New York Age
Thursday, April 22, 1909
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
VOL. XXII. No. 29.
Hold Twenty-Eighth Annual Session in Montgomery
GOVERNOR COMER
Addresses Negro Teachers for One Hour, Speaking Encouragingly on Education.
STATE SUPT. GUNNELS
Hearthly in Favor of Education of Negroes
in Alabama--Booker T. Washington Given
an Ovation
Special to THE NEW YORK AQB
MONTGOMERY AUA. April 21 — The
Alabama State Teachers' Association
held its twenty-eighth annual session
here last week and the consensus of
opinion was that the session was the
most successful ever held. The association
was organized 28 years ago by
Prot W. B. Fatterson
Prt: J R F Lee, of Tuskegee Insti-
tute, among the prominent
speakers were Gov B B Comer,
State Superintendent Harry C Gun-
nell and Booker T. Washington
The opening session on Wednesday evening set a high standard for the balance of the week Welcome addresses were given by the first president of the association Prof W B Patterson, and Nathan Alexander, who is commissioner of the Land Office in this city, with a feeling response by Prof W J Labols of Birmingham These were followed by an address by Superintendent Harry C Gunnels, who showed his interest and hearty favor in the education of the Negroes of Alabama Every word he spoke conceived the hearers that in him the Negro education has a stanch friend. Accompanying him was also Mr W C Swanson, one of the superintendent's best assistants, who also was most emphatically in favor of the education of the Negro in Alabama
Superintendent Kern on Country roads.
After the addresses of Superintendent Gunneld and Mr. Swanson, Superintendent O. J. Kern, of Rockford, Ill., gave an illustrated lecture on the subject "Along Country Roads in an Educational Way." The lecture of Mr. Kern was, perhaps, the greatest treat that has been had for Negro teachers anywhere in the Southland Mr. Kern showed conclusively what could be done, and what had been done in one county in Illinois, and what could be done in a county by the proper teaching methods. He presented one hundred and fifty slides, showing school houses that had been repaired, replaced, and renewed, and school grounds which had been made entirely new by the co operation of the entire community. He especially emphasized the possibility of growing flowers, evergreens, etc., so as to make the country school house and school yard attractive and home like.
Mr Ketu came to Alabama through the efforts of the white teachers' assoc. with officers of which were instrumental in moving him to lecture to Negro teachers
On the following day in the forenoon there was a study and papers on the social side of the school work, and an address at 11 o'clock by Dr J H Dillard, president of the Jeanes Fund Board. Dr Dillard was most enthusiastic, and showed himself in most hearty sympathy and accord with the efforts which are being put forth by the Negroes of Alabama for their own education and by white people, through State and county officials. Dr Dillard stated that he had found the county and State officials throughout the South almost to a man ready to do what was in their power to improve the conditions of the public schools among the Negro people.
C J Talloway's Great Work.
In the afternoon round tables were
presided over by persons well prepared
for their meetings. The round table for
school work was presided over by Mr.
Jacob Warner.
There was a large experience in
building new school houses, and the
longer term terms in the public
schools. Mr. Malley has been an
instrument of having built thirty-two
new schools. He has more than $4,000
one per school in the county in
which Tuskegee Institute is situated.
The kindergarten and primary section
presided over by Mrs. L. T. Jones.
Superintendent of the Children's House at
degree level to Mrs. Jones is a
state of the Normal school at
ingleton and has taught for
years in the present position. She
state of the Terrell, of Wash-
ington, the grammar and high
school meeting was presided
by Mr. N. H. Parker, principal of
High School in Birmingham. He
built one of the few splendid
schools on the South
all of the meetings actual exo-
final meetings actual exp
ere given as to the different
THE NEW
methods applied in progressive work along the various lines. The experiences in the rural round table meeting were exceedingly interesting, showing how school terms had been lengthened by school farms, by mothers' entertainments, etc. Dr. Dillard was present at this section meeting, and expressed himself as greatly encouraged at the outlook.
In the evening addresses were delivered by Prof N B Young, president of the State Normal school, Tallahassee, Fla., and Dr. J A Kenney, resident physician, Tuskegee Institute Prof Young spoke most eloquently and helpfully on the meaning of education, while Dr Kenney told how teachers might help in preventing the spread of tuberculosis
Friday morning was taken up in discussing the physical side of the child's life, and the institutional character of the school At 11 o'clock the meeting was honored with the presence of Gov B B Comer, who spoke for one hour, most encouragingly and helpfully of the education among the Negroes of Alabama Throughout the discourse of the governance he dwelt largely upon education as the molder of character, and in no instance indicated that education was any less potent in the advancement of the Negro race, than in the advancement of the white Both he and Superintendent Gunnels insisted that they were equally as hearty in favor of Negro education as white They both expressed themselves that upon the education of the Negro depended the improvement of the citizenship among the people
During the governor's speech an incident of interesting note occurred when Dr. Booker T. Washington of Luskeeger Institute came upon the rostrum, and the entire audience arose to greet him and gave the Chautauqua salute. While the chief magistrate of the State and the great Negro educator stood together on the platform there was a scene which would give inspiration to the most inactive. The incident seemed to give the governor new inspiration, and he entered into his speech with an enthusiasm which received cheer after cheer from the entire audience, until he had closed. The governor of the State has never had a more hearty welcome than the Negro teachers of Alabama gave and in no case could the chief magistrate have given more inspiration and encouragement than Gov. Comer gave to his audience. At the close of Gov. Comer's address Dr. Washington was introduced and congratulated the association on having the State officials with them, and on the splendid appearance of those present.
Friday afternoon was taken up largely in the reports from the various counties, showing what had been done in these counties for Negro education, amount of money raised by the people, average length of school term, and average pay for teachers. The election of officers which took place on this afternoon resulted in the re-election of practically all of the present ones
The evening meeting was held at the city auditorium which had been donated to the association by the city authorities, together with the Colored Men's Business League. The speakers for the evening were Mr W T B Williams, agent of the Slater Board, Hampton, Va., Dr H B Frissell, trustee of the Jeanes Fund and principal of the Hampton Institute, and Dr Booker T Washington. More than three thousand people were present Dr Washington, as usual, covered himself with new glory in his own State, and practically in his own town, in his magnificent address, in which he told the teachers what it meant to be teachers He especially dwelt upon the necessity of teachers locating in the sections where they are to teach and to become examples in home life, as well as teachers in the school room A large share of the audience at this meeting was of the best white citizens of Montgomery, who listened with most attentive ear to the entire program, and especially the words of wisdom by the great Educator At the close of Dr Washington's address resolutions of commendation to the citizens of Montgomery were adopted, also a resolution was offered commending the appointment of Mr Emmett J Scott, secretary to Dr Washington, as one of the commissioners to Liberia The association will meet next year in the city of Birmingham, where it is expected that more than a thousand teachers will be present
LIBERIAN COMMISSION
To Leave New York for Africa Saturday
WASHINGTON, D. C. APRIL 20—Next
Saturday April 24 has been fixed as
the date of the departure from New
York of the Liberian Commission ap-
pointed by the State Department to
conditions there, with a new to
improving the management of the af-
fales of the Republic that will better
provide for its maintenance and integ-
rity than now exists.
The commission will be absent from the United States about two months. Because of the possible unfavorable effect on the members of the party the ships taking them to Liberia will anchor off shore, the Commissioners and their assistants making them headquarters, to which they will return each night. The scout Cruisers Chester, Birmingham, and Salem are to be utilized for transporting the party, which is to be made up of Dr. George Sale of Georgia, and Emmett J. Scott, of Alabama; George A. Finch, of Washington, D.C.; Secretary; Capt Sydney A. Cloman, of the Twenty third Infantry, Military Attache at London, who will be called for en route; Major Percy N Ashburn, of the Medical Corps, and Frank A. Clower, Attache.
NEW YORK, THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1909.
A. M. E. CHURCH COLLECTS $3,559,399
Holds 39th Annual Meeting in Washington, D. C.—Wealth of Church Estimated at $7,721,811
Special to The New York Aum
WASHINGTON, D. C. April 21 - The thirty ninth Annual Meeting of the Financial Board of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, held here at the financial headquarters of the denomination, 1541 Fourteenth street Northwest.
Rev. J. John Hurst who is mushing up his first year as financial secretary of the A M E. Church, reported that $167,972.14 was collected from six out of the sixty eight annual conferences in subscriptions of one dollar each for the local year ending March 21. On this money eight per cent went for educational purposes, ten per cent for church extension, thirty six per cent for widows, orphans and worn out preachers of the various annual conferences, and the remainder for the salaries of the bishops, general officers, widows or bishops, etc.
The collections of the various churches during the year for all purposes were $1,559,199.16, and the property of the denomination was reported as being worth $7,721,811.00. The financial department was reported as owning $12,000 in real estate the value of the present financial headquarters and the old one, located six doors below.
Dr. Hurst reported a cash balance $25,299.56, the largest in the history of the department, and this in spite of the fact that the last general conference increased the annual liabilities of the department by about $13,000. He present incumbent succeeded Bishop E W Lampton, and he brought to the department the same up to date and careful business methods which characterized his work as a prominent pastor in Baltimore, Md., for sixteen years.
The members of the financial board are Bishop A Giant, Kurtis City, Kan, chairman; Rev A J Carey, Chicago, Rev A L Murray, Atlantic City, N J Rev John T Jenifer, Annapolis Md., Rev Charles Bundy, Cleveland O, Rev J R Ransom, Topoka, Kan Rev F W Lee Atlanta, Ga Rev N B Sterrett, Charleston, S C, Rev J W Lampton, Vicksburg, Miss, Rev J M Comer, Little Rock, Ank, Rev P C Ghent Palestine, Texas Rev F J Rosholt, Hallabasse, Ia, Rev C H Shelto, Memphis Tenn., C H Johnson, Liberia, West Africa and A Lortune Cape Town, South Africa
OHIO NEGROES
Gilbert Banguet in Honor of Ralph W.
Tucker in Columbus
Court mints O. April 21—One of the most notable gatherings of Negroes held in Columbus in recent years was that which attended the complimentary dinner given for Ralph W Tyler, or Columbus, auditor of the navy, at Dunbar Theater, Vernon and Champion avenues. Wednesday evening of last week Letters regretting inability to be present were read from Dr Booker T. Washington, Charles W Anderson, collector of customs, New York, W T Vernon, registrar of the United States treasury, Judge R H Tercell, J A Cobb, W B Wright, Geo A Myers and others.
During the course of the banquet C L. Maxwell of Xena, former consul to San Domingo, made an elogent ad dress in which he touched upon some political matters. The banquet was an elaborate one and the decorations were in harmony
J S Tyler, father of Ralph Tyler was also honored with his son and responded to a toast, "Yesterday, To Day and To Morrow" "Unite" was the toast to which Ralph Tyler responded. Other speakers were Rev R D Brown, Dr E L. Gilliam, Rolla S Huston, Rev W H H Butler, all of Columbus and Charles Doll of Chillicothe, Captain W S Thomas was toastmaster.
Rev Dr Gilliam introduced the following resolution, which was unanimously adopted: Resolved That this assemblage of citizens of Columbus and the State of Ohio, representing, we believe, the best of our race in this commonwealth, deem it an honor to ta
testimonial in honor of our respected fellow-townman and friend the Hon Ralph Tyler and wish to assure him that he merits and enjoys our fullest confidence and esteem and it is our earnest desire and wish that the citizens of the U.S shall know that he carries with him to the city of Washington our best wishes for future success in the discharge of his official duties as our honored representative
Is Not a Yale Graduate
Is Not a Yale Graduate.
NEW HAVEN, CONN. April 19—The alumni lists at Yale University do not give the name of Louis O Graves, the Negro held by the grand jury in St Louis on the charge of forgery, and who, while on the witness stand, at tributed his mental condition to supereducation.
Graves claimed to be a graduate of Yale, and declared in Judge Tayfour's court several days ago that he became mentally unbalanced because he received too much knowledge.
In the Second District Municipal Court, Brooklyn, on April 1, a case is docketed for trial involving the question of whether a business college has the right to refuse admission to one because of race or color.
The plantiff in the case is Cora M. Powell, who has brought suit to recover $500 damages against Norman P. Hefley, head of Heffley's Business College, located at 678 St. Miles's avenue, Brooklyn. Miss Powell, through her attorney Frank Edmard, instituted proceedings for damages. After that last August she went to Heffley's college and announced her intentions of taking a course in stenography and typewriting, that she offered $10 as payment for the first month's tuition, but was refused admission because of her race and color
The defendant has filed an answer in the case, setting forth that the school is a private corporation and not obliged to accept all applications for membership
NASHVILLE, TENN. April 17 — Dr. Booker T. Washington delivered an address in the main auditorium before the faculty and students of Vanderbilt University in this city a few days ago Vanderbilt is, perhaps, the largest and best organized white university in the Southern States. Dr. Washington was greeted most enthusiastically by the faculty and students. Besides the faculty and students, a large delegation of white men and women from the city of Nashville were present. Both the white and the colored citizens of Nashville commented on the enthusiastic reception accorded the well known educator, and expressions were heard on all sides of indications pointing toward the growing liberal spirit in the South.
BIRMINGHAM BUSINESS LEAGUE
Holds Annual Election of Officers—P. J. Bond Dellerva Advenen.
BIRMINGHAM, ALA., April 27.—At the annual meeting and election of officers of the Birmingham Local Negro Business League, held at the New Washington Hotel, the following officers were elected President, P. M. Davy Jr. Vice-president, P. M. Davy Jr. Secretary, W. A. Baydale. Harris: Chalice Hayes, W. J. Hayes.
mainly responsible for the growth of the local organization, presided and made the principal address. He declined nomination, owing to the time he will have to give to the newly-organized State body. Among the other speakers were Dr W R Potifford, W. J Echols, W A tainfield, C M Harris, R A Blout, Dr J A Bray and P D Davis. President Bond spoke in part as follows.
"Within the past few years there is an element of satisfaction growing among our people to the effect that the salvation of our race lies chiefly with the Negro business man. This may not be clear enough to you, at present as individuals, but I shall endeavor to show you to what extent the business man figures in this commonwealth.
"The masses of our people are not easily controlled, even when it is to their interest to be. Therefore, they must have leaders pioneers who will take upon themselves the responsibility of venturing out. This leader, this pioneer in the commercial world, must be a man of honor, a man of pride, he must have that pride that is unashed of patches, pride that prefers to walk rather than ride in a buggy when that buggy is not paid for. Pride that will say, 'I can't afford it.'
"The organising and concentrating of the energies of the Negro business and professional men will develop a force, a pressure that will enable us to do anything we undertake. Gentlemen, we are all considered as one and the same action; let us be one in reality. Put your shoulders together and faunt the flag of determination to promote the financial and commercial development of the Negro.
FUTURE OF NEGRO REPUBLIC
Present Melancholy Aspect to Liberia's Advancement—Have Done Nothing to Develop the Country's Resources.
MONROVIA, LIBERIA, March 12—Monrovia, with its population of 4,000, plus some 2,000 Kroos, Mandingoes and Ves, who are settled within three miles of the city, is the center of intelligence and power here Liberia. It is the capital of the Republic, the only college town, the home of the ruling class and the center of commerce Since it is the life-center of a Negro Republic on Negro soil, it is hitting that I date my letters from this point. For the most part, these letters will treat respectively of (1) The Government of the Republic, (2) The Education of the Country, (3) Agriculture and Commerce and (4) The Relation of Liberia to the Great Powers
The theory of the government here is modeled after the government of the United States. With president, vice-president and legislative bodies it stands nominally at least, for free speech, liberty of the press and the right of habeas corpus. However it bears one striking and unfortunate contrast to its model. It is in every sense a government of the minority, since in a recent election, out of a population of more than a million and a half, only six thousand persons voted.
This minority consists largely of American Negroes, or Negroes of Afro-American descent, who are called out here, Americo-Liberians. Upon these, numbering something less than fifty thousand, out of a whole population of a million five hundred and fifty thousand, devolves the whole scheme of government of this Republic. They nominate themselves, they elect themselves, and in so far as they may be said to govern, they govern themselves. The president, vice-president, judge of the lower courts, members of the not members of the legislature, and those who constitute the army and navy, all come from this minority of fifty thousand.
This class of people presents a most melancholy aspect to the advancement of Liberia. In all ranks they are as far as possible, mere parasites living on the government, slandering one another and showing general inefficiency. To what may be called inborn inefficiency are added several other hindrances. The climate along the coast where most of them live seems to wither them so that they appear to have no ambition or sense of progress. The soil yields them very紧ant returns. Their intermarriage with Liberians and Negroes from the West Indies has produced a very flabby and physically degenerate offspring. And finally they give themselves such an over the native Liberians that they quite disgust the latter, and thus make it utterly impossible to construct a solid government.
One of the few exceptions to this treatment of the natives, and to inefficiency in general is President Barley. With his good sense President Barley has sought to conciliate the natives, seeking their friendship and interest in the Government with very promising results. Before his election the whole body politic was flipped to the core. He is exceedingly well informed and far-sighted. While he is not radical, he is also not as some for a time supposed pro-British. By keeping his temper in trying situations with other rulers, by calling in expert accounts to systematize and collect customs, by employing trained soldiers of other nations to drill his people for the army and police duty he has shown himself to be the proper ruler for a nottinging Republic. However, he is as I stated an exception. I return to the Americo-Liberians, who in the main, form the government. For all their airs of superiority over the natives they have done nothing to develop the resources of the country. Despite the fact that they have managed the government for more than three score years they have not even the shadow of a school system. With five hundred miles of water front they have not begun to improve even the harbors about the capital. They have six months of dry weather, plenty of good clay and excellent temperature for brick making
date brick yard. They have land in the interior capable of producing any quantity and variety of vegetables and yet they have only the crudest form of farming. And with their forests of rosewood, mahogany, teak and hickory they have no saw mills to supply the demand for lumber, even of their own country. And they face with this minority government these physical degenerates who show no ability to master the Liberian soil or government, stands the native Liberian Numbering at least one and a half millions, they occupy more than four fifths of the forty thousand square miles of the Republic. They survive the climate, they live in the hinterland on the best soil, they have physical vigor, intellectual capacity, a disposition to be generous, and a tendency toward industry. They can be easily led and taught through the spirit of kindness.
Americo-Liberian quite disgust them. For this reason they bear no very strong allegiance to the central government Still left in a semi-savage state, they hunt, fish and farm after the most primitive methods. As they have but a few cart roads or facilities of any kind for exchange of products with the city, they merely seek to cultivate enough to survive on from day to day Still superstitious, they worship devils and fear witchcraft, as they did centuries ago.
And yet, I am bound to believe that upon this people rather than upon the Americo-Liberians, rests the future of the Liberian Republic. They above all, possess the ear-marks of a surviving people in this country. They have physical strength to withstand the whims and changes of the climate. The fever does not sequester fever, but the poised stiffness the white man, and often renders Negroes from other countries helpless. And then, too, the Liberians have intellectual capacity, capacity for work and kind and honest dispositions.
What, then, shall the government be turned over to them? Not now Rather let the way be opened for them to come to the government. Let some sensible American Negroes from our industrial schools in the South, especially from Hampton and Tuskegee, come out here and begin work in the hinterland. Send out here, for example, a few Tuskegee road builders, a few Tuskegee engineers, a few Tuskegee teachers, a few Tuskegee farmers, with the right kind of hearts in their bosoms, and the Liberians will rise in his native strength and build up a Republic that shall be an honor to the black races of the earth. I L
CONSCIENCE WHIPS JUDGE
Who Railroaded Negroes to Prison for Life—Now Ask for Their Freedom.
LIFE—NOW AWK FOR THE FREEDOM
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN, April 20 — R. L. Underhill and George Washington, prisoners in the State penitentiary for life on a second-degree murder charge, stand a chance of gaining their freedom after remaining in custody for thirty four years, thanks to ex Judge James F. who is responsible for their life.
Ex. Judge for the State Redion Board and the following statement:
"I have warranted for thirty-four years about the sentence met out to these men. I shall rest easier if I know that I have done something to undo this injustice."
According to ex-Judge Egan, Underhill and Washington had been arrested and convicted on circumstantial evidence. A house in St. Paul had been robbed and the escaping burglar shots a policeman who intercepted them. Later a woman who lived in the house and saw the burglar in the dark identified Underhill and Washington as the burglar.
Sentiment was so strong in the city against them that it was made use of to frighten them into making a false confession to save themselves from lynching. Their confession was obtained from them, the former judge said, while under stress. A mob was then waiting for them outside of the jail. They were railroaded through court and to life imprisonment in the penitentiary without a jury trial
COURT UPHOLDS CHURCH.
Mrs. Sylvin M. Hall Barred from Bethel
A. M. E. Church, Brooklyn.
Supreme Court Justice Marean, of Brooklyn. Saturday handed down a decision denying a writ of mandamus to Mrs Sylvia M Hall, who sought reinstatement from the Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, from which she had been expelled Mrs Hall applied for the writ through Lawyer Rufus L. Perry and claimed that the officials of the church wrongfully acted in putting her out
She charged the insignation of the church action to the Rev William H Lacey, the pastor, and asserted that she was not tried according to the church discipline. The law firm of Dayton & Bailey represented the church on the trial of the writ and the trial was attended by nearly every member of the church. It was stated that the burden of the relator's wrongdoing was that she declared at a meeting on the evening of January 27th last that she wouldn't "shake hands with the pastor this side of eternity and that he couldn't shake hands with her old black eye." Free Marean disposed of the matter by saying "The property of the defendant corporation is held to religious uses and the expulsion of the relator from church membership precluded no civil or property rights. The secular courts have therefore no juris diction. Motion for a mandamus denied."
WASHINGTON D.C., April 21—May 21uznkz has rented the large house at 1701 New York avenue for the purpose of the Brownsville Inquiry Court Alterations and repairs are being made to suit the nature of the meetings to be held in a few days. The preparations indicate that the court will be in session for many months, probably consuming the entire year given to it by law. The court will not only examine soldiers, but will make a thorough investigation of the raid at Brownsville to determine whether it was committed by members of the 25th Infantry or by others. Some of the court sessions will probably be held in Brownsville. The court has discovered that there is no law compelling men to come before it, so that if there are any who cannot prove their innocence, they do not necessarily have to be shown up.
Has Largest Circulation
PRICE, 5 CENTS
Not All Being Borne by White Tax-payers of the South
SUPT. C. L. COON
Says Small Amount of Money is Spent for Negro Education Considering Population
GOVERNOR HOKE SMITH
Addresses Twelfth Annual Conference for Education in the South - Urges That Negroes Scatter Over Country
Special to The New York Age
ATLANTA, GA, April 21—One of the principal addresses of the Twelfth Annual Conference for Education in the South was delivered on the last day of the session by C. L. Coon, of Wilson, N. C. who spoke on "Public Taxation and the Negro School."
In his address the speaker took the position that the present cost of the Negro public schools is not a burden on the white taxpayer of the South, and made the assertion that the white public school in the South is between six and seven times as expensive as the Negro public school, figuring on the basis of population.
Superintendent Coon's address in part:
"The South is spending $32,068,851 on her public schools. Of this amount $23,866,914 is paid for teachers, white and colored, 74.4 per cent of the total Negro teachers are receiving about $38,187,050, or 12 per cent of the total expenditures for all purposes, white
teachers are being paid 64.4 per
The amount being spent on Negro
teachers is by far the largest item
of expense of the Negro public schoola
In addition to the expense of Negro
teachers the South is paying about
$917,670 each year, making the total
aggregate cost of the Negro schools
near $479,375. These figures relate
to the States of Virginia, North C
lifornia, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida,
Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas,
Arkansas and Tennessee, which contained
814 per cent of the Negro population
in 1900. The Negro population
of these States is about 40 per cent of
their total population. Hence, the Negro
school teachers who have charge
of about forty out of every hundred
of the children of the South, are being
paid only 12 per cent of the school ex-
penditures. The total cost of all the
Negro schools is only 14.8 per cent of the
$22,065,851 expended. In other
words, the white public school in the
South which takes care of only 60 per
cent of the population, is between six
and seven times as expensive as the
Negro public school which takes care
of 40 per cent of the population.
"It is not possible to ascertain accurately what the Negro contributes to his own education, except in some of these States. In Virginia, North Carolina and Georgia, it is possible to find out approximately whether the Negro school is a burden on the white taxpayer. If, in these States, we take the amounts the Negroes actually pay on property and polls, their part of the taxes imposed on railroads and other corporations, their part of the permanent school funds and their part of the license taxes devoted to schools, it will be found that the Negroes' part of the school fund raised by Virginia in 1907 was $507.305; North Carolina in 1908, $420.197; Georgia in 1907, $447.852. These States spent the following sums on Negro schools in Virginia, 1907, $489.288; North Carolina, 1908, $402.658; Georgia, 1907, $506.170. Thus it will be seen that when any fair division of the school funds of these three States is made on the race basis, the Negroes will fare as well as they are now faring in the absence of such race division.
"It has been generally assumed that the white taxpayer is now bearing nearly all the burden of the Negro public schools. But the figures for North Carolina, Virginia and Georgia seem to indicate clearly that this is not the case. If we divided the present school funds of the South on the race basis, how would we divide the funds raised by taxes on railroad and other corporation property, which is not listed as either white or black? How would we divide the license taxes and the income from the permanent school town, which is not listed according to population. If that is done, then it is not likely that the present cost of the Negro public schools is a burden on the white taxpayer of the South.
Gov. Smith on the Negro.
The session opened Tuesday, and the members were welcomed by Gov Hoke not believe that those who dwell upon the South, dwelling on the race question as follows:
"The presence of a great number of Negroes in the South creates a problem which must be understood. I do unsuited for the opportunities they the work of Negro institutions into which few of the race enter comprehend the question. The real Negro educational problem is found in the six million Negroes who never enter these institutions, and who are utterly unsuited for all opportunities they offer. I refer to the great bodies of
BOSTON AGAIN AGITATED
Church Article in Age Discussed—St. Mark's Literary Be-elects Hill.
Boston, Mass., April 1.—Boston is agitated over the article which appeared in the last edition of THE AGE under the caption "Color Line in Boston Church." THE AGE correspondent interviewed several ministers concerning the article and found the consensus of opinion to be in perfect concurrence. Many related their experiences with their white fellow churchmen which will amply substantiate the facts and the purpose of the article. A great many Bostonians are diffident about admitting the existence of color prejudice in this city, but the concern over the issue remains in presence in every phase of life when a number of some proportions is concerned.
Last Sunday St Mark Union held its annual election of officers. For the first time in its history this annual event called over smooth waters and the following officers were landed* President, Mr F. Gaston Hill, Vice-president, Mr Lovett Groves Treasurer, Mr J H Madison, Secretary, Mr Wm A Lee, Assistant Secretary, Miss Bessie Lee; Chaplain, Rev S A Brown, Librarian, Miss Christina Ward; Chorister Mr W O. Taylor. At the conclusion of the election, she was unanimous to retweet, remand vote made by Mr Cole, who spoke briefly on the influence of the Union in the community He also spoke in a congratulatory way of the splendid work of President Hill. Then followed an interesting program arranged by the board of ushers Miss Bessie Lee had charge of the exercises. The first number was a well-rendered piano solo by Miss Crystal Bird Mrs. Olandia Jordan sang and was heartily applauded. Miss Katherine Brown gave a reading which was so pleasing that she was compelled to respond to an encore. A trio by Misses Crystal and Birdi Bird and Charlotte Walker was another pleasing number. Miss Olive William son offered a vocal to which dightened the audience. Miss Bessie Lee gave reading which brought a storm of applause. The final number was given by Miss Mary Page, whose rich contralto voice won an encore.
The concert and ball given under the management of Mrs Betty Traynham for the benefit of the Cambridge Visiting Nurses' Association at Odd Fellows' Hall last Thursday night was a very delightful affair. Jefferson's orchestra furnished the music. Mrs Traynham was assisted by Muses L. Scott. M J Traynham, Mesdames F W Watkins, E M. Ford, W Lewis, K Y Jacobs, E Wilson. L Jordan M E Hamilton, Mrs Taylor Cotton and Prof Payne Mr. W H. Hamilton was floor director Mr and Mrs J T Harrison of 111 Washington street, are repolling over the advent of a little daughter. The event occurred on April 13.
The Cambridge Men's Forum had their Cambridge Associates' Day last Sunday. Mrs Grace Boughlass spot on "The Colored Soldier." In the discussion which followed, Messra Checks, Clark, Blackwell, Hamlin and McCoy participated. Vocal solos were rendered by Mr Carl White and Mrs S B Nobles. Next Sunday will be High School Associates' Day.
Mr Wm. A Thomas opened on April 12, a very fine book shop at 956 Tremont street. Mr Thomas has conducted a book agency in Hyde Park for about four years and he enters into business in this city with the asset of experience. The shop in its stock and furnishings is a credit to the race. Mr Thomas makes a specialty of race literature and many other experiences of merit produced. Mr Thomas will have on sale The New York Age and the Colored American Magazine.
Miss Jamie Kennard, of Worcester, is a guest of Miss Helen Lee of Cambridge and Miss Marie Kennard, her sister, is the guest of Miss Narka Lee of Boston.
