New York Age

Thursday, June 22, 1911

New York, New York

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VOL. XXIV. No. 38. NEGRO'S STATUS EXACT AND SURE In Eloquent Address to M Street School Congressman Taylor Tak's High Position Reading the Stirring Records of Advancement, Statesman Bids the Young to Take Courage DO NOT SPURN THE SOIL Business Development Must Go Hand in Hand With Intellectual Development, and "Excelsior" the Motto. Special to THE NEW YORK AOR Washington, D. C., June 21, 1911 — A class at eighty five was graduated this attention from the four-year academe course offered at the M Street High School, the exercises taking place at the Howard Theatre before an overflow audience which had gathered in large numbers, not only because of the inspiring spectacle, but also because the commencement address was delivered by the Hon. F. L. Taylor at present a member of the House of Representatives from Ohio, and recognized as one of the greatest friends of education effort in behalf of the Negro in the country. It had recently been made known that it was very largely through the efforts of Mr. Taylor in Congress that the sum of $60,000 was appropriated for the purchase of a site for a new M Street High School for colored students, and that the congressman had exercised itself to such good purpose for two years that appropriations had been more than one occasion based on the ratio of colored population in Washington as compared with the white population which is nearly one third. The congressman was given an ovation when he stepped upon the platform and another when he had concluded his eloquent remarks. The exercises were presided over by Mrs Mary Church Terrell, and the diplomas awarded the graduates by Rev W V Tunnell both members of the Washington board of education. Congressman Taylor's address is still the chief talk among the people Mr Taylor said in part. I consider it a distinguished honor to have been invited here by the affection of this school, to meet with and address for a few short minutes the graduating class and so many of the representative colored citizens of the District of Columbia. An audience like this is an inspiration to any one, and particularly one who, unlike myself, may be inclined to be pessimistic as to the progress and future of the American citizen of Negro persuasion. I am further honored by being permitted to speak to a class graduating as it does to-day, from the oldest high school in the city of Washington. The M Street High School has compelled my interest from the time I took up my duties as a Congressman, representing as do a district, which a larger and older Negro population is. I was gratified to learn that there are now more than 15,000 young colored people enrolled into the various grade schools of the District of Columbia, and more than 1,600 enrolled into the high and normal schools. School Typical of Race. The growth of the M Street School typifies the development of the race Starting as it did with but one teacher and forty-five pupils, to-day it is represented by thirty-five teachers and an enrolment of seven hundred and forty young American citizens, determined to prepare themselves properly to take up life's duties according to the bent of their individual ambitions and this not including that special institution, the Armour Manual Training School the work of the old business of the M Street High School. The effects of a high school upon your pupils lead to include the addition and a desire to educate ministers busi-ness lawyers and every other profession for the individual for the time of 1840 at which time the school was now higher education in industrial schools and professional schools and forthcoming. Pursuing Higher Things so percent who not in the other cities, in the high poor to still further in the low and still further in the hard to centre to the conditions of others follow them. It has been fortunate for them to keep in lob with the New Orleans ship from native state in many lar of having from boyhood know many of the race, both in school and in business. I have been M. H. HON. E. L. TAYLOR, M.C. FROM OHIO Who Delivered a Notable Address at M Street School Commencement at all times, even when others, both colored and white, were discouraged and inclined to pessimism, asdently optimistic and to the future of that portion of our citizenship, whose ancestors came to this country under the unfortunate circumstances of servitude. Example of Good Faith. One has but to look back a very short cycle of time, less than half a century, to see that the Negro has accepted his duties of citizenship in good faith, with true courage, and rising above more obstacles than any other nationality, has cheerfully and patiently progressed in education, business and other honorable pursuits as rapidly as any other race was ever known to do. When we consider the evolution of the Negro man to a citizen, we have a chapter in history which should stand as a beacon of encouragement to every one of us. When Abraham Lincoln declared the Negroes free, it could be well said that they were practically totally illiterate. A very few who had been freed or educated by their masters, could read and write, but the great body of the race, men and women, lived the lives of bondsmen,atterly laboring for their masters with no intention of being assigned to each under the direction and control of the superior minds. With one stroke of the pen, this dependent race were declared free and in a very short time thereafter, given the full privileges citizenship. Overcoming All Things With centuries of servitude and degradation behind them, how hopeless it must have seemed to ever accomplish or raise up education or compete with the other races. The utter poverty and ignorance which enveloped the colored race at the time of the reconstruction, is almost beyond comprehension. They had no money They had never earned a wage They had learned to depend for food and sustenance upon their owner They had no clothing or shelter, and most of them were without the slightest conception of the school and the home as we know them. At the very beginning they had no time for education The serious struggle to sustain life to obtain food, clothing and shelter of necessity retarded their efforts and desire for book knowledge. They had no knowledge of their legal rights, of contracts or agreements for wages. They did not know what their life would be without work. They must have worked, in season and out for the unscrupulous and selfish for bare sustenance. But this condition did not last long. Underlying the Negro character even in its then underdeveloped state were certain great saving qualities First they were less ill. Second they were courageous and this had demonstrated in every of this country that we knew. The Negro Soldier The Negro soldier has demonstrated his bravery in the War of the Revolution the War of 1812 the War of Mexico the War of the Rebellion and with Spain. During the Rebellion he served in every branch of the army with distinction, then earning the coveting gratitude of President Lincoln General Grant and other famous leaders. War was not forgotten his heroism and his bravery in the battles of Fort Wagner William Benton Petralia and numerous others. His record in the Spanish American War at San Juan Hill is a splendid monument to the heroism and bravery of the Negro soldier. But his chief asset the one great secret of his rapid adjustment to conditions was his wonderful adaptability. This has been the real secret of your remarkable progress. Factor in the Government. In the short period of less than <sup>B</sup>Continued on Page 9 NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JUNE 22. 1911. NORWOOD ALL WRONG SAYS S. PORTER HOOD TO REMAIN INDEPENDENT But If Colored Members Want to Stay With Mother Church Let 'Em Sipy, No One Cares. The statement made by the Rev S H Norwood, of Washington, and appear in last week's AGE, has stirred up a nest of one kind or the other. The Rev Mr Norwood is secretary of the Washington Conference of the Methodist Church, and is opposed with all his heart to the 300,000 colored members of the mother church going out of it. He not only believes that they ought to stay, but believes also that the "colored" Methodist bodies ought to "break up" and go back and in this way pave the way for a real Methodist union. Of course there is hardly the tiniest bit of remotest possibility of anything like that coming off It is hardly doubted that Mr Norwood represents the major feeling of the membership of his church, on both sides, in advocating "no quarter." Most of the leading colored men in the church want to stay there and will hardly get out without a fight. Robert E. Jones, editor of the Southwestern Christian Advocate, Dr J W E Bowen, Dr M C B Mason, Dr William W Lucas, Field Secretary of the Foreign Mission Board, and most of the strong laymen, are outspoken defenders of the present order of things. Mr Norwood's greater offending was in his description of the "colored churches" as imitators and as agencies that have helped along in widening the breaches between the races. Hereabout the ministers of the A M F Church are rather indignant if any such suggestion, and the Zion preachers would be indignant also if they did not have the annual conference on their hands. For the A M F Church Dr Solomon Porter Blood of Trenton issues the following consoct statement Rev. S. H. Netwood says that the Negroes who left the M. E. Church about no hundred years ago made a mistake that they are guilty of lim- townism and race segregation in high places in spiritual things in the Chri- sian Church from which it has spread and become organized and legalized in all spiritual and temporal thing- ets. He says the independent Negro Methodists are imitators and mustte- m back, tells them they can do more by staying with the white people and making a fight for right than by drawing out and establishing a sepa- rate organization. He says all this in answer to the question which has been agitated by some of the most pro- minent Negro preachers in the M. E. Church. "Should the colored members (Continued on Paragraph 8) MRS. STOWE HONORED St. James Church Parked With Enthusiastic Lovers of Freedom Who Cheer Praise of "Uncle Tom"—Musical Program in "Keeping With Spirit of Occasion—Dr. Brooks Presides and Introduces Orator. The anniversary of the 100th birthday of Harriet Beecher Stowe was celebrated in New York with both great enthusiasm and a large outpouring of the people. Many has been the day since so large a crowd assembled on such an occasion it got together Wednesday evening of last week at St. James Church, in West 51st street. The exercises were held under auspices of the New York Literary and Historical Society, upon whose board is almost every prominent person in the greater city. The program rendered was far in advance of anything that has been attempted in Greater New York in many a year, and a packed house enjoyed every number, and entered heartily into the spirit of the occasion. In the audience were the representatives of the best in the social and literary life of both Brooklyn and New York. Dr A. S Reid, president of the society, introduced as the chairman of the evening the Rev Dr W. H. Brooks, "the people's pastor," who had charge of the celebration The Rev. William R Lawton, pastor of the church, delivered the invocation. A feature of the evening was the musical program, as rendered both by the choir, which was in excellent trim, the soloists, who received round after round of applause, and the audience, which sang "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" with a harmony such as only an audience of that kind can sing. Mrs Booker T. Washington, who was unable to come, congratulated the meeting upon the progress made since "Uncle Tom" leaped into fame, and Mrs M C Lawton read an able paper upon the influence of Mrs Stowe's life. The reading by Mrs. Ardelle Taylor was an able effort. Mme Gourdine sang in charming style, and Mme. De Lyon Leonard, who sings with striking ease, was compelled to respond to an encore Carroll, the baritone, sang with the spirit of the occasion. In introducing Roscoe Simmons, who delivered the oration, and who has delivered each of the centennial orations, Dr Brooks referred to him as the word-magician, and added that "to New York he is the voice, and this occasion, inspiring as it is would be incomplete if he was not here to deliver the oration—our own, our brilliant, in doquent, our devoted Roscoe." Mr Simmons spoke for an hour upon the career of Mrs. Stowe, surveying the period in which she moved His oration was punctuated with great applause and upon its conclusion he was given all kind of cheers, the audience crowding up to congratulate him. The officers of the society are President, Dr A. S. Reed, vice-presidents, C. C. Davis and Miss Dora Cole, secretaries, J D Jones and Miss Willa G. Rowe, treasurer, James Gwatheny. Executive Committee—A M. Robinson, chairman, Charles W. Anderson, Fred R Moore, James L. Curtis, Dr E. P. Roberts, John E. Nail, Thomas J Bell, C. A Allison, Jr, Edward E. Lee, William Brown, Philip A Payton, Jr, Ralph E. Langston, Anthony McCarthy, Edwin F. Horne, Henry C Parker, Dr Charles H Roberts and Wilford H. Smith. Honorary Vice-Presidents — Mesdames Frances R. Keyser, Philip A. Payton, Jr, Charles H. Roberts, Edwin P Horne, M. C. Lawton, A. M. Robinson, E. P Roberts, Alexander Walters, Reverdy C Ransom, James I, Curtis, Misses Edith Leonard and S. Elizabeth Frazier. Ushers—Misses Eva D. Timpson, Gladys Moore, Rebecca Porter, Edwina M. Smith, Bessie Pike, Ethel Norwood, Willa B. Whitner, Mrs. Prince D Smith and Mrs. Gilbert Williams. BRADEFORD MEMORIAL Citizens of Montclair Propose to and Congregational a Lader by Eroting Colored Y. M. C. A. Building in That City. Special to THE NEW YORK AGE Montclair, N J, June 21—The announcement that prospects are very favorable to the proposed memorial to the late Dr Amory H Bradford, taking shape in the erection of a $50,000 building for the Colored Branch of the Young Men's Christian Association, is hailed with delight by all citizens here. The definite conclusion has not yet been reached but the outlook is very bright. Dr Bradford was a great champion of the rights of the Negro, and as president of the Congregational Council for many years did all within his power to assist the cause. His pulpul was ever open for ploys for various colored educational institutions, and man thousands of dollars went from his rich congregation to further the work. A committee of prominent citizens has in its control the decision is to what the memorial shall be. The Key Frederick H Butler pastor of St Marks M L Church is the only colored man on the committee. WHITE MAN LYNCHED Monticello, Ga., June 21. The neighborhood is still all excitement over the lynching of Lawrence Crawford, a white man, accused of having raped Luzie Hale, a white girl. Remember the Fourth Annual Froille of the Frogs at Manhattan Casino, Monday, evening, June 26, 1911. Pennants for ladies free. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON Before 3,000 People at Wilberforce He Makes an Address as Important as Any Utterance Since His Famous Atlanta Speech. If So, Why Not Bring It Out Before the People and Test It Son of Harriet Beecher Stowe Discusses Some Interesting Phases of the Rebellion. Special to THE NEW YORK ACR Nashville, Tenn., June 21—The commencement exercises at Fish University this year were as interesting as in the famous old university ever had. Thousands attended the several celebrations, and many could not gain entrance to the hall on the day that Charles F. Stowe, son of Harriet Beecher Stowe, delivered the annual address President Gates, who is making a determined effort to rase $300,000, needed to put the university on a good footing, was highly pleased with the enthusiasm manifested by both the visitors, students and citizens of Nashville Prominent Visitors. Many prominent visitors were present during the week Booker T Washington, who stopped over on his way to Wilberforce, occupied a seat on the platform on commencement day Others present included Hom J C Napier, Register of the United States Treasury, D R Lin Cave, who made a comment upon the address delivered by Mr Stowe; Clinton J Calloway, one of the commencement orators, and many of the distinguished townpeople. Every effort will be put forward during the summer to make a successful campaign among colored people all over the country to raise a large part of the money that the school needs. Several wealthy friends of the university are willing to lend a helping hand, but they want to see what the colored people themselves will do for their greatest university. Dr. Stowe's Oration Chief interest centered in Mr Stowe, not only because of his relationship to Harriet Beecher Stowe, but also because he has made a first-hand investigation of conditions in the South, and has a reputation as an observant student. In the course of his address he made many interesting statements and gave altogether an address out of the ordinary. He said, in part. Abraham Lincoln, in the celebrated Gettysburg address, spoke of our nation as conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. This is the great vague central terminant idea which has at the very heart of our national institutions. The fathers of our republic who propounded this great principle were neither Utopians nor Socialists but men of profound political wisdom acting under a noble sense of political responsibility. They did not monolograte about the need not to abolish human nature. They simply mean to declare in short that in our nation there should be a fair chance for every man to develop the best that there is in him irrespective of race, color or nationality. The idea was new and untried and if tried at all it must of necessity be in a new country. It was an experiment. It was not anything that could be realized at once, but must be the slow growth of age. This much must be conceded, that then northern states were just as responsible for the existence of slavery as were the southern states and that slavery ceased to exist in the northern states because it was for them an economic failure, and it grew strong in the southern states after the (Disclosed on Page 9) DISFRANCHISEMENT TESTED Negroes of Oklahoma Enter Suit in District Court at Guthrie Against Democratic Damages. The Court Refuses to Allow Them to Register. Asking for $5,000 Damages. Special to The New York Am. Guthrie, Okla, June 19—The colored people of this state are not going to be disfranchised if they can help it. Thurs. has been a bitter fight since Haskell fastened disfranchisement on the state, but they are not at all discouraged. The test suit to determine the constitutionality of the "Grandfather Clause" provision of the state constitution was filed in the district court here Wednesday by Attorney's John Devere and John J. Hildreth, of Guthrie, representing Theodore Cofield, a former Mississippi colored man, who sues Thomas Farrell, Democratic election inspector, and L. F Leach, sr. Democratic election judge, for $5,000 damages and court costs for enforcing the grandfather clause and preventing him from voting. It is declared Cofield was denied a vote because of race, color and previous condition, thus violating both Federal and state constitutions, and that only colored men are subjected to an education test in Oklahoma because of color, the law thus becoming a discrimination against that race. The case will be carried through all intervening courts to the Federal Supreme Bench for final determination of the Oklahoma law. Cofield shows that he was properly registered and in every way qualified as a voter. He admits, too, that he is unable to read and write a section of the state constitution, as required by the grandfather clause. The law is declared in violation of the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments to the Federal constitution, and Cofield claims the benefit and protection of such sections; also in violation of the state constitution, which adopted the enabling act provision that no law should ever be enacted that would disfranchise because of race, color and previous condition of servitude. The state supreme bench has held the grandfather clause constitutional and the Federal courts of this state in criminal actions have declared it unconstitutional. A civil action was desired, however, on which to secure final decision. The suit was started at the direction of James A. Harris, of Wagoner, chairman of the Republican state central committee, who believes the Oklahoma law should be tested. The votes of about 15,000 colored men are involved REYNOLDS LET OUT Columbus, O, June 21—Secretary of State Graves, a Democrat, will finish the process of eliminating Republicans from his department by replacing the last two Republican holdovers Calvin D Reynolds, corporation clerk and Capt David McCandlish, record clerk. He has not announced their successors. Reynolds, who has served for threeteen years, was first appointed by Secretary of State Kinney. He is one of the oldest colored men in the state, a lawyer by profession and a devoted student of English and classical literature. Three quarters of the business done in Ohio is carried on by authority of abstraction and his desk since he became the department from Tom and he has come to be recognized as an authority on charter law. SLEEPS WITH HIS MASTER Special to Tue New York Age Hartford, June 21. Henry Greene, a Negro, was buried on the Golemow Welles family lot here Sunday afternoon Golemow Welles, of this city, was Secretary of the Navy under Lincoln During the Civil War Greene born a slave in Virginia was taken to Washington as contraband and was assigned to Secretary Welles as a body servant. After the war he remained with the family until the day of his death. At that time he was with the family of Mrs Danforth, a relative, of East Orange. N J. Greene was buried in the family plot at the express wish of his old master PRICE, 5 CENTS GREAT HARVEST WAITS REAPERS Booker Washington, Speaking on Ohio Soil, Sends Message of Warning There 2,000 Shoe Stores, 2,000 Millinery Stores and 2,000 Banks Are Needed Certain to be Negro's Lot Unless He Rises to His Opportunity in the South. Special to THE NEW YORK AGR. Wilberforce, O., June 16.