New York Age
Thursday, January 13, 1910
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
Leading Negro Newspaper
VOL. XXIII. No. 15.
Cry of Governor Crothers of Maryland to State Legislature
DEMOCRATS BITTER
Defeat of Disfranchisement Amendment Last November a Great Disappointment to Them
WANT TO TRY AGAIN
Scheme on Foot to Submit Another Measure to Voters Two Years Hence—Plan to Change Equal Registration Laws.
Special to The New York Age.
Baltimore, Md., Jan 12—Maryland will have another disfranchisement amendment to vote on two years hence of the wishes of the Democratic bosses and bosses prevail. This is indicated by the message of Gov. Crothers to the Legislature and utterances of former State Senator Marion C. Brewington and Arthur Pue Gorman, president of the State Senate.
The Maryland Legislature had no sooner opened in biennial session last Wednesday when the question of the elimination of the Negro vote was broached.
The Legislature, which the Baltimore Sun characterizes as "theoretically Democratic, really oligarchic," had been shorn of the duty of selecting its presiding officers, Gov. Crothers and United States Senator John Walter Smith performing that oneous duty in advance. This left them plenty of time on hand in which to consider the "dire consequences" of Negro suffrage.
Radicals Plan Policy.
The plan of the radicals, as announced by some of the hot-heads, is to discontinue equal representation of the two parties on the registration room, thus giving the Democrat a majority; the Republican a party majority; and the third party a majority in one of the twenty-three counties and gives a loophole for all kinds of trickery to other counties of the State, and the refusal of election officers to place the names of Negroes upon the registration books.
Those who support the latter suggestion point to the fact that the Fifteenth Amendment, which conferred upon the race the right to vote, was never ratified by Maryland, and that the constitution adopted by the State in 1867 only confers the right of suffrage upon white men. They seem to think that the United States Supreme Court would wink at their denial of suffrage in the manner indicated. Another scheme is to pass a municipal election law modeled after the one in force at the State capital—Annapolis—which practically disfarrances all of the Negro voters in that city. The Annapolis law is already in the United States District Court for testing, and the Republican leaders are expected to go the limit in having its unfair provisions tested.
Governor Crothers' Message.
The recommendations of Gov. Crothers to the Legislature anent the suffrage question are as follows:
The failure of the people at the recent election in this State to re-commit to the suffrage clause of the Constitution, whereby it was proposed to eliminate from the electorate the most unintelligent and thriftless class of our Negro population, presents a situation which, in my judgment, should be considered a careful and serious consideration of the present Legislature.
If I could feel any assurance that the defeat of that amendment meant that the majority of the white people of Maryland were in favor of the perpetuation of unrestricted Negro suffrage in a state well as that of the legislature, to bow to the will of the people thus expressed, to accept their will as final and to refrain from any further discussion of the question at this time. But after mature deliberation I am unable to reach such conclusions. During the late campaign little, if anything, was said by the opponents of the amendment in justification of unrestricted Negro suffrage. Indeed, it might also be inflicted from their silence on the question, and I accord with the general opinion of the rest of the civilized world—which is that a most grievous mistake was made when the elective franchise was conferred without restriction or limitation upon the images of the African race in this country. In any rate, the grounds upon which the amendment was defended were that, in the form presented, it infringed the franchise of the white man, and that it would unduly increase the power of the party organization and that make it more difficult. In other words, the objection was out to the principle of the proposed amendment, but to its form. I did not and do not think that those objections were well founded, but I consider that it is our duty to lose to the will of the people and to be made and made to be correct which they have rendered on that question.
1. therefore would not approve
amendment, or, any other amend-
ment of substantially like character
Nevertheless, I am firmly of the opinion that in view of the conditions existing in such a large portion of the State and in view of the great benefits which I believe the people of the State, both white and black, from the removal of the Negro question from our politics, it is our duty, if possible, to submit to the people an amendment in such form as will enable them to vote upon the question as to whether or not unrestricted Negro suffrage shall be perpetuated. In this connection I deem it proper to remind you that Maryland never consented to the ratification of the so-called Fifteenth Amendment, but, on the contrary, rejected it by the unanimous vote of its Legislature, and the question as to whether or not any State of this Union, even by amendment of the Federal Constitution, can be stripped of the power to vote upon the question, which shall have the right to vote at State elections—that is to say, who shall constitute the State—has never yet been adjudicated by the august tribunal which alone has authority to determine it—the Supreme Court of the United States, the question is in grave one, and one which should not be dealt with in any hasty or ill-considered fashion. I therefore, advise no precipitate action, but I do recommend that you take this matter up with the seriousness of the question, in the meaning of the hinting legal advice, endowment to present to the people of the State an amendment of the character which I have indicated. The only suggestion which I have to make at present with reference to the question is that it should contain the essential guarantees of fair elections and provide for a uniform ballot throughout the State.
CHRISTIAN AMERICA: HEATHEN AFRICA
Bishop J. D. Scott Gives Interpreting Talk to Large Audience at St. Paul A. M. E. Church, Kashville.
Special to THE NEW YORK AGE
Nashville, Tenn. Jan. 11- Bishop J. B Scott spoke to an audience that taxed the seating capacity of St Paul A. M. E Church a few days ago, in which the Bishop comped Christian America to heathen Africa. The Bishop chose as his text "Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord." - Psalms xxiii. 88.
He show with admirable the Christian nation how over the un-Christian nation by referring to the preparations Japan made between that country and Russia in their recent war by sending to such Christian countries as England and America to learn whatever was possible relative to their methods and armament of warfare, and also said that these nations had their young men in American and English schools and colleges for the purpose of gaming additional light as to their methods of business and government.
The Bishop said that it might seem strange that one should go to a Christian nation to learn methods of warfare, but he emphasized the fact that God of war, saying that He believed in war, especially when He opens the gates and tears down the walls of un-Christian nations for the admission of the Gospel.
He discussed the shortcomings of Christian nations, especially those of America and referred to the vices, prejudices and the murderous spirit that seem so rampant. He mentioned the fact that ten thousand murders take place in this country annually, as compared to about five hundred in Germany and about the same number in England. He then compared the system used in Germany and several of the other countries of keeping those who have been once condemned for crime constantly under the surveillance of officers of the law, to that of America where those who have been imprisoned for crime, when released by pardon or at the expiration of their time, go about their affairs, very often to violate the law again just as they had done before. In these countries where the methods re- not so lax, he said, the officers know where each man lives who has been condemned for crime, and such persons cannot move without permission or without first having reported their detention, and they have to report occasionally their whereabouts to the officers, and in addition to this, are compelled to attend church at least once on Sunday, with a view of bringing about their information.
In his discussion of what the Christian nation stands for, he presented three points. First, the largest opportunity for childhood, second, the highest development of women; and third, the salvation and uplift of all men. In presenting these three points, the Bishop showed what Christian nations are doing along the lines indicated and how sadly similar work is needed in heathen Africa.
A vivid description was given of the ignorance and superstition of the thousands of neglected children of Africa and of how the heathen women were degraded and deprived of even the right to choose her partner in life. Bishop Scott closed his sermon by relating a number of incidents to show the influence of the Gospel in Africa and an appeal to his large congregation not only to pray, but to give of their means for the salvation of that country. On last Thursday night in the Walden Auditorium here the Bishop delivered an instructive and interesting lecture to the faculty, student body and friends of that institution on the diseases in Africa and the treatment of some of them by the native "medicine men." Among the many important theories advanced by him in his lecture was that the forests of Africa contain many secrets that will be valuable to civilization in the treatment of disease.
NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1910.
TO INVESTIGATE
SCHOOL PROBLEMS
Principals of Washington Elementary Schools Organize
COMMITTEES FORMED
Classroom Teachers to Co-operate- Fourteen Subjects Submitted for Mature Consideration.
Special to The New York Age.
Each committee, consisting of a chairman and two members, is responsible for the investigation of the topic or problem assigned. But each committee is authorized to appoint one or more self-committees, the classroom teachers to cooperate with the main committee in various phases of the investigation. The subjects chosen for investigation by the committees are all of current interest and importance, subjects upon which the school administration may be called to act in the future.
**Personnel of Committees.**
Every building principal serves upon one committee, and only one. The committee upon each principal has been chosen as closely as possible accordance with the individual's wishes. The subjects for investigation by the various committees and their personnel are as follows
School Savings Bank—Miss A M Mason, Miss M M Ormex, J E Synhax, chairman
Pupil Self Government—Mrs M E Tucker, Miss A V Smith, Miss F S Bruce, chairman
Home and School—Miss I I Kinner, J C Chase, Miss E A Chase, chairman
The Over Age Child—Miss A V Shorter Dr F J Cardozo, Miss K C Lewis, chairman
Economy of Time and Efforts in Teaching and Management—Miss I I Jordan, Wormley, Miss S C Lewis, chairman
The Clever Child—Miss E D Barrier, M G Lucas, Miss A E. Thompson, chairman
Separate Classes for Boys and Girls—H Wythe Lewis, E L Cardozo, Miss E F Wilson, chairman
Bridging the Gap Between Elementary and High Schools—Miss F J Smith, A O Stafford, Miss M L Washington, chairman
Revision of Syllabis and Courses of Study—Miss J C Grant, A P Lewis, Dr M E Gibbs, chairman
The School Lunch—Miss R A Boston, Miss K U Alexander, chairman, Dr D I Renfo
The Retirement of Teachers—Miss N A. Plummer, J W Cromwell, J C Bruce, chairman
The Dull Child—C C Bannister, Miss F R Turner, Miss M E Shorter, chairman
Vocational Training—Miss L G Arnold, Miss M V Tibbs, Miss J E Page, chairman
Practical Results of Recent Child Study—Miss C F Smith, J P Gillem, Miss L A. Smith, chairman
The committees have gone to work and are now busily engaged in looking up references upon their subjects in the Congressional and Carnegie Libraries and at the United States Bureau of Education Others are in correspondence with officers in the more important school systems throughout the country in order to find out what other cities are doing
The four supervising principals in the colored elementary schools and the Assistant Superintendent of Schools themselves stand in readiness to confer with the committees whereby call for the cooperation each of these officers is making a special study of his share of the fourteen subjects for the investigation of which committees have been formed
The chairman of the meeting of all the building principals is, of course, the Assistant Superintendent. The other officers will be present at the meetings of the whole group of principals and participate freely in the discussion so that the members of the several committees may have the benefit of the views of their officers, but each committee is absolutely free to submit to the body
READ THE NEW YORK AGE A National Weekly of Large Circulation
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of principals its own recommendations, unhampered by the advice or suggestion of anybody. It is believed that such organized investigations on the part of the building of the White House in the midst of Washington will awaken and sustain spirit of enterprise that will tend toward steady progress.
FEWER LYNCHINGS IN 1909
Texas Leads in Mob Law—Illinois and Oregon, Northern States, Included in Life Clean Record for Virginia.
According to statistics, lynchings were fewer in 1900 than the year previous. Seventy-eight lynchings took place in the United States in 1909, a greater number than in any year since 1904, except 1908, with 100 summary executions. In 1907 there were sixty-three, and in 1906 there were seventy-two. The victims of the 1909 lynchings were sixty-five Negroes and thirteen whites. All but five cases were in Southern States. Illinois and Oregon were the only Northern States to furnish instances of mob law last year, and two cases were recorded in the Territory of New Mexico.
Virginia barely missed a record of "no lynchings" in 1900. On Christmas Day a mob at Hurley hanged a white man. Except for this tragedy, Virginia would have been the only Southern State with a clear record on lynchings for the year Quandrule Lynching.
In Oklahoma there was a quadruple lynching of cattlemen, and there were several double lynchings in Southern States. Texas led with thirteen cases and Georgia was a close second with twelve crimes and alleged crimes against white women were the principal causes, and accusations of murder and theft were responsible for many cases. A charge of counterfeiting was the incentive in one case and kidnapping in another.
The record by States is: Texas, thirteen. Georgia, twelve; Alabama, eight; Florida, eight; Louisiana, seven; Mississippi, seven; Oklahoma, five; Kentucky, four; South Carolina, two; New Mexico, two; Missouri, one; Oregon, one; Virginia, one; West Virginia, one.
The detailed record for 1909 is as follows:
6—Lexington, S. C.; unidentified Negro; attack on woman.
1—Hope, Ark.; Hilliard, Negro; insulting white woman.
2—Mobile, Ala.; Douglas Robertson, Negro, murder of deputy sheriff.
2—Leighton, Ala.; Sam Davenport, Negro; mccendiarism.
2—Scottsboro, Ala., unidentified Negro attempted attack on woman.
February
3—Mexia, Ala.; Will Parker, Negro, attack on woman.
g. shooting a wrist ball
11—Gainesville, Fla.; Jake Wades,
Negro, attack on woman
March
4—Blakely, Ga.; John Fowler, Negro,
murder of deputy sheriff
7—Rockwell, Tex.; Anderson Ellis, Negro, attack on woman.
12—Edan, Miss.; Joe Gordon, Negro, shooting and blinding a white man.
13—Eikins, W. Va.; Joseph Brown, white, shooting chief of police.
white, shooing up of police
25- Cuvero, N. M.; Daniel Johnson,
Negro, and Manuel Candoval, a Mexican,
kidnapping young girl
29 - Dawson, Tex.: Joe Redden, Negro, insulting white woman.
April
Pennacota, Dia.: Dave Alexander, Negro, murder of a policeman.
9—Lafayette, Ky. Ben Brame, Negro, attack on woman.
11—Yazoo City, Miss. Howard Montgomery, Negro; assaulting an officer.
13—Arcadia, Fla. John Smith, Negro attack on woman
14—Irwin, F. B Miller, B. B Rurrill, Jesse West and Joe Allen, all white; chagged with murder.
25—Bessemer, Ala.; John Thomas, Negro; attack on woman.
28- Bartow, Fla ; Charles Scarborough. Nero, attack on woman.
30—Marshall, Tex.; Creole Mose, Pie Hill and Mat Chase, Negroes; murder May
1—Tyler, Tex.; Jim Holmes, Negro; attack on woman
8—Camden, Fla.; unidentified Negro; attack on woman
24—Lincolnton, Ga; Albert Aiken, Negro, shooting white man
24—Pine Bluff, Ark; Lovett Davis, Negro, attack on woman.
(Continued on Page 3)
MAYOR OF CAIRO ADMITS MOB'S ERROR
Offers Reward of $1,000 for Arrest of Pelty Slayer
SEARCH FOR REAL CULPRIT
New York World Comments on Report of Grand Jury, Which It Says Condones Work of Mob.
Cairo, Ill., Jan. 12—That the Cairo authorities realize that the slayer of Anna Pelly has not been found, although one Negro has been mobbed for having committed the crime and a white man lynched during the mob's frenzy, has been clearly shown by the announcement appearing in the Cairo Evening Citizen last week that Mayor Parsons had offered a $1,000 reward to anyone furnishing the identity of Anna Pelly's assailant.
The announcement read as follows.
A reward of one thousand dollars will be paid for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons who killed Miss Anna Pelly in the City of Cairo, County of Alexander and State of Illinois, on the night of Monday, November 8, 1909, in the neighborhood of Elim and Twenty-seventh Street in said city.
GURGE PARLS.
Mayor of the City of Cairo, Ill. the news item appearing in the Evening Citizen relative to the reward read
With the hope of securing certain facts claimed to be in possession of anonymous informants and to induce some person who may know the facts regarding the murder of Miss Aisha Fellbli to reveal the identity of the officer of the county, the City of Cairo has renewed the offer of reward of $1,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of persons supposed to have been implicated in the murder. While the authorities have evidence was strong against Frogy James, they believe that there may be some other person or persons implicated with him. It is the desire of the city and county officials to bring before the grand jury over a coup of willful theft, and to secure the facts regarding the darkest crime in Cairo's history.
Cairo Grand Jury Reproached by New York World.
The New York World soundly scores the Cairo Grand Jurors for reporting that they believe no innocent man met his death at the hands of the mob
Commenting editorially on the report the World said, under the caption, "A new Defense of Mob Law":
The Grand Jury at Cairo, Ill., which after investigating the leaking of two documents with murder reported that "we believe no innocent man met his death at the hands of the mob." left its work incomplete. It should have adopted a formal resolution of the case to the mob from the county the needless trouble and expense of keeping in fail and trying its two victims. Having been praised for their discrimination in killing no innocent man, the jury here was recognized on the records of the grand jury as public benefactors.
According to the Illinois theory apparently, when a mob feels disposed to break in the jail doors and hang a Negro or two or burn one at the stake it is fully justified if it tells that interest that all the might have been grounds for indicting the men already dead. This is a theory of justice not yet accepted by the courts and fortunately never likely to be. Instead of vindicating the law the Cairo grand jury directly identified itself with the latest that all the mob. In a way its position is more indefensible than that of the mob, for it did not have even the excuse of acting in the heat of passion. As a judicial body it was charged with the pursuit of criminals, not with openly allying a seafarer, and reads almost as if the grand jury intended to say that in the mob's place it would have lynched the two men itself.
Negro Bank in Anniston. Special to TUW New York Agr.
Anniston, Ala—There is a Negro bank in this city which is doing well. The bank owes its origin largely to the unselfish interest and hard work of Dr. W. R. Pettiford, of Birmingham. The local people have backed up Dr Pettiford's efforts and are in control of the bank.
1830
JUDGE ROBERT H. TERRELL
Robert H. Terrell Renamed Municipal Judge.
Special to THE NEW YORK AGR
Washington, D. C., Jan 12—Judge Robert H. Terrell has been reappointed Municipal Judge of the District of Columbia by President Taft for a term of four years.
Judge Terrell was formerly Justice of the Peace in the District of Columbia, and was appointed Municipal Judge by Theodore Roosevelt in 1908.
Judge Terrell was confirmed by the Senate on Tuesday, January 11.
INTEREST IN SCHOOL SITES
Many Cities in Tennessee Bidding for Proposed Negro Normal, Industrial and Mechanical College
Special to THE NEW YORK AGE
Nashville, Tenn., Jan 11—Much enthusiasm is being manifested and substantial progress is being made by the association of Negro citizens of this city and vicinity, recently formed, for the purpose of securing the location of the proposed Negro Normal, Industrial and Mechanical College, for which provision was made by the last Tennessee Legislature, their plan being to have the institution located near Nashville, and in this (Davidson) County.
The matter of selecting the site for the college is in the hands of the Board of Education of Tennessee, and it is understood several other cities of the State are bidding for the site, including Memphus, which, it is being urged, will be hard to outbid on account of her large Negro population being able to offer a larger amount of cash and other advantages, which the Board demands from the citizens and according to the legislative provisions in order to establish the school. The State's annual allowance amounts to but $17,000, and it is proposed to have the school establish features so as to be benefited by the Morrel Fund, which would give it a much larger endowment and make it usefulness more widespread.
Hon J C. Naper, Dr R. F. Boyd and Rev R. H. Boyd have been selected from the committeemen to meet respectively the City Council, County Court and Board of Trade who will be asked to help financially to secure the location for Davidson County. A committee of one hundred influential Negro citizens will make a soliciting campaign among members of the race in an effort to raise a large amount themselves, the campaign to last a week and to wind up in what they propose to make their crowning effort at the last meeting, which will be held in the Ryman Auditorium here and at which they expect to have many prominent white citizens present.
Took Money to Enter School
Columbia, Miss, Jan 11 - After robbing their father of the savings of a lifetime in order that they might matriculate at the school of Booker T. Washington at Tuskegee, Ala., five children of Albert Alfred, an aged Negro farmer, have been forgiven. The three girls and two boys had attended to the father's business affairs, both he and their mother being unable to read or write. Alfred had accumulated $2,000, which was on deposit in the Columbia State Bank. He was opposed to educating his offspring, believing they should spend their lives on the farm. The three children disappeared and with him went the bank savings. Last week Alfred received a letter from the secretary of Booker T. Washington asking for recommendations before the children could be entered at the Tuskegee institution.
PRICE, 5 CENTS
Are to be Appointed in the South to Take Census
DURAND'S POLICY
Director of Census Issues Long Letter to Supervisors Instructing How to Make Selections.
Members of Race to be [Named in South
in Which Two-fifths or More of Population
are Negroes.
Special to THE NEW YORK AOR.
Washington, D. C., Jan 12.—Census Director Durand has issued a letter of instructions to supervisors of census throughout the country, approved by Secretary Nagel of the Department of Commerce and Labor, defining the conditions relative to the employment of Negro as census enumerators. They are directed to select those so far as competent ones are available to count the Negroes in those enumeration districts in which two-fifths or more of the population consists of members of the race. He does not consider it desirable that in the South Negroes should enumerate white families, and he informs the supervisors that it will be necessary in many enumeration districts to appoint both a white and a Negro enumerator. The director's letter to the supervisors is as follows:
"It is exceedingly important to the interests of the people of the United States and particularly to the people of the Southern States that the compulsory census should give complete and accurate information to the Negro race. It is probable that the census will show approximately 10,000 of that race in the United States, large districts in those countries constitute more than half of the population, in fact, in it all the census district stations established by the Census Bureau they will constitute from nearly 100 per cent of the population."
"Negroes can doubtless obtain the information required by the census from members of their own race more accurately than white enumerators. In various of the Southern cities the board of education regularly employ Negro enumerators to take the school census of the Negro population. This is true, for example, in Montgomery, Ala., and in Savannah, Ga. This practice shows that the white men of the South themselves recognize the desirability of employing Negroes to do work of this character among their own race.
"You are, therefore, hereby directed to select Negroes as enumerators of the Negro population, so far as competent Negroes offer themselves for the position, in those enumeration districts in which a large proportion of the population—say, two-fifths or more—consists of Negroes.
On the other hand, I do not consider it desirable that in the South Negro appointed as enumerators should be authorized to enumerate white families. It is certain that in many, if not most, parts of the South Negro enumerators would not be able to obtain accurate statistics regarding the white population as white enumerators could. It will, therefore, be necessary in many enumeration districts, to appoint both a white enumerator and a colored enumerator in order that the entire population may be properly enumerated.
"It is understood, of course, that applicants for the position of enumerator, whether white or colored, shall be subjected to such tests regarding their efficiency as may be prescribed, order that only competent persons may be employed."
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Speaking of Director Durand's proposed policy, the New York Evening Post has the following to say:
"The wise decision of the new Director of the Census, Mr. E. Damu Durand, to employ Negro enumerators to deal with the Negroes in the South will give the greatest satisfaction to the colored people of that section. It is not merely that they wish the offices as a means of getting ahead, but that they feel that there will be more accurate reporting of their progress if the work is in the hands of their own people. The coming census means much to them. In the face of widespread criticism of their usefulness as citizens and laborers, they naturally wish all of their really phenomenal advance as a race recorded in time for the semi-centennial of emancipation, when the whole country ought to stop for a moment to take cognizance of their progress. That Mr. Durand's decision will be popular in the South is not probable since he is, however, to employ white enumerators for the whites, the edge will be taken off of any open faint-finding there may be. Here is the Richmond Times-Dispatch rejoicing over the rumor that Mr Taft intends hereafter to appointNegroes to office in the North only. This census decision does not look like it. But no one in the North will seriously object if the appointees are as able officials as Charles W. Anderson, the collector of internal revenue in this city, and William H. Lewis, Assistant United States District Attorney in Boston.
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Naval Vaccine at Bethel Through-
ent January.
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The Rev. Reverdy C. Ransom preached at both services at Bethel A. M. E. Church last Sunday. In the morning he spoke on "Let There Be Light," and in the evening on "Feeding With Swine." Revival services will be held every night during the week at Bethel A. M. E. Church in January except on Saturdays. Rev. Ransom will preach next Sunday morning
Horizon Rexival Continues
The revial meetings are attended with splendid results at "Little Zion," where the pastor, Rev J. H McMullen is preaching ga practical gospel against sin. Notwithstanding the very disagreeable weather conditions of last week, every evening the services were enthusiastic and well attended. On Sunday morning one young woman was happily converted during the sermon, and at the evening service a young man acme forward fully surrendered to the influence of the gospel. Such peaceful and spiritual benedictions as pervade the church is an omen of great results. During the past six months twenty-nine persons have united with the church. All financial obligations are met as they fall due, and the pastor is not allowed to want for anything in the way of support and comfort. The revival is still in progress.
Union Baptist Church
Revival services continue with great success. We have had seventeen converts in the past week and a good attendance each evening.
Sunday at 11 a.m the pastor preached a strong sermon on "Christ's Presence With the Church." At 2 30 p.m. Superintendent W H Johnson officiated with his co-workers to instruct the little children "On the Life of Christ." At 4 p.m. the Missionary Circle under the direction of Mrs. R Bruce held a good meeting. At 5 p.m. Mrs A Williams, president of the B Y P U, felt greatly encouraged at the attendance and interest in the Union.
At 7 30 p.m. a common was served to a crowded house, the hand of fellowship being extended to thirteen members.
The offering is to be amounted to $143
Beecher Pastor at Nanarene.
The pulpit of the Nazarene Congregational Church 112 Herkimer street, Brooklyn, on Sunday morning by the Rev. J. H. London-Isaacs and by the Rev. Charles W. Allan, pastor of the Beecher Church and a member of the Brotherhood of Congress, the Ministers of Brooklyn. Dr. W. Widdley acted a torceless servant in the course of his remarks, and the congregation that he was way to succeed is loving one another and trusting God. He assured both pastor and people of the sympathy and assistance of the Congregation, ministers of Brooklyn in which they were engaged. The chair rendu Ann a excellent style several anthems, after her hartet was merely sung by Miss V. I. Stel, rMs. Octavius Waters. Wm. Taylor and hCarles Holmes. The Lend-a-Hand Club gave a successful dramatic performance on Thursday night.
Beth Tphillish at Work.
The week of prayer ending on Friday evening last brought out a fun attendance each evening. The meetings on Wednesday and Thursday evenings were in charge of Mr Joseph. On Monday and Friday evening evenings they were in charge of J Edmead. The special speakers on Friday night were Messrs J Edmead, on "The Bible Antiquated" and Herbert I. Thomas, on "Church Work and the Child." Mr Edmead's address was of an assuring nature, wherein he showed that the Bible is co-day thearest guide and strengthener of weak human nature and its precepts and doctrines worthy to be relied upon. Mr. Thomas reminded his audience of the importance of work in the life of the Christian. The speaker dwelt upon the importance of child culture in social uplift. He spoke from his experience on how much good any effort among children can be made to accomplish, and urged his hearers not to allow the week just spent in prayer to be without definite results. In closing his remarks, he said that no neighborhood in this great city is more in need of work for the salvation of the child than that of 134th and adjacent streets.
The pastor preached at morning service on Sunday and the singing meeting as usual attracted a large number of people.
Revival at Mother Eion.