The Rising Sun Lodge gave its sixty-second anniversary at Paul Revere Hall on April 15. This ball was one of the most brilliant of post-Lenten functions Music was furnished by F. P. White's Orchestra to a long and brilliant dance. All the prominent members of the craft and several guests from out of town were present. The affair was in charge of the following
Committee of Arrangements - J H Charleston, chairman Stewart E Hoyt, secretary; Wm H Mills, assistant secretary, and Frank E Turpur, treasurer. On the reception committee were S E Courtney, chairman, Daniel H Minor. J W Underwood, William D King, Curtis J Wright, Edgar P Benjamin L, A Eicholburger, Gabriel Miner, Luther A Dawdridge, Charles S Howe, Howe, Rane Rue, Robert C Wilson, Christopher R. Flagg, William O Armstrong, William B Clark, Robert H Trotter, John A Russell, John D Taylor, Scott Green James N Garvin, Fred W Corneau George W Sharper, Edward N Haggill George Monroe, James F Woods, James A Young, James A Lang and Lawrence S Jackson. In the Council were William Armstead, Robert P Ransom, Geo Draper, Powhatton Rufin, Wm A Skinner, Wm A Tartty, Henry Henry Theiler The floor marshal was Wm Haywood, floor director Chua Alexander and assistant director Wm H Gilbert. The table were Richard L Crawford William L Todd, J C Moore, G Wilmott Floyd J Edward Stephens, Charles R Anderson, John F Drayton, James Jones John N Lamb, Robert P Watkins, Nicholas Moore, James H Allen, Columbus Washington, William H Jones William R Mobley, Raymond L. Phillips, C. Henry Robbins, Edward S S Glover, Robert T First, J Mortimer Dorsey, William A Smith and Edward E Brown.
Mr. M. Gray, proprietor of the tenuous parlor 131 Dartmouth street, has thoroughly renovated his place and has added many inviting features.
Mr. Maxwell N. Hayson the gifted young poet of Washington, D.C., continues to adorn "The Listener Column" of the Boston Transcript with his fine connets. Especially good is his recent "Vale! Algeron Charles Swinburne" in the Transcript. We understand he is eternally but quietly working and that a book of his poems is forthcoming in the near future.
Shef's Hall was a tower of beauty last Saturday night when the Rach Brox entertained their friends in their monthly schlub. Its detritus of the season was present, and were also the Misses Kennard of Worcester.
Mr. Jerome Barlow has recently contributed an interesting article to the Springfield Republican on the work of the Roht, Gould, Shaw House.
Mr C Henry Robbins, one of the seven candidates who successfully passed examination for superior court stenographer, is among the three who have received appointments. Mr Robbins will be the official stenographer for the counties of Barnstable, Duke and Nantuckett. In the last edition of Tur Ack Mr. Robbins was referred to as "Robinson."
Mr Wm Lloyd Marshall has returned from Washington, D.C., where he has been the guest of his mother.
Mr Mahlon Kennard of Worcester was the guest of Mr Lewis Caution unday and Patriots' Day.
The spacious and handsomely furnished house of Mrs. Jennie Lounon at Holypoke street was filled to overing with a jolly gathering of peo-who responded to the invitations of "Dr. Harrison Club" to attend the
Lemon Social on Wednesday evening, April 14. The dining room was very prettily decorated with streamers of lemon color, which made quite a gaudy effect. During the evening, Dr. Marcus Wheatlaw, of Newport, and Dr. W. H. Higgins, of Rhode Island, with Drs. B. E. Robinson, H. W. Ross, A. P. Russell, Jr. made their appearance. Lawyers Alston and Hicks were also present. Good music was furnished by Mr. Lovett Groves at the piano. A most enjoyable evening was spent by every one present and the affair was a decided success in every way. At the end of the members of the Thursday Entrance Club, composed mostly of young persons engaged in intellectual pursuits, met and decided to give a May Party in the interest of the N. A Convention in August
The lovers of something rare in a literary way will find it every Sunday afternoon at the Young Men's Educational Aid Association, 218 Northampton street. Last Sunday was Virginia day, and an elaborate program was rendered. An able address was delivered by Rev D A McKay, assistant chaplain of Charles town prison. Sunday before last the subject of his discourse was the "Message from the man behind the bars." He gave a graphic description of prison life and the causes that lead to the commission of crimes as he learns them from the minutes. One sad feature in his remarks that touched his heart is that in proportion to the population of colored people in Massachusetts, the criminality was excessive. This is a statement which the members of the Young Men's Educational Aid Association have long since believed, and a condition with which it is their purpose to deal
Double Funeral in Newark
Double Funeral in Newark.
NEWARK, N J, April 19 - At Bethany Baptist Church. Bank street, Rev R 10 Wynne, pastor. on Sunday, preached from the book of Daniel, subject, "The King's Dream." At the close of the services, the pastor officiated at a double funeral, that of Mrs Ella Andersen, formerly of Washington, D. C., one of the faithful Sunday school teachers of this church, who died on April 15, after a brief illness and that of Mr James H Robertson, formerly of Newark, N J, who died in the asylum at Trenton
In the evening, the children of the parish held their Easter celebration. The church was crowded with a large concourse of parents and friends of the little ones. The exercises which were very interesting were conducted by the young superintendent of the Sunday chool, Mr. Baldwin, who has been very successful in his work. One of the main features of the exercises was a miniature ship built by the superintendent to receive the fund donated by the school for African missionaries. The music rendered at the funeral services, under the direction of Professor Eppa, was of an exceptionally high order and speaks well for the ability of our choir manager.
All persons wishing to have news items to appear in THE Age will kindly sent notes to Mr. Bland. Bethany Baptist Church. Bank street
TO
REDUCED RENTS TO R
236 East 8
First floor six large light rooms, bath, run
310 East 8
Four large light rooms, tubs and toilet in
month.
142 West 2
Four large light rooms first floor. Rent $
T. F. KA
62 Hamilton
near West
TO LET
BUCED RENTS TO RESPECTABLE FAMILY
236 East 85th Street
door six large light rooms, bath, range and stationery tubs. Rent $23.00
310 East 80th Street
large light rooms, tubs and toilet in house large yard for drying. Best
142 West 26th Street
large light rooms first floor. Rent $16.60 month. Janitor on premises of
T. F. KAUGHRAN
62 Hamilton Terrace
near West 144th Street
REDUCED RENTS TO RESPECTABLE FAMILIES
236 East 85th Street
First floor six large light rooms, bath, range and stationery tabs. Rent $23.00 a month.
310 East 80th Street
Four large light rooms, tubs and toilet in house large yard for drying. Rent $14.00 month.
142 West 26th Street
Four large light rooms first floor. Rent $16.00 month. Janitor on premises or owner
T. F. KAUGHRAN
62 Hamilton Terrace
near West 144th Street
Ready About May 1st, 1909 234 WEST 27th STREET
This building is being entirely rest style SYPHON JET TOILETS and SINK, HANGING DRESSEM MARBLE HALLS and VESTIBU TER BOXES Apartments of 2 and 4 rooms can be decorated to suit tenants.
building is being entirely remodelled and will contain the SYPHON JET TOILETS newest design ALBEREN
NK, HANGING DRESSER, newest type RANGES, BOOLE HALLS and VESTIBULE, ELECTRIC BELLS and BOXES
partments of 2 and 4 rooms, large light airy rooms, reser
decorated to suit tenants. Apply to
This building is being entirely remodelled and will contain the newest style SYPHON JET TOILETS newest design ALBERENE TUBS and SINK, HANGING DRESSER, newest type RANGES, BOILERS MARBLE HALLS and VESTIBULE, ELECTRIC BELLS and LET TER BOXES Apartments of 2 and 4 rooms, large light airy rooms, reserved now can be decorated to suit tenants. Apply to MR8. CHAS WRIGHT. 238 West 26th Street
2283 SEVENTH AVENUE
Seven rooms, bath, steam he
rooms single or en suite Hands
ments
Only House with En
RENT $
ven rooms, bath, steam heat, hot water supply, private single or en suite Handsomely decorated, superior Only House with Entrance on the Avenue RENT $32 to $35
Seven rooms, bath, steam heat, hot water supply, private halls, rooms single or en suite Handsomely decorated, superior appointments
Jamitor on premises
JAMES O. WRIGHT
437 Lenox Avenue
THE GREATEST BARGAINS EVER
WESTON I
At the
All ideal suburb benefitted by six tunnels
so low and upon terms so easy that you must
each $2monthly.
Also improved building lots 25 x 100
TITLES GUARANTEED. For particulars
EDWARD L. WALKER
REAL ESTATE
Telephone: 3
Half Month
6, 8, 10, 12 and 1
To Lot 5 large light and air flats with t
floors through rents $20 to $22 dollars.
APPLY TO
THE GREATEST BARGAINS EVER KNOWN OF IN NEW JERSEY
WESTON PARK, N. J.
At the Station
Real suburb benefitted by six tunnels and within 35 minutes of New York,
and upon terms so easy that you must marvel at it. High and dry lots 25
monthly.
improved building lots 25 x 100 in Railway Park, N. J., $50, and up
GUARANTEED. For particulars and free railroad tickets write, call
EDWARD L. WALKER, 3160 BAILEY AVENUE
REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE
Telephone, 321 Kingsbridge
Half Month's Rent Free
6, 8, 10, 12 and 14 West 136th Street
15 large light and air flats with bath and hot water supply, gas, tubs
ough rents $20 to $22 dollars.
APPLY TO JANITORS
THE GREATEST BARGAINS EVER KNOWN OF IN NEW JERSEY
WESTON PARK, N. J.
At the Station
All ideal suburb benefitted by six tunnels and within 35 minutes of New York. At prices so low and upon terms so easy that you must marvel at it. High and dry lots 25 x 100, $25 each $monthly.
Half Month's Rent Free
6, 8, 10, 12 and 14 West 136th Street
To Lose 5 large, light and airy flats with bath and hot water supply, gas, tubes and ranges
floors through rents $20 to $22 dollars.
APPLY TO JANITORS
TO BE LET
TWO WEEKS
163, 165 and 167
Six very large, light rooms
N. E. Cor. Bradhurs
Four light rooms and bath, fa
305, 307 West 119th
Five, large, light rooms and
74 East 119th Street
Five large, light rooms, select
Well located private houses
SAMUEL
360 Lens
*Phqne, Harlem 355
TWO WEEKS RENT FREE
163, 165 and 167 West 133rd Street
very large, light rooms and bath, hot water, rent $25
E. Cor. Bradhurst Ave and 146th
our light rooms and bath, facing park, rent $17
307 West. 119th St.. near 8th Ave
ave. large, light rooms and bath, rent $22 to $23
East 119th Street. near Madison Ave
ave large, light rooms, select neighborhood, rent $21
well located private houses Moderate rent
SAMUEL A. KELSEY
350 Lenox Avenue
Harlem 355
Or Janitors on p
N. E. Cor. Bradhurst Ave and 146th St.
Four light rooms and bath, facing park, rent $17
305, 307 West. 119th St.. near 8th Avenue
Five, large, light rooms and bath, rent $22 to $23
74 East 119th Street. near Madison Avenue
Five large, light rooms, select neighborhood, rent $21
Well located private houses Moderate rent
APARTMENTS TO LET
146 W. 124th Street
Three and four rooms apartments with
every convenient place. Select locality. Apply
Janitor on premises or
JOS. N. GITTENS
Phone 969 Col. 216 W. 64th St.
apr.15-11
TO LET
29 West 90th Street
Five Elmstead Place of 6 Rooms and Bath
Hot Water Supply, Steam Heat. Tousse apartments are hope in the very best of order. Inquire of superintendent
JOHN E. JORDAN
20 WEST 90th STREET. NEW YORK
SEE ME FOR
IF YOU WANT TO
OR SELL A
JOHN M.
30 W. 135th
Phone 2171 Harlem
345 WEST 59th STREET
TO LET
A Fine Store with Plato Windows. In busy locality; with living apartments $50 per month. $35 per month without living apartments.
APPLY JANITOR ON PREMISES
apr.15-4t
530 West 45th Street
Elegant light apartments of 23 and 4 rooms house in excellent condition. Rents $7 to $14.50
Inquire of Janitor on premises, or
BENJAMIN LEVY
30 Pine Street
Apr. 15-4t
TO LET
406 West 55th Street
Seven large light rooms with improvements.
Single Flat.
258 West 47th Street
Three and four large light rooms with improvements. Cheap rent. Apply Janitor or R. R. LADSON. 412 West 55th Street
mar.4-2m
FOUR ROOMS $13 and $14
Large and light, and in good order, running water in rooms
449 West 42nd Street
See Janitor
mar.18-7t
HALF-MONTH'S RENT FREE
235 to 241 West 124th Street
At Reduced Rents. Fine apartments of 3 and
4 large light rooms, with improvements. Well
kept houses. For respectable tenants only.
Rents $12 to $18 per month, payable one half
first of the month, balance fifteenth of the
month.
Apply JANITOR ON PREMISES or
P. D. DONNELLY, Lanlord
3264 Broadway, corner of 131st Street
Feb-18-Sm
305-307 and 309 WEST 68th STREET
Three large light rooms, improvements to
rent to desirable colored families. Rents $11
and $12. Apply to Janitor or
SENIOR & STOUT
81 West 50th Street
Oor, 8th Avenue
LET
RESPECTABLE FAMILIES
25th Street
age and stationery tabs. Rent $23.00 a month.
30th Street
house large yard for drying. Rent $14.00
26th Street
$16.00 month. Janitor on premises or owner
JUGHRAN
Lion Terrace
44th Street
modelled and will contain the new newest design ALBERENE TUBS newest type RANGES, BOILERS LE, ELECTRIC BELLS and LET large light airy rooms, reserved now Apply to
hot, hot water supply, private halls, formally decorated, superior appoint-rance on the Avenue 92 to $35
HER KNOWN OF IN NEW JERSEY
PARK, N. J.
Station
and within 35 minutes of New York. At prices
and marvel at it. High and dry lots 25 x 100, $25
Rabway Park, N. J., $50. and up easy terms
and free railroad tickets write, call or phone.
3160 BAILEY AVENUE
E. INSURANCE
All Kingsbridge
apr 22-3m
7s Rent Free
4 West 136th Street
with and hot water supply, gas, tubes and ranges
JANITORS
RENT FREE
West 133rd Street
and bath, hot water, rent $22 to $24
St Ave and 146th St.
ing park, rent $17
St.. near 8th Avenue
path, rent $22 to $23
near Madison Avenue
neighborhood, rent $21
Moderate rent
A. KELSEY
Box Avenue
Or Janitors on premises
apr. 22-3t
Duponty, Steam Heart. Tones apart in the very brow of order. In association:
JOHN M. ROYA
30 W. 135th st., New
Phone 2171 Harlem
JOHN E. JORDAN
400 STREET. NEW YORK
The Moore Publishing
and Printing Company
7-8 Chatham Square New York
W. T. GRIMES
Real Estate Agent
Does more for his clients in saving, buying,
leasing, loaning and good management of
property than they expect. Insurance placed
in best companies. Policies looked after.
1000 BROOK AVE. bet. 164th and 165th Sta.
'Phone 383J Melrose
One Hundred Home
WE WILL OPEN THE
METROPOLITAN PAL
Monday, A
at which time we will sell One Hundred Chos
$200.00 EACH THE
This means that all lots which are now an
for ten days beginning next Monday at the se
balance in 30 days. This offer only holds good
FREE EX
Our Agent will be at Pennsylvania station
P.M. with free tickets; also salesmen at Rahw
Call or write
Metropolitan Mercant
46th Street and Eighth Avenue
INVESTORS STOP BUY
"On which one dollar cannot be raised if n
daily on the exchange—convertible into cash
investments that are safe, profitable and ma-
fured upon request.
CHAS. HER
1433 Broadway
Phone 411 Bryant
Hundred Home Sites Must
WE WILL OPEN THE SPRING SEASON AT
METROPOLITAN PARK, Rahway, N.
Monday, April 19th
time we will sell One Hundred, Choice Building Lots at a discount of $200.00 EACH THE SACRIFICING OFFER
means that all lots which are now and have been selling at $260 each, will begin next Monday at the sacrificing price of $200.00. Terms: H
30 days. This offer only holds good until May 1st.
FREE EXCURSIONS
ent will be at Pennsylvania station, Jersey City side, every day from 9
free tickets; also salesmen at Rahway station and on grounds. Agen
Metropolitan Mercantile and Realty Co.
Street and Eighth Avenue
NEW
ESTORS STOP BUYING WILD CAT SCHEME
each one dollar cannot be raised if necessity arrives. Buy only Securities
exchange—convertible into cash when necessity arrives. A list of
these are safe, profitable and marketable with guaranteed 10 per o
on request.
CHAS. HENRY HALL
Broadway
New
Phone 411 Bryant
One Hundred Home Sites Must Go! WE WILL OPEN THE SPRING SEASON AT
at which time we will sell One Hundred Choice Bullding Lots at a discount of 30 per cent.
$200.00 EACH THE SACRIFICING OFFER
This means that all lots which are now and have been selling at $260 each, will be sold for ten days beginning next Monday at the sacrificing price of $200.00. Terms: Half cash and balance in 30 days. This offer only holds good until May 1st.
FREE EXCURSIONS
Our Agent will be at Pennsylvania station, Jersey City side, every day from 9 A.M. to 4 P.M. with free tickets; also saleemen at Rahway station and on grounds. Agents Wanted. Call or write
Metropolitan Mercantile and Realty Co.
46th Street and Eighth Avenue
NEW YORK
INVESTORS STOP BUYING WILD CAT SCHEMES
"On which one dollar cannot be raised if necessity arrives. Buy only Securities traded in daily on the exchange—convertible into cash when necessity arrives. A list of gilt edge investments that are safe, profitable and marketable with guaranteed 10 per cent, income furnished upon request.
CHAS. HENRY HALL
1433 Broadway
New York
Phone 411 Bryant
mart-3a
Houses, Lots and Investment Properties
I can save a buyer money and able property for the amount of mo seeking good investments which yield a good per cent. There is no property in a good locality like Rah map and free tickets. JACOB GRIFFITH, 46th
In save a buyer money and time in the selection of mo-
perty for the amount of money they desire to invest.
good investments which are absolutely safe and whi-
good per cent. There is nothing more desirable than h
in a good locality like Rahway or Plainfield, N. J. W
free tickets.
DB GRIFFITH, 46th Street and Eighth Ave.
I can save a buyer money and time in the selection of most desirable property for the amount of money they desire to invest. To those seeking good investments which are absolutely safe and which will yield a good per cent. There is nothing more desirable than high class property in a good locality like Rahway or Plainfield, N. J. Write for map and free tickets. JACOB GRIFFITH, 46th Street and Eighth Avenue
SUFFOLK, VA.
The Chicago of the South, the largest P
steam ship line, three banks, many factories, li
vestments, in all Virginia. Lots from $100 to $1
formation and investments. Write the
NANSEMOND DEVE
623 East Washington
W. H. CROC
JUST C
Cogo of the South, the largest Peanut Market in the world, six r
line, three banks, many factories, 15000 inhabitants, one of the safest pl
n all Virginia. Lots from $100 to $500, homes from $400 to $8000. For
and investments. Write the
ANSEMOND DEVELOPMENT CO., INC.
23 East Washington Street, Suffolk, W.
W. H. CROCKER, Manager
UST OPENED
The Chicago of the South, the largest Peanut Market in the world, six railroad, one steam ship line, three banks, many factories, 15000 inhabitants, one of the safest places for its restments, in all Virginia. Lots from $100 to $500, homes from $400 to $800. For further information and investments, Write the NANSEMOND DEVELOPMENT CO., INC.
623 East Washington Street, Suffolk, Va.
W. H. CROCKER, Manager
JUST OPENED
319 West 40th Street
An Elegant Apartment House rooms, tiled baths, steam heat an opening into hall. Rents $24 to tenants with reference.
Elegant Apartment House containing flats of four lailed baths, steam heat and hot water supply. Bath into hall. Rents $24 to $26 per month Only re with reference.
An Elegant Apartment House containing flats of four large light rooms, tiled baths, steam heat and hot water supply. Each room opening into hall. Rents $24 to $26 per month Only respectable tenants with reference.
Apply Janitor on Premises
OFFICE
PHILIP A. PAYTO
TO
Southeast Cor. of 1360
10s. 2227, 2229 am
To reand four rooms and bath, steam bea
$15 per month.
OFFICE OF
PHILIP A. PAYTON, JR., COMPANY
TO LET
neast Cor. of 136th Street and Fifth
Sts. 2227, 2229 and 2231 Fifth Ave.
and four rooms and bath, steam heat, hot water, supply, opening p'numb
per month.
8 East 132nd Street
live and six rooms and bath, range boiler, &c. Rents $18 to $22 per mo
118 and 120 West 134th Street
large rooms and bath, steam heat and hot water supply. Rents $25 to $28
102 East 102nd Street
PHILIP A. PAYTON, JR., COMPANY TO LET
Southeast Cor. of 136th Street and Fifth Ave.
100s. 2227, 2229 and 2231 Fifth Avenue
Tt. reamd four rooms and bath, steam heat, hot water, supply, opening p'umbling Rents $15 c $24 per month.
8 East 132nd Street
Four, five and six rooms and bath, range, boiler, &c. Rents $18 to $22 per month.
118 and 120 West 134th Street
Six large rooms and bath, steam heat and hot water supply. Rents $25 to $28 per month.
102 East 102nd Street
Four large rooms, improvements. Rents $12 to $13 per month.
229 East 127th Street
Three and four large rooms. Rents $10 to $13 per month.
109 West 134th Street
Five rooms and bath, ranges and boilers. Rents $19 to $21 per month.
181 West 134th Street
Five rooms and bath, ranges and boilers. Rents $19 to $21 per month.
Northeast Cor of Brook Ave., and 164th St.
986 Brook Avenue
Five and six rooms and bath, ranges and boilers. Rents $17 to 19 per month.
APPLY JANITORS ON PREMISES OR
PHILIP A. PAYTON, JR., COMPANY
Tel. 917 Harlem
67 WEST 134th STREET
SEE ME FOR QUICK SERVICE
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
IF YOU WANT TO BUY
OR SELL A HOUSE FOR CASH
JOHN M. ROYALL
30 W. 135th st., New York
Phone 2171 Harlem
(am. 7-8m.)
329 AND 331 WEST
39 th Street
Nice Apartments of 3 and 4 large light rooms, Improvements, Rents $10 to $18 per month. Well Kept house. Apply Janitor or JOSEPH LEVY & SON 389 Eighth Avenue Permanent quarters for lodge orders on Harlem's most prominent thoroughfare. Rant cheap. Hurry up this wont last long. Book also open for New York's largest, most elegantly appointed, best located Hall for banquets, receptions, entertainments and rehearsals. Inspection invited. Cheap W. J. TROTTER 172 West 133rd Street
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
Properties For Rent, Sale and Exchange in
City or Buburba. Building lots $250.00 to $600
L. C. HUBBERT
1103 SPRINGWOOD AVENUE
ASBURY PARK, N. J.
apr. 1-Smo
Half Month's Rent Free
Reduced Rents
345 and 347 West 59th Street
Fine apartments of 6 large light rooms and
bath. New Law Houses. Every room light
Rents $24 to $27 per month.
APPLY JANITOB ON PREMISES
apr. 1-4t
ONE Sites Must Go!
IN SPRING SEASON AT
ARK, Rahway, N. J.
April 19th
Price Building Lots at a discount of 30 per cent.
SACRIFICING OFFER
have been selling at $260 cash, will be sold
sacrificing price of $200.00. Terms: Half cash and
until May 1st.
CURSIONS
Jersey City side, every day from 9 A. M. to 4
day station and on grounds. Agents Wanted.
Entile and Realty Co.
NEW YORK
ING WILD CAT SCHEMES
necessity arrives. Buy only Securities traded in
when necessity arrives. A list of gift edge
retailable with guaranteed 10 per cent. Income
NRY HALL
New York
mart-31
time in the selection of most desi
they desire to invest. To those
are absolutely safe and which will
thing more desirable than high class
way or Plainfield, N. J. Write for
Street and Eighth Avenue
ANNUAL MARKET in the world, six railroad, one 000 inhabitants, one of the safest places for is 800, homes from $400 to $8000. For further is ELOPMENT CO., INC. on Street, Suffolk, Va. KER, Manager
OPENED
containing flats of four large light and hot water supply. Each room $26 per month Only respectable
PLEASE OF
DON, JR., COMPANY
LET
12th Street and Fifth Ave.
and 2231 Fifth Avenue
hot water, supply, opening p'umbling Rents
12nd Street
roller, &o. Rents $18 to $22 per month.
West 134th Street
hot water supply. Rents $25 to $28 per month.
02nd Street
OFFICE OF
REDUCED RENTS TO LET 211 and 215 EAST 88th STREET Fine apartments of 3 and 4 large light rooms, with open-light shaft Improvements, Tubs, Toilets in Hall and Slot Gas Meters, House beautifully kept and always in first class condition; also Apartments a
Fine apartments of 3 and 4 large light rooms, with open-light shaft Improvements, Tubs, Toilets in Hall and Slot Gas Meters, House beautifully kept and always in first class condition; also Apartments at 218 West 17th Street and 344 West 16th Street Apply Janitors on Premisea
Only a Few Flats Left
331 and 333 West 16th Street
Two Handsome Apartment Houses containing flats of four large light rooms and bath, hot water supply, ranges in each apartment. Rents $21 to $22 per month. Only respectable tenants with reference Apply
Only a Few Flats Left
331 and 333 West 16th Street
Two Handsome Apartment Houses containing flats of four large light rooms and bath, hot water supply, ranges in each apartment Rents $21 to $22 per month. Only respectable tenants with reference Apply
D. Kempner & Son
626 Eighth Avenue
Near 40th Street
LOOK! LOOK! FOR THE CHEAPEST RENTS IN HARLEM
B. G. HOWELL, 62 West 135th Street
WILL OPEN SEVERAL NEW HOUSES BY MARCH 1st, 1989
70-72 EAST 115th STREET
LOOK! LOOK! FOR THE CHEAPEST RENTS IN HARLEM
B. G. HOWELL, 62 West 135th Street WILL OPEN SEVERAL NEW HOUSES BY MARCH 1st, 1909 70-72 EAST 115th STREET
Private houses to lease or sell, rents $60 to $84 per month. Lots for sale that you can make a big profit in by buying them now. Call or telephone 3663 Harlem, office hours from 8:30 a. m. till 8:30 p. m.
Feb. 18 No.
United Worker's Association
INCORPORATED
RESIDES the United Worker's Association, a Mutual Aid Society for the purpose of giving death benefits from $100 to $275, we have brought about the Worker's Healthy Organism which has an authorised capital of $50,000. Shares $5 each, par value.
Its object is buying sailing and land, and it has at its disposal property at New York, Orange, Montclair and Westfield, M. J. Write for information.
IN ORDER to introduce ourselves to you, we are offering for 90 days 500 shares of our stock at $3 each, or $4 in monthly payments, in blocks from 2 to 10 shares each. Subscribe now, before May 1st, and save from $1 to $2 on a share and draw 4 per cent. October 1st.
IN ADDITION to our stock, death and real estate departments, we have opened a first also hand laundry at 230 West 1st, Street, managed by Mrs. Mattle Jones. Address
Private houses to lease or sell, rents $60 to $84 per month. Lots for sale that you can make a big profit in by buying them now. Call or telephone 3663 Harlem, office hours from 8:30 a. m. till 8:30 p. m.
United Worker's Association
RESIDES the United Worker's Association, a Mutual Aid Society for the purpose of paying death benefits from $100 to $775, we have brought about the Worker's Healthy Company which has an authorised capital of $50,000. Shares $2 each, par value. Its object is buying, selling and leasing and it has at its disposal property at Newark Orange, Montcolar and Westfield, M. J. Write for information.
IN ORDEB to introduce ourselves to you, we are offering for 90 days 500 shares of our stock at $3 each, or $4 in monthly payments, in blocks from 2 to 10 shares each. Subscribe now, before May 1st, and save from $1 to $2 on a share and dawn 6 per cent. October 1981.
IN ADDITION to our sick, death and real estate departments, we have opened a first also hand laundry at 250 West 41st, Street, managed by Mrs. Mattie Jones. Address
The Worker's Realty Company
1931 Broadway, New York
Phone 4193 Columbus
Or Mrs. J. E. Thomas, 118 West, 41st Street, Phone 5116 Bryant
TO LET
NAIL & PARKER, Agents
Tel. 417 Harlem 25 West 133rd Street
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
218-226-230-232 W. 64th St.
I beg to announce to the public that I have recently come in possession of the above mentioned property which has been renovated, marble vestibule and hall, letter boxes, bells and gas in each apartment. Anyone wishing to move in I will pay expenses of moving. Apply
W. M. SMITH, 218 WEST 64TH STREET
218-226-230-232 W. 64th St.
I beg to announce to the public that I have recently come in possession of the above mentioned property which has been renovated marble vestibule and hall, letter boxes, bells and gas in each apartment. Anyone wishing to move in I will pay expenses of moving. Apply
142 and 144 West 28th Street
Four large rooms, handsomely decorated, boilers, ranges, tellets, private halls, light and alry. Near 8th Avenue.
309 and 311 West 37th Street
First houses from the corner of Eighth Avenue. Steam heated, all improvements, all decorations. First class Janitor service. Only quiet families allowed.