—The commencement exercises of Wilberforce University, better this year than ever before in the history of the school, came to a close yesterday with an address by Booker T Washington that fairly took the audience off its feet. The occasion took the form of a memorial to the late Bishop Daniel A. Payne, perhaps in his lifetime Dr. Washington's closest friend in the early days of Tuskegee. More than 3,000 people were out to hear the leader talk of the character of the race's greatest churchman. Of this number almost one-third was made up of white friends from all sections of the state. Dr Washington took as the basis of his remarks a passage from the Scriptures: "The heavens were opened and I saw visions of God." He was never more eloquent, never more effective, and himself spoke with a vision, delivering doubtless the most important address he has made since the famous Atlanta speech. He was cheered time after time. He said, in part I am glad to be in the State of Ohio again and at the University of Wilberforce. I am glad to have a part in the celebration of the 100th anniversary of the late Bishop Daniel A. Pagine, founder of Wilberforce University and one of the leading spirits in the establishment of the African Nethodist Enclosal Church. Bishop Payne a Great Man. Bishop Payne was a great man, a man of character, a man of vision. It is impossible for any individual or any race to have any large degree of success without vision; without faith in the present and faith in the future. There is little room in this world for the psalmist; for the man who has no faith in the present or future. I repeat that Bishop Payne was a man of vision. We, as a race, must follow his example, and to be a race and to possess vision, we must believe in the present. Without faith in the present and in his country Bishop Payne never could have laid the foundations of Wilberforce University so securely as he did. I have little doubt but that way back in the dark days of slavery, when the foundations of this institution were laid. Bishop Payne pictured to himself even then the spaces grounds, the well-planned and well-qualified buildings, the industrial and academic departments of this institution, as they exist to-day in such flourishing condition. We have little doubt but that he pictured to himself that the day would be when the community there would be gathered here thousands, as there are to-day, of the best types of white and black people representing the State of Ohio and nearly every section of our country. Bishop Payne's Vision I have little doubt but that Bishop Daniel A. Payne saw in a vision the time when there would be few in any part of America to rise and oppose the education of the Negro, whether it be industrial education, semantic education or professional education. I sometimes fear that we, as a race, do not rightly appreciate the advantages and opportunities which we enjoy in this country. Since the great bulk of our people, 9,000,000 at least, reside in the Southern States, you must excuse me if I dwell a good deal on what shall say upon the people of the Southern States, opportunities development in material, educational, professional and religious directions. Nation Within a Nation In numbers we constitute as it were, a nation within ourselves. We are 10,000 strong, Canada has only 7,000,000 of people. Australia 4,000,000, Belgium 7,000,000 and Holland 7,000,000. The combined population of Norway, Sweden, Switzerland and Denmark is about equal to the population of America. We must learn to use the strength of numbers and improve our condition. This means that we should cultivate in an increasing degree in every part of the country pride of race. If there is any one human being whom I distest it is the man or woman who is ashamed of the race to which he or she belongs, who is in all the time trying to get away from the race; who would rather be a third rate white man than a first rate black man. The Negro in America must learn to have as much pride in his race as the Frenchman or the Irishman has in his racial identity. There is a passage in the Scripture which reads something like this: "The heavens were opened and I saw visions of God." I believe that the heavens are just as truly open to today as they were thousands of years ago, that we can see visions of God just as truly as the prophets of old did thousands of years ago, and we must begin to see these visions before it is too late. Let us open our eyes and see the visions (Continued on Page 4) 1 St. David's Church Last Sunday at St. David's the recuer, B. G. Clifton, was the preacher at both morning and evening. Air Home at Silver Lake Park. White Plains, through its friends appeals to those not so well acquainted with the work, far reaching in its scope. This effort to reach and relate the sufferings during the summer months of those unseen to the luxury of resort, deserves the sympathy of those more favored. Any one who desires may assist by being present at the summernight concert and hop to be given at the William H. McKenzie Arena in 21st street near Webster Avenue. The early hours will be your reward for attendance. Union Baptist Church Union Baptist Church. Rev G. H. Sims returned to the New England Baptist Church in which met weekly at Providence, R. I., and made an encouraging report of the convention to a large delegation and a harmonious session. The same officers were reelected. The convention is to meet next year at the Monumental Baptist Church, near delphia. A small wood of Lord Presentation presented gave an excellent gospel message. Dr smallwood has been pastor of the Second Baptist Church, which he built and passed for 20 years. The Sunday School met at 2 p.m. under Superintendent John son. At 6:30 p.m. under Superintendent John son. At 7:30 p.m. under Superintendent Star Tarnache of Moses, with many other visiting orders, were out for their sixth annual sermon. Our pastor was at his best and preached a soul stirring sermon on The Standing of Moses. At the close of the offering the trustees held an audience and received special services for Sunday will be Dr. C. T. Walker at 11 a.m. and the Masonic Grand Order in the evening. St. James' Presbyterian Church. Rev Lawton, the pastor, preached a very instructive and inspiring sermon Sunday morning to a large audience. The rest of the day was given to the Sabbath School The Home Mission settlement held its regiment sermon at the school. The gram was short and sweet. Miss Rosa Harper, the president, made a short address to the members and friends, appealing to them to give to the work of the church and to present exercises were made more pleasant by the splendid singing of the little orphans from Charleston, S. C. The Christian Endeavor meeting was adjourned to William Brown and Proof Arthur W. Mitchell At the evening service the regular Children's Day exercises were held. The program consisted of singing by the school choir and addressing by Rev. Wm R. Lawton and the moderator of the session. Rev. John H. Edwards, D. D. Next Sunday Rev Wm R. Lawton will be the musical director of the Missionary Society will hold its first monthly meeting at 8 p. m. Mra. M. C. Lawton, the talented wife of the pastor. He will be the principal speaker The Sabath school will be the school picnic for the school picnic at Dexter Park July 26. Abyssinian Baptist Church. Rev. A. Clayton Powell returned from the New England Baptist Missionary Convention, which was held in Providence, R. I. in time to preach a stirring sermon to his audience Sunday morning. Rev. J C Love of Montclair N J. delivered a very helpful discourse at the evening service. Two or three hundred of the Abyssinian members have left the city for the summer, as was noted at both services Sunday. Rev Dr Powell is representing his church at the World's Baptist Alliance in Philadelphia. There will be a union prayer meeting at the Abyssinian Church Friday evening between that church and the Mt. Olivet Baptist Church at which time Rev W. P Hayes will deliver a short sermon. Rev Dr C T Walker, of Aurusta, Ga. and Rev J W Hackett of Covington, Va., who are delegates to the World's Baptist Alliance, will preach next Sunday at the Abyssinian Church. St. Mark's Churn Rev Dr Brooks filled the pulpit last Sunday and proached a wonderful sermon: subject "Love." One must sit and study a great painting he would get the full attention of the congregation. The Bible does not begin to inform us of its beauty and grandeur, Dr Brooks said. If we would comprehend God's love towards us we must study Him through His word until we can see Him with the full attention of the congregation. Every individual, but we can never forget Him until we have learned to love Him with all our heart, soul, mind and strength. We must completely lose ourselves, our wills, our desires, our indulgences in the study of the Bible. Full restlessness every plainty of the disbelief will call away but says that love endures forever. When Jesus was asked which is the greatest commandment He at once answered love. Without love we could not approach the central God. It is upon the basis of the commandment that Jesus said, "He is Father." It was through love that Jesus died for you and me. The secret of outlining can be found in the word "love." A very unique characteristic of love is that it never counts wrong done to it. When dying on the cremation bed, it is out of of His great heart of love. "Forget me" for they know not what they do." One of the greatest needs of the church is a spirit of divine love. True love will right all wrongs, whether in church or in state or in the social life. True love as mentioned by Paul and exemplified by Jesus Christ will advance. Nowwithstanding the warm weather the attendance at Sunday School has kept nearly up to the usual standard owing to the many visitors in our city who readily find their way to St. Mark's Church. A very commendable feature of our Sunday School is the organizing of the entire school for physical, social and mental recreation during the season. Clubs were also formed among the little children to cultivate the habit of saving money. In the evening a very forceful and logical sermon was delivered by Rev L. J. King, the assistant to Dr. Brooks during the summer of July and August. Rev King has been with us since time but he has already won the hearts of every member and friend of St. Mark's Church. Y M C A Notes tended the Life. Preachers that sat Saturday in the Church. Mr. Y. M. C. A. took the chair in the closing talk on "Health and Pollution." The interest in the subject was great. The presence of Dr. Hilliard of Philadelphia phila was great. In some of the diaries he writes that came up. The and St. John's Church was well attended by an expert in these matters. Rev. R. D. Lawton being the par- sons of St. John's Church dellivered to the parish and was years later in the church. "MATTHEW WHAT THE CAN BE NOW THERE IS NO MAN TO DO MANY things there is no man to do MAN is not limited to man there is no limitation of his own ability. The man can go no further than the giant ask for the grain of corn no higher than the full ear but there is practically no limit to the full development of man. It is possible for him to be in his spiritual nature anything upward next to God. "In the second place we can be useful men. That is within the possibility of us all. The good-for-nothing, no- the academy and the university for the academy and the university women. In President Roosevelt'* used to say that every man ought to be able to pull his own weight. Such a man is always a useful man. "Again, every man can be a law- abiding citizen. We may not all be statesmen and lawmakers; some of us cannot even be prominent in other ways, but we can all obey the laws made by the lawmakers. Nothing counts in the end but character. The law-abiding citizen is one of character What are you? Let this question ring in your ears until you come to ap- plion-did activity and to noble deeds." Anne secret and strawberry festival was given Tuesday evening, in which the Y W C A. quartet of Brooklyn, Mrs Daisy Tapley, James Price of St George Church, and Master Wm Dolgson, took part. Next Sunday afternoon will be "Mexican Sunday" Counsellor C P Lee, an official and representative of the Mexican government, will speak on "The Nego in Europe" Rev, C T Walker, of Augusta, is also expected to be present. A YOUNG GIRL'S TIME To Receive Company Dwelt Upon by Mrs. Booker T. Washington, Who is the Principal Speaker at the Y. W. C. A. Rally at Bethel. The Young Women's Christian Association held a large and enthusiastic mass meeting last Sunday in the interest of their work at Bethel A. M. E. Church, of which Rev. R. C. Ransom is pastor. Mrs. Booker T. Washington was the principal speaker. Mrs. A. W. Hunton preaded and introduced the speaker. Mrs. Washington told in an interesting way of the work that is being done by the women's clubs for the betterment of women and men. She emphasized the importance of beautifying the backyard as well as the frontyard. She showed the value of parental co-operation with children. The proper time when a girl should receive company was also dwelt upon. Mrs. Washington told of the work the clubwomen of Alabama and Texas were doing. Especially interesting was her story of the reformatory movement in Alabama and of the interest of the governor and white people generally in the work. The reception given Mrs. Washington was most cordial and she was warmly thanked for her very helpful service to the Y. W. C. A. Mrs S Elizabeth Ross Haynes spoke on "Self-Rellance." The music was rendered by the Mt Olivet Baptist Church choir Mrs James L. Curtis had direct charge of the arrangements. The audience was made up of the representative women and men of New York. Brooklyn and New Jersey. The collection amounted to $80. The young ladies of the Y W. C. A acted as ushers Counsellor James L. Curtis had charge of the collection. Miss Edith Leonard, one of the secretaries, read the notices. SALEM'S EDUCATION RALLY. Large Crowd Attends the Meeting Held to Aid an Alabama School. The movement to aid the West Alabama Institute took the form of an educational mass meeting, held in Salem M E Church last Sunday, and was in every respect a successful gathering. The Institute was represented by Prof Arthur W Mitchell, order and principal, who described the condition of the people in Sumper and adjacent counties, which led to the establishment of his school at Panola. Among other things, Prof Mitchell stated that in eight counties there were nearly 250,000 Negroes, $5 per cent, of whom were illiterate, that they outnumbered the whites eight to one, that there were only forty public schools for colored people, and twelve licensed teachers, getting from $15 to $22 50 per month, or about one teacher to each five schools, and that the average school year was less than four months. Prof Mitchell established the work at Panola three years ago, with three students. He taught in a church. The number has increased to 280 day and night students, with four buildings and eighty acres of land, valued at $12,000. The present obligation of the institute is less than $900, $300 of which is due to the teachers for back salary. He has the hearty co-operation of the white people of the neighborhood. One of them donated the eighty acres of land, and another $2,000 in cash. No part of his address made a deeper impression than his recital of how four girls walked thirty miles to enter the school, only to be refused admittance because of the lack of facilities to accommodate them. The movement to aid this school is receiving hearty support from some of the leading pastors of the city. Present at the meeting were Rev. W. H. Brooks, of St. Marks; Rev. W. P Hayes, of Mt. Olivet; Rev. D. W. Wisher, of Philadelphia; Rev. F. A. Cullen, pastor of Salem Church, all of whom made impressive addresses and appealed to the New York people to aid this worthy movement. A Camp for Boys. On July 1 there will be opened at Manorville, I. I a camp under the auspices of the Committee on Urban Conditions Among Negroes. This camp is to be conducted for boys between the ages of 12 and 16 years of age whose board of $250 per week for two weeks, is to be paid by individuals, by churches or other organizations. The camp will be under the supervision of an experienced and competent director, Archibald E. Thomas, whose time will be devoted to the discipline, physical training and amusement of the boys. A cook of long experience in military camps has been ordained. If the organization wishes to make a camp for public or more compulsory use, it must be approved by the states of the counties. Another Battle in Maryland NEW YORK, NEW YORK A. M. E. Zion Church Leaders Gather at New 'Rochipi—Reports 'Show Progress—Bishop Hood Collected—Dr. Bolden Returns to Mother Zion—Delegates Elected to General Conference. New Rochelle, N. Y., June 21. The sessions of the New York Annual Conference closed at St. Catherine's A. M. E. Zion Church Monday evening with the reading of the appointments by Bishop James Walker Hood. The conference was one of the best in the history of this jurisdiction. Harmony was everywhere, and the reports of the officers showed general progress. During the week touching exercises were held in honor of Bishop Hood, the oldest Bishop in the world, who has been a Bishop forty years and a preacher fifty-five years. Among the celebrants were Hox. John C. Dancy, Dr R. M. Bolden, Rev. John J. S. Smyer, Rev M. O. Haynes and Bishop Caldwell, who assisted Bishop Hood in the work of the conference Bishop Alexander Walter paid the conference a visit and delivered a helpful address. It was reported that in this conference the Hood Thank Offering amounted to $832, while the Varick Monument Fund reached $10.60. Welcome visitors were President Goler, of Livingstone, and Secretary Atkins, of the educational department of the church. Mr Atkins reported that his department was able to present Livingstone the sum of $5,000 at the last commencement. The delegates to the General Conference were elected and are Rev Dr R. M. Bolden, of Mother Zion; Dr. J. H. McMullen, of Little Zion; Rev. Mark A. Bradley and Dr. L. G. Mason. Appointments Bishop Hood announced the appointment as follows: p.m. Vernon, W. E. Collins, Fleet Street, Brooklyn, A. A. Crooke, St John's Mission, Brooklyn, R.C. C. Jones, Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn, J. Dotson; Coney Island, J. A. Peachy; Bath Beach, H. W. Morrison, Gravesend, W. H. Hogan; 133d Street Mission, J. H. Edwards; Lorimer Street, Brooklyn, R. C. Smith; Troy, J. W. McCoy; Hudson, W. Borden; Poughkeepsle, Benjamin Judd, Fishkill, C. L. Smith, Newburg, M. L. Harvey; Highland Falls, E. O. Clarke, Tarrytown, L. H. Taylor, Yonkers, J. J. Smyers, Portcheater, F. W. Cruse, White Plains, N. E. Wright; Mother Zion, New York, R. M Bolden; Kingston, J. Waters, Middletown, J. W. J. Johnson; Haveratraw, R. B. Buren; New Rochelle, fr. Var. Buren; Mamaroneck, S. J. Royd, presiding elder Long Island District, M. O Haynes; presiding Harlem District, Dr. F. M. Jacob, Hudson District, L. G Magon, Little Zion, New York, J. H. McMullle, Ralph Avenue, Brooklyn, H. W Allen GREAT BAPTIST CONGRESS. The City of Meridian Was Alive With More Baptists Than Ever Gathered at One Time in a Mississippi Town—Gov. Noel Makes a Speech. Special to THE NEW YORK AGR. Meridian, Miss, June 13.