Unbounded success in attending the efforts of Rev Bolden in the revival at Mother Zion Church. Many are coming forward at each service to be prayed for, while fifteen persons joined the church. The service by the pastor at both the morning and evening services were of religious enthusiasm, and their power is being felt by the hundreds of people who are attending the services every Sunday. Mr Lato preached the communion sermon in a highly acceptable manner. An unusually large number took the Lord's Supper.
The Sunday School services were brief but interesting. The attendance showed a large interest. James A. Hopkins, ex superior, led of the Sunday School and the teacher of one of the largest Bible classes and also a leader of one of the largest classes in the church, was presented with a solid gold Masonic watch, to be the superintendent, Mr. Duto from his combined classes. Mr. Hopkins made a suitable reply and feeling, expressed his thanks for the gift
The J. C. Price I. L. held a short session with a short program. The weekly paper edited by Mrs. Sadie M. Lockett was bright and evidently made a good impression. The rendering of a recitation by F. H. H. Burney was in every way pleasing with his fine dramatic effect. He is one of the best interpreters among the galaxy of elocutionists. C. T. A. French, vice-president of the Lyceum, read a splendidly prepared paper on the influence of the late King Leopold upon the Congo. Mr French has made quite a study of the conditions obtaining in that part of the country, and he demonstrated his ability to intelligently discuss the question he had to hand. Mestra. G. Washington
THE NEW YORK AGE: THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1910.
Butts and George B. Haynes, the critics, were introduced to the Lyceum and made short talks on what they expected to do toward building up the Lyceum. The program next Sunday will possess unusual merit Councilor John W. Smith will read a paper which will be of undoubted interest to those who attend.
Alonzo A. Rives was made glad by the presentation of a very pretty and unique Masonic pin from the members of "That Famous Banner Class."
On Sunday evening, January 2, the president of the board of trustees, James E. Nixon, was presented a package, contents unknown, by the members of his class. Mr. Nixon regards his leadership in the church more highly than any other position he holds.
Among those who spent the holidays in the city was Miss Mabel Diggs of Howard University, who is taking such a leading part in the musical department of that cultured institution.
Charles Miles of 144 West 100th street is confined to his home by pneumonia.
Bethel A. M. E. Chapel.
Rev W W Beckett, D.D., after a three months' trip to the Southern and Western Conferences as secretary of missions of the A. M. E. Church, arrived home recently and occupied the pulpit last Sunday evening, and delivered an excellent and interesting sermon to a well-filled house. There was one person received in the church.
The revival services last week owing to the inclemency of the weather were not very well attended, but it will continue all this week. Preaching will be by prominent divines
The Christmas exercises for the children last Thursday evening were enjoyable and largely attended. The presents to the pupils were very pretty as well as useful. Mrs. Alexander deserves much credit for the interest manifested
The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. Kenedy of 229 Fifth avenue was baptized by Rev Shields last Friday night at 11:30 o'clock. The baby was very ill, but since the baptism it is slowly convalescing. Dr De Shields will go any hour in the night to visit the sick. Mrs. S D Wilkerson at 195 West 133th street, who has best vying relatives, has returned home. Next Sunday evening the pastor will preach the sacrament at the Lord's Supper will be administered.
V. W. F. A. RE-RECTS OFFICERS.
Mrs. R. C. Kansson Again the Leader—Mrs. Keyser Secretary—Years' Work Begun.
At the regular meeting of the Board of the Young Women's Club in Association Thursday, January, the annual electio n of officers and of committees occurred, while discussions and enthusiastic spirit minister at the meeting indicates an interest in the Association which doubts will result in much good work during the ensuing year.
The unanimous vote to the re-election of the same officers is an evidence of the confidence of the members in their officers and their appreciation of the good work which they have already done. The officers are as follows President, Mrs. E. S. Rasson first vice-president, Mrs. Lydia Smith second vice-president, Mrs. E. R. Kessler secretary, Miss A A Holstein treasurer, Mrs. V E Scott, chaplain, Miss Alice Scott. The following were elected chair of committees: House committee, Mrs. N Montague Social committee, Miss Minyard, membership committee, Miss Martha Venable program committee, Mrs. Lydia Small finance committee, Mrs A L Re. educational committee, Mrs M L Smart lecture committee, Mrs J A J. O'rourk committee, Miss Estella White missionary committee, Miss Alice White employment agency committee, Mrs Ella Dawes, boarding department committee, Mrs Sadie Crafton, Bible study committee, Miss Alice Scott
It was decided that each committee shall be required to hold a monthly meeting with the secretary. The installation of officers will occur next Sunday afternoon. Already several of the committees have started to work and have plans on foot for the development of important phases of the Association's work. Miss Lettie Gilham is chairman of a committee arranging for a fair for the benefit of the Association to be held in February.
A meeting of the social committee has been called for Friday, January 14, at 8 p.m. to arrange for the monthly social, which will be on Thursday, January 27.
The membership committee is urging delinquent members to pay up their dues, and is asking the cooperation of all members in their effort to double the membership of the Association by the enrollment of many good workers and many worthy women who need the work for which the Association stands.
The educational committee invites all young women to register with the secretary for any of the following classes which they may wish to enter. Monday, 8 to 9 p.m., literature Mrs. F. R Keyser, instructress, Monday, 9 to 10 p.m., elocation, Mrs. M. L. Stuart, instructress, Monday, 9 to 10 p.m., singing or choral class, Pr. Rosenblatt, instructor Wednesday, 9 to 10 p.m., composition and grammar Miss Cora B Jackson, instructress, Wednesday, 9 to 10 p.m., physical culture instructor to be announced later Friday, 9 to 10 p.m., Bible study, ten lesson, Miss C B Jackson, instructress Friday, 9 to 10 p.m., cooking class instructor to be announced
Most of the courses offered will be limited to a term of ten or twelve lessons, which will begin before or during the first week in February.
A large number were present last Sunday and enjoyed the stated concert conducted by Madame S. at Next Sunday A T Gouns, for social years the secretary of the Colored Y M C A in Baltimore and now secretary of the Y M C A in Orange was at the regular service at 4 p.m. Sunday, January 10, the secretary Miss C B Jackson, accepted in invitation to speak to a new organization of the Y M C R, which has just been started in Hackensack N J. Really ing the need of work of this kind for the colored women, a few earnest women under the leadership of Mrs S B Porter, have organized and begun the work in Hackensack. The meeting was well attended and the audience seemed to appreciate the advice given by the speaker.
At St. Mark's A. M. E. Zion-Church, Rev W H Newby, pastor, a stirring revival is in progress. Souls are being saved and uniting with the church. Three joined at the morning services Sunday and one was baptized. The pastor appointed Mr Bolden, a very intelligent young man, as the leader for the young members Rev Brown preached morning and evening with great power. The revival will go on for several weeks to come Mr. and Mrs J H Stocker of 335 Pine street entertained at dinner Sunday Mr and Mrs L. Moorman
Englewood, N. J., Jan 12—Mrs James Sprague of Brooklyn was the guest of her brother and sister-in-law, Mr and Mrs. C. E. Pogue, Sunday.
Mr Carter died at the Englewood Hospital Tuesday morning with pneumonia. He was buried from the Bethany Presbyterian Chapel Sunday, January 9, at 130. Deceased was in his thirty-second year, and is survived by a wife, son, mother and a sister Rev. W. E. Griffin officiated, and interment was at Brookside Cemetery
Rev E. W Williams of Abbeville, S. C., preached his farewell sermon at the Bethany Presbyterian Chapel Sunday evening Rev Williams conducted the meetings at the chapel during the week of prayer Though inclement, weather prevailed, the meetings were fairly well attended.
Mrs Hayes and family have gone South for the winter
Mrs Margaret Smith and Mr Bob-
Miss Margaret Smith and Mr Robertson spent Sunday in Ordell
Presiding Elder Mason is on the sick list
Mrs Andrew Smith of Van Brunt street has moved into the house vacated by Mrs Haves, on William street
The Betham Art Class met at Mrs. C. F. Pogue's Thursday Next week it will meet at the residence of Mrs. John Jackson, on Walton street
Wright Announcement in Little Falls.
Little Falls, N.Y. Jan 4—The home of Mr. and Mrs. William B Wright of Little Falls, N.Y. was the scene of a very pretty and enjoyable holiday reception given in honor of their guest, Miss Nora I. Pearson, of Brooklyn. List Tuesday evening Their home was pretty decorated in red and green in keeping with the Yule Idle. After a symposium, repast was served of trays were given each guest in the room. English walnuts with Christmas ribbon having cards attached with the words, "In a Nut Shell written on them I included were notes which told Mr. and Mrs. William B Wright announce the engagement of their daughter Miss Berthel M. to Mr. Benjamin A Crosses at New York City
FEWER LYNCHINGS IN 1909
(Continued from Page 11)
28 Ableno, Lex Bob Barnett,
white, shot to death in his cell, convicted of murder
20- Portland, Ark Joseph Blakeley,
Negro, threatening murder
June
3 Franklin, Ky John Maxey, Negro, shooting white man
11 Smacks N. C. Quille Simmons and Frank Simmons, white charged with murder
15 Arvalo H. unidentified Negro, attack on woman
24 Lafayton Ga. Joe Hardy, Negro charged with instigating murder
24 Cuthbert, Ga. Albert Reese, Negro attacking white woman
20-Wilburton Okla. Sylvester Stenien, Negro murder of deputy constable
July
1 Barwick Ga. unidentified Negro, found under bed in home of white family
20-Paros, Ky. Albert Lawson, Negro, shooting a sheriff
20-Quim Branch, Ga., King Green, Negro; attempted theft of horse and buggy
29-Opelousas La. Onesime Thomas and Fmile Anotine, Negroes, attack
31-Wellstom, Ga. Sim Anderson, Negro peeping into woman's bedroom August
2- Platte City Mo George Johnson, white, murder
9 Cahz, Ky Joe Miller Negro, at tack on woman
12- Greenville, Miss Will Robinson Negro, insulting white girl
20- Littergerald Ga Henry Taylor, Negro attack and murder of woman and child
27- Larrstown Ga John Sweens, Negro, anding Negro murderer to escape
September
4- Jackson Ma Josh and Lewis Balaam Negro, murder of deputy sheriff
5- Clarksdal Miss, Herman Mc Daniels, Negro accused of complicity in a murder committed by his brother
7- Mungham La Henry Hill Negro, drowned by mob attack on woman
15- Sandy Point Lex, Steve Haves and Charles Delmey, Negroes killing white man
25. Perry Ll. Charley Anderson,
Nigro murder
21 Greenville Les Frank Williams and Ill Negro attack November
12 Caro Ill Henry Salmer, white charged with wife murder, and Will James Negro confessed murder of young white woman
20 Della La James Estes, Negro, shooting city marshal
23 Edwardville Al Ray Holston, Negro, shot and body burned, attack on woman
25 Mecham Miss, Morgan Chambers, Negro, attack
26 West Shreveport, La Henry Rachel, Negro, attack December
1 Cochran, Ga John Harvard, Negro, burned at stake, shooting white man.
20- Rosebud, Tex . Coke Mills, Negro, shooting city marshal
21- Hurley, Va . Henry Pennington, white, shooting white man
20- Canyon City, Ore . Orville Snyder, white, shooting white man.
The Real System by which Perfect Success is Amured. Maintains your Positions - Improves Your Business - Reduces Your Interest.
Clio School of Mental Sciences
Instructs I am complete on. Simplified—Re-
ults Certain—Instructs and Heading-
Day and Evenings and by Mail.
BRANCHES:
Physiology—Had Reading.
Psychognomy—Phoce Reading.
Psychology—Mind.
Scientific Palimetry—Hand Reading.
ABEHA C. E. MROTT, Principal
457 Sixth Avenue
NEW YORK
Telephone 4307 Medicine
Jan 13 3p
Phone 3616 Bryant
Hours 6 P M
ISABEL W. MAXWELL.
PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER
ROTARY PUBLIC
Room 18 Metropolitan Building
46th St. & 8th Ave.
NEW YORK CITY
dec16 3m
The Only Store in the City
WITH A FULL LINE OF
HAIR GOODS For Colored
People
We Can Provide
AI SEALSLEY'S ORT GOODS STORE
399 Eighth Ave. N.Y. Near 30th St.
dec 30-41
A Complete Study in Chiropody
which offers a great field for our
people can be had at .
J. A. O'DONNALD'S
332 Sixth Ave. New York
jan 6-21
Phone 2635 Chelsea
A Complete Study in
:: CHIROPODY ::
for the Pedic Examinations of the States of
New York and New Jersey Consultations
Free. See Mr.
Dr. V. T. THOMAS
Jan 10th
265 Sixth Avenue
Books (Dealers)
A colored writer Prof A F A L K E N now works
namely You Rubber Nork 40 stories com-
mings in New York and London
funny. Prof S S. And also his scary pro-
fessional. For sale at south east corner at ar-
thro G Brays new stand and lanes
south east corner at New York
New York
FOR SALE
PHONOGRAPHS.-S100 Edison & Co.
phonograph $29 others $1.59 up Edison &
Victor records $2 (exchanged also) All kinds
phonographs exchanged also. Red Sole bargains
and structures amberola attachments 19
75 each Violins wanted any 11 90 to
Record Exchange, 353 West 59th St.
Jan 03m
The La Cotch House
39 West 133rd Street
Neatly Furnished Rooms, large and small, by the day or week Price 25c. a night and up Mrs A K BROWN, Prop. Dec 22 3m
Working Girls' Home
Formerly of New Rochelle
216 W. 133rd STREET
Just as the proof of the pudding is in the tasting so the superiority of our help and situation is in a trial Compensation allowed to girls holding positions three months.
Young Women's Christian Ass'n
Pine large rooms to let to women who desire good home cooking.
ROOM AND BOARD $4 & $5 PER WEEK
Meals served to outsiders 25c a meal.
GIVE US A TRIAL!
nov. 25-8m
TO LET
329 and 331 West
39th St.
Apartments of 3 and 4 rooms,
all light, with improvements.
Rents $12 to $17.50. See Jamton
or
LEVY & SON,
Jan 13 4t
389 Eighth Ave
554, 556 and 560 W.126th St.
Felegant apartments of four Large, Light Rooms First-class College neighborhood near Broadway. Apartments kept in First-class condition Rents moderate. Apply MANAGER 560 W 126th St.
ELEGANT FLAT
Handsome Apartments with all improvements at Moderate Rentals
THE DOLLY MOUNT, 211 W 60th St.
THE SARATOGA, 209 W 60th St.
THE VENICE, 210 W 61st St.
THE DORIN COURT, 217 W 60th St.
Above houses have first-class motor service and are always in good condition
ROBERT CARTER,
209 West 60th St
A C BRADLEY.
THEODORE CAMPBELLI, 217 West 60th St
Dec 29.1 yr
SEE ME FOR QUICK SERVICE
SATISFACTION QUARANTED
IF YOU WANT TO BUY
OR SELL A HOUSE FOR CASH
JOHN M. ROYALL
20 W. 138 St. New York
Phone 2171 Harlem Jul 8-3 mo
For Cheap Flats in Harlem—70 O 72
E, 116th St. 5 light rooms and bath
hot water supply; all improvements
Big yards for drying. Rents $18.00 $2
APPLY OWNER—E. SCHLOMOWITZ
55 Lenox Ave. Or Janitor on premises
nov. 18, 3 moa.
Homes, Fair & Square
At Rahway, New Jersey
(If you contemplate buying or building a suburban home on easy monthly payment, consult with:
EDWARD L. WALKER
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
25 W. 42d St. Room 422
Phone 2182821
Nov 18 8mo.
526 West 45th Street
3 large rooms. House newly carpeted. Rents, $9 50 and up. Payments weekly. Apply
JOSEPH F. FEIST
408 West 42d Street, or Janitor.
dec23if
307 W. 146th Street
307 W. 146th Street
Elegant 4-room apartment, all light corner house and oppose park; one block from 8th Ave. PL. "House newly decorated. Rent $16 to $18. Half month free. Inquire Janitor, or BENJ LEVY, Agent.
Tel. 472 408 John
Most better neighborhood in this city.
Five, large, light, newly decorated rooms with bath and hot water supply; halls tiled and carpeted
Respectable tenants only Rents $21 to $23, payable half monthly.
See Janitor, No. 369. dec 23-tf
302-304 W. 69th St.
Thoroughly renovated. 4 light newly painted and papered rooms with improvements, $10 to $13 a month, payable half monthly. Dec. 9 JANITOR
Rents $26 $27, $28
19 West 99th St
Under new management to large
light rooms, steam heat and hot water.
DANIEL L KORN.
140 West 12d street
Telephone 529 Bryant Notary Public
JOSEPH F. FEIST
Real Estate and Insurance
Loans Life Life Accident and Plate Glass
Insurance
No 408 West 42nd Street
Near Ninth Avenue NEW YORK
Renting and Collecting a Specialty dec 23mo
TO LET
TO LET
422 W. 45th Street
Near North White
Apartment three large, exceptionally
light rooms. All improvements newly
decorated, quiet, select tenants. Rent
only $14.50 half month allowed Janitor
or POCHER & CO
jan 6 126 W 34th Street
406 West 55th Street
TO LET
Six large, light, rooms, single fist.
258 West 47th Street
Four large, light, rooms. Rent reasonable.
Apply Janel or, or
ROBERT R. LADSON,
412 West 55th Street. oov15 am
207 West 60th Street
Elegant five large, light rooms.
Quiet house; hot water and bath.
Rent $19. Inquire Janitor, or
BENJ. LEVY, 30 Pine St.
L phone: 42N John
Jan 14 1
183 West 134th Street
NEAR LENOX AVENUE SUBWAY
Five large, light rooms and bath; newly painted house under new management. Rent $19 Apply Janitor, or H. Neumann, 118 W. 30th St.
H NICHOLS, 418 W. 39th St.
Floors through Five large, light
rooms and large bathroom (3 bed
rooms), reduced to $25. Quiet, clean
house. References The only house
for colored people on street. No race
troubles here. Launtress in basement
on 130.
440 West 45th Street
Four rooms and bath, steam heat and
hot water supply $22 flat, $21 flat,
$22 Basement $10
First class junior service and looked
after by owner, MRS. MORRIS or
LD KARSI & CO., 100 Broadway
JUST OPENED
To Respectable Colored Tenants
427W 143D N ST. LANCASTER
Plugg apartments floor and light rooms
bath and hot water supply
225W & 405F ETHAW AVE. 1001 W
Two three and light rooms apartments
Renters受偿 Apply Invoice
TAMES H MORRIS
Phone 427W Manning need
514W 15th St.
RAST
305-307-309 W. 68th St.
3 large light rooms all improvements to rent to desirable colored families
Rents $11 and $12 Apply lantern on premises or
FOR RENT
227 E.127th Street
3 and 4 room apartments $9 to $12
Inducements to good tenants
jan. 13-3t Janitor on premises.
Cheapest Rent in Harlem
Open for inspection, the finest new fireproof apartments, hand- somely decorated throughout. Elegant entrance, 2, 3, 4, large light, airy rooms, all improvements, ranges, hot water supply, tiled baths and open plumbing. Rents, $8 to $16. See Owner or Janitor, 214-16 East 127th St., near Third Ave. Sept 2-8m.
JUST OPENED!
---
Five 6-story New Law Houses, four families 4 and 5 rooms and in and hot water; all ims. Rents $19 to $28. ore of Janitor on premi AIL & PARK
Five 6-story New Law Apartment Houses, four families on a floor. 4 and 5 rooms and bath, steam and hot water; all improvements. Rents $19 to $28. Inquire of Janitor on premises or
NAIL & PARKER
AGENTS Telephone 417 Harlem
23 W.133rd St.
JUST OPENED
26-28 West
Two 5-story Double Plats
heat and hot water; open plum
RENT
14 WEST 133rd STREET
5 rooms and bath, hot w
$20 and $22.
163 and 165 WEST 133rd ST
6 rooms and bath, hot
Apply to JANITOR on p
NAIL & PA
25 W. 133rd Street
28 West 132nd Street
very Double Plats, with 7 and 8 rooms and
water; open plumbing.
RENTS $34 TO $39
3rd STREET
and bath, hot water; beautiful bay wi
$22.
WEST 133rd STREET
and bath, hot water. Rents $20 and $2
to JANITOR on premises, or
AIL & PARKER, Agent
street Telepho
Two 5-story Double Plats, with 7 and 8 rooms and bath, steam heat and hot water; open plumbing.
14 WEST 133rd STREET
5 rooms and bath, hot water; beautiful bay windows. Rents
$20 and $22.
163 and 165 WEST 133rd STREET
6 rooms and bath, hot water. Rents $20 and $23.
Apply to JANITOR on premises, or
NAIL & PARKER, Agents
25 W. 133rd Street Telephone 417 Harlem
JUST OPENED
235 West 133rd Street
Eight rooms and bath;
provements. Rents, $2
JUS
24 West 132nd Street
Beautiful house in selec
heat, hot water and all
Rents $26 to $30.
33rd Street
rooms and bath; halls heated, all private
ents. Rents, $29 to $32.
JUST OPENED
32nd Street, bet. Lenox and 5th
al house in select block—only one of its
bet water and all improvements. To selec
26 to $30.
235 West 133rd Street
Eight rooms and bath; halls heated, all private rooms; improvements. Rents, $29 to $32.
JUST OPENED
24 West 132nd Street, bet. Lenox and 5th Aves.
Beautiful house in select block—only one of its kind—steam heat, hot water and all improvements. To select tenants only. Rents $26 to $30.
JAMES A. JACKSON
5th Street New
OFFICE OF
HILIP A. PAYTON, JR., COMPAN
122 West 135th Street
PHILIP A. PAY
TO LET
140, 142 WEST 133rd STREET
6 large, light rooms and b
58 WEST 133rd STREET
4 rooms and bath, hot wa
55 and 59 WEST 98th STREET
6 large, light rooms and b
Rents $33 to $36
ST 133rd STREET
right rooms and bath, hot water supply. $2
rd STREET
bad bath, hot water supply $19
ST 98th STREET
right rooms and bath, hot water supply.
to $26.
80th STREET
bad bath, hot water supply, steam heat.
140, 142 WEST 133rd STREET
6 large, light rooms and bath, hot water supply. $23 and $24.
58 WEST 133rd STREET
4 rooms and bath, hot water supply $19
55 and 59 WEST 98th STREET
6 large, light rooms and bath, hot water supply.
Rents $23 to $26.
53-55 EAST 130th STREET
4 rooms and bath, hot water supply, steam heat. $21.
Philip A. Payton, Jr., Company
One Month's Rent Free
901 Grant Ave., near 161 Street Most beautiful house ever opened to colored tenants. 4 and and 5 rooms and bath, steam heat, up-to-date with every modern improvement Not far from subway Rent $19 to $25
New York City
d Street
8 rooms and bath, steam
$39
ful bay windows. Rents
s $20 and $23.
R, Agents
Telephone 417 Harlem
all private rooms; im-
x and 5th Aves.
one of its kind—steam
s. To select tenants only.
COMPANY
GET
r supply. $23 and $24.
19
ter supply.
cam heat. $21.
Company
ent Free
to colored tenants. 4 and
at. up-to-date with every
subway Rent $19 to $25
New York City
New York City
Grand Commandery Receives High
Officers of Knights Templar at
Washington — Society Doings —
Other News.
Regular Correspondence of The Acn.
Washington, D. C., Jan 14 —Agreeable to established custom, grand commander, officers and fraters of the Grand Commandery, courteously and fraternally received the most worshipful grand master and officers of the Grand Lodge, the most eminent grand high priest and the officers of the Grand Chapter, and the eminent commanders and sir knights of the five subordinate commanderies of Knights Templar during the early part of the month
The officers of the Grand Commandery are Rt Eminent Sir John P Turner, grand commander, Very Eminent Sir John P Davis, deputy grand commander, Eminent Sir William W Walker, grand generalissoo. Eminent-Sir Prunus H Simmons, grand captain general, Rev Eminent Sir William H Severson, grand prelate, Eminent Sir Sihas S. Thompson, grand senior warden, Eminent Sir Brooks Burr, grand treasurer, Eminent Sir James O Bampfield, grand recorder, Eminent Sir Herbert Lamaster grand warden, Eminent Sir Nelson F. Weatherless, grand inspector general, Eminent Sir George W Simmons, grand standard bearer, Eminent Sir Humphrey P Jackson, grand sword bearer, Eminent Sir Solomon Phillips, grand guard
The order of receiving was as fol-
lows Simon Cameron, No. 1, Em-
ment Sir Peter Walker eminent com-
mander Henderson Commandery, No.
2, Emment Sir Virton J. Gaskins, eminent com-
mander Gettisheme Commandery No. 3, Emment Sir Daniel I Ren-
fro eminent commander Mr. Campbell,
No. 4, Emment Sir John J. Schubert, eminent com-
mander Ivan Campbell, No. 5, Emment Sir Walker I. Williams eminent com-
mandery.
Vice President were Past Rt
Reinhold G. Newman, Commander
H Wrayton, George S. Newman, John N
Dester R. Barkey, John G. Varnay,
Nathan R. Johnson and William G. Smith,
Dearman Commander Charles D. Drexel,
Post Deputy Commander
Richard Gates, Post Grand Commander
W H Moline, Post Grand
General William R. Gries, Post Grand
Recorder George W. Wester Post
Commander John L. Wester and Andrew
W Sears, Post Grand Senior
Wardle John H. Days, Post Knights R.
H. Lerardidge of the Municipal
Court W L. Vernon register U S
Treasury, Ralph W. Deler and for the
navy Department David L. Fisher,
Arthur J. Smith, Charles E. Bags Wm
H Anderson, John L. Smith, J. O
Miner, Charles H. Young Senior Bush
Dr. J. M. MacDutta, L. Lankford
Alexander Walker, Robert L. Pendleton,
James P. Payne William Simons,
Henry J. Days, John W. Mitchell
Thomas M. Dent, and J. Lomax
Migration from Baltimore consisted of
Grand Master of Maryland Thomas J.
Johns, Robert Doughtys, grand high
prince; William Fletcher, deputy grand
master. Noble L. rBooks of Bryn Mawr
also attended.
A report of the Board of Education of Washington have been somewhat delayed in their issuance. The report for 1907-1908 has one toog press, however, and will appear this month containing many interesting suggestions and comments.
"Teh School Teacher" for January contains an article by Principal, Francis L. Cardozo of this city and another by Dr A E Wunship of Boston. Other articles appear well written by G D Houston of Baltimore on "The Part of Every Teacher in the Teaching of English," an article by George M. Myers, principal of the McKenzie Manuscript Training School, on "Problems of Correction," and an article by Miss Charlotte E. Hunter of the kindergarten department on "Certain Phases of Kindergarten Problems." The magazine is well taken in Washington and the East
The banquet which is to be given next month by the junior class of the Howard University Law School will be in the hands of the following committee Edward H Lawson, chairman, O C Granady, B M Montgomery, Horace G Anderson and Arthur J Turner. The service will be Martins'.