40-42-44 West 135th Street
These houses have been artfully remodeled, steam heat, new plumbing, tiled baths. Prices house and bath, neatly decorated, light and alry, new adjutant in halls. Moderate rent.
TO LET, DOWN TOWN
142 and 144 West 28th Street
Four large rooms, handsomely decorated, boilers, ranges, toilets, private halls, light alry. Near 5th Avenue.
309 and 311 West 37th Street
First houses from the corner of Eighth Avenue. Steam heated, all improvements, all decorations. First class Janitor service. Only quiet families allowed.
These houses have been carefully remodeled, stained, bead, new plumbing, tiled baths, new
laundry and bath, neatly decorated, light and airy, new carpets in baths, stairs, toilets,
Moderate rent.
TO LET. DOWN TOWN
263 WEST 40th STREET
Four large light rooms, all improvements, $20 to $21.
248 1-2 WEST 40th STREET
Three rooms, ranges, boilers all improvements. Rent $18
357 WEST 54th STREET
Four large light rooms, range, hot water supply. Rent $23
307 WEST 39th STREET
Three large light rooms, with improvements. Rent $14
414 WEST 52nd STREET
Four large light rooms, all improvements, rents $16
227 WEST 18th STREET
Three rooms, ranges and boilers, all improvements. Rent $16
APPLY TO JANITORS OR
RED
21: and 2
Fine apartments of 3
Improvements, Tubs, T
beautifully kept and alw
Only a
331 and 331
Two Handsome Ap-
light rooms and bath, h
Rents $21 to $22 per mo
Apply
D. I.
LOOK! LOOK! FOR
B. G. HOW
WILL, OPEN SEVERE
70-4
RE
Private houses to lease
sale that you can make a
phone 3663 Harlem, offi
United W
BESIDES the United Wor-
ing death benefits from $100 to
which has an authorised capita-
l. Its object is buying, selling
Orange Monarch and Westfield
IN ORDER to introduce o
stock at $3 cash, or $4 in meet
now, before May 1st, and save
IN ADDITION to our sick, do-
hand laundry at 230 West 41st, $
BT D. KEMPNER &
deo. 3-4
RENTS FROM $11 to $18.
Reduced Rents
Or Janitor on Premise
RESPECTABLE FAMILIES ONLY
626 Eighth Avenue Near 40th St
Big Surprise to Many Members of St. Augustine's Church
Rents Administration Forces—
Rector Miller Said to Have
Favored Old Members
Although it has been over a week
since the election of the ventry at St.
Augustine - P E Church, St. Edwards
street, Brooklyn, the members are year
talking about the unexpected result,
which turned all the vestymen out
official with few exceptions, and
lected a new board, headed by Louis A.
Jeppe
St. Augustine - Church has a congregation
that nearly reaches the four-hundred
mark. At each annual election of
the ventry there is a friendly rivalry,
and this year's election was no exception
to the rule. Last year Vestyman
Jeppe and Adrian after his defeat that he
been in the winning side at the next
section. And he was.
The opening ticket was headed by Charles H Lansing. It is claimed by the Jeppe supporters that the Lansing ticket was supported by Rector George Fraser M. Mur, set the administration's ticket was debated, which was the big surprise of event Vestryman Jeppe and his supporters attending the election was that while the administration ticket lost Charles H Lansing and the majority of his supporters lost by only one vote each. Two members of the Lansing ticket were elected—Charles E Mowis as warden and A Phillips as vestryman.
The other victors were Louis A Jeppe, counselor garden and Emory Jones, J. H Hall Coural Rollick, W H Kind, S W Johnson, George Dean and G A Haworth. Vestryman George Dean is also the candidate. Those on the Lansing ticket to lose out were Charles H Lansing, E F Hall John Watkins Vernon C Murray, T M King and D Reekman.
st. David's. Bronx.
At St. David's Church on last Sunday morning, the rector, E G Clifton, D. preached and celebrated the Holy Communion At the evening service the British Colonial Society of New York was present for their second annual sermon. The rector preached a very appropriate one, pointing out and exhorting the society to the highest aims, making an earnest plea to them to remember their relatives and friends in the West Africa where they came. He congratulated them for their successful work in the past two years, and wished them still greater success in the future.
Abyssinian Baptist Church. An unusually large audience was present Sunday morning, April 15. A惊喜瞬间, the "Mission of the Bible" was delivered by Rev Goo, William Carter, of the New York Bible Society
At 2 o'clock the Sunday school, under the direction of Superintendent W H Taylor, rendered their regular Easter program, which was very interesting. At 7 30 Dr Powell occupied the pulpit and taught the students Among those present was the Lincoln Literary and Musical Association, which turned out to have their annual seminar preached to them Dr Powell's subject was the "Transforming Power of the Word" and his discourse deeply impressed the large audience. The students April 24th His subject in the morning will be "Blessing God" and in the evening he will presach to the "Daughters of New York."
Mother Zion Notes
The founder of the museum of Mother Zion last Sunday was the Thanksgiving sermon preached to the Independent Order of St. Lukes. Dr. McMuller preached an excellent sermon to over one thousand people. Dr William B Pearson was the speaker at the morning services. Dr Pearson also addressed the Sunday school. Mr Joyner expounded the lesson. The Christian Endeavor meeting was not up to the standard in interest and attendance Ye Ole Folks Museum Club gave an entertaining program on last Tuesday night under the auspices of the Board of Stewardesses. On next Sunday Rey R A Morrison, minister secretary of the A M E Zion Zion will preach both morning and evening. Dr Morrison is one of the most important in the real church. A large crowd is expected to turn out to hear him. Bishop Alexander A. Walters will preach at both the morning and evening service the first Sunday in May. The second quarterly reunion of the classes promises to be the biggest.
Mei Ling Guan died last Tuesday
mom after only a week's illness, and
was held on Friday. Dr McMullen of
St. Louis leaves a wife and a host
of friends.
Reception for Solem Pastor
Preception for Salem Pastor
Rev L A Gillen pastor of Salem
M F Wen 12th street, been
been in the Guildhouse to the
church in his eighth year. The
congregation gave him a most cordial
reception on Wednesday evening a re-
ception on Friday the pastor to the
young man in the church at his resi-
dence. Walt L H street
The Rev Mr and Mrs Nel
Missines Helen A Trigg
Nancy M Marie C Moldleton
Missine Hanna Davis E Myrre
Mar L Ireland James Ada C
Mar M M M
Mar M Maurice Johnson
Rev L Glen Moses Lamar
M L R Jones Fred Dong
Mar W Wreta F S Manson Win
W W L Trotter Fred G
K Stoutwood and Fred C
Fag K Stoutwood and Fred C
Tray
The pulpit last
services will be held
11. Usurpist, the Moor
being in charge of members of the congregation and one having for attendants white ladies, who are friends of the mission. Next week many people are expected to visit the fair, because there are to be entertainments and speeches by prominent men. Some of the other parishes in the city are going to appoint nights at the fair and will urge their members to meet there and thus show a practical interest in the work done by the church of St. Benedict, the Moor.
Timothy Baptist Church.
Holy communion was celebrated last Sunday evening at this church, and in connection with this ordinance an impressive service was conducted by Rev W H Jenkins, though Ms H B Jenkins, the chorister, was unable to be present, appropriate music was rendered by the choir, under the direction of Mrs A Augustus.
St. Barnabas P. E. Men's Luluid.
The St. Barnabas Men's Guild in connection with the St. Barnabas P E Church of East New York is in no small way adding to the growing popularity of the little edifice of which Rector Walter Chan is the moving spirit, was especially the one of the finest Tuesday evening April 6. One of the great highlights in the short history of the Guild's in attendance at its fourth public literary meeting. The program for the occasion consisted of the following: Opening piano solo, Mrs. G D Cargill vocal solo, Mrs Ruth Gattin invitation, Mr Aaron Ferrhee, baritone solo, Mr R P Hamlin of the Carlton Y M C A, and as an encore rendered Dumbar's "Anchored Son," J. Nimrod Jones, director of the Nimrod Theater, vocal solo, Mr G D Cargill and a paper by Miss Carroll Stewart, late of Honolulu, Hawaii, but now a teacher in one of Brooklyn's public schools entitled "A Trip to Honolulu." Miss Stewart's paper was more in the form of an illustrated lecture and proved most interesting and instructive. Miss Stewart has a phasing and well modulated flow of language made his reception realistic to the land and its people the Pacific." Remarks were also made by Rector Walter D McClan and the trump, May 4.
Drama Study or Beth Tobilab
The Literary Society seeks Tphibian
The literary society meets the mission rooms,
West 14th street, on Thursday evening.
The exercises of the evening were
originally in charge of Miss Legona
Edmund but towing to the serious illness
of her father this plan could not be cared
out and an unprompted program
was arranged instead. Among the numbers
were Duet, Mrs Ames and Mrs
L. Pars address, Our Literary Society
Mr Mills's soprano solo. Mass
Laura Christopher address Mr John
Patterson duet, Mr. and Mrs. E.
Hubson address Charles Martin
Mr E. F. Edison, paper on
"Education" by Mr H. J.
baritone solo, "Come Into Me"
Mr H I. Thomas. The Dramatic Club
meets on Friday evenings and is continuing
the study of Shakespeare.
The Sunday services were well attended. The pastor preached at the H lock service and the Rev W S Holder occupied the pulpit in the evening. At the afternoon Lyceum a fine program was rendered Among the speakers were Counsellor S Frank Edmone of Brooklyn, on 'The Lyceum and Its Possibilities' and Mr Herbert J Thomas on "Health and Its Mental Factors". The chair wag occupied by Mr Joseph, and Mr Swanston was at the organ.
Mrs Harriett Thomas, organist, has almost entirely recovered from her recent illness, and we hope soon to welcome her back to the post she has so admirably filled.
The concert on Thursday, in charge of Mr Mills, promises to be a very interesting one.
A Meeting for Fort Valley
To the Colored Citizens of New York and Brooklyn
During twelve years of subservitation at the North for funds to build and maintain the Fort Valley (Georgian) High and Industrial School, I have not made an appeal direct to any large number of colored people, not that I have thought they would be unwilling to aid me, but because I have been cognizant of the grave struggle which our people have even here at the North to build their churches, maintain their charities care for the sick and find employment for the untrained, who come here from the South.
The more I study the situation, however, the more I am convinced that we are in one Year of the North and in the South that we have an struggle. Whatever therefore of interest to the Negro of the South should be of interest to the Negro of the North, and vice versa.
During the last half dozen years men of the North prominent in the white race, have organized boards of education for the purpose of investigating in the South and helping where help is needed to wipe out the ignorance of that section and start it on toward a more enlightened and more useful future. These boards have been organized by white people, and more people. They have also been organized by white people for black people, both more receive consideration at their hands.
The Negroes of the North have no millions; they do not have generally very encouraging and helpful opportunities to earn money in large sums, but among the old settlers of New York and Brooklyn there can be found here and there an important element in the development white people for generations people who have become attached to them and are willing to and help them both by paying decent wage for their service and by taking a deep interest in the things that make for their general improvement. Then there are those who have made a solidified strides in business because of close application and because of the greatest of commercial cities in America gave them.
In view of the conditions stated, it seems well to bring before the control people of the North the conditions of our race in the South in the same way that we would bring them before the white people and expect at least
I am therefore now calling a meeting of such people of my race in this city as may desire to know more of conditions in certain sections of the South, and to tell them how the Fort Valley High and the Fort Valley School is poised and grappled with these conditions. Primarily I want to raise some money for Fort Valley and shall take a free will offering on the occasion of this meeting. Ultimately I wish to among the students the North more general interest in the work of their struggling brothren in the South. This meeting will be held at Bethel A M. F. Church 25th street between 7th and 11th. Courses on Tuesday evening May 1 at 8:15 o'clock. Prof R. Moore editor of Tux New Yong Anr will preside. Among the speakers will be the Hon Chang W. Anderson, the Rev Dr Ransom, the Rev W H. Brooks, Mr Roosecock Cummings, Counsellor Jas L. Curtta and others who will be announced later. I want to ask your full co-operation in this effort. The gods help those who help themselves. Thanking you for a general interest in this movement, Sincerely yours.
Audit, Principal and Financial Agent.
THE NEW YORK AGEL THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1909.
COLE AND JOHNSON.
To Play important Engagement at Washington, D. C.
WASHINGTON, D.C. April 21 — It gives your correspondent with pleasure to announce that Cole and Johnson, the distinguished Negro players, and their excellent organization will play an engagement in this city in the near future.
The production of Messrs Cole and Johnson has, during the present season, enjoyed a long success, and has been presented in the theatre's. The patronage has been every where made up of the most celebrated personages, and the tour can be indeed termed a triumph. It has always been a desire of all colored stars to play Washington, because of the knowledge appearing before an audience that would be a majority of the most intellectual Negroes. America Minds that would be keenly alive to the sentiments of the artists' work.
This unique privilege has been unfortunately denied as far as Washington is concerned, owing to an unfortunate prejudice which has presented the securing of a theatre in which to give a high class performance. Similar conditions freed the former stars on several occasions to the most important Hall in order to present their offering in playing, but owing to its lack of the necessary theatrical mechanical devices and large expense in preparing that large auditorium for a professional performance, its use has had to be abandoned, beside it would be necessary to greatly alter the prices of admission. Over what is shared in other cities, and the performance could not be given with the same degree of satisfaction. When a party of Washington's distinguished Negro citizens requested an engagement of Cole and Johnson's exquisite comedy, the handout of predecal theatrical arrangements for a high class colored company was explained, and the assiduity of playing a half or place not tally equipped for the proper presentation of their play could not be considered.
It was explained that the lighting of foxes and curtains colors were also totally necessary for a perfect and artistic presentation of their play. These will know citizens are using their every effort to secure a practical theatre for an inauguration of Cole and Johnson and their company. A work has already been set aside for the inauguration and wherever the company plays in Washington at will without doubt enjoy the same social patronage and social support as is given such stars as Mrs Fisk, Mr Wortht and other distinguished players whom auditions have forced to play away from the stage of bookings in several of the larger cities. Beside, the play is the thing and this one will bring pleasure and exquisite harmonies.
St. John's M. E. Church, Newark, N. J.
Rey Storer M. Jolly, pastor of St. John's M. E. Church, preached last Sunday the second of his series of sermons on the "Theophanes of Christ" his text from Luke 24. 16th verse. The trend of his discourse was the danger before the honest truth seeker.
The Sunday school held usual exercises.
The Epworth League met at 4 o'clock and na usual the church was packed, Mr. Goo Tuff, the president, read scriptural selections. Prayer by Pastor Jolly, Mrs. Albert Francis, one of Newark's most capable women had charge of the program. There was a cello solo by Mr. O'Jake Fo, a member of the Epworth McDonald Dresden accompanied by Mr. McDonald Dresden, for the choir. A quartet by Miss De Mund, Mrs. MacDonald Messy Griffin, and Ruffin a most interesting paper on successful business people by Mrs Chase Ruffin Pruno solo by Miss Brenda Masyck Vocal solo by Master Albert Francis Vocal solo "My Rosary" by Mr B R Purvis. The exercises concluded with an address by Fred R Moore editor of Tiny New York Aur Revolly said it was most timely and would be helpful to the league Prof C Fletcher was complimented on the name endured by his choir and orchestra each year. The pastor occupied the pulpit at night, teaching on the Illumination of Faith Luke 24, verse 31 Mrs Mary Gilmour reported $10000 as the profit from the Easter supper
On Sunday night next the Easter musical by Prof. Fletcher his chair and or chestra will be repeated. Rey A. L. Murray of Atlantic City will preach
Society Wedding at Synergy
SYBACUSE N. Y. April 20 Mr. Fred Johnson and Mrs H. Robinson of 3214 Almond street were married on Mon day evening April 12 at the Grand Episcopal Church to Rev Codlington Music was rendered by Mr. Spencer Shields and dancing followed Refreshments were served later Among the guests from out of town were Mrs. N. Jackson of Canopahore Miss Grace of Onedale Mrs Logan of Onedale Miss L. Lagan One Miss Stewart of Norwich Mrs Thompson of Norwich and Miss Thompson of Onedale Mrs Milllet and Mrs P. Hughes on
Mrs Millett and Mrs P Hoghes pa
visit recently to Mrs Ada Hobkook
Miss Calperton Rogers is quite sick at
1119 East Fayette street
Mrs Cunningham held a short
visit to her sister Mrs Middleton and was
called away suddenly by the illness of her
husband
Mr Edward Blake of Scarceau N.Y.
came out fifth in the four day race at
Oswego. He is considered one of the
best runners and walkers of New York
State
April 14, 1900 marked the third
annual full dress and promenade of the
Ontario Lodge, New York
which was held at Prairie Hall. A
very important summer was furnished to
G A. Tholl caterer. Among some of
the dressed women in attendance
were the following Mrs L C
Crombie white sat on a trumpet
with dots on Mrs L R Robinson
and red dotted gray sat on a message
to Mrs P Carroun colored butterfly
Mrs Pink salk Mrs L W. Winters
Miss Crombie brown Miss Z Peterson
Miss H. Hirsch
Realted in Studies No. 1
For the last week Roy S. R. Ellerger all pastor of the Rising Mr. Zon Hunt the Church has been conducting vital services. Mr H. C. Anderson of 14 Harrison street, has been confined to his bed for a week but he is now rescuing Miss A. R. buthe has returned to Bordentown College on a week's stay with her mother. Mrs Ellerger and Angders spent Friday last with Mrs. Bristolbe Mr. Robinsos of Lincoln University, is visiting friends.
NOTICE
All news left out of these columns in this week's issue will appear in the next.
New Amsterdam
Musical Association
(INCORPORATED)
First Class Colored Musicians
Furnished for all Functions
HEADQUARTERS
322 West 59th Street
New York
Send all communications to
Wm. A. Bierer, Manager, 18 W. 1858th Street
jan. 28-30
BEST DANCE MUSIC IN NEW YORS
Walter F. Craig's
ORCHESTRA
321 West 59th Street
Phone 1479 Columbia
It is conceded to be the BEST BALL
SOME ORCHESTRA in New York barring
some white or black
jun. 28 3-
RESTORINE
(Hair T-nfo)
Were discovered 20 years ago after curative
study and skilful labor by
MME. C. PRICE
516 SIXTH AVENUE, NEW YORK
Registered under Pure Food and Drugs
June 30, 1906, at Serial no. 1811L.
Sold at the following drug stores: Robinson
& Burnstein, 99th street and Columbus avenues
Payne, 3d avenue and 99th street; Canton, ocr.
185d street and Fifth avenue Wm. Klaren, Las
Lugton avenue and 111th street; Nyman
Avenue and 111th street H. H. Harper,
2159 Fifth avenue; Fred. H. Schoen,
Handled also by Mrs. M. Hodges, 297
W. 124th street, City; Mrs. McDonald, 181
Blair avenue, Providence, R. L.
max. 48
MME R. W. OLIVER
AFRO-AMERICAN HAIR DRESS PARLORS
129 Arlington Street, Newark, N. J.
All kinds of Hair Goods for sale or to order
Hair combing made up. Straightening,
Shampooing, scalp treatment. All kinds of
veneered work done. apr. 22-21
The Webb-Draper
Employment Agency
Has removed from 423 Sixth Avenue to 395
Sixth Avenue, cor. of 25th Street. This
Agency has a great demand for colored help,
both city and country.
apr.22-1yr
SHARPENS RAZORS DOES IT QUICK
KEENKUT RAZOR STROP DRESSING
Gives a smooth keen edge. Makes old stropa
as good as new. The very thing for barbars.
Mailed on receipt of 10 Annual Money re-
funded if not satisfactory. Address
H. D. PERRY, Agent
238 West 62nd Street, New York
apr.22-4t
TO LET
229 East 75th Street
4 large light rooms with bath; nicoe neigh-
borhood. Apply to
F. L. WILLIAMS, Agent
229 East 75th Street
FOR SALE
A NICE RESTAURANT
in Brooklyn, at a BARGAIN. Half block
from New York Cafe.
Apply
360 Hudson Avenue, Brooklyn
HALF MONTH'S RENT FREE
322 and 324 West 37th Street
near 8th Avenue
Three and four room apartments, improvements, all light. Rents reasonable. Well kept houses. Apply Janitor or
W. R. MASON, 558 Eighth Avenue
apr 22-4t
338 WEST 37th STREET
TO LET
Pine Apartments of 6 large, light rooms.
Ranges, Boilers and Triplets. Very moderate rents. Apply Janitor, or
CHRIS SCHEIRLOH
774 Ninth Ave., near 52nd St.
apr 22-4t
343 aud 345 West 44th Street
Fine neighborhood. We want respectable families to rent our 3 and 4 room apartments Big inducements. Houses newly renovated Apply Janitor, or W R MASON, 558 Eighth Ave apr284t
PRIVATE HOUSES IN THE FORTIES AND FIFTIES near 6th Avenue $1100 to $1500, fine for furnished rooms. Apply Janitor or SENIOR & STOUT 81 West 50th Street cor. 8 Avenue
FOR SALE A TAILOR-STORE With New and Old Work. On busy thoroughfare. Reason for selling. Leaving city. APPLY OFFICE 334 W 50th STREET
APARTMENT TO LEI
Ground floor, large kitchen, large bathroom and two bedrooms long pally-line. Refined people only reduced to $15
70 West 100th Street
near Columbia Avenue
Janithea in Bedment
FOR SALE LONG ISLAND
COLORED PEOPLE.
Make your money earn large profits, build
lots into 100 feet deep, high dry and level
$3,500 each, $8,100 down, $2,000 monthly in
prepossessional town. A great chance for the
right parties. Title guaranteed.
Buy Now. Get Leased & Loaded.
Box Owner New York Age, 7 and 8 Chatham Square
New York Land and Brokerage Company
Real Estate and Insurance
Commissioner of Deeds
J. B. WOOD Manager
1431 Plain Way
Brooklyn, New York
BENEFIT
IN AID OF
St. Philip's Parish Home
GIVEN BY
A OVERTON WA
AT
AND CENTRAL PAL
43rd Street and Lexington Avenue
Day Evening, April 29th
L. Y. R. R.
Sirius Orbital
1900
AIDA OVERTON WALKER
GRAND CENTRAL PALACE 43rd Street and Lexington Avenue
FROM 8:30 UNTIL 3:00 O'CLOCK
PART I.
chorus, "Picnic Day,"
character, "Its Lonesome in the Cabin"
by Aida Ove
By Mr. A
ing, by Misses Odessa Warren and B
Assisted by Company
Lilian Marshall, Annie Jarrett, Larine R
Misses Ida Day, Lizzie De Massey, Marg
Edward Connick, Frank Bayne, William
Williams, Mr. McCracken, Music by Mr. Jo
SPECIALTIES
Bootsie, Service Divine, Mr. Jo
umber,
wn, Imitation, by Aida
is,
umber, "Carrie" by Mr. W
Carrie Girls--Misses Ida Day, Mazie Bus
Ada Rex, Adah Banks
the Bandanna Gals—Misses Jessie Ellu
ryn Jones, Maggie Davis
PART II.
PART I.
Mesdames Lilian Marshall, Annie Jarrett, Larine Rogued, Daisy Tapley, Misses Ida Day, Lizzie De Massey, Marguerite Ward, Messrs. Edward Connick, Frank Bayne, William Moulton, Lengie Williams, Mr. McCracken, Music by Mr. Joe Jordan
SPECIALTIES
Tootsie Wootsie, Service Divine, Mr. Joe Weatherly
Musical Number, Henry Troy
Sheath Gown, Imitation, by Aida O Vaughan
The Kemps, May and Bob
Musical Number, "Carrie" by Mr. Will H. Dixon
Carrie Girls--Misses Ida Day, Mazie Bush,
Ada Rex, Adah Banks
"WE," by the Bandanna Gals—Misses Jessie Ellis, Effie King,
Kathryn Jones, Maggie Davis
PART II.
OPERETTA
The King's Quest, Lyric by Mord Allen
Music by Ford Dabney
King. (Baritone) J. Francis Moreau
Queen. (Soprano) Inez Clough
Queen. (Contralto) Bessie Payne
Grand Vizier. William H. Dixon
Gibson Girl. Odessa Warren
Brinkley Girl. Anna Jarrett
Ragtime Girl. Marguerite Ward
Tailor Maid. Daisy Tapley
Egyptian Girl Lillian Marshall
Circassian Girl Ada Rex
Indian Girl Abryn jödes
Jungle Girl Adah Banks
Devil Dance Introduced by Aida Cverton Walker
Musical Director. James J. Vaughn
MUSIC...CRAIG'S ORCHESTRA...DANCING
Gen. Admission and Balcony 50c. Boxes $10, $12 & $15
Reserved Seats 75c, $1 and $1.50
Under management of R C. McPHERSON and JACK NAIL, Jr.
USHERS Messrs Lew Proctor, Erskim Bell, Royal Rutledge,
Frank St Clair, Ernest Miller, Paul Prayer, Edward Connick, Charles
Johnson, Lizg, Throodorf, Tom Augerger, Samuel Branch
PROGRAMME. LADIES - Misses Hattie McIntosh. De Lina Brown. Frankie Thompson, Minnie Brown Nettie Black, Ida Canheld, Willie Starks. L. W Randall
Tickets on sale at Nall Bros. Cafe, 450 Sixth Ave. Nail & P
ker's Real Estate office, Gotham-Attncks Music Co. 136 West
Street, and at the Marshall Cafe, 127 West 53rd Street
---
Lady Gonzales
and Mme Zarreta
CLAIRVOYANTS
If You Are Going to See a Clairvoyant
Why Not See the Best?
If you have already made a mistake, throw away your money and lost confidence through a mess with much-advertised and self-style palettes that you voyants and their ebony clap-trap methods, voyants and their ebony clap-trap methods, voyants and their ebony clap-trap methods, wonderful mediums that will tell you frankly your condition and when 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 can tell you all this and more!
How can I have good luck?
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qwq ?qwq ?qwq
No charge if not satisfied when reading
over. You be the judge.
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
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THE LOGIC OF THE TIMES.
There is no question of the accuracy of Governor Hoke Smith when in addressing the Conference of Judges in the South. "Experience where there are fewest of them proportion to the number. The best of Negro would distribution to all sections. This can be accomplished by having more white settlers come South and more Negroes go North. East and
that implies, of course, that the Neighbors are lacking in capacity, elevation, and, when left to themselves, tend stealthily to a lower social and eco-
Neither in logic nor in fact do we find support for this ipse dixit of the New York Times. In fact, the wonder is that such partial and suspiciously strange logic should find its way into the editorial columns of a great cosmogolitan daily. Why, Mr. Editor, does that necessarily imply "that Negroes are lacking in capacity for self elevation?" That the Negro isolated from his fellows in a progressive and enlightened white community makes the faster progress is true and natural. That that same Negro isolated from his fellows in a vicious and stagnant white community would rise above his environs to be doubted and would be unnatural. That an illiterate Negro cannot teach an "illiterate Negro, we agree. You would, Mr. Editor, agree perhaps to as much concerning two such white men. That the Negro race, divided, demoralized, and brutalized by two hundred and fifty years of abject slavery, should catch as quickly the pace of "self elevation," as it has, been the maryel of all honest students of the race. But, Mr. Editor, it is a false and studied insinuation to deny to the Negro the natural tendency toward progress of other humans.
No, Mr. Editor, neither Liberia and Hayti nor the "black belts" and "black countries" of the South, as you say, illustrate any such "regrettable fact." That Liberia's nucleus of transported slaves, poor and unsustained by a home government and its resources, should have persisted amidst the most unfriendly conditions and overwhelming barbarism, seems to us to argue volumes for the capacity of the Negro for self-elevation." The "regrettable fact" is, that conditions in Hayti have been deadly misrepresented The Haytians, according to facts and figures undisputable as tabulated by ex Minister Leger and as reported by many travelers are making actual progress. According to such first-hand information with the Republics of South America, they are slowly but steadily growing toward a stable and efficient government Nor does the progress of the Negroes of the "black belt" and their thriving communities like Mound Bayou bear out any such theory.
No, Mr Editor you must produce something more than the words of Governor Hoke Smith, of Georgia, something outside the realm of logic, more facts than those at hand to support your preposterous though popular assertion that "Negroes are lacking in capacity for self-elevation"
THE SHERIFF'S IMPEACHMENT.
One of the strong and progressive governors of the South is Governor B. B. Comer, of Alabama. If he but prosecutes his present course in law enforcement to the end, he will prove a veritable god-send to his native State and in his example to the entire South land.
So disgusted has Governor Comer become with the enforcement of law and order by Alabama sheriffs, that he recently declared that hereafter, when a lynching is imminent, sheriff willing or unwilling State troops will appear on the scene. On April 11 at the order of the governor and acting upon the petition of the leading citizens of Mobile, Attorney General Garber began amputation proceedings against Sheriff Frank Cazalas, of Mobile, for permitting a Negro prisoner to be lynched. The Negro was a bad Negro, a murderer of a deputy sheriff, but the sheriff was an equally bad sheriff, a typical Southern sheriff. Experts in the art of sham battle with the mob, who are "overpowered" and whose "keys are seized," the action of the Mobile sheriff puts even such pretense to shame in comparison. Though he was reliably informed, the Governor says, "many hours before the sad entry into the jail," and although he knew "that within the last three years there have been two lynchings in Mobile County, the sheriff left the jail and went to his home four miles distant therefrom and took no precaution to
prevent the entry." Further, the Governor says, that "the deputies on guard in the guard room of the jail suffered the entry to be made without resistance" and that the sheriff's forces have not "ordered or undertaken any attempt worthy of the name to apprehend the murderers" of the Negro.
