take Snbwas to Borough Hall Station, eS + Straighten Your Hair pees Oe me ew Sta Tone, Ford’s Hair Pomade stasnsnanaern eee concen r att Se . i oe Fg RRS com fae ee cae ChiLs Ford Praag Hic iedtindie ce a Ab Go beste ama aca a The Ozonized Ox Mer-ow Co. Paiste Vow ane te maar ninieta thy OAR ta oie Wanted Reerswharn, see j I CAN HELP YOU : set cea Nein, nile gm attend ta pote ere ‘ Old Dr. Bryan VM des Has bein favarat ski en ta the readers of this oa Sy cian apne ant by the estore pupulation, for over $0 JOury A Y ee a Seer se Hon Tt Diseases of Men iat Wenn id avait hia Ihr gamalausia aitislate aanteantad oe Re Se brreate eanaore uloere iuaharcos sal doy uring awalli va Ve eee aaa ba Old Dr. Bryan a OY Reyna van man on: afore magga sas Sect Niel ft ofa Spas thy adap pide aac mornings Cuma and soe we to day’ DR. BRYAN 208 EAST 17th STREET | Near 3rd Avenue, N Y¥ atten . ( News From Out of Town ORANGE, January 12.—The educational classes recently established by the Colored Branch of the Y. M. G. A. of the Oranges is meeting with marked success. New scholars are being enrolled every class night. The city of East Orange is making elaborate preparations for the celebration of the 100th anniversary of the birth of Abraham Lincoln on February 14, 2014. The mayor is pointed an executive committee of ten, of which the mayor was named chairman, to arrange for the celebration. Justice of the Peace Robert A. Travis was appointed a member of the committee as the representative of the colored citizens of the city to the meeting in the city include a public mass meeting in the afternoon at 3 o'clock at which Gov. Fort will preside and erecting of a statue of Lincoln in the Parkway. The taking up of the celebration of the anniversary by the city was occasioned by the city council by Justice Travis calling their attention to the anniversary and suggesting that fitting arrangements be made to properly commemorate the event. The revival services which started on New Year's Eve at the Calvary Baptist Church is meeting with enthusiastic success. The Negro-American Republican League is enrolling the names of those who contemplate attending the inauguration, which will permit their carrying members and friends at a reduced rate. Send your name to the league at 21 Jones street, East Orange, bldgside stone church being erected by the Olive. Mt. Olive Baptist Church in Ashland avenue is nearing completion. The success of Dr. Sutherland, the popular leader of Omaha only goes to that there is always room at the top if we aspire to attain. The dignified and learned Rev. Solomon Porter Hood, who in the short time has readied among us his become a leader in matters of public racial concern, is contemplating taking up his permanent residence here. The city and the county is sadly in need of men of like calibre but also in public and political life. That advertising pays is being demonstrated by the success which the revival now being held at the Union Baptist Church is accrued in cards announcing the revival hung in all the stores and shops. Waterbury Gleanage WATERBURY, CONN., January 11.—R. E. George Biddle held an interesting quarterly conference at the A. M. E. M. Church and his people for their excellent report. Miss A. R. Johnson was conferred as president of the Varick Christian Endeavor Society. Miss S. Nelson, secretary, W. Holland was conferred as superintendent of the Sunday School. Miss Viola Keford, secretary, and A. D. Gathing, treasurer. The pastor made a splendid report of his work. W. Holland was conferred the annual Sunday to the Eastern Star. The attendance was large. The funeral of H. Walker was held in the A. M. E. Zion Church, Dr. G. O. Whitfield, E. George Biddle and B. Scott. The deceased was a member of the Odd Fellows and the Masonic Lodge, which attended in a body. Internment was in Riverside cemetery. W. Holland was in military office. In the J. O. Price Historical and Literary Society for the quarter: Mrs. M. McKethan, president; M. C. Beanman, vice-president, Mr. Jackson, secretary; W. Holland, treasurer, and Mr. Roundtree, chapel. Dr. C. Fairfax preached and gave the communion service Sunday assisted by Rev. B. Scott. Mr. Alfonso Gatling and Mrs. E. Scott joined the church. Mrs. Jeff. Wilson and Mrs. C. McDowell, who have been sick, are improving. Mr. and Mrs. R. McKenny have a many attended