In the general preparation for the meeting of the N M A in Washington next August the scientific side continues to hold the greatest interest. The various candidates for the presidency of the association continue to be friendly, and may be overtopped by the full justice which is to be given to scientific and social matters. We recently addressed the meeting of the Teachers' Association held in Frankfurt, Ky. He spoke on the theme Moral Education.
Mrs. Patty Washington Pittman is receiving rapidly from the effects of the severe scars about the face she received on New Years Day. She has been attended by Dr. Wallis W. Jones of Dewey Heights.
Mississippi Mathews and Eva R. Reeves from compiling society notes for a Washington newspaper recently Chester A. Carpenter likewise has taken up the quail. Miss Claima A. Stewart is teaching in Appalachia Mol. He has instated on good authority the name of the next presidential appointment, coloring colored men will be that of Fletcher Fiction of Newark, N. J., to the office of chaplain in the United States.
Gollum, who was recently ap-
position of fourth grade
the training school at Magna-
ruing in connection with Normal
was until a few days ago
at the third Grade Educational
one of the divisions of the
books. At the last meeting he
stated with a magnificent wallet
in instruction in gold letters
members of the Circle are
Matthew Cromwell, Le-
lva a Wilson Louise Cor-
Wallace M. Williamson,
Broadway Castle Jackson
Lighthouse Castle Grundy,
F. A. Gollum, all of the
ten graded as excellent
followed as elated over the
making the recent installation
of system of collections in
Mr. Ollie Macdonald, as
the church, is in charge of
of the envelopes to a
a
Society at the national capital turned out in full force to participate in the function given by the Interdenominational Bible College at the residence of Mr and Mrs J. W. Hall, on Vermont avenue, last Sunday afternoon The sacred musicule was voted a grand success, and the members of the Aeolian Mandolin Club—Dr. W. P. Napper, the Misses Mamie Williams, Sallie Fisher, Davidge and Mr J Edward Wilson—have seldom played to a more appreciative audience Mrs Eva eBll Height, directes of music, Bible College, presided at the piano Mme Johnson of Montclair, N. J., appeared at her best in a selection attshowed the range, pitch and melody of her voice
Mr. Lawson spoke of the missionary spirit of completed Catherine Ferguson to establish the first Sunday School in New York for children of both races, and urged that liberal contributions he given to the fund for the establishment of the Catherine Ferguson Memorial Hall in this city in the School of Applies Christianity, Bible College
Prof Kelly Miller showed the feasibility of such an institution as the Bible College in reaching the great masses of the colored people in the work of moral and social uplift
The committee in charge of the affair consisted of Mrs Mollie B Hall, Mrs Ella B Walker, Mrs Emma R Dorsey, Mrs Bertie Churchwell, Mrs Jennie B Browne, Mrs Anne M Gordon, I Edward Wilson, James L. Neill and Prof Jesse Lawson
Mrs Jennie B Browne and Mrs Anne M Gordon added materially to the entertainment by the artistic rendition of several restitutions
The W C L U', under the presidency of Mrs Josephine B Bruce, is taking on new life Mrs Rosetta B Lawson, national organizer met a company of ladies at the residence of Mrs M B Wood January 10 and organized a union with the following named others Mrs Maria B Wood, president Mrs L L Christian recording secretary Mrs Meryle Chiles corresponding secretary Mrs L N James treasurer Mrs L L Wilkes was president
Miss Imogen Wormley and Mrs C Williams are doing spherical work among the Young, People's Welfare. The St. Luke's of Washington DC received their many friends last summer to help them on the last day of Mrs Lizzie Sinclair for 11th street. N. W. Among the wonders of the museum, Bessie Van Ness in Minneapolis, West Side in New York, Lily L. Anderson in Minneapolis, M. M. Maggie R. Pemphrey and Helen M. McGregor in Larry L. England, Scott J. Haines in Raven Island, Margo R. C. Carter and Mr M. M. Porter. Lily was worn by the ladies as a home. Mrs Lizzie Sinclair presented the gifts.
The music was languidly furnished by Mr. I. J. Phillips, piano, Miss Garner, violin, Mrs. Knight, piano and Mr. W. Colin Chase, Jr. correct Among some of the callers were Prof J T Laston, Hon W T Vernon, the Amphion Glee Club, Dr Morse, Curtis, Gray, Messrs Taylor, Lankford, Edwards, Carter, Mr and Mrs, Lee, Mr and Mrs Buckner, Miss Mitchell, Mrs P Pope and others.
Refreshments were served in the spacious dining room by a committee Solos by Prof Laston and Miss B Mason
FRENEZER LITERARY SOCIETY
Emancipation Address in Boston—
Personalis.
Regular Correspondence of THE AOR.
Boston, Mass. Jan. 12. In an
address before the Ebenezer literary
Monday night of last week on "The
Meaning of the Emancipation Proclamation of 1861" Monzo J. Bowling,
a student at Harvard and a pro-
gree of Colonel Thomas Wentworth Higginson, said that in the philosophy of
loyalty no one principle perhaps
stands out more prominently and
conspicuously than that of loyalty to
race. "The world loves a man who
respects himself he said. The eter-
nal movements the dynamic forces in
the universal history of civilization
favor, and lend effective aid to the
individual race or nation that shows
the rare common sense, the wisdom,
the race pride, the strength to present
a united effort, a solid front in the
struggle for existence."
Another large wedding is scheduled to come off at the Hub at an early date. Miss Ray Louise Swaby will be married to Dr. Emmanuel Wright at the new 12th Street Baptist Church Wednesday February 20. Miss Swaby is a native of Spur Tree Manchester Jamaica, is a graduate of Bethlehem College of St. Elizabeth and for six years was principal at a school in Manchester. Wright is a successful dentist at the Hub. He was graduated from Fair Old College, Manchester Jamaica, of which he is a native was graduated from Howard University Dental School Washington D.C. He has practiced dentistry here four years. He is secretary of the Bay State Medical Dental and Pharmaceutical Association and is secretary of the dental section of the National Medical Association.
Dr Benjamin I. Robinson is home from his Southern trip. He says he had the time of his life, and that the Southern folk are not making much fuss, but doing things. He visited Raleigh, Richmond and New York.
Mrs T W Henderson who has been arrested is unruly
been inquisition. He the revival meeting at Charles St Church is going on and is being well attended. Rev W H Williams of Lynn is assisting in the work. I P Tucker to source of Charles Street Church has returned from a two weeks visit to relatives and friends at his old home in Wilmington, N.C. The recital given by Charles Street Sunday School Sunday afternoon under the direction of W H Bright was largely attended. Lysengustic services are in progress at Calvary Baptist Church of which Rev S J Comfort is pastor. The Calvary people are preparing for a mid winter fun to be given at an early date. Dr John B Hall will address the Ebenezer Literary Monday night on "The Emmettian Movement" The funeral of Miss Martheline Stephens was held from the Ebenezer Bap
Our Church Sunday afternoon Rev. C. A. Ward officiating. The funeral was in charge of Samuel H. Perkins.
John Sneath of 12 Camden street is ill with pneumonia
Miss Daisy Jones, who has been very ill at her home at 72 Kindall street since last October, is able to go out again.
Miss Jones is one of Boston's popular young ladies and is well known in New York as well as here
Miss Ruth Battey left here Friday for Augusta, Ga. She will resume her work as a teacher in the public school Monday
Little Uva Ruddick, 41 South Russell street, the kidnapped boy, has not been found as yet
Wm T Bell, 29 Dundee street, received a telegram last week stating the sad death of his uncle. Peyton Burroughs of altimore, who was killed in a railroad accident
Wm S. Moore, 000 Huntington ave. nue, went to work at his new position as a messenger for the Old Colony Trust Company on January 0
Mr Charles Bray, 665 Shawmut avenue, who has been continued to his home for several days, is able to be out. He resumed his position this week
Mrs Helen Armstrong, 53 Hammond street, who has been quite ill for several weeks, is improving
Ambrose Johnson, 37 Greenwich street, entertained a few of his friends last week. There were games and music. Among those present were Mr and Mrs Ray, Mr and Mrs P Rollins, Messrs Chas J Harris and R Murray Johnson, Mrs Mahoney and daughter
A sumptuous supper was served by the host
TRAINING YOUTHEFUL PRISONERS
Business Men of Greenhaven Discuss
Up Infants of Reform Schools
Special to THE NEW YORK AGN
Greenbore, N. C. Jan 11. The Negro Business League of Greenbore, in der direction of Attorney to H Mitchell hold a successful mass meeting in the chapel of the A and M College last week in the interest of the Laulk Retinatory School. Mr Mitchell on opening the meeting planned that the school had been not ported by the last Attorney, and the first was being made. He is in President Dittie, and the meeting is intended to be held on the Lawn.
Short addresses were made by Prof. and Mrs. A J Griffin of High Point, Dr G V Gerran, Mrs B Dudley, Rev S S Sever and others. President Dudley made an appeal to persons present for subscriptions to the school and received in response subscriptions to the amount of about $400. The program was interpersed by close selections of solos rendered in a most charming manner by the Misses Uma Moore and Fannie Gulner, both of this city. After the mass meeting quite a number present withdrew from the chapel and reported to the A and M College dining room where an excellent repast amed tastes, decorations was spread. President J B Dudley was designated as toast master, and tastes were collector and responded to by Prof. B H Elford Key R J W Walker Mosey J A Akins and Smith Donnell All voted the evening a very pleasant and successful and retired with much praise for the Negro Business League of Greensboro.
MER CAMPBELL DEAD
Well-Known Young Educator Succ
Educator/Cubiculato-
Funeral Last Saturday
Special to THE NEW YORK AGE
St Louis Ms. Jan 11 Over one thousand persons attended the funeral of the late Prot Eleanor C Campbell, a professor of chemistry at Summer High School who died at his home, 3300 Arsenal street at his home, an attack of tuberculosis.
Funeral services were held last Saturday morning from Al Saints Episcopal Church, and were conducted by the Rev Luther M C Mason in the Chapel at Lorem Epist Church the tempter's home. Al Saints Church the Luther Teacher Mts. at tempter of Jesus Lover M. Soul.
The other funeraries were David J. Gordon principal of Overture School Edward S. Wollams principal of Bannerke School Andrew J. Gossin and William H. Hoffman teachers at Summer High School.
The chancel of the church was filled with floral tributes from friends and pupils. The remains were interred in Greenwood Cemetery.
Prof. Elmer C. Campbell was one of the most popular school teachers in St Louis. Although but thirty-four years old he enjoyed the reputation of being one of the most Negro educators in the country. He was educated in the elementary schools of St. Louis. Vah native home and at Howard University, Washington D.C. He took post graduate courses at the University of Wisconsin, University of Illinois and University of Chicago. Last fall Prof. Campbell contracted a severe cold while coaching the Summer High School football team, and an attack of tuberculosis was. He is survived by widow Mrs Elizabeth Campbell and a son, Elmer C. Campbell Jr.
Personals of Poughkeepsie
Poughkeepsie NY Jun 12 - Messes
G C West and James E Dewitt,
formerly of the Morgan House, are both
engaged at the German Tavern on
Union street, run by A Axman
Oritz.
Quite a number of Apokeepsians are
on the sick the ladies room.
Robert Rose, a resident of this city, died on January 11, and was buried from the Selfridge Undertaking Rooms, on South Hamilton street. The services were largely attended on January 10. Intruding the Rural Cemetery. Mrs W. M. Jackson, who spent the holidays visiting her parents at Peekskill, N. Y., has returned home.
Mrs. Imogene Green of New York City, who has been the guest of her sister, Mrs. Jas. Deyo of East Mansion street, has returned home.
Irving E. Sanders of Mill Brock, N. Y. Dutchess County, who died suddenly on December 31, was buried on January 3 at Milbrouck, N. Y. My Sanders was a member of Rose Leaf Lodge, No 3530. There was a large number of the society attending the funeral service. The pallbearers were J. K Lewis, John Miller, James Tunison and C J Lawrence.
The annual reception of the Poughkeepsie Lodge, No 17, K of P, at Karchner Hall, will be on January 20.
Mrs T. Storts is on the sick list.
SARACUSE EMANCIPATION DAY.
Fine Program Presented—Colored Grocer Sells Church Mortgage—Social Functions.
The Emancipation celebration held by the People's Business and Cooperative Union, Thursday night, January 6, did not create the degree of enthusiasm and interest which many believe that the natal day of the manhood of our race should have done. We believe in living in the present and planning for the future, but that also it is largely from the history of the tragic past of the race that we gather inspiration and courage to push forward. A tableau, true to the past and present and illustrative of the future advancement of the race, was given by Miss Mabel Owens, reading of the Emancipation Proclamation was in unusually fine manner. Miss Mrs. Easley sang two beautiful songs.
Miss Lily was awarded the gold
military award by the management
of the most popular young lady in
World was received here Monday of
death of William Writers a hero
will known citizen of this city
Albany N. Y. Sunday, June 2
W. W. and Miss Mary Free
the city and her death to
the one war great N.
Miss Susan Wright went to Albany to attend the funeral. She attended the funeral, in New York on Tuesday. While in New York on Tuesday, while in New York against the A.M.F. Zion Club, other parties. Mr. Frazier who is in the grocery business at Albany has held this mortgage for nearly nine years, and although he has never forced payment upon it and has been very considerate in the matter, considerable all feeling and abuse of Mr. Frazier has arisen from the transaction, seemingly from no other cause than that Mr. Frazier is a Negro himself, and "to better than any of the rest of us," and he can wait for his money.
Captain Sanford was the guest of honor at a dinner given by F. E. Persett at Utica, N.Y. on December 29, the occasion being his birthday. A nine course dinner was served, after which the occasion was enlivened by "speechmaking."
The installation of the newly elected officers of Charles Summer Lodge No. 10 K of P, took place Monday night, January 10. The officers installed were J. A Sanford, C. C. W H Davis V C, O. Shields M. F. G Robbins M F. A. Burr. K of R Sims Davis, M W. Alex Alexander L. Ed Johnson O G Geo Bennett Lesse Perkins and Frank Wine trustees.
Mrs. William Madison of Harrisburg P has been the guest of her sister Mrs. S Glenn of 410 East Washington street, during the holiday Mrs. Madison left Friday for her home in Harrisburg P.
Mrs. Thursday Mrs. Oscar Shields, this Lost Petite street, gave a luncheon in honor of Mrs. William Madison. The party included Mrs. William Wooding, Mrs. S Glenn, Mrs. Lucius Robinson, Mrs. F Bowls, Mrs. Mabel Verner and Miss Harriet Keyes.
Miss Imanita Bowen a student at
St. Francis University, has returned
from Rotterdam for the last
week to her mother. Mrs John
Bowen for two weeks
Cifford Hall the little son of Mr. M. Rav Hall 722 East Wash-
ington street, as quarantined in from
night attack of the scarlet fever.
Epistle Commandery, No. 11, K.
I will give their second annual full
reception at Freeman's Hall
February 3.
---
Lites Lodge Install
N Y Jan 12-At Damon
Lodge N, 6, K of P, last Tuesday
evening the following officers were installed by Deputy Charles Washington
assisted by Deputy at Large F P Persett C C Chas W H Lloyd V P
Kohlans M W, Chas Thomas
Pulitzer R J Strother, M E F, Rav
Lovel R of R S Edmond Edmond
S M F L P Persett, I G, Lee
Dala O G, John Johnson M A
Relt Sherman, ground lodge representat
ace F P Persett alternate, Edmond
Edmondson, trustee 18 months Charles
King
Res Charles W H Lloyd, has opened an office as notary public, em
ploment and insurance agent at 26
Katherine street
Hiram Lodge, No. 18, A and P M hold their annual installation of officers at their hall Thursday evening District Deputy W. H Howard, assisted by Past District Deputy R C Anderson installed the following officers. F M Theo Pell, S W Leroy Anderson M Theo Jell, S W Wright S D H Moses Moss, S D Sanford Fletcher, S Sec W R Jackson, Treas, J W Carter, Tyler, John T Titus, Chaplain, A W Schuyler, S M C, William Lippin, M J C, Fred Jackson; trustees, C W H Lloyd, R C Anderson and Robt J Strother
---
Knowledge of the Future is Power for the Present Know Your Future
And Guide Yourself Accordingly You Can Do So By Consulting New York's Greatest Clairvoyant
h
PROF. A. C. RICE
215 W. 45th Street
(3 doors W of Victor Theatre)
May Be Consulted Daily on All Affairs of Life
If affairs of the heart or emotions of love interest you he gives exact and truthful information of all your affairs, settles lovers quarrels, quarrels of all kinds, and affection of any one you desire, causes speedy and happy marriages tells if the one you love is true date of marriage, and shows if the one you love is true love and disbanded. If lovers give you the final word how to control, love and form the one you love, make a promise to distance think of you.
Concerning Business Affairs
If you have dates, fees and figures related to important information and information related to loans contracted with trust companies, damages with deals, mortgage information and other financial details, timely proof of the success of failure of new loans, proof of the success of previous loans, proof of whether you are satisfied with payments. If you can be be assured that you would follow to be assured that you would follow to be assured that if you intend to make any when you intend to make any business, business or property, you should not fail to consent Mr. White. If you may be the boss of saving your liabilities of debts and a great deal of trouble.
IT'S NOT WHAT HE HAS DONE
FOR OTHERS. BUT WHAT
HE WILL DO FOR YOU.
INVESTMENTS
There is no question on which he is comfortable. He wants to consider well the person who wants to consider well the enterprise before he embarks or invests in it. The investigation is given to questions of such nature that there is no person in this line who is better suited to invest your money than Mr. Rice. He is ever ready to help and advise those who should invest your money and find a safe and good paying investment.
This he can do and asks no until the investment pass a handsome profit. Has this not been on the face of it? $1.00 READINGS
If you are in trouble or your future is uncertain, he can help him and perhaps it would be too much.
IN CONFIDENCE
There is absolutely no accurate method whether I can keep the full list of tacit things that have been accounted for, plotted and handled and brought around to brighten the sad hearts of many who have been fortunate enough to call on me simply because the nature of my power has been wonderful power has been accomplished such as winning the love of your heart's desire, or bringing about all manner of private affair's secret NATIRE that offer a valuable power has once gained your desire you naturally feel a hostility about even trust that your great friend, knowing that your great power but there have been many who, out of true gratitude and appreciation, themselves to lay his pride of secret in the confidence of happiness. While he holds all such information secret, which is stricter professional never revealing it to a live audience, he himself ends ending October, thus for him, let he receive no names or secrets only the bare facts.
The Sewing School and Kitchen Garden, with Mrs I. R. Scrippson as manager, assisted by Mrs M. J. Strother, joined Saturday for the New Year at 6 p.m in that newly decorated room. The attendance was good for a stormy day.
At the residence of Mr. and Mrs William Howard of Clinton, N. J. was held a family reunion in honor of Mrs Maria Vanderpool on New Year's night. This reunion consisted of four generations of the Robert Vanderpool family two daughters, Mrs Sarah Ross and Mrs William Howard, Miss Alice Johnson of Philadelphia, Pa. Mrs Mildred Parker, the great granddaughter Covers were had for ten to a six course dinner served by Mrs Howard, assisted by W. H. Green nephew of Mr Howard. The evening enjoyment consisted of music William Howard is chef at the Central W M C A of Utsa and is held in high esteem by all who know him. He spent New Year's evening and Sabbath at his home in Clinton.
The meeting at 10:30 a.m. and the Sunday School at 10:30 p.m were spiritual. At 7:30 p.m. St James I preschool Chor (white) entered from the Sunday School room, a professional ten in number, the pastor following. The church was crowded with white and colored. The pastor preached. Prayer was made by Rev C H Lloyd
WOULD YOU LIKE YOUR FACE LIGHTER COLORED FOR EVERY IMPORTANT OCCASION? YOUR SKIN CLEAR.SMOOTH.FINE? YOUR HAIR LONG.THIGK.DRESSY? YOUR PERSONALITY MORE ATTRACTIVE!
These samples and our information book and the private letters we will write to you will show you how to have all these improvements. We cannot overcome nature, but as far as your individual characteristics will permit we can make you prepossessive presentable and attractive. The editors of colored newspapers will tell you we are responsible. We are coming to mind more people than any business concern in this country. Our mission is not just to be a bearer that I do. Baker Washington, but in our way, we are trying to do for their benefit what he did for our endeavors.
WE WILL BE READ TO CORRESPOND WITHOUT CHANGE
WITH COLORED MEN AND COLORED WOMEN WHO
PRIDE IN THEIR PERSON, APPEARANCE AND WE
BEING THEM. WE BEEN THEM. WE BEEN THEM.
WE WILL BE READ TO CORRESPOND WITHOUT CHANGE
Between 1353th and 1363th St. New York City
Specializing in prescriptions only. Standard Drugs used.
jan 6.27 Call, write or phone 2433 Norringside
ADVERTISE IN THE AGE
A
I do hereby solemnly agree and guarantees to make you no charge if I fall casually you by name, you will tell you how to do it, you will tell you most desire, even though miles away; in fact, I will tell you every hope, fear or optimism better than you can tell yourself; you will tell you and whom you should marry and when; also tell you the names of your friends, enemies or rivals, and how to gain respect or favor to you; and wish to know is told you patiably and correctly to your perfect satisfaction. I have nothing to pay for satisfaction if I have money accepted in advance. You pay nothing until after the sitting.
When doubtful, discontented unhappy, consult SAINT GERMIAIM immediately. He has reduced his fee to 500. SAINT GERMIAIM advises in business, changes, awaltis, separations, wills, damages, mortgages, love, affection, marriage, divorce, in fact, everything SAINT GERMIAIM requires, speedy marriages restores lost感情, moves evil influences, teaches you how to fascinate or control anyone you desire, and cannot bring happiness and sunshine to it. I don't mistake name and number
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SAINT GERMAIN as a matter of 464 vertisement this week, will give his complete reading for 56c. Everything strictly sacred and confidential.
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67 WEST 38th ST TRFET
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56c. READINGS
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CUT THIS OUT—BRING THIS AD.
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SEND 10c FOR SAMPLE ANOTHER 10c FOR 2 SAMPLES
These samples and our information book and the process to have all these improvements. We cannot characterize will permit we can make you preparations of colored newspapers will tell you we are respect than any business concern in this country. Our masters Washington, but in our way we are doing for That Company could be a special people who have gone along better every way.
WE WILL BE GAD WITH COLORED ME PRIDE IN THE PERFORMANCE BEING SEND 20c FOR THE THREE THIS LITTLE EXPENDITURE WILL BEEN THE samples are received watch for the postman WRITE YOUR NAME AND STREET.
M. B. BERGER &
NOW Anderson's Apollo 517 LENOX Between 135th and 136th St.
Specializing in prescriptions on jan. 6. 2
Call, write or phone
ADVERTISE I
Plainfield, N. J.
The services at Calvary Baptist Church were largely attended both watch night and New Year's week of prayer Our revival began Tuesday night, January 4. Providence has been grateful to us through 1909, and we are beginning 1910 with strength and courage. Pastor and Mra. Bailey were recipients of a purse and many useful
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Your Fortune Told by Hand, Cards
and Crystal
If You Are Going to See a Clairvoyant
Why Not See the Best?
If you have already made a matsubara, throw away your money and lose confidence through dealing with much-advertised and self-published paints and clairvoyants and their shadows chap-trap methods, start from the beginning. They will tell you these wonderful mediums. They will tell you your conditions and when you may expect; if nothing can be done for you they will not take you to your next step. Has not this honesty on the face of you? We can tell you all this and more.
How can I have good luck?
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How can I make my home happy?
How can I conquer my enemies?
How can I throw the ball I choose?
How can I marry well?
How can I conquer my rival?
How can I make anyone love me?
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How can I remove bad influence
How can I control anyone?
How can I defend ones think of me?
How can I settle?
How can I hold my husband's love?
How can I keep my wife's love?
We tell all and never ask questions.
No charge if not satisfied when reading over. You be the judge.
We do hereby solennly agree and guarantee to make no charge if tell me, or your most names of your friends, enemies or rivals promise to tell you whether your business wife or sweetheart is true or false; tell you how to get the love of the one you most desire even though miles away; how to succeed in specializations; lawsuits; how to marry the one you want; how to regain your health and vitality; remove all evil influences Diploms hang in Parlors.
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nov 4
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208 East 171b Street
Near 3rd Avenue NEW YORK
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A. PRIMROSE, Prop.
jan 6-tf
403 W. 55th Street
presents for Christmas. The pastor's brother, Rev. R. H Bailey, preached Sunday, December 28.
The Christmas tree and exercises were held Wednesday, December 29. Our church was comfortably filled and presents were distributed to friends as well as to our school in general. Mrs. George Miller and Mrs. Mary Booker had charge of the program.
Published on Thursday of every week by THE NEW YORK ACE Publishing Company, Fred R. Moore, President Jerome B. Peterson, Secretary-Treasurer. Address of the corporation and its officers, 247 W. 40th street, New York.
Address all letters and make all checks and money orders payable to THE NEW YORK ACE Publishing Company.
IS IT AMERICAN?
The American Constitution follows the American flag. American prejudice follows the American flag, and prejudice is followed by disintegration, race suicide and political failure, if the southern section of these United States may speak. The race riot in Havana last week over the American hotel's refusal to serve Negro Congressmen—and in which the Negroes won a complete victory—is only the skirmish to the great battle which North American race oppression will wage with South American race freedom. The control and influence of the United States in South America politically, commercially and socially will hinge upon the issue of the impending struggle. Our country might as well face the music and while in Rome do as Romans do or leave Rome to do her own sweet will
There is thus put up to America this crucial question. Those who have an eye single for her future well-being in the mixed republics to the south must realize that her anti-Negro sentiments cannot there prevalent unless their population is either exterminated or forcefully annexed. Americans, not only Government officials, but traders and tourists as well, must realize that Cuban freedom and South American freedom were bought at the price of Negro blood, not only in the rank and file of the majority of armies, but in their doggedly persistent and most able officers Americans must be made to realize that those Negroes and mulattoes, now at least one-half of the population, have furnished many of their leading statesmen and business men. Americans must be made to realize that by any discriminating commercial or political party they are breeding trainy and resourceful hostile men of the type of Del Gado, whose hostility, in a revolutionary Spanish population, will be fatal not only to American trade interests but eternal rancors in the vessels of American peace.