One must go far indeed to find a parallel picture to this lawless state of affairs. But it is apparent that the reputable citizens of Mobile and Alabama and the South are awakening to this, their greatest peril. But Governor Comer has courageously placed the blame for the present barbaric conditions where it should be, on the shoulders of the guardians of the law Impeachment will hardly meet the deserts of the lax and cowardly sheriff of Mobile. But it will have a powerful tonic effect on the other sheriffs of Alabama. It sets a high and timely precedent for the other Southern governors
EDUCATION IN THE SOUTH. The Twelfth Annual Conference for education in the South, which met in Atlanta for three days last week, beyond question was the largest and most successful conference on education ever held in the South.
Hundreds of distinguished educators and philanthropists were gathered from all parts of the country Under the inspiration of Robt. C. Ogden, the retired New York merchant, they discussed Southern school problems with a frankness that was as honest as it was helpful. Remarkable indeed was the ovation given President Ogden, who now for quite a decade has made the education of the white child as well as the black child his business. Thanks very largely to his own efforts and to the influence of the conference and the Southern Education Board, sixteen millions of dollars in Southern State appropriations for education have been added in the last few years. Equally remarkable were the strong addresses made by Gov. Hoke Smith of Georgia and President Mitchell of the University of South Carolina. In the course of the former's address he not only urged Negroes to isolate themselves in white communities, but placed education above all other problems. While the latter declared that if the South would solve her problems, it must let her conscience guide, it must break the inherited chains of ignorance, intolerance and bigotry. Aside from the direct uplift through education of the five millions of poor and degraded whites of the South, the greatest contribution of the movement has been its education of public sentiment. It is, together with the Jeanes Fund Board, educating the South to the tolerance and necessity of Negro education
Though the additional appropriations by the Southern States goes almost entirely to white schooling, it nevertheless thus removes one great barrier to Negro education and progress. The conference recording high water mark of popular interest in education was another milestone passed by the South in her march from slavery and ignorance
THE NEGRO IN SOUTH AFRICA
There is a group of Negroes in America who have been constantly assisting the Negro to return to Africa in order to better his condition. In order to let the readers of The Age know just what conditions exist in South Africa and also to permit them to make a comparison between the encouraging condition of the colored man in America and the discouraging condition of the colored man in South Africa, we print below a part of a speech recently delivered by High Commissioner Lord Selborne Lord Selborne lives in South Africa is thoroughly conversant with conditions there, besides, he is a brave and generous Englishman who is not afraid to speak out. The address was delivered on the occasion of Lord Selborne receiving a degree at a university in South Africa
"How is he to perform his task? In the first place, as a wise man, he will take precautions not to make the task harder for himself than need him by making the native regard him with dislike and his efforts with suspicion. I will leave out of account altogether the unwise and hard things said by reckless and unthinking white men about natives. I will only ask white men if they have ever calculated the cumulative effect on the natives of what I may call the policy of pin pricks? In some places a
ever he may have striven to civilize himself, is not allowed to walk on the pavement of the public streets, in others he is not allowed to go into a public park or to pay for the privilege of watching a game of cricket. In others he is not allowed to ride on top of a tramcar except in specified seats set apart for him, in others he is not allowed to ride in a railway carriage except in a sort of dog kennel, in others he is unfriendly and ingratiate in men and women who will not sit without a pass and if, for instance, he comes, as thou sands of battles do, from the farm on which he resides to work in a labor district, he does not meet with facilities but with elaborate impediments. In the course of his absence from home he may have to take out at least eight different passes, for several of which he has the right to take them, and would he much mappier without them; and it is possible in an extreme case that he may have to conform to twenty different pass regulations. Now let a white man put himself in the position of a black man and so how he would like it, and let him ask himself whether such regulations and laws really make his 'take easier'
THE NEW YORK AGE THURSDAY. APRIL 22, 1909.
There is no feature perhaps of Negro industrial life during the present months so evident as the beginning of co-operative business enterprises North, East, South and West, like mushrooms, Negro enterprises are springing up at the dawn of the promised era of prosperity Insurance companies as in St. Paul, Atlanta and Columbia; "better housing" movements as in Hartford, Springfield, Mass, and in Chicago; fraternity homes as in St Louis, New Orleans and Jacksonville; commercial enterprises as the shoe firm in Haverhill, Mass, and the Negro doll factory in Memphis, indicate the strength and scope of the movement. If the Negro has not as many business firms on the main streets of our great cities to-day as he had a score of years ago, it is because the Negro did not meet the era of combination with a similar co-operation and competition. This belated era of business co-operation indicates first, that the Negro in business has awakened to the call of the times, and secondly that the race is responding to the call for business co-operation Doubtless, in your community, wherever you may be, such Negro enterprises have recently begun Doubtless you have recognized this increasing sentiment and tendency among Negroes. Doubtless you recognize that out of this movement are the issues of the race's commercial growth, employment for your children, the higher standing and respect of your race
Then it is for you, we mean you, to forward this movement. Perhaps at a few reasonable sacrifices for a time, but you must stand behind these Negro enterprises not only with your moral support, but with your money. This is the call of the hour, this is the call of your race.
THE NEED OF EXERCISE.
In view of the recent successes of our local athletics, we take this occasion to commend the increasing growth and activity of our athletic clubs. As the season of outdoor sport approaches, we wish especially to urge our citizens to the habit of taking regular and systematic exercise. It is quite impossible for the race, as for an individual, to exist without exercise under the artificial living conditions of this great metropolis—away from the pure and undefiled atmosphere of nature, apart from actual contact with mother earth and preserve physical and mental vigor For our younger people we heartily endorse and recommend the numerous athletic clubs. For our older people we urge daily and vigorous walks. It is said by physicians that a daily walk of ten miles will cure the worst case of chronic indigestion
We are glad to see the progressive spirit of many of our local churches in attaching and fostering athletic organizations. This is one of the most direct ways of attacking the excessive Negro disease of New York and of raising the rather poor physical standard of the coming generation of New York Negroes. We wish that every church would follow the lead in this matter of the pioneers. Such clubs are absolutely harmless and abundantly helpful to the young, a needed and inspiring diversion to the old New York Negroes take more exercise.
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THE TRUTH ABOUT LIBERIA.
With this issue we begin publishing a series of letters from Liberia, written by one who has made a careful study from the inside of the whole situation in that republic. These letters will reveal the facts as far as Liberia is concerned, and we feel sure that they will prove very interesting reading for THE AGE constituency. These letters have been secured at considerable expense and effort and we are sure they will have a wide and careful reading
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PROGRESS IN JACKSON
The series of letters we are publishing from Jackson Miss, showing the progress of our people in that city, are most encouraging and inspiring. There are other sections of the South where our people are doing equally as well. We think it helps our race to call attention to these object lessons which indicate so much theft and general prosperity.
EDITORIAL AFTERTHOUGHTS
The scholars are discussing whether or not photography is a fine art but to ordinary mortals viewing Mr Jones' success photography is a very fine art.
"Squire Jones, an aged Washington Negro, finding a bag containing money and jewels valued at $2,000, held it and eventually found its owner, Mrs Wm H Clark. There the story ends, but assuming that the 'squire' received the usual handful of 'thank you' reward, we insist that honesty is the best policy.
Senator Bacon of Georgia writing recently to the New York Sun, says the Negroes of his State own $27,000,000 worth of property, have 200,000 children in school and that these show that the Negro has the protection of the law in his property rights and that "Georgia does a generous part toward
the education of the Negro." The Negro is getting money and education all right, Senator, and barring such insignificant facts and that the mob, as in the school house and church-burning last fall and in the Atlanta riot, has free reign, and that Georgia gives three times more to each white child's schooling than it does to a Negro child, your conclusions, Senator, are painfully accurate and generous.
Chas. R. Doll, of Chillicothe, engrossing clerk in the Missouri legislature, recently resigned that post to accept a clerkship in the automobile department of the Secretary of State's office Mr Doll is a sage all right, for the automobile business is lucrative to the runover stage the year round in Missouri
Dr James E. Shepherd, planning a Negro Chautauqua and Bible training school for Durham, N C, has collected $50,000 of the $150,000 needed. As this is an off-year in politics, we would advise Dr Shepherd to come North to the Chautauqua this summer with some simon-pure spell-binders
Robert C Ogden, the retired partner of John Wanamaker, has accomplished wonders for the popularizing of education in the South since his retirement. In these days of increasing industrial education, business is being called the handmaid of education, but in Mr Ogden's case education had to stand and wait the pleasure of business.
The A. M. E. brethren have been thoroughly tickled by the election of R. R Wright, Jr., as managing editor of the Christian Recorder and the A. M. E. Publishing House We, too, believe that Wright's in the right church and the right pew.
The Charleston News and Courrier recently "hopes that Secretary of War Dickinson will be able to make an impression upon Mr. Taft before the administration is much older." From the vigor with which Mr. Dickinson on the hustings has recently been slashing just such prejudiced and demagogic Southerners as this Charleston editor, we rather suspect that Mr. Dickinson has made a splendid impression on Mr. Taft
The local Negro Business League in Washington, D. C., which is unusually wideawake, has just started a monthly journal to be known as The Negro Business League Herald. The first issue presents a commendable appearance, and we wish for it the highest degree of success. We very much hope that it will be the highly esteemed by our people, not only in the District of Columbia, but throughout the country.
Down in Kentucky a white man recently married a wealthy colored woman and both were doing the p. f. w. act until the woman's brother came along and had his brother-in-law arrested. The white man quoted the classic author: "Love laughs at lock smiths," and the colored man retorted in the homely thought of Josh Bailings "Love likes to light anywhere there is money."
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Andrew Carnegie has promised Walt
force $17,500 for a women's dormitory providing the university raises
an equal amount, as the building will
sue $15,000. As President Scarborough starts out after the $17,500 it
may not be amused to remind the friends of the institution that eymologist's say "scarborough" is the contraction of borough surremer the one who picked up everything living loose.
Sally J McCall, whose will was recently titled, bequeaths the Andover building in Cincinnati, to four white trustees for a Negro industrial school. To the chronic higher education brethren who are kicking because "it is a part of the dehileber attempt to reinstate the Negro to manual labor" that famous reply is best "There is a difference between working and being worked."
Despite the noise ovation that the Philippine constabulary band is receiving everywhere in its tour of the country, it is a significant fact that there has been comparatively little public warming up to its great Afro-American leader, Capt Walter H Loving. Musica bath charms to soothe the savage breast but it hath not the power to make the American white people forget
Hare Dut Increasing
President Mitchell, of the University of South Carolina, touched in his address last evening on the most important outcome of all this mighty educational striving when he urged his Southern auditors to break away from tradition to think for themselves, and then to science without regard to what their forebears said or did. In other words, Dr Mitchell wonts to see broken those chains of ignorance, intolerance, and bigotry which are the South's most grievous inheritance from slavery. Fortunately, as we are happy to point out elsewhere, to the slaves like the African Southmen, like Dr Mitchell who dare to speak out freely even though running counter to the prevailing opinion, is steadily Increasing Hardly a week goes by without some brave utterance, some helpful criticism of the South by Southerners. Indeed, Booker Washington's speech through South Carolina and his dispensative help has demonstrated beyond dispute that there are men of this kind in every town who welcome an opportunity to stand up for justice and righteousness without counting the cost.—The New York Evening Post.
WHAT THE NEGRO PRESS HAS TO SAY
The success of the Pekin Theatre in this city would lead one to the belief that if a really first-class colored play house was put up here the white theatres would have no further use for their peanut galleries.—The (Norfolk) Lodge Journal
The city election was the tastest in the history of Topeka. A very light vote was polled, there being no important issue to stir up interest. It was a great success, three—two Democratic members of the council and marshal of the city court.—The Topeka Plaindealer.
The idle, the vicious and intemperate Negro should watch. He disregardful every event; he makes it hard for the Negro whose life has been a credit in the community where he lives. Away with him, he is no good to you, nor is he any account to himself. Keep away from him as you do a lifelong affair. Both of them are amenities to the community. The Lexington Standard.
Self-preservation is the first law of nature, but were you to start an investigation of the lives and acts of some of our so-called leaders, you would soon decide that these fellows prefer preserving the other man instead of helping self and helping the fellows who do the best in the fellows of the day. The only way we can account for such is a lack of civilization and enlightenment—The Oklahoma Tribune.
The Payne Bill just recently passed in Washington though it has somewhat decreased the bulk tax on imports and exports has certainly brought little relief to the poor and the man of small means, in what the bill has increased the laying on the wearing apparel of the poor, such as buttons, wool, and cheap furnishings for women's goods. We are also applying this approach, which really reduced that the country's small-like progress toward better times will continue—The Cambridge Advocate.
The exercises at the Ryman Auditorium on Thursday night brought to a close another chapter in the history of Mehray Medical College. One hundred and five received diplomas, giving them the right to go into the different States and appear before the boards of examination. These examinations are of great weight and many sacrifices will be required of them. Their constituents will be in the main people of little means, which signifies the young physician must have patience and be resourceful.—The Nashville Globe.
THE NEW YORK AGE published an article last week in which it was stated that several of the Boston churches have been trying to get rid of their Negro members because of their increasing number. If this is true we find that the Negro problem in Boston is practically the same as it is here. Negroes belong to white churches in the South in small towns and to black churches in the North and South look upon the Negroes as a suspicion when they begin to multiply, organize and consolidate. The (Darlington S. C) Farmers' Corner.
Some of these Negro haters who see disaster in every movement of colored men are suffering from a nervousness that only death will cure. We belong to the African-American community and country belongs to us. A race of people that has been here as long as the white man barring a few years, can hardly be called an alien or a foreigner. We hope that some of our jurists will be kind and considerate in the future of study the meaning of words in accordance with the definitions of the best lexographer. The Richardson Planet.
The president will make some enlistment to meet the storms of life when they come upon him, as they are as certain to come as recognized and fixed events of human existence. There is no occupying sickness, disease and death, and there is no need to seek formal help for these sad occurrences and for a man to make provision for the relief of himself and those dependent upon him and liable to suffer in case of the disability in demise. These ill of life come as expected and it is best to be prepared for them. The Louisville Columbian
To lay all the blame for present race conditions upon the white man is as unjust as it is to lay it all upon the Negro. There is a great deal that our people can do for themselves which if they would do would quicken sympathy for the black people, that causes the white man to look upon us with contempt is our disloyalty to each other. Think of the number of useful organizations started in our city that have failed because they lacked the lay city of their members. What is true of Kansas City is true of the whole county, but we are thankful that there are signs of improvement. The Kansas City Sun
In the face of it all it is a matter of encouragement that the great bulk of the inhabitants of the country have Negro in all things essential to his permanent and substantial upfit. Just now when America applies to be a great world power when her statesmen jurists captains of industry and publicists are challenging the attention of the balance of mankind at its fitting that within the government they carry every in industrious element should receive justice at the hands of the State.
The Negro who offers for office should stand ready for the test. He should be capable and competent. He should agree up to the American standard. This done nothing more should be expected. The Dallas Express
The Negroes of Wacoross need not expect the white citizens to help them along any useful line, until they show some disposition to help themselves. They cannot show this disposition until they fully realize their needs. The Negroes of Wacoross seem to have gone so long without any ambition to possess a board of education, college, or even ask the board of education to accept the qualifications, that ignorance and criminal difference have become a second nature to them. We believe that if we can get the people to see their needs, also money and buy a school site somewhere on Hazzard.
sard's Hill, when this is done, we firmly believe that the white people generally will help them erect a suitable building, and when completed the board of education will willingly contribute, each school year, toward the running expenses.—The Waycross (Ga.) News.
The St Louis Masons are to be congratulated upon their purchase of a magnificent property for a hall. The building, a three-story one, built at a cost of $200,000 a year, is adapted for its purpose. Hitherto the Masons of St. Louis have paid out vast sums annually for hall rent. Now this will be stopped and a revenue will be derived from their own property. This is a wise move which reflects credit upon our St. Louis brethren. We hope community where our people are to be found in any great numbers.—The Omaha Enterprise.
What a great misfortune it is to hate anybody! How bad it makes one feel! So many hate without a cause. We often grow envious of another's prosperity, and immediately set about to do them harm. The great weapon of destruction among us is slander. We, that is, the majority, seem to possess a peculiar relish for this kind of employment. They are never so happy as when they can help on a sensational rumor, and spoil the good name and reputation of some neighbor. This all results from hate.—The Baptist Sentinel.
Mr Emmett J. Scott, secretary to Dr. Booker T. Washington, is an admirable substitute on the commission instead of Dr. B. T. Washington. We would have preferred Mr. Washington, but as his many duties require him to remain in the United States, we think the next president will be very able young man, and we are glad he has been honored by Mr. Taft on this important mission to Africa. Mr. Scott has the advantage of many men of his age by his long association with Dr. Washington who is the acknowledged owner of over 100,000 Afro-Americans.—The Providence Advance.
We feel so much gratified at the sign of progress as we observe them along business and industrial lines in which colored people are engaged that we cannot resist the temptation of commenting on the situation.
In every section of the city colored men, who a few months ago confessed they were fighting hard to keep from being deported, they also say they are increasing their stock and planning in every way they can to get more customers and accommodate them. One of the most encouraging signs ofvolunteerism is the emplosion of additional members of our race.—The Baltimore Advocate.
Once again the Republican party has won a victory with the Negro vote. Without that vote no victory could have been possible. Last fall we voted 12,000 Negro votes. This spring we voted about 11,950, leaving out about fifty who voted with us last fall. The deserters are the most common among the race. Then we have several who returned to the town and voted in last who are expecting good appointments. But we wish to say to the party leaders that before the fatted calf is killed and proportioned out, we want some results. We shall watch the actions of those in power and see who will be elected to the regular old-time Republicans or the new comers. Please take note --The St Louis Palladium.
With respect to the idle and shiftless Negroes who are like a millstone about our necks, the Nashville Clarion voices our sentiments exactly, when it says
"Just at this period in the progress of the race the lazy, idle vagrant element among us should be discouraged. Every member of the race should be taught to secure and hold a job, and earn his bread in the sweat of his face. When poor people refuse to work it is evident that they will soon begin to suffer. The rate of immigration is already large enough, and the industry portion of the race should see to it that it is not made larger. Unlimited restrictions should be placed on all who are careless or indifferent to toll for their support. The Texas Fiskman
ALABAMA AND MISSISSIPPI
Should Follow Georgia's Convict-Lenear
Example, Says New York Sun.
Now that the faeces have all been threshed out in Georgian and the horrors of the contact base system finally extinguished should we not begin to hear of similar reforms in neighboring States? There is no reason to cheve that things are in Alabama or Mississippi at this moment. We heard of the most stronge barbarities that were practiced in that State under the system but that was only because inquiry and agitation had stimulated dissidence. It is safe to assume that under similar treatment the system would have relied conditional equally abbreviate.
We remember how Senator Bankhead speaking to the good roads convention at Mobile last year discussed at great length and with the utmost melody every imaginable way of getting good roads in Alabama except that of using the convicts for the purpose. We recall also the sage who told his audience a fairy tale about the Federal treasury and the vast wealth contained therein awaiting only the "open sesame" of some inspired patron. The meeting dispersed full of good cheer and over the empty crab shells and the fragments of the conjectures they saaried the treasury to the cause of good business. Wetumpka where the private speculators divide the penitentiary among them. How do we know and what reason have we to suppose that the Alabama lessees are any more malicious and ever less than good men? Only whole is that Alabama is now no longer a system of Haskell himself off at Mobile and gave them a gust of language in exchange for their rabished banquet board.
Georgan at least has done the cultivated thing in taking his contact out of the murderous hands of the losers and the wise and economical thing in dissecting their labors to the purposes of the com- munity. He has offered an example but the eyes of the whole country looking on it will at least serve as a reproach. The New York Sun
Committee for Improving the Industrial Conditions of Naryan in New York
The secretary of the committee desires to file the names and addresses of all the colored men who have learned mechanical trades, such as carpenter painting bricklaying, plumbing etc. Also the names and addresses of contractors and men conducting their own businesses. The office of the committee is fast becoming an important center, and, if costs are increased, the men are desired occupation in the office, it is suggested that more men take advantage of this opportunity
"NEGROES ARE NOW AMERICANS
Laleg Williams and Bishop Clase
Disciple Taft's World and Bible
It is immensely important to the well-being of the colored people of the United States that our new president has strong and wholesome views on race question in the United States. What the President feels, says and lives may be summarized as follows: (1) When he speaks in the South he speaks to all the people and recognizes their oneness in the forces that make for orderly government. Men can be white or black in compulsion, citizenship based on intelligence, character and patriotism is colorless. (2) The Negroes in things under intellectual and economic efficiency is ever increasing asset of tremendous sufficiency in the South
(3) There is something reassuring in the ring of the President's work when he says that the Fifteenth Amendment has not been generally observed in the past, but it ought to be observed; that it is a great protection to the Negro, and it never will be repealed and it ought not to be repealed. Surely there is no equivocation about this.
(4) The President's declared policy with reference to the appointment of colored men to public office must be interpreted in the spirit of the man whose sense of justice has been tested in many ways and has not been found wanting.
(5) It is immensely significant and encouraging to hear the chief executive of the nation state with unaffected cery: "Personally, I have not the slightest race prejudice." To believe this is our duty and our encouragement.
(6) The new President has been a earnest student of the Negro's program and no man in public life appreciates the significance of this progress more than the President Taft, and no man in public life appreciates the sheer force of his moral courage in the face of wholesome influence on Southern thought than President Taft. He has toled the conscience of the South as no other man has done in his insistence on the violability of the Fifteenth Amendment Men in the South, who, ten years ago, appealed to him in behalf of Negro citizenization that student Taft in the spirit of acquiescence and agreement. Colored men in the South, and indeed everywhere, will take hope since there has come to the presidency a man who is heard and heeded when he appeals to the conscience of American questions: justice to the ever increasing aspiring Negro man and woman of ambition.
It behooves us to take every possible advantage of these favorable auctions. The new administration, committed as it is to the improvement of the North and the South closer together, but also to make more prominent and permanent, in every way possible, the progressive and regenerating forces among the people of the country. Assessment of the good forces that make for the success in all directions of human endeavor. Under these new conditions it will be our privilege to contribute no insignificant success of President Taft's administration.
S. LAING WILLIAMS
Ass't U S. Dist. Atty at Chicago
I appreciate your invitation to have give my opinion concerning President Taft's inaugural address, especially that part relating to the South and the Negro, for the columns of your great paper.
Two things impressed me when I first read the President's admirable and compassionate First, its frankness in taking the people, over whom he presides as chief magistrate into his confidence as to his purpose, and as to his plans for the furtherance of that purpose. The spirit of good will and kindly interest, the welfare of all the people, and a desire to have all parts of the spirit which prompted him to sound this timely and useful note as a necessary factor in having the government fulfil its true mission for all the people through the office of President, the will of the qualified electors.
It seems to me that the President has spoken well and wisely by assuring the South that he will endeavor to make his administration serve its best interest and that he will shall cherize his efforts in behalf of the section. As to his attitude concerning the Negro portion of his constituency, it may be said when his inaugural is examined without reading between the lines or reading into a what does not appear to be a sentence. What he says about the Third季度, Fourth季度 and Fifth季度 is all that we could desire of him, and I think when the nation comes around to the President's press and is willing to enforce this view, the Negro will be fully satisfied.
That the anti Negro portion of the South and the Southern press generally have read between the lines or read into the opinion that the President is not stated concerning his attitude as to the appointment of Negroes to office in the South and are consoling themselves with the opinion that the President intends to eliminate the Negro as an office holder in the South as the terms of present legislation expire as just what it might be expected.
In the meanwhile, the race
to exercise patience and to
lure I believe that President
Hawes and just as he is officiating
the election of the new
leaders, I if I am not sure
in opinion the Negro will have nothing
fear as to his interest whether it
lates to office holding or in any way
good under the Taft administration, let
us also the President time, and let
and that our cause is not forging
let us go to him in a manly and undo-
way and he shall he will beat on
cause and he shall he plea
Charlotte, N.C.
BISHOP GEORGE W CLINTON
April 1, 1909
WASHINGTON EXAMINATIONS
Said to Be, Many Instances, a Grotesque Farce
MANY APPOINTMENTS
Made Wherein Teachers Failed
To Pass Examinations; Others
Denied Schools Who Pass
Special to The New York AQR
WASHINGTON, D. C., April 21.—The AQR is in receipt of many letters, divi-
rected to the staff correspondent who is
instituting a series of letters on the Wash-
ington schools. Some are bitter in their
denunciation, and others are compli-
mentary. Some charge that certain
teachers, and others charge that
I have not to hold, and give me some
information derogatory of this or that
teacher, or of this or that school's dis-
I treat all with respectful indifference, for in my investigations I have secured all the information desired, and some of it fairly bristles with sensation. As to favoritism, that is far less than Boost of these letters, namely that the deserved complaining school is paid Armstrong Manual Junior School is but part of a scheme of the advocates of industrial education to "boost" this branch of education at the expense of higher education. A little inquiry made as to the nature of the Armstrong school that this particular school is being "boosted" by the parents and pupila, and does not require another "boost."
I do not intend to parallel or diverge the two branches of education. My purpose is primarily to deal with the schools in so far as the competency or incompetence of the teachers concerned I instituted that ten per cent of the teaching force of the Washington Negro schools in incompetent, and I repeat it. I declared that the board members know it; that the assistant superintendent knows it; that the principal knows it; that the principals know it. I repeat this declaration. If there is any doubt on this score, in the minds of the before-mentioned superiors, let the Board of Education call for an examination, fairly and impartially conducted, and the result will support my declaration. I have been pretty generally admitted that in the not very dim past, examinations for Negro teachers in Washington have been a grotesque farce. Some of those who actually failed were passed and given schools, and some who actually denied schools. The latter constituted those poor unfortunate who had no "pull."
In justice to the many competent and splendid teachers in the schools, the dead branches should be clipped from the tree. There are many of them, and the majority, who have as thoroughly consecrated their lives to the education and uplift of their Negro pupils as ever a nun or monk consecrated her or his life to the sombre walls and exacting sacrifices of the conde and monastery, who are similarly qualified to receive the same reward—in salary—as do these incompetent teachers, and too infrequently, in the past, have the splendidly qualified and devoted teachers witnessed the advance over them of teachers whose abilities were far higher a joke than a serious proposition.
It is charged in Washington, and not behind fans either, that some teachers are retained because of a feeling of pity, others because of pull, and others because of fear if the teachers in school were conducted as schools in other cities, the giving to the superintendent free reins as to the personnel of the teaching staff, possibly better results would obtain.
In talking with a prominent and old resident of Washington, and who, by the way, is a very accomplished woman, she said
"There is perhaps no city in the world when the love of music among Negro people is more pronounced and where this art is more generally cultivated than in Washington and this fact would suggest that 'the head of the music department of the Negro school' set the man who is in charge of the music of our Negro schools never had any especial wholesale training. He is little more than a make shift. The white school authorities would not dare impose upon the white schools a white supervisor of music who had such a limited training for the work as the one in charge of the music of the Negro schools. The Negro pupils be given the benefit of musical ability and musical preparedness equal to that which the whites enjoy?"
This question, I find is a prevalent one in Washington. I find also that this particular interview quoted is corroborated by many others. If an examiner in the Northwest for today director in the Northwest for today doubt the present director would stand at the head. It is pretty generally believed by Washingtons that he would simply be in the same class. There is nothing further to prove a grounnel or an earnest ideal; I learn from a simple question of musical ability and fitness. A lover of music myself, a firm believer in the good influences of the art of music upon both children and appreciate the needs of the Washingtons. I groan at the emphasis of the ter and I ask of Roud Edbarton this question. If there was a vacancy in the head of the music department of the white schools and if the present head of the music department of the white schools was white taking only into consideration his known ability and known needlessness would he select him to fill that vacancy?
fair question Fair because schools, and the Negro child settled to as high order of the white schools and write if you gave Harriet Carson an indention of the Negro should you go to the police supervisor of music? a snap of the finger for the supervisor of the Negro in or a lady is concerned question that calls for an interview the Negro pupils are students supervisor princes equal to the whites? a slave having young men and of any who站 in and take the of the old fossils and in the record the advancement and give them a fuse to camped teachers rather prepared Negro teachers Negro pupils who goarn
drawback to the Negro Washington has been the preface of high Negro govern-ment, they may hereto be considered to the front for this or that appointment or promotion.
In short, they have been so officious that they were continually sticking their nose in matters of education and applying offensive politics to a subject that is near and dear to thousands of Negro children of the District. It is whispered in "the House of Usher" that the present assistant superintendent in charge of the Negro schools turned up the numbers (high numbers of these H. N. O's (high Negro officials), and had the audacity to let it be known that the public schools of Washington was not a field for marauding politicians. And to think a Negro superintendent of schools in Washington would be so bereft of feminine characteristics as to really aspire to the masculine gender, to the extent that they are not a part of H. N. O. This surely is an ominous sign. It bespeaks progress. I am "coming through the rye," and bringing along some exhibits that when catalogued will make ye Washington parents of young hopefuls sit up and take notice, and ask the question—Are our children favored up are some of the teachers favored by outside pully?