the funeral of Essele Demo, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. Miller at Nanauduck. Dr. and Mrs. Fairfair received many useful and handsome presents from the Christmas tree. Matt. organist of A. M. E. Zion Church, has been unable to fill her place, having had a severe attack of rheumatism. Miss V. Keford is presiding for the present. The concert was held by the People's Forum and Varkid Endeavor Sunday at 3:30 p.m. Rev E. George Biddle, D. D., presiding elder, deliver an address. A man and S. Munn spent New Year's Day in Newark, N. J. Mr. J. T. Fairfax, superintendent of the Buds of Promise, distributed holiday cards and baskets of candy among the little ones. Dr. C. Fairfax gave a special collation to Bible Class No. 1, of which he is teacher. The Friday Night presentation was by A. Amar, leader, presented Mr. J. T. Fairfax with a handmade imported vase. Entlewood Briefs Mrs. Hannah O'Brien and son, Ro- land, leave Thursday for the South. Mrs. O'Brien anticipates spending so much time with her children. The stork visited the home of Rev. and Mrs. Griffin about two weeks ago with a baby girl. Miss Prescott Boone and Mrs. Cora O'Brien will be the sick sister. Mrs. Stephen Rivard will Sunday. Stephen Boone spent Sunday waiting relatives in Brooklyn. E. D. M. C. anticipates giving a dance in the Odd Fellows' Hall early in Friday. Mr. Arthur Lee joined the E. D. M. C. Friday evening. The Young Men's Progressive Club is on Saturday, one month, for gentlemen only. PlainSold. N. J. PLAINFIELD, January 11 — The classical rectal which was postponed from December 30 on account of inclement weather, was rendered on Wednesday evening, January 6. By January 9 the bury of Holmes at Plainfield was commenced at Montanaquanta at Mr. Olive Baptist Church. It was a rare treat and was the most thorough and classical affair rendered in the history of Plainfield by the colored people. The weather was ideal. Under the direction of Chairman H. Warner, the program was opened by Mr. Calender, the number was a chorus by the lyeum choir, which was followed by Mrs. Dr. R. C. Wormley who recited "The Party." The next was a solo by Miss Patty Lander, entitled "Queen of the Earth," which was followed with a violin oblation, "The Fifth Archer." A. J. Lambert was substituted in place of Dr. F. W. Lawson, who was unable to be present. Mr. Lambert recited "The Face Upon the Bar Room Floor," and stirred the audience with applause. Holmes Ganaway was next on the account of Mr. Gliana, "a successor to H. Minus, with a success that called forth much applause. Part two was commanded by Mrs. L. Calender with a selected overture. The best was Mr. A. J. Lambert, who did justice to the baritone solo, "The Armorer's Song," by the composer of the dramatic piece by Poe, Mrs. A. G. Ligins then sang "Asthore," a contralto solo in E minor, with a sweet voice that won the audience. The program was so concluded by a quartet composed of Meers, Ganaway, Clay, Thompson and Wilson. The lyricus was by the composer of North and those who were absent missed & trent that they may never again be accorded. Last Friday evening was the regular meeting night of the Nonparial Social Club. The members, after transacting business briefly found their way to the Metropolitan grocery store to buy groceries, with which they tendered Mr. William Mayhew, of West Fourth street, a surprise. Mr. Mayhew, who has been sick for several months with rheumatism, is one of the founders of the club and is well thought of by his fellow clubmen. He is also a member of the membership committee. The members were met by their wives and sweethearts on their way to Mr. Mayhew's and while many engaged in different games others demonstrated their ability as to serving refreshments. A pleasant evening was spent and many of the club members attended. The club is preparing for a ministral and dance on Lincoln's birthday. A Brilliant Social Event. The social whirl of Kansas City during the recent Christmas holiday season was dazzling, and its most famous event was the celebration of the teacher and Mrs. W. W. Yates for their daughter, Miss Yates, Monday, December 25 at Lyrie Hall. The best and most conservative families of the twin cities were present, and visitors from several other Missouri and Kansas cities and towns even from Chicago and New York. Professor William