It is for America and Americans to make of Cubans, white and black friends or foes. They may either pursue a democratic policy which will mean Cuban development, or they may pursue their undemocratic policy, which will promote dissension and leave Cuba devastated and undeveloped.
May we not hope that Christian America will fulfil her mission and seize her opportunity even at her own commercial advantage and lead South Americans into the ways of progress and prosperity? Even as in the abolition of slavery, may we not expect democratic America to follow some day the lead of the less enlightened nations and treat men according to their merit and not according to their color? Is it inherently and eternally American to dam a man because he is black. Then success will not attend her ways in Cuba, Central and South America.
THE FIGHT ON VARDAMAN.
The Mississippi Legislature after several ballots is still deadlocked over the attempt to elect—Governor James K. Vardaman to the United States Senate. Few political Southern incidents in recent years have so claimed the attention of the country. Few have been so noteworthy. The South has been rapidly ridding herself of her fire-eating wavers of the bloody shirt and her Negro-hating platform performers. Her Governors chairs have been divested of their Hoke Smiths and her Jeff Davies and in their stead have been seated men like "Citizen Joe" Brown, in Georgia, and Governor Noel, of Mississippi. The one-eyed monster of South Carolina has been subdued by broken health and the Roosevelt exposure. Senator Carmack, of Tennessee, aviomit of his own methods, has passed to his final judgment. The stubborn fight which the determined minority of Mississippi conservatives is waging against its spectacular demagogue's ambitions is laudable and encouraging.
Like every other Southern demagogue Vardaman's public professions do not square with his acts and private life. And it has been their public professions which have harried the South at times into little less than a howling wilderness. Vardaman, too, knows his "good Negroes" and as Governor did many acts worthy of rejection. He abolished the corrupt lead system and he splendidly improved the Alcorn A. & M. College for Negroes. During his term of four years as Governor there were fewer
Negro liberals must make sure other four years in the State's history. He personally led the militia in all such outbreaks and directed the State soldiers to uphold at all hazards the law and their oaths.
Despite this splendid record Vardaman is a dangerous demagogue. The race question is his hobby. He is a Southern punish politician. He says the Negro is inherently and permanently inferior. He advocates the modification of the Fourteenth Amendment and the repeal of the Fifteenth Amendment.
All friends of good government and of political progress must congratulate the opponents of Vardaman on their splendid opposition. His election would be another political calamity to the South and an irrepressible disgrace to the nation.
DIRECTOR DURAND'S SERVICE
Census Director Durand* by his latest order directing Southern census supervisors to appoint Negro enumerators to take the census of the Negro population has rendered the race a double service. First of all he is assuring the race a fair count, something which it has never had. Secondly, he is giving rightful employment to Negroes, something which they have not had in adequate proportion in former census takings and something which we feared they were not to have in any measure this time.
Deplorable as it is that conditions make it seem necessary to the Government to recognize the color line, the order is both practical and political. By directing that there shall be Negro numerators in those districts where the Negro population is two-fifths or more of the total, due to the fact that the Negroes in the cities and country districts are congregated, there will be Negro numerators for nearly the entire black population. By ordering that Negroes shall not enumerate white families, the occasion for race friction has been avoided. That in some districts there will be thus both a white and black numerator and a double expense incurred was inevitable Director Durand richly argues that as Southern boards of education employ Negroes to take the school census there can be no logical reason to the Government employing Negro numerator. With equal trust and positive Director Durand and President Leftew were appended to in vain. The settlers, including Congressman Hardwick and Bartlett of Georgia, who would suppress the truth concerning the Negroes numbers and progress. In that only competent Negroes will be appointed, a task devolves upon Tuskegee and Hampton and Atlanta University and other Negro institutions whose prerogative it is to promote Negro progress, to present and secure honest and capable colored men.
It is regrettable, we cannot omit to say, that the Government should deem it wise that no Negro supervisors should have been appointed, that colored enumerators should be appointed on this strictly color basis. But Director Durand has thus redeemed a situation which otherwise seemed hopeless and discouraging. The Negro in the census of 1910 will probably have a full and fair estimate of his wealth and numbers revealed to the world. More than that he does not want. Less than that he should not have
PHILLIS WHEATLEY
Phillis Wheatley filled a great and unique place in the history of the Negro race. As say Mr. and Mrs R. R. Wright, the editors and publishers of the neat and attractive little edition just issued of her poems, she proved conclusively so early as the Revolutionary War the capacity of the Negro for the highest culture
So apt was she in literature and Latin, she wrote verses of such unusual merit and such remarkable English that she astonished New Englanders and attracted the attention of their leading men. I test there be any question afterwards concerning the identity of the author eighteen of the foremost men of her day and section, including Governor Thomas Hutchinson, Leutenant-Governor Andrew Oliver, Harrison Gray, James Bowdow and John Hancock, write a memorial to the public attesting the fact of her authorship. She debated a poem to George Washington, which pleased the General highly, who out of modesty refused to publish Her poems, the editors say, composed the second volume of Abbie Joseph Le Valle's book, "The Negro Equalled by Few Europeans," published in 1801. Brought to this country at the age of seven or eight years, at the age of fifteen, in 1770, she wrote a poem in memory of George Whitfield Phillis Wheatley taught the Americans of her time that the Negro race, too, has genius. Their conclusion that followed from many such other concrete evidences was that the Negro is just like other men. That Puritanic liberty-loving New England should have later led in the fight for the freedom of the Negro was inevitable.
The editors of the new edition in again calling attention to Phillis Wheatley and in preserving her works have rendered a service. The edition is one of the best pieces of mechanical work that has come from a Negro publishing house in a long time. The volume is gotten out by the A. M. E. Book Concern in Philadelphia Phillis Wheatley should be a household work among Negroes.
PROPERTY, IN PUBLIC AFFAIRS
The standard of public affairs of the public men in New York with but few exceptions is far below what it should be. With but these few exceptions, the Negroes who have in charge the movements and efforts of public interest have as their end and aim personal and selfish advancement. The Negro politician first of all seeks to turn every meeting and every movement, whether historic, philanthropic or purely racial to political and commercial account. The Negro preacher—and here we include men of the cloth high in their church—dabbles in politics to the detriment of their own profession and to the hurt of their own standing with their people. No great call to purify government is needed to bring them down to the street corner of the hurly-burly political game. The reform of tenement house and slum conditions, the waste of public money and official corruption are not the calls which they heed with an eye single to the public and the race's good. They with their fellows will not permit the race's best men to lead and represent the race on such occasions. They thwart the efforts of good men.
To their shame be it said they enter any and every movement where petty graft seems opportune.
We single out these two classes of our public men because their offences are most flagrant and frequent. We need not point out the occasions. We need not specify the individuals. Neither need we tell of the hurt to the race which their nefarious motives have worked. This petty, putrid public performance was in evidence at the reception of the Tenth Cavalry last summer. They repeated this disgraceful procedure at the Hudson-Fulton Celebration. They attempted their same grafting game during the recent election when the forces of good government were waging war against those of vice and corruption
We are content to day to call attention to this lack of probus in many of our public men. We shall later advocate methods for a reform which is an indeed urgent. Since it now to say that the Negro public of New York should make to the Low standard of these self-pointed leaders. There should be a better awakening at this opportunity. These leaders should be released permanently to the rest. Instead the Negroes of New York should honor with designate and follow worthy leaders.
JUDGE TERREL REAPPOINTED,
Judge Robert H Terrell, appointed by President Roosevelt as a Justice of the Peace in Washington, D.C., and promoted to a judgeship of a district municipal court last February, has just been reappointed by President Taft for a term of four years.
Judge Terrell was confirmed by the Senate on Tuesday, January 11.
His reappointment testifies to the wrath of his promotion Possessing in an eminent degree judicial poise, fairness and firmness, strange as it may seem, Judge Terrell has been frequently called the most popular municipal judge in the district A graduate of Harvard in the class of 1884, Judge Terrell has ever since been a conscientious student of the law Through hard work and strict performance of duty, he has forced his way onward and upward We congratulate the Judge upon his reappointment.
A FULFILLED NEED?
We are informed that efforts are now making among experienced Negro hotel men of this city for a large and respectable colored hotel. Whether these efforts will remain nothing more than hope and prospects we can not say. With all other Negroes who appreciate the hotel situation for Negroes, not only in New York, but as well in Boston, Philadelphia and nearly every other large city we can hope that these efforts will materialize. Especially urgent is the need and especially good is the opportunity for a first class colored hostelry in New York. If there should be established, let us say on Fifty-second street, convenient to all colored communities, to the railroad and railway facilities, and to the theatre and shopping districts, a clean and commodious hotel, such an establishment would be not only a service to the race, but should be highly profitable as well.
A hardly realized large number of Negroes are constantly coming to and through New York. They are lost on their arrival for places of accommodation. There are a hundred thousand Negroes in Greater New York who do their shopping and attend the theatres who are likewise lost for places of first-class restaurant accommodations. The same conditions obtain in the other large cities. There is here both an opportunity and a service for men of experience and means. We sincerely trust that such men will rise to the occasion
EDITORIAL AFTERTHOUGHTS.
Secretary Knox's plan for preserving the open door and neutrality in Manchuria has got all Europe and
The prohibition law passed by the last Tennessee legislature went into effect on midnight, January 1, and on January 3 Tennessee was as dry as a bone. But Southern Bourbons have had their hospitality for countless ages and the leopard doesn't change his spots overnight.
O when, yes, oh when will our strenuous Teddy come?
He's gone to hunt the jungle with his little megaphone.
But it's deep in our heart that we wish him safe at home.
Havana Negroes following up their victory over the American hotel have ever since been flocking to the hotel bar in droves. Wise men heap coals of fire on the heads of their enemies and then rub them in by swallowing their wrath and turning the right cheek when smitten on the left
---
Cairo, Illinois, has posted another one thousand dollar reward for information as to the murderer of Anna Pelty. Not that they say that Troggy James, the Negro burned at the stake, did not commit the murder. Oh, no but just to make assurance doubly sure. Isn't this the limit of infernal modesty?
In addition to the large hole made in the Republican balloon by the open split of the insurgents in Congress another nasty rent has been made by the discharge of Gifford Pinchot, the man who knows more than any other about American forests. Now we have no doubt that the administration will patch up all these matters before 1912, but let us suggest that a stitch in time saves nine.
On the ground that New York is seeking to enforce class legislation in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment in that the State is discriminating between white and Negro Elks, the latter declare that their case will be taken to the highest court of the land if necessary. The Elks even in this matter, which seems to us sober judgment, are certainly high rollers.
Those cultured colored folks of Boston just turned around last Tuesday and gave it to Mayor George H. Hilbard in the neck for refusing to give them any consideration whatsoever in the way of appointments. Now when the Negroes of Boston get so politically wise the Grand Old Party would do well to get something through their heads.
Cella Parker Woolley Strongly Disapprove.
To the Editor of The New York Age:
If any change is made I prefer New York Age, but I like the present name much better than the other changes in the paper. If you wish to indicate in the title the especial purpose of the paper, why not have a subtitle—something like this
THE NEW YORK AGE
Devoted to the author of the American Negro
CELIA PARKER WOLLEY.
Nashville Globe Editor Says No
To the Editor of The New York Age
Your letter of December 20 has been
opened. I have not been able to answer until now.
You ask me for an opinion on the
word Negro, whether or not the same
approach may or not be applied as
a rule. My answer is NO. I have
not as yet been able to see the
propriety in adopting the word. If Negro-
ism is not applied to us as a race, I use
the word Negro. I also use the word
Afro-American, and sometimes I say
and write colored, and again I say
Afro-American. We are Americans of African descent, and in my
opinion if we are distinguished as a
race in this country we can the most
distinguished by the name of
Afro-American.
As to the change in the name of your
paper I suppose that is an unattainable
thing, but the people of this country and
of other countries have become familiar
with the old name.
D. A. HART.
Enhance Nashville Globe.
BRUCE'S BIG SOUL
Notable Service Rendered Former
Master by Famous Senator
All the love has an unselfish man and especially one who can go out of the house and into the city, the Charlotte Observer's Washington correspondent, relates the following in speaking of Mitsaihiko great men in general and Senator Money in partic-
When Blanche K. Bruce, a Negro was Senator from Mississippi, his old master came to Washington. He had owned acres and land, and had had a bank and a now bankrupt in purse but richer than "either Ind" in a pride that might have gazed Lucifer blind. Bruce went to John Sherman, then Secretary of the Department for his old master. He knew the old "Peveril of the Peak" would scorn it coming from him, and so he went to Lamar and said that he had Lamar should stand sponsor, and that he should not be known in the transaction at all. Lamar grasped his hand and said: "Bruce, you are as much of a gentleman as ever I will appreciate you and shall gladly discharge the office to which you have appointed me." The old man got the place and died in the public service. That one circumstance nails to the counter every one of the ten thousand lies in "Uncle Tom's Cabin," and if Mississippi could produce such a Negro as Bruce, is there any wonder she should be the man as Herman-Davis Money.
I reckon not.—The Wadesboro (N.C.)
Anacapan.
On the Roopies 'topmost crest
On the Roopies 'topmost earth and sky-
'Ho' for the breese West!
On the Rockler' crystal crest
And she wakes to earth and sky-
Ho! for the breezy West.
From the glare, the noise, and the gaudy
Joys
From her monster-shape, I would fall es-
To the land where Man is King.
I would make my bed and pillow my head
For a vulture's feast is the dying East.
And I yawn for the living West.
For the Wheat hatte room for women to
And for men to work aright.
She is young as Youth. She is true as
She is crowded with Creative Light.
Let her great winds cry unto every sky.
Let the song go forth, East, South, and
North-
Ho! for the breezy West.
From the Success Magazine.
WHAT THE NEGRO PRESS HAS TO SAY
Because of the Negro being unable to find constant employment, and as it is natural that they congregate in the city, the Negro community other sections only see them in this place where they spend many enforced idle moments, the impression is that Negroes are shiftless, and industrial managers cannot get results from his as he can from laborers or other races. Some one is blind to the fact that a Negro artisan is not a restless citizen of the city, and thus thousands of other races have failed to produce. In the town of Favelleville N.J. J. there is a silk mill killing employment with the foreman of the mill, he said that he found the Negro employees possessing inherent qualities that make them skilled operators. In tobacco and clothing, the Negro employees are employed, managers say that the Negro is peculiarly fitted to give service as good as other races. This fitness will be good returns to the Negro, and this section would launch movements that would give employment to an element that would not cause the returns from promotion to diminish, and that would not be the best center.—The Charleston Message
Recognizing the fact that the late municipal election in Kansas City, under the referendum, for the adoption or the ordinance extending the franchise of the Marmon Railway Company, was to be a test of the ability of the Democratic city administration to put over a measure in behalf of the Democratic leaders in the attorneys of the railways company, the Republicans lined up against it. The Democratic council had passed the ordinance, such Democratic leaders as James Reed, and their local heutenants and State allies had promoted and approved it, and the workers of the Democracy. Many of the Democratic politicians and ward heutens went into the fight with the idea that they could control the large Negro vote by a liberal distribution of the votes out their host. The colored citizens of Kansas City had not gotten the bitter taste of Crittenden and his Jimcrowism out of their system, and they sweetened enemies with an avalanche of Noe's. "The Central Afro-American.
The arrest of William Gibbons on a flimsy auspicion for the murder of Mrs. Coburn Gibbons ago caused some men to dark murder arouse by fynching the Negro, and seventh of our great dalles began to talk about white men using patience with Negro dalles, and the Negro came upon to set out like bloodhounds to chase down their criminals. This prevailed though. Respectable Negroes know as little about black criminals personally as decent white men know about white hunt them down. However in a few days, after being grilled and third-degree Gibbons comes out unacquainted, the city not so well protected by the guardians of the law as St Louis a mob becomes infurious and how innocent the St Louis Advance
The colored people of this city have manifested the proper spirit with regard to the Normal School movement, which has formed and active efforts are being put forth to raise the required sum for a bonus. At the present rate of progress in the Normal School, the required will be subscribed and paid in and the school guaranteed to Nashville. There is no more appropriate place in Nashville than Nashville. There is an intellectual temperament about this city that would give impetus to any educational movement. There is no kind of educational institution. This activity is another evidence of the fact that our people know a good deal when they see it—The Nashville Globe.
The Enterprise rises to remark that it affords it unappealable pleasure to note the gradual change of sentiment in some sections of our common country, and in others of our own dear Southland. The Southern Nowae gives a debt of gratitude to the white Southern journals The Southern Newspaper and The Devouring to present things relative to the race in their true light; prominent among these may be mentioned the Charlize Observatory, recently the Raleigh News and Observer, Messenger and Intelligence and The Ansonian, the latter two the esteemed white journals of Wadeboro. The Wadesboro Enterprise
There never lived a more corrupt king. There never lived one who was a slave. There never lived a word pictures of hades as drawn by Dante are correct, there still is left
"It was not until 1884 that the first colored physician. Dr. C. N. Dorothea set up an office and began to practice medicine in Montgomery, Alabama. Previous to that time I do time there as a dentist, or pharmacist in the State. At the present time there are more than one hundred, and the members of these three professions maintain a flourishing State Association
In two volumes, boxed. The Price $3.00 (postage 30c)
no place of torture sufficient for the punishment of such a man. But what about the other countries, what about the United States, what about all knew of his sins and yet who raised no hand to stop his crimes? What about the people of the world who were afraid of the republics and destines of other people? What about the cowardly monarchs of other countries who were aware of it, and did not fear the republics that were afraid to condemn him in their legislative bodies? The United States went to war with Spain because of her alleged treatment of the Cubans—The Oklahoma City Guide.
一
While the industrious, well-behaved, good meaning colored people are improving their financial condition and strengthening their wealth of the communities in which they live, the lawless, disreputable colored people are building up brush fires in their courageous conduct and this will make much of the product of honest toll. For this reason, we should study out some method to curb and control the violence because we so much concern and no end of annoyance. We cannot rely entirely upon the police power of the respectful police to do it. We must do much of the work ourselves and our organizations owe it to themselves and to the race and to the government to make an honest, proper Plan to reform—the Richmond Planet
President Taft in his message emphasized the importance of national aid to the African republic. There is reason to believe that this government should not only guarantee the integrity, but lend material aid to the development of that country, but also to the supreme power for the deported lives and as our foreign policy reaches the far east and takes in Philippines with its mongrel population, we must share blood has developed this country by hard toll. Let us help Liberia to grow to the fullest development and help for the prophecy that the United States will stretch hand to God — The African Educator.
---
It is an open secret that the so-called social clubs among the Negro tenderlaborers of Seattle are nothing more than a class of citizens and no class of citizens know that better or even as well as the members of the police department. Why have they been so blinded by the crime protecting been permitted to run wide open in defiance to the law? With the officers of the law dogging their neighbors, the protection comes to break both the local legal and State laws—The Seattle Republican.
Americans Balk Taft
While President Taft is trying his best to create a kindly feeling toward the United States on the part of the Southern republics, he finds Americans too hard to accept. He invites Cuban Congressmen in attendance on President Gomer's New Year's reception entered the American Hotel and the Cuban government, and then charged four dollars aplece, because of their color. They were angry enough, and there followed a riot and bitter anti-American sentiment over the color line. The independent
Confessions Are Forced.
"Another of the laws' invasions of the rights of the citizen and an infamous persecution of justice is the attitude which is allowed peace officers during admissions from prison, damaging admissions from prison, who are yet to be indicted and tried. This practice has become a gross abuse. Especially is this true in the case of 'outrages' on females in the South and 'contractions' on males in the heart of a lynching down South we are also told of a confession by the victim. It is almost needless to say that the confessions are nearly always forced and really amount to nothing. The confession is too gross an abuse to be longer tolerated—The Washington Post
---
American Folk Songs of Negro Orglan
Saga, Saya Bostonlan
I notched through The Age the comment of the New York Sun relative to the students at Howard University and their protests against singing Negro melodies. The Sun would have us believe that the songs are splinations of the Negro, but products of some Northern Caucasian. We condeed that Stephen Foster wrote such songs as "Swaince River" "Kentucky" but the majority of the folk songs were inspired on Southern plantations.
It is not that the Sun wishes to uphold the students, but rather to try to imitate the only valuable folk songs America knows. An eminent authority on matters musical in the person of Mr. Dovakan would be helpful for having brought forth songs that are true and much to be desired in any race. Most of the American composers who wrote songs in their compositions. Even the great Dovakan has written a world symphony with a Negro theme. While the Negro songs by Negroes would be taken from them if possible, yet these songs can never be obliterated as not of Negro origin.
CHAS. J. HARRIS
53 Hammond Street, Boston, Mass.
January 9, 1910
NEGRO NOT SOURCE OF HOOKWORM
A conference of Southern States upon the causes and cure of the hookworm disease has been called in Atlanta. Mingled resentment and congratulations on the part of the South have met the donation by John D. Rockefeller of one million dollars. Bishop Caudler, of Georgia, openly denounced and impugned the motives of the philanthropist, while Governor Hadley, of Missouri, has just declined in a derivative statement to name State delegates to the Southern convention, declaring he will give no official consideration to a fantastic a movement. The Negro has been credited with the origin and distribution of the nasty little germ which has given the white Southernners that tired feeling, just as it has been the historic fashion of their eminent statements to ascribe to the black man the source of all their woes. Dr R. T. Luis, of Dallas, Texas, has sent to the Dallas express the following illuminating and conclusive refutation of the charge. He says
In a recent issue of McClure's Magazine, Mr Marion Hamilton Carter, in reporting his brilliant study of the causes of the hookworm among the millions of poor whites of the South, says 'Causes of the conditions existing among the poor whites of the South is the hookworm, and the source of the hookworm is the Negro.' The editor of Current Literature concluded an article on the hookworm by saying "Where the Negro goes, the hookworm goes." In Mr. Carter's brilliant report, he admits that the Negro is immune from the degenerations caused by hookworm. Mr. Carter says the paranormal hookworm seems to have been brought to this country by the Africans generation ago.
These statements are at white
background, show the subject in
the subject in band.
Goeze, a German clergyman andologist, in 1782, discovered a hair-like parasite in the intestine of a hedgehog which he was dissecting, and which he round worm *wurm* (the hair round worm). Froellich, another German zoologist, found a similar parasite in the intestine of a fox, observing the hook-spoken of by Goeze, and still supposing them to be such. Froellich adopted the hook-spoken of by worm *wurm* (the hook-spoken of by worm), to the genus hooked. Thus the parasite got its name.
In 1843 Dubim, an Italian of Milan described a species occurring in man's spread anemia among industrial makers, excavators and the poor rural population. It was terrible epidemic of what then became known as tunnel disease broke out among the workers in the St. Gothard tunnel, and the interest of the whole scientific world was aroused. There was no doubt as to the cause of the disease, and that it had been spread through total neglect of personal hygiene, lack of sanitary conveniences. The soil of the tunnel was completely impregnated with the ova and larvae of the species and all who handled it became infected.
The Negro was not there, hence the Negro was not the source of it. Netherland is the least indigenous of Africa in the least obscure, have become some simple at last.
Compacted within its tiny body, less than an inch long and looking like a small soiled coarse thread, are well developed solitary coarse phagocytes, intestinal canal, various glial cells, to which the female adds the capacity for many thousand eggs. The mouth is shapped and bordered by a fastector against the intestine, righteously against the intestine of its host during feeding and the strong muscular larcophage thus becomes, a powerful phagocyte. In addition, the mouth are two pairs of small innuous lancets, and prominent at the rim is a single stilleto-like fang, the mouth a round, with a long gland at its head, ready to eat. It presses its mouth diagonally against the intestine, draws a tiny bit of mucous membrane into its mouth and fangs. Through the minute lancet and made the blood is sucked out. The punctures are repeated many times during the course of a meal, finally rife with blood. If not actually gouging it itself, After the worm has dropped off genomic bacterin frequently finds lodges in these holes, produces small microbes in these holes and forms irregular ulcerations.
On account of the irritation caused by the presence of the worm, it is quite common to find, in addition to the lesion, a diffuse scarring of variable security. The only prevention of this terrible disease is to keep the premises as well as the body in a perfectly sanitary environment. It is all riot about the Negro community, nicking the hookworm, for everybody knows that the Negro and the poor whites of the South have no personal contact—to say nothing of communal contact. From any disease, let them report to the frequent use of soap and water and put only wholesome food in the stomachs. The only remedy to the stomach is to wash the stomach, and should only be imitated by a physician.
At City Does for Intellectual Uplift of Its Negro Citizens
Many Negroes Engaged in Business—Fifteen Churches in City Life—Comfortable Homes.
Special to THE NEW YORK ACK.
Chattanooga, Tenn., Jan. 10.—The question is frequently asked—What has Chattanooga done toward the intellectual uplift of her colored citizens? The following statistics will throw one light on the subject:
It has three grammar schools and one high school. There are thirty-five Negro teachers at an average of $42 a month each, with three principals at a salary of $1100 a year each. The grammar schools have four primary and four grammar grades, with a course of study and requirements identical with one of the white schools.
In the high schools there is a required course of two years, with a college of a third year.
The investment in land, buildings and equipment for the three school buildings near $150,000, while the sum of $200-a year is required for their maintenance.
The Negro school population begen the ages of six and twenty-one years is 4,144. Of this number 3,543 are to read and write. The actual enrolment is 2,800. That the enrollment not a larger per cent. of the school population is due to the fact that the unit of twenty-one years is three years longer than the usual limit—eighteen years—with the result that a very large number of those between eighteen and twenty-one years of age do not attend school, but are at work earning a liv-
The figures given you relate alone to city proper. The populous suburbs under the control of Hamilton county, which maintains schools of a sixth grade at Churchville, St Elmo and other places equal to the grammar schools of the city
Industrial Education.
Relative to industrial education, thus no provision has been made for this very important branch. The school hard is strongly favor of establishment, both in the white and colored schools. Doubled the regular demand will be met and funds provided for this system next year. There have been organized School improvement Associations among the strons of the colored schools with the suit that the actual attendance during present session has been larger than the previous year.
leaves to the white child. There is a difference of opinion as to just kind of education the State should offer for all her children; most usually a thorough grammar school education and corresponding technical training to fit them for the usual duties of life.
The colored high school has kept back of its former pupils, and it is most gratifying to report that all the graduates are leading honorable, honest and useful lives, none have disgraced their school and their city. Surely this makes the city's expenditure a profitable one.
The Negro citizens of Chattanooga have become land owners. They have built hundreds and hundreds of comfortable homes and thus allied them with the conservative, solid citizenship.
There are one hundred Negro patrons of the telephone company. These phones are an evidence of thrift and business enterprise.
City Auditor Payne says the amount of property, chiefly homes, owned by the Negro citizens of Chattanooga is surprisingly large, and they lose nothing by comparison with their white neighbors of equal learning capacity. They are following many profitable mercantile pursuits. On Whiteside street is a Negro grocer with property and stock in the neighborhood of $35,000, while others have from $5,000 to $20,000 in business and property.