BURDEN OF SCHOOL
(Continued from Page 1)
Negroes engaged in the simplest lines of manual labor.
"The first step in the education of the great body of the Negro race is to inspire a desire to do better the labor they are called upon to perform, and to rid them of a willingness to live poorly, if perchance a meager support can be made with half-time labor.
"Experience shows that Negroes improve most rapidly where there are fewest Negroes in proportion to the number of whites. The best friend of the Negro should seek his distribution to all sections. This can be accomplished by more white settlers coming South and more Negroes going North, East and West.
President R.C. Ogden of New York rear interested paper on "The American Spirit in Education," which was handled in an able and broad-minded manner.
The annual election of officers resulted as follows:
President, Robert C. Ogden, New York; vice-president, B. J Baldwin, Montgomery, Ala.; secretary, Wickliffe Rose, Nashville, Tenn.; treasurer, William A. Blair, Winston-Salem, M. The executive committee includes Dr. S C Mitchell, W. H. Hand, Columbia, S. C; Harry Hodgson, Athens, Ga. J. Y Joyner, Raleigh, N C; H. B Frissel, Hampton, Va.
MONACAN CLUB.
Given Second Assembly-Mrs. Veronica Entertained-Other News.
Special to TN New York Acq.
WASHINGTON, D. C., April 21.—The Monacans' second assembly Wednesday evening of Easter week proved the most enjoyable social event of the year. Its purpose to drive away the dull care and self-willed monotony of the Lenten season was admirably accomplished, lending a retouch of tone to the capital social organization. The affair was the reproduction of the former effort of the Monacans in March on a more elaborate scale, the executive committee, consisting of the president, the treasurer and Harry H. Cardozo, profiting by the experiences of the earlier occasion.
The hall was decorated with Easter lilies, rendering a color scheme in green and white. In addition there were an equal number of palms and ferns and a dozen or more of lilies containing electric bulbs. An Anthurium, a green and white electric scutcheon bordering the stage of the auditorium and spelling in colors the name of the club. These effects were arranged by Arthur C. Newman, of Armstrong Technical High School. A canopy effect in wall and ceiling decoration of carved and burning images, flames and stream arranged by Burton lend an idea of rich palatial splendor.
As a general refreshment the frappe was served on the ballroom floor through out the evening. These arrangements are more elegant and were quite successful. The rights of the supper room were kept more brilliant than the subdued effects in the ballroom. The supper table decorated with two large azaleas underhair fern and a large vase of flowers. Lax and twists of spun here and there, presented in predominance the green and white scheme. This, too, was presented by the favors and souvenirs. The former were distributed on promenade and the latter were placed in a color. The latter were small green boxes containing creme de merte tied with white bow and containing the inscription "Monneau's Easter Assembly" 1926.
The officers of the Monacons are James Walker, president Frank W. Check Vice president Robert T. Donglass, Secretary and W L. D. Wilkinson, Treasurer. Together with the ex-college committees they are to be credited with giving the capital a model function.
The Pastalozzi Froehle) Society of the Teacher's College of Hawndow University presented Mrs W T Vernon in an afternoon with Count Leo Tolstoi on Friday last. A remarkable program was rendered the participants being Rufus J Hawkins R G Doggett Miss S J Hawkins R G Doggett Miss S Mr P R Robinson M S Walton and Mrs Vernon. The society announces for its closing program the presentation of "Dream Lovers" an operatic romance by Paul Laurence Dunbar and S Coleridge Taylor. A plan has been communicated whereby a series of lectures and recitals embracing the most distinguished lecturers and artists available will be presented. The society plans these lectures and artists available and fund for worthy students of the Teachers' College who are in need of assistance.
The new Carnegie Library of Howard
Pittsburgh is a school last Saturday will be a model of its kind. It will consist of two stories and a basement having a height of thirty nine feet. It will have a terra cotta cornice and a balcony on the first floor the library and librarian's room, two large study rooms a stock room and a cataloguing room. Several other rooms are designed in the plans. On Saturday afternoon last addresses were delivered by Commissioner MacFarland and Justice Ranard of the Supreme Court a superintendent of public schools addressed the Hillsdale's Citizens' Association last week upon "Moral Education and the Public School" emphasizing the importance of character in a teacher. Mrs Mary Church Terrell will be again in Washington in a few days. She will be visiting her trip also in-included a visit to Cuba. Dr. Lucy Moteo, principal of Normal School No. 2, spent a very enjoyable Easter vacation in Atlantic City. The True Reformers are holding a sixy-day rally in the national capital. On Thursday evening last Dr John
THE NEW YORK AGB, THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1909.
married in St. Mary's Chapel by the rector of St. Luke's church, Rev. Thomas J. Brown. Miss Florence M. Hunt has returned to St. Luke's after a pleasant stay of ten days in New York. A debate between the Kappa Sigma Society of Howard University and the Gamma Phi of Lincoln will take place on Sharp's Free Memorial Chapel on Friday, April 23. The subject for debate is "Resolved, That Women should have the right to vote on the same terms as men." The annual prize debate of the Eucharist will be held in Andrew Hankin Chapel May 7.
The vestrymen of St. Luke's P E Church have been re-elected as follows: James C. Burril register; Jerome A Brooks register; Charles A Brooks, treasurer; Charles J. Pickett and Dr Norwood were elected delegates to the diocenan convention to be held some time in May. John A Davis and another member of the choir as alternates from the congregation
The Lincoln Emancipation League of the capital celebrated emancipation day with appropriate ceremonies in the auditorium of Friendship Baptist Church last Friday evening. Among those in attendance were among illiterate William E. Chandler Register W. T. (Vernon and Recorder John C. Dancy, M. N. Corbett read an original poem on Lincoln Miss Bessie Haskins spoke upon the duty of the race, Miss Jennie L. Shelton rendered a vocal solo and Clarence Blakey a cornet solo, Rev. Alex W. Cox, a violinist, called the meeting to order. Following the preliminaries E. Toomey read the edict of Lincoln freeing the slaves in the District of Columbia, April 16, 1862
DEATH OF ELLEN WALLIS LANSEY-
Teachers Hailing Funds to Fight Tuberculosis Recruitment to Malaria
BALTIMORE, Mr. April 20—The community was shocked last Wednesday morning by the announcement of the death of Miss Ellen Wallis Lansay, a daughter of Mr. J Edward Lansey, one of our most prominent and useful citizens, and had useful assistance in her brief days, and the announcement of her death early Wednesday morning cast gloom and sadness over a very large circle of friends, both of the young lady and the family, which is one of the most important members of the Mary Lansay was 20 years of age. Her funeral was held from St. Francis Xavier Roman Catholic Church, of which she was a communicant, last Friday morning at 9 o'clock, where a requiem mass was
At the Easter election at St James Church, the following were elected vestrymen: D. W Queen, Solomon DeCoursey, Walter S. Emerson, George A. L. Anderson, Robert H. Pennington, L. Anderson, Burt H. Peck, C. Peck. The last two mentioned are new accessions to the Board. The old officers were re-elected. Mr S DeCoursey was elected delegate to the Diocesan Convention. The Easter music as this church was unusually attractive and imminent, held during the present week. The rector was presented with a handsome Anglican canock by members of the congregation. There is in progress, at the Grace Presbyterian Church, "A National ensemble being conducted by the colorful men of the city," the interest of raising funds toward procuring apartments for the treatment of colored patients suffering with tuberculosis. The decorations are beautiful and impressive, and the crowds patronizing the affair through the present week. Mr Hesher E. Wharton is at the head of the affair.
The principal attraction in society during the past week was the annual entertainment and promenade given under the auspices of Prof. Toomey's Dancing School, and that promenade in the Lycee, and that spacious building was well filled with the fashionable and otherwise prominent people. After the drama, dancing was indulged in until about 1 a.m. The Theater, with its balance, composed of the clergy of the various denominations in the city to the number of fifty or more, held an interesting meeting Tuesday. Several pastoral receptions are scheduled for the present week. The M.E. ministers are about to leave for the next conference, and the people in many of the local charges are tendering receptions to their pastors for it is possible that many of them may not be returned. The Rev Gilmore, Cummings, pastor of Ascension Presbyterian Church last evening presided at Church host evening attended by large numbers from his own congregation.
Mr W Ashleigh Hawkins Grand Chan cellar of the Knights of Paths, together with Mr Bernard Taylor has married Mr Ashleigh Hawkins City Mo where their stay was exceedingly enjoyable as well as profitable Miss Gertrude Harris and Mr William H Pristor both efficient and highly respected teacher in both public schools and private schools. Wendy Hawkins the residence of the bride Hopkins avenue the Rev Dr Bragg officiating Mr William Logan and Miss Eliza both H Howard both of New York, were invited to the reception, the Rev W A C Hughes, of Sharp Street Memorial Church, officiating The bride is a sister of Mrs Johnson, the wife of the Rev John Wesley Johnson, the Rev Alfred Young pastier of Whatcat N E Church was presented last week with a beautiful gold headed cane by members of his congregation
The second intercollegiate debate be tween debating clubs of Howard and Lincoln Universities will take place in this city at Sharp Street Memorial Church, on next Friday, evening. The women should have the right to vote on the same terms as men. The Howard society has the affirmat end while the Lincoln team will maintain the contrary view. The women also with visiting "Elks" The dedication of the Elks' Hall takes place this week at which time a great cultural and musical program will be rendered at the Monumental Assembly room. Mr William Lewis the National Land Organizer, is to deliver the orn
CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR
At Fort Ontario Gives First Social of Season.
Four ONTARIO N.Y. April 20 The Christian Endeavor gave its first social Friday evening at the quarters of Company L. 24th Infantry having been granted the privilege to use the company lumber room through the courtesy of the company L. 24th Infantry. The guests gathered at 8:30 I. It being the first occasion of the Endeavor the evening was spent in making formal acquaintances and social chats. The pictures of the people of our new island possessions furnished much amusement and were a great treat to many who had never crossed the bumpy drive. A 9:15 a. four gallon freezer of ice cream was opened and seventeen cakes were cut. All present sat down to overflow dishes of ice cream and cake. The cream was procured by popular subscriptions, but the many cakes were donated by the ladies of post and city. An effort of the chief chairman of the committee, Mrs. C. Sanders, assisted by her efficient coworkers, Mrs. C. Fryman, Mrs. E. Fryman.
man, Mrs. Harming, Misses Favors and Green. The arrangements were made by the President, Sergeant-Major C. A. Sandora, assisted by Post Commissary Sergeant M. Sandora, Adjutant, Cook Brown and E. W. Shook. At the close of the feast the following toast was offered by Post Commissary Sergeant Saddler:
And be so merry forever
For we are a happy Christian band.
The members of this Endeavor."
The soldiers were merryly entertained by the following ladies: Edmond Fryman, N. R. Fryman, Edward Fryman, Charles Fryman, Harman, King, and Benton; Misses Brown, Morale, Harman, Favors, Slater, Benton, Fryman and Roberts.
The following gentlemen from the city were also present Messrs. Edward and Charles Fryman, N. R. Green and Jacobs.
Music for the evening was furnished by the Fort Ontario Orchestra under the directorship of Corporal Wm. De Lyons.
At the early hour of 10:30 the guests had enjoyed themselves to their full capacity and went home with merry hearts.
St. Paul, Minn.
ST. PAUL, MINN., April 21 —Mme. Addie Minor went to Cedar Rapids, Iowa. April 10, where she gave a recital. She is a soprano solist of rare ability. She is a church dedicated its new and handmade pipe organ. The choir, under the direction of Mme. Minor, rendered selections from Hayden's Third Mass. There were also solos rendered by Miss Harast, Loomer Mk. Jr., and Mr. Erlil Moor, Mr. Allen Freeman J. and Master Henley also rendered a splendid duet. Mrs. S. E. Hall presided at the pipe organ. Mrs. Hall holds the distinction of being the first Negro to play a pipe organ owned by our own population. Mrs. Mamie Loblins has been employed by the Schultz Millinery Company, on Lexington avenue. John Vincent died at his home on Wabasha street, Saturday, April 10. Mme. Byron Riffle and Chaucey Miller, members of the twelfth, are at work on another play,
The choir of St. James A M. E. Church went to Fort Snelling on April 14, and gave a concert. Mr. R. E. Haynes, of Bellingham, Washington, has come to St. Paul to reside
LIBERIAN SECRET SOCIETIES.
territories and Special Duties.
Discuss the role of Liberian people, William B. Thatcher, a mining engineer who spent some years in that country prospecting for minerals, and Washington Herald that they said in the Washington Herald that they have secret associations in the Dark Continent.
"The Greee Gree and Devil Bushes are secret institutions for the moral, social and religious development of the youths both sexes."
"The Greee of the Greee Gree Bush is called a Zoah, and the head of the Devil Bush, a country Devil. The term devil has not the same significance as in our language. The location of these bushes, or lodges, is in the thickest of the woods. The paths leading to them are labyrinthine. Byrssi burrowing is taken to the air of mystery which the weird tales told by the native healer the air of mystery which is made to surround everything which relates to them, are sufficient to guard the curious from approach.
Yet, lest some man should stray accidentally into the entrance, a white cloth is to be thrown to a pole at the head of the path as a danger signal. This is always sufficient warning.
"These bushes are the most popular institutions in West Africa among the non Christian natives. Their purpose in the main is exalted. The Greec Greec Bush is pledged to the preparation of manliness for their life work. It instructs us in the principles of strength as well as the principles of their wisdom. So impressive are these lessons that even Christianity itself is said to be powerless to remove the impression in after life. The purity of those trained by them is wicked for. As a safeguard men are still forbidden not only to enter the bible, but to be found anywhere in the world, in the absence of a graze of fence. The punishment is with the consequence is no escape. Poison is administered by a solution of necessary to carry out the poison of the Zomb."
IMMIGRATION AIDS WHITES
Democrat Ayns Negroes Outstrip Nats
Live Whites in Natural Increase
WasitNorton, March 28 In a study of census figures covering a century of growth of population in the United States made public today, Director North without intending it, shows that native whites and the Negroes are engaged in the native white in woofly outlapped. From 1790 to 1900 the Negroes increased 1007 per cent. During the century from 1800 to 1900 the native whites increased 688 per cent. Immigration has saved the population has lost 011, as against 1007 for the Negroes.
In 1780 the Negroes formed 193 per cent of the population. Now, however, they have declined to 11.6 per cent. In the first mentioned year, for every one North States white people slaves. In 1850 the proportion had declined to 49 per cent. In 1900 the proportion had decreased to 19 showing a decline of one per hundred of whites. The proportion of blacks to whites in the Southern States was twice that in Maryland to 140. In South Carolina the slaves in 1780 are estimated to have been worth $145,000,000 of which the South had $88,000,000. New England (where it was not profitable to keep them) $155,000 and the Middle States have not been maintained in 1800 there would have been but 41,000,000 whites and about 15,000,000 Negroes. The figures, however, have remained white and 88,330,000 Negroes.
While the Negroes as a whole in increased 1997 per cent in the 110 years Director North in another place figures that if the necessities to the black population by reason of immigration and by the Negroes in the United States during the century between 1900 and 1000 increased at the rate of only 667 per cent, against 686 by the white people then in the country. In other words he finds that the wild Negroes brought in between 1700 and 1850 were much more numerous than the white people. The Director concludes that while there is only 15 children in the white family, the people of the colonial stock have an average of 18 children per family indicating that the descendants of recent immigrants are not nearly so prolific as their fathers nor as prolific as the older Americans, such as found in the 80th century. In 1900, 1,000 children are shown to 1,100 adults—The New Orleans Times-Democrat
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HOTELS, RESTA
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First-class rooms by the day or week.
buffet cafe and restaurant connected.
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MY RACE!!! I Appeal to You
I WANT MORE OF YOUR PA
I cannot succeed unless you give me the opportunity that I am not potent to examine eyes for glasses, before of cheap magnifying or pain window glasses you may opt for in a haphazard way with correct glasses, to reel give you, to touch aapain, headaches, eyes water, feel it fortable white reading, sewing, looking at any near object, then white reading would your head with a hat and you even then you are extremely careful in your selection, so with your eyes, the most Priceless Gift on Earth been ruined by wearing wrong glasses given you have your expert practical and registered practitioner. I will to scientific examinations, whether you need glasses or re-registered man of the RACE in this City with over eight native practitioners yeteteen in this city My office zcward shows 87 percent of white patron an excellent comparison indeed of confidence and approbation the other hand, lack of confidence and appraisal from
MY RACE!!! I Appeal to Your Loyalty
I WANT MORE OF YOUR PATRONAGE
I cannot succeed unless you give me the opportunity to convince you that I am not competent to examine eyes for glasses, before you buy a pair of cheap magnifying or dollar and run your sight. You cannot fit your eyes in a haphazard way with correct glasses, to relieve the discomfort you give, you such aspain, headaches, eyes water, feel tired and uncomfortable while reading, sewing, looking at any near object, letters run to her while reading, or would your head with a hat and your feet with shoes, even then you are extremely careful in your selection, and why not more so with your eyes, the most *Priceless Gift on Earth*. More eyes have been ruined by wearing wrong glasses given by incompetent persons than by diseases, and the most critical and registered practitioner. I will tell you positively by scientific examinations, whether you need glasses or not. I am the first registered man of the RACR in this City with over eight years of experience in active practice in all branches of *Eyctesting* which have been appointed.
In active practice
Occupies in this city
Bibliographies: My office record, shows
of ordered. An excellent comparison indeed
race, and on the other hand, lack of
Dr. R. GORDON A
EYESIGHT
16 W. 134TH STREET
Oculists in this city. Glasses furnished if necessary. Reference book. White shirt. White pairing, and 18 per pair of shoes. An excellent comparison indeed of "confidence and appreciation" from another race, and on the other hand, lack of confidence and appreciation from my race.
Dr. R. GORDON ADAMS, Optometrist
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Broad Street, New York City
MAY 17
AURANTS, ETC.
New Maryland House
ENLARGED AND REMODELED.
West 57th Street.
Nicely Furnished Rooms by the Day.
Week or Month.
THE BRADFORD
173 W. 120th STREET, NEW YORK
A first-class restaurant that dis-
penses nothing but first-class food,
properly cooked and seasoned to the
taste. We serve the best regular dinner
in town for 25 cents. Furnished rooms to
let.
JOHN E. BRADFORD
Proprietor
april-3m
The Long Established and Favorably
Known
GILBERT HOUSE
254 W. 28th St. near Eighth Ave.
EUROPEAN PLAN.
NEW YORK
FIRST-CLASS ACCOMMODATION.
Prompt and courteous attention. Mod-
ern location convenient. The patronage of
either Permanent or Transient guests
respectfully solicited.
E. JOHNSON.
Proprietor.
Phone 1168 Columbus Strictly First Class
European Plan.
THE WALL
The most elaborately furnished and decorated apartments, accommodation of colored ladies and gentlemen. All modern improvements. 16. 18. MISS IRENE JOHNSON, Prop. MISS IRENE JOHNSON, Prop.
Near Ninth Avenue.
Handson, Steam Heat, and all Modern Conveniences. For Permanent or Transient Enviention to all cars. Moderate Rates.
MRS. N. L. BURNHY, Proprietress mar25-3m
Fifty Mandamely Furnished Rooms with
heat, bath and all conveniences, by the
Mandamayi Hotel in New York,
1st per day. Messages if desired.
jan-31 mon. FRANK G. NOLMER. Prom.
HARRY'S CAFE
HARRY'S CHRIST PROP
349 WEST 59TH STREET
Pool and Billard Parlor. First-class
instrumental and vocal talent furnished
for Bert Steak Parties. Stages and
Private Entertainments
July 1-19 yr
Estab January, 1897 Tel 303 Columbus
HOTEL MACEO
218 West 58rd Street, N.
First-class Accommodations ONLY
Handsome. Steam Heated, Furnished
Rooms for Permanent or Transient
Businesses. First-class Restaurant
regular Dinner, including Wine, SSC.
6 to 8 p. Sundays. 1 to 8 p. m., 465.
BENJAMIN F. MHOSHA, Propri-
mary18-3m
Near Eighth Avenue
Handlomely. Furnished Rooms.
For Dormitory. Transit Queen Room.
$1 per day upward. Best Furnished
Houses in New York Restaurant Attached.
Lunch from 3 p.m. to 12
A.M. Every month through life.
let us live by the way
FRANK C. HOLMES, Proprietor
feb18.3m
eras and the public generally that we have just
making it the most attractive tenorial parlor in
installed which urge extensively nude ours the
Greater New York. Six of the most compet-
table always in attendance.
We announce that
Mr. Gaydon Chiropodist
and properly treat all ailments of the feet.
NORMAN
Hair Work of all kind still continues in attend-
and haping for a continuance of the same. We
wetly yours,
B. G. HOWELL, Propr
apr 15.
C. STAHL
Manufacturer of
Fine Confectionery and Ice Cream
807 COLUMBUS AVENUE
Bet. 99th & 100th Streets
New York
mar.18-Bu
I Appeal to Your Loyalty
RE OF YOUR PATRONAGE
you give me the opportunity to convince you
examine eyes for glasses, before you buy a pair
plain window glasses from glassers, let you look
with correct glasses, to relieve the discomfort
with headaches, eyes water, tired heat and unco-
newing, looking at any near object, letters run to
and out of your sight. You should not your
did your head with a hat and your feet with shoes,
maily careful in your selection, and why not more
most Precious Gift on Earth. More eyes have
wrong glasses than normal. You should not have your eyes examined by an
gistered practitioner. I will tell you positively by
whether you need glasses or not. I am the first
ACB in this City with over eight years of experience.
You are yet one of the best if necessary. Until hours by appointment
1 percent of white patronage, and 1 per cent of
"confidence and appraisal" from medical
inference and appraisal from the race.
New York City
Cleanest and Cheapest
3-ROOM APARTMENTS
FOR QUIET PEOPLE
174 East 77th St.
APPLY JANIFOR
ELEGANT FLATS
To Let.
Handsome Apartments with all improvements at Moderate Rentals. In the DRY POINT, 211 W. 60th St. THE SARATOGA ST. 60th St. THE VENICE, 210 W. 61st St. THE DORIN COURT, 217 W. 60th St. Above houses have first-class janitor service and are always in good condition. Apply
ROBERT CARTER, 209 West 40th St. O. HARLEY, THEODORE CAMPBELL, 217 West 40th St. 210 West 61st St.
dec29-1yr
PHILIP A. PAYTON, JR., CO.
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
Our specialty is the management of Colored Tenement Property, AGENTS, BROKERS AND APPRAISERS. 67 West 134th Street.
'Phone 927 Harlem jan26-1yr
Tel. 4487 Morningside.
JAMES A. JACKSON
Real Estate and Insurance
Agent, Broker, Appraiser.
172 West 133rd St, New York
Brooklyn office
Jefferson Building, Room 28
4 and 5 Court Square.
Telephone
991 8455
aprts-172
554, 558, 558 and 569
West 128th Street
Handmade apartments of four large, large
room, manger, hot water supply. All in FB.
Champ Condition.
Bishop locality near Broadway. Rent $24.40,
$18.50 and $13.80 per month.
Apply Janitor on premises
jun-20
GET INSURED
Don't be Burned Out and Move Nothing Left.
A Three-Year Policy for the Furniture for Your Flat at very lowest rates.
Only the best Fire Insurance Companies.
47 Albany Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.
July23-lyr
D. A. GREENE, Insurance Broker
67 Albany Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.
July 23-lyr
SAMUEL A. KELSEY
Real Estate Agent, Broker and Aggrieves
All classes of property for Bent,
Sale and Exchange
350 LENOX AVENUE
At 130th Street
New York
Telephone 3265 Harlem
E. A. JOHNSON
Attorney and Counselor at Law
MORTGAGE LOANS
154 NASSAU STREET
Room 732
Tribune Building
Phone 4998 Beckman
WILFORD H. SMITH
COUNSELLER-AT-LAW
AND PROFESSOR IN ADMINISTRATE
150 NASSAU STREET,
NEW YORK
1booms 905-6-7
feb4-3m
Damage Suits a Specialty.
Telephone 991 Main Room
WALTER W. DELSARTE
Attorney and Counselor at Law
Jefferson Building, 4 Court Bqs.
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
FRANCIS F. GILES
Counsellor at Law
CLEARING UP OF OLD TITLES A SPECIALTY
8000 21-22, 41B FLORIDA, JEFFERSON COUNTY
4 TO 5 COURT SQUARE
Residence 1003 Pacific St., Brooklyn, N.Y.
apr 8, 8m
JAMES L. CURTIS
Attorney and Counselor at Law
Bc. 141 West 88th St.
Office, 322 West 88th St.
Phone, 8313 8 E Hirschfeld
NEW YORK
oct 28-9 m
Ladies and Gent's Tailor
57-59 WEST 135TH AIRT.
Full Dress Suit to
White Rose Working GI Negro Race
217 East 56th Street
Between Second and Third Avenue
Pleasant temporary lodgings
working girls, with privileges, at re-
sourable areas. The Home solitors order
for working dressing rooms, etc.
Address, MRS FRANCES REYNOLDS
KEYSER, Superintendent
"Smooth as Velvet"
COOK'S Celebrated SNUFF
Scotch
The Standard for 70 Years.
If time and the hard school of experi-
ence has any value, then what must 70 years of maki-
ng snuff be worth?
Only one Booth snuff to meet doubt, that there is only
one Booth snuff to meet need, and COOK'S
Sells for so. a big box, and all Ogar Brosse
keep it.
Old Indian Snuff Mills
Music and the Stage
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WHEN IS A NEGRO A NEGRO?
HERE is an all-absorbing question, one which at times calls for the expenditure of as much mental activity as does the puzzling subject of perpetual motion. The question at issue is "When is a Negro a Negro to a Caucasian?" We, of the so-called black race declare among ourselves that it is not a very difficult matter to determine one another's identity but those of the white race, at times, show such lamentable ignorance in "determining who is who," that we are beginning to wonder by what standard do they differentiate as to when is a Negro a Negro? Since the St Louis World's Fair, when hundreds of dark-skinned people came to this country, it has been even more perplexing to the white citizens to make the racial distinctions along their peculiar lines. Added to this is the fact that the Negro is increasing in culture and refinement at a fast rate, and, after hearing from time to time some ludicrous story of mistaken race identity on the part of some white person, leads one to form the conclusion that after all it is not so much a case of color and appearance as ways, mannerisms and deportment
The colored performer has many unusual experiences on this question. Traveling from town to town, often playing in localities where there are no colored citizens—at least none capable of offering, suitable lodging and accommodations—he is thrown in contact with whites, and it is not infrequent that he makes a "grand-stand play" about being other than a Negro. that is, when it is evident that prejudice exists against Negroes, and there is a possibility of playing in the town without having a place to refer to as "home." From Los Angeles, Cal., comes the following story in which Hodges and Launchmere were principals. In writing to THE AGE these two well-known performers incidentally remarked that they did not care much for Tonopah New, and then related the following incident. On the first day of their arrival in Tonopah they took their meals at a white restaurant. The next day Mr. Hodges went in alone and asked to be served breakfast. He was informed by the waiter that he could not be served Upon demanding an explanation for being treated in such a manner the information was given that some of the patrons had been complaining about the management catering to colored people. With a display of feeling the colored performer asked the waiter "Haven't you sense enough to see that I am not a black man?" whereupon the waiter answered "Is that so well what are you going to eat? I am sorry of accusing you of being a Negro Pardon me, but of what nationality are you?" Mr. Hodges explained that he was an English Jew, ordered soft-boiled eggs, bacon, toast and black coffee, ate his breakfast and was treated with the highest respect. Now, any colored person can tell what John Hodges is, and he asks the writer this question: "Can you heat that? They can't tell a Negro when they see one."
Now Desmond and Bailey are two nice-appearing young women who are refined in their ways, but what colored person would take them for other than members of the Negro race? Yet in a small town in Pennsylvania a few weeks ago they unconsciously created an interesting discussion on the race question. They were booked to play East Liberty Pa. a town where but few colored people live. Having experienced some trouble on previous occasions relative to securing eating and sleeping accommodations, they learned at the station where the white vaudeville performers boarded and held themselves to the place designated. As no questions were asked as to their racial identity they did not vouchsafe the information that they were members of the Negro race. The hotel was conducted by a Swede—one who while he has not been in this country any too long, always shakes hands with himself about his great insight on the Negro problem. Although there are
objected to colored performers stopping at the same hotel with the whites. When she protested the hotel keeper indignantly denied that Desmond and Bailey were colored and put up $10 to support his contention. He not only put up the money but offered to allow the leading doctor of the town to decide the bet. His argument was so strong that the white woman performer refused to bet. Next day he related the incident to Desmond and Bailey concluding by saying "Just as if don't know a d—n nigger when I see one," to which they replied "Yes you are all right!"