H. Dawley, of Lincoln High School, and the social secretary of the hostess, in the imposing unilateral degree Mason, was master of ceremonies. The hall was beautifully decorated with palms. A color scheme in which the blue and white of Lincoln Institute and the brown of Kansas University, resulting of courses in the colored colors, was artistically carried out. The orchestra, concealed behind a grove of palms, discoured delightful strains of music, while here and there chatted levymaiden, stately dames, with chivalry. The orchestra, with twenty matrons and maids of honor, assisted the hostess, Mrs. Yates, head of the Department of English, Lincoln Institute, and the host, William W. Yates, principal of Lincoln School, the city's largest high school. Professor Dawley, escorting Miss Yates, led the grand march, assisted by Major B. E. Watkins, of the U. R. Knigh's of Pythias. Miss Yates, of charming modesty, was小姐 of Lincoln School, an accomplished musician, a social figure, graduated with high honor from the Normal Department of Lincoln Institute in 1906 at the age of sixteen and is now a sophomore in the University of Kansas. numerous flowers and other presents were received from a large circle of friends. Utica Items The Y. M. C. I. on January 23. was favored with the presence of Dr. James Mason, financial secretary of Livingstone college. Dr Mason spoke at 4 p.m. on January 23. the paper and the city papers spoke favorably of Dr. Mason and the work he represents. Dr Mason captured the audience from the start by his eloquence. The new orchestra was offered by Dr. Strother. Dr Mason, after speaking at the First M E Church, of which Dr A. Zimmerman is pastor, went to Hope Chapel A. M E Zion administration of the Lord's Supper. He was called upon afterwards for a speech. He said that he was presiding elder of the district when the church was in chaos, and it was he who appointed the pastor. He said that was proud to see that through its present pastor the work was advancing. He was glad to know, he said, that in the near future they would be placed in a new office and urged them to uphold Dr Strother. Dr Strother preached Sunday morning After the sermon, Mr. and Mrs John Villodas united with the church Dr Strother preached at 3 p.m. for Captain Heft of the Salvation Army at New York City. Dr Strother Walter Brendle, of New York Mills, leader of the Union Choir, gave a splendid sacred concert. The pastor gave a short address. Next Sabbath there will be a sermon preached to the hotel waiters at Hope Chapel by Rev J. C. Roberts, of Binghamton. Harmony Lodge Anniversary. Pristenbush, Pan. Jan. 9 — On Friday evening, January 1. Harmony Lodge, No. 6000. F. V. F. O. F., hold its third annual banquet honoring Odd Fellows' Hall. There were cows laid for one hundred and fifty, all the delicacies of the season being served. It was one of the finestceptions ever made. F. V. F. O. F., Odd Fellows were present. Brother F. Hyson presided and gave great words of praise for the splendid work accomplished by the lodge. He introduced the members of whom made favorable impressions. O. C. Taylor was the recipient of a popular demonstration when introduced by F. Patton made a splendid effort with his band. M. W. F. responded. The logical and eloquent address by Ex-District Grand Master James C. Delphy was much appreciated, as well as one of his supervior John Haven and among his colleagues Dr. S. Beckett, M J E. Johnson, Mrs. Dennis, Mr. and Mrs. O C. Taylor, Dr. George Winteland, Miss Tylor, Mr and Mrs Walter Harris, Mrs Hyson, Miss Ceccone and Mrs Johnson, and host of others. Mr Dennis was tonalmaster on Sunday, January 3, the anniversary sermon was delivered by Dr W H Hoone, at Central Baptist Church. The anniversary sermon was delivered by Walter P. Carter. The Harmony Orchestra under the musical selections under the lender ship of Prof A F Hyson. Hackensack, N. J. At the Mt Olive Baptist Church revival services have been going on for a week and will continue through this week. The Rev. James Harris was held in the Sabbath School after the regular exercise. The revival is being conducted by Rev Crawley, of Ashbury Park, Rev R. L. Harris, in doing the Y M G A of Hackenack is doing a good work. They are preparing to render an interesting programme soon in which local and out of-pawn talent will appear. Mr