Next to this auditorium there is a building owned by a Negro costing about $11,500 and in it is a drug store that is a credit to any city industrial lines the Negro men of Chattanooga are unusually active. There are many contractors and builders skilled stone mason and mason and carpenters, while there are hundreds of metal and wood workers earning from $ to $30 per day. For example in one of our iron working factories there are $250 to $250 per day, nine making from $250 to $3 per day, seventeen making from $ to $350 per day, two making from $75 to $1 per day.
All this work is done by Negro labor without any serious conflict with white labor. In ordinarily good times there may be honest wages by the bon- wore man or mechanic in Chat- town.
Churches.
some have not forgotten the think less of your funerals "our lives." However, they are people and have spent weeks of dollars in the building of some fifteen churches with limits. The majority of the cost from $1,000 to $500 exclusive of the land, which in cases purchased many and has greatly increased in national Church cost $177. It was paid for by self, its members and friends. A company in New York made of the money, but the mortgage were rather being for their sanctuary and to pay off. Negro church with the exception, the steel ceiling being. To day two of these bills he eliminated.
honest benefit socie-
He among the New Yorkers these but but
taught to wear the savings banks and
solid insurance companies. Your corre-
spondent represents one that started
about 1870 with a $400 lot in this neigh-
borhood, bought on long time. This so-
ciety is to-day worth $12,000 and has
given away as much or probably more
in charity. But once has there been a
shortage in its accounts and that was
only $100, and a temporary one. The
man sold his land and repaid it.
Our Negro citizens are too busy to
middle much with politics, though the
have two representatives in the City
Council.
No more eloquent chapter can be
written on the Chattanooga Negro than
that embodied in an address delivered
a short time ago to a mixed audience by
a noted white attorney of this city—Mr
L. M. Coleman. Mr Coleman said
"The colored people of Chattanooga
are intelligent, earnest, self-respecting,
law-abiding citizens. They are proud of
Chattanooga and Chattanooga is proud
of them."
ROOSEVELT ON THE AFRICANS.
Mighty African Hunter Says Government Should be for the Good of Africans.
President Roosevelt in his article on "African Game Trails" in the Christmas number of Scrubbers for the first time discusses African politics. Following up the splendid speeches which the strenuous hunter has made on festive occasions to the whites now colonized in British Africa, he again deals frankly with the political problems which must attend the development of the black man's country. Saying that the African problem is for the white man to govern "with wisdom and firmness, and, when necessary, with severity, but always with an eye single to their own interests and development, the black and brown races," he concludes his remarkable discussion thus:
"We lunched with the American missionaries. Mission work among savages offers many difficulties, and often the wisest and most earnest effort meets with dishearteningly little reward; while lack of commonsense, and of course above all, lack of a firm and resolute disinterestedness, insures the worst kind of failure. There are missionaries who do not do well, just as there are men in every conceivable walk of life who do not do well, and excellent men who are not missionaries, including both government officials and settlers, are only too apt to jump at the chance of criticizing a missionary for every alleged stiff of either omission or commission. Finally, zealous missionaries, servient in the faith, do not always find it easy to remember that savages can only be raised by slow steps, that an empty adherence to forms and ceremonies amounts to nothing, that industrial training is an essential in any permanent upward movement, and that the gradual elevation of mind and character is a prerequisite to the achievement of any kind of Christianity which is worth calling such. Nevertheless after all this has been said, it remains true that the good done by missionary effort in Africa has been calculable. There are parts of the great continent, and among them I include many sections of East Africa, which can be made a white man's country, and every effort should be made to favor the growth of a large and prosperous white population. But over most of Africa the problem for the white man is to govern, with wisdom and firmness, and when necessary with severity, but always with an eye single to their own interests and development, the black and brown races. To do this needs sympathy and devotion no less than strength and wisdom, and in the task the part to be played by the missionary and the part to be played by the official are alike great, and the two should work hand in hand."
Discussing in his narrative the nature of
women with whom he was hunting, he said,
"Safari life is very pleasant, and also very picturesque. The porters are strong, patient, good-humored savages, with something childlike about them that makes one really fond of them. Of course, like all savages and most children, they have their limitations, and in dealing with them firmness is even more necessary than kindness, but the man is a poor creature who does not treat them with kindness also, and I am rather sorry for him if he does not grow to feel for them, and to make them in return feel for him a real and friendly hiking. They are subject to gusts of passion, and they are now and then guilty of grave misdeeds and shortcomings, sometimes for no conceivable reason, at least from the white man's standpoint. But they are generally cheerful, and when cheerful are always amusing, and they work hard of the white man is able to combine tact and consideration with that insistence on the performance of duty the lack of which they despise as weakness. Any little change or excitement is a source of pleasure to them. When the march is over they sing, and after two or three days in camp they will not outly sing, but dance when another march to begin. Of course the suffer greatly from thirst and hunger and fatigue, and at times they will suddenly grow gullen or rebel without what seems to us any adequate cause, and they have an inconsequent type of mind which now and then leads them to commit follies all the more exasperating because they are against the interest of their employer. But they do well on the whole, and safari life is attractive to them. They are fed well, the government requires that they be fitted with suitable clothes and given small tents, so that they are better clad and sheltered than they would be otherwise, and their wages represent money which they could get in other way. The safari represents a great advantage to the porter, who in his turn alone makes the safari possible.
"When we were to march, camp was broken as early in the day as possible. Each man had his allotted task, and the tents, bedding, provisions, and all else were expeditionally made into suitable packages. Each porter is supposed to carry from fifty-five to sixty pounds, which may all be in one hundle or in two or three. If the man was a matter of much pride to the porters, and was always carried at the head or near the head of the line of march, and after it in single file came the long line of burden bearers. As they started some of them would blow on horns or whistles and others would beat little tomtoms,
THE HOME OF THE MAYOR
and at intervals this would be renewed again and again throughout the march; the men might suddenly begin to chant, when we asked to keep repeating in unison some one word one phrase which, when we asked to have it translated, might or might not prove to be entirely meaningless."
NEGRO HOME IN SPRIN
Alexander Hughes Has Residence — Compline Well-Kept Lawn.
Springfield, Mass., Jan. 11 where home, garden and
NORD ALEXIS MAY RETURN.
President Simon of Haiti Willing to
Welcome the Deposed Huler.
Port au Prince, Haiti, Jan. 4. President Simon, to whom the Government officials and people paid their respects to-day on the occasion of the anniversary of the independence of Haiti, announced that he would authorize the return to Haiti of General Nord Alexis, the former President. In making this announcement, Gen. Simon said that as Nord Alexis had been chief of the State, he merited the respect of all his fellow-citizens. This generosity on the part of President Simon is unique in the history of Haiti Gen Nord Alexis, who was deposed from the Presidency on December 21, 1901, is at present living at Kingston, Jamaica Recent reports indicate that his health is failing.
Elizabeth People Entertain Students
Mr and Mrs B I James, of 1040
Bond street, gave a reception New
Year's night in honor of Charles A. Davis, who was spending the holidays
in this city with his mother and father at 1072 Magnolia avenue Mr Davis
returned to Howard University Sunday
Miss Maud M French, who has
lived here for the last eighteen
months, has gone to Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma, to visit her mother
The Union Baptist Church, 1080
East Grand street, commenced the
New Year with a funeral and mourned
the loss of one of its most faithful
members, Abram Hodge.
Mrs William Graham, of Trenton,
N J, formerly Miss Daisy Jones, was
up to spend New Year's Day with her
mother, Mrs Agnes I. Jones
The New York Age can be gotten
every week at T. J. Taylor's ice cream
parlor and confectionery, at 2773 Morris
avenue.
Prof. Boas of Columbia Discusses Negro at the Y. M. C. A.
A crowd that packed the rooms even to the doors was present to witness the program of the Young Men's Christian Association last Sunday afternoon. The occasion was the fourth annual celebration of the Emancipation Proclamation by the branch. It had been announced that Harry T. Burleigh, widely known baritone, would sing, and that the Emancipation Day address would be delivered by Prof Franz Boaz, the famous anthropologist of Columbia University. Mr Burleigh wired that owing to a pressing call that had just come to him he could not be there, but would come next Sunday afternoon John Price (white), a friend of Mr Burleigh, came in his stead
Prof Boaz took as his subject "The Colored Man's Opportunity." He made several references to the relative size of the brain of the white and black races, and declared that while it was true that the brain of the white race averaged a little above that of the black, it did not show that there was any superiority of the white brain over the black White women, he said, had a smaller brain than the white man, but no one would say that the white woman was inferior to the white man, and still the white woman's brain was also lighter than that of the Negro Prejudices, he said, can be overcome only by achievement.
An interesting musical program was given by the Literary Society of the Young Men's Christian Association on Tuesday evening at Association Hall. They presented the Barnette Quartet and Star Concert Company, supported by Mme G W Allen, dramatic reader, and Mr H O Harding, violin. The numbers were appropriate and enthusiastically received. A large attendance was present despite the inclement weather. This entertainment marks the beginning of serious effort on the part of the Literary Society to build an organization that will be a New Year's sacred concert will be given at Association Hall next Sunday, January 9, at which time the public is cordially invited Among the artists will appear Mrs G H. Tapley, soprano, Miss Marie Wayne, violin, Mr. William Loguen, tenor, Mr. I Dwight Fairfield, reader, and Mr. H I Burleigh, harpone. The meeting will be devoted to sacred music and an interesting program is promised
NEGRO HOME IN SPRINGFIELD.
Alexander Hughes Has Attractive
Residence — Complimented — for
Well-Kept Lawn.
Springfield, Mass. Jan. 11.—Up here where home gardening and attractive front yards are a sort of craze of the hour, it is highly refreshing to find a Negro in the front ranks with those who have known art and culture in every phase for centuries. Alexander Hughes, of 16 Monson street, has a front yard whose luxury of flowers and shrubbery along with the most velvety lawn in the city calls forth expressions of admiration from all those who make the study of these things a specialty. As the picture will show he has a heavy rooftop hugging the lower part of the front of the house, thus concealing the offensive glaze of a brick and cement foundation. Then comes the clean white walk, the enviably and well-kept lawn and 'tiring about this a wealth of shrubbery and trees that would do honor to a more tropical section.
It is difficult to appreciate the racial value of a piece of work like this. Every Negro in the city is lifted a little higher in the estimate of his white neighbor by this lawn. As the Republican stated some time ago no discussion of gardens and trout vards is complete even among the most skilled in such matters without mention of the place of Mr Hughes. It is significant, that this lot is never mentioned as the possession of a Negro out simple as the possession of Alexander Hughes. Thus even by this labor, a pastime Mr Hughes ceases to be a Negro and becomes a man. Many of our New England colored people emulate the example of Mr Hughes and thus and in wiping out the reputation of indulence and do-not-hut whine of many of our Northern Negroes.
ALPHA PHI ALPHA
A National Negro Fraternity Organized.
The first national Negro fraternity, the Alpha Phi Alpha, has just ended its second annual convention in New York City. In order that a more perfect foundation might be established, two sessions were held during the Christmas holidays. The first was held in Richmond, at the Virginia Union University, on December 28, 29 and 30. The second was held in New York City, at the Colored Y. M. C. A. 252 West 63d street, on December 31 and January 1.
In 1906 the fraternity was begun at Cornell University, where the Alpha Chapter is located. In 1907 the Beta and Gamma Chapters were formed at Howard University, in Washington, D. C., and Virginia Union University in Richmond, respectively. Toronto, of Toronto, Canada, formed the Delta Chapter in 1908. The year 1909 showed a signal development along the lines begun at Cornell, three new chapters being formed, the Epsilon, Zeta and Eta, at Ann Arbor, Yale and Columbia, respectively. Total membership, about 116 Negro men.
The national officers elected last year at the convention held at Howard in Washington, D. C., were: President, M. A Morrison, of Howard; vice-president, H. A Callis, of Cornell, secretary, S. S Booker, of Virginia, treasurer, R. C. Giles, of Cornell.
The various chapters and their representatives at this year's convention were Cornell (Alpha), represented by R C Giles and L. E Graves; Howard (Beta), by M A Morrison, N. P G. Adams and Dagler; Virginia (Gamma), by S. S Booker, and Hies; Ann Arbor (Epsilon), by William M. Thorne (Yale Beta), J. M Maso and Columbia (Eta), by George W. A Scott and C T. A. French.
Much business of great importance was accomplished during the two sessions.
The fraternity hopes to establish chapters in several other universities during the coming year.
The newly elected officers are President, R C. Giles, of Cornell, vice-president, William M. Thorne, of Ann Arbor, secretary, S S. Booker, of Virginia Union, and treasurer, N P G. Adams, of Howard. After the installation of these officers spirited speeches, which manifested true fraternal love and ambition to further the union were made by each of them, and all of the remaining representatives. The recording secretaries were Mr Hill for the session held in Richmond, and George W A. Scott for the session held in New York City. After singing "God Be With You Till We Meet Again," the convention adjourned to meet on December 27, 1910, in Philadelphia.
Newarker to Visit Worcester
Newark, N J, Jan 4—Miss Edith Mav Scotland, the oldest daughter of Mr and Mrs J H F Scotland, has left Newark for Worcester, Mass, there to reside for a time with her father's relatives. Dr Horace G McKerrow and his aunt Miss Inez Thomas, in furtherance of her final mission, she is expected to visit Halifax, N S, the home of Mr. Scotland's near relations.
Between 9th and 11th Avenues
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FORMERLY THE WALKER HOUSE
404 W. 133rd Street, New York
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buffet cafe and restaurant connected.
Large parlors to let for reception.
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feb5-2m
HOTEL PLEASANTS
261 HASP 142nd STREET
Near Morris Avenue.
Nicely furnished rooms by the day or week.
Excellent table board. Moderate rates.
Convenient for railroad men.
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Tel. 796-W Malrese.
dec24-1yr
Telephone, 2523 Morningside
HOTEL ALEXANDER
111 and 118 West 123rd Street.
FIRST CLASS ACCOMMODATION
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RESTAURANT ATTACHED
J. T. ALEXANDER, Prop.
Oct 29-3m
apr23-2m
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Formerly THE VIRGINIA
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oct 28-31.
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105 W. 29th St.
the door from the left
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NH. HI. HI. W. W. Formally with the Gilbert Hotel 254 W. 20th st
oct 23 3m
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Pleasant temporary lodgings for working girls with privileges, at reasonable rates. The Solicitor's orders for working girls must be submitted to MRS. FRANCE B. KRYRSB, SUM
Yearwood's Home Restaurant
Bet 8th and 9th Aves NEW YORK
The most moderate prized First Class Dining
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pastries Polite uniform prices
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LUCK IS IN YOUR HAND
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dec 23 41
YOUNG MEN
To spend a Pressent Hour while in New York, visit the
WORKING MEN'S CLUB
R. T. HOLLOWAY Pteg & Mgr
150 W. 53rd Street
oct 28 3m
73 WEST 134th STREET, New York
A first-class restaurant that dispenses nothing but first-class food, cooks and seasoned to the taste. We are the best dining room in town for 25 cents. Furnished rooms to let.
JOHN E. BRADFORD
Proprietor
284 W. 36th St. near Eighth Ave.
EUROPEAN PLAN.
NEW YORK.
CLASS ACCOMMODATION.
Prompt and portable rooms.
Modern conveniences and modern
conveniences and modern profe
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Proprietor.
july 23-3m
Phone 1185 Columbus
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HOTEL MACEO
FIRST-STREET Accommodations ONLY.
First-class Station Hosted. Furnished Rooms for Permanent Guests.
First-class Restaurant Headquarters of Clergy and Business District Wine 88s. Regular Dining Room 88s. to 8 p. m. Sundays 1 to 8 p. m.
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June 17-8m
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261 and 263 94th Street
East 61st Avenue
Handsomely Furnished Rooms For Permanent or Transient Guest Rooms
down upward. Best Furnished Houses in New York and Restaurant Attached. Lunch from 3 to 13 o'clock.
"As we journey through life, let us live by the way."
FRANK C. HOLLIS, Proprietor
Nov 18-3m
Broadway House
204 to 6 W. 49th Street
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Neatly furnished room for permanent or transient guests.
Mrs. E. M. Crawford Prop.
San 24-3-m
225 West 134th Street
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For Permanent and Transient Guests Every
thing first class. Table Board. Terms Reasonable. Correspondence invited.
JOHN I. WILLIAMS,
July 20th. From
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5 West 135th Street
First class accommodation, steam heat and hot water. Baths on each floor. Booms $2.50 to $3 per week. Best rooms in the city $1 per week. Also rooms TO LET at
255 West 47th Street
MBS, F. B. WHITE, Gen. Mgr.
Phone 5668 Harlam
doc. 16-3m
THIS I
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50 SHARES—$75.00 DOWN—$20.00 PER MONTH
40 " 05.00 " 15.00 " "
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20 " 28.00 " 8.00 " "
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SEEBE'S WINE The C and B
(A PLEASANT TASTING PREPARED
This Wine contains the Active of Malt, Hypophosphates of Lime, Wine, Wild Cherry and Sherry. We proved on to build up the body of Bronchal and Lung troubles and hacking Coughs it is excellent.
PREPARED
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DISTRIBUTOR
CODY & BERGER
470 Lenox Avenue
Bet. 133rd and 134th Sts.
P. S. Purchases of SEEEBE's Wine, in attaining the SEEBE'S best lives and best institutions.
THE WORKERS
Capital Stock, $50,000.00
Organized 1907. In
A solution is to establish a chain of Drug Stores, which will not just use a means of furnishing digested and responsible medicine. We can ACOOMPLISH THIS WITH LOYAL SUPPORT. W. Call or write for further partitions.
Street, N. Y. Tel. 4666 Harlem
S. N. PIERRE,'M.D., Gen. Manager
E The Great Tissue Builder and Blood Purifier : : :
WING PREPARATION OF COD LIVER OIL)
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PREPARED ONLY BY
ARMACAL CO., New York
DISTRIBUTED BY
LOUIS BERGER
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2278 Seventh Ave., Cor. 134th St.
In obtaining the MD will receive FREE OF CHARGE a box of first patient remedy known
KERS' REALTY CO.
000 Shares, par value, $5.00
Signed 1907. Incorporated 1908.
The object of this Corporation is to establish a chain of Drug Stores, which will not only be a profitable investment, but a means of furnishing digiscoped and responsible employment to members of our race. We can ACCOMPLISH THIS WITH LOYAL SUPPORT. THE TIME TO BEGIN IS NOW. Call or write for further information.
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nov. 4 mos. M. S. N. PIERRE,'M.D., Gen. Manager
SEEBE'S WINE The Great Tissue Builder and Blood Purifier : : :
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470 Lenox Avenue
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This Company is owned and controlled by WORKING PEOPLE. Paid $9 per cent November, 1992. Will pay $per cent April, 1990, and $per cent, semi annually thereafter. Operates Real Estate, Insurance, and Commission Business. Will advance money on your Stock, also conduct Stores and Laundries. Each officer has an income to sustain himself. No part of the receipts are used to pay officers, but is reserved to increase the business
Special 90 Day Offer
to buy a variable piece of property upon
we must raise an additional $15,000.
voted 500 shares to be sold at a discount
blocks of from 1 to 20 shares ASH
together with one year FREE subsu
to persons buying or selling 25 shares. 10
75 shares, 20 per cent Buy now and do
Address, THE WORKERS' REALTY C
property upon which we have an option of 30 days,
B.S. I do this the Board of Directors have
at a discount of 20 per cent or at $4 share in
LCR ASH half down and the balance in 30 days,
KEF subscription to this paper. Further discount
25 shares, 10 per cent, 50 shares, 15 per cent :
now and draw 6 per cent. In April 1910
ERS' REALTY COMPANY, 1831 B'way, New York
to buy a valuable piece of property upon which we have an option of 30 days,
we must raise an additional $100. I do this the Board of Directors have
voted 500 shares to be sold at a discount of 20 per cent or at $4 share in
blocks of from 1 to 20 shares for ASHF or half down and the balance of 30 days,
together with one year of FREE subscription to this paper. Further discount
to persons buying or selling 25 shares, 10 per cent, 50 shares, 15 per cent:
75 shares, 20 per cent. Buy now and draw 6 per cent. In April 1916
Address, THE WORKERS' REALITY COMPANY, 1831 Bway, New York
JAMES A. JACKSON Real Estate and Insurance Agent, Broker, Appraiser
122 West 135th St, New York
Brooklyn office
Jefferson Building, Room 28
4 and 8 Court Square
Attorney and Counselor Law
MORTGAGE LOANS
154 NASSAU STREET
Room 732
Tribune Buildins
Phone 6088 Bookman
WALTER W. DELSARTF
Attorney and Counsel at Law
Jefferson Building, 4 Court Bd.
BROOKLYN, M. I.
JAMES L. CURTIS
Attorney and Counselor at Law
Office, 222 W. 3rd Street
NEW YORK
410-12 Eighth Avenue
Near 31st Street NEW YORK CITY
Furniture, Carpets,
Bedding, Etc.
Houses, Flats and Apartments Furnished
Complete.
Cash or Credit
FRANK DONNATIN
Oldest and most reliable Store in the City
GEORGE A. BRAMBILL
Ladies and Gent's Tailor
57-59 WEST 135TH ST
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Dr. James A. Banks
SURGEON DENTIST
118 West 59th Street, New York
Telephone 6623 Cohort
Gas Administration
Bridge Work a Specialty. Ten years
Dr. D. C. White
dec 22.98
NOTICE
Metropolitan Halls to let for Societies and entertainments. Special arrangements can be made for Lodge Rooms at the rate of $3 and up a night. These halls have electric light, steam heat and Janitor service. JAOB GRIFFITH,
Metropolitan Bldg, 46th St. & 8th Ave.
nov. 25-3m.
M
POPULARITY OF RAGTIME
SOME months ago one of our leading bandmasters gave out an interview relative to the popularity of ragtime, in which he declared that such music was a thing of the past, and that it was seldom strains of the copated variety were heard in the leading hotels and restaurants of New York nowadays. Should one give close attention to the musical situation, however, it would be found difficult to agree with the conclusions formed by this noted bandmaster.
Within the past six months it seems that ragtime has regained its former hold on the public—that is, if one's judgment is to be based on the number of ragtime songs heard on Broadway and the respectful consideration shown this brand of music by the publishers. With the exception of the "Chocolate Soldier" and possibly one other musical piece, every big production with music in New York has quite a list of ragtime songs on its program.
There seems to be at this time a craze for songs with the word "rag" is the title. Since the appearance of the "Yankana Kag" we are being inflicted with all all kinds of compositions on which the word "rag" is used preceded by some adjective. 10-day almost every big musical show has such a number on its program.
That ragtime is again coming into its own is evidenced in the new production in "The Jolly Eichhorn," designated on the program as a musical spectacle in two acts and seven scores, which opened at the Broadway Theatre last week. The show, which is one of the highest and most entertaining seen on the Gray White Way, for some time boasts of twenty-three musical numbers, many of which are ragtime compositions. Eager is the management to make good in the ragtime numbers that Stella Mayhew, who bears the high-growing name of "Veronica Verdigris" Jackson' in the piece, appears throughout as a colored miss of chocolate, hue, and sings several ragtime numbers, one of which is entitled "Sion That Rag."
I am taking a comparison it may be of interest to relate that while the white musical shows are exhibiting a penchant for ragtime songs, the only colored production that has graced Broadway this season, "Mr. Lode of Koal," cannot plead guilty of having on its program one deep-dyed-in-the-wool ragtime selection. In fact, it appears that a studied endeavor has been made to keep far away from ragtime for some unknown reason. Probably the absence of ragtime songs in the production prompted some of the white critics to make the charge that an attempt was being made by the soloists and members of the chorus to imitate the white performers. However, in recalling the principal song, "Harbor of Lost Dreams" it would be difficult for the singers to show an abundance of sprightness and energy.
Colored Shows Must Pay More Attention to Songs and Singing.
At all times does the writer deplore the use of ragtime songs containing such obnoxious words as "mugger," "coon," as well as the overworked words chicken, razor, etc., but no opposition will be shown to interpolating ragtime numbers which have good, clean lyrics. Then, too, if ragtime is once more coming in style it is more fitting that our colored shows direct attention to this kind of music than the white aggregations, as it is generally known that colored singers can sing ragtime songs more effectively than white performers. The writer is not making the plea that our colored productions pay attention to only ragtime, but it is to be hoped that this music will not be ignored altogether as in the case of "Mr. Lode of Koal."
If in the future our colored stars want to make a successful as well as a lengthy run on Broadway there is much that they will have to take into consideration, and if they are wise they will give the public what it wants, not what they desire the public to have. In the successful musical shows of to-day more attention is given to the musical end than to the dialogue. As stated above, in "The Jolly Bachelors" there are twenty-three numbers, and nearly every one is of the level, jingly variety. The writer regrets that he is unable to make a similar assertion with reference to some of our leading colored shows which this season would not take the medal for songs of quality or quantity.
Aside from the consideration given the musical program, the best shows of the season pay marked attention to the scenic end, introducing many novelties in the staging of the numbers. Very few novelties, if any, have been brought to the attention of the writer this season by the colored shows, although the opportunities afforded for the display of such ingenious methods are many and varied. At this time the staging of a
MUSIC AND THE STAGE
EDITED BY
song means much, and not only should the star or stars be provided with good numbers appropriately staged, but the other members of the cast having songs as well. Only a few of our leading comedians have made it their policy to instruct their writers to furnish those in the cast with songs to which they were peculiarly hitted, and stage the numbers accordingly. The star is not the only one in a show who should be paid especial attention. To insure an even performance it behooves the writers to give strong parts and catchy songs to those who are selected to entertain an audience while the star or stars are off the stage. Otherwise interest will be shown only when the principals are before the footlights.
In the palmy days of Weber and Fields they enjoyed their greatest successes when they surrounded themselves with the best talent obtainable and let them go as far as they liked. The writer longs to see the day when a similar state of affairs will exist in all of our colored shows and performers of ability will be turned loose and told to go the limit.
217
WHERE THE SHOWS ARE.
MR. LODE OF KOAL-Columbus, O, Jan
10. 11 and 12, Wheeling, W. Va., Jan
13. 14 and 15 Next week, Cleveland, O
THE RED MOON-Lyceum Theatre, De
trott, Mlbh Next week, Chicago, Ill
HIS HONOR, THE BARBER-Mork, Neb.