EDITED BY
LESTER A. WALTON
seriouss of her husband to the contrary. A few days ago the vaudeville team Smith and La Rose was booked to appear at small vaudeville house in New York City, and on the appointed day put in appearance for rehearsal. The stage manager did not extend them a cordial greeting when they reported to him, in fact, treated them coolly. After waiting around for a few minutes John Smith informed the stage manager that he was ready to rehearse his music. He was greatly surprised to learn that there would be no rehearsal, and that the act had been cancelled. This statement greatly angered the colored performer, who demanded a reason for such a sudden change of plans. He stage manager took the male member of the team aside and confided that when the team was booked to play the theatre the agent had notified the management that it was composed of colored people. However, it had been discovered that it was a mixed team, composed of a colored man and a white woman. Why, the patrons of this theatre would not stand for you working with a white woman, declared the stage manager Smith and La Rose tried hard to convince the man that they both had the honor to belong to the same race, and were colored, and furthermore, that they were man and wife. But the stage manager remained firm in his belief that there was a vast racial difference between the two. So on account of the white man's knowledge of colored people, he too evidently being impressed with his remarkable knowledge of the Negro race by having come in contact with many, Smith and La Rose lost a week's work. What is puzzling to the writer is when a white manager in referring to a colored performer, says she is and the antithetic what can be done in the meantime to prove to him that she "antit"
WHERE THE BIG SHOWS ARE
BILD MOON Holiday Theatre, Ralt-
mour, Md. Next week Brooklyn, N Y
SMART TEC Whitney Theatre, De-
troit Muh. Next week, Toledo, O
BLACK, PAYT1 TROUBADOURS—
Baker theatre, Portland, Ore. Next
Avenue, Kelso, Wash., and
Centralia Wash.
MCABELES GEORGIA TROUBADOURS—
Baboo Wis. April 21 22 and 23
Augusta, April 24 25 and 26, Strum,
April 27 and 28
RABBUTS FOOT CO.—Jessup Gn.
April 29, Buxley, April 21, Lumber
April 29, Hawkinson, April 23
Jubilee, April 23, Mason, April 23
Jackson April 27, McDonough, April
known far and wide as the "Paradise of
25 Griffin, April 29
BERT AND BERTHA GRANT
DELIGHTFUL DARKTOWN DOINGS
To Be Fenture of Alda Overton Walker
Benefit Next week.
Many interesting and novel features have been arranged by Aida Overton Walker for Thursday evening, April 29 on which occasion a big benefit will be given at Grand Central Palace, 43rd street and Lexington avenue, in aid of St. Philip's Parish Home. Rehearsals are being held daily and a first-class evening's entertainment will be provided - not to say anything of the dance after the vaudeville hall.
The program will consist of two parts. In the first part several specialties will be offered, including Aida Overton Walker to an old woman character, the Kemps- Robby and Mane in their regular vaudeville skirt, Joe Weatherly in song and dance, Ida Day, Mauzie Bush, Adn Rex, Maggie Davis, Fife King, Katie Jones, Jesse Ellis and Aida Banks, members of the Williams and Walker Company who will present for the first time their new appearance in place with Aida Overton Walker next month little Aida Coughnain in limitations and others.
An operatin King's Guest will be presented in the second part. In the cost will be J F Morris Inez Clough Bessie Payne W H Dixon Anna Jaccott Olsen Warren, Marguerite Ward, Daisy Topley, Lillian Marshall Ada Rex and others. In this part Ada Oerton Walker will give her version of the devil dance.
Fremont Hogan's Condition Serlona
and aquarium store. It was now been informed of his true condition which is said to be a serious. A few weeks ago the well known comedian felt much improved in health and many who saw him were of the opinion that it would not be before the "Unplanned America" would be seen on the stage. However his condition has grown steadily worse during the past ten days. Prominent physicians have visited his home 1002 Brook Avenue Bronx, and have several consultations as to Mr. Hughes condition which is said to be not of the best
Notice
No attention will be paid to anonymous letters in these columns. Sign name to all letters containing information, etc.
THE NEW YORK AGE: THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1909.
THEATRICAL JOTTINGS
Anderson and Goines are at Proctor's,
Troy, N. Y.
Cook and Stevens are at Poll's, Worcester, Mass.
John Rucker is at the Family Theatre,
Williamsport, Pa.
The Musical Spillers are at the Bijou
Theatre, Brooklyn.
Watts and Gant are at the Lyric Theatre, Brooklyn, this week.
Copeland and Jones are at the Grand Theatre, Cleveland, O.
Carter and Bluford are at the Cook Opera House, Rochester, N. Y.
Hodges and Launchmere are at the Crystal Theatre, St. Joseph, Mo.
Billy Harper and Company are at the Fourteenth Street Theatre this week.
Bowman and Terry are playing at the Cummings Theatre, Fitchburg, Mass.
Juniper and Hayes are at the Globe Theatre, Boston, Mass, this week.
Black and Jones opened at the Empire Theatre, Bradford, England. April 10
Brown and Nevarrie are playing in White Plains, N. Y, this week.
Wesley Norris and Stella Wiley are
at the Grand Theatre, Philadelphia, Pa.
This week Cooper and Robinson are at
the Grand Opera House, Indianapolis,
Ind.
The Georgian Campers are playing at
the Gaiety Theatre, Boston, Mass. with
the March Gris Company this week.
George Williams of the one time
village team of Smart and Williams,
is very ill at his home, 202 West 27th
street.
Martin and Fox are laying off in New
York this week. Gotham, Brooklyn
next week.
J A English, hoop roller, and "Queen
Dora" fire dance, are at the Orpheum
Theatre Halifax, N S.
Ida Bluford, of the Williams and Walk-
er Company sailed April 15 for Port
of Spain, Trinidad, and will be away
several weeks.
Jon Michaels and Eleanora Wilson of the "Merry Michaels," are enjoying success at the Antique Theatre, Watertown N.Y., this week.
Cole and Johnson are to play Washington, D.C. before the season closes. They return to Brooklyn next week at the Majestic Theatre. When they will play New York City continues to remain a mystery.
Rose Wellman and Grace Delaney have closed their ten-weeks' engagement at the Pekin Theatre, Norfolk, Va., and are now playing with a white company in the city for two weeks.
. . .
It is rumored that S Tutt Whitney and brother Honner Tutt are to be featured in a show that is to go South next season.
---
Ray's Crook Belles continue at the Casino, Hoboken N.J. with the following performers: Billy Ritchie, Walter Ensher W H Ray, Gertie Miller, Milford Cross, Clarice Wright, Fannie Edmonds and Manue Further. The company will soon open at Coney Island for the summer.
---
The Whitman Sisters write from Atlanta Ga. that they are home by the bedside of their sick mother and although they have called in every local specialist of prominence the patient's case has been delivered homeless.
---
The Pekin Theatre Chicago, has come into its own again. Last week it played in crowded houses the special attraction being a society play called the "Idlers." All the old favorites are back, including Harrison Stewart, Lottie Grade, Nelly Lewis, Pearl Brown and others old and new.
---
This is the second week of J. M Moore's New Orleans Minstrels at Huber's Museum, and with the assistance of John Smith, stage manager a new bill is being presented each week. In this week's show are Fred Rogers, Dave and Gusse Smith Mattie Phillips and her Troop Girls, Joe Bright and J W Jeff
. . .
The Belouine Mands composed of Auria Bush Gibbs, Bassie Vaughan, Mimie Brown B. Brady and Miss Carter, opened at Keene's Theatre New Britain Conn. Monday and made good. It was the first appearance of the act in public. Minnie Brown went, big at her solo number James Vaughan musical director of the Williams and Walker Company directed the orchestra for the act.
. . .
The Lincoln Theatre, Knoxville,
Tenn., closed for the season April 10.
Manager Johnson plans to start building
a new plaushey within a few weeks.
Since the reopening of the theatre December
14, 1908 with S. Tutt Whitney,
director of amusements, assisted by
Homer Tutt, the house has invaded
stable success. "They leave Knoxville
with a host of friends washing them one
cose."
---
This week the members of the Lincoln
Stock Company are being royally entert
ed. A guest was tendered them
on proprietors of the Kunxite Cafe
and on Nov 19 an entertainment wa-
ven in his honor by Prof. I. Sliger
and Vivet Johnson.
. . .
There have been many reports in our relation during the past season about Vooekel and Nolan disgusting partnership. That there was some truth to the many rumors is shown by the following announcement sent to Turf Avr by Mr Vooekel. The Black Patti Trouhouders under the sole management of R Vooekel now touring the Pacific Coast on their way. Post Messrs Vooekel and Nolan will disgust partnership with the Black Patti Trouhouders. Mr Nolan will retain interest in their other show. The Dandis Dish Minstrels, which closed April 17. The Black Patti Trouhouders will not close at all this season.
---
Harris Ribb's Georgia Colored Minutia stole a performance at St. Mary's Hall Port Chester N. Y. Friday, April 10 under the nuples of the Eagles, and the entertainment was a success artfully and financially. The following artists appeared: The Wilson Quartet, A. Johnson, Will Brooks, and
Polley, The Brinkleys, Sidney Chase, Hitchley and Francis Ada Robinson, Ada Johnson, M. Behman, William Copeland and Misa Collins and Brooks. The performance opened with a minstrel first part and closed with a grand prize cake walk. The Eagles presented the winners with a cake which was won by the Brinkleys. The company played at the Metropolitan Temple, 14th street and 4th avenue. April 17, giving a jubilee concert
IN THE SPORTING WORLD
AT last Jim Jeffries, former champion heavyweight of the world, has decided to fight Jack Johnson, present champion. After four months of hard training, he has concluded that he is in fit condition to re-enter the ring, and has publicly challenged Johnson to fight for the world's championship before the close of 1900.
Johnson should derive much satisfaction from the issuance of such a deli coming from Jeffries, who has for a number of years drawn the color he although he did not object to fighting a number of colored men years ago. There is one thing that is almost a certainty, and that is. Johnson will return good for evil, and instead of drawing the color line, will accommodate Jeffries and accept his challenge. Jeffries decided to fight Johnson brings to life one little secret—that the champion would have fought Johnson long ago, but he did not know whether he could ever get in good enough condition to re-enter the ring. He, therefore, set up the convenient cry of "color line"
If Jeffries can really get in good enough condition to fight the present champion, he should be Johnson's logical choice. Just why the champion signed an agreement last week to meet Stanley Ketchel in a twenty-round bout for heavyweight honors at the Colma Athletic Club on October 12, 2011, as a mystery player. But Ketchel must be claffed Johnson into such an agreement, or Johnson saw versions of large sums of money, as Ketchel is not in his class. Johnson could be well afforded to have gone about making big money in the theatrical business and waited until a bigger man showed up, instead of taking a fighter out of the midweight class to combat for heavyweight honors. And then, they are to light in California where Britt hails from and we all have heard about the "no"
It would have been more fitting for Britt to have arranged a match between Ketbel and Sam Langford the man of whom all seem to be afraid
Sam McVey Dethroned
For over a year Sam McVey, of California, has been the pride of Paris. He is one colored man who has been paid homage by the French people. But Saturday their idol fell, and another coloredighter—Joe Jeannette—took his place. Maybe he will not be as well liked personally as McVey, but the sporting fraternity of Paris has not the exalted opinion of McVey it once had.
In the greatest fight witnessed in France since John L. Sullivan and Charley Mitchell fought their 30-round draw at Chantilly in 1888, Jeanette defeated McVey Saturday. In the fifth round of a final fight. A great crowd witnessed a game exhibition of the Negro heavyweights, the contest lasting for three hours and a half, McVey had the better of the fight up to forthright, and the fight up to twenty-fourth, twenty-second rounds he had the New Yorker so groggy that the latter barely could keep on his feet.
Jeanette bore the punishment bravely and recuperated in a wonderful manner. McVey had almost worn himself out after forty rounds, and by this time the New York fighter was coming back. By effective infighting he gradually beat the Californian, and practically had him knocked out when the fight ended. McVey's seconds throwing up the sponge Jeanette was the favorite in the betting and the crowd was cheering. It is understood that Jeanette now intends to issue a challenge to "Jack" Johnson for the championship of the world.
---
Langford Adda Another Victory
Langford adds Another Victory. In one of the best fights between heavy men seen here in a long time, Sam Langford of Boston, the colored man who may get a chance at Jack Johnson, the world's champion, Saturday evening defeated Al Kublak, the Michigan giant at the National Athletic Club, in six rounds. The referee would have awarded the fight to the Boston man had a decision on points been allowed by local law. Langford forced the fighting in every round and punished Kublak severely. The latter however, was game and gave his opponent a great battle. He did best, but he was not a winner, although he was tired, he kept coming back at Langford, and was cheered for showed himself a fighter of the first class, giving a most clever exhibition of skill.
Baseball Notes.
Evidently the managers of the baseball parks in New York City and Bran have made up their minds to grant Sol White and his Quaker Giants, and Pop Watkins and his Brooklyn Giants dates even if they do not belong to the International League of Colored Baseball Clubs. Announcement has just been issued that the Quaker Giants and Pop Watkins nine will meet at Ridgway Park Brooklyn May 2, and we would not be burdened by hear of other dates within a few days.
Several colored newspapers throughout the country have taken up the content of Tup Acq that the colored manager of the East became as prominent as that in the baseball world as are the colored managers in Chicago St. Paul and other cities. It is rumored that Manager Connors of the Royal Giants has been approached to join the other
The Island Giants are making a great trip through the South in a Pullman. They will play all the large towns in Texas reaching Chicago May 2 when they will have traveled more than 1,000 miles.
The 'Bell Smith' of New York is one of the best known baseball players in the Fast and Phil Reed managers of the St. Paul Gophers are with the Leands.
The baseball game was scheduled to be played Sunday at Mervens Park Brooklyn, for the benefit of Red Fowler has been postponed until a future date. The managers of the benefit were unable to get the players together by the date.
Island Glentna Defeat Birmingham
The Chicago Island Giants and the Birmingham Giants played two of the most exciting games ever witnessed in Birmingham several days ago. A little more than 8,400 paid admissions to the two games were registered. About one thousand members of the fair sex at tended. The Island's base running and inside work, and "Occlone" Johnny Williams' pitching were the features.
and fast base running the Lelands scored
three runs. In the first inning, with the
bases full and no one out, Williams put
on steam and retired the Lelands without
a run.
First Game—Score by innings:
Leland Giants . . . 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 3
Birmingham m Gts. . 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Glewood and Booker. Williams and
Oliver.
Second Game—Score by innings:
Leland Giants . . . 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 4
Birmingham m Gts. . 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1
Foster, Bael and Booker Taylor and
Oliver.
Brooklyn Giants Meet Defeat.
Sunday at Corona, N Y, the Brook-
lyn Giants were defeated by the home
team by the score of 7 to 1.
R H E.
Brklyn Gts. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 4 3
Corona. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 x 7 8 0
Batteries — Iavis and Taylor H
Ebers and L. Ebers
Ridgewoods Defect Philadelphia Giants.
The Ridgewoods played the Philadelphia Giants Sunday at Meyerrose Park, winning by the score of 4 to 0 Lindenmann, of the Ridgewoods, pitched a great game
PHILADELPHIA
R H O A E
James 2b 0 1 3 3 1
McChellan, cf 0 0 2 0 0
Duncan, lf 0 0 1 0 0
Batson, rf 0 0 0 0 0
Francis, 3b 0 1 0 2 1
Hill ss 0 0 1 2 2
Wilson, 1b 0 0 12 0 0
Williams, c 0 1 5 2 0
Hayman, p 0 0 0 3 0
Totals 0 3 21 12 4
RIDGEWOOD
R H O A E
Brown, 3b 1 0 2 2 2
Smith, 2b 1 0 1 3 0
Bathy, lf 0 0 2 0 0
Lindenmann, p 1 1 1 1 0
Ray, cf 1 1 2 1 0
Henry, rf 0 1 1 0 0
Farmer, c 0 0 2 0 0
Piel, ss 0 1 2 4 0
Draison, 1b 0 0 10 1 0
Gauvin, c 0 1 4 1 0
Totals 4 6 27 13 2
Phila Gts 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Ridgewood 0 1 2 0 0 0 1 x 4
Easton Giants Win From West Easton.
The Easton Giants have organized for the season and is composed of a fast lot of colored players. They are open for games on Saturdays, Sundays and holidays. The team will play all games away from home.
W E Ward, of 230 Chambers street, Phillipsburg, a well known newspaper man, is manager Bill Merritt is captain.
Name of the players on the Giants have played on the Brooklyn Giants, the Philadelphia Giants and other fast clubs. The team has played three games so far this season, winning all. The teams who opposed them were composed of players who have all been in fast company.
The Giants have arranged games with the Easton team of the Atlantic League whom they play April 21.
Last Saturday they crossed bats with the West Easton team, Jake Jacoby pitching for the West Easton team, winning by the score of 8 to 3.
WEST EASTON
J. Smith, ss 0 1 1 2 0
Cassidy, c 0 2 2 2 0
J. Slaton, lf 0 1 2 0 1
Stout, cf 1 2 4 0 0
E. Slaton, 1b 0 11 0 2
F. Smith, 3b 0 2 1 0
Honey, rf 0 0 0 0 0
Bethan, 2b 0 0 0 0 0
Jacoby, 2b 1 1 1 1 0
Wagner, p 0 0 0 2 0
Young, rf 0 0 0 0 0
Mattes, 1b 1 2 3 1 1
Totals 3 11 24 9 1
EASTON GIANTS
R H O A E
Oliver 2 2 9 2 0
H Good, p 1 2 0 4 1
L Merritt, ss 1 1 0 1 0
W Merritt, 1 2 3 1 0
C Good, 1b 0 0 10 1 0
Robbins, lt 1 1 2 0 0
Scott, 2b 1 2 1 2 0
F Merritt, rf 1 0 1 0 0
Laughley, t 0 2 0 0 0
Totals 8 12 27 11 1
Easton Counts 1 0 0 2 0 4 1 x-8
West Easton 0 0 0 3 0 0 0
Smart Set Wins Last Game of Season.
Saturday evening at Pilgrim Hall,
Brooklyn the Smart Set Basketball team
decisively defeated the Armstrong High
School point of Washington D.C. be-
fore a large and fashionable audience by
the score of 18 to 4.
As the Armstrong team is winner of the
Interscholastic Athletic League at
Washington an the local point has made
an excellent match during the season.
The point closed a closely contested match
was unanimated. Not that the visitors
do not put up an aggressive game but
they were outplayed from every stand-
point.
The match had not been in progress
two minutes before it was evident to all
that the Brooklyn players were much
superior of the boys from the capital.
From the rhinoceros the whistle blew the
Smart Set team started in with an air of
determination and win, and but a few
minutes had transpired before several
points had been registered.
The Smart Set players distinguished
their team from the local shooting the
Ball Armstrong High School was no
unanimed Instructor Iain B Harden.
The lineup
Armstrong H S. Smart Set
Walker R Guard H Oliver
Anderson I Guard R Lattimore
Bockwith Cotto H Arvone
and H Brown
Danbridge and R Lwd C Scottron
Kenny I Lwd C Moore
Fox Grace from R Lwd 2 Moore I
Grace from R Lwd 1 Waker L leaves from
Grace I Waker L leaves from
Relocation C Minder St Walters L
Impression C Minder St Minder L
Relocation C Minder St Minder L
Relocation C Minder St Minder L
St. Cypriana Defent Montclair
St. Cypriana Backtall team of
the Montclair Basketball team M
may coming in the season of 2010
cottets and 2011 cottets shooting in goal
Do not miss the team High
School Gymnasium Montclair
New York's New Symphony Orchestra's First Appearance
Marie M. Mercer Conservatory of Music
in the Symphony Orchestra of
Albert F. M. Mercer and she has been
engaged to perform for the audience of
the reception and dinner of
Furika Temple No. 22. Dancers of
Elks at Mastic Hall 125 East 125th
street New York on Friday evening
April 27, 1990. Dress or orchestra and
club is composed of fifty skilled positions
only. The music on this and all occasions
will be of the very latest and most
popular and no doubt will be the finest
heard during the season. This orchestra
under the leadership of Dr. Mando, the
eminent conductor and composer can
be engaged for all occasions
where music of superior quality is re-
served. The terms addres
MAJESTIC Brooklyn's Perfect Theatre WEEK APRIL 26, 1908 Matinees, Wednesday and Saturday Return Engagement by Popular Request
in Their Merry Musical Comedy
"The Red
The Same Incompet-
and Unexcelled C
With Many New
Just Add
Take Subway to No
"A RABBIT'S FOOT" COMES
traveling in their own two Pullman cars, playing us
9th successful season of forty weeks and
Wanted A Few More PERFORMER
both male and female. Kindly state all you can do
ticket to right parties. Address:
PAT CHAPPELLE, C WREN
BOX No. 702
FOR SWEET CHARITIES
"The TEMPLE OF
Will be produced for the bene-
HOPE DAY NU
FOR COLORED CH
25 WEST 35TH STREET
Under the瞥客 of the LITERARY
GRAND CENTRAL L
Lexington Avenue and 43rd
On Friday Evening, M
Music by the New Amsterdam Musi-
DMISSION, 50c.
Boxes, $4.50 and $5.
Tickets on sale at the Nursery, $25 West 35th street; D
done 418th Columbus; and in Brooklyn at Mrs. E. A. D
ved under the stipices of the Committee for benefit of
Miss M. K. Griffin in charge of Music; Mr. H. L. P
Kearns in charge of Dance; Outline
Literary Committee:—Mrs. A. S. Reed, chairman;
Mrs. E. E. Greene, secretary; Mrs. M. E. A. Griffin, Mi-
Associate Committee,—Mr. E. S. Lynch, Mr. Chas. M.
Mess, Dr. Albert B. Reed, Mr. J H Becks, Mr. Harry W
Wilth, Mr. S. G. Snowden, Mr. W. T Wright, Mr. Chas. M.
W. Handy, Mr. E C. Younger.
Officers of Board of Managers:—Mrs. E. A. Dorsey
sident; Miss M. F. Eato, secretary; Miss A. L. Dias, treas
GRAND OPENING OF THE
Summernight's
and Musical S
ON THE
New Amsterdam Musi-
INCORPORATED
AT MANHATTAN PARK
155th Street and 8th Avenue
On Monday Evening, M
Orchestra of 25 H
Brass Band of 20 H
Continuous Dancing from
TICKETS, : : : : :
PROFS. M. MIMMS and J. H. BANKS
The Red Mile
Time Incomparable
Unexcelled Chorus
Many New
Just Added
Subway to Nevin
IT'S FOOT" COMEDY
at two Pullman cars, playing under canopy
fewful season of forty weeks engagement
New More PERFORMERS and
Rindly state all you can do in first
s. Address:
CHAPPELLE, C WNER AND M JACO
SWEET CHARITY'S
TEMPLE OF L
Will be produced for the benefit of the
DAY NURSE
OR COLORED CHILDREN
STREET
a couple of the LITERARY COMMISSION
AND CENTRAL PALACE
Lexington to Avenue and 43rd Street.
Day Evening, May
by the New Amsterdam Musical Assn.
RES
Boxes, $4.50 and $5.50
Merry, $25 West 53th street; Dr. A. S. in Brooklyn at Mrs. E. A. Dorsey's
the Committee for benefit of the New
charge of Dance; Curtain prompt
Mrs. A. S. Reed, chairman; Mrs. J. A.
Mrs. A. Dorsey, treasurer;
Miss Fannie J Murray, Miss Alice C
Miss Misa M. E. Griffin, Miss M. A.
Mr. E. K. Lynch, Mr. Chas. Murray,
Mr. J H Becks, Mr Harry Winnie L.
Mr. W. T Wright, Mr. Chas. Henry J.
Managers: Mrs. E. A. Dorsey, presi-
cretary; Miss A. L. Dias, treasurer.
OPENING OF THE
mornnight's Festival
Musical Soir
OF THE
HARDAM Musical A
INCORPORATED
SHATTAN PARK and
Street and 5th Avenue. New
Day Evening, May
Orchestra of 25 Piece
Grass Band of 20 Piece
Famous Dancing from
Red Moon"
Incomparable Cast
accelled Chorus
Any New Things
st Added
way to Nevins Street
"ROOT" COMEDY COMPANY
Human rare, playing under canvas. Will open their
on forty weeks engagement in April.
PERFORMERS and MUSICIANS
state all you can do in first letter. Will advance
as:
PPELLE, OWNER AND MANAGER
JACKSONVILLE, FLA.
SET CHARITY'S SAKE OF
"AMPLE OF FAME"
produced for the benefit of the
MAY NURSERY
CLORED CHILDREN
SET NEW YORK CITY
of the LITERARY COMMITTEE at
CENTRAL PALACE"
on Avenue and 45rd Street
Evening, May 7th, 1909
New Amsterdam Musical Association
RESERVED SEATS, 75c
boxes, $4.50 and $5.50
West 35th street; Dr. A. S. Reed's, 314 West 52nd street,
Lynn at Mrs. E. A. Dorsey's, 224 Dreeden street. Supper
mittee for benefit of the Furry
Music; Mr. H. L. Pryor, dramatic director; Miss M. A.
of Dance; Curtain promptly at 8:50
Red, chairman; Miss J. C. Silve, assistant chairman;
S. A. Dorsey, treasurer; Mrs. E. B. Magee; Mrs. J. W.
Je J. Murry, Miss Alice Carr; Mrs. T. B. Francis; Miss
M. A. E. Griffin, Miss M. E. Eato; Mrs. L. B. Whitebald,
Lynch, Mr. Chas. Murray, Mr. E. V. C. Kato, Mr. James
Becka, Mr. Harry Winslw. w. Mr. Chas. Lomaz, Mr. W.
Wright, Mr. Chas. Henry Hall, Mr. C. A. Williams, M.
NING OF THE SEASON . . .
night's Festival
musical Soiree :::
OF THE
m Musical Association
INCORPORATED
TAN PARK and CASINO
and 8th Avenue, New York
Evening, May 3rd, 1909
Extra of 25 Pieees
Band of 20 Pieces
Dancing from 9 to 4
35 CENTS
and J. H. BANKS, Floor Managers
Take Subway to Nevins Street
"A RABBIT'S FOOT" COMEDY COMPANY
traveling in their own two Pullman cars, playing under canvas. Will open their
9th successful season of forty weeks engagement in April.
Wanted A Few More PERFORMERS and MUSICIANS
both male and female. Kindly state all you can do in first letter. Will advance
ticket to right parties. Address:
PAT CHAPPELLE, ( WNER AND MANAGER
BOX No. 702
JACKSONVILLE, FLA
FOR COLORED CHILDREN
325 WEST 35TH STREET
NEW YORK CITY
Under thepieces of the LITERARY COMMITTEE at
GRAND CENTRAL PALACE
Lexington Avenue and 45rd Street
On Friday Evening, May 7th, 1909
Music by the New Amsterdam Musical Association
ADMISSION, 50c.
RESERVED SEATS, 75c.
Boxes, $4.50 and $5.50
Tickets on sale at the Nursery, 325 West 35th street; Dr. A. S. Beed's, 314 West 52nd street; phone 4138 Columbus; and in Brooklyn at Mrs. E. A. Dorsey's, 224 Dreeden street. Supper served under the supersides of the Committee for benefit of the Nursery
Miss M. K. Griffin in charge of Music; Mr. H. L. Pryor, dramatic director; Miss M. A. Kearns in charge of Dances. Curtain promptly at 8:30
Literary Commissary—Mrs. A. S. Reed, chairman; Miss J. C. Slee, assistant chairman; Mrs. E. E. Greene, secretary; Mrs. E. A. Dorsey, treasurer; Miss E. B. Moghan; Mrs. J. W. Dias; Mrs. E. S. Lynch; Mrs. Manna F. Jangie; Mrs. M. A. L. French; Miss Annie L. Dias; Mrs. W. T. Wright; Miss M. E. Griffin; Miss M. E. Eato; Mrs. L. B. Whitehead; Associate Committee—Mr. E. B. Lynch; Mr. Chas Murrey, Mr. E. V. C. Kato; Mrs. J. Jones, Dr. Albert S. Reed, Mr. J H Becks, Mr. Harry Winslow, Mr. Chas Lemar, Mr. W. Smith, Mr. S. G. Snowden, Mr. W. T. Wright, Mr. Chas Benry Hall, Mr. C. A. Williams, Mr. A. W. Handy, Mr. E. C. Younger.
Officers of Board of Managers—Mrs. E. A. Dorsey, president; Miss J. C. Slee, vice president; Miss M. F. Eato, secretary; Miss A. L. Dias, treasurer, Miss Allice Carr, assistant treasurer, apr. 8-10
... GRAND OPENING OF THE SEASON . . .
Summernight's Festival and Musical Soiree :::
AT MANHATTAN PARK and CASINO
155th Street and 8th Avenue, New York
On Monday Evening, May 3rd, 1909
Orchestra of 25 Pieees
Brass Band of 20 Pieces
Continuous Dancing from 9 to 4
GRAND STREET PARADE
The Manhattan Life and Drama Corps will accept an on the afternoon of the event. The House of Parade will wear 153th Street, east to 5th Ave, north to 153th street, 5th street east to Broadway, north to 153rd street, west street, east to 5th Avenue and Fifth station, 18th Lane, Lancaster Avenue, east to 5th Avenue, north to 153th street, east to 5th Avenue, north to 153th street, Manhattan Center.
FIRST GRAND DRAMA and RECEPTION
By the
UREKA TEMPLE 22 DAUC
I B P. O. I of W
At Majestic Hall, 122 East 125th St.
Tuesday Evening, April 27, 1
Music by Mandoa Conservatory Symphony Orchestra.
Box seats twenty five cents. Entrance fee. Pass Understaker, 4th Seventh Avenue and H.A. Howe. The following artists will appear: I. Cecil O. Cole, J. Alphon Haston.