L. M. Brooks returned Tuesday, after spending some time visiting his parents and friends in New York. evening Dr. and Mrs. B. F. Wheeler, Rev. and Mrs. A. R. Jackson, Mrs. Margaret Hood and Mrs. E. P. Bruny, Mrs. M. Huff and Mrs. J. L. Johnson, and Miss Lloyd Davis attended the reception in New York given by the U. O. G. R. R. Fred Hogan, of New York City, is now a resident of Hicksville, the mother of, Abelahne, N. C. J., who has been with her since her very severe sickness and would remain until she is stronger. James H. Huff and Miss Mary Ruffan, of Paterson, N. J., were united in marriage by Rev. A. R. Jackson at the Parsonage, Wednesday, December 23, 2015. Sophia Jackson gave a lunchon honor to Sophia Jackson and Janoris Jackson, Friday, January 1. Riker's Hand in Yonkers On Sunday afternoon a band concert was given in the Phillipaburg hall under the auspices of the Y. M. C. A. (white). Music was furnished by Riker's Black Concert Band. The program was well well attended and an excellent it is said to be one of the best band concerts that Youkner has heard for many a day. Miss G. E. Banks, of New York City, was visiting friends yesterday and worshiped at the A. M. E. Zion Church. Miss G. E. Banks was in the city last Thursday visiting friends. Miss Lucretia Madison was in Newark last week and attended the twentieth wedding anniversary of her cousin last Monday evening the A. M. E. Zion Lyceum met as usual. The vice-president, Mrs. M. J. Spence, presided. The literary program was very interesting, especially the recitation by Miss Emma Gross. The members' meeting at the A. M. E. Zion Church on Friday was largely attended and much business of great importance was transacted. On Sunday afternoon at the A. M. E. Zion Sunday School the regular monthly concert was given under the auspices of Class No. 11 Miss Irene Howard, whose bring the class the programme was long. Each one of the little tots taking part the performers ranged from two years up to seven. Among the youngest were little Miss Ruth May Sunyer, two years, who sang and gave a recitation: Master Charles Milton Gross, who recited the oration on record; Miss Vincent Winters, who recited and Miss Dorothy Mann, who also recited. Every number was well rendered. Dr. Smyrna baptised the sick infant of School street, last Sunday afternoon. New Rochelle. Mr. James R. Harris, who has been so very sick, is able to be out again. The funeral of Mrs. Peggy Bannister, who died Tuesday evening, was held Thursday afternoon at Hethada Baptist Church, Rev. Boddy Hichating. Mrs. Bannister is said to have been over 100 years old. Rev Charles Landrine is very sick. Mrs. Charles D. of New York, and Mrs. Misser Berry of Pittsburgh, V. Mason Larson of Queens of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Davis. Miss Laura Crump and Miss Mussle B. Green spent Sunday in Greenwich, Conn., the guest of Mrs. Louisa Jerman who is very sick. Mrs. University G. St. John's M. Church was the scene of a brilliant wedding. The contracting parties were Mr. Edward Wright and Miss Hattie Jackson, both of Newark. Mrs. Anderson was the guest Nellie Berry, Mrs. Wright and Virginia Poulson. Mr. Eugene Gibson was best man. The reception was held at Davis' Place, and her an elaborate collation, Van Dyke Berry, Mrs. Wright and Virginia Poulson. The happy pair were the recipients of a large number of handsome presents. Rev. Monroe was the guest of Rev S. H. Monroe, and Jackson has returned from Annapolis, where she spent the holidays with her parents. Rev. Robinson has returned home from the hospital after having undergone an operation He is improving now. Mrs. C. V. St. John is on the sick list. St. John's literary is well attended Sunday afternoon, an excellent programme was rendered by the following talent: Solo, Miss Alice Howard, recital; Solo, Rodger; solo, Mr. Paris Edward; recital by Rev. Monroe; recitation, Mr. H Sewell and remarks by Mr. J. E. Proctor. Pausale, N. J. The revival services held at Oak Street A. U. M. P. Church last week resulted in inoculation of five persons. Quarterly Mass held at Oak Street Church last Sunday. The speaker of the day was Rev. Robertson, of Rutherford Miss C. H. Kingland is slowly imple- mencing in health and is now able to sit up On the first Sunday in February there will be a baptism at Mt Zion Baptist Church, there being two