—The Baptists' hosts that populated Meridian last week, who came here to attend the sixth annual convention of the Sunday School Congress of the National Baptist Convention have gone. The Congress closed Sunday night, when the whole city had turned into one huge Sunday school class. The visitors were treated with kindness and civility by both white and colored citizens, and since the convention the moral atmosphere about the town is greatly improved. A feature of the meetings was the music not only by the selected choirs but also as sung by the congregations. When Dr C. H Clark, D. D., chairman, of Nashville, Tenn., called the Congress to order a chorus of 100 voices, selected from all the churches of the city, under the direction of Dr N. H. Pius, sang "Hail the Baptist Congress," and thousands of voices enthusiastically joined in the song. A song and prayer service followed, lasting thirty minutes. Dr. Clark made a short address, outlining the work, and introduced Secretary Henry Allen Boyd, of the Congress, the young man who had labored hard for the success of the meeting. The Sunday School Congress has more than twenty-five thousand Sunday schools to draw upon for representatives and support, as every Sunday school is entitled to send one or more delegates. Governor Noel Speaks The local committee rendered a program at the opening that was entertaining. The night service on the first day was splendid. Among the distinguished visitors was the Governor of the State of Mississippi, Hon E. H. Noel, who has gained much distinction as a Sunday school worker and enthusiast. His words of admonition to the Negro Baptist Sunday school forces of the United States were received with prolonged applause. Personnel of the Congress. At 11 o'clock Sunday morning, ministers of national reputation were sent to all of the churches of the city. At 3 o'clock in the afternoon all gathered for the mammoth, overflow Sunday school missionary mass meeting, where it is estimated that over five thousand people were in attendance. No auditorium in Meridian could hold the people. The principal speakers of the afternoon were Rev H M Williams, D. D., pastor of the Avenue L. Baptist Church, Galveston Tex. Other speakers down the street were Rev R. Arlington Wilson, D. D. of Kane City, Kans., who will speak in the Mokka or young men's Sunday school class and Mrs I. V. Melon, A M. Suntar, S. C. Cohen, G. Chelly, r Among the men who have played music for the past 20 years, tracing ing from an insistence of public into one of such national prominence that it is attracting the attention of the world are Rev R H Bowl D D L D D, director of the Conser- tive, the man who is responsible for this sentiment Rev C H Clark D D D D L D, chairman Rev I P Robson D D Little Rock Ark, vice-chair- man Rev Henry Allen Royd, Nash village, Tenor general secretary Prof R H Russell A M Soltha Ala recording secretary Prof J Milton Easter line A M Chattanooga, Tenn., assis- tant recording secretary, Rev William Beckham, D D, superintendent of missionary conferences, Rev W S E L ington, A M, D D, blackboard critic and arbiter; Rev N H Pius D D, superintendent of Teacher- Elegant five rooms, bath, hot water supply, and good yard for children to play. Rents, $17.50, $18.00, $19.00. Apply owner 10 LET 61 West 1341h Street Four light, airy rooms, on top floor of private house. References required. Colored Folks Attention! 24, 26, 28 W. 136th Street Beautiful light and airy apartments of 4 and 5 rooms, with bath. Steam heat and hot water supply. Apply Janitors on premiees jun 22 tl 219-29 West 40th St. 5 and 6 rooms and bath. Apply To JANITOR may 25 th 223 West 40th St Telephone 5478 Columbus Robert R. Ladson REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE 412 WEST 86TH STREET (Near Ninth Avenue) Notary public NEW YORK 159 W. 61st Street Bet Columbus and Amsterdam Aven The only house on block for colored tenants. 4-room apartments, bath and hot water Rents $20 to $22 Also several 2-room apartments, rented on weekly plan. Inquire on premises or S. H. OSSERMAN 30 Broad St. apr 27 th TO LET 325-331 West 52nd Street Near Eighth Avenue Elegant flats-Five rooms and bath. Reference required Rents, $24 to $28 June 22 th Inquire of JANITOR 422 West 45th Street Quiet Respectable Families Only Apartments of 3 and 4 rooms; newly renovated; all improvements—tubs, teilets, etc. Quiet reserved section. Rents $14.50 to $17. Apply Janitor or POCHER & CO. JUNE 22 41 126 West 34th St TO LET 440 W. 45th St. 4 rooms and bath, steam heat and hot water supply. All bed-rooms, open in private hall. Apply Janitor, or J. D. KAESR & Co. JUNE 22 41 171 Broadway FLATS TO LET 335-341 West 591th St. 4 and 5 rooms and bath, steam heat For respectable Colored tenants. Apply H. J. SCHUM 161 COLUMBUS AVE Near 67th St Or Janitor on Premises Tel. 714-414-Columbus june 22 31 Cheapest Flats in the Bronx 280 East 155th St. REAR MORRIS AVENUE@ For respectable Colored people Five rooms, bath, ranges and tubs $14 to $16 Apply Janitor in Premises Training Course and National Chorister. The Sunday school paraphernalia department is under the direction of Lovell Landers An earlier meeting datal of the Conference meeting of the Baptist news papers which was called by Prof I D Crenshaw, the editor of the official or the National Baptist Convention. Some of the members of this conference have been captivated by the editorial chair for more than twenty Special meetings made by Willie H. Ward, Lansville, Ky. editor of the American Baptist and R. W. Walton I. White D. D. Augustine, editor of the American Baptist In addition to the Sunday School Committee, a morning taking place at the same time, but not conflicting with the movement was the Program Committee of the National Baptist Convention, which was called by President F. C. Moore, of Helen Ark, and Secretary R B Hudson, of Selma, Ala, to take advantage of the splendid rates given by the railroads. This committee is composed of the officials of the National Baptist Convention, the chairman and secretaries of the seven boards under this convention, with sixty-three vice-presidents. In all, about one hundred members constitute the committee. 439 West 35th Street HALF MONTH FREE Newly renovated apartments of four rooms and bath; exceptionably quiet house, all improvements. $19 and.$20. Janitor or POCHER & Co. jan 14t 126 W. 34th Stree ALLOWED TO MOVE IN ON A 1/2 MONTH 235-241 West 124th St. Low Rents. Fine Apartments of 3 and 4 large, light rooms. with modern conveniences. Well kept houses. For respectable Colored tenants only. Rents. $12 to $15 per month, payable on half of the first month, balance 15th of the month. Apply Janitor on premises, or P. D. DONNELLY, Landlord 3254 BROADWAY Corner 131st Street dec 1.3m 554, 556 & 560 W. 126th St Elegant 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. july 8. 3 mos TO LET: REAR HOUSE 215 West 35th Street [Near Seventh Avenue] 11 rooms, newly decorated. All improvements Respectable family with reference. Rent $40. HULBERT PECK & SONS 268 W. 34th SL. OR JANITOR june 15 31 TO LET 345-7 West 59th St. Six rooms and bath—floors through, all improvements. Rents, $22 to $34 APPLY P. A GEOGHEGAN (Or Janitor) 464 EIGHTH AVE 331-333 West 69th St. 3 and 4 extra large, light rooms. Modern improvements Rents $'0 and $13 Apply MANHKIMER BROS. Or Janitor 204 W. 34TH ST. TO LET 329-331 W. 39th St. 3 and 4 large, light rooms. Rents $10 to $17 Apply Janitor, or JOS LEVY & SON june 8 at 389 8th Avenue SEE ME FOR QUICK SERVICE SATISFACTION GUARANTEED IF YOU WANT TO BUY OR SELL A HOUSE FOR CASH JNO. M. ROYALL 21 W. 134th St. New York Phone 3565 2666 Harlem FOR SALE Houses and Lots in Hackensack EASY TERMS Loans negotiated on satisfactory terms. Mortgages made Write or call M. HAYES BERRY St. apr 20-3m HACKENSACK, N. J TO LET 422 West 40th Street 3 & 4 rooms. Floors through. Rents $8 to $17 Apply Janitor, or JOS. LBVY & SON june 84t 389 8th Avenue 243 W. 35th St. 3 and 4 Rooms. Ranges and Boller Rents $16.50 to $20.50 409 West 52d St. 4 Rooms. Bath, Range and Roller Rent $21.00 430 W. 52nd St. House newly renovated 4 and 5 all light rooms, ranges and hot water supply. Reduced $16 to $18 AFTER JANBOERS OR JONES & SON may 11th 902 W. 43rd St 307 West 146 h St. 3 and 4 large light rooms bath bathroom and ranges. Rent $17 to $18 per month Two weeks free Inquire latitor 530 West 45th St. 530 West 45th St. 3 and 4 elegant, large light rooms Rent $10 and $2.50 per month. Half month free June 15 44 INQUIRE JANIWOR TO LET Newly Renovated FOR FIRST CLASS TENANTS 225 and 227 West 18th Street 3 and 4 rooms. boilers and ranges, wash tubs, electric bells and toilets. Rents from $14 to $18. 343 West 40th Street 3 & 4 large, light rooms, elegant condition, newly renovated. Rents $15. 668 THIRD AVENUE (NEAR 42ND STREET) Apartments of 3 large, light rooms, with improvements. Rents $13 to $15. 355 West 54th Street 3 and 4 large, light rooms with improvements. Rents $16 and $20. 203-223 WEST 63rd STREET UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Elegant Apartments of 3 large light rooms, hot water supply. Rents $12 to $14. See Janitors on Premises, or D. KEMPNER & SON 17 West 42nd Street Philip A. Payton, Jr. Company 67 W. 134th STREET Just Opened 180 & 182 WEST 135TH STREET 6 large, light rooms and bath, hot water supply. Rent $23 to $25. 41 & 45 WEST 138th STREET New Law. 4 and 5 rooms and bath, steam heat, hot water. Rents $19 to $28. Half month free. PRIVATE HOUSE, 158 WEST 133rd STREET 10 rooms and bath. Rent, $75 per month. Newly renovated. 152 WEST 62nd STREET 4 rooms and bath, hot water. Rent $20 and $21 609-11-13-15 WEST 130th STREET 3, 4 and 5 large, light rooms. Rent $7.50 to $15. 414 EAST 124th STREET 3 rooms. Rent $9 to $11. 107 EAST 106th STREET 5 rooms, ranges and boilers. Rents $16 to $18. 58 WEST 133rd STREET 4 large, light rooms, bath, hot water supply. Rents, $16 to $19 181 WEST 134th STREET 5 rooms, bath Rent $20 and $21 112 WEST 132nd STREET 6 rooms, all improvements. Rent $29 and $31. PHILIP A. PAYTON, JR., COMPANY New York's Pioneer Negro Real Estate Agents Telephones, 917 and 918 Harlem 67 W. 134th St. Apartments To Let 6 & 8 WEST 137TH STREET New Law houses; 5 private rooms, 10 halls. $ 9 to $22 per month. 10 & 12 WEST 137TH STREET New Law house; 5 private rooms, 10 halls. $19 to $22 per month. 38 WEST 136TH STREET New Law House. 4 rooms, all imp. 4 WEST 135TH STREET 5 large, private rooms and private h etc. Rent $23 per month. 144 WEST 124TH STREET 3 and 4 room apartments, tubs, Rents, $13 50 and $16.50 per month. 456 LENOX AVENUE 5 large rooms, steam and bath. $2 Stores, $10 and $11 APPLY { JNO. A Phone 3565-3566 Harlem I HAVE ANOTHER I 234 West 63r A beautiful new fire proof house stairs, hot water supply stationery r rooms are outside rooms 3 rooms 4 rooms - Rents $16 50 to $19 00 APPLY IANITOR ON new houses; 5 private rooms, bath, hot water and prince $19 to $22 per month. WEST 137TH STREET new house; 5 private rooms, bath, hot water and prince $19 to $22 per month. 136TH STREET new house. 4 rooms, all improvements. $20 per month. 135TH STREET 4 private rooms and private hall, open plumbing, steam vent $23 per month. 124TH STREET 1 room apartments, tubs, etc. Near Lenox Avenue $13.50 and $16.50 per month. OX AVENUE rooms, steam and bath. $25 per month. Scores, $10 and $12 per month LY { JNO. M. ROYALL Phone 3565-3566 Harlem 21 West 134th St AVE ANOTHER NEW HOUSE 4 West 63rd Street beautiful new fire proof house, tiled halls and more hot water supply stationery range, private toilet all outside rooms 3 rooms Rents, $14.00 to $14 Rents $16.50 to $19.00 APPLY IANITOR ON PREMISES New Law houses; 5 private rooms, bath, hot water and private halls. $ 9 to $22 per month. 10 & 12 WEST 137TH STREET New Law house; 5 private rooms, bath, hot water and private halls. $19 to $22 per month. New Law House. 4 rooms, all improvements. $20 per month 4 WEST 135TH STREET 5 large, private rooms and private hall, open plumbing, steam etc. Rent $23 per month. 3 and 4 room apartments, tubs, etc. Near Lenox Avenue Rents, $13 50 and $16.50 per month. 5 large rooms, steam and bath. $25 per month. Stores, $10 and $12 per month APPLY JNO. M. ROYALL Phone 3565-3566 Harlem 21 West 134th Street I HAVE ANOTHER NEW HOUSE 234 West 63rd Street A beautiful new fire proof house, tiled halls and more stairs, hot water supply stationery range, private toilet all rooms are outside rooms 3 rooms Rents, $14 00 to $14 4 rooms - Rents $16 50 to $19 00 Or SIDNEY L. WARSAW R 354 West 43d St. CHEAPEST RENT IN HARLEM Open for inspection, the first room is decorated three feet light any room all important baths and special plumbing See Owner or Jennifer, 214-16 E 127 Open for inspection, the first new property might be decorated thru. It is a property entrance right any rooms all improvements are not wa- thed and open plumbing. Ports $10.00. See Owner or Janitor, 214-16 E 127th St, nr 3rd Ave CHEAPEST RENT IN HARLEM Open for inspiration, the finest new properties simply decorated through it. Property entrances light any rooms all improvements range but what baths and outdoor lumber. Lots $10.00. See Owner or Jennifer, 214-16 E 127th St, nr 3rd Ave TO BE LET 2479 Fighth Avenue (Near 133rd Street) 4 rooms Rent, $16.00t 24 West 132nd Street 5 rooms and bath; all improvements. Rent $24. AMES A. JACKSON 122 WEST 135TH STREET THE NEW YORK AGE: THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1911 BOSTON WELCOMES DOCKING Well Known President of Rust University. Entertained at Dinner by Prominent People of Boston and Speaks on "The Outlook." Special to THE NEW YORK ADR Boston Mass June 21 - The Rev Jacob King, president of Rust C. Moly Springs, Miss, and Mrs. Were royally received and trained by a number of the most prominent citizens of Boston. Mass Wednesday evening, June 7. the home of Mrs J Smith, on Tavern streets. The affair was in form arranged by Mr Nathan K. Mull of the Boston University S. Law who graduated from the Cooke Institute while Dr Docking was doing Conspicuous among the present were Dr S S Court- neer John J Hall, the Rev Dr P. Baker Mr J C. Westmoreland Charles W. Robert Teamoh and Athena L. Hicks After the dinner, Mr. McGill the testmaster told of his personal knowledge of the Dr. Locking's work and interest in the great Southern work and especially of the many blessings he had received from both Dr. and Mrs. Docking personally. The first host was responded to by Dr. S. Courtney, who briefly gave his impression of the noble work the doctor is doing the South for his people. Among the speakers were Charles Alexander, J C Westmoreland, Lawyer Huks, who in the cause made impressive remarks, Dr J B Hall and Robert Teachm of the Boston Globe who although a Northern man, feels the res and burdens of his Southern brother Mrs. Docking spoke of her work among the small children in Florida of her work at Rust University and her devotion to the doctor and her life work. T.墨master McGill presented Dr. Diking who spoke at length of his work in Florida and Mississippi, and of his strange experiences in the South during the past eight years there. His subject was The Outlook of the Negro Lives on present was able to inform and appreciate the character of work he is doing there when he first joined Dr. Diking as a man full of optimism full of joy and most of all full of that spiritual spirit now so far. To hear Dr. Diking with it seeing him one would not think him to be a white man because he always refers to Negro not as Negroes but as usus. Dr. Diking among the others present, and who added joy and ease to the occasion, were Mrs. J. Smith Miss Louse Hodnett and Miss Annie J. Pipe Dr. and Mrs. Diking left for their summer home in Westly R I the next morning. Mrs George L. H. Bishop Zlackwall of Zool. Church, and Mrs beth of Philadelphia, after spending a week and Mrs Jacob W. Prodaua, Maplewood Buffalo Briefs. Regular Correspondence of the Brow N.Y. June 21 Allan Good Scott, correspondent of The Age, has been for the past two weeks, but is up and around again Mrs James I. Branham of Chicago has arrived and will spend the summer to Buffalo, at the Talbert Cottage Mrs Bernice Paul Poules of Omaha. N.Y. will spend the summer with her sister Mrs James A Ross of Florida street William Powell and Robert Polley have returned from Washington, D.C. where they have been studying for the past year at Howard University. They will spend the summer here. Henry Williams of William street has been confined to his home for the last two weeks. He is able to be up not about. His friends are wishing him a speedy recovery. The dance given by the Men's Club of St. Phillips Church was quite a large crowd was in attendance. Mr. and Mrs. Riddick are spending the week with Mr. Hersy of Walnut Street. Prof. Riddick spoke at the lecture. Mr. Hersy and Mr. Riddick at the Christian College. The Young Men's Club of Washington is in attendance. forming will visit Chicago and Can She is well known in Denver living spent her girlhood there and living her education in the College schools. M Hammond is very preminent in business and social circles in St. Louis. He will tour the continent during the summer months. Mrs. Mary Aikerna spent the past week in Cleveland and Springfield. O. guest of her mother, Mrs Cunningham, and sister, Mrs. Don Berry. The wedding is announced of Miss Harriet A Robinson and Henry Clay Drew at the Michigan Street Baptist Church Tuesday afternoon June 27, to be followed by a reception at the home of the bride in Delevan avenue. Carde are not announcing the wedding of Miss J Richardson and David Copeland on Monday June 26, at 64 William street Miss Edythe Jordan, who has been teaching the past year in Atlanta, Ga, at Morris Brown College, will spend the summer at home with her parents. Mrs Ada Jordan has returned home after a visit with her daughter Mrs Bonnie Smith, of Detroit, Mich. Benjamin Lambert of Detroit Mich Mrs Charlotte Dette and Mrs. Thompson of Niagara Falls, were dinner guests of Mr and Mrs William H Talbert Thursday Mrs S Howard of Niagara Falls, was the guest of Mr and Mrs Munroe Evans Saturday Later Mr Evans entertained Mrs Howard and guests at the Criterion Cafe. PHILADELPHIA GRADUATES Regular Correspondence of THE AGR Philadelphia Pa. June 21 -- Mr. Dehaven Hinkson is the only colored graduate from the Central High School of this city. He is a commercial student and graduates well up in his class and expects to take up the profession of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Some of the successful graduates of the Girls' High School are Misses Harriet Adger Ethel Bascom, Cordella Hergamaig and Isabella Clarance, Lydia Morris Miss Hilda Steth graduates from the William Penn High School this year. Miss Verona Elsey graduated from the Girls' Normal School with high honors and great credit to herself. Miss Elsey expects to take a college course in order to prepare for a possible supervisorship in the near future. Miss Edith M. Kemp graduates from the early High School at the head of the Latin School, Class and holds the position of Volunteer, a position soldon hold by a colored person. The Zeta Chi Chapter to the graduates from the various high schools and churches in this city Tuesday June 26 at Cherry Street Baptist Church at Cherry streets. The Y M C A and Y W C A head joint meeting at Allen A M E Church. The speakers were Miss Nate Barrett's and H W Porter. Miss Barrett's school was The Challenge of the Harbor. The church was crowded. The Home and School Visitor of the Armstrong Association in Mrs Wesley P Henry is highly endorsed by the principal of the school at 16th and Lombard streets. A series of public meetings at which the secretary and field secretary spoke has just closed. Fifteen enthusiastic meetings were held among both white and colored people, over $21,000 worth of work was secured for colored mechanics during the past year among these was one $12,000 contract by Wm J Robinson to build a church in La Mott, Pa. The association is just finishing up an investigation of the colored pupils in the public schools, as to their scholarship, department, etc. The association will keep these records for reference purposes. The graduates from the Normal School are Misses Bessie Mitchell, Emma Titus, Frederick Jones Estes, Pearl Christensen, Marie Sugjet Verona Els Great Negro Town Receives and Honors Chas H Moore and Loads Him Down With a Sack of Gold After the meeting the Commercial Club gave a banquet in honor of the visitor at Roberts' airdome. PITTSBURG HOME OWNERS Colored People in Iron City Keep Step with March of Progress. Special to THE NEW YORK AOK Pittsburg Pa. June 21 That portion of Pittsburg known as the East End may be truly called "Pittsburg the Beautiful," for there is no part of the city in which may be found homes of such architectural beauty as may be seen there. Well kept lawns with sweet scented flowers form a picture nowhere to be seen in the city excepting the East End. It is encouraging to note that our people are keeping pace with the citizens generally in their home beautifying. While it would be exceedingly difficult in a letter like this to mention any great number who own beautiful homes in that section, those who deserve special mention are Mrs. Martha W Holmes, Attorney Wm H. Stanton Dr A. G Giant, Mrs. Wm M Writt, A. L Crile, R E Frazel and F Strothers Our leading churches are the Euclid Avenue A M E, Carron, and Rodman Street Baptist Churchea. Revs C J Powell R C Fox and O S Sims are pastors, respectively. East End is also an important business section. The largest real estate and employment office in the city conducted by colored people is in that section. Frazier and Brown, proprietors, with Miss Jackson confidential clerk and typewriter The Lucerne Realty Company, recently opened by J L. Phillips on Franktown avenue is making a creditable showing. Two undertakers, one millinery store, four groceries, two insurance companies, one drug store, one dry goods store, restaurants and barber shops represent the commercial activities of the colored people on the East End The following doctors are located there and are doing well Drs J B Shepard A G Giantt W H Christian James E Brown, G W. Strickland and N Outlaw Cherry Drs Shepard Brown and Christian use automobiles. The many friends of Mrs Jessie Could 6642 Deary street are pleased to hear of her recovery from a serious illness but regret to hear of the death of her fine new born baby boy Mrs Margaret Dunning has moved from Deary street to her new home in Hertitage street. Miss Margaret Wise and Judson Jones were quietly married last Friday evening at the home of the bride's parents. Rev. S. Sims officiated. The hobbies party given by the Flower Club of Euclid Avenue A M F Church last week at the residence of Mrs Jackson 200 Everett street E. E. was a success. A prize was offered to the one winning the greatest hobble, which was won by Miss Elizabeth Milton. The party was given for the benefit of the church. The following are the clubs officers: Mrs Mary Wilson, president Miss Mae Moore secretary, and Miss Ellibell Wilson, treasurer. Rev A M Patterson preached a very effective and soul stirring sermon last Sunday evening at Good Hope Baptist Church on "Christian Faithfulness." The reverend pastor pleaded for a purer life and expressed the hope that a greater number of church people would show less haughtiness and work more earnestly to live up to the true principles of Christianity. The B. Y P U services at St Paul last Sunday were very interesting. The topic for discussion was Why I Love Christ" David S Tysol a native of Middle Drift, South Africa was presented to the union and told in his own way why he loved Christ" Mr Tysol has been a student at the Lynchburg Seminary for five years. Mrs B. E. Mason who left the city general weeks ago to visit the bedside of her father Simon Tompkins Beaver Dam. Va. has returned home. After sailing six weeks Mr Tompkins died at the age of 79 years. He was a member of the Baptist Church for six years and chairman of the boards board for forty-five years. The many friends of Mrs Smith of the street register to hear of her se- cessions. Mrs Smith serves with a sister headache. Mrs Smith was stricken with paralysis. She has also lost her shape of her recovery. 