Jan 12 Lincoln, 13 and 14 Next
st, St Joseph, Mo
BLACK PATTI 01 Jacksonville, Fla
Jan 13 and 14; Fernandelle 15 Bruns
wick Ga., 17, Sawanah 18 Charles
ton, 8 19
GEORGIA FROU BADOURS Glencoe,
Minn Jan 13 and 14 Buffalo Lake,
15 and 16 Hector 17 Hielo Island, 18
Otlich 19 and 20 Rowlley 21
UNLE TOMS CARNES OT Dutaway
Jan 13 and 14 Ogden
burg N 17 Carthage 18 Water
town 10 Oswego 20 Rone 21 Uton
22.
Lucie Tom's Cabin Company
For the last two weeks we have had a typical Canadian winter but in the whole it has been rather interesting as many of the company have seen not be first time Canadian winter sports such as ski jumping or skiing. At Branford Out we just James sold the juggler who has retired from the road. He conducts the largest barber shop in the town and is also engaged in gardening using three areas of land and owns a two story brick residence. Horne Dent, Little West and Count Bloor were entered by the white Is of P at Berlin, ont.
Ala Bowles and Deborah Leal as the Topsters are clever complaints with a gagging joke under the tutelage of Willie Workoff the little doe in dancing as a flubb.
Edit, Browse and Find Work on computers
or printers at digital planners
Joseline Smith says she is all right
but longs for that their *I* Willingham
Dell.
Lamar Lawson is playing a baritone solo
from the curtain of *Masks and Laces*
and his accompaniment is highly com-
ultimated.
One more week of work and then for the Emprio State
RED MOON'S RAYS
Detroit Mills Jan. 11 that the proprietors of the Loomian Thrills Foley appreciate with shows is immensely by com- monly but raising it as greeting code and Johnson in their second edition of the Real Moon. This play will, if it was not a com- monly show, would interest and amuse the most fastballing playwright. And is a so- sult it has hundreds of admirers here who are delighted with the return.
Falcon like truth will rise above the common level. This good old adage can be consistently applied in the case of Loomis M. Mitchell who, cleverly partied the cost of J. Rennison Johnson Mr. Mitchell has big shown his real worth was held in res- ceive for any important sanity securing in the east of the company. Upon the loaing of Bound Jones and Toshell All but playing the parts of Hill Simmons and Hill White, respectively, will be met with delight in all those two important parts. To simply say that both Mr. Mitchell and Mice Gee are making good would be mildly putting it
Prof. Adolph Weinsteinberger, a Dutch scientist says that with such rapid transit facilities as now are being employed by the American people and from the link of use of the lower extremities with a new type of horrors: "terrible news for the average musical comedy chorus members, an their chief agent will be denied them thecept the Red Moon Company whose chorus is hired to and does sing." Joan Conversa an art student of Sarnae University has designed a contemporary coat of Joanna Marshall as Minneapolis opera star for the 1994 season. He impersonates an opera singer in her heart. I most among the valuable photo collections in the Life in Theatre Detroit is an enlarged likeness of the Grand Toulon Man Sam Loomis taken some thirty years ago. Detroit is the city in which Arthur Talbot made his debut as an actor in an amateur dramatic club of this city. All of his old associates attended a performance in a body to do him honor. C A H
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THEATRICAL JOTTINGS
Delaney and Nash are playing at
Sheedy's Theatre, Broton, Mass
The Mills Sisters are doing nicely at
the Majestic Theatre this week
Maud Manley of the Butler Sisters is
at the Crescent Theatre Harlem
The Brinkles are playing at Keeney's Theatre, New Brutam, N.Y.
The Le Vards are at the Grand Theatre, St Albans, Vt., this week
John
W. H. SMITH
Jumper and Carrington are at the
Savoy Theatre, Syracuse, N.Y.
Hildler and Shelton are at the Col-
umbia Theatre, St Louis, Mo.
Harris and Wilson are at the Palac-
theatre Boston Mass this week.
The Kemps are at the Shubert Thea-
tre, Upta N.Y.
L. Mores is planning to go on a
concert tour through the South.
Avery and Hart are at the Orpheum
Theatre, St Paul Minn.
Carter and Blutord are playing at the
Orpheum Theatre, Brooklyn.
The Brittons are at the Lynn Thea-
tre, Lynn, Miss.
Copeland and Phillips are playing at the Fourteenth Street Theatre
Belle Davis and picks are at the Orpheum Theatre San Francisco Cal.
The Dixie Serenaders are doing well at the Lighthouse Theatre this week
Brown and Neavarro have gone in vowel over the Morris circuit this week. Luton Theatre Brooklyn.
The Sunny South act with Johnson and Wells is at the Orpheum Theatre Lima, Ohio.
Pankey and Cook are playing at the Pantages Theatre Seattle, Wash. Next week Vancouver, R.C. Canada.
Daisy Brown of the Red Moon Company is in the city on account of all health
Benny Jones, and "Tootsie" Allen
closed with the Red Moon Company several
days ago
Bessie Simms is no longer a member
of the Red Moon Company. She is in
New York City
Wesley Morris is at the Lyceum The
atre. Stamford Conn, and is being well
received
Ledman and Somers are playing at
the Academy of Music, Staten Island,
N.Y
★ ★ ★
G W Brown, manager of the Frog
Man, writes that the bone solost is tour
ing the South, where he will remain for
several weeks.
The Alpha Comedy Four have just
closed a successful engagement over the
Keith Proctor circuit. Laying off this
week.
Jones and Grant are at the Plaza
Theatre. It is reported that they will
appear as a pain in the future without their wives.
Griffith Wilson, at one time a prominent acrobat, has been made an honorary member of the Colored Vaudeville Benevolent Association
George L. Archer, head usher at Hammerstein's Victoria Theatre, left Saturday for Matoon, Ill., to attend the funeral of his grandmother
. . .
Mme E. Azala Hackley has a large vocal class in St Louis, Mo. She plans to make a tour of the South in the spring
A Ray and N Morse, known as "The Jetneys, are on the Cleveland Circuit this week Happyland Theatre, Auburn, N.
* * *
The Henderson's write from Los Angeles, Cal., that they are meeting with success in their skit, Aunt Phoebe's Southern Home."
Many letters asking that THE Ace either affirm or deny the different reports concerning the shows for next season are already arriving at this of time.
---
J A Lengish, hoop roller, and 'Queen Dora, dancer, have finished a successful tour through Canada and are at the Grand Opera House, Chester, Pa. this week.
John Grant, known in the profession
SMITH
atre (Chicago II) and manager of a
atres in recent years
as Dearie, successfully played the part of Raz Jenkins" during the illness of John Larkins in Talladoga, Ala., a few days ago.
. . .
Carey B Lewis of Louisville writes that he thinks the Christmas number of The Auk was the best piece of journalism that has ever been gotten out by Negroes.
. . .
Speaking of the Christmas number Bob Cole writes in part. Allow me to congratulate you on your Christmas number. It is away ahead of anything that has been done so far.
---
Will H. Dixon, besides laying claims to being a composer of ability, prides himself on being a chef at the Waldorf Astoria variety.
---
Dan Frazier, well known in vaudeville, died Tuesday at the Bellevue Hospital. The Colored Vaudeville Benevolent Association has taken charge of the romances.
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Frank B La Mette is no longer secretary of the Colored Valleyville Beneficial Association. He has moved to North Dakota Va. He has been succeeded by Wadium Bull.
---
Curtis Day is paying in East St. Louis, Ill this week. She writes that the house is none too friendly to colored people and would not have a colored performer on the ball at any cost if they knew it.
. . .
Dan Michaels of the Merry Michaels and Mine Robins is called up the Colo-
tion Vaudeville Bancolent Association headquarters several days ago over long
distance and were given a concert by a number of vaudevillians. They in turn
sang a song or two.
. . .
Smith and Larkin of Otterborn Company opened at Hubers Museum Monday for a run. In the company are Watts and Gust, Smith and Smith Johnson and Rector, Joe Bright, Wm S Ball, Miles Dewey Minnie Robinson Maud Robinson, Mrs Irving Allen and Smith and a Rose
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Joe Jordan's Pekin Graduates are making good in vaudeville in the Middle West. This week the act is at the Temple Theatre Lort Wayne, Ind. In the act are Sam Arnold, Clarence Duncan, Happy Bud Jouner, Lena Mitchell, Sam Burns, Raz Jones Howard Jeff frews, Wright Smith and A Goodbar
The Columbus Stock Company has finished its engagement at the Star Theatre Pittsburgh. Manager Stinson has booked the Original Six Black Bees for a two weeks' engagement. In the act are Iva and Iewall Sampson, Walter Lyons and Maude Singleton, G F Wilson and Nora Goff
William Barker, business manager of the Chocolate Drops, says that while the ate was in Washington, D. C., recently, he made a trip through the White House accompanied by King and Bailey as the guests of an attache of the Secretary of War's office. They were shown especial attention
---
The members of the Georgia Troubadours spent a very pleasant Christmas in Reville, S D Turkey and eggog were the features of the menu. The principal address of the day was made by Manager William McCaine, in which he advised the members of the company to uphold the high moral and artistic standards that had been set for the company. Many presents were received
Vaudevillians Appear at Entertainment.
On Wednesday evening, January 6, an entertainment was given by the Knights of St Benedict Association, Commander) No L. Lutie Lyric Hall, Sixth avenue, near 42rd street, which attracted a large crowd. A program in charge of members of the Colored Vaudeville Benevolent Association preceded the comedy force entitled Trouble of His own and consisted of an impromptu minstrel show, Bob Slater acting as interlutor, Tom Jletcher, Erb Robinson, William Hall and Al. Bailey, end men. The sleight of hand was performed by Black Carl Stamford McKissick, of the team of McKissick and Shadney, appeared in grotesque dances and songs, and Henry Creamer rendered two of his latest compositions. His partner, Mr Farrell, was accompanied A monologue by L. R. Whippor was followed by comic songs by Ernest Lauron All of these performers of the C.V.R. A proved themselves to be artists of particular merit in their respective fields.
The force comedy presented by the Morely and Bryor company was creditably acted by the following cast: Bob Henshaw, Hayes L. Pryor, Jerry Hopkins, Thomas W Morley, Deacon Silas Smith, L. P. R. Chadwick, Mrs Cordale, Mrs O. L. Leopot, Sally Miss Margaret H. Brown. An address was made by Counsellor J. Frank Wheaton.
Too Much Opera and Drama
That New York had gone theatrical and opera mad was generally understood but it has remained for the managers through their confessions at the association that to disclose the fall of the state and its paralyzing effects.
These handtoed petitions of good opinion in two weeks season with eighty-seven in the series of the classics appearing for patrons and among moving public shows in fall that almost the entire city strut in play companies. There the limbs come to New York's world of plays for outstanding amusement and art. There are limitations to its exigencies for beauty and bounds to its expenditure for entertainment.
Some containment of this oversupply of stage attractions is clearly needed not done in the interest of the box office but in plain justice to plighters but to this overestimation of the theatrical industry are do not only the dwindling audiences but the bad plays and incompetent companies. The forcing process has proved harmful to all concerned. Its effect is well illustrated by the remark of Mr Hayman that he knows "only three actresses and one actor who can be rolled on as drawing-cards in America to-day". The statement bears eloquent witness to the standards of the New York stage a quarter of a century after Daly and Wallack. How is the remedy to be applied? It is not to be supposed that the trust method of dismantling unproductive plants will be resorted to while new theatres continue to spring up mushroom-like. Yet the prediction of foreclosure sales if the present conditions prevail shows their seriousness to managers. New York World.
IN THE WORLD OF SPORT
BY LESTER V. WALTON
McVen-Jennette Fight Big Society Event.
Judging from the accounts in the Paris papers of the recent McVen-Jennette match, a prize fight is considered a big society event in dear, old Paris.
In glancing over the list of those present the names of members of the nobility or notorious, and, what's more, prominent Societies women are giving special mention of having witnessed the bout.
Following is the write up in part of the fight is published in the Paris edition of the Herald.
At the Cipriau de Paris last evening before a large and fashionable audience, the two Americas in color braceweights, M. Vélez and Jennette fought a thirty round contest which ended in a draw. Interest was keen in the encounter for M. Vélez and not Jennette, twice last year, the first battle of twenty rounds ending in his favor on points while the second which was to a chush proved too long for him and he gave up in the forty ninth round.
Among prominent people who witnessed last night's boxing were Barons Horta and Monteiro de Hortauld. Count de Ponteadio MM Charron, Camille Plone, Leslie Delage, Desgranges of the Valeu and M. Vélez of the Nice Grand Arena presents included Messis, Oscar Lewisohn, Harry Rozenfeld, William Carroll, Henry J. Thomson and Cathen
Among the many women were Mrs Oscar Lewhohn and Milo Gustaf of the Comic Dameate. The big event of the program was preceded by two interesting boots. In the first Sam Kelly a good English fourth-wright beat Paul Till the French champion in that category. The verdict went to Kellan on points and was popular.
This was followed by another ten pounds off between East and the same amateur lightweight champion of France and Daryle Hales of London. It was simply a singing match, in which the French man ran himself out by too fast a beginning. In the eighth round his seconds toasted the sponge.
McVean and Ianette did not keep the public waiting long and with the usual army of seconds helpers and bangers on which is customary in France took the ring in time. The trotter was Mr J. T. Holle of the Spotted Life London Ianette was seconded by Tom Stewart Wilkie Lewis and Marc Gaucher under the expert guidance of his manager Mr Dan McKetrick McVean on the other hand was looked after by a somewhat mixed team of colored boxers, including Bob Scanlon, presided over by Mr Ecclestone, otherwise known as
Grand Vaudeville Show and Ladies' Souvenir Reception
Colored Vaudeville Benevolent Ass'n (INCORPORATED) AT MADISON SQUARE GARDEN On Friday Evening, January 28, 1910 OENERAL ADMISSION, 60 CENTS
Pre-Lenten Recital and Assembly At PALM GARDEN, 58TH STREET and LEXINGTON AVE. NEW YORK Monday Evening, February 7th, 1910
...ARTISTS...
Miss MARIE BURTON, Soprano of Chicago III first appearance in New York Mr. P. HALL JOHNSON, Violinist of Columbus NC first appearance in New York
Mme. JENNIE KELLY-ARMSTEAD CONTRALTO Mr. MELVILLE CHAPLTON ACCOMPANIST
Mr. RICHARD B. HARRISON Peciter of Chicago III first appearance in New York WAL FR F. CRAIO'S ORCHESTRA OF TWENTY MUSICIANS
Admission $1.00 Private Boxes $3.00
All Seats Reserved
Boxes and Seats can be secured of Walter F. Craig
OFFICE 321 West 98th Street New York Telephone 2267 Columbus
RYDNEY 321 Hancock Street Brooklyn Telephone 522 Bedford
DOORS OPEN AT 7.30 RECITAL BEGINS 8:30
DANCING FROM 10:30 P.M. TO 3 A.M.
Steinway Piano Used at This Recital jan 6-4t
UNITED KINGDOM
GREAT BRITAIN
1801
British Colour
OF NEW
On Tuesday Ev'g,
AT MANHATTAN
Music by Miss H. L. Anderson's Orchestra
OFFICIAL
MR. A. MENLINKE TOSCH
MR. A. HARDING
MR. JAMES CAMBRIDGE
MR. CHAY KOHAN
ADMISSION: Including
N.B.-This event will occur when
Lance Press Ball, but you can enjoy
Brooklyn's Annual Pre-Lun
Under the th
ST. BARNABAS
East New York
FOR THE BENEFIT OF
At the KINGS COUNTY
120 Schermerhorn St. near Smith St.
THURSDAY EVENING,
Musk by J. Nimrod Jones
Admission, 50 Cents.
CRESCENT
36-38 WEST 135th STREET
Beautifully Decorated and Up-to-date
Vaudeville Artists and Novel Pictures
BILL CHANCED
NB - This event will occur whether rain or sunshine. We call it a
Lazy Dress Ball, but you can enjoy yourself the matter what you wear
Beautifully Decorated and Up-to-date. Presents Strong Bill by Noted
Vaudeville Artists and Novel Pictures
BILL CHANCED TWICE A WEEK
Jolly Jumbo of the Coach and Horses, Stonebridge Park, London, where Mo Vaa trains when he is in England.
In the early stages of the night Jumbo set up a asfal lead on points. From Mo Vaa kept rushing, but his attacks lacked precision and told to penetrate his opponent's skilful defence. Great attention was paid by both to the kidney punch but while Mo Vaas's innards seemed impatient to attack, Jumbo had an only red lump on the small of his back by the fifteenth round. The defence on both sides at this stage was the feature of the light and the parrying of well-mount blows cooked applause from the audience.
In the middle stages of the match Joanne it seemed to tire for a time and contended hints if with dodging McNeil's fierce rushes. His dick was very clever and throw McNeil on his hands several times by impression was again created by what happened now and later that twenty rounds is McNeil's best distance and he thinks as himself. Still he kept rolling off the adverse course to tell the twenty fifth round after which Joanne it was much the fresher now, was all over him and most have piled up a heap of points. Judged as a winner it must be admitted that Joanne it clever and more thick than McNeil and his defender is stronger than his attack. McNeil is a hard or bitter but appears looking in stamina.
The verdict of a draw was on popular. In the opinion of most sportspersons, present cigarette was fairly easily on points. There was a discredited exhibition on the part of some spectators in the gallery who drew musks into the ring during the last round why they alone knew M. A. weighted 44.7 lb. and I knew P. Pat 47.0 lb.
Bnt Masterson Glys Decision to Rev Rangom
In commenting on the sermon preached a few Sundays ago by Rev
Reverdy C Ransom in which the minister of Bethel A M J Church se-
verely criticised the Rev John Hamilton of Cedar Cliff, N J for calling
Jack Johnson a gorilla Fat Masterson of the New York Morning Telegraph
and noted before decides Rev Run
son won out in the battle of words
in production in full from The Age.
Ransom section Mr Master
son makes the following preface.
If Jack Johnson can hand Jeff
riles was varied in assortment of
fictive shams when they meet in
the ring next July as the Rev Reverdy
C Ransom of the Bethel A
M E Church delivered to Rev
Mr. P. HALL JOHNSON, Violinist
of Columbus N.C. first appearance in New York
Mr. MELVILLE CHAPLTON
ACCOMPANIST
WAL FR P. CRAIO'S ORCHESTRA
OF TWENTY MUSICIANS
Private Boxes $3.00
Reserved
Secured of Walter P. Craig
York Telephone 2267 Columbus
Brooklyn Telephone 5226 Bedford
RECITAL BEGINS 8:30
0:30 P.M. TO 3 A.M.
jan 6-4t
National Society
NEW YORK
January 25, 1910
STAN CASINO
NEW YORK
Dancing from 8:30 p.m to 4 a.m.
CERS
MISS LUZAVI MAY Vice President
MK C. K. MELTON Roe Secretary
MK G. G. KOGLER H. GARKETT Chap.
JESSON ST. OF AYRE
Wardrote : 50 CENTS
other rain or sunshine. We call it a
oursome matter what you wear
Henten Farce and Assembly
a supers of
P. E. CHAPEL
N. WALTER D. McLANE President in charge
THE BUILDING FUND
Y DEMOCRATIC CLUB
Brooklyn
FEBUARY 3RD, 1910
Curtain rises 8,30 shop
Children under 12 years, 25 cents
THEATRE
NEW YORK CITY
Date. Presents Strong Ball by Noted
aires
TWICE A WEEK
MARION SCHOOL OF MUSIC
WILL MARION COOK, Director
HARRY T. BURLEIGH, Vocal Instructor
Instructors in
VOCAL PLAYING, FRONT
136 W. 37TH STREET
NEW YORK CITY
FLOOR
John Hamilton Timbrell of Cedar Cliff N. J., a Sunday or two ago, Jeffries will be taken from the ring on a stretcher in pig time after the gang announces the opening of hostilities.
The Rev. Reverdy C. Ransom might not cut much of a figure with the paddled mitts in the roped ring, but no one can gainay the foot that has not all there and some more with the verbal wallops. The Rev. Mr. Ransom's pulpit explosion was to reply to some disparaging remarks about the Negro to made by the Rev. Mr. Timbrell during a sermon in which he took for his text the mooted question of whether Jeffries could be back.
Rev. Mr. Ransom's remarks are pointed and go elegantly constructed to make their of general interest. Here is the war. Mr. Ransom pulverizes the Rev. Mr. Timbrell as taken from the New York Age.
New York Defends New Jersey
Basketball Games
The New Jersey-New York baseball fall games last Friday evening resulted in two decisive victories for New York. The teams representing Jersey were the Strollers A C. Newark and the Jersey City A C. Jersey City. The New York team were the Alpha lightweight regular teams.
The games were fast, exciting throughout and although they closed the start, the Alpha boys not together and after securing a commanding lead increased their advantage as the game progressed.
Following are the scores:
Strollers A C. 16. Alpha (light weight), 30
Jersey City A C. 21. Alpha (regular lar), 50
For the Latest Theatrical News Read the NEW YORK AGE.
THE NEWS OF GREATER NEW YORK
MANHATTAN AND BRONX.
ADVERTISING MATTER Must
the Age Office not later than
any evening, 5 p.m.
insure publication in the current
NEWS MATTER should reach the
office each Tuesday by 12 noon.
Phone: Bryant-3815
VICE TO CORRESPONDENTS—
CORRESPONDENCE MUST BE
THE AGE" OFFICE NO LATER
TUESDAY EVENING OF EACH
MONTH TO INSURE PUBLICATION.
VICE TO ADVERTISERS—
BELLANIAS OF OBSERVANT ADS
BE INCERVED IN "THE AGE"
VICE FOR PUBLICATION NO
AR THAN WEDNESDAY, 9 A.M.
MACH WEEK.
human hair goods go to Green-
850 Eighth avenue, near 38th
-Ade
aug. 3-Irr.
Mr. Albert De Ancy, of 327 West
street, is suffering from a severe
of the grip
Lotte West, sister of Raymond
is all with asthma at the Har-
ospital
Jerry M. Lymus, of 357 West 54th
is all at his home with a se-
cold
Chas Huston had a dangerous
in the ice a few nights ago, but was
seriously hurt
Ollette Robinson of 150 West
street visited her mother in Boston
week
James I Rudolph, who resides with
Lewis, Esq, at 207th street and
avenue, is critically ill
Frank Stewart has recovered
indisposition, and thanks her
kids for their kindness and good-
ness
Lotte Roberts of 136 West 17th
who went to the New York Hos-
to have a surgical operation of the
of the mouth, is home again
Anthony Madden has returned to city, after spending the Christmas in Baltimore, MD. He the guest of Art and Mrs W J will at a house party. Les Edward Gordon of Beuna, Culver County Va, has returned home. His first visit north to his sons and George Gordon of Pawling. I忘 forget the Apron Bazaar under desks of the Hope Day Nursery, Nursery, 223 West 14th street. Admission will be 10 cents each eve. The date is January 26, 27 and Adv. Christian Clark of Providence was in the city list week a guest of Eva Jupton and Mrs Edwin Day of 140 West 14th street, who have traveling with two well-known men for the past ten weeks.
Mrs. J. H McComas has returned to home in Atlanta City after having Christmas and New Years in New York City with her brother in-law, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. McComas of 214 West 49th street in George Allen, of 59 West 18th has just returned from Richmond where she was called by the wife of her brother, Joseph Hill, died very suddenly December 21, tomorrow evening, Friday, January 14, will be the invitation dance for the Progressive Art and Embroidery Club. The club desires to state this time, in order to prevent emasment please present your invitation at the door. Mrs M H Holmes of New York, Nettu Dorssey of Philadelphia, Messrs Louis Henry, Jr., and Thomas Staples of Buffalo were entered at the parlor social and dinner by Miss Ophelia Harris at her residence, 236 West 47th street, on Sun-January 9.
Mr. and Mrs. 1 Benjamin Brown, father and son in-law of Mrs. Hart, Washington, entertained the fam, and their friends with a reception their home, 145 West 44th street, Friday evening, December 31, 1909, New Year's eve. The guests enjoyed music and refreshments
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kinner of 422 45th street celebrated their tenth anniversary on Tuesday evening, January 74. Quite a number of their friends are present to wish them many happy times of the day. Music and games are indulged in until the sma wee hour. A buffet luncheon was served at Lockhart Mr. and Mrs. George Valerie and Mrs. Strothers of Jersey City are among those present
On last Thursday evening Mrs. N R伯伯
of West 10th street gave a
spirits part in the honor of Mrs. Alice
Gain's birthday. A delicious supper
served by R N Lordman. Many
unfavorable presents were received. Those
sent were Mr. and Mrs. Lee, Miss
Bley, Mr. Laylor Mrs. L Harris, Mrs.
Neary Mr. L Gory and Miss Ihel
tellrrell
The U.S. School of Mental Science,
459 Fifth avenue, New York
graduated in phrenology on
Wednesday evening January 2 19th
Bishop George I Blackwell and
Caldwell in Philadelphia spent the
terting in the school, and expressed
himself being well pleased with
his career and proud of the
principal J Osser
Journey the star student and
bookworm with the practiced and
dinner of the 11
Mary Hall Thursday
that was a brilliant
and outstanding the
team that evening
gave the singing of that
not aloud
Brooklyn Jersey
that Manhattan
interior were
many of the evening
will be recorded by
Orlando
fans to be on
with many of
the team that the
Brooklyn Boston
who is to be
the Kings
tight house on
Persons
of the
the character of
expected, they
will get their
the force to
the year by Her Busy
Day Stock Company" is more amusing than either of its former productions. In addition to the fance a very laughable sketch will be presented
meeting on Saturday, January 9, 1910 a meeting of colored and white citizens of Harlem was held at 101 West 140 street, when by a unanimous vote the name of William Minshel was taken as the name of the organization Mr Minshel is one of the leading business men of this section of the city. Addresses were made by Messrs Prod Larrell I Heagney, B. L. Supp, Davis Berry John W. Williams George Horton and William Minshel. The necessary papers have been sent to the Secretary of State at Albany for incorporation. Regular meetings of the Wm Minshell South Club will be held at 101 West 140 street the first Saturday of each month. The officers are President Lingue Hengney, vice president Charles W. Rich, secretary, Charles W. Williams, financial secretary F. A Sinclair, and treasurer, J. K. Skelly
On Tuesday evening, December 28, 1909, the ushers of Union Baptist Church surprised their chief usher, Philp Norrel, with a banquet It was a very brilliant affair. The tables were beautifully decorated and loaded down with good things. Thirty-tour guests were seated. Much credit is due C H Tables, the master of ceremonies. Isaiah I. Fell delivered the welcome address followed by remarks from Mrs Francis Green Miss Lester M Couton, of Clayton Del. Mr Thomas of Long Branch, N J G M Baptist J Hammond, I J H Stutley A Hutchins and others. Presentations were made to Mr and Mrs Philip Norrel by Mr H Beckett to Mr and Mrs A J Braun by Mr George Wilkerson, also to Mrs Francis Green by Mr Isaiah I. Fell. Mr Norrel has held the position of chief usher of Union Baptist Church for a number of years, and during that time has proved faithful.