candidates for immediate ordination. Miss Edna Jackson departed this last Tuesday, January 12, at 4 o'clock at St Mary's Hospital. She leaves a mother, father, four sisters and one girl. All were in attendance. Vide- ees were held at Bethel A. M. E. Church, Rev J. Thomas officiating. The remains were in联织 Lolm Cemetery. At the morning service at the Mt Zion Church, the sermon was delivered by the pastor, Rev W. J. Winston, entitled "Bride Your Tongue." Sunday School convened at 3:15 P. M. to a large school. At the last service the pastor occupied the pulpit Prof Maxwell gave one of his mystifying entertainments at Mr. Zion Church Thursday evening to a large number. His greatest feat was his packing box escape. Mr. Chas, H. Kingland made a flying truss to Manhattan last week. Mr. Chas, H. Kingland, and Miss Estella Malze were united in holy wedlock last Thursday evening at the residence of Mr. and Mrs Wylie Goodle. Park Place, by the Rev W J. Winston. Newark Notes. NEWARK, N. J., Jan. 10 — Rev Edward P. Jones, District Grand Master of the State of Mississippi, former Grand Director and Fraternal Delegate to Engg and Fraternal O. F. arrived here Tuesday of last week. O F arrived here in this city he was a guest of Mrs. Rachel Hilton and was tendered an informal reception by loading members of the Order at the residence of Mr. Harry Christmas 90 Arlington street. At the reception election and installation of the officers, Mr. Hilton and M., the following officers were installed: Mr. Harry Vandever re-elected W. M. H Waldain, S. W. Luke H Dancey, J W. Jno H P Young, secretary: Jno H Willama, treasurer, and J. H. Spratley tyler. The night the teachers of the Plans Street Sunday School attended the hearts of the children of the school by their annual Christmas treat. There was a beautiful collection of persons there with a warm smile and beautiful presents with warm smiles. The annual fair was the Plane Street Presbyterian Church was held during the holiday week. The different booths were handmade decorated booths were most handsomely decorated. The fair was well attended each night. Mr. and Mrs. Kaiter, of Philadelphia, were the guests of Mrs. Bohlow, mother Mrs. Matthews, of Charleston street, Miss Anna Gray, of New York City, spent a few days visiting her niece Mrs. J. B. Wade, during the Christmas holiday, Mrs. and Mrs. Robert Harris of A.ington, N. J., have gone to Richmond, Va. for the winter to recuperate from the rigors of our Northern climate and to skiff friends. Dancing, Plane Street Presbyterian Church is one of the most attractive church edifices in the city. A cordial and hearty welcome has been extended to all strangers to attend the fair. The heartfelt desire of both pastor and the heartfelt desire of everybody feel throughtout at home. Mrs. Jane Mathways, of 192 Charlton street, is entertaining her couple, Miss Annie Delaney, of Silver Lake, N. J. for days. On Monday evening Miss Olive Maris, Mrs. served a delightful little lunchon a few friends in honor of Miss Delaney. The first meeting of the Half Hour Reading Class of 1009 was held at the residence of Mrs. James A. Wormley, Mint Street, Manhattan, on Wednesday, January 6. Quita G. Quita, gram was rendered, consisting of recitations, instrumental solos. A recitation was given by Mrs. Richard Miles, of Reading by Mrs. Ballard, of Orange, Mint Street, Manhattan, groups of the year's work of the class. The honor were Mrs. Sampon, of Boston; Mrs. Janifer, of Washington; D. C. Conick, of New Rochelle, and Mrs. Birth, of D. C. The Reading Class represented people of Newark and the Oranges, who are as follows: Mrs. Dr. John D. Ballard, Mrs. Fred. H. Dravis, Mrs. James A. Wormley, Mrs. George Douglass, Mrs. A. Wormley, Mrs. John Moycley, Mrs. James E. Churchman, Mrs. George W. Roper, Mrs. Charles Johnson, Mrs. Richard Miles, Mrs. Gregory, Mrs. Granger, Mrs. After the program was rendered, refreshments were served, followed by a social hour. On Tuesday evening, January 12, a large company of friends gathered at the residence Dr. and Mrs. John D. Ballary, Dr. John O. Orange, N. J., in honor of Mrs. W. Sampson, of Boston, who has been visiting New York and Brooklyn during the several bridges what was inudged in during the visit, a beautiful collation was served, followed by dancing. Guests included many well-known society people of