1200 Springwood Ave. Cor Attkins Ave Asbury Park, N.J. This well known hotel is now open for the season under the same successful management as during the last ten seasons. Large are rooms, the most spacious dining room with excellent tableboard hot and cold baths, large shaded grove cavern and other games. Special rates for large families and those spending a season. All correspondence promptly answered. jun 15 m MR & MRS E.C BURG55: Prop. 130 N. Ridge Ave., Ashbury Park, N.J. improvements, aspacious lawns, croquet first class service in the regular dining application Phone 843 Ashbury Park THE HOTEL LINCOLN 22 and 24 Lincoln Avenue is the ideal place to spend your vacation delightfully located one block from the ment and operation; perfect in cuisine Write for descriptive booklet and for in 24 Lincoln avenue, Rockaway Beach. L. I. DORSEY & PAL Direction to Hotel: Take any Boot Tel. Con. Open June 18 to September 1 coln avenue, Arverna, L. I. Lincoln Avenue place to spend your vacation on Saturday and is stored one block from the ocean, thoroughly up position; perfect in culinary and service. Boating basi- cative booklet and for information. Address all in one, Rockaway Beach. L. L. DORSEY & PARKER, Manager. to Hotel: Take any Rockaway Beach train at H. June 18 to September 18. Address all letters to verna, L. L. Is the ideal place to spend your vacation on Saturday and Sunday holidays delightfully located one block from the ocean, thoroughly up to date in equipment and operation; perfect in culinary and service. Boating bathing and fishing Write for descriptive booklet and for information. Address all mail to F Dorsay, 24 Lincoln avenue, Rockaway Beach L. DORSEY & PARKER, Managers. Direction to Hotel: Take any Rockaway Beach train at Hammel's Station. Tel. Con. Open June 18 in September 15. Address all letters to 22 and 24 Lincoln avenue, Arverna, L. L. June 15-8mo Special Notice To Stockholders of the Metropolis On JULY 14th, 1911, the NUR TRANSFERING your STOCK HALL ASSOCIATION, after wh Association will accept no more o METROPOLITAN H 4 and 5 Court Square 14th, 1911, the Ninety Days will have ING your STOCK into the METR CIATION, after which date the Metr will accept no more of the M.M. & R. C. METROPOLITAN HALL ASSOCIATION r Square Br On JULY 14th, 1911, the Ninety Days will have expired for TRANSFERING your STOCK into the METROPOLITAN HALL ASSOCIATION, after which date the Metropolitan Hall Association will accept no more of the M.M. & R. Co. Stock. J. TURNER WALL, Secretary avenue, through constant attention to business, has built up in that section of the city one of the largest retail stationery and cigar businesses in the town. The closing exercises of the Indiana grammar school were held in the auditorium of the school June 14. The special feature of the interesting program was the trial scene from "The Merchant of Venice" being rendered by the graduating class. Superintendent of Public School Chas R. Boyer addressed the graduates and presented the diplomas to the class, which numbered seventy. BOSTON NEWS Regular Correspondence of THE AGE Boston Mass. June 21—On Thursday, June 15, a reception was held at the Palm Garden in honor of William O. Armstrong Jr., by a number of his friends. Mr Armstrong is a popular Boston man and the son of William O. Armstrong who is a court officer in the Suffolk County Court House. He has been in the South about two years teaching and will only be in Boston for a short time. The reception was well attended and was very enjoyable throughout Music was furnished by Troy orchestra and dancing was in order until 2 a.m. During the intermission all the guests were served refreshments. The affair was in charge of the "Unique Four" and the Social Sexual George Jones was floor director and David A Roberts assistant floor manager. The reception committee comprised John Chinn George and Whitney Stevens Frank Chinn Charles Edward and Peter Harris Drucking Charron Canada Ulysses Howley Whit Bryant Harry Brown and others. On Saturday, June 17 the New York Giants scored an easy victory over the Royal Giants of this city, defeating them 16-0. Mrs. O. Henry Robbins has just returned to the city after a trip to New York City and Morristown N. J. At the "Float Day" exercises at Wellesley last Wednesday Miss Ethel Caution Davis entertained a party composed of Misses Iola Yates Ethel Johnson Belva Overton and Mrs. Russell Custon. On Wednesday June 16 center celebration of Harriet Beecher Stowe was held in Fenelon Hall a committee of prominent citizens. The speakers were Prof. A. R. Hart of Howard University Rev. D. D. Mills B. E. A. Horton chapplain of the Massachusetts Senate Frank Santorn Miss Katharine Gutway Miss Eliza Gardner Mrs. A. C. Spencer and Mrs. Niles Adams Robbins has just resumed a trip to New Morristown N.J. at day's exercises at Wednesday Miss Ethel entertained a party commo-ola Yates Ethel Johnston and Mrs Russell. June 12, center of Harriet Beesher in Fenelon Hall, a prominent citizen. The Prof A. B. Hart of Roxbury D.C. with Horton chaplain of the state Frank Sanford Gentry Miss Ethel Sparrow and Mrs Jersey City Notes The North Regina Syracuse and its monthly meeting Monday through a Nationalld. The following officers are in charge of President Dr. W. H. W. president Dr. W. H. Southland and retired Dr. W. H. Washington to serve Dr. George E. Cannon. The new president made an able and timely address after which a collection was served by the host and hostess. Remember the Fourth Annual Frolic of the Frogs at Manhattan Casino, Monday, evening, June 28, 1911. Pennants for ladies free. Mr and Mrs C Tolman Harris announces their first season's opening of the Tolman Terrace as a high class cot tage for the exclusive set. All modern tennis, and other seashore attractions room to the general public. Rates on pp.15.3m Arverne, L.I. Lion on Saturday and Sunday holidays the ocean, thoroughly up to date in equip- and service. Boating bathing and fishing information. Address all mail to F Dorsey, L. MARKER, Manager. Bickaway Beach train at Hammel's Station. MR. Address all letters to 22 and 24 Lin June15-8mo nenty Days will have expired for K into the METROPOLITAN which date the Metropolitan Hall of the M.M. & R. Co. Stock. HALL ASSOCIATION RICH TEXAS SOCIETY. Meets and Figures in Dollars Like a Tramp Figures in "Coppers"—Board of U. B. F. Sets Aside $12,000 for Current Quarter. Special to THE NEW YORK AGE Houston Tex June 19--The Board of Directors of the Mutual Aid De- partment of the United Brothers of Friendship not here last week at U I F Hall with the following officers present President W F Bledsoe, Marshall secretary F W Gross, Houston treasurer Joseph Nichols, Houston The secretary F W Gross made report of receipts for the six months ending May 31 1911 as follows For windows and orphans $26,134.05 for per capita taxes $3,597.05 for rent of the building $1,290 for home and business fund $738.53 for mutual aid reserve $499.50 for the sale of sup- plies $277.23 for interest on deposits $24.25 for the change of policies $44.70 A number of cases were up for settlement and were adjusted to the satisfaction of all concerned. The board set aside $12,000 to pay claims for the latter. The celebration of the sentimental of the order throughout the state Tuesday August 1, 1911 was partially endorsed. Toledo Tudings Regular Correspondence of THE AGR. June 29. A beautiful reception in honor of the recent marriage of John F. Stewart and Miss George F. Moxley was given on the evening of June 7 at the home of Mr. and Mrs John D. Stewart parents of the groom. Pink peaches and springs blooms adorned the parlor and living rooms while pink roses and springs was tastefully disposed in the dining room. The bridal party besides the happy pair and their parents consisted of Miss Wilma Rattell Miss Hilder Wilson and Frank Wilkerson. The arrangements of sixty Mrs O. G. Fields and Mrs H. Griffin served the cream and with Miss Bessie Castle served others assisting were Mrs H. Riddall and Mrs Harrison. Many handsome presents of flowers and other were presented by the former Mrs H. Riddall Mrs L. Miss Moll Owings was a member of the A.M.E. Zion Church at the annual conference which con- sented at Saratoga the past week. The opening of the younger net dancing series was held on Thursday night. June 15, at Freeman Hall, on East Jefferson street, with a large at- Brooklyn, N.Y KINKINE for barb curly kinky hair. Makes the hair smooth, and softens and strengthens the roots removes dandruff and promotes growth and health of the hair generally. For sale at all drugstores at 35¢ a large bottle, or we will send it to any address on receipt of 15¢ in stamps. DINE SUPPLY CO. West 10th Street New York City June 15th STRAIGHTEN YOUR HAIR Not with hot irons It. do it with (Kink no more) the greatest hair straightening preparation on earth Kink no more will straighten the hottest kind of hair Think about it a preparation that all you have to do is apply it on the hair and with a little combing the hair becomes straight, not to stay for one day or one week, but to last from six to eight months. Water nor nothing else will make it kink again after it has been straightened Kink no more is a wonder worker. So marvelous does it do its work that one can hardly believe their own eyes. It works like a magic, and is unique because there is not another preparation in the world like it. We offer a reward of $100 for any head of hair the Kink no more will not straighten Kink no more is a vegetable compound; it is perfectly harmless and will not injure the scalp nor hair. But will stop it from falling out, possibly removes dandruff, promotes a luxurious growth of healthy hair and keeps it soft and glossy. Remember that Kink no more is sold under a guarantee to do the work it is latched for it or money refunded. We will ship on the receipt of $100 a regular size box of Kink no more, enough to straighten from one to two heads of hair. When ordering send registered letter, postal money order or express money order. Liberal inducements offered to agents Write to-day for special terms. Enclose 2 cent stamp to reply Agents wanted everywhere Address Snelton & Jones, 1019 Spring wood avenue, Asbury Park N J WILLIAM W. HART (Successor to R H BUNDY) HYGIENIC TONSORIAL ARTIST Hart's Hairber guaranteed to straighten the most stubborn hair and keep it so. Unimorous no burning makes the hair bean-tiful and thick. Demonstrated and sold only by Hart's Measure Manicuring Scalp Treatment for ladies and gentlemen. 107 WEST 53rd ST NEW YORK mar 23 3m MME. CORDELIA BONE Hair : Dressing : Parlor 65 W 18TH STREET NEW YORK When you want the best and latest styles to human hair goods come or write me. Send sample of your hair. I can match it offices re-reasonable price. Combing made up Brandy Transformations Puts. Scalp Treatment $3.00 per month. New Electric Comb $1.00 Mail order attended to may 25 3m HAIR HAIR HAIR Colored people can get rich in the HAIR business. LET ME START YOU IN BUSINESS LINK NO. 03—the great hair straightener—send 25c in stamps for samples. THE ANALETA—the great hair grower makes the hair beautiful and soft. Stamps: 25c in stamps. ADDRESS C S STARKS Bair Grower and Manufacturer of all kinds of Human Bair Goods. Colored People's Bair Goods a Specialty 2W 133D STREET NEW YORK may 25 3m A June Wedding Brown Pearson The Whitehead House 25 Atkins Ave. W. Asbury Park - New Jersey OPEN JUNE 15 The comforts and luxury of the Whitehead House, its cuisine and service combined, place it in the front rank of all the houses in Asbury Park, away from the noise and bustle of street traffic, is greatly appreciated by all those who desire rest while on a vacation. Rooms airy, two separate bathrooms, hot and cold water, special arrangements for large families or parties spending the season. Convalescents desiring rest before the festivities of the "Fourth" can be accommodated. Correspondence invited and promptly answered. Mrs. L. B WHITEHEAD, jun B-15t Proprietress Rosemary Cottage and Restaurant MRS. M. L. SMITH, Prop. Room and board by day or week. Fine bathing and fishing Restaurant open all night. North Carlton Ave. ADVERNE L. North Carlton Ave. june 15-3m ARVERNE, L.L. Farm contains 135 acres large, shady lawns, high elevation, 15 minutes' walk to post office and trolley. Terra strictly in advance MRS AGATHA LEE FEVER New Paltz, N.Y. Ulster Co., R.D. 3 on 22 4t FOR SALE "Ripple Villa" 30 rooms 2 stores at modern improvements. Can 100 feet selling to settle estate. Apply to J. C. EDWARDS, Executor, 1903 ABCTIC AVENUE ATLANTIC CITY, I.L. june 8 3t W. FRANK KING All : Kinds : of : Job : Printing 31 Sylvan Avenue Asbury Park, N.J New Appointments june 15 8m LUCK IS IN YOUR HAND Send birth date and 25c for Horoscope. These Questions Answered Clairvoyantly Call or write Consult the best Clairvoyant - Removes Ev Influences brings Quick Results Positive act faction guaranteed Mme. Julie, Australia Gypsy just returned 422 - 11TH AYENUE, near 26th Street. Pax 25 CENTS may it: CAAN DRUG CO. Prescription Specialists 512-514 Lenox Ave. Rear 135th S Prescription carefully compounded by big class chemists. The only drugstore in this section that is OPEN ALL NIGHT Jan 12 8am OLD DR. BRYAN 10 Years Experience 208 East 17th Street Near 3rd Avenue NEW YORK and all other services on men only. and all other amenities to readers o may be available at any time at THE THOROUGHGOOD CLUB, Inc. 308 W. 38th STREET President 79 Vice Pr U U Auto Learn More To Learn More J.A. Roberts' Automobile School Date Peerless Lars Mark Special rates Telephone Home Carriage 5796 Columbus 57 West 88th NEW YORK EMPLOYMENT BURAU MANAGER 34 WEST 99TH STREET Chest but we areed Employers a ways satisfied Home 54th Avenue Feb 2 3pm The New York Age Battered at the Post Office at New York as Second-Class Matter. Published on Thursday of every week By Fred R. Moore, 247 West 46th street, New York. London Office: 17 Green St., Charing Cross Road, W.C. Address all letters and make all checks and money orders payable to The New York Aga. INDEED TOO MUCH. Too much of some things is quite enough, as we have said behind some more famous sayer from time to time. We have had too much "Negro baiting" in and out of New York, too much mouth from Joe Bailey, formerly of the rope, the torch and dive in Copiah, but now of oil and wide hats in Texas. We have too much cursing of colored men in this town and too much color prejudice The situation is alarming, not only to colored men, but to the real thinkers among every color and every tongue Life, the one great publication of its class in this country, that speaks for the red bloods and the blue, and that despises a snob as much as the devil despises holy water, is like all its readers, pretty well disgusted with the attitude of white men some of whom ought to be ashamed of themselves, towards a dark skin. Under the caption "Too Much Negro Batting" Life sent the following arrow straight to the heart of snobbery When I go to work upon the levee Man) man happily dances there. Ol' Song So also doubtless in New York one may see happy darkies if he looks for them in the right place—see many of them, no doubt. And yet things come to light in the papers, which coupled knowledge, makes one wonder, if, even hero, Negro life is all one glad sweet song. There was the Booker Washington incident the other day, an instance of the sort of casualty that may overtake a man. Then on May 17 there was the incident of the little yellow man, Cain, who was smoking a pipe on an elevated car platform (which was quite wrong of him) and was rebuked by a white man who slapped his face. Furising to his own fight, Cain ran amuck, killed two men with his knife and wounded eight or nine more. Cain is a dangerous mulatto. He had killed a man before and been in prison for it, but it was an outrageous mistake to kill the man who did it disappeared unhurt. Then on May 22 the Negro, John White, went into a saloon wearing a green necktie. James McTaggert, a furniture mover, objected to White's necktie and ordered him to take it off. White refused McTaggert grabbed for the necktie. Naturally White struck at him and then came White a broken jaw, a broken nose and a fractured skull. He died in the hospital. McTaggert disappeared. At this writing his reappearance has not been reported. One hopes he is not permanently lost like the man who slapped the face of little Cain. New York is a cosmopolitan city. It should have more cosmopolitan manners. It should complexioned voters should regard themselves as clothed with consensual police powers for the regulation of voters whose skins are dark. While there is *Life* there is a voice against the cowardly attitude of a certain class of white men towards all colored men an attitude based on ignorance and a false notion of race and color and that kind of external thing *Life* is very correct. Light complexioned voters who are not "colored" will not be allowed to regulate voters of the darker hue and hotel and unkeepers we must run into their holes, for they are many of them hoodlums in their hearts and a disgrace to our great city. BAILEY In a recent speech Senator Bailey the Copiah hero makes the hold and hold statement that the Negro must always remain infirm the whole time. The Negro is a slave who has a good mind but lacks task and problem solution for the solution he has given the greatest task of his life the task of always returning inferior to a man like Bailey. How on the world in any man what ever he gets at the point where he can no longer infer Bailey? Come, the wipe out from your ered blood and give us an easier task. THE TABLE TURNED Way down in the southeast corner of an inside page of Mondays Sun we come upon a sticker of two type, telling a story always found on the front page of our glory sheet when some poor Negro is put away with red hands that seek blood. But the Sun is a wise old owl This is the story Monticello, Ga., June 18—Lawrence Crawford, a prominent young white man of Jasper county, was 1 early this morning, accordi- ports reaching there. Miss Lissie Hale, the seventeen-year-old daughter of a wealthy planter. The crime for which it is reported Crawford was lynched was committed Friday afternoon, and he was chased with bloodhounds by relatives of the girl all day Friday and Saturday and was run down and shot to death this morning. Poor Lawrence, he did not have time to blacken up his face, make his escape, and in that way secure another "black brute" for the lyncher's oak, for half the number of Negroes lynched in the South are lynched for white men's crimes. And shocking this must be to "Anglo-Saxon" civilization, for the "Anglos" are paragons of virtue, manbness, gentility and gallantry, as the "white slaves" in this town and elsewhere will testify Booker T Washington has a tongue of wisdom, a judgment almost unnerring "If white men lynch colored men, the time will come when white men will lynch white men," Mr Washington once said. And if white men lynch white men, and enough of them, we shall see the end of it, for lynching is not an ineradicable disease. TAFT'S GOOD WORK President Taft is a great record breaker, a great finder of new places. No President in recent years has gone so far in placing Negroes in positions of honor and trust, heretofore untitled by colored people, as President Taft We name only a few of the places he has put Negroes where none have heretofore been. He has sent Charles A Contrill as Collector of Internal Revenue of the district of Hawaii, he has made Whitfield McKinlay Collector of Customs for the District of Columbia, he has placed the stalwart ex-governor Pinchback in the internal revenue service and made his position permanent at that. Now he has just made W T Vernon, Assistant Superintendent of Indian Schools in Oklahoma. We have only named a few of the new positions which the President has opened up And last, but not least he has made W H Lewis Assistant Attorney-General of the United States, and still there are those who say that the Negro is not making progress in America. All honor to a President who has courage enough to lead the way in such matters! LEWIS. President Taft, who thinks with his own head and does things in his own way, we have thanked in all kinds of fashion for standing by William H. Lewis. When it was announced in the Fall that the President intended to appoint Cottrill to Honolulu, Napter to the registrieship and Lewis to his high place, the howlers and baggage masters on the kickers' train, smoke truth hip and thigh and slandered everybody in sight. The Act gave it as its sober opinion that Mr Taft said what he meant, and was settled in