In honor of his twenty fifth birthday anniversary, a little reception was tendered Harry F Delmas by his many friends and relatives at his residence, 159 West 61st street, last Saturday evening. Mr Delmas, formally of the district attorney's office, is now directing the physical department of the Manhattan branch of the Young Men's Christian Association. After an enjoyable repast there were many short speeches. Among those present were Counsellor F A Johnson Dr R M Cullen of McGill University O H Jefferson M D Jamaica L I J D Jones Columbia University, Abram Hopkins I D New York City James B Lateny Pittsfield Mass Wm I Jackson New York City Messrs Noah Hickman and Tucker of Brooklyn N Y Messrs David Riley and Slater of Philadelphia Pa Messrs Delmas and Hooper of the Republican Club Mr Charles Francis Skeete of So Vinderbelt avenue who has been ill since November with heart trouble is again confined to bed with heart trouble and not bed.
Local League Holds Interesting Meeting.
The regular monthly meeting of the Local Negro Business League was held Tuesday evening at the Hotel Macro. A large number attended. A committee of thirty two was appointed to wait on the executive committee of the National Organization which is expected to conven in New York the latter part of June and urge the claim of New York for the most annual meeting. The committee on Fred R. Moore Des. P. Roberts N. E. Thomas I. Hummel L. Lee N. J. Jackson Reys W. H. Gallert C. R. Ranson W. H. Brooks Commissioner James L. Curtis W. Welford H. Smith L. H. Mkans C. W. McDougall L. Collins Geo. W. Allen. Thos W. Lurring. George Holton J. S. Montague R. L. Thomas I. D. Lewis John M. Rousell P. Sheridan Rall H. W. Battrett N. L. Nelson C. Crag L. Jones and Lee D. Rowlall
The sessions in the local league are rather interesting. Members are called to tell of their business and the success they are meeting with helpful suggestions are made for improvement. The most regular meeting will be devoted to what will be known as inexperience meeting. Seven new members were added to the roll. The total membership is now 130. A public meeting will be held Thursday evening, January 20, at the rooms of the Y M C A.
The local league will use every effort to persuade the executive commit-
THE NEW YORK AGE: THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1910
tree to hold the next annual session in New York. Plans are also under way for the organization of a State league.
Brooklyn Y. M. C. A. Progressing.
The New Year's reception at the Carlton Avenue Branch of the Brooklyn Y M C. A was one of the best and largest nits history. More than two hundred visitors were in attendance.
The work of the Branch generally has gone on as formerly. The boys' work, which was begun in the spring, has been encouraging. About thirty now are enrolled and under the leadership of N D Johnson, Jr. Bowling is a favorite recreation now, and the men are using alleys at the Bedford Branch. The basketball craze is on, and about fifteen men are now practicing every week. The religious meetings have been very interesting and inspiring.
Financially the Branch is about what it was at his time every year, whichinds us facing a small deficit. The review of receipts for the month justpassed shows received from membership $20, boys' work $45, subscriptions $66.23, religious work $59, social department $45.0, room rent 49, total.205.10. Expenditures, $125. From now until March 31 they must raise about $00 to close the year without a defect The membership is about 200, a little less than it was last year. Efforts are being made to increase the membership
Birthday Diaper
Mrs. Robert J Andrews, formerly Miss King, of 26 West 130d street, gave a ten course dinner Tuesday, January 44, 1910, in honor of her husband's birthday, which greatly surprised and pleased him. The dinner was served by a lifelong friend from Richmond, Va. The guests present were Mr. Pickens, of the Murray Hill Hotel, Charles Harris, of Endicott Hotel, A Dickerson, of the New York Custom House, I. Mainforth Mrs. Andrews had as special guests a number of ladies
Erake Lodge Installer
On last Friday evening, January 7
Eureka Lodge, No 4152, G U O O F
holds its first public installation of offi-
cers at the Odd Fellows Hall. The dis-
truct grand master W D Brown, made
his first official visit and installed the
offices of the lodge, assisted by Super-
sons Brothers, R C Tolliver, H J
Edwards, W Irs C A Williams
and George A Marshall. There was a
large number present. Among the in-
terested guests were the Ladies Bunner
Cub which was organized by Mrs P
H Tolliver. This will soon present
to Lurika Lodge No 4152, G U O O F
I canbamone Bunner. I Reed of
Cleveland Ohio M A P and ex Grand
Sururer, arrived in the city on Sunday
evening. He visited Philomethon
Lodge No 646, G U O O F, on tues-
day evening. The installation of the offi-
cers of Lurika Lodge No 735, was held on Tuesday evening. District
Grand Master and staff were present to
perform the ceremony. Don't forget the
reception of San Manuel Lodge, No
1794, G U O O F, on Wednesday evening,
January 19, at Manhattan Casino.
The committee of Hamilton Lodge
No 710, G U O O F, are making
great preparations for a reception to be
held in February.
Mrs W. D Brown is quite all J. J
Johnson, district grand treasurer is
I're Lepton Recital
The much cultivated public especially those who have cultivated a taste for high class clothing, using its finest materials and assembly which occurs on Monday evening February 7, 1916, at Palm Garden, New York City, will be soon be bush furnishing its thrashes and taking its peek dog collars and stomaches out of the safe deposit vaults in preparations for the forthcoming season, substantially informed that this event will fair to eclipse any of former years,合 moulable as they have been been to listen to some of the greatest artists the race has produced, which fact alone should be sufficient to attract even larger audiences. Among some of the artists scheduled to appear will be Miss Marie Hurton, soprano, an accomplished guitarist, a graduate of college Music, leading the artiste the West. This will be her first appearance in New York, and she will play Arnette, contrata, an accomplished artiste and undoubtedly the best known contrata of whom the race can boast, will also appear on the program and will make the first appearance at New York, all litterer who is conduit to be one of the best and most versatile on the American stage, irrespective of
Mr F Hall Johnson of Columbus S.C. is a young and accomplished violinist with a special interest in the music that will appear for the first time in New York. Mr Melville Charlton as accompanist will be the special mention will be included in the IUlike most efforts combined along this line the Pre Leonten recitals seem to grow. Mr F Hall Johnson of Columbus S.C. believes this special concerts
MARRIAGE NOTICE
The marriage of Mr W H Branch to Miss Maggie Roster daughter of Mr William and Susan Roster of Soudan Va was surnamed on January 14 at the real estate office of the Soudan Street. Those present were her sister Mattei and two cousins Mary and Jennie Roster Mr. and Mrs. J W Brown and Mrs. Mel Donner and her Allan Blond from
IN MEMORIAM
TO LET-Furished rooms for gentlemen;
improvements, exclusive neighborhood;
hooligans; improvement;
Subway or L. 800 W. 183th street. Private house Mrs. M. A. Chambera.
TO LET - 210 E. 60th st. 3 rooms, gas, gas for fire, $14.50 to $14.50, $3 allowed for moving expense.
TO LET - Furnished rooms, small and large, with hot and cold water, room reasonable, 21 West 132d st., N. J. Mrs.
TO LET - Four large bright rooms: hot, cold water and respectable neighborhood. Inquire Ringgold, 36 W. 117th st.
TO LET - For colored tenants, 611-513 W. 35d st., all improvements, 3 and 6 rooms, jan13-4t
TO LET - Neatly furnished large and small rooms, with heat and bath. Greenapple 165 W. 35d st.
TO LET - 63 East 1030 street, near Madison avenue, elegant house, 4 rooms, bath, hot water supply. Apply to Janitor.
TO LET - A nicely furnished room for one or two gentlemen. 331 West 50th street. Mrs. Ferrell.
TO LET - Private parlors and dining room of the Progressive, Art and Embroidered Crafts, elegant house, 4 rooms, murales, etc. Inquire 21 W. 123d st.
TO LET - Flat, 81 Ninth street, only $15. to Jan13-2t
TO LET - S and 6 rooms, bath, steam heat. For colored decorated, moderate rent. For colored rooms only 1212 1 W. 118th st.
NEATLY furnished rooms at moderate prices Mrs. Ardelle Moore, 212 West 53th st. Private house
TO LET Hall bedroom. front: also basement room. 340 W. 53d st. Jan13-4t
TO LET One furnished room. Inquire of Mrs I Mosby, 137 W. 53d st.
TO LET Large, unfurnished front basement room. for light housekeeping per Mrs J A Melabella, 157 W. 53rd street
TO LET Furnished room with use of Mitchen $250 12 E. 132d st. H Massa
TO LET in heat two family house in Willamette, 7 rooms, bath and all improvements, hot water heat, 528 I. J. Age Office
TO LET Come and take apartment in the location in town 36 W. 51st st. Janitor
TO 111 In private home, second floor loo-
and cold water furnished or unfurni-
ed, respectable married couple Mrs. V
Williams 33 W 133d street
100 LEF Neatly furnished room gentle-
man or man and wife all conveniences
private house Address Mrs. A. Williams
53 W 133d street Jan 34
WARNED A married colored jacket in
children or most one child; must be
sober, honest and understand thoroughly
steam heat, hot water, and furnish good
reference and $100 cash security. Write
to H. this office. 1500-3177.
TO LET-BROOKLYN.
TO LET—Large front room and bath, furnished, suitable for two, one ball room. Apply R. L. Wright, 1479 Bergon street. Brooklyn, phone 200 W Bedford. dec04-47
WANTED Young men from B to 25 years of age of good character with musical experience, to join amateur concert band, professional employment unnecessary. For further information apply. Burrell Elkins, 413 Waverly avenue, Brooklyn, N.Y. or Mr Pollard, 90 Boreum place, Brooklyn.
TO LET Parlor floor and basement at 180 Putnam avenue. Brooklyn, for business purpose if desired. Apply on premise.
TO LET Furnished rooms, fifth or with out board 106 Putnam age. Brooklyn. References exchanged. Apply on premise.
Ford's Hair Pomade
Fifty years of success have proved the merits of this preparation.
What is more attractive than a beautiful beard of hair? It has seen the ambition of women in all area. The use of Ford's Hair Pomade makes stubborn, hair, kinky or curly hair softer, more pliable and glossy, easy so comb and arrange in style desired consistent with its length, as long as the Pomade remains in the hair. This is the most important application according to directions. Two four applications a month will keep the hair in an satisfactory condition, and two of four bottles, regular size are usually sufficient for year. Directions with every bottle.
Ford's Hair Pomade removes and prevents dandruff, invigorates the scalp and keeps it from getting harsh and dry, stops itching and prevent the hair from falling out or breaking off and gives it new texture. Pomade with splendid results even on children and infants. Delicately perfumed its use is a constant pleasure. A most satisfactory preparation for ladies, gentlemen and children.
MORRIS SCHAFFER
WITH THE
SCHAFFER FURNITURE CO
131 West 135th St.
Furniture Riding and
anng on wreck payments
Also, Ladies and Gentle
men's Clothing.
dec 16th
The Hampton Upholstering and Inter-
Decorating Company
46 W. 133rd Street
NEW YORK
F. C. Haznk, Mgr 114 V 134th St.
Upholstering in all its brasses. We re-
commend Harry's Furniture Bright (polishing fur-
niture) Price per bottle 25c
jan. 63m
RELIGIOUS NOTICES
ABYSSINIAN BAPTIST CHURCH, 242-46 West 40th St. between 7th and 8th Avena.
Sunday Services—11 a. m. and 7.20 p. m.
Holy Communion every first Sunday, 11 a. m. and 7.30 p. m.
Sunday school 2 p. m. Sunday Morning Band prayer meeting 2 p. m.
Weekly Prayer Meetings—Tuesday and Fridays at 8 p. m.
B. Y. P. U. at 8 p. m. Thursdays.
HOLY COMMUNION every second Wednesday in each month at 8 p. m.
A. C. Powell, D. D. Paster, residence 265 W. 124th street; phone, Morninggate, 458 W. 124th street from 1 to 2 p. m. daily and from 1 to 2 p. m. daily.
BETREL A. M. E. CHURCH, West 125th street, between 7th and 8th avenues.
Sunday services—11 a. m. and 7.45 p. m.
Holy Communion every first Sunday, 12 a. m. and 7.45 p. m.
School 2 p. m. Prayer meeting 6.20 p. m.
Wednesday Meetings—Class meeting on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday night at 8 o'clock. Prayer meeting on Friday from 8 e'clock to 9.30.
SUNDAY Meetings—Class meeting on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday night at 8 o'clock. Prayer meeting on Friday from 8 e'clock to 9.30.
SUNDAY Meetings—Class meeting on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday night at 8 o'clock. Prayer meeting on Friday from 8 e'clock to 9.30.
Pastor's residence 268 West 129th street at home from 8 to 10 a. m.
The pastor can be seen at the church every day from 12 to 8 p. m. oct 12-19.
MOTHER A. M. R. ZION CHURCH, 137
West 88th street. Rev R. M. Bolden.
pastor, 34 West 140th street.
Sunday services—11.00 a. m. and 7.45 p. m.
Penishment every second Sunday
at 3 p. m. Vark Christian School
Sunday Morning Class—12.30 p. m. Sunday
School at 2 p. m. Vark Christian
School
Weekly Meetings—Class Meetings every
Tuesday and Wednesday evenings.
Friday Meeting—Friday evening.
Saturday Meetings—Saturday evening.
Rev. Balden can be seen every day at
the church from 11.30 to 2.30.
July1 1-y
ST. CYRIANIS CHAPEL, PROTES-
TANT EPISCOPAL, 177 W. 63d
STREET.
REV JNO W JOHNSON. Priest in
Sunday services—11 a. m. and 8 p. m.
Sunday School 3 30 p. m.
A CORDIAL WELCOME TO ALL.
June 29-1-yr
UNION A. M E. CHAPEL,
230 EAST 85th street.
REV J C FERNANDERS. Pastor
Sunday Services—Preaching 11 a. m.
Mass Service—Preaching 12 30
p. Mass Preaching 8 p. Holy Com-
munion every third Sunday, 3 p.
Week-day Services—Lyceum, Wednesday
8 p. Mass Thursday, 8
p. All are welcome.
sep 3-1yr
ST JAMES PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH.
357 West 51st St. between 5th and 9th
acre. New York City.
Pastor. C. LERIGY BUTLER, D.D. Resl
donate best 51st street Office hours
until 10 acre. Presbyterian Church.
Preaching at 11 m. and 8 p.m. Prayer
meeting Wednesday evening at 8:15
Sunday at 1 p.m. Y. P. B. C. K.
7:30-Sunday. Holy Communion first Sunday in
each month at 8 p.m.
A CORDIAL WELCOME TO ALL.
mar.19-1yr
MT OLIVET BAPISTER CHURCH.
169-161 West 53d street, between 6th
and 7th avenues.
Rosemary Gilbert, D.D., pastor
Preaching Services every Sunday at 11
clock a.m. m. and 7:30 p.m.
Sunday School at 2:30 p.m. Sundays.
B P M U meets every Sunday at 5:30
p.m.
B P M Literary meets every Wednesday
at 8 p.m.
The Weekly Prayer Meeting on Friday
evening at 8 p.m.
Church Aid Society, second Monday evening
in every week.
Yungang Booch Club, every month on
the third Monday evening.
Visitors are made welcome. June 3-1yr
UNION BAPISTER CHURCH. 204-6 West 51st
St. Himo, Slim, Mt.
Sunday Services--4 Himo, First Meeting
11 a.m. Preaching. 3 p.m., Sunday
School. 5:30 p.m. B P M 7:30
p.m. Preaching.
Second Sunday evening in each month—
Communion.
Second and fourth Lord's Day, Missionary
Tuesday evening—The Twelve Tribes of
Israel (Literary Exercises).
Thursday evening of each week—The
Oriental Bible Library Literary Society
(Literary Exercises).
Prayer Meeting each Friday evening
at 8 p.m.
Pastor's residence. 29 West 99th St.
Pastor's residence. 4472-8 Riverside.
TABERNACLE BAPISTER CHURCH.
160 East 112th Street, Rev. E. D. Bowles.
Sunday sermon--11 a. m.
Sunday School--2.30 p. m.
Weekly sermon: Wednesday evening.
Weekly meeting: Friday evening, Prayer
Meeting.
LEGAL NOTICE.
STATE OF NEW YORK
County, Court, County of Dutchess
52 Market St. Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
To all the Defendants above named and
the defendants Anna Roll Dufolia William D. Brimmer and Hea
lamin Robinson
TAKE NOTICE that the foregoing Num-
ber pursuant to an order of Hon. Frank Hahrocn,
County Judge of Dutchess County,
her 1900, and died the same date, with
the Complaint, in the Office of the Clerk
of the County of Dutchess, at Poughkeepsie
Mrs. tha. Skecte desires to express her gratitude to the members of the Dlick com. Attention during her husband's illness Much commendation is due to the following gentlemen. McArre Brooks, Williams, McArre Brooks, Williams, Philadelphia Tribune kliny copy.
CERVUS ALCEB
Grand
Thursday Even
Music by Prof. L.
DR. T. W. ROBINSON
W. A. THOMSON
DR. J. R. STROUD
JAMES D. JACKSON
T. BROWN
J. M. WASHINGTON
L. E. MABRY
T. SMITH
J. M. SMITH
JAMES H. BUCKMAN
C. T. FURGUSON
WALLIO E. IONES
W. H. J. Jackson
DR GEO E. CANNON
T ustees—John H. Milligan.
Arrangement Committee
Brown, E. C. Snead, W. H. T.
Floor Director Chester.
Past Exited Eckers J.
George W Griffin Edgar C. S.
Adm.
ROUTE TO HALL. Parties
direct to hall from Pennsylvania
Plank Road car to Grand Street
HE WHO
African
Est
206 Broadway
Is Offering for S
Stock wh
DR T. W. ROBINSON ... Exalted Rider
W. H. THOMPSON ... Eateened Leading Knight
DR J. R. STROUD ... Eateened Loyal Knight
JAMES D. JACKSON ... Eateened Loyal Knight
J. M. WASHINGTON ... Financial Secretary
L. E. MABRY ... Recording Secretary
T. S. SMITH ... Treasurer
JAMES H. BUCKMAN ... Tiler
D. A. THOMAS ... Chaplain
C. T. FURGUSON ... Require
WALLIO E. JONES ... Inner Guard
W. H. JACKSON ... Chairman Social Session
DR GEO E. CANNON ... Examining Physician
Testees—John H. Miller Chairman R. Jones. W T Brown. I. A Walker. J. W. Scrogins.
Arraignment Committee. W. T Brown Chairman Norman Soad. Secretary J. T. Brown. E. C. Sneed W. H. Thompson
Floor Director. Chester A Gardeen
Past Exalted Riders. J. T. Brown. George E. Bates W T Brown. Dr. Geo. E. Cannon-George W Griffin Edgar C. Sneed.
Admission 50 Cents
WHO HESITATES IS
African Mining and Real Estate Company
Broadway New York
Rooms 16 and 17
ing for Sale 300,000 One Dollar S
stock when issued at 25c per share
HE WHO HESITATES IS LOST
African Mining and Real Estate Company
206 Broadway New York City Rooms 16 and 17 Is Offering for Sale 300,000 One Dollar Shares of Stock when issued at 25c per share.
DEVELOPMENT
of 12,800 acres, Ru Gold Mines, Accra, C There is no time This, no doubt, price, after which the Chairman of F
acres, Rubber and Cocoa plantations and
Miss. Accra, Gold Coast, West Africa.
is no time like the present. Act now.
no doubt, will be the last allotment offered
which the price will advance to $1.00 per
man of Executive Committee, Bishop W.
Wrafa, Africa, January 27, 1910.
or call on
ALFRED C. COWAN,
T. R. King's Coun-
Attorney and Counse
ISCHIANZA AND DAY
Will be given by a COMMITTEE OF LADIES
IN AID OF THE -
John T. Dixon Memorial Dome
OF THE
HOWARD ORPHAN ASYLU
By Evening, February 4th
AT 8.15 P.M.
AT JEFFERSON HALL
Court Square, Brooklyn, N.Y.
C. H. LANSING
MRS. H T B
W. F. CRAIG
MRS. J W B
M. HOLBROOK
MRS. C E B
MRS. W. G. GREENE, Treas.
WASHINGTON vs. NEW YORK
AT BASKET BALL GAMES AND
Biggest and Best Court in New York City, MANHATTAN
155th Street and Fifth Ave.
Floor covered with AWVA for the Game
EDNESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 2, 1910
UNDER THE SPICES OF THE
Alpha Physical Culture C
N Christopher two and three vs. Alpha (lightweight)
Washington M C vs. Alpha (regular)
Game M 15 share 15% of the score while the game is in pro-
session 50c
Boxes (Best to view the game) seas
DANCING MUSIC BY DOUGE
Annual Spring Reception, April 29, Palm Garden
The Fifth Annual Ball and Reception
OF THE
MAN PORTERS SICK AID
At MANHATTAN CASINO, 155th St. and 8th Ave.
SDAY EVENING, JANUARY 20
Music by the New Amsterdam Full Orchestra
ION: Including Hat Check:
OFFICERS
President
Haughton G. Pa-
Thomas Lofthouse Financial Secretary
of 12,800 acres, Rubber and Cocoa plantations and Placer Gold Mines, Accra, Gold Coast, West Africa.
There is no time like the present. Act now.
This, no doubt, will be the last allotment offered at this low price, after which the price will advance to $1.00 per share.
Chairman of Executive Committee, Bishop Walters; will sail to Accra, Africa, January 27, 1910.
Write or call on
ALFRED C. COWAN,
T. R. King's County, 652
Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law
A MISCHIANZA AND DANCE Will be given by a COMMITTEE OF LADIES
WASHINGTON vs. NEW YORK
BIGGEST BASKET BALL GAMES AND DANCE
on the Biggest and Best Court in New York City, MANHATTAN CASINO
155th Street and Fighth Ave.
Floor covered with CANVAS for the Game
WEDNESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 2, 1910
UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE
Alpha Physical Culture Club
1st Game: St. Christopher (second to and vs. Alpha (lightweight)
2nd Game: Washington X M C vs. Alpha (regular)
Preliminary Game: $15 share
For the score while the game is in progress
General Admission 50c
Bpaxes (Best to view the game) seating eight, $1.00
DANCING MUSIC BY DOUGE
Annual Spring Reception, April 29, Palm Garden
... The Fifth Annual Ball and Reception ...
OF THE
PULLMAN PORTERS SICK AID SOC'TY
At MANHATTAN CASINO, 155th St. and 8th Ave.
THURSDAY EVENING, JANUARY 20TH, 1910
Music by the New Amsterdam Full Orchestra
ADMISSION : Including Hat Check : 50 CENTS
OFFICERS
Sylvester Brown President
Haughton G. Parris, Treasurer
Thomas Lofthouse, Financial Secretary
American Hall
North Avenue, New York Bet. 41st & 42nd St.
LET FOR Balls, Receptions, Entertain-
Weddings, Parties and Rehe-
M. N. SEMANSKY, Proprietor
L. Newly Fitted. Large Stage for Theatrical Perform
RTISE IN THE N. Y.
(Amerloan Theatre Building)
OUT-OF-TOWN CORRESPONDENCE
NEW HAVEN NEGRO NAMED.
Moses T. Rice Assigned to Tax Commission—Dr. Hall Visits.
Regular Correspondence of The Ann.
New Haven, Jan. 11.—At the City Hall Saturday, January 1, the newly-installed Republican administration stepped in to assume the reins laid down by the Democrats.
The first work taken up by the newly-made Mayor, Frank J. Rice, was to make several appointments. In this batch Moses T. Rice, of 313 Dixwell avenue, Ninth District, was assigned to the Tax Commission. The citizens generally congratulated Mr. Rice on his success. Very probably there will be another colored appointment made. However, the appointment will be made later on when the Mayor will be able to find a colored man who he believes will be suitable to fill the job.
The cantata of Esther the Beautiful Queen will be given at the Foy Auditorium, Temple street, on Wednesday evening, February 2, for the benefit of the building fund of St Luke's' Church parish house, Rev H. O. Bowles rector. The cantata will be under the auspices of C. Henry Barclay, general manager, and T. Bartram Jones, director. The cantata will be accompanied by the Elm City Orchestra, Miss C. Effort, pianist, assisted by Miss M. Hope and Clarence Wilmore.
The people of New Haven are being generally urged to the Union Evangelistic services to be held at Varrick Memorial Zion A. M. E. Church, Dixwell avenue and Charles street, beginning Monday evening, January 10, and continuing until the 21st. Rev. David S. Klugh, D. D., will act as the evangelist. Music will be furnished by a chorus choir.
Mrs. Moses T. Rice gave a birthday dinner at her residence, 313 Dixwell avenue, last Sunday, January 2 Covers were laid for ten Good cheer characterized the affair all through Those present were Mr and Mrs. William J Hargett, Mr and Mrs. James W. Stewart, Mr and Mrs James E. Porter, Mr and Mrs William Thomas and Mr and Mrs Moses T Rice
The song recital given by A. St Claire Fenderson at Warner Hall, last Thursday evening, January 6, was an artistic success. Those who took part were. Miss Josie Muse, pianist; Miss Cormine Adams, elocutionist; Ralph Howard, violinist.
Dr. John B. Hall, of Boston, while in the city was the guest of Mrs. Josephine Adley, *pit 33* Eaton street.
Providence Industrial School Incorporated.
Regular Correspondence of The Ann.
Providence, R. I., Jan. 11.—The
friends of Mrs. Singleton will sympa-
tize with her in her sad misfortune of
a fire last week, which destroyed some
furniture and clothing.
Miss Viola Haliday of Boston spent
her vacation with Mrs. J. H. Wiley.
Miss Haliday was guest at dinner with
Miss Lela Williams. Mrs. Wiley enter-
tained Miss Rebecca Marshall on New
Year's Day in honor of her guest.
Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Johnson enter-
tained Miss Nora Rice of Newport during
the holidays.
Rev. Ryon of New Bedford was in
the city this week. Mrs. Mary Barker
is very sick. Her daughter is with her,
from Albany, N. Y.
All of the churches report for excellent watch meetings. The Ebenezer Church received several new members on New Year's night and also began its revivals at this meeting. The Sunday School concert and Christmas tree was enjoyed by a good crowd, Wm. Mercer taking off the part of Santa Claus, Mr. Mercer left last Tuesday to spend the winter in Florida. The Watchman Industrial School has obtained its charter and been incorporated by the State. AGE—TWELVE Rev. Greene of Philadelphia is in the city. The Ebenezer Baptist Sunday School, after making a grand report, elected its new officers last Sunday. G. W. Long, superintendent, and Anderson, his assistant. The Christian Endeavor also had a body of able officers re-elected, including Rev. J. Dunn, president, and Mrs. J. H. Wiley, vice-president, and others.