Newark, Orange, New York and Brooklyn. KEY West, Ela, Notes. KEY West, January 2—Rev. M. C. Clark, of Tampa, arrived in the city with hold a ten-day meeting at St. James missionary Baptist Church on Olivia street. Rev. R. S. Singleton, of Olando, in visiting Rev. R. C. F. Sams, pastor of the Prelature of Baptist Church. The O. E. Church, Union Grand Lodge of the State of Florida had a public installation yesterday afterparty. Rev. R. S. Singleton, of Olando, is in visitation M. Church. The R. G. M Lady, M. Church, gave the officers of the Key of the Gulf Chapter, No. 53. This chapter adjourned to the chapter room and were dismissed. Curtains are not announcing the marriage of Miss Thames, Lang, of this city, to Dr. A. J. Kenkel,庐溪 of Iowa, Miss Mildred Shayert, principal of the Douglass School, who has been ill for the last few days at her residence on Out-of-Town Hotels a HOTEL W. H. MARRY, President! Thoroughly Modern Wine Two hundred steam heated outside room. restaurant attached. Special Series to Bedroom Box at all stations. Opposite Back Bay Station, Dan BOSTON. Out-of-Town Hotels and Summer Resorts HOTEL UPTON Two hundred steam heated outside rooms. Superb dining room service. Bar with restaurant attached. Special Enter to Railroad Men and Textile People Luggage free to and from all stations. Opposite Back Bay Station, Dartmouth St.Price moderate. June 25-lyr. BOSTON, MASS Hair Dressers and Barbers. Greenberg's Ladies' Hair Dressing Parlors MANUFACTURER OF HUMAN HAIR GOODS Afro-American Hair Goods a Specialty All kinds of Wigs. Front Pieces and Switches in Stock, and Made to Order Mail orders promptly filled out from any part of the country. List sent free. 589 Eighth Avenue NEAR 39th STREET Greenberg's Ladies' Hair Dressing Parlors MANUFACTURER; OF HUMAN HAIR GOODS NEAR 30th STREET MACY RE Hair Tonic and Dandruff Cure, Macy Re Massage Cream and Skin Food, Mme. Mason's Face Beautifier. Above goods guaranteed under Pure Food and Drug Act, Series No. 18979. Only Afro-American Hair, Goods Store in New York owned by an Afro-American, 41 West 183th Street, New York. Old hair made new. MRS. IDA WHITE-DUNCAN 19 Prescott St. Jersey City, M. J. HAIR WORKER. Wright, Brake, Baga, Pompadour and Omega-Magic, made up in the latest styles. Face Hair, Makeup, Haircut. Colored Prescott Omega-bearng. Mall orders primarily attested to. Branch Office, 65 West Street, New Haven, Conn., Mrs. J. A. Mason, Amstet. Dr. James A. Banks SURGEON DENTIST 118 West 59th Street, New York Telephone 966-6280 Gas Administered. Porcelain. Crown and Bridge Work & Specialty. Ten years with Dr. D. C. White. dec. 17-1yr CODY & BERGER 470 LENOX Between 133rd and The most popular drug store in I remedies ca not be excelled. We nark St. Josef's Liniment—For Rhee Brown's White Pine Cough I Drugs. Still Most Effective. Camphorets—For Gripppe and Col Quinade—The Ideal Hair Pomade Hair Apr 9-1yr. CODY & BERGER'S PHARMACY 470 LENOX AVENUE Between 133rd and 134th Streets The most popular drug store in Harlem Our line of household remedies can not be excelled. We name below a few of them. St. Joseph's Liniment—For Rheumatism and all Aches and Pains. Brown's White Pine Cough Balsam—Contains no Poisonous Drugs. Still Most Effective. Camphorets—For Gripe and Cold in the Head. Quinade—The Ideal Hair Pomade, Straightens and Beautifies the Hair Age 9-19. Key Word Plan Test visiting his slater, Mrs. Jesse Clark. large number of the sponge vessels number of spones. The crews will make other trip during the last of this week Jermey City Notes Botrytial services are being held at the Salem Baptist Church, where were converted at Salem Baptist Church last week and quite a number joined the church by letter. Dr. Charles B. Morris preached a strong sermon here on Sunday morning, January 3. It is whishery distinguished and that the couple are to be married in the church and the affair will eclipse all former events. Of course Dr. A. Mark Harris, the marrying parson, will officiate. Y. M. U. A. is contemplating the purchase of a home in Garfield avenue for its future home. Mrs. M. Watkins is conversing Mrs. John Sprogringa continues indisposed. Mr. Joseph Johnson, superintendent of the Salem Baptist Sunday School, was present in the church and worked pillow by the teachers last Sunday. Dr. Harris, the pastor, made the presentation address. A choir fifty voices