his determination. By referring to the files our readers can substantiate this. He has carried out every promise and done other things not on his books at that time. Talking about laws many of the shining critics who could never shine at anything else claimed that the tribute we paid the Boston lawyer was far fetched and underserved. No tribute we should pay him now. On the other hand we would that honor to the loving law and works. We love it this way. The admission of William H. Lewis is the Eighth East Indian lawyer as Assistant Attorney General of the United States without the expected oppposition marks we have the best evidence of a lawyer in dealing with the most important officer of the federal government, the United States Marshal. When the admission was taken before a federal South Carolina question was why North Carolina men were not selected for the Court, a number of answers to the question. There was no rational ground for any opposition to Mr. Lewis both at Amherst and Harvard, where he was a famous abolitionist he was so highly popular because of his stirring qualities and as Assistant United States Fiscal Attorney in Washington. We wish to write to the people that in our long and wide imprisonment with leading colored men from Dunglass and Pimphacke of Lewis and Cottrell we have known no colored man who was in asleep for political honor whose main reason for wanting a job was other than to reflect credit upon his people and through his office lift his race. Now, the antis everything who have abused and slandered Mr Lewis may care to turn their alimy tongues upon Oswald Villard and the Evening Post for these kind words. THE NEW YORK AGE, THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1911 CLARK8DALE Clarksdale is the queen town of the upper Delta in the State of Mississippi and the capital of Coahoma county, within whose boundaries, from Friar Point to little Coahoma, may be found more good and brave white men than may elsewhere be reached through the whole state. Charles Banks was born in that county, and his influence, notwithstanding his removal to the adjoining county of Bolivar, has never waned. His name is still a high sign for his people. Once it was the boast of Clarksdale that no lynching would ever disgrace its records and that every one of its sons, let his color run or stand fast, stood equal before the law. That was once the boast and is yet. So that colored men walk the streets of their city, first of their loves, with a feeling of security common among them in no other community in the state, excepting, of course, Mound Bayou. A week ago Clarksdale white men made it plainer than ever before that no crime against an innocent colored man would be permitted to follow a breach of the law committed by some other colored man, holding to the old-time principle that, indeed, guilt is personal. A lawless set of Clarksdale white men, presumably, visited the home of Dr C W Raines a week ago and riddled it with buckshot Dr Raines, one of the leading colored men in the state, was supposed to have committed the heinous crime of raising funds to employ a lawyer to take an appeal to the Supreme Court in behalf of a colored man who had been convicted in the courts of the county and sentenced to be hanged. The militant defenders of law and society of Coahoma, armed with shotguns and other paraphernalia of war, accused Dr Raines of having prevented a hanging in the county, and of too much insolence, if it was he that sought to raise funds, in carrying a cause to the Supreme Court of the state, the best and fairest tribunal among them all. We have often turned the willing ear to the claim that the "best" white men in the South see nothing while seeing all, and that often they are mute when they should speak a stern word against the behavior of those who bring shame upon them and their fair section. Not so with Clarksdale. On the morrow of the night of the assault upon the Raines home more than 200 of the best white men in Clarksdale and Coahoma assembled in the court house, and with no small vehemence and eloquence, denounced the hoofprints as a disgrace to their city and its people made a record of their meeting in strong resolutions, and offered a reward for each of the men composing the riotous band. Not a man arrazo to defend the deed. Not a note was heard. Not a plea in extinction was made, but the determined actions of a peaceful town spoke a moving speech against laxness and against vane or perverse of their ideal neighbors. They knew the behind them was the settlement of a county and the local support of the white women of the county the wolves long celebrated. The Delta K. is a river in the United States. It is a strong river and it is the most important city in the country. It is also the most important city in the country. but the right will be a people for white men of the South who love people the in front of the country's population. All the time we appreciate the President and Mrs. Taft. We are planning to be in this neighborhood when they celebrate their golden anniversary and if pens are still in use and ink still flowing we shall go on record then as now. We count it rather a misfortune that the President was not given some slight sign of the affections of colored Americans, but they are not to be scolded for refusing to rush in where only those easy in the mind may tread. Mr. Taft's large success as a politician, a judge and now a statesman is due to the jewel he has in a good wife, more to be chosen than many riches, for a good wife is in herself a treasure beyond compare We had it on our mind the second day of the week, as we passed the plot of the first Pulitzer homestead in West 55th street, to inquire of him, when a glance through the *Tribune* a few hours later gave us the intelligence of his return to these shores. We are glad that the great journalist has returned to us. When he is sailing foreign seas we are always apprehensive And, then, what about that dinner wager between Mr Pulitzer and the "old master," who returned to his Louisville throne some weeks ago? Who wins, Watterson or Pulitzer, the wager having to do with the relations between Mr Taft and Mr Roosevelt? The feast, we believe, is to be served in Washington. The means, is to be served in Washington. The guests will die of indigestion before morning unless Jim Gray is permitted to dish it up and out It is a happy thing to note the esteemed Planet of Mitchellville in Richmond, Va., commend Booker T. Washington for a good deed. We do not agree with the Planet when it says that Dr. Booker T. Washington is "the political referee for presidential appointment of colored men in this country" Dr Washington, we believe, desires no such high office or distinction. As the foremost colored man in this or any land, Dr Washington may be consulted about men and measures, which is a good thing for his country as well as his race, but he is not "referee". Not only in the Lewis appointment but in many another direction, too many to recite, he has proven his loyalty to his race and his patriotism to his country. Carter Harrison is off on his vacation and Chicago misses him. Just before leaving, so our correspondent informs us, he appointed several additional colored Democrats to office Mayor Gaynor of New York, as good a man as his party ever had, might very properly loosen up in his attitude towards colored Democrats, many of whom are good and able men. Adamson, we hope, is not so much Georgian that he can't do things in New York, like a New York way NOTE AND COMMENT A Remarkable Tribute. That there are in the South white men who are deeply interested in the progress of the colored people, we have all along contended That there are not enough of them we have never failed to admit A Southern white man is the wonder among all the elements that make up our wonderful population He loves with an ardor that no man can understand, and hates with a venom that the devil's don't know Jeff Davis, the Arkansas blue back speller who lost his book, doesn't lay much store by the colored people of his state, because if he did he would be hewing cotton instead of exhibiting himself in the halls of Congress. The Arkansas Democrat is the leading daily newspaper of the state. In a recent issue the following remarkable tribute in cultural it is, to the Negro was printed The approaching national convention of Negro business men which will be held in Little Rock directs attention to the accomplishments of this race which has been master of its own affairs based on a half century of hard work and overcame the difficulties and overcame the many of them has the Negro Hold in bond with his master will for generals the Negro was at one stroke of the point of President Lincoln placed in political position with the proof of truth the globe but without the compromises which was necessary for him to cope with his changed conditions. But the Negro should have required some generations to cope with a working knowledge of the officers of the race to be expected but that he must be years made a place for himself in the country where he was going a slave more than marketable. His last words would be, "the country will be the industry of the members of the race, and all that will be done with the concession these facts will be much more manifest doubtless as a general principle. The Negro is to be congratulated upon his achievement and encouraged toward a achievement of this and the coming generation. White Skin and Black The Hon Noah W Cooper is a white gentleman of high standing in Nashville, Tenn. He is always a weighty word, and he bears well the honors of the people. A few days ago he was called on to speak a word or so before the Negro Teachers Institute, then in session at Nashville. He delivered the following eloquent and touching address The ideal Negro has righteousness in his life, intelligence in his head, joy in his heart, and skill in his hands. He is a Negro that nobody hates, that everybody loves. You can find use in scrubbing his clothes to good use, whether scrubbing flowers or laying brick, whether laying crossties or plowing fields, whether hauling garbage or healing the sick, whether preaching the gospel or teaching school. We are praying and looking for the ideal Negro, and when we meet our neighbors to rejoice with us time we have found a friend to every virtue, a foe to every vice. The true glory of the Negro race and the peace and happiness of all our people depend, in large measure, upon the Negro school teachers. For the Negro, just like one bad white man, can bring pandemonium to any community. The Negro school teacher is the white man's tribute to peace and virtue. He goes to reincarnate the gospel of righteous living and honorary military service. Every good Negro teacher is a palladium of the state's happiness. He goes to the schoolroom, like a picket to his post, without bond or security. We trust him like a Roman guard to watch and work for the state's best interest, and for his duty well performed he deserves as rich rewards as any other job. Your success will mean that the greedy dives of shameless men will go into bankruptcy and decay for want of Negro loafers. Negro thieves, Negro drunkards, Negro gamblers and Negro ruffians. The selfish politicians will have no Negro dupes to vote for vice in virtue's testimonies. Scarce three hundred years have passed since first the Negro was sold a slave upon our soil, not half a century has passed since he became a citizen. Yet today in many places the Negro stands the voluntary arm of the destines. We have seen him sold the land. His vote is almost as much sought for in the political world, as is his labor in the industrial world. If the Negro is ever to decide our conflicts in the political world, if the Negro is to vote us forward toward paradise, or backward toward perdition, then I pray that that Negro may be the Path of Negro. The path of Negro is always the path of safety. And if we white folks don't do our full duty toward our brothers in black, if we don't strive with might and main to make him an ideal Negro, the time will come when the Negro who was sold a slave to make us rich will sell us to the devil at the ballot box or bind us out in slavery to public plunderers. We should out to the Negro in order to save ourselves. Joseph went to Egypt as a slave but he stayed to save Egypt from famine and death. The Negro came to America a slave to a virtuous slave who will him to stay a slave to a virtuous slave who will him to save America from a famine of bread and a famine of righteousness. His skin is black, but it takes more than a black skin to make us outcast, and it takes more than a white skin to make a gentleman. Go see Philip far from home out upon desert to preach the truth to the Ethiopian. If we fail to follow this great example Ethiopia will rise up to condemn us, if not to inflict us with unutterable words. We work with a teacher, virtuous and valiant in his task of supplying our country with ideal Negroes, will become a Christian Hercules, who works out his own freedom, happiness and salvation by freeing his country and stables of vice, and slaving the hydra-headed monsters of double and crime. POLITICAL NOTES It is announced by his closest friends that United States Senator La Follette of Wisconsin, who has made every effort to disrupt the organization of the Republican party, will be a candidate for the nomination for the presidency at the next national convention. No one outside his circle of friends takes the Senator's candidacy seriously, for the renomination and re-election of President Taft are taken as a matter of fact by keen political observers in the capital city. William A. Andrews editor of The Summer Disaster announces that now the end of U.S. Capitals in the politics of North Carolina is in sight, steps will soon be taken to let President Tatt know that the regular organization of the states is with him and that the organization is betting on the President being with them. Mr. Andrews is a very wise leader and he understands that plans ought to be and now for the contest that his organization must make in the next national convention against Capitals and is a little ahead of hope. The United Republican of Pittsburgh led by N. I. V. War is known far and wide for his progress. Ideas are making a determined effort to get their share of patronage in the Republican party. That is the only way to do it, although it is very discouraging to party workers to be opposed for recognition after working hard to roll up a party victory. The Republican machine of Pittsburgh is Mr. Bryan says in his Commander that he has never assumed the role of dictator of the Democratic party, but that in what he has had to say from year to year and what he has done, was said and done in his capacity as a member of the party who had a perfect right to speak out whenever he saw fit to do so. That is very correct, and we reckon, also, that Mr. Bryan should not be damned, because a million or two of pretty good people respect his word Whatever else may be said against Democrats, this much can be said for them. When they get into power they take care of the men of their own party who have borne the burden in the heat of the day, and appoint no Republicans to office, holding that no matter how good a man a Republican may be. there is one Democrats who is a little better. That isn't bad politics, either "The Great Triumph." The United States Senate confirmed the nomination of William H. Lewis as Assistant Attorney General of the United States. There is much to its credit and a remarkable tribute to President William H. Taft, who must have insisted upon the elevation of this brilliant attorney from Massachusetts. It may be well to state too that the president of the Col. Theodore Roosevelt. We are of the opinion that colored men throughout the country should regard with favor this signal recognition of merit on the part of both the administration and the United States Senate. It indicates that color will prove no bar to him, and that who possesses transcendent ability of the positive kind and the tenacity of purpose which merits praise. It may be well too to recognize the fact that Dr. Booker T. Washington is primarily responsible for Mr. Lewis' elevation. He has stood by him in season and out of season and it is proper place to recognize this great triumph. The confirmation of Mr. Lewis is a surprise. We doff our Panama to "The Sage of Tuskegee," the political referee for presidential appointment of colored men in this country. Those who had been killed by Mr. Washington had he failed, should now accord him praise for having succeeded A Chicago Musical. (From the Chicago Defender ) Mime Hackley on Thursday at the new Appomattox Club was at her best. She has never appeared in grinder form but since the time of her coming the last twenty years of her coming here. The beautiful club house auditorium was packed, and even the stairways and billiard hall were packed. The silver offering was good only to that, and the only thing that was, it looked like robbing Peter to pay. Paul, when the ladies would let their escorts pay the silver offering. If a three-cent silver coin is found among the change the Defender will publish it, and he will publish the silver in the Guess Who column next issue. Not Guilty. Lord Not Guilty The echo is still in the atmosphere giving place for praise and commendation upon the breaker that surged around the Temple last Thursday evening in that wonderful lecture "The Fruits of Appomattox," by that man who met the genius, historian, unassured logician, and philosopher the Epicetus of our day, the Hon Roscoe Conkling Slimmons, of the New York Age. GREAT HARVEST 'WAITS REAPERS (Continued from Page 1) that are in the South in the direction of opportunity for material advancement Must Be Up and Daing. The foreigners who are fast flocking into the Southern States are these clans and the Negro must see them or the time will come when he will be shut out from the many opportunities now offered him in the Southland. We have a right by inheritance, a right by the labor of our forefathers, the riches of the South and we must not let these nor inconvenience frighten us away from sharing in this birthright of today. Two hundred million acres, or over fifty per cent of the total land in the South is unimproved. There are about 100,000,000 acres in Alabama twelve million in Georgia. Five million in Louisiana, six million in Mississippi and one hundred million in Texas that means that there are two hundred million acres of land waiting to be cultivated, that means that this land at the present time is comparatively cheap and can be purchased by black man or white man, but it will not remain cheap long. The average 100,000 years land value in the South has increased very rapidly. In some instances the increase has been from one hundred to the hundred per cent. Lands which fifteen years ago were selling at from $2,000 to $15,000 per acre are now selling at from $40,000 to $100,000 per acre. The South has been increased by $10,000 per acre. Woes of Landless Race While most of our parts of the world are seeing this opportunity and getting bind I want to. I go to do the same thing. I want to see that many of our offspring lived through the opportunity and are basking in it. Land is land. Land means a position taken raiser. A landless race means a dependent raiser with uncertain emplacement, one that they are phiking up old jobs and that they a landless race means not taking raiser an unsettled race a thrifty raiser. Every person into the possession of all of this country North and South. Throughout the South there are numerous organizations that work every day in the form of commercial farms, farmers, and workers. Old King Cotton There are millions of acres of land in the Roths that are purchased for cotton relation and made for drying and for fruit growing. There are millions of acres from which coal and iron can be gotten from which lumber can be manufactured. All these are possibilities within the reach. of the humbest black man in America. 