Committee: Tatjie C. Kennedy, chairman, L. W. W. executive, Hachel Binnidge Treasurer, Eola D. Duncan, assistant treasurer.
and Drum Corps will accompany the
event. The Hue of Parade will be at
Athens, north to 50th street, west
north to 50th street, west to
and Fulton station, 18th street,
east to 51th street, north to
east to 51th Avenue, north to
Mortonatten Street, Dumbo.
DRAMA and RECEPTION OF
AMPLE 22 DAUGHT
J B P. O. I of W
1122 East 125th Street
Ening, April 27, 1909
Symphony Orchestra, Prof. A
Accents, Entrance, costing 16 $400
North Avenue and H. A. Howell, CW
will appear, I. Leonard, Dr. D.
Kennedy, chairman, I. Leonard, Dr.
The Treasurer, Ella D. Watkins
and RECEPTION OF ALL NATIONS
BY THE
22 DAUGHTERS of LLKS
B. P. O. I. of W.
East 125th Street at Lexington A.
April 27, 1909 at 8 o'clock
Amphony Orchestra, Prof Albert F. Mando, Conductor
ntheater operating $4.00 Ticket for sale at 3.00
and H. A. Howell 21 West 125th Street
earr. I. C. Loeffenthal, Lilian Peelley, Wesola
chairman Ella Waller, the chapel Alicia Joel
renter Bob Duncan, assistant treasurer Nallie Payne
EUREKA TEMPLE 22 DAUGHTERS of ELKS
I B. P. O. I of W
At Majestic Hall, 122 East 125th St. at Lexington V
Tuesday Evening, April 27, 1909 at 8 o'clock
Music by Mando & Conservatory Symphony Orchestra, Prof. Albert E. Mando Lundquist
Committee: Tattie F. Kennedy, chairmen: Linda Weller, vice-chairman: Alice Jock
son, secretary: Rachel Binnacle, treasurer: Pila Urschel, assistant treasurer: Nalle Payn
assistant secretary
Rice Directors: Lillian Warner and Mamie Dudley
American
(American Theatre Building
-646-648 Eighth Avenue. New York. Bet. 41st and
TO LET FOR Ball, Recep
Weddings, F
H. N. SEMANSKY, Prep
Indoor New Management. Newly Blithed. Large stage for
American
(American Theatre Building)
e. New York Bet. 41st and 42nd
FOR Balls, Receptions,
Weddings, Parties
H. N. SEMANSKY, Propietres
Newly Bilt 6, Large stage for Theatres
ican Hall
(Theatre Building)
York Bet. 41st and 42nd Sts. Tel. 1730 Br
R Balls, Receptions, Entertainments
Weddings, Parties and Rehearsals
EMANSKY, Propietes
146. Large stage for Theatrical Performances.
01 TH1
BAS Rea IE SCRE AR aE OCR RCI ake CEPR CRE CROLL Ee eS or a
DANG ana See eT eee a aa aU ae RN Ee eS RS
ber Artic tAy eee hee CEE A ToT) REO ROC eS ee:
AL ERRS INN CORE CARRE Ee Te Re Ks
ge ots RN ah ane ti sco coy tax ta ton arin aang Bie te ince soatarad
E CRpasin’ ann auowx. © Hed months ede ccdae GALLEN aE multe copia eaten,
SET MATTER wust
Fe efiee wot later then
toed sae one
[Te esate p{sdliontide tn the eurrent
Eaiane
eMongeth ifecstay Ky 12 nose,
: =
te ORE. "Plate We, fs 3458-Worth
ao sae moms
“Mr. and Mra. J. C. Roper, and their
ce, Mies Brown, of bdlenapoli,
Piad., are ing relatives and friends in
E:, Don't the Temple of Fame,
GPRS Been Das
Aivrstes lat Grand Gestcal: Palace, uy
Fi, 190; Admission, 60 cente—April
E The gicnic season will open Mont
Ferning May det Ateopattan Park aad
FOusing, when ‘New Amsterdam Musi-
al tion will give their annual
r alght'e ‘featival and musical
i ‘VOR this, cceation the dancing
ppl! be cpntinuous, music being fu
an (orchestra of twenty-five pieces
Panda band of twenty.
fj Have\you secured your reserved seats
Rite the, of Fame” {a the, bene:
it of Nareery, at Grand Gen
et Palace om May "710002," Do not
E Tong 42 you want good
Sareea eh Pes
Ha sale
‘wreot, anid at Dr. Beld’e, S14 West 62d
street.
E Mr. M. Hatchet, of 250 East 130th
treet, New York, visited Washington dur
uag the Inauguration and was the special
guest of Mra. Mi. Taylor, Sheridan avenue,
Feo Se 9 eee
Faven . nquet was
oo by Mra. AL. ‘Taylor in honor of Mv
3 Hatchett. She enjoyed herself tre-
F mendously while on her tour here. H
|; Arrivals of Hotel Maceo are’ Rev.
and Mrs. D. Wylder, New Haven, Conn. ;
Fir, and Mra 8. WW. Harley, | Harris-
aorg, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Pool.
;Hroghing, L. Lz Mr. and Mra M. J
q ao, Minos. Mir, and Mrs. 3.
F Hartrldge, Oharleston, §.C.; Mr. J.
Clark, bare, Va.; Mr. Richard J.
F'emith, Elmira, N. ¥.; Dr. J. E. Brown,
Pittsburg, Pa, and Mr. Rt. L, Johnson,
F Chicago, Til. i.
ft At the. me of the Jobn
b uaneston Division Rageag cron, Bro
eTadett was made a Sir gat Capt.
a T. Clark, of the B. G. Staff, appointed
F © A. Geer recruiting officer, with
ite raak of sergeant; Sir W. EL ‘willis,
; een reean'
Behe executive board of the National
BSissociation of Colored Graduate Nurses
pcwil bold @ business meeting at the Lin-
fain Hospital Nurses’ Home, 61. West
RigAth street, on Wednesday evening, April
Eas, tt 8 olclock p.m. to arrange for
Biétir second annual convention, to be held
Fi ‘Boston August next.
BSWhen you want first-class meals and
Ft Bop at Nall Bros Restaurant,
FeO Sixth avenue, where you can ge
Pipukiant with Rome-made hot bread from
Pie i & t, for 25 cents Lancheon, if
see 2 D. to, cent Regular dinner,
pe ep. may.
Fo Mies Martha, Frankllo, of |New
Mfisven, Conn., lent e National
ciation, ‘will attend the Lincoln Hos-
ital Alumni recital Apri! 27 at Manhat-
Fran Casino.
;'Prof. Torbert, of the Fort Valley Hirb
sand Industrial School, visited Toe AGE
FeGice last Tuenday.
F,"Siss Grace Campbell bas returned from
f.@ pisasant sojourn in Richmond, where
‘We spent Easter visiting friends.
Sherald Wright left for Meadow Mount.
HR. ¥., last Saturday, to spend the sum
wer.
J. Miss Lillian Thompson. of 432 West
exh street, gave lest week a large and
pleasant party in honor of Mr Fred Wil-
yt of Srashington. who is visiting his |.
Fister, Miss Mamle S. Williams, in Neg.|
fXork’ An agreeable evening was spent
with a parlor musical and games, after
f.wmbich refreshments were served Among
ae sree were: Misses Mamie Wil-
an, Grace Dean, Etta Austin. Dorothy
Sites Mamie L. Williams; Messrs. Exdus
A per Fred Williams, Perey Thomp-.|
ma, Ifted Carter and Emory A Fos- |,
; Miss Blanche Smith, teacher in a Bos: | |
ton public school, Is in New York and is | ,
“the guest of Mra J C Fernanders. 1
On the retirement of Mr Harry Stow-
att, who: for years has been chef on the
‘Weamer C. W. Morse, the young men un- |
} Ger bis charge presented bim with a band: | '
‘mame gold watch.
r.. Registered at the Kenilworth late}, at
No. 154 West 1894 street, are Air. and
Aire. slams, of North Carolina, Mr_Jos |
‘Campbell, of Asheville, N.C. Mr. PC. 1
Gombe, of British West Indies, and Mr
Bulth, of Asheville, N. ©. ;
| Mr ‘Jamen B. Garner hag retared from |
‘4 busloess and plearure trip to Jamaten’ |
"Mire. Lulu Robinson Jones, a promis: | j
ae f young slager, left for hiladeiphia tnx:
i Wedorsday to participate to the tausleal | ,
cierclsen at the dedication of the Fred: |,
Setick Douglass Memorial Hospital in Whit | |
Adelphi, !
y Mies Tena Simms is making rapld | :
(rien nna singer She ie also president |
: the Fillte Club, for the study of the | 1
(ECCHCE Hronneon, Chea ave |
v Mr Pierce ‘Thompson, Chiengo Waiver
faly“o7. anm accepted a ponition in Thi | |
iptipbin an socratary of The Phitadeipbia |
y ir the. Sraproseaunt Colored ;
fe. Thompann will be nasocinte
Mth Brot. RT Wright. Je i
Beh ten wah 9
{Percy Greene, sophomore at City Cat | |
ee, tx prominent in the Y MC A” work
A that oatitatten ‘
gill a dAny at Me age ’
tus Auerledly called to New York in +
Tidey) evenlog to attend the funeral of | »
Shaigter, Mew Tentelln F Lender 1d
inrclor Jamee {- Curtin delivered a |
‘ ughly Intereeting address to a inree | |
lence of women nt the Went Std Strvet | #
ch of the Young Women's (Christian | (|
‘ lation on Sunday lant. Mrx. Emma | \
insom presided and commended the | “
rr, r
(EM. W. Alibgrt wil anont att p |
janday, feet 2. Mr VF Reott f
charge of the orogens Easter Sunday, |
Wren now sagmbers wore added” | 0
‘Augusta. ‘Brown, end daughter, | 3
jusale, arrived on Bunday from the | *
} Te in whore they hava heen | »
Bath, any nedtal preset: Mrs
Eopesrtiia abe ton
Eales ie eee re}. Mir
i.
Monroe, Mra. Wallen, :
Ae Ron, a * Llahifoot
ue ‘Patter, Mr, and ura
BIW. Ges en, open Hee
ila, Mra 0, 8” Moi nla
iu ry ©. S Mora Ser W. le
Alias Huth Morea, Ste H. Mor
‘Gwoptoliae Great’ let Mocs Bator
‘Ml ot, Reno, Hay anala Oar
‘ter, Mise kn, Mine Bra Bord
Hilts Bebo! Jackson, Miia Neonlo Waller,
Fuaulo Christian, Mr, James Porte
Mr. Hubert and ‘Blasters. Wilmer and
Tawcenes Jordan, Donald Johason, Wit
iam Duncan, Lewls Cooke, St. Clalt Jack-
sop, Ralph Glivart, Chas. 8 Morris, Ue.
Giarence™ Morris, ‘Thomas "Weiter, Ver
pon Willls and Junis Thornton.
"At the Alda Overton Walker’ Benes,
to"bo giren at Grand” Central Palace
‘Thoreda: orale April 29, in aid of Bt.
Philip's Parish lome, an unusually atrong
vaudeville program will be presented.
‘The principles set Yorth by the Monitor
League Assoolatian, incorporated Febru-
ary 1, 1009, are Republican. .
On Saturday evening, February 17, «
beefateak dinner was pe which proved
to have been a very pleasant affair. The
table wan set Cor chifty. Among the a.
vited gE Were’ Geo. W. Baptist, An-
drew Mead, Ptrillip Morrell, John Moody.
James Allen, Geo. Brown, Henry Swan,
Geo. W. Bliss, FV. Fisher, ba. A, Smithy
Thomas B. Brown, P. Frederick. Walter
Mason, P, W. Jones, Jno. Temple, Dr.
Pau! Borchard and other members of the
organizaton, ‘This waa the fist time such
an affair had heen given by the league,
also the first time tobiog of its kind
had ever poco, given in the district among
our people. @ organisation han made
strides forward under its present
present and officers, who know their
riends and know how to treat thelr ene-
mies. The prealdent is striving hard to
build op a strong organisation among
his people in the district, and asks the
co-operation of all concerned in the wel-
fare tieceet Bice \ Beptia. ~ Lifes
among tle principal apeakers, walle the
president, J) Wilson ‘Cooke. ‘wan, fonst,
master ‘The talent for the occasion was
furnished by the Excelsior Quartette.
Tbe superintendent of the Colored Or
pI ‘aylum, now situated at Weat 2502)
street and Atverdale-on-Hudson, exteude
a cordial invitation to all former parle
who were in the old institution when It
was sittiated at 143d street and Amster
fate grenue, fo ‘nit the oer Mae at
ihe above afdress on any dey. Shadage
Hite adr
Bethel A. M. E. Church.
‘This is the ninetieth anniversary of
Bethel Church. Appropriate services
commemorating the event were held in
the church each evéning. The anniversary
celebration will come to a grand climax
Bale arate o,f ag
x t Sgn a wal
for Haan, ho Benen bo 9
a on Re
aacred concert wan well attanded’and es
ander the direction of Superintendent
Baer day Dr. Gs of Chic rill
satay te de
pee Sea ay
Samson, of Topeka, ‘will preach in
the evening. ther prominent minsters
will be present.
BROOELYN.
‘A recital will be given by the Metro
politan Women's Busines Club at Mem-
Seal Hl “Ratha enue and) Sehr
ipertora street Bia Mon
crpaing, May 3, 4008.7 Gencrat oa
imatse WO cents, age wuts Bae
Johnson, manager. (Dr. W. A. Credit,
of Pailadedphie. Pa.. will deliver an ad-
dress.adv. April 22-2t.
‘The Men's Guild of St. Barnabas PE.
Chapel, Belmont avenue and Biton street,
will give their enoual picaic at Daner’s
Park, Jamaica avenue and Ward street.
Richmond Hill, Friday evening, June 14
Miss Mary F Edwards. of Crawfords-
sille, Ga..vis the guest of Mr. and Sire
George Collins, at 44 Lafayette street
‘The annual installation of the vewly
elected officers of the Ladies’ Auxiliary of
the Society of the Sons of Virginia or-
curred op Tuesday erenlny The off.
cero and new members whlch were re:
ceived are the following Mra. Jennie
Stewart, president. Mra A W Wiley,
vice-president: Mina Cora I. Robinson,
financial secretary: Mra. H. I. Brown,
assistant secretary: Mrs. Josrptine Dab-
ney, recording secretary. Mrs. Louis Hall,
assistant recording secretary: Mra Annic
Darrell, trenturer: Mra. P Parago. chap.
plain; Mra. Adelin Ladson, marshall The
new members are Meo. ety Allen,
Miss Annie B. Ellis, Mme Alice B Scott,
Mra Winnie FE piles: Mra Addie 1.
‘Stoke, Mr Loniea Fitts, Sian Marin
TL. Burwell, Mre. (Warfield, Mise Smith
and Mise Lillian ‘Ovington
At the Alda Overton Walker Benefit. to
be held at Grand Centr! Palace, Thur.
day evening. apr 20. in aid of St
Philip's Parish Home. an unusually atrong
vaudeville program will be presented
Mathins ‘Tabernacle, No 1h, of the
Grand Thited Onder “of the Pishermen
of Galil of the Eastern nnd. Wertore
Homiaphere, beld n_ meeting at their
Indge rooms, 118 "Mortia avenue, ‘Inet
Wednesiny night The ocension was the
lnatalintton ‘of officers anda, reenption
Smang. the ‘vinitars.” from “Maahattan
were € ‘Tolland, worthy erand. manters
Jas Tappen, worthy onteide sentinel:
Mra NTR" roland. genni installing
mistress The officers wore inatalled hy
Av Holland, ansinted by the grand. mak
ter ‘The oficern lostalled were
Brother “Harris, inost ” warshipfot
rater Fawn) Manon, most worthy nan.
rinte Nora Johnson, ebaplaia Fannie
Tabloson.” inatmetsr "Alice Brawn,
tronmirer I Zeno, financial averetary
Xtelin” Rohinenn,. ‘recording. secretary
Trother ‘Morr outside. xenting! Marts
Harlin, Inoite aentinel “Trother Tam
in, conductor” “Men” Lani Sonen: the
Paae eine aut a tana le
ne jewel af the orien, “Attn Vanden
Muere ta the founirr of the tahernacte
atic was organized in’ eptember, THOS
ie ine a meniership nt THE ned a oor
lank acount, "A Soliation. wan ‘Reena
ture the inetallat von
‘ile Taniar. monthly tweeting af the
{ deen Seles kon marin
say amet Se ae Theationtt
oer Alas AcERIGT GBE wae teety
misaniel The mectine was called tern |
he by President DD Mineon Wetwrr |
After Taeteral enomeal selections “1g. n!
Mile daughter, ‘of one of the wlatvorn |
the apeaker af the evening wna. tare
duced in the person of Willinm Engl!
Walling. who delivered ‘an ndudeems on
"Race Prejudices and Conte" The firnt
pet af the npeaker's nik was dveectty
Renverning the evile or" thenty. af Ture
= jidice or mee hatred in the Ronth
Rr, Walling reviewed! nv length the work
ot Murphy and others who have written
along ‘be Hines of roee antipathy The
mibject wax vltacimed be Are. Walling,
Meg A (C. Coman nai others
The tnstalintion “of officers of the
Ausiliary to the Rone cf Virglola won
held lant evening at thelr rooms, 118
Myrtle nvenne, In the presence of a large
alr omJented ne” Ni
fennle Stewart, Mlaldent Mey. Alloe W
Wiley, vleeprealdeat les Gora obia-
ge Sanaa) weereary? Mra HE Le
romD, assistant secretary: Mrs, 7
ae Dabnad, secetding memetucer te,
2 it recording secretary:
i Mite,” Darl treamurer; | Mr
Peay rave, chaplain; = Mrs, Aiels
‘Wyre paiorts woke Inetaled by the Bey
Mae, Dizon, DD. pastor ol
ony elves, ce AU se het as
short address, ax e Bev, Wa.
Be 'fawton, A colton, won astied
Ag cow of the. Installadon,
‘ue “Birt ‘Assembly "Distelet Colored
ablcan Clad at lis lest public mea
aE Metropolitan Hall, 2 set street
wrobght up) over ‘members losing
ible potdons wate were understood ty
be permanent, after the last natioaal
tlectlon, | The meeting appointed & com.
Ne "bade ecconiitg to sppolstseat a
ir. Dadv accor 0 abpolntmen
hs club "house of “the iret Assembly
Dintrict, 180 ‘Gchermerhorn treet. ‘They
submitted four propositions, and hls an-
awer sitwfled the committee
Fue stallion Of the Feeeatly elect
€4 ollivers of ‘the Boclety of the Bons of
North Carolla tant night. at’ the club
‘yooms of the H. H, Garnett’ Republican
Club, 417 Carlton ‘avenue, was, in the
opinion of all present, one of the most
Pleasant affairs of ite’ Kind In, the four-
teen years’ Iife of the club. ‘There were
a number of ‘ladies present who added
wuch to the pleasure of the evening:
D, B. Fulton was master of ceremonies,
wod Paul, Fulton “wae in, charge ofthe
wusle and the chor, of which he is the
avualeal director, gave several pleasing
numbers, Mra, Mary Simons alto gave a
Pleasing” plano scloctlon..” Prominent
‘among those present were Dr. At
Cooper, James ‘Tappen, sad W. R. Law.
ton, ‘Phe last named ts an honorary
member of the society. D. B, Fulton
faye, ® bref blstory, of the society In
which he credited Benjamin Williams
a8 the principal ia the organisation. “He
said the cause was the sudden death of
fone of thelr fellow townsmen, who had
to be buried by charity. RE. War
dell, chaplaia, installed the following of-
ficere: President, Counsellor FF.
Glen | vice-prenident, Benj Williams
treasurer, FD. Lofton: financial sec
retary, SL. Taylor. recording secre
fang. MJ, Butlee corresponding occ
WT Walker: chaplain, fh".
Waddell. ‘sergeant-at-nrms JD. Green:
custodian, “Wm. Swindell. ‘board of dl:
rectors, W. 0, Murphy. chairman. J. D
Nixon,’ 5." F. Foy, D. Adams, J
McRes, “Thomas Colwell, and W. C.
Henry” Ranking trustees “W Header:
fon, W. DAdams and Heese Poole.
Trustee ‘of Class B (to Invest money o
society). JH. Dickerson, chairmaa’ &
L. Taylor, D. D. Kennedy, Sr. C+
Milter. A" D. Payton, EW. StcQueen
and Chas Moree. Refreshments were
served after abort addresses by WT
Jemmott, Chas Driggs and Rev W. R.
tbe il 4 social engertal
iiterary and soclal entertainment
st AUR, ah ee
dence of Mrs, Johin Hardy, 030 Herkl-
mer street. was largely attended and a
most enjoyable affair. The program con:
sisted of recitations, vocal aad plano
solos and duets.
Last Monday evening Rev Dr Dav:
Cincore of Philadelphia. speared in the
role of Othello in the Auditorium of the
\oung Men's Christinn Association. Dr.
Cincore was aasisted by Mr. John 1
Jones of Columbia University, wha
lased well the part of iago, and Bliss
Maher Ghavis of the Teachers “Peainicg
College, who thoughtfully loterpreted the
dart of Deetenon Bisdag- alia
@ associaton, last San cen
Hie eae
a men and women to
the ‘Piorida fabllen Binge ts ae
Hon melodies. ° Song service was con
acted Seve ae Ws
Some, ba ee We "Oop
5 L, re
‘Again ‘The ‘program war. vated, “oat
sisting of solos and dramatic
Mr. “Friiliame sang fa baritone
Phy Odd For if a Bom and me
Feonie De Knight recited “The Pastor's
Vacation.” Mr Prince wang, and the
Jubilee slagers continued the prograns mith
well-known melodies. At the conclusion
of the program Rev. Brooks made a brief
address of commendation. Next Sunday
afternoon the monthly public eting of
the assoolation will be baa at Bethel A.
ME 'Ghareh fa. West S3th street Me
David J, Rauney, “Lodging House Mix
sigoary 1a the Hwee wil ape ot
“Saved from a life of Crookedness and
Crime
Lawyer \itaton Dena ta PBlladelghte-
Fittcaveuenta, "Aprit “10 ‘Theepitte
3 Minign diel at dP at. Sunday. ot an
aponiectic wtroke, after a ale’ Keune
sickness," Tle wan admitted to: the Ber
of Sonth Carolina in 18s. had to the |
Philadelphia courte In 18M
| sc, REDEOD BERGE Eile.
"Roa Toc oft George FL Cannon.
of Bt Pacific avenue, Jermey City. Nd
velehratnd the erehtie ashivesary ol
thel= nnerlage with an “at home’ tant
Frulny ‘evening Their spacious” bonne
Waa filled “with friends’ the entire even
ing and the social event was marked
with “the height of plenaure The eel
Int nae eed the trae dina
room, which wns beautifully. “decorate
in green and pink About three hundred
furnds called representing Jermey City,
Newark Orange, Plainfield” and. Madi:
won Nd, and New York City and
Btrwkdy
eric
SPECIAL, NoTICR,
1,2, hereby otliyhe public nat t0
give any credit to Mra Avex cin {8
Jay namo Gr In Neras'an she has chat”
Soned tho “nnd: two ehitdren ‘since tha
thied day SF Febeunry. 1908 “ans Ree
Hone on her own will on heron pant
fie"rareer™” For further intorination,
ace ‘mnvan, any’ evening after T stk
Bielacke at 162 W190 street tor Ines
feuiare ‘AEX Chane
arth Bost
REWARD,
itty, datinea Fewarge tor, the apere.
henalan nf Joneph aoker Denerieion
Brawn akinned, helt E teet p ieenen
Belahe'ahant 418 ponndn ‘ann in nose
Ae 'Searn ot age Works neunity woud
Inharar” Anyone tuentehing Iago
tin nt ne wherenlontn ad hehe
Bion neta ‘what rereien the ateree awn
hy enmmintenting ta tae Now Ware
Rage ee nathane Sunes
gic aee
CMe lin eres. youngent daughter
af Menaul Men Feeumeen Pleree ag
222" Wearean atest Rrnon te ain
Wie tee teomntn agen ah tte Ee
PO i St Ie er
Aftornoun from her Inte reptdence ane
Was A tang and patient guitorer
Mra tenhelin Frances tender daugh-
ter lat Meas Elian ney a2} Wont tort
sirens departed thin tte lant ridny
marning April 1 nt S16) Men Eentey
wae twenty-thten yearn olay nnd a
Brite nen year Sho’ was a dutital and
losing with and a great companine ny
her miothor
The tunern! wan hald at the Abvanin
Int Rapiiat Church whera she wana
menber tat Runday at 8 pe mn Tt
Brarrdea team. Thomaw t'nfertnking
Eatahilshment, apcartad to the chore
by "the "pail baareran) The Rev hr
Powell pastor, nMcintad The gecennea
yearn, a hibit BW, Lenders Hany
dnugnter.'n mother one alate: ‘sre
Aunle Tajiar three brothers AE ae
Charles and Av Gary. and a hawt at
raintives and trinnda ta moutn her loan
The funeral which was to have taken
piace ate om sean elnyed awaiting
ine arcival ‘of Gécanaed'e eldest brother
‘The young mon acting aa pallbearers
wore "Robert Murray. Altrod. Gariar
Robert evomen, Arun Cooke and Mr
Lewis ‘The bedy was interred at Sv.
vet Comet
5 TOMS, SANOE RAB Bh2-8r4
. ar Lawedal ee
ine eee
tome conan
Gr nd 903 Westinih Street
three reome nG-path, range
a foome, rang and bath,
Toquire of janitor or
wt MOEA, Street
oe ET Basement fat, four rooms,
Jow rent. conventont ‘location. 138
wo Torn Be, Senna ered
TO .ET—Gurley, who ts Known to give
the beat service, hap three dete et
100b" and 1008 ‘Broo Rea set AE
ance only. between s8éte ahd Wasth Soe
abrs-tt
nT
Fou SAL=—Stock to the Mercantile
Reaity Company at very fort srign ie
qayene’ whom it may corset esti 32
SOUR" Srth"an Maka wei”
apre-4t
wen pe
76 LsT—targe and small furnianea
Toots in private house: ¥a (e'5a ee
Bune Prgeanaee Be bsbageeeee
ing Mre WH. Willis, 78 Woissth ot
prise
To Lat_anooxnyn.
70, LET—Anderson House bas nicely
uctang Pa by NaSEe oP te
Dougines St, Brookirn’ ‘phone veo
Povgines Bt, | 18 4549-
MQodt Tar Nicely, furnished room, frat |
foot, for lady ‘and. gentleman eit ‘ia: | &
provements 238 Franklin Av. near| i
Tae €y t apereca |
TO LET—Three or four roome, all im: | &
provemonta, at "Sos. Bast 1384 “wtrect
fanitor wanted. M. Ky #11 Christo: | «
pher avenue, Brooklyn, N. ages ge
TO LET—~406 Waverly avenue, rent, 10 |
Toome and. bath 487-60" >
Jrompect atecet. hear Bridge entrance. |
10 ‘toome, mprovementa, $36 98 P
Lain itergen acreet, 8 FoOMa, Improve
monte
Wntren treet, near Bourth avenue.
9 renin, imnprovemonta, $0490
Hedtora "Dlatrice. brownstone front,
frxtsMins nelithbornaed Pbardwocd fin |
nh, open, plumbing) 6 roome and bath,
ron. Fira eiegt Mosely. 104 Montawus | F
Seed teeenian
UOTE Fite at” F17 Warren stron. | ®
dive (rome and “bath, $14: also’ four: |
room flats” Geb Naltic atract, Brooklyn
‘Gtitan*Kenneny. e06. Warren stenor” |
TO, LET, _Parlor Moor and Basement. |
S804 Latayette vento, Broskiyn:
rent reasonable. cee | ae
WANTED —Childrey to boatd By “ae:
epecinbie colored, lady Geil “aks | i
thom trom birth. “We oan furnish fret
cings ‘rateronee” Agarese OF ceil 103
oshesine evanue, Wrooltiyn, near ner:
Bon mirent. MracA. Ae Puller eer sient | |
‘TO LOT_—BROORLYN.
Huut ot. Qeatory, @roome aNd bath | $46
Metrcusiati nts d-atory, ® roome and’ |]
at nai
meter st upper part rosmie ana *°1]
fn a
acheneriady ave, Tower part, ¢ roeme '
‘and. both setae exe aD
Atinntie ave upier ‘bart, 4 raonie “21 |
S18 BAN ce eiotrse ee see aE
Bergen st. upper vert. d'réoinn na 1 f
Prowpeat pl. S-famaity, sii issprove: O° | |
Paolde’ at. cisier part, @ recme nd 11 |
MADQUAND, 1003 ‘FULRON erueT.
pandey Servicse—i1 w. ca” ani 1:56 on
Ba xk = rh
ee EE | Bee
Spars v1 aie IN errED,
Chite-
ERE 6 se
ian es
EA 2 bem eee
We esting Baa
on
BR Ee ve
ieee Bs fore: =
trary aay trees 18 ts Sos see TES
or, ry
JSRLERROS a
UNO & MR GauEcE,
‘Se market ee
eee aos:
ce er Se
oe ran a
Buy” Game fret Banda tn cach
2 CORDIAL WaLcowm TO ALL
IN PURBUANOE of un onier of Hen
TESUANOH of ox 6
(01
gag ae eet
ieee Fe eee Be
Socmne, to — ‘the same eee
of tremecticg becizees, reess No, et
Beckman Street, in oy lew
Eonar ees Ge a
Se a, 1908, J. DOUGLAS
Atterney for Administre-
Hof Wecia ae,Seso
Tomascarws aonae
an order of
Se eae seers
Bae Bcree iter rer Se
gestae Menibtee, Seeman Cops
ae pe ey ee
Seats Pima re
FEES Pointe dette A
"Dated New York, Rovernber 3. 190
5. povaLass orm
- pon rat
PSE an etree Mee ‘Yere y.