were organized at Salem Church by Prof J. H. Delegale which will sing at the 11 o'clock services. Bronx Items. Mrs. Patterson, of No. 1010 Brook avenue, died last week, and her funeral was attended by Rev. C. W. Winder, of Epworth M. E. Church. Her remains were taken to her home in the South. Mr. and Mrs. Robt. H. Spotswood gave a dinner in honor of their friends, Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Barrett, of Orange, N. J., and their guest, Miss W. W Frazier and Miss N. Johnson, of Baltimore, on Thursday evening, December 31, 1908, at their residence, 992 Brook avenue, Bronx. Last Sunday the attendance at the services at St. David's Church, Melrose avenue and 160th street, Rev. Dr. E. G Clifton, rector, was large and the congregation and many friends were repolicing over the presence of the rector over health than he has enjoyed for some time. The services at Epworth M. E. Church, 367 West 158th street, Rev. C. W Winder, pastor, was as usual very inspiring and the sermons instructive. At the services in the evening two very fine solos were rendered by a talented tenor singer. A concert by a company of Jubilee Singers, under the management of Mr. R. D Galloway, will be given in Epworth M. E Church on Thursday evening of next week. The deaconses and choir of the Tahoe Baptist Church are giving frequent concerts for the benefit of the church. There will be confirmation at St. David's Church, 600th street and Melrose avenue, on Wednesday evening, January 20. Bill Against Mixed Marriages WASHINGTON, Jan 19—Senator Milton of Florida has introduced a bill prohibiting the marriage of white persons to Negroes in the District of Columbia or in any Territory of the United States and making issue of such marriage, if any, incapable of inheriting, and prescribes a penalty for such intermarriage, the word "negro." It also prescribes penalty for any person performing such a marriage ceremony. MADAME J. L. CRAWFORD HAIR DRESSING PARLOR 341 West 59th Street Wigs, switches and pompoms made from natural hair. Combails made up of hair straightening a speciality. Made Crawford's Face Cream for sale.-A skin beautifier and remove of pimples and black- hands. apr2-1 y Telephone 2801-38th St. MRS. P. BERGER Ladies' Hair Dressing Parlor 513 Eighth Avenue, 1st Floor Bet, 55th and 38th St, N. Y. All kinds of Afro-American hair goods in stock or made to order aug 20-smo DR. ROBERTS' White Rose Tooth Powder is one of the best known preparations for wetting and cleaning the teeth CHAS. H. ROBERTS, D. D. S. 236 West 55d Street NEW YORK Apr 28 1917 Double Gold Saving Stamps Every Friday THE BEST QUALITY IN The lowest prices consist most liberal terms are the in dated firms of BEST QUALITY IN FURNITURE AND best prices sensitent with the best terms are thej inducements offered The lowest prices consistent with the best quality and the most liberal terms are the inducements offered by the consolidated firms of E. V. KRAUS (Former of 9th Ave.,) and the EQUITY FURNITURE COMPANY AT Y FURNITURE CO AT EQUITY FURNITURE COMPANY 705-707 THIRD AVE bet. 44th and 45th street Accounts open We give GOLD SAVING S them all. Respect Unde JAMES C. UNDERTAKER 493 Seventh Avenue, between Camp chairs to Hire. Lady embalmer in as I have no connection with any other firm. Telephone, 3935 Columbus JOHN H. BEV C. Franklin C. UNDERTAKERS Show Room and Chap Licensed L. OFFICERS:—President, Rev. C. L. Br. Benjamin F. Thomas. BOARD OF DIRECTORS:—BeaJ. F. Tho C. L. Brown, John H. Becks, Walter E. Handy, ounts opened $1 per wOLD SAVING STAMPS, the best Accounts opened $1 per week We give GOLD SAVING STAMPS, the best premium of them all. Respectfull/yours Undertakers MES C. THOMAS UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER Avenue, between 36th and 38th street. Lady embalmer in attendance. Be sure and se with any other firm. Telephone, 5140 38th columbus N H. BECKS, Man. C. Franklin Carr Burial Co. UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMER Room and Chapel, 266 West 53rd S. Licensed Lady Embalmer Resident, Bev. C. L. Brown; Secretary, Walter R. ECTOBS:—Banj. F. Thomas, J. H. Morgan Taylor, Fr Becks, Walter K. Handy, Benj. F. Brown, Jr. UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER 493 Seventh Avenue, between 36th and 37th Streets. Camp chairs to Hire. Lady embalmer in attendance. Be sure and send to