200,000 Farmers Needed I know of no one influence, no one ment that would add more to the dependence and the progress of the 9,000,000 of Negroes in the South, than for us to have, within the next 20 years, 100,000 200,000 more intelligent, successful ladies pendent farmers throughout the country, and these farmers would not be composed of the ignorant element of our race, but should be composed of the educated of our race. Our vision need not be limited to writing and cultivating the soil. There are great opportunities in the direction of manufac- turing. Within the past 25 years the cotton and manufacturing center of the country has moved from New England to the North Carolina and South Carolina. It is not necessary for the Negro to conduce to the same matter of cotton raising fle can advocate cotton manufacture in some form. The Negro, both in this and other countries, is a great consumer of cotton goods. On a small scale, at least, he can be grown. He can also be grown in another field for the energetic, panshing, educated colored man. Heretoon, in too large a degree, our educated man have felt that he must either teach us, and not enter the field of commerce. On Becoming Manufacturers The South is full of the best lumber ridden for the manufacture of all kinds of the culture. The lumber in its use is as far to the colored man as to the white man. We are great consumers of household furniture. We have the lumber that can begin the manufacture of furniture that could manufacture one-tenth of the household furniture that we, as a race, consume we would give employment to thousands of our men and women and add immediately to our wealth, improvement and usefulness. We extend the white man is taking to the fact that twenty years Arkansas has increased her horse advantage of the natural resources of the South. I have but to refer to the fact that within 10 years Arkansas has increased her horse power for manufacturing 214 per cent. South Carolina has increased her horse power for manufacturing 214 per cent. South 250 per cent. Louisiana 610 per cent. There is vast water power in the South that can be used for manufacturing purposes. Everywhere in the South people are using water power for generating electricity. Examples of the water power used in aquaguard (near Columbus). Gas on the Tallapoosa River and near Montgomery, Ala. Opportunities for Merchants If we do not want to go into either agriculture or manufacturing there is a real hold open for the educated colored man in the direction of merchandising. With a hold open as we have in the direction of commerce in the South there is no readiness to create a colored man need go about looking for a job. He can create a job for himself and when one creates his own job, he gets into a position of power and independence, and is not dependent upon the whiteness of political color prejudice. There are places in the South where we can store stores, and there are colored people ought to support these dry goods stores. In the South the Negro merchant is not dependent upon the trade of his own race alone, but throughout the South, while there is prejudice against colored people has little prejudice to contend with about this line. Not only the colored man trade at the colored man's dry goods store, but the host white people are not afraid to protrize a first class dry goods store, and the same thing is true of other business enterprises owned and controlled by the colored people. Lot Us Build Cities. There are openings in the South for at least 8,000 additional grocery stores, at 3,000 additional drug stores. There are openings in the South for 2,000 store closures, 2,000 millinery stores, and there are openings in the North for 2,000 additional Negro banks can be opened and reported. Further than this, there are places in the South where, at least 75 self-giving self supporting and self directing towns or cities may be established where the colored people can have their own major own board of aldermen, their own self-giving from every point of view. In the South, there are openings in the most precious kind of self government. If none of these openings suit the requirements of our educated colored men and women on there is another field that is ripe for the harvest that of education. There are many schools and a few Negro schools in the school age who do not attend any school in the South and there are hundreds of thousands of others who are in school only three months out of the twelve months. We need 30,000 additional school houses built in the South and we need at least 20,000 additional school teachers. That is the number of the schools that we should be realized in any of the callings to which I have referred, there are still further opportunities in the South. I refer to the opportunities in professional directions. There are individual locations in the South for 200,000 additional dollars and 400,000 additional dollars and 1,000,000 additional dollars. Do Not Lose Courage In the lines of religious service I want the young women to be the visionaries opportunity to preach the message to the more colored people to be supporting a Y M A A are situated in the country of Y M A A building and support. We need them all relations. Then we have to trend with in the South and color line of unjustified the country. We have to have we have to contend with information that people as we should use it to higher efforts to re Foundation of Baset Taft and Lea: man who in education and tutoring was able to fulfil than fifty years in Presidency and Taft. A President who is making the appointment and in of William Henry Lewis, who was found the co-founder man capable of filling the position. When a circumstance take within so short a period, who will dare be so short-sighted and faithless as to go discouraged? Truth we are living in as when old men shall dream dreams young men shall see visions. 7 NS ae eS ae 9 RN eS PRE AERA SM eRe ae ee | “gen THE NEW YORK Aca) THURSD AY, JUNE 22,1988 . very bi under > HAVE YOU CULTURE? Pater clevarys ‘Mnaliticn of slats HOTELS, RESTAURAI " (Continced trom Page 0 eet Be nS cele ee ee Telephone Ceanection EDWARD BANKS; Proprietor ED a invention of Ell Whitney's cotton | Someta’ ‘2hun® 2" ace de for OTHL U.- —— gin, slmply because it was enor- freedom, prepared to embrace and Wa, B RAMRT, Proedtnet mously profitable, and property make the most of the opportunities ” tor Russell Declares That Mile] ®n¢ slaves correspondingly valu- offered them as free men. But Tharvaghty Wadera Wh Every Conv Pasto able, As a result, the two sec- some were not ft for freedom. ‘Two hundred steam heated outside rooms, Si fons of Christians Unwittingly tions of the country grew up on Now that ts no reflection upon with restuarant attached. cae ees eae ives al two utterly trreconcilable and the cotored race. We have a very to and from all stations. Opposite Back Bay Su Profane the Creator In Misrep- hopelessly antagonistic baste, that large broportion of the waite Face P. ARK HOTEL moderate at aro not ft for freedom. resenting What His Holy Name rth with fee Tabor, waa | have innumerable numbers of mon ——__B0 STON, Mass. fo m . e Represents. ed ineelilgence of tho age te conde is stlrutions fend. keep Caf e nd Re t t to slavery, and adv 7 : : A BRANCH, Free, — iy towards: conenption of sina. | ray" Womaehvee “una "oresbody a eatauran WORTHY ones demcer ne. repuuils i alee else. |GGESTIONS individual should, be” the Uni Devotion of Slaves. a OF CONSIDERATION.| Meutotion of slavery when ‘it hed It slavery were an unutterably | || Larasy mepRovannnre The Charlotte re become an anachronism, and the evil institution, with no alleviating ‘liana ieee ale eS nse Ct) acne oe Denver, Colo, Jong 18—Paator Russell gave two pabilc addresses bere today, one of which we report Many of Denver's prominent religious people were con: spictous in the large audience > @ A £ Gates spicuocs in the jarge audience. Profound impressions were undoubted: ty made Speaking from the text. “Holy, boly, holy. Lord God Almighty; (he whole earth shall be filled with tay glory” (Revelation tv. 8). the speak, er sald — ‘Three General Views. ‘There may be sald to be three differ at theories prevalent in Christendom @o the subject All three of these ‘views declare that the Almighty, with fall power to bave done otherwise, 30 ereated bumanity that a child once born into the world can never die— most lve somewbere unceasingiy— either in pain or In pleasure By what authority any make these declarations we have never asertained Our Catholic friends tell us that by Divine arrangement. terrible purge torial experienres avait practically every member of wur race, in the bope that, if rightly exercised therebs. after centaries of torture. an eternity of Biss will be gained Is not this also a diasphemy against the Holy Name? Who could dens tt? Surely such # theory Is blasphemens, borrible | Worse and Wor-«—Predestinated. — Is it aay wonder that. Ip early life | our childish bearts were Giled with fear rather than with love toward our Creator and toward His Resetation the Bible? Is it any wonder that It Fequired all kinds of Obting with our common sense to belleve. as we were taught we should, that God loringly predestinated that all buman families should suffer eternally except a saintly handfal—pecause He was pleased to | have It so—berause He foreordained that it mst be so—becaure He bad | made a great place called Aell before Be made the earth. and made it larze ‘eough to bold the entire buman fam By—because He created Greproof de Mons to inflict tortures upon the poor Unfortunates who were sbapen In io fquity. in sin conceived by thelr moth | on Still Another Blasphemy. A considerabie proportion of think fag Christian people will join with us fm saying. Ab. surely Brotber Calvin @revousls erred and grievously mis tepresented the God of love when be tangbt the doctrine of the predestina ton of the wicked to eternal torture’ Ab‘ soy thear Christian friends, our bearts rebel against that theory of Di vine predestination We claim that the Almights Is Love itself-that He ts sympathetic with His creatures, and ts using every effort to avert the great amity of eternal torture for the Great majority of the race AbS my feintts ie not this still an Other fern of bea whee” If some of BS bisph: tied Oe fle © Name fn repre: seating our Heveets Father ag merct Lest bieless hive we tat In another Way Masphened that same Holy, Name ty destanins that He Ineks the Powe and the wiedam to do the good Which His bwin heart would prompr? Do we worstay 1 stnpld and tinpetent God one whee bundered In the erea ton of ure and whe far ary thon Rand ver tes towns Striving te ree ty that ers vit all the whe has been nein i atsands af millions of Bis crestares whom he loves to ge down tan cternity of torture? Alas? Mme te aw arly as eagy te warshly QD ve rewerful and loveless God as to mention nliioving but unwise ANF vopetent Gand who foolishly sin fully brought thousands of millions Of ine cont beings Inte existence on! to suffer an eternity af agony through He ete Moy Haty Holy Lord God” Woe ter tent Te ate Pe rane te cette het the a get et tee fa) of tows Rr Sea des Then the that Fy tee stnperatition: Mee ysatie und ty steperese nt We peer ee te Tica eters ters Mee he fone Hie ott eof tte Bet ne ete ef teat the : ote Deve ter aeter . Pdi the Picine Phin for be Hen beat Mies Seo tw fa fatnetedd curd tt Dene tae Ph eee see tae apietee betead toe de te Poneto dust opal deev ine fe a cater of the Ent fer were ane h erin and tor Mh ceertmeme na the crete of thy ser Agee hase et forth? Bue * On the contrary in thts Foe Dae wil be fulfied the Bei irs prediction call tn heaven And ty onrth and under the earth ee HAVE YOU CULTURE? —_— ae invention of EM Whitney's cotton gin, simply because it was enor- mously profitable, and property and slaves correspondingly valu- able. As a result, the two sec- tons of the country grew up on two utterly Irreconcilable | and hopelessly antagonistic basis, that of and free labor rth, with free labor, was jony with the most en- d intelligence of tho age to slavery, and advanced rapid- ly toward a conception of a na- tlonal democratic republic in which the individual should be the unit while the South, holding to the inatitution of slavery when it had become an anachronism, and the whole enlightened intelligence of the world was armed agatust it, was put upon the defensive, shut up within itself, and was as hopelessly tsolated from the rest of the world as is China today Abolitioniste Scorned. Now, as slaves were property. according to law, any attack upon this form of property was an at- tack Indirectly upon all forms of property, and an attack also upon the Constitution of the United States. In the minde, therefore, of plous, church-going, orthodox slaveholders, and many ‘such there were, the abolitionists of the north were looked upon as we to- day regard the bomb-throwing anarchists of Chicago or the most radical wing of the socialist party. as the enemtes of society and the enemies of God and his holy word. the Bible, in which the pious slave- holder of the south found abund- ‘ant authority for his beloved in- stitution, So atong these two points, the conflict raged, and slavery. when it was attacked, entrenched Itself more and more within the doc- trine of states’ rights, so that at the last the two became Identical, ‘and to attack one was to attack the other, to defend one was to defend the other — Consequently, when it came to the outbreak of the Civil, War, many patriotic southern men who cared little or nothing about slavery were stirred with the deepest indignation at the suggestion of the national government subduing a sovereign state by force of arms, and sald that a unton that covld only be held together by bayonets had better be dissolved, and for the principlé of state rights und state sovereignty, the southern men fought with a hols ardor and self- denying patriotiam that have cov- ered even defeat with tmperish- able glory A Southern View. And let us look at the matter from the southern standpoint. The party that elected Abraham Lin- coln was a party avowedly hostile to the Institution of slavery, and elected a man to the presidency who also avowed the hostility to the Institution of slavery, and who had been known to say’ that the Union could not exist both slave and free, was bound ultimately to become all slave or all free. and who in his Cooper Union address said that the anti-slavery senti- ment had already caused more than a milion votes. which could have seemed to the southern states nothing more or less than a danger and a menace. Conse- quently when they drew thes word to defend the doctrine of states’ rights and the tnstitution of slav- ery, they certaloly had on their side the constitution and laws of the land, for @ strict Interpretation of the nations! constitutlon gave a certain justification to the doc- trine of states’ rights As to the institution of sinvery oven the abolitiontats tad tueds the digeay ery that the conatitution legalized ft. and panaequentiy ther de- nounced the conatitution of the United Staten a angue wlth death and a covenant with hell and maintained that ne moral or Chria- tlan man could find or hold office under auch an nceureed govern- ment ar ore and gave all their energie to proting that geccasion wan the duts of the fellow atates So, Is It net perfectly evident that’ there was a great rebellion hot that the rebela were the north erners ani that those whe defend- ed the constitution ag it war were the eeutherners for ther defend- ed states’ righte and alavery which were Alatinet entren: hed within the constitution War Rosult of Compromise Sows can tenly ere that mis underline Ueffelent snags of our Sad war we fhe sompromba:< af Mhe caatitution utterly trrecens ADL principles s eeetine thee aide Veosideceavered aply Pe camper mise Hat could tn the end eriaty neither party, Then ram the ete at canten sere that emda) te the VWiawoart cinpromiae | Inta that entered ates the element af abicery when Nhe fee atites dented the slave Peter any pert et the Tautalyna Porehase whieh sans the gure her Bie whole natin The elise Valdera crnge up In anwer and faked whe thes woth their pe Sale praperts senhd be abut aut from tereitary which had been Lotehawed Ta the whale nttian Tere veain there ane a compre miss Mat nat a esbutten Lincoln's Death Unfortunate. Tinecatn war our Plemarck and ery acted on the colored race like & wedge, forcing some down and some up. Those who were fit for freedom, prepared to embrace and make tho most of the opportunities offered them as free men. But gome were not Mit for freedom. Now that Is no reflection upon the colored race. We have a very large proportion of the white race that are not fit for freedom. We have innumerable numbers of men and women that we are compelled to confine in stitutions and keep 88 wards of the state, or they de- stroy themselves and everybody else. Devotion of Slaves. If slavery were an unutterably evil institution, with no alloviating features, how ‘are we to account for the fact that when the Con- federate soldiers were at the: front fighting, as they thought, for thelr independence, the Negroes on the plantations ‘took care of the women, children and old people, and nothing like an act of vio- lence was ever known among them? T have seen in Charleston, 8. C. ‘ monument erected by ‘former slaveholders and their descend- ants In grateful acknowledgment of the fidelity of those slaves who remained upon the plantations and cared for their women and child- ren while they were at the front, and I understand that the con- federate veterans are also to erect another such monument. Certainly such kindly feeling between master and slave shows that there must have been some- thing good in the institution of slavery Certainly that is the plain Implication of “Uncle Tom's Cabin.” for the very noblest char- acters in the book, Mrs. Shelby. Eliza. Uncle Tom, ‘St. Clare and Uttle Eva, were all the offepring of the Institution of slavery and nourished on its breast. and cer- tainly an {natitution that tn itself was essentially wicked and dia- bol{cal could not have produced stich noble characters So we should not look back upon slavery asa reign of unalleviated wickedness and horror, but re- member that It had within itself, 1n spite of Its many nbuges and In- tolerable horrors, much that was good Now Fellow Citizens. Rut tt ts forever past, and the two races must now dwell side by side, no longer master and slave. but as fellow citizens, in the same republic, That the proposition, we Heve. that men are created equal. was flagrantly \tolated by the slave power and by the Institu- tion of slavery. finds tacit ac- Knowledgment in the fact that Alexander H Stephens, in addi- tion to saying that the Southern Confederacy had the peculiar ex- cellence of being the only govern- ment, 60 far as he knew. that had made slavery its foundation stone, also sald that for the erroneous proposition of Jefferson that all men are created equal, must be substituted the undeniable fact of the inferiority of the Negro to the white man, and that his only possible relation to the white man must be that of slavery or subor- dination of the Inferior to the su- pertor race. Every Man His Part. And into this confifct you must go and take your part Your people, since the emancipation. have mado praiseworthy, and. on the whole, remarkable ' progress upward But, nevertheless, there are sections of your peopie that lag behind, as might be expected. They roust be raised, for if there fs to he friction between the two races, It will be between tgnorant whites and ignorant blacks. Edu- cation Ie the only possible solution of the problem Your people are ts find thete place in aur democ- racy, not nr a people, but as Indl- viduals, for In the long run, though you develop a culture of your own, fan sou certainly will in exercin= ing the right of suffrage, ag citt- zena and before thr law, you are individuala Far the right of auft rage und of citizenship in our re- public founded on the great prin ple, we believe men are equal, must be Irreape: tive of race, color fr aoell condition Color Line Unfortunate It fs an unfortunate thing, to my mind that the rolor line has teen ao drawn nnd that the at: tention of beth the races la of Heceaaity ao concentrated upon the faeCef color Bat thar me inet Me Tt eaniner tee athe rw ite “be MY Wat the onty aetation te that Cor paeapebe beth obese tage there fn peculiar cultere thelr own eeelar pase petke ant remiss Pretudter net Tyo greteat fat by Hein aes WE AIL warthy ctare far osech preted "Tat comer Minos Meith |e enemy eddie Neon antec s unt work ofehar ter Ht ta 4 dM att problem that ie tetas Cot for aetition 7 tollese ven ure ealytna i and Mba wear edie ited veung men theb women whos es Cantante hy ers leaders and inspirers of your Iaen people feats cereal reapaty BiTIy bat with that rexpanal Mts a ment opertanity far trou Setters ue great and pe Heer die aitioe th the wane af the fired tien amd water Gotan te Mimnply tee ay that thes have aun Impalas and dnspieation fe eine tnd te Imprave themactvea that te An Impressive Sight. KS WS 4 tote ede ie En eT te te matte t at wt os h wivancing heer de Le OE To Ge Mt ne eer oe peste: te esthyn He matters MAH ee WE ge Eee et ene Varteeroun Mfrlor the alave Hpk MInve det the nue ton Kate We PRISE Oe Gautiae an Tat terare Mens Te oie edan atlan. Preah ent Wane at ate meetin ath tow hat aw hepa MANE bared onnghee oe dete framed Co whe ko the werd that vse Hee tart tad awe mien ghee hanna the er hurheet cugatilition of the Terman tee cin Gon thon rhe Postion hE Sea ape placed tidas teefere the omilthiona atthe white rie te are wet hime sear progrenn® At the con tusien of his addres Mr Stowe read two letters one fron ox-Preadent Roosevelt and the othe fram Preadent Taft The Presiden said that after a long aot of th matter he is “convinced that it is nec essary to have a few high-class Negr: universities for those who are to b Telephone Ceanection EDWARD BANKS; Prepeietor PARK HOTEL Cafe and Restaurant LATESY IMPROVEMENTS FURNISHED ROOMS BY DAY, WERK, OR MONTE 78 First Aveaue WITH OR WITHOUY BOARD. Leng Branch, N. J. apr 13600 National Waiters’ Restaurant 128 WEST 53rd STREET A sitchen famous for ite cleantiness; = dining room ‘Mew Yeri ss catering ess Selered ising teem ot , MBALS 286 SUNDAY DINNER 35c " Polite waiters; obliging management; Music every Sunday te feb, 240 LYMAS WILLIAMS, Prop. Telephones 410 Meorningsi¢e Young’s Cafe FINE WINES, LIQUORS & CIGARS ‘CARLES HOME OF MERTH AND BUSIC 126 W. 135th STREET, NEW YORK CITY GIB YOUNG. Freprieter feb2-3m WILL STARKS. Massager Cor. 134th St & 7th Ave. CAFE ASTORIA ™ ‘ee vone For many years the ASTORIA has been headquar for pleasure-seekers in Harlem. It is now under t management of BARRON D. WILKINS FORMERLY OF CAFE WILKINS The ASTORIA is now undergoing e renovation, which will make it the chief RESORT OF ALL PLEASURE-SREKERS. mov 3-tf A WELCOME WAITS ALL! “Keep « Little Cozy Corace ta Your Heart for ile.” THE BOCTOR FOR THE BLUES! Anytime you are eut fer a pleasant evening, : don't forget to stop in the WM. BANKS’ , Cafe aad Restaurant ‘206 WEST 37th STREET Hew TOR cny First-ciecs Meals served by é2y er weet. Tel, SUMorray Hil jan i23m0 Was Banks, Prop the leaders of the race,” and further, that “nothing can do so much toward establishing a real nucleus for leader- ship among them as the maintenance nf such a university as Fisk” Mr Roosevelt sent the following letter 1 moat earnertly commend your werk You do not need to be told how emphatically 1 favor indus- trial education for the colored man no leer than for the white, but T cordially agree with Rooker Washington in his support of Fink, because it 1a eminently un- dvaifabie that the Negro. should have only a chance to get tech- nical education in industry and agriculture. With the Negro, as with the white, while auch training is that of which there ts fundamentally the grentest need for the greatest number, it {s yet imperative for the mike of the race that there shell iv oppartunits for furnish- (he a different type ef training for Coertain proportiun of the race Hisk has behind ita lem record Hf proved eflciones and (te pres: rn Work fe nf high merit not fnky from othe atardpoint af the telered man but from the stand: feat of the goed ltizen gener ite Pifty seven grudaates all told re sesed diplomas, 22 recenaing the de kree of Michetor © Arts Q the de uree af Ta beior of Scnnce 20 diplo. mos from the Normal department, 4 trom the Department of Domestic Soenee ind} from the Department of Mine Desk meses cmeve tog fner VIRGINIA CHURCH INSTALS Mt Zion Baptist Church of Fredericke- burg Has New Pastor in Person of the Rev D L. Reid. re er eee oe eee: come Fredenckgherg. !ne 2? The instal lation Srvices ef the Kev Damel T Reed at) Washington, DC Litton niet af the Mt Zhen Raptiat ONG) dade thes Leldes coseiine. 