——EEEEe
:
Oscar Hackelberg
a CAFE
1952 PARK AVENUE
Cor, 152d Street NEW YoRK
marist
‘TeL3586W-Harles,
ei War i960 Steet
Bet Fifth and Lenox Aves. New York City
LADIES’ AND GENTS’ SUITS
Saas
and delivered. mar i8-Sm
Str i ht
Y Hai
aan 1p tary ed se
Encore aa Geer Sais
SUE WREST nee,
; :
Ford’s . Hair
3
| Pomade
ery terrane Grete Ox Mare
Fae serestnweccriee cater
pee a eee
a Sas in re ony cee ae
Briotetay apt oor Sat
Ear ret tat
secretin ati
goats eaerimena trates
Ser attt meter esas
route ee Sea aey Re w
irae ere rane
ait eiacee ia ieara
agate geet aa aD
ont tt Renae aR poy
yertoalar acuta att OEY
pisree wremrees Gear,
Le TAN)
Chirk Bord Bead
Siee Ante oe vee is we
selgeecten ee
ie |
Petrie ees as churn apa
BUF ceeeuiee teen
‘The’ Ozonized Ox Mnszow Co,
REM Pomsoe u outeativtee
asco by heatarfrmre ee
ANJESTORS—_HOMESEEKERS:
YOUR OPPORTUNITY
‘To own s home fa desirable localities
of the Browz, Bagelwood, N. J., Palisedes
Heat ‘J., Brooklyn and Long Leland
ta he nn ae a ou at
salostad soe tad two'faztiy Sotses oxo
tor ke DUPLIGATED. nl week vine
cheoe are obtains mec
Rotow thelr soul ratos, ‘Whar tosicn
Fee
wh AVE W. U8Rre Bt, Cor, 7h Ave.
eee pets ahh en
* ‘Bwanty-Kighth Grand Annual Picnic bay
| @ Summer Night's Festival . 2
e - GIVEN BY 2
WALTER F. CRAIG ae
At MANHAFTAN CASINO, 155th St. and Eighth Ave.
TUESDAY EV'G, MAY i, 1909
© F CUys Fanoes ncaesrna oF 20 neces. Danciog trom 0 9, a. wut 40, m,
| TICKETS, teow - - 35 Conte
ce EARS is ae a
1819 The Ninetieth Anniversary 1909
OF THE ORGANIZATION OF
BETHEL A.M. E. CHURCH
And the Fourteenth Anniversary of the Removal from
Sullivan St. to West Twenty-Fifth St, N.Y. Clty
REV. R. C. RANSOM, D. D., Pastor .
At PALM GARDEN, 58th Stroet, Bet. Laziegton and Third Aves, *
Thursday Evening, April 29th, 1999
Music by New Amsterdam Orchestra ‘Supper served by Committee of Ladies
CARD OF ADMISSION, - (Including Supper) - 50 Cents
Children under 12 years of age, 3c. Boxes seating 7 perseas, ae we
‘Eee
i
THE GRAND CONCERT
ST. MARK’S M. E. CHURCH, 2% Firms sing
Monday Evening, April 26th, 8.30 o'clock
PROGRAM Violin, “Sth aleet Variation,” ~ De Bertoe
OP ACE inn inn cab | tm nage A
Spring» POL Leon @.Adgor | Dustt, “Prison DTroratore? et
Reeth Beery Moje 2 Vara penn keke Ps
we ir, Heory Pleasant Contre, “Samson et Dallah” «1 pisint Besap
Boyne, “Chant Du ase™ SOF nN Taee | Viola, “Concerto”. Muara Palaer
Hie Beka Linak| Vile “Conere eG wae
‘Trio, “Braise Yo" Sant ee Non re oranda Raa see
Miss Ln, Sir Paaeast, Me, Tarrant? uartecte, “Rigoletto,” ot Lega 8, Ada
ADMISSION, . 3 . - 25 Cents
—_—_—_—
The First Annual Spring Recital
Carlton Avenue Branch, Y. M. C. A.
(498 Cariton Meee, Broohlyo, N.Y.
rednenay, APRIL 29th, 1909, at 8:30 P. a.
. . the Renowned Violinist
Grandacn of Frederick Dot less; aaaisted by ‘Ssice Bile B Grant, a)
tN ‘Gonns HL Pryor be rmlsiag
erect me ce ina
Jmission : : Cents Seats : : Cents
notte Raters, tom lt ae St 2 amt,
enna strest station, walb upone block =
48 AID OF THE BUILDING yURD
| Be> THE THIRD ANNUAL CONCERT and RECEPTION
st
MEN'S CHURCH CLUB OF ST. DAVID'S cHURGH
REV. DRE. CLIFTON, Rector :
BBLING'S CASINO, 156th St., and St. Ann's Ave. ‘
On Thursday, Evening, April 29, 1909
Masic by Miss Hallie ‘a Orchestra,
Admission, Adutis, 35 Gants js . Chitin sade 10 yrs,, 15 Gants
Basle tas as "Sire ona re ATS Ma Bert to Fordham ot Wet Bence
‘car to 186th Street.
geome ernest a trait ay
‘Snoe that our endeavors to givy pleasure: ‘te the pleasure lorias, Hepat will insure thely
ovsemballag support tn tr recat afore to sages te ot fing fond of the Omarah.
‘The humble work at St. David's, straggling against varied outaide specaition, ‘bas sti
tmdaunted Inthe determination to make substantial additions to its iy socumulated
7,000, seeks the support of the publto at large, in firm faith that the desire to complete the
Sica tome espe tee ON las, ‘aad every department of the Oharbhvia tort,
ise aren haven geosetol wil tand aot ooly cha aeuumeat fo the neces PEL
David's, bus as another tribute to the ability and thrift of the Negro Race,
Compand ‘enjoy an evening of exolesive enjoyment and lacidantally contribute to the baile.
¢ fond, 1
Te
‘Post-Lenten Recital
Por Benefit
St. Philip's Parish Home
age», Will be given by . .
St. Philip’s Young Men’s Guild
E ae a Garden, sah Sect and Lexington rere
tiday Evening. April 23, 1909, at 8:30 P. .
ng ne Sree nee i
ADMISSION, 50 CENTS BOXES, $3.00
Al Mie. A. H. Pay of Ml of Mme. Beret itralto; Mr. Charles
getall3e Philadephia, Barons se PN Tyler Violaisy ‘Me Melee Oe ne
‘on n—Rev. H C. Bishop, warden; Mr, C.B. Mi > guild master; Mr. A. F. White,
qlee arlld’ ante: be A’ Meady sonia Me Mae. Sold maaan eA Motes,
Sicaniiiees dregomement—lir, St 8, Willian, chalrinan; Mr. A. V, White; Dr. V. 2,
Thomen Mr. G. 8. Mare er Jas. see eee ge a”
—_—_—_——_—_—_———
SHIP AHOY! HEAVE To!
Thore Will Bo A
JOLLY TARS' HOP
Coder Auspiosn ot
THE VIRGIN/A SOCIAL CLUB
AT NEW PALACE HALL, S'st Street and Seventh Avenue
MONDAY EVENING, APRIL 26. 1999
There will be rendared choice scleotions of vecarmustc be oe
« = +. wa MALLORY BISTERS SOARreT TS CLUB
‘ Sd @ Hallie Avderron’s Pall Orchestra
AAs Marines and constitusn's you cannot fail to take advantage of this round of pleesure,
which is being given inthe absence of the Marine Annual Ballunder the auspices of the
Virginia Boalt Club, Mrs. Bilen P. Weight, the prealdent of this club, has been generous
qhough to adopt thts methad through ber dateem and wall withce to the Matioe Bosersiore
‘Assooiation {p order to belp reorult.Itetreagary. A noble Inspiration, aud we sores the
Marinos can do nothing leas than reapapd to forco ag that thls ageel tod foead aes
‘may bo ap cnbounded success. Bring ell Zour friender
Esvoutivo Comm{tten —itv, Ellon Wright president; James Jobnaco, secretary; Mies
‘M. Jones, \roasvrer. Yen) * he
Floor Committes:—F. B. Webster, Wilton ‘Wright moene| Carter, H.C. Wright,
Befreabrnnt Committee:— Mr, Bama Johnson, Mra. L. W. Webster, Mire, Gare Carter,
: AOMISSION, — - tem idle Ml Cet SB CERT
fe ee ee,
AGENTS AWANTED fr dotases sor oft Nato Race
Wo ee books Tor stimulating Rage Fide and Froarees cop be ip you hea “Kite.
taining tothe 2d aad etimulatiog to the young. Price cents per copy for each, Large
E. A. JOHNSON, New York City
Room 782 Tribane Bailding, 154 Naman Street,
= ‘One"Agent writes: “They sell faster than book I have handled before.”
——eeeeee_e_____— — — — — — — —
. C. Redfield’s sat OFauaD
toh 5. =|* THE KIRK HOUSE »
ww Union Orchestrawy 118 Woat apth Street
sha Tile Leann eT MNO | et, Sesiet cere by fhe o-0
Oe | eee faa Uf desired. A. how et
STUDIO: 2B7OAKESTREET ee. FLETCHER
JHMOEY OMY | Phbaw this ats By. Jen hte
JUST OPANED
# THE KIRK HOUSE «
158 Wost 29th Street
‘Near 8th A¥eane
Handnmoly furnished rooms, by the day ov
Frovemeyts, seis i aestty 4iat, fm,
wee intel
Phage ad, By. Jn tte
News From Out of Town
GAMMERPARK, Mass., April 12.—The churches of Cambridge were dressed in elaborate for the celebration of Easter, and all of them and the women were garments that of the Rush Church, with many receptions and solos. Among those who took part were: Mr. Peter, who read a paper on Easter; solos by Mrs. Pasello, Miss Henrietta Jacobs and Miss Gorman, reading a reading by Mrs. Gorman, Taylor.
On Saturday evening the Right Rev. William Lawrence, of the Diocese of Massachusetts, visited St. Barthelemy's F. B. Church and confirmed about eight persons before a large congregation. On Master morning the Holy Eucharist was celebrated, and in the evening they came a choral and Easter song service. Many Master floral decorations were in evidence.
The Union Baptist Church, of Main Street, began on Easter noon by baptizing eight persons, and in the evening carried out an elaborate musical program.
The Cambridge Lyceum had an open discussion on last Wednesday evening on "Do education, and may the children in school sex should be separated in the classrooms." The memoir of the Lyceum are rehearsing for a mock trial to be held in May.
Mrs. Alexander Easily, of 319 Marlboro street, Boston, will read selections from Dunbar in the new future before the Cambridge's Forum. With best platform gaily dressed in fural grandeur and her president and other officer clothed in their new Easter salts, the Cambridge Men's Forum was set outdoors by the many churches in Cambridge.
The speaker for the occasion was Part Commander G. Henry Powell, of Boston; subject, "The Progress of the Negro Since Emancipation from Slavery. He said in part that the man should seek to force himself into any society where he is not wanted. There are grades of colored people just as there are grades of white people; the educated, talented and cultured colored man; the do not care, not attached to the white social functions, for they are contested in their own sphere."
Among the many who spoke on the paper was Mr. S. L. McCoy, who observed that in order to make progress in the business world we must make efforts together. Solos were sung by Mr. William Oxley and Mrs. Flossie Puelo.
Briggs-Kelly Nuptials at Utica.
On Wednesday, April 7, at high noon,
at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. J.
Hanley Webb, 92 Whitesboro street, Utica.
N. Y., occasioned one of the prettiest
weddings of the season. The bride, who
is a sister of Mrs. Webb, was Miss Sarah
Bryan Briggs. One of her sisters, Mrs.
William Arthro, Mr. William Arthro,
Kelly of Buffalo, N. Y., the cres-
cement being performed by the Rev. Robt.
S. Strother. Those present were: Mrs.
W. G. and Master Bradley, of New York
Miss. Mrs. P. G. Vanderpool, of Onlada;
Miss Betta Epps, of Waterford; Wal-
m. G. Briggs, of Alburny, Y., and
William H. Briggs, of Buffalo; Mrs.
J. Briggs, of Buffalo; Mrs. Mary
B. Strother of Utica. The bride was
worn by her brother, Walter Briggs.
Mendelssoha's "Wedding March"
was played by Mr. William Briggs.
The bride wore a directoire gown of cham-
pagne messaline silk and carried a handsome bouquet of carnations and roses.
The presents were numerous and cost-
ly for the fine dining occasion of the
delicacies of the season Mr. and Mrs.
Kelly left on an early train for Bradford,
Pa. After April 15 they will be
at home, 6 Pine Street, Buffalo. Miss
Briggs, now Mrs. Kelly, was a great
worker in Zion Church here. She acted
as organist to the church when the regular
organist was absent. She was a great
Sunday School teacher. She was a great
brought up in church work. Her num-
erous friends wish her years of happi-
ness in her married life.
At Hope Chapel Sunday morning the pastor, Rev. R. J. Strother, preached and administered the Lord's Supper. The services were impressive. In the afternoon the Easter program was carried out. Addresses appropriate to the occasion were delivered by the pastor, Mrs. J. K. Scanton, Mrs. A. H. Ballon, Mrs. M. J. Strother and others. The church was perfectly and on pace, down at 5:30 a.m., the pastor preached the Easter sermon, taking as his topo "The Bisman Saviour." Six persons were baptized. Mrs. Martha Bowden, who has been unwell, was able to be out. She dined with Mrs. M. J. Strother on Easter Sunday.
Easter in Newark, N. J.
All the churches in the city held special extended Easter services with most excellent floral displays in commemoration of the Risen Saviour. At the Bathany Baptist Church baptizing by immersion was held at the close of the morning service. Administered by Rev. Johnson the New York evangelist, who has been holding arrival meetings at the church for some time and as a result a large number of converts were dipped.
St. James' A. M. E. Church was well attended, and special music was sung. Mr. L. H. Dancy, the christian, led the gathams and thornhams were rendered during the day. It the evening the Kalighna Templahe heard a stirring service by the pastor, Rev. Hurley. Easter services were most unique at St. John's Church, Academy street. Rev. S. S. Jolly officiated, and in the evening stethetic views of the life of Christ were offered to a large and appreciative audience. Rev J. H. Brown led the
All the St. Lukes Councils in Newark and vichity will assemble at Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Thomas street, on next Sunday evening to listen to their annual Easter sermon by the pastor, Rev. William H. Browne, class by the members of the Order. Papers and memoirs and also music will be rendered by some of our best home talent. Mrs. Elisabeth Williams, of 57 Brunswick street, who has been critically ill for several years, arrived in the last few days, and bright hopes are now entertained for her ultimate recovery.
Notes of Jersey City.
The services at St. Mark's A. M. E. Zion Church Easter Sunday were of more than ordinary interest. At the morning service the choir more than sustained its energy in the music. A very large congregation enjoyed the music, also the sermon on the "Living Hope" by the pastor, Dr. Bell. Two persons were received into the church and three children, baptized. The church service is appointed to one headmaster.
was directed by Mrs. Anna Harper, Jersey City's leading singer.
m. and Mrs. Jas Johnson, Brunswick street, entertained Rev. and Mrs. Ball and family, Sunday afternoon, at dinner in honor of their daughters, Virginia and Lorraine, who were christened Sunday morning.
The annual sermon to the St. Luke's will be preached in St. Mark's Church the evening of the fourth Sunday in April.
Bishop A. Walters, of New York, will preach at St. Mark's Church, Tuesday evening, April 27.
Miss Ethel Mobley, of Scranton, Pa., was in town for the Easter holidays. While here she was the guest of her aunt, Mrs. John John 244 Vernon street, Mrs. E. Brown of 47 Monkton street, Jersey City, is again on the sick list, suffering with a terrible cold. Mrs. Ida E. Brown entertained at dinner. Mr. and Mrs. De Holland, of New York City, Wednesday, April 1
Mrs. W. T. Williams, of 250 Vanhorn street, is still confined to her bed, under the care of Dr. Geo. E. Cannon, Mrs. Virgil Richards and family have been brought to stand at her where she has been from her sick mother. They are stopping at 47 Monhott street. Mrs. L. Perkins, of 156 Pine street is also on the sick list.
Baptism in Grasford, N. J.
The baptismal services at the First Baptist Church of Cranford were held on last Sunday, April 11, at 3 p. m. Rev. E. Flowers officiated. There were nine candidates, who were as follows: Charlie Jenks,eline Cline, John Bailley, Bailley Sperlock, Oscar Sperlock, Alma Hawley, Andrew Cox, Valine Thompson.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Bailey, of Yonkers, N. Y., were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Johnston, of Garden avenue, is suffering from an attack of asthma.
Anthony Funeral in Poughkeepsie.
The funeral of Mr. James Anthony took place Thursday from the Ebenzer Baptist Church, Rev. C. S. Failress officiating. Interment was at Pleasant Valley. Eatery services were very impressive. School services were at pastor, Rev. C. S. Failress, preached at 10:46 a. m. Rev. Failress accompanied Dr. Cotter on an automobile ride on Friday. Mrs. J. W. Harden was taken suddenly sick on Sunday evening. Miss Magna Fountain, who has been Sister Fountain, returned recently from Nashville, Tenn.
Mrs. Rose Hose, of 90 North Clinton street, left for Sherron, Conn., for the summer. She is employed at the Sherron House.
Interdenominational at Nyack.
The Interdenominational Preschool Union of Rockland and Bergen Counties held a very pleasant and profitable meeting at Sparkill on April 2. An interesting paper on "Should Ministers Reject the Study of Natural Science?" was read by Secretary N. W. Griffin, A. B., of Baltimore, Dr. J. I. Johnson, of Saint Louis, delivered an excellent sermon on "Salvation." The next session will be held at Nyack, May 14. Among the recent deaths in this vicinity we note the following Albert Edgar of Sparkill, and infants Grace E. Jackson and Bryon E. Johnson, of St. Philipps, A. M. E. Zion Church was the speaker at the Men's meeting of the (white) Y. M. C. A. Easter Sunday. His subject was "Prayer," from which he delivered an impressive address. The Philip's Church for the conference year, will be held May 6, 13, 20 and 27, with a grand rally Sunday, May 30.
Ongoing Notes.
The Rev. E. F. Morris has been returned from conference for another year, where a welcoming reception was given for him, which was a large and enjoyable event. The piano and violin were rendered by Charlotte and Caroline Prime, Elliabeth Magget and Helen Berkley. A fine collection was served by a committee of ladies. Miss Louise and Charles Magill, of New York City, were in town visiting the children of the Easter Sunday. Mrs. Geo. B. Hammard, who has been spending several days in the metropolis visiting friends, has returned to her home in this village. Mrs. Lulu Peterson, of Croton, is spending a week with friends in Englewood City, with Mrs. Brown, of Mt. Kisco, N. Y. is spending a few weeks the guest of Mrs. Henry Ayers. Mr. Arthur Thomas and sister, Miss Grace, were the guests of Mrs. Hannah Hutchinson, of Peekskill on Easter Sunday. Mrs. Brown is a birthday party in honor of Miss Lena Jackson, of Yonkers, the past week.
Notes of Orange, N. J.
Mrs. Mary Kingland, beloved mother of Rev. Joseph Brown, died at her home, 114 Academy street, and was buried from Plain Street Presbyterian Church, Wednesday, April 7. Interment was in Evergreen Cemetery.
A large and sorrowing throng gathered at Plane Street Presbyterian Church, Sunday Afternoon, to pay a last tribute of respect to all that was mortal of Hattie the beloved and loving wife of Rev. Geo. Ehnay. The Rev. Dr. Palmer, of Hickory Street Methodist Church, officialized, led by Rev. Eggleston. The floral offerings were profuse beautiful. The interment was in Fairmount Cemetery.
"The life and works of Dunbar" was the very interesting theme upon which the Rev. Wm. Armstrong, of Philadelphia, held the bla audience under excellent lighting. The Friday evening, April 2 Everybody went back feeling happier for being identified with the Afro-American Race.
The funeral of Mr. Henry Miner, whose death occurred in New York was held from Oakwood Avenue Church, north of the city. The two wives of friends and relatives were ent and a very touching and appropriate sarmon was delivered by the pastor Mrs. Miner, his mother, who is identified with the choir of that church has been married both in the Oranges and New York. The interment was in Rosedale Cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Reamer of 12 Oak street, East Orange, paid a flying trip to Caten Ridge last week. Caten Ridge unnounced the marriage of Miss Mollie Anderson to Mr. Noah Melvin on April 21. A grand event is anticipated. We spend our years as a tale that is the text of a story told by the Rev. Berrick Anderson of Sanford Street M. E. Church, to the friends and members of the Colored Branch of the Y. M. C. A. in the Oranges, at Mt. Olive Baptist Church, Orange, Sunday, April 4. It was in love and inspiring talks the writer has ever heard.
Rev. McKay, a young man and brilliant orator, is doing a wonderful work for the uplift of the masses both white and colored in the Oranges. As is also the student and palm-treading leader, Mr. Gates, who recently came from
very poor, and more life.
The baptismal services of Oakwood Avenue-Union Chapel, Bray, W. P., Lawrence pastor, were held on Wednesday evening, April 7, at 8:30 o'clock. Rev. Lawrence made a few impressive remarks preceding the introduction of the pastor, D. D. Chadwick, the baptismal sermon. There were fifty candidates, but on account of the unreadiness of the majority, seventeen were baptised. They were: Lollicle Tanner, Ella Jester, Bertha Terrall, Effe Hollowan, Corine Dorany, Bessie Crowell, Luther J. Wesley, Jaspe Pendleton, Rose Parker, Gladys Wilson, Emma Tillery, Louise Hawkins, Sulee Smith, Hassel Hawkins and Henry Tucker. Arranging from the age of 8 to 22, the youngest was Louise Hawkins, daughter of Deacon Hawkins, Deacon Peter Smith, of Roselle, was present and delivered the prayer for the
Dr. Langdon in Kansas
KANSAH CITY, Mo., April 12—Dr. H. A Langdon, of Chillicothe, Mo., spent Easter with his brother, Mr. Henry Langdon, of 9 East Forty-fifth street. He is very sick at her home 19 Floor street. Mr. Frank Banks is on the sick hat. Charles A. Simes, a musician, of Local No. 208, A F M. of "Ulengo, is visiting Miss Mary Perry, of 1223 Vine street. Mr. Perkins, second headwaiter at the Baltimore Hotel, is confined to his bed from an accident which happened while he was with the party. Mr. Perkins' residence is 1000 Charlotte street.
Order of Mosca in Mt. Vernon.
The Easter services of the Centennial A. M. E. Zion Church, M. Vernon, N. Y., had a most elaborate and beautiful Easter program for the entire day. Rev. N. E. Collins, pastor, preached a powerful sermon on "The Resurrection of Christ" at 12 a.m. m. At 3:30 in the afternoon at 12 a.m. which consisted of solos, duets and papers, also beautiful pieces on "The Resurrection." At 6:30 p. m. the V. C. E. Society of young people met and had a very interesting program; subject, "Resurrection." Mr. Ed. Butler, superintendent of Sabath School, of Yonkers, gave a few interesting remarks on the top. Also present were, Mrs. Ida M. Boyd, of Brooklyn, N. Y., who spent the day with Rev. and Mrs. Ward, of 214 South Eight avenue. Mrs. Boyd was well entertained. She spent the night with Mrs. Francis Palmer, of 258 South Eighth avenue, and will leave for her home on Tuesday morning. Mrs. Boyd hair-dressing and massaging parlor, at 405 Waverly avenue. Brooklyn.
At 8 p. m. Rev. N. E. Collins preached a stirring sermon to the Grand United Order of the Sona and Daughters of Moses, Tabernacle No. 67, of this city. The Grand Past Worthy Priest of New York City predecled over the lodge, also Rev Stiles sang, the seething singer of Stiles. $15.00 in the pastor's beautiful offering of an Easter egg with $5.00 in the egg. Collection for the day was $41.00.
OHIO STATE NEWS.
Cincinnati
The marriage and wedding of Mr. Jan. F. Maxwell, formerly of Xenia, now a clerk in Chicago, to Miss Alice Edna King, teacher of millinery in the public schools of this city, was probably the most elaborate event of the kind in the history of this city. Guests from all over Cincinnati and the city's happy couple. Bye. Bye. Dear friend, officiated.
Miss Maggie Parker has returned from Augusta, Ga., where she spent the winter. Miss Ida Washington has returned after a delightful visit in Palm Beach. Fla. Miss Lavina Edinborough, of Carr street, is convalescent after an illness of six months. Mr. Stanley Burrell, of Oberlin, O. is expected home soon. Mr. Lucie Witte, Monroe,效力 entertained in the Web Art Club last Friday. Miss Rhea Miller is on the sick list.
The funeral of Mr. L. L. Hawkins, the well-known blind pianist of this city, was held last week. Rev. Philip Ferguson died last Friday and was buried Monday a.m. He was an old and prominent m. of the community and a stricton crowd greeted Rev. W. L. Anderson at a grand banquet at True Reformers' Hall on April 1 Mrs. Jas. Townshedin entertained the L. M. I. Club last Thursday evening. Mrs. O. Banlon and niece, Miss N. D. Green of Piqua, aspen lake, Mrs. Jas. McKinley relate, Mr. Renben Darnel, of Georgetown, Ky., returned home after a very pleasant visit in this city.
Hamilton.
The Excelsior Literary Club held its weekly meeting at the residence of Mrs. Nannie Hampton, Miss Pearl Bryant entertaining. Miss Amanda Finch, of Springfield, O. spent Easter Sunday with Dr. Snelson and family. Special Easter Sunday were held at Dr. Church on Easter Sunday. Dr. Snelson preached the Easter sermon at 11 a.m. and the Sunday School held excellent exercises in the afternoon, and at night the choir rendered a splendid sacred concert. Mrs. Churchman is reported very sick in Connerville, India. The Golden Heart Club was a splendid literary concert at Wood Street Baptist Church last Wednesday. The former sermon Easter Sunday in Lockwood. O. Among those who went to Clincinnati to attend the grand Odd Fellows' celebration were 'Mr. and Mrs. Burgess Fox. Mr Byrnan Anderson. Mr John Freeman
Muncle. Ind.
The banquet given by the Masons last Monday night was quite a success. Rev. T. L. Ferguson, of Cincinnati, O., spent the day wishing for his slay. Mr. George W. Norvell of New York City, Mr. Walden entertained the Phyllis Whently club at her residence in Whitely last Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Paline, who has been visiting Mrs. Pennabaker, returned to her home in Wheeling, W. Va. W. Va. was resplendent with a respoiled to Muncie for another year by Bishop William Anderson, Miss Karen Wohlgard of Anderson, is to the city visiting friends. Mrs. deby Wohlgard returned from Indianapolis last Monday, where she had been visiting her ego, and also attending the Lexington conference.
In accord with the eternal fitness of things, people who keep harping on disagreeable things should be strung up.
The projected 600-mile canal in Florida would convert 6,500,000 acres of swamp into fertile land.
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HAIR DRESSING PARLOB
241 West 96th Street
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COLORED SKIN M
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SURGEON DENTIST
112 West 555th Street, New York
Telephones 8323 Columbus,
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The Colored Amer- FOR A
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red American Magazine FOR APRIL
The Colored American Magazine FOR APRIL
WILL CONTAIN
1. A Personal Review of Roosevelt
By Recorder of Deeds, John C. Dancy
2. The Liberian Crisis
By a Monrovian
3. The Heart of the Race Problem
By Quincy Ewing
4. Affairs at Washington
By Auditor of the Navy, Ralph W. Tyler
5. The Sky Pilots of our Colored Troops
6. Abraham Lincoln
By Booker T. Washington
2. The Liberian Crisis
3. The Heart of the Race Problem
4. Affairst Washington By Audi
5. The Sky Pilots of our Colored T
6. Abraham Lincoln
By Recorder of Deeds, John C. Dancy
n Crisis
of the Race Problem
Washington
bots of our Colored Troops
ncoln
By Auditor of the Navy, Ralph W. Tyler
By Booker T. Washington
Abraham Lincoln By Booker T. Washington FRED. R. MOORE, Publisher
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Colored American Magazine
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Coast Phone 1916
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LICENSED UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS
202 West 63rd Street
Next door to Union Baptist Church
Mrs. Florence B. Brown, Housed embalm
Prompt service all times of the day and night
Special attention given to shipping.
Tel. 111 Harlam
ORLANDER L. DANIELS
Undertaker and Embalmer
Funeral Chapel and Salon
71 West 134th Street, New York
Coaches and Camp Chaits Hire
Notary Public
Lady in Attendance
Jun. 24
Established 1898
Phone 608 700
THE
SATTERFIELD PHARMACY
1791 THIRD AVENUE
Oct. 9th & 10th Sts.
NEW YORK