above address as I have no connection with any other firm. Telephone, 3140 388 581 JOHN H. BECKS, Manager C. Franklin Carr Burial Co. UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS Show Room and Chapel, 266 West 53rd Street Licensed Lady Embalmer OFFICERS:—President, Rev. C. L. Brown; Secretary, Walter E. Handy; Treasurer, Benjamin F. Thomas. BOARD OF DIRECTORS:—Banj. F. Thomas, J. H. Morgan Taylor, Francis S. Grant, Rev. C. L. Brown, John H. Becks, Walter E. Handy, Benj. F. Brown, Jr. nov. 13-19- OPEN ALL NIGHT C. FRANKLIN C. FUNERAL DIRECTOR 120 WEST 135th STREET Coaches to Let. Camp Chairs to Hire. I Not connected with my FIRM. My servi- at the above address ONLY. Telephone: 8592 Harlem. Camp Chairs and Coaches to Hire. Coach to Let. Camp Chair to Hire. Lady Attendance. Furniture. IBM. My services. can be attended at the above ONLY. TURNER & HOLMES Funeral Directors 203 West 26th St New York City Two Doors West of Seventh Avenue Service and Vices Bight Thomas W. Turner, Chatham, Mass. Bc. 210 West 27th St. Bc. 498 10th Ave. NOTARY PUBLIC 10月1日 MENT's services on be had for Stoknes, Rockingham, Chilling and Marriages, at any hour in the day or night. HORATIO JA Successor to the late JA UNDERTAKER and REV. ROBERT R. MONT Undertaker and Embalmer : : NEW YORK Rex 4 W. 186th St. Sept.38m Wet. 8859 Harlem. J. Wesley Lane 112 West 133rd Street Near Lenox Avenue Prompt Service. Moderate Rates. Coaches and Camp Chairs To Hire. jan14 8m Tel. 3034 Columbus Notary Public W. DAVID BROWN HIGH GRADE Funeral Director and Embalmer Paraphrallia, material and service of the bee Funeral Parlor and Chapel 146 West 53d Street Between Sixth and Seventh Avenues Madam Brown in attendance at Funerals Branch Parlors 413 Washington Street Newark, N. J. C. N. BROWARD TONSORIAL PARLO 5342 WEST 37th STREET Bet. 8th and 9th Aves. A full line of Perfumes and Toilet Art and Facial Massage, Cigars, Cigarettes and C. N. BROWARD, Proprietor JAMES JOY C. N. BROWARD TONSORIAL PARLOR 342 WEST 37th STREET Bet. 8th and 9th Aves. New York A full line of Perfumes and Toilet Articles Electric and Facial Massage, Cigars, Cigarettes and Tobacco C. N. BROWARD, Proprietor JAMES JOYNER, Manager Telephone Call 4414 Chelsea ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` FURNITURE AND CARPETS lent with the best quality and the inducements offered by the consolli TURE COMPANY AT med $1 per week TAMPS, the best premium of EDWARD V. KRAUS artakers A. THOMAS AND EMBALMER open 36th and 37th Streets attendance. Be sure and send to above address Telephone, 5140 38th april 19 CKS, Manager Carr Burial Co. AND EMBALMERS ol, 266 West 53rd Street ady Embalmer own; Secretary, Walter R. Handy; Treasurer, omas, J. H. Morgan Taylor, Francis S. Grant, Rev. benj. F. Brown, Jr. NOTARY PUBLIC FRANKLIN CARR GENERAL DIRECTOR WEST 135th STREET Camp Chain to Hire. Lady Attendant. with any FIRM. My services can be Attended ONLY. Telephone: 8592 Harlem. H. Adolph Howell FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER 21 W. 133d St., New York Good Service Moderate Rating 1867-12 C. PARKER REV. R. W. WAINWRIGHT PARKER @ WAINWRIGHT UNDERTAKERS 6 Lawrence Street, New York Tel. 4468 Morningside The services of Rev. Wainwright can be obtained for marriage, sickness or funerals any hour of the day or night feb 6 3 pm HORATIO JACKSON Successor to the late JAS. MATTHEWB UNDERTAKER and EMBALMER 49 SIXTEB AVENUE Having twenty years' experience while in the amply of Mr. Matthews, I am now prepared to serve my many friends and the public and give careful attention to his world-wide reputation. Tel 675 Series, New York Telephone Call 472 Columbus ALLEN BILLARD JOHN H. BROWN DILLARD & BROWN LICENSED UNGERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS 202 West 63rd Street Next door to Union Baptist Church Mrs. Florence E. Brown, licensed embalmer Prompt service all times of the day and night. Special attention given to shipping. apr 18-3m Tel. 111 Harlem Orlander L. Daniels Undertaker and Embalmer Funeral Chapel and Parlor 73 West 134th Street, New York Coaches and Camp Chairs to Hire Notary Public Lady in Attendance Jan. 16-19 Read THE NEW YORK AGE and the Colored American Magazine BROWARD MORIAL PARLOR WEST 37th STREET Aves. New York Fumes and Toilet Articles Electric e, Cigars, Cigarettes and Tobacco Perlator JAMES JOYNER, Manager Aug.20-7mo AT