1 Tre aittte ace Peantttentty Te NAY NASA FORE SH 4 GEAR LVI thats ite itis Konsined Tey thapch SUN Ob nitaemmted by aM the tend Aig nite Sacre EW Ga) nattoty Te we Mem I De State a fexee Afton at Seda os a tatate Efe fan wht hy eM eeanated with ata. then feet kr ates in tenders at VED Bonne mete et PE alleges Pe ered ted WIth taghest bene e atthe He nae te MO Vey tae eaten Hen oP then farmer pmater the lite He Walle Redingen actus ta naw lend the church aa Nt foam the adele of their former mater tonal Res Reed “Ts Hawrtiat ian meri cn ae ve prenr hed by Rov Magar B. Ricks, pantor of the Hew Haytiat Chureh af Waahingtor Te tt warn at atde address The He 1 Diamond pater of the Shiloh Rapuiat Churen tala alte) of Min City was MaRter of ceremanion Other apenkers were the Reva D. Tx Reed, W A Carter, WD Jarvis, F. B. Pree, WH Underwood of Washing- ton, Rev W. I. Ransome, 8. A. Frum, C. B. Lucas, D. B. Bullock, J.C. Dia- mond and Prof. J. W. Moss, ait of this -atty, ppuetters were sacetved from the fol- Howing gentlemed? Dr, Clatk, Dean ‘Tel. 437 Morningside JAMES A. JACKSON BACENT: BUOKER. ABPEARSET 122 West 135th Street New Yer Broontrs Orrice: Jefferson Building Room ? 4B heart Saaare E. A. JOHNSON ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR-AT-LAE @ MORTGAGE LOANS 154 NASSAU STREET NEW Yer, ‘Room 732, Tribune Bldg. Phone 4998 Beshas Telephone 3787 Certlandt JAMES L. CURTIS Attorney and Gounsellor-al-Law Office Residence Suite 412 Temple Court 225 W. (ith ST ‘5 Bookman Street Phone 723 Morolageide NEW YORK CITY ‘Phone 5574 Beckman WILFORD H. SMITH | LAWYER 180 NASSAU ST. NEW YORK doc 2) ton ROOMS 906-7 Telephone +m J she Llewellyn C. Collins CAWYER Office: 82 Wail St. New York City eee ty Aenean coat” rte nee 172 Weng STRRET tor ise DR, CHARLES H. ROBERTS SURGEON DENTIST 2396 West S$3rd Street NEW YORK CITY doors 9am. t Saco noses 2m. 1060. Semdape to a Robert's Teoth Powder ls the Best™ Theobagial Department Howard Unt ermity (er Thikteht president of Howard Univeraity and Rey TA Perking st itiehimend va After the pragrsin the pastor-olest waa presented with a very, handsome bouquet of flowers and alao with a handsnine purre from Clubs Now 1 and 2 Juat outelde, in the beautify! church yard, whore the brilliant lights were shining, hundreds were scat to par- take of'a sumptuous supper Yhich had been prepared by « ttee of ladles known as the “ ‘Work ere HOTELS, RESTAURANTS, ETC. _ HOTHE UPTON WG. B KARST, Proeitest Batere Wun Every (RRAEL GE, Treesever ‘Two hundred steam heated outside rooms, Si room service, Bar Ehieaci ee Seer Sera ees SeeR a BOSTON, Mass. faslbige First-Class Acceatmedations Bt moderate prices; whh Serer ace bomes la New York. Restricted neighborhood; ceaventent to all THE CLIO HOME ADEMA 6 E. MINOTT. Sept. - 121 Weat 136th Street Phone 4% Avdubee MISS MARIE RICHMOND'S First-class Roeming Heuse FOR DGRMANERT GUESTS 240 W. Sard Street New York Restaurant Attached Moais at all Bours, frvt-ctam service. home cocking Telepbowe 2877 Lenox White Rose Working Girls’ Home 317 mest th fee mussint semestaty ledghags ter working LE or “Gna Frances 2 fsvemn, woot Phone 48 Colamsus Young Wemea’s Christan Associates 42 West Sed Sirect New York Cw end board wemen st reessnable rate Benloyeeet Agwecy Omen oren tem spread amare : = ‘Bible stedy.” Ratigtenss est: vas Hee RE TRERBR ES, HOME FOR WORKING GIRLS S¢ WEST 1TH STREET Board and lodging, either per- manent or temporary, at nominal rates. Classes in sewing, Irish lace-making, cooking, etc. may 3m Yearweed’s Heme Restaurant et wa nal d, WY. 40TH sr. and Mh Aves. Ww ‘Seathera cooking, Sener a Ear saMURL WOOD, Pree. bog on MEE EMENOO MRS. G. JOHNSON 196 Putnam Ave. Brooklya, RLY. First class boarding accommodations. Rooms with or without board, refer- ence Fine location. Terms reasona- ble Special ateention to transients, 207 W 19TH STREET Stnctly high class, Nicely furnished large and small rooms with bath and all conveniences for permanent and tras- sient guests, Convenient to all car lines Guests receive the best attention B ) ROCHELLE Prop may 11 3eo TH: CLIFF HOUSE 33 WEST 1MTH STRERT WEwLY Pere boecial sumenct tatre to permancat of trap sient questa Sprcial attention to. out ul towe Tourists. Up to Gate private house 1a. every re spect Tetepbove connection MRS WE PERKINS Prop may 255t New Amsterdam Musical Association#® (moomromarsD) Firet Class Celered Musicians Vornlahed for all Functions mmapguanrans 322 W. seth St. New Yer Bend al! communications W A, Scott, Cor Secretary yan 28-3m 322 W Soh Strese Best Dance Music in New Verb Walter F. Craig’s ORCHESTRA 340 West 59th Street Phone 2247 Colombus NEW YOR Tt ta ceuoceded to be the BEST BAly BOOM OBCHESTRA is New Vork, barrim cone, white or blank Taeobeoe 7 Morseras Dr. James A. Banks SURGEON DBNTIST Gas administered Porcelain Crown an: Page ah Oe Bee na 104 W. 1236 Street New Yor Teicehans weiss FRANK WHEATON LAWYER 17 W. ta5th STREET ater ‘Law MEW YORK SER? \ ae “A Quiet Place for Quiet People te Dina THE BRADFORD 1 WEEE SE STUMEL JAW Tom, chepa, : fer eee perplag [ae aa NE ADO sett ‘Telephone, 3815 Columd HARRY'S CaFE BARRY REINSCHenus, PROF. roa Sa Tee See Seek Jan Lav oes Cole HOTEL MACEO ‘313 West 534 Bt. Mew York Ca Poke te Ea bes nce beccen Sri Saeed, Tienes ere THE ROSSALINE 128 Weat agth Street Neatly terntehes oe a pemaeee =o Se decorated bouns tn the city st dation of ectered indice and Mires tanita DENSE Ae oor 2am 601 take Bee First Class accommodation, ste a8 HOTEL PRESS FORMERLY THE WALKER HOU, 40-21 W. 125th Street, New York. ETS Pe ee ae ES Tica, St OF evar scomegmn Wak ©} han LOS THE LAWS MOUS 248 WEST 20th STRERY Betwees Tth and 8th Aves Se Siore BE ED. Laws, Prem ae A nwnh. Ee ARVONIA HOUSE 5 West tasth Street First clase accommodations, steam Bell 4nd bot water. Baths on each Gost. Reset Pe te Seg 258 WEST 47TM STRERT Pome ea Maria, VENTE, Gan. Mae. Phoee S6@ Harlem ee SGD ™* GORDON .HOUSB J. GORDON, Proprietor. 269 Weet laath Street 7 eee Reale Boome Nha it Olt B Sr Week isd chteals ia. 18 'bu50 em The Ten Eyck Houee 232 W. 20th STREET Bet 7th and 8th Aves. New York Omp Neatly f translent guests by Book yore MES THOMAS L. TEN EYCK sor 18-dm. Propeiotemm I Phone 3086 Madison. SINGLETON HOUSB 168 Went 29th St. New Yoot Neatly furoished rooms for bermaneng a] Sat eth Tatan concabit Correnpende seo Ba AO 8 GLeTON, Pram "18 West 63rd Street Near Columbus Avenoe Nic, foralsbed rooms, with bath og all cont Sipoees for permanent or tum alent grate” Pine locality, near Costag Pare ee” wogarate rates Mas GF SOBNBON apr 338m Proprietrean, f- —<— ” “TE ALLEN Elegant Furnished Roems for pernaa- nent or transient guests Hot amd eeld water ip rooms. First class sccomme tione = (Juiet meighborheod, ceavenien to all care Mrs, M.A, Anderson-Johnsan (G2 West 13206 Street al, Loner A 580 does, (eb 163m MR». P. HARRISON ae Large, airy furnished reoms, all med- em improvements, ee case le every r te atten to transients, Conceninet te tarea Ines of cars Fe et " ene Ave., al 394 CARLTON AVE. Breektya ialine | Mew Yous smeminmernntainetignterneniveialen ADVE: NY \ i Te ee MUSIC AND THE STAGE EDITED BY LESTER A. WALTON PREPARING FOR NEXT SEASON MANY playgoers throughout the country seem anxious to learn of the plans being made for next season's colored shows. There are several hundred colored Thespians who are evincing even more interest in the movements of the respective managers, being ignorant of what is going on. To date preparations galore have been made to produce several colored shows during the season of 1911-12, but very little definite advance information has been given out. Indications are that the coming season will be sponsor for quite a number of colored shows—more than the season recently closed. That the managers are showing a more friendly interest in colored productions this summer than a year ago is apparent to all who give some attention to colored theatricals Twelve months ago it was difficult to interest a manager in a colored theatrical proposition. For some reason one gets a more respectful hearing on the subject to-day. It is probable that conditions are more favorable for colored productions. Next season the South promises to be quite a theatrical center. More colored shows from the East will visit Dixieland than ever before. The col- [Picture of a man with a mustache and a dark suit]. General Manager of the Colored Enterprises of the Barton Amusement Co ored citizens below Mason and Dixon's line have evidently become enthusiastic theatregoers to the great delight of the managers in recent years, for no less than half a dozen shows will be sent. South from New York to provide entertainment for the Southerners The oldest and most prominent organization will be the Black Patti Musical Comedy Company. For sixteen years Mme. Sissieretta Jones (Black Patti) has been making annual visits to the South, and the appearance of the gifted singer and her company is always looked forward to with pleasant anticipations. Manager Voelckel reports that last season's business was more profitable than any other, and is optimistic as to what his show will do during the season of 1911-12. A company to win five in the South last season was the Smart Set Company, No. 2 headed by S. Tutt Whitney and Humber Tutt. From every where came out that the company was making a favorable impression and what brought joy to the heart of Manager Charles L. Barton was that when the season of the company ended on the profit side of the judge, it was expected that the company will do a large business next year and the reputation make the past year. Jolly John Larkins will provide a stint entender in the told especially in the South—the coming season. He is appearing in leading companies in the Black Patc Company for several seasons and with much success. Arrang- made to put him out which he open some st. and while the compass oked over the Southern ter there is some that it will r in some of the large cities ast and Central West the house of the to the resi ing be Compo a pr quite a deal the com Company alone or be start Overton Walker If Auda Gustav Walker does not with the Set Set Company it is reliable that the firin will star her in a show of her own However to conclusions have been reached on the subject at issue which is proving a complex one J. Leubrie Hill took out an aggregation, consisting in the main of raw material, last season, but he favorably impressed the managers and hundreds of playgoers. He will be seen at the head of "My Friend From Dixie" next season, and the company will be greatly strengthened in many departments. J. Leubrie Hill agreeably surprised many friends and admirers as a comedian last season and he claims he will make them sit up and take notice with increased vigor during the season of 1911-12. There is some talk of Stair and Havin reviving "The Red Moon," and occasionally one hears that Hurtug and Seamon contemplate taking "The Oyster Man" off the shelf, but these two firms have done nothing so far to substantiate the reports circulated by those of the fertile mind, who find delight in sending out much unauthentic information From the West comes word that Wm McCabe's Georgia Troubadours, Richards' and Pringles' Minstrels and the Congo King Company will continue to make the one-nighters through the West and Southwest, while Pat Chappelle will make his annual pilgrimage to small towns in the South. WHERE THE SHOWS ARE. ROHARDS & PRINGLE'S MINSTRELS Big Timber, Montana, June 22, Boe man, 23, Great Falls, 24; Helena, 26 Hamilton, 26, Stephenville, 27, MIssoula, 28, Sand Point, Idaho, 29, New Port, 30 THEATRICAL JOTTINGS The Pewees are at the Pekin Theatre, Richmond, Va Hervieley & Nicholas are at the Lyric Theatre, Attleboro, Mass Panks and Cook are at the Opera House, Dover, Del Brown and Sheftall are at the Colonial Theatre, Nashua, N H Marie Bolden is illustrating songs at J Whittaker's Casino, Canarsie. The Three Mills Sisters are at the Line In Theatre, West 135th street. Billy Ward, the Black Dockstader, is at the Maceo Theatre, Charleston, S. C At a meeting of the Frogs last Friday evening Matt. Marshall was made a Frog Andrew A Copeland is at the Scenic Temple Theatre, Pawtucket, R I Next week, Globe Theatre. Black & Jones after a separation of a year and a half, have joined hands, and will open at Mohawk Park, Troy, N Y, June 26. Edward Peat & Madeline Cooper, Jones & Gray, Glen & Glen, Howard & Mason are at the Auditorium Theatre, Philadelphia. Remember the Fourth Annual Frolic of the Frogs at Manhattan Casino, Monday, evening, June 26, 1911. Pennants for ladies free. Susie Sutton was an extra feature on the bill at the Minnehaha Theatre, Washington last week. She will return to the Foraker Theatre in a sketch with Andrew Trouble this week. William I. Gross, the popular caterer of 217 West 134th street, will present a handsome trophy for the new mile relay at Mothers' Day at Mother's Park, Brooklyn. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN CORWELL CHIEF OF STAFF PAT CHAPPELLE IN LONDON fitted up on account of the collar, and we held the the Charing Cross Road which in the heart of the city. We have met several Americans, and a few of them are professional people. We will remain in London until after the coronation, then we will make a tour of the continent, visiting Paris Berlin, Vienna, Naples, Milan, Florence, Rome. We expect to sail for America about July 22, as we hope to be home about the first week in August to prepare for the opening of the Rabbits Foot Co. in September. THE NEW YORK AGE THURSDAY, JUNE 22. 911 SPARTAN A. C. The Spartan Athletic Club of Brooklyn, was organized last August, 1910, for the development of sports among girls. They played quite a number of basketball games during the last season, losing only two games. There are about thirty members in the club. The officers of the club are Bormadine Harris, president; Elizabeth Mars, vice-president; Gladys Moore, secretary; and Edith Trice, treasurer. Mary Harris is captain and manager, and Sidney Jackson, coach. The Spartans will give a picnic June 30 at Ridgewood Coliseum Park. We will be pleased to see our friends. SCOTT JOPLIN HONORED. A reception was tendered Scott Joplin Wednesday evening, June 14, at the residence of Miss Christie Hawkens 145 West 98th street New York, in honor of his success in writing and publishing an opera entitled Tree monisha" The hostesses were the Misses Christie Hawkins and Stella Lewis A delightful collection was served, and dancing indulged in Among the invited guests were M. and Mr. Charles S. A Minetree Mr. and Mrs. Tolt Mrs. F. Parham Mrs. Mottie Ullenl Mrs. F. Walker Mrs. Francis Vartik Mr. F. N. Wink Misses Muldid Creed, Iva Cook Mice Calloway M. Taylor the Messrs Scott Joplin Sam Cook Zell Blade-Black Carl, Tom Cross Anthony D Byrd, Jerry Williams, W. N. Spill B Brady C Smith, Bob Slater M. M. Clellan, and Hans Yorgensen FROGS' FROLIC NEXT MONDAY Manhattan Casino 155th street and Eighth avenue will be the scene of the Frogs Fourth Annual Erie Moods evening June 26 Every indication is that this year's summernight dance will be, as usual, the most largely attended affair of the summer season Visitors Boston. Philadelphia Baltimore and adjacent towns will be very in evidence as in the past Although dance music will be furnished by Walter F. Craig's Select Orchestra and Hallie L. Anderson's Augmented Band for the benefit of the duos, other forms of entertainment have been arranged. In the Swiss Garden songs will be sung by sweet singers, and in the German Garden a big brass band and twenty musicians will make sweet music. At 1 a.m. "The Frogs, Siberian Dip" will be played by the combined orchestra conducted by the composer Frog L. Roamond Johnson SUMNER HIGH GRADUATES Twenty-nine Students Graduate in Senior Class—Interesting Exercises Held—President of School Board Awards Diplomas. Special to The New York An. St. Louis Monroe Twelve students were awarded diplomas in the school of W. Washington in the Park and in the Library. June 14 and to the Tue. May Wake. Waltown, Vernal Park, Peoria Lincoln, Edith H. Stevens, W J. Stewart Ruth J. Thomas Vinni R. Durry Irwin H. Stevens Othe A. Reynaud For the latest Theatrical news read The New York Age. Remember the Fourth Annual Frolic of the Frogs at Manhattan Casino, Monday, evening, June 26, 1911. Pennants for ladies free. IN THE WORLD OF SPORT Ridgewoods Defeat Royal Giants. The score ROYAL GIANTS RIHOL WOOD r b o o c r b o o c Dunbar rf 0 0 1 0 0 Brown,3b 1 2 0 2 0 Limbs 2b 0 0 2 3 0 F.P. Smith,2b 0 1 4 4 W. Smithc. 0 0 5 0 1 Brug'eg,1b 0 2 1 2 0 Robin bs 0 1 6 0 0 Lin'ann,p. 1 1 0 0 Hundy,bs 0 1 3 2 1 Hohman,c. 0 1 0 1 Hundy,cf 1 2 2 0 Streaser,cf 0 1 0 0 Fulif 0 1 3 00 Ham'er,cf 0 1 1 00 Bann 0 1 2 11 McCabe,rf 1 1 1 00 Shipp 0 0 0 41 Piel,ss 1 3 2 3 Totals 1024104 Totals 61127100 Racial Groups 000001000001 Land 20000012116 Other Games. A. Light RHF B. Light 000001000 182 C. Light 120002122* 11011 D. Light Nettles and Tunnels E. Light Readies At Marinas Park 120004115 12152 120004102 4105 120004100 and James Building At Rivers 10702000 10141 10702000 012 10702000 012 and James Building At Rivers 10702000 10141 10702000 012 10702000 012 and James Building Montcla - Marriages Regular Correspondence of The Anz The post WANTED "JOLLY" JOHN HAPPY F 50. Good Looking Chorus THE PICKER AMIL SEMENT CO. Suite 2 friarly T New York A Real Star "A Trip Around the World" An Illustrated Stereopticon lecture Beautifully colored views showing some of the most famous and historic scenes in the world. Interesting and instructive for both adults and children. Paul Baptist parsonage last Wednesday. The couple left on a short trip, after which they will take up their residence on Dyer street, where the groom has a flourishing confectionery business. The Mountain Ridge eRality Company which is developing a large tract of land on the border of the City of Mountain reports large progress in the interest in their proposition Wm E Jackson the manager, has fitted up a very comfortable and attractive office over the new store of the Hoose News Company on Glen Ridge avenue. Charles E Cleggett is also interesting himself in suburban property and is developing a tract called Wildwood Park which is within the city limits. Mr Cleggett is a progressive business man and is meeting with much success. Lacy Fox, the well known painter, has completed his handsome new home on Elmwood avenue and moved in. This is one of the exclusive neighborhoods of Montclair and it was rather a surprise to some that a colored family should enter this block, but money talks and Mr Fox is comfortable domesticated and quietly enjoys himself. Mr John Fitzgerald, the popular backpacker is about completing the new garage he is creating for Wm M Morgan on Maple avenue. The structure is a very creditable one, built at a cost of over $10,000 and a very valuable addition to the good property owned and controlled by colored people in the city. A Surprise Party in Jersey City A very pretty surprise party was tened to Mrs Jesse Freeman and her son Leonard, who recently returned from Howard University, at their residence. No 111 Pennsylvania avenue a large company of young people attended among those being the following Misses Olive Vaughn Hattle Vaughn Pauline Vaughn Rella Sears Carrie Van Dyke, Nell Auston, Beatrielle Cobb Clarice Cobb Mildred Miller Anna Deney, Elsie White Anna Mitchell Mrs Edith Majors, Mrs Sarah White Mrs Edith Majors, Mrs Fred Davis, Mrs Rollofftmr and Mrs Harry De Mund Mr and Mrs Anthony Nicholson Mrs Maud Moore, Mrs and Mrs Miahon Kunjun, Mrs Tom Smith Mr and Mrs Emmet Tresses Mrs Harry Williams and Judge Scotland Megs Tom Parker Frank Jackson Julius Vaughn, Ala Jones H Conover, Rich ard Novins Willard Bristol, Herbert Voorbie Orle Strucker and Arthur Jones A very enjoyable evening was spent in games and dancing was indulged in until a late hour after which a delicious and beautiful repast was served SEND IN YOUR ORDER Hannibal Julius Caesar