Revival Series in Hartford.
Hartford, Conn, Jan 11—A series of revival meetings have commenced at Shiloh Baptist Church this week.
Master Paul Wilson celebrated his eighth birthday January 6 by entertaining several of his little friends at his home, on Union street.
Mrs. Ellis of Whitmore street was able to return home last Friday, December 31, from East Radford, Va, where she went to see her mother, Mrs. Belsey Mands.
Mrs. Dorsey of New Haven, Conn, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Wm Cross of Capen street
Mrs. Coles of Cedar street is very sick with the grip.
The funeral of Edward Hepton, formerly of this city, who died Monday at his home in Brooklyn, N. Y., was held in this city Wednesday afternoon, January 5, from the undertaking parlors of Hills & Marchant, 53 Ann street. Rev Alonzo Johnson of St Monica's Mission officiated. The burial was in the Old North Cemetery
The subject of the Y P Society of Christian Endeavor of the Talcott Street Congregational Church last Sunday was "Bringing Others to Christ" Mr. Holmes, representative of the Christian Endeavor Union, gave a very interesting address on missionary work to a large and appreciative audience
Baltimore, Md.
Baltimore, Md., Jan. 12—The Walters Public Baths No. 3, which is maintained by the city for the use of Baltimore Negro people, reports 30,500 patrons for 1900, an increase of 2,111 for the previous year. Bishop J. B. Scott, who has charge of the work of the Methodist Episcopal Church in West Africa, will be the principal speaker at a mass meeting in the interest of African missions, next Wed-
Carle B. Cooke, comedian and songwriter, is in the city. Revivals are being held in a number of churches. A two-weeks' bazaar, given under the auspices of Monumental Lodge of Elks, has just closed. The process are for the building fund of the lodge.
DROWNING IN TAMPA.
John Jefferson Loses Life in Navy Yard—Merrymakers Entertain.
Regular Correspondence of The AQR.
Key West, Fla., Jan. 10.—The bazaar and dance given by the members of Bethel Church was a grand success. Music was furnished by the Orpheus Orchestra.
The A M E. Zion Sunday School gave their annual festival on Tuesday afternoon at the Odd Fellows Hall, which was beautifully decorated. It was well attended.
The Merrymakers' Whist Club entertained their friends at a progressive dinner on Wednesday afternoon. The menus at the different homes were as follows:
Soup, assorted crackers and wine at Miss Andrews', deviled crabs, shrimp salad, olives and oysterettes at Miss Welters'; turkey with dressing, chicken, cranberry sauce, giblet sauce and sandwiches at Mrs. Kemp's, and cakes, ices, nuts, fruits and soft drinks at Miss McDonald's. Excellent music was furnished for the occasion by the Victory Orchestra. The dinner came to an end at Miss McDonald's residence, where whist and dancing were indulged in. The manner in which the young ladies entertained will always be remembered by those present, who were: Misses Grace English, Constance Roberts, Florence McDonald, Carrietta Tinker, Yule Welters, Miley Shaw, Angie Andrews, Grace Shaw, Mary Gibson, Panchita Portal, Genevieve Mary Gibson, Yule Smith, Mesdaines Mabel Simons, Eldy Kemp, Amos Kealing, Mary Moreno, Messrs Udward Palicious, Ernest Bailou, Jas Andrews, Eugene Kemp, Amos Kealing, Wm Moreno, Edward Wilkinson, Ormond Burtissel, John Russell, W Rievers and John Gibson
Miss Hattie Smith, D. M. N. S. of the Grand Lodge of St. of R., was in the city last week on a business visit She left on Saturday for her home in Tampa.
John Jefferson, who has been employed at the Naval Station for the past seven years as a watchman, met his death by falling overboard Friday night. He was formerly of Jacksonville, and leaves a wife, son and relatives throughout the State. His wife and son have left for their former home, accompanied by his brother, who came to their rescué after the accident. Their many friends were sorry to hear of their quick departure.
Mrs. Arimina Lewis of Tampa is if the city paying a visit to her aged mother, Mrs. Catharine Sinear.
Mrs. Mary Wiggins and daughter, formerly of this city, who have been visiting Mr and Mrs. Peter W. Bryant at their residence on Thomas street, left Tuesday for their home in Tampa.
Reynold Nealy, who has been spending the holidays visiting friends in Havana, has returned.
Mrs. Mildred Albury is suffering with a severe attack of the grip at her residence on Catharine street. Her many friends wish her a speedy recovery.
Miss Mary Neely and niece have returned from a visit to Tampa.
Mrs. Robert McGhee, who has been ill for the past few weeks, is recovering
Frank R. Shavers, one of our oldest citizens, died Sunday after a Lingering illness. He was born in Danville, Va., 75 years ago, and, has resided in this city for the past 48 years, and leaves many relatives and a host of friends to mourn his loss. Funeral services were held from the A. M. E. Zion Church, of which he had long been a trustee.
Rev, J. E. Garrett officiated, assisted by Revs Jones and Blair.
Mesdames Houston and Cantwell, who have been on the sick list for the past few months, are recovering. The many friends are glad to hear the news.
Presiding Elder Wm Blair has been holding his conference here last week, he has returned to Tampa.
The homes of Measart. John Smith and John Knowles and Mrs Douglass of Angela street were destroyed by a very pecuilar fire on Tuesday morning. The whole neighborhood was threatened, and only good work by the firemen saved the adjoining buildings. They have the sympathy of the entire community.
Valtors in Brugelm
Buffalo, N Y, Jan 11—Mrs James
A Ross of Florida street entertained
the Cold Spring Club last Thursday
evening.
Miss Adelaine Hamilton has returned
to Rochester, N Y
Mr and Mrs J W Upshur of Elm
street will celebrate the twenty-fifth
anniversary of their wedding on Thursday
evening, January 13
Mrs Luke Greene of Trinity street
will entertain the Dames at their next
meeting, on Tuesday, January 11.
The Seremta Club and St Phillip's
courge gave a very successful entertainment
last Tuesday evening at St Jude's
Hall for the benefit of St. Philip's
Church
Miss Gertrude B Johnson of Niagara
Falls, N Y, was a recent visitor in
Buffalo
Mrs George Williams of Albany, N
Y, is the guest of Mrs Lester Dixon
of Laurel street
Petersburg, Va.
Regular Correspondence of THE AGN
Petersburg, Va. Jan 12 —The young ladies of this city's social circles have been busy of late with the usual midwinter entertainments. More recently Misses Florence Dalney, of Dunlap street, Lena A. Jordan, of Brown street, Mame J. Harrison and Nannie E. Johnston, of the Normal School, appeared in delightful parties to a number of their friends and acquaintances. Those present were Misses Lizzie Howard, Ida and Laura Bell, Grace Valentine, Mary Blick, Inez Clemons, including also Messa. Roger illiams, Jesse Baker, Hugo Johnston, Robert Jones, J. G. Brown and Dr. and Harris. The program consiste
THE NEW YORK AGE THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1910.
Prof. John M. Gaudy has just received a commission from the U. S. Census Director to stump the counties of Southside, Va., in interest of securing an accurate count of the heads, homes and farms of the Negro population of this section. The commission was secured through the solicitation of Dr. Thos. Jesse Jones, of Hampton, who is working hard to have the census returns show a more intelligible accounting of the black man's progress than it has heretofore.
Prof. Jas. T. Phillips has just edited and published a "Quick Review in English Grammar." It is a manual for the use of pupils and teachers in the public school system, is handsome bound and retails for 50 cents per copy.
Misses T. B. Willes, Mary E. West and Bessie Rawlings, popular young school marms of the counties, have recently left for their charges, after a pleasant visit to parents and friends in town.
W. M. Spratley was in Suffolk on business last week.
Prof. Pollard, of Lawrenceville; was a welcome visitor in our city last week.
HUBBARD HOSPITAL ASSN. MEETS.
Subject of Raising Funds for Erection of $40,000 Structure Discussed.
Regular Correspondence of THE AGR.
Nashville, Tenn., Jan. 11—At the December meeting of the George W. Hubbard Hospital Association, held in the Walden Auditorium, the reports of those in charge of raising the necessary funds for the erection of the new $40,000 structure to be used for clinical instructing and nurse training in connection with the Mehray Medical College here were very encouraging and showed a great amount of interest manifested in the project by faculty, students and friends which seems to indicate that the proposed building is assured
Dr George W Hubbard, for whom the proposed hospital is to be named, reported collections for the month on subscriptions of $582 30, and Dr R. E. Body reported subscriptions coming chiefly from the alumni, secured while on the recent Booker T. Washington tour over the State, of $870. He also read a letter of endorsement sent him by Washington, of the efficient work being done by Mehairy Medical College and assume the support of the public in this new effort, the trustees to establish the new building Hon. J. C. Napier is president of the George W Hubbard Hospital Association, Dr George W. Hubbard is treasurer and Dr Josie E. Wells is secretary
On the night of January 1 Emancipation Day was very fittingly observed by the students of Fisk University here by appropriate exercises which were held in Fisk Memorial Chapel. The principal address was delivered by Prof. H. T. Kealing, editor of the A. M. E. Review, of this city, a speaker of international prominence, who compared the new American at the present to that as when he was but a chattel, and said that the Negro can reach the status of a full American citizen An essay on "The Negro in Fine Arts" by Miss Beatrice D Walker, deserves especial mention
Raymond Augustine Lawson, artist pianist from Hartford, Conn., gave a recital at the Fisk Memorial Chapel on December 31 that was of an exceedingly high order and showed that he was a superior artist in his line. He is a graduate of Fisk University and of the Hartford Conservatory of Music. His engagement at Fisk here was of great interest to the music faculty and many other Nashville friends, his wife, Ida Napier Lawson, be a niece of Hon. J. C. Napier, of this city, and she, too, has great ability as a soprano singer, and while it a student of Fisk executed in most admirable manner the most difficult solos in quite a number of the oratorios which the Mozart Society here rendered from year to year.
Mr. Lawson's appearance was regarded by all who heard him as the crowning event of a series of high-class musical entertainments of the year at the University
Anniversary Sermon in Passage
Passair, N. J., Jan. 11—C. H. Kingland, superintendent of Mt. Zion Baptist Sunday School, deserves hearty congratulations for the most excellent program rendered by his school at the Christmas exercises. Mr. Kingsland is one of the most proficient superintendents in the State, and he has his school well disciplined. He will read a paper before the Sunday convention next month at East Orange
Services at the Mt. Zion Baptist Church were well attended all day Sunday. In the morning the pastor, Rev W J Winston, BD, preached an excellent sermon. At 3 p.m he preached the annuity sermon of the Rose and Slaton Lodge, No. 5776, G U O of O F, at the A U M P Church. At 8 p.m there was a general covenant meeting, after which the pastor administered the Lord's Supper to a large number.
Mrs Rev W J Winston is a patient at the General Hospital, Paterson, N J. under the care of Paterson surgeon specialist. We are glad to hear that she is on the road to recovery. She is a great factor in the church
Mrs James H Penn, the wife of Lawyer Penn, is rapidly recovering from a severe attack of neuralgia. She is a patient in the St. Mary's Hospital Mrs Penn has the church's sympathy and prayers in her affection. She is a most lovable wife (George Sibree, BD), of Baltimore, Md, is visiting his old friend and classmate Rev Winston
R. Epps and Mrs Amanda Gholson were united in holy weekock Tuesday, December 28, by Rev W J Winston at the residence of Mr and Mrs W. L. Goode Their presents were many and costly
The ladies will hold missionary services on the third Sunday, sermon by the pastor.
Rev. P Nevis is improving rapidly from a severe attack of rheumatism. He is a patient at the Passaic General Hospital. Rev. Winston has been elected as president of the Baptist Ministry Conference of Newark and Victoria.
Hair Dressers and Barbers
Greenberg
Ladies' Hair Dressing
MANUFACTURER OF HUMAN HAIR GOODS
Afro-American Hair Goods and
All kinds of Wigs. Front Pieces and Switches in Stock, and
Mail orders promptly filled out from any part of the country.
589 Eighth Ave
NEAR 20TH STREET
aug 5-1yr
Greenberg's
es' Hair Dressing Parlors
MANUFACTURER OF HUMAN HAIR GOODS
American Hair Goods a Specialty
kinds of Wigs. Front Pieces and Switches in Stock, and Made to Order
is promptly filled out from any part of the country. Just sent free.
89 Eighth Avenue
NEAR 20TH STREET
Greenberg's
Ladies' Hair Dressing Parlors MANUFACTURER OF HUMAN HAIR GOODS
NEAR 20th STREET
MACY RE Hair Tonic and Dandruff Cure, Macy Re Massage Cream and Skin Food, Mmc. Mason's Face Beautifier. Above goods guaranteed under Pure Food and Drug Act, Series No. 15007. Only American Hair Goods Store in New York owned by an Afro-America, 17 West 185th Street, New York. Old hair made new.
MRS. IDA WHITE-DUNCAN
19 Prescott St. Jersey City, N.J.
HAIR WORKER
Wigs, Braids, Bangs Pompadours and Comb
tings made up in the latest styles. Nealp Treat
nast, Shampooing, Oil Pressing Fine Massage
Manticuring, Colored People, Combressed Office
Mail Orders promptly attended to. Branded
445 Orchard Street, New Haven, Conn. Mr. J. A.
Henson, Agent.
dec. 10.3m
Is Your Hair Beautiful
Soft, S
H
NELSON'S
pomade o
it makes your hair
tangled hair as o
it keeps it from m
and gives it that
Use Nelson's H
Your hard with patience.
Soft, Silky and Long?
NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING is the first hair pomade on the face of the earth for colored people. It makes your hair grow fast it makes and bends it kninks it tadpoles hair as it a fist and a sleeve as it makes it healthy. It keeps it from splitting or breaking off. It makes it such and gives it that charm so longed for by all true ladies.
amount of oil. You will never have scalp disease. You will
Nelson's Hair Dressing put up it
agents everywhere sell it at 25 cents a box. If you can't
you a full-fill hair postpaid. Go and buy it now, or at right
NELSON MANUFACTURING
Live Agents Wanted. W
Out-of-Town Hotels and S
HOTEL
Hair Dressing is put up in handsome four-ounce square tin boxes, like the lady holds in her hand. Druggists and we will sit at 25 cents a box. If you can't get it, send us 30 cents and we will mail go and buy it now, or at right down and click us on Address.
MANUFACTURING CO., Richmond, Va.
Agents Wanted. Write Quick for Terms.
Out-of-Town Hotels and Summer Resorts
HOTEL UPTON
ISRAEL RUE, Treveser
Thoroughly Modern With Every Convenience
Team hosted outside rooms. Superb dining room service. Bar with Special Rates in Lafayette New and Theatrical People. Ruggage free to and from White Back Bay Station, Dartmouth St. Price moderate. June 25-17
BOSTON, MASS
Bonds! $250,000 Bonds!
Investment that appeals to the small as well as the large Investor.
Metropolitan Mercantile and Realty Company
Capital Stock, $1,000,000
for sale $250,000 worth of bonds $50,000 of this will be sold at a discount of twenty per cent. on the remainder at par. Proceeds from the sale of these are used for building houses for Negroes bonds are issued in denominations of $12 and $100 and percent. Interest The bond will run for ten years, and be at the rate of one tenth of the principal each year interest, after the same has been freely paid.
Nelson's Hair Dressing is put up in handsome four-ounce square tin boxes. like the lady holds in her hand Druggists and agents everywhere sell it at 25 cents a box. If you can't get it, send us 30 cents and we will mail you a half-ton box postpaid. Go and buy it now, or sit right down and add us. Address
Out-of-Town Hotels and Summer Resorts
Throughly Modern With Every
Two hundred steam heated outside rooms. Super-
restaurant attached. Special Rates to Reserved New and Tha-
all stations. Opposite Back Bay Station, Dartmouth
BOSTON, MA
Bonds! $250,000
An Investment that appea-
well as the large I
The Metropolitan Mercantile and
Capital Stock, $1,6
OFFERS for sale $250,000 worth o
issue will be sold at a discount o
dollar. The remainder at par. Procee-
bonds will be used for building houses o
These bonds are issued in denomina-
bear si per cent. Interest. The bond
is redeemable at the rate of one tenth o
including Interest, after the same has be
Two hundred steam heated outside rooma Superb dining room service. Bar with restaurant attached. Special Rates in Edinburgh and Theatrical People Baggage free to and from all stations. Opposite Back Bay Station, Dartmouth St.Prices moderate. June 25-1y. BOSTON, MASS.
An Investment that appeals to the small as well as the large Investor.
Tle Metropolitan Mercantile and Realty Company
OFFERS for sale $250,000 worth of bonds $50,000 of this issue will be sold at a discount of twenty per cent. on the dollar. The remainder at par Proceeds from the sale of these bonds will be used for building houses for Negroes These bonds are issued in denominations of $12 and $100 and bear sil per cent. Interest The bond will run for ten years, and is redeemable at the rate of one tenth of the principal each year including Interest, after the same has been fully paid.
Bonds sold for Cash or Installment
Send for Booklet. Reliable agents wanted
Metropolitan Mercantile and Realty Company
METROPOLITAN BUILDING
10,000 Stock Issue
TO BUILD AN
Corium in Greater New York
for the special accommodation of Afro-Americans
CONTAINING
Concert and Banquet Halls, Modern Offices
and Lodge Rooms
not a far fetched scheme but a same practical busi-
tion bound to succeed because it is giving the people
tant. We are offering
$10,000 SHARES AT $10 EACH, PAR VALUE
in blocks of three shares or more to suit the Investor
us.
Capital already in hand and the rapid increase of
ans the realization of the Auditorium. This enter-
each investor Safety of Capital and Growth of
all or write for further particulars
46th Street and Eighth Ave.
$100,000 Sto
TO BUILD AN
Auditorium in Greater
For the special accommodation of
Auditorium in Greater New York For the special accommodation of Afro-Americans
Reception, Concert and Banquet Lodge and Lodge Room
This is not a far fetched scheme but nesproposition bound to succeed because what they want. We are offering
$10,000 SHARES AT $10 EACH
Stock sold in blocks of three shares or more on easy terms.
The capital already in hand and business means the realization of the April assures each investor Safety of Income. Call or write for further parti
Reception, Concert and Banquet Halls, Modern Offices and Lodge Rooms This is not a far fetched scheme but a same practical business proposition bound to succeed because it is giving the people what they want. We are offering
Stod sold in blocks of three shares or more to suit the investor on easy terms. The capital already in hand and the rapid increase of business means the realization of the Auditorium. This enterprise assures each investor Safety of Capital and Growth of Income. Call or write for further particulars
MOORMAN-HARPER COMPANY
26 Street
Telephone 2803 N
Street. Brooklyn, N.Y.
Telephone 2803 Main
sng 5-1yr
W. R. KARBY, freesoul
MADAME J. L. CRAWFORD
HAIR DRESSING PARLOR
341 West 59th Street
Telephone, 5457 Calzambre
Wigs, switches and pompads made from
natural hair. Combings made up, shampooing
and hair straightening a speciality. Madame
Crawford's Face Cream for male-A skins
beautifier and remover of pimples and black-
heads.
april-1 y
Telephone 2801-881 St.
MRS. F. BERGER
Ladies' Hair Dressing Parlor
513 Eighth Avenue, 1st Floor
Bot. 55th and 88th St. N.Y.
All kinds of Afro-American hair goods in
stock or made to order
nov 19-dno
Does it comb easily without breaking?
Is it straight?
Does it smooth out nicely?
Can you do it up in any of the charm-
ing styles, so it will stay, and
make you proud of it?
Is it long and full of life?
If you cannot say YES to all of the
above questions, then you need
Nelson's
Hair Dressing
ISRAEL RUE, Treasure
New York City
JAMES C. THOMAS
UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER
493 Seventh Avenue, between 36th and 37th St
Camp chairs to Hire. Lady Embalmer in attendance. Be sure and send to above
I have no connection with any other firm. Telephone, 8140 38th.
C. FRANKLIN CARR
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
120 WEST 135TH STREET
00 e1 6868 Morningside
1. WESLEY LANE
Undertaker and Embalmer
12 West 133rd Street
Near Lenox Avenue
Appt Service. Moderate Rates. Lady In-
ce. Coaches and Camp Chairs To Hire.
MAN B. STERRETT, Jr.
Successor to GRAVES & STERRETT
bertaker and Emba m
Funeral Parlor Free
Lady Attendance
Branch Office
W. 41st St.
232 W. 61st.
'Phone 3242 Column
JAMES W. H. WITHERSPoon JR. Asst Manager
Telephone: 8292 Harlem.
H. Adolph Howe
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBAL
21 W. 133d St., New York
LADY ATTENDANT
GOOD BERVICE
MODERATE RATE
O. PARKER
BEV. R. W. WAINWRIGHT
PARKER @ WAINWRIGHT
UNDERSTRIKE
6 Lawrence Street, New York
Tel. 4468 Morningridge
Residence, 839 West 126th Street
Residence Tel. 6308 Morning
The services of Rev. Wainwright are obtained for marriage, dismember or for any hour of the day or night feb. 8.
Telephone Call 672 Columbus
ALLEN DILLARD
JOHN L.
DILLARD & BROWN
NORMAN B. STERRETT, Jr
Successor to GRAVES & STERRETT
Undertaker and Emba m
Large Funeral Parlor Free
Main Office
304 W. 41st St.
'Phone 4521 Bryant
JAMES W. WITHERSPOON JR. Asst Manager
Lady Attenda
Branch Office
232 W. 61st.
'Phone 3242 Colum
Telephone $173 Columbus
Rev. Robert R. Mont
Undertaker and Embalmer
Telephone 9128 Col
Andersen & Cummings
UNDERTAKERS & EMBALMERS
322 W. 59TH STREET
BRANCH:
381 Cumberland Ave, Brooklyn
Phone 3025 L Prospect
NEW YORK
York DR. ROBERTS WHITE ROSE TOOTH POW
FREE For One Year
shareholder 5 per cent. November 18, 1910
per cent. April, 1910. This company is
and its shares are $5,000 each per share. By
a show, we are offering 500 shares in
with The Ace Inc. You repurchase 50,
send your paid receipt for the Ace
print on your shares, then give you the
will only last until the 400 shares are
draw 6 per cent. in April 1910
where.
Good Commissions
CO.
1931 Broadway, New York
The N.Y. Age FREE F
THIS Company paid each shareholder 5 per
and we expect to pay 6 per cent. April,
corporated for $50,000 10 and its shares are
order that each worker may have a show, we are
of 3, 5, 15 and 20 shares each with The Age f
balance $2 a month and we will send you paid
separate receipt for first payment on your share
free for one year. This offer will only last
Don't want! Subscibe now and draw 6 per cent.
Agents Wanted Everywhere.
Address: WORKERS' REALTY CO.
Nov 18.8mo
The N.Y. Age FREE For One Year
THIS Company paid each shareholder 5 per cent. November 15, 1911
and we expect to pay 6 per cent April, 1910. This Company is
corporated for $10,000 00 and its shares are $5,000 per value
order that each worker may have a show, we are offering 500 shares
of 3, 5, 15 and 20 shares each with The AGC fee. You send us $1,500
balance $2 a month and we will send your paid receipt for The AGC
separate receipt for first payment on your shares thus giving you the
free for one year. This offer will only last until the 500 shares are
Don't want! Subscibe now and draw 6 per cent in April 1910
Agents Wanted Everywhere. Good Commissions.
Address: WORKERS' REALTY CO. 1931 Broadway, New York
---
P
Prompt tendance.
NORMAN
Succ
Undertak
Large Funeral
Main Office
304 W. 41st
Phone 4521 B
JAMES W
Uptown Phone
Riverside 3421
OPEN ALL NIGHT
Downtown Phone
Chicago 4414
NOTARY PUBLIC
TURNER & HOLMES
Undertakers : and : Embalmers
Rale Office
203 West 26th St.
Branch Office
69 W. 99th St.
NEW YORK
Every requalite for the burial of the dead
Camp Chaits form filled at short notice
THOR. W. TURNER & CHAS. E. BOLMES, Press;
Lady Attendant
209 W 63rd Street New York
Rev. Robert B. Mont's services can be had for Sickness, Funerals, Preaching and Marriage, at any hour in the day 3 at night.
W. DAVID BROWN
HIGH GRADE
Paraphernalia, material and service of the best
Funeral Parlor and Chapel
146 West 53d Street
Between Sixth and Seventh Avenues
Madam Brown in attendance at Furarla.
Branch Parlor 419 Washington Street
Newark, N. J.
Telephone 2-0-
FIRST CLASS POSITIONS FOR FIRST CLASS HELP
Atlantic Servant Exchange
8 W 13418 Street, Near 61st Ave.
Register now for First Class Positions
In near by Summer Resorts
F. S. GRANT, Prop.
jun 17-Smo
321 West 59th Street
Phone 2267 Columbus NEW YORK
It is合約 to be the BEST BALL
BOOM ON CHIN STRA in New York, barring
bone, white or black
New Amsterdam
Musical Association
(INCORPORATED)
First Class Colored Musicians
Furnished for all Functions
HEADQUARTERS
322 W. 59th St New York
Pend all communications
Wm. A. BIKEN, Manager, 15 W. 1351) Street
Jan. 24-3m
LICENSED-UNSORTERS AND
209 West 62nd St.
Mrs. Morance E. Brown, licensed F.
Prompt service all times of the day.
Special attention given to shipping.
Jul 18
BASIL F. HUTCHINS
FUNERAL AND SHIPPING BENEFITI
In case of death anywhere in the U.S.
call to us to arrange your all
Charge of Morgue connected. Take
any hour night or day.
Main Office: 700-752 Shoreline Avenue
Long Bitterness 128 Northbury
Seattle 98122 E-282 Harbor
Miss Richetta G. Randa
desires to announce that on and January 1st, 1910, her business of a geography, Typewriting, and Mimeoging, formerly at 322 W. 53rd street be conducted at 248 W. 53rd St. She licts a continuance of the patronage the public. jan 6-2t
The Webb-Drape Employment Agency
Has removed from 422 Sixth Avenue W Sixth Avenue, cor. of 24th Street, over Oing store. This Agency has a great deal for colored help, both city and country.
In one of the best known prepara
for whitening and cleaning the toes
CHAS. H. ROBERTS, DDS.
226 Wort 55rd Street
NEW
apr 23-1yr
J. C. Redfield's
Union Orchestra
First Class Music Furnished For A
alona. Violin Instructiona.
STUDIO: 25 OAK STREET
JERSEY C