Charles XII of Saxony Napoleon and Lincoln are types of the highest human efficiency They became ennobled with the years. On the royal stage of Time all the great figures of history pass before our eyes. Greece Rome Italy Scotland England. Ethiopia Has Stretched Forth Her hand and America is her stage It is true that we are proud of our deeds rather than our arts, and truly we are proud of the great men of action that our race has produced. We may claim to have surpassed all other races that ever lived, for the marked achievements which they are grounded for us within that fifty short years. Wonderful is our advancement inhabitants of this great American republic, living in an atmosphere given over to pursuits chiefly industrial, dubbed a race of mental, or, Greece, not Palestine, nor Rome, nor the various country, can we with us in the variety of achievements in surmounting forbidding challenges. All this may lie in the inspiration that we have received from our struggles for liberty and true manhood. It may lie in something that dazzles analysis. It was in its years of daily conflict with all men of vital interest with our people, radiant with vital energy and feels that the time has arrived when we should perpetuate and hand down to possibly the images of the heroes of the race Douglass, Langston, Dunbar, Bruce and Rockefeller Washington have scrolled upon history pages, arts and deeds that will all have value and to future years immense will be the prize that brings children to have handed down to them current images of the immortal hero who took up the first struggles of our advancement. We have secured the services of a member of our race. Mr. M Hattay an artist of unquestionable ability who has won national and international honors at world sights of photographic arts to create for the public a grouping of the life above named immortals. Upon his completion of this memorable work it is our intention to publish a first, and final edition of a genuine photogramature printed from stone on India that will be presented upon Japan willum 202424. We are delighted at your unquestionable art and it will be a church or business on the ground and will be without the adornment of this portrait. In this new book we are offering for 90 days to each of you a photogram for the 2024 willum pur and for the 2024 willum pur with ten days from WANTED TEMPLE THEATRE FOR RENT OR LEASE Season Beginning Oct. 1, 1911 MONDAY MAY 10 WEDNESDAY MAY 11 THURSDAY MAY 12 A Big Star ST. MARK'S M.E. CHURCH 53rd St Rev W H Brooks D.D. Pastor Hursday Ev'g, June 29th AT 8:30 O'CLOCK UNDER AUSPICION Young Women's Christian Association and Ladies' Auxiliary of S. Mark's Church Admission 15 Cents CRESCENT THEATRE 36-38 West 135th Street VAUDEVILLE MOVING PICTURES Box Office open from 1 to 11 P M every day All seats reserved. Tickets can be secured eight days in advance. Telephone Harlem 6322 netime is Frogti on't Forg NEXT Monday Nig JUNE 26TH, 1911 RTH FO nual Fro and Summernight's Danc ...OF... HE FROG Don't Forget NEXT Monday Night JUNE 26TH, 1911 FOURTH FOURTH Annual Frolic and Summernight's Dance .....or... THE FROGS HATTAN CASINO 155th Street MANH Dance Music Furnished by F. CRAIG'S and H. L. ANDERSON'S C THE FROGS FOUNDERS MANHATTAN CASINO 155th Street & 8th Ave. MANHATTAN Dance Music Furnished by WALTER F. CRAIG'S and H. L. ANDERSON'S Orchestras BERT A WILLIAM BOB COLE BROOKIE IR R A MCPHERBURN TOM BROWN JOHN E. NAIL NARTHUR TABOT EDWARD G. CONIC CAPT WM H JACK ROBOT R. CHURCH ARTHUR H. PAYNE G L. YOUNG EDGAR CONNOR HON JAS DR. MCG ROBIL T. MOLLIS HO FRE Owing to the man been reserved Boxes o The New York Ac Gotham Attacke Music C ray Hill 4670 Nail & Pa ngside 7682 Alex Rig Morningside 5190 Fred Morningside 431 Admissi NAIL R TAL BOT D G CONICK W M H JACKSON H DUDLEY GEO CATLIN GEO L ARCHER W L E STARKS ARTHUR KING HON JAS W JOHNSON U.S. Consul Nicargon HON EMFMT L SCOTT Tankagee DR ALGERN R JACKSON Philadelphia W H HUNLEY HON EDA D GREEN Chicago FRED WILLIAMS Honorary Member to the many requests for Boxes, the entire box- d Boxes can be secured at the following places: New York Age, 247 West 46th street, Telephone, Jack Music Company, 136 West 37th street, Telepl Nail & Parker, 145 West 135th street, Telepl Mex Rogers Studio, 100 West 135th street, 511 Fred Wileams, 2283 Seventh Avenue JOHN E. NAIL >ARTHUR TALBOT >EDWARD G. CONICK >CAPT WM H JACKSON >H DUCLEY ROBT R CHURCH JK ARTHUR H PAYNE G L YOUNG EDGAR CONNOR HON JAS W JOHNSON US Consul Nicaragua HON EMMEET L SCOTT Tookaukee DR ALGERON B JACKSON Philadelphia ROBIT T MOLIS Chicago HON EDA D GREEN Chicago SAM LUCAS JAS E LIGHTFOOT BOBBY KEMP HENRY TROY GEO CATLIN GEO L ARCHER W L E STARK ARTHUR KING Owing to the many requests for Boxes, the entire box section has been reserved. Boxes can be secured at the following places: The New York Age, 24, West 46th street, Telephone, Bryant 315 Gotham Attacke Music Company, 130 West 37th street, Telephone, Murray Hill 870, Nail & Parker, 145 West 135th street, Telephone, Morningside 762, Nex Rogers Studio, 130 West 135th street, Telephone, Morningside 512, Fred Williams, 2283 Seventh Avenue, Telephone, Morningside 431 BOXES, seating 8 persons, $2.00 Athletic Carnival MOTHER At Ulmer Park ADMISSION Carnival and Summernight's F OTHERS' DAY NURSE Park On Friday, July Music by J. NIMROD JONES Orchestra GRAND : OUTING : AND 1910 Out of 1 Music by J. Nimrod Jones' Orchestra ADMISSION 35 CENTS to Directions—Take Halsey attent car to Wykoff avenue, walk one block at left from New York take Myrtle avenue "L" to Depot transfer to Cypress Hills car, which she door --- THEATRE 12th Street BING PICTURES M every day be secured eight item 6322 PERFORMANCE Continued 2:00 to 11:30 Frogtime George T Night 1911 FOURTH Froli t's Dance ROGS (ED) 0 155th Street & 8th MANHATTAN finished by ANDERSON'S Orchestra ROGS GEO W WALKER J ROSAMOND JOHNSON JAS REESE EUROPE LESTER A WALTON SAM LUCAS JAS E LIGHTFOOT BOBBY KEMP HENRY TROY REO CATLIN REO L ARCHER W. L. E STARKS ARTHUR KING Consul Nicaragua Takahara Philadelphia W. H. HUNLEY Cleveland Chicago Entry Member the entire box section following places treet. Telephone, Bryant 3 37th street, Telephone 9 9th street, Telephone 135th street, Telephone 135th Avenue, Telephone 50 Cent Onnight's Festival NURSERY Friday, July 7, 19 No. 10 N. Ave. Orchestra (INCORPORATED) ‘Normal Conditions Do Not Prevail. No one can deny that the normal condition of things ought to meat it all Christians should and could t along nicely together, no matter Shether they were Jew or Greek. bar- barian or Scythian, black or white No one can deny that the normal Christian condition of things would Be that there should be_no Raptists for Methodists, Roman Catholics nor Episcopalians | Presbyterians nor juakers, or any distinctive denomina- ea toe aioe in Christ Jesus Bat we know this cannot be, because things are not as they ought to be, but as they are Wag must adjust our- selves to them as they are im such a measure as to get the very best re- sults and attain the greatest good to all. Not Establishing Jim Crowlem,_ To say that Negroes i a separate Charch are establishing Jun-Crowism is not true The Negroes have never made any of the conditions as they are in this country. but have been forced to accept the conditions as they fond them and do the very best they could under them The Negro Methodist organizations have tried and have been the leaders in the ef- fort to fraternize with their white brethren, but to fratermize on the grounds of equal manhood The inde- pendent Negro churches have no con- troversy with the brethren who desire to remain under what <cems to us white domination, however welcome ‘or acceptable the conditions may be to them But for ourselves, we feel better, however gmall and humble, in our little denominational cottage. keeping house for ourselves, than in the most palatiol residence overshad- ‘owed by some one else A Day of Sepheate Things To-day all over this country there are Negro lawyers, Negro doctors, Negro banks, Negro newspapers, Ne- gro business leagues, Negro insurance companies, Negro ‘secret organiza- tions. Why? First, because the Negro was either entirely excluded from many of these things or wrongly treated in them, and had no redress. and to continue meant only to be out- classed and outnumbered by superior numbers, superior wealth and influ- ence. Second, all these independent organizations are plain illustrations of what the Negro can do for himself. and nothing has helped to bring him up to a standard of recognition more than these independent organizations An Age of Imitation. Mr. Norwood contends that the Negro church is an imitator and has developed nothing new I suppose he means because the independent Negro Methodist churches have the same doctrines and government as the white. This seems very weak It is equivalent to saying because one per- son, institution or organization adopts the’same plan and method of another it is, therefore, impossible to show its ‘own ability All over this land cities are adopting government by commis- Son, one imitating the other Accard- ing to Mr Norwood the city that does this shows no ability to govern itself ‘because it has the same form as an- other. Rather than this, adoption by the Negro of the methods and sys- tems of the ME Church showing any lack of ability, it shows exactly the opposite: that the Negro has the ability to take the white man's sys- tem and work and run it independent 9f the white man to his own benefit If the Neegro. church is producing nothing new, what is it doing? Using Another's Weapons. This whole nation denied the Ne- grees ability to stand atone It told e world that it had a race of chat- tels, irresponsible children, incapable of learning, of manly action, of being other than wards But the Negro took up the same methods, forms sdeas, plans and systems of the white man, 'and more than anywhere else in his ‘independent church life, and showed hi8 ability, in the face of pov- erty, prejudice, and every possible discouragement, to take bis place alongside his white brother in the progress‘of the world. Negroes n0- where in the world have given & glearer and better idea of their abil- ity to do for themselves than is illus- tradted by their independent churches in this country. . Negro Churches’ Work. / “The Amerfeaa people at one time arted {2 make the world believe that jegroe was lazy, ignorant an immorsh and absoletly nothing bas done mote, with all its defects (and it hae them), to prove to the contrary than the independent Negro church The fitances is raises, its missionary operations, education institations, and, we all, its organized ministration to the need of its own people, hus demonstrated this. ‘The Presbyterian Church has mil- ions, the M_E. Church the same, and all of the other great denomination. They have years of experience They have the most pious and learned Scomigioateompeai onl peeteniosingrt chaena: bee Beer es hich these’ trained workers Mave found. | An Argument of Contradictions. | Mr. Norwood’s whole argument if telf-contradictory He is secretary of a Negro conference, not a Methodist Episcopal Conference, but a black conference in a white denomination with everything Negro in it, Sere the bishop who presides over it Why do they have a colored and a white conference within the same territory? For the very reason that we have an independent church Conditions make Jat hest The distinctly Negro churches }and Negro preachers and Negro con- ferences in the MF Church are conclusive proof that Negro churches are best for Negrocs Why was Bishop Scott sent to Africa? Choose Ye Your Master. Mr Norwood aud all the other brethren who choose have a right to go right on as they are in the ME. Church, but he misses the mark by a great way when he says that the inde. pendent Negro church 1 only an imi- tator has established nothing new, would have been better to have re- maimed with the other church and is advancing Jim-Crowism Allen and Vaarick. Why did not Luther remain and fight it out in the Roman Catholic Church?) Why did not Wesley's fol- lowers do so in the Church of Eng- land, as hg had intended? Because they could’not do so and establish the principles in which they believed Allen Varick and Spencer believed in independent Christian manhood. and were willing. as other great souls have been, to make any sacrifice to obtain it They were not imitators but brought to.the world what it had nat seen, a band of Christian Negroes who could have all the wealth, intelli- ence, prestige and influence of the greatest denominations of this coun- try to lean upon for help of all kinds, hut instead chose rather to fight for the sake of having their own inde- pendent government NEGRO’S STATUS EXACT AND SURE 6 (aateead Seen enee't) # ward of the people, and have be- come one of the great factors In ur scheme of government ‘The Negro 1s strong in gratitude He was Indeed grateful for his free- dom and has proven this by his splendid efforts to earn and be worthy of a place among the citi- zena of this republic As 1 sald, the education of the Negro began with the Emancipation Proclama- ton, and instead of heing an fl- Mterate race, you Rad reduced his Milteracy at the time of the 1900 Census to 44.5 per cent. This in- cludes the whole country not such localities ag Washington. where the percentage of illiteracy muat be indeed very small, and not such great states as Ohio, where the education of the Negro Is encour- aged and where the illiteracy ten years ago waa lesa than 18 per cent and must tr mush tess to- day. Education the Great Solution. You have realized as a race that education {s the great solution, the hasin essential. of good citizenship Education and christianity go hand in hand. To carry to the less for- tunate the light of wisdom more than 30,000 of your people, men and women. have earnestly striven through secondary schools and col- legea, to obtain a certificate which would entitle them to do thelr share in the splendid work of o people's uplift. T understand that practically all of the teachers in the District Schools, training the minds and morals of more than 16,000 school children. are gradu- ates of this splendid M. Street High School 1 have sald that edu- cation leads to good citizenahtp. Education 8 the very key-stone to individual success and racial ad- vancerhent. You as a people, as soon as the opportunity: was given you, eagerly sought the advantages of ‘an education. The colored schools rapidly advanced from the old Freedom's Bureau to include In their number such splendid schools as Hampton and Tuskegee, How- ard University, Fisk University, and other great parta of the educa- tional machine which. to-day throw open the door of opportan- ity to every colored child to te- celve an education fitting It to cope fo every walk of life with their white neighbor. A Love ef Learning. Tt ts your love of learning, your eagnerness to acquire knowledge and with that knowledge its neces sary companton, wisdom, that you owe the rapid advancement of the colored race to the postilon to self- respecting citizenship that you oc- cupy to-day ‘There is need not only for teachers. but for ministers of the gospel, doctors, lawyera, and men and women of other profes- sions, to encourage the youth to the very highest ambition. More than 16,000 Negro clergymen are Preaching the gospel throughout the United Staten This is a won- derful record of achievement tn the higher profession, but the great salvation of the race in not in devoting Steelf solely to mas- tering the professions Must Go Into Business ‘These are only necessary Incl- dente to miccenaful reint pragrere und decelnpetuent | While ven have tore than n thounatl able Inw vere Beneticing theavehient the Tnited States tie thongand op mare phe ficiann and hundreds vf bankers Hrokera nechitectr musts fone and sther profeminnal men. de net for homtngle ntnute think that it be nat faquniy. an honorable te go ints Waintnone Inte farming. Inte me chanien Inte ane Renwsat le Teter nna de tt well The Soil Important Tiaedly need slauinteh the Se kre ont the eet importance at Tiling the moll WH ia uw neknowt taged fact that the real future at Tin counts HA vers has kbane. de fends pon agriculture Fan aan Peeple Wave reeognized itd am Fouls aw have the whites and te Aas more thin the millon Segrace ite tensed In ngticnltuea’ pure fulte ind ten Sears age ow ed In aver tan hundred aniiiion wallara arth of farnia And in the great atnte ot Virginia loking at are part tram the Auditor of tho Btate for 1906 the Negroen of the state Increnned the vatne of thelr prop: ‘erty more than one million dollars in one year, thua making their nade. mba therhos” Reet 3 pase: prartinar- 06 / 2 hams ma Sates AT eve am as proud of ‘tact that mils figoe ale cugnaed es fafmarn, 08 1 am that thousands are-engaged tn professional pureolts. Both class- ea of citizens are needed to prop- erly solve the future of your race. 1am proud of the fact that over 276,000 Negroes are engaged in me- chanical and manufacturing pur- suits. Too many are prone to the mistake that education ts not nec- easary for manual Inbor, agricul- ture. and occupations other than professional, Tet me say at this point that the best teacher is the One best educated. The heat law- yer, doctor, professional man or woman Is the one who has the heat trained mind, and this rule applies with equal force, for wherever "you find. an educated farmer, mechanic. or laborer, there will you find the heat equiped of his class. Hands and Brain. The hands are but the tnstru- ments of the brain, and a well-de- veloped brain” will produce the more ekiliful manual labor One cannot pursue any vocation suc- cessfully with his brain dormant. ‘One can reach a high degree of proficiency in his chosen line only by a high degree of development of his mental processea We can- not all be teachers, we cannot all he Inwvera If auch were the case, Mt would be a great calamity Courage and Faith. And now the one thing that I be- Meve we must remember most of all Tis naturally customary with young people, going out Into the World am you are to-day, no longer guided, instructed and’ alded by Four preceptors, entirely depend- ént upan your own abilities, Cour- age and, resources, to feel that the world is at your feet. when in fact unless you clothe yourself in an abiding faith. an undying courage, and an ambition that will not fal: ter when face to face with aim- culties “and. discouragement. you are at the fect of the world, and will be trodden upon unless there fo In you the stamina which will force recognition of your merits. be those the merite of a teacher, doctor, lawyer, minister. business man, mechanic, farmer, nuree, la: horer. or domeatic nervant T place no one of these occupations above the other. All Labor Honorable. They are each equally honorable and nn honest ambition to be the heat of your kind will make your Iife a success. for success Is not meanured by the greatneas of the individual, but if a man or woman can say that he or ahe te the deat. ‘or equal to the best, In thelr chosen litee work, thelr am‘ition 1s a8 well rounded out ag is the ambi- tion of the greatest man or woman of Sour ree You cannot all he Tenders One mast excel the other ‘The same standard applies to the colored people that applies to the white that +i werk Is honorable and necess: ry ‘There must be manufactur FR as well ne senators There mue te Rood tusiness men ag well 4+ politicians ‘There must he fine artisans as well as Iiter- tours” There must be good Inbor- ere ta the fleld aa well as million Ale And T wish to impress pan Cra that the success at \our Pree Mee future of sour tee das not “ie in the mecean of a chosen. few. but In ‘the suecess of all. Work with the hands le Just as honor able an work with the braing, and the bert workman ig the man who has his banda and. brain. hoth trained. “Excelsior.” A Rood rule to follow te to fos. ter an nndving ambition ta exert all in ao far as sour abilities. will permit’ and while the men or women who constantly endeavors tovexcel in all. things ‘will. find others who by natural abliity and adnptitdlity, pasa them in the race. yet the ona who strives to excel the there In certain of excelling the great majority We are too prone to “measure success by wealth As a rule the wealthy man Is termed the successful man, and yet this is absolute sophistry ‘A man whose entire success 1860 accumulation of money, and who has given nothing to posterity, has Ee small tribute for the privi- lege of having existed T do not mean that the accumulation of wealth In not a thing to he proud of Rut there are other things which spell success In more bril- Mant letterm I believe im all per- sons being thrifty, but do not lose your better self in a wild race for wealth alone. We must have pro- ducers of wealth. We must have scholars, divines and thinkers. Gold ta Not All, The man who with his brain and the skill of hand and muscle. can contemplate a beautiful struc- ture of which he took part in the building: the woman who can look upon hundreds of the youth of the nation. and reallze that thelr minds and their morals have been under hor control. that ehe has taken part in thetr training for a future life of _usetuiness, even though both draw e mere day's wage, and live in comparative obscurity. can be Just as proud of their achieve- tqente as can the millionaire who es gloatingly upon his accum- Wated aditenn le atcchs te Upon the Threshold Ae for voupaelver vow today atand spon the threshold af Ife For con tne marke the frat ater of Sour enreer | Your entire future fm Individuals reata with each one of von A providence haa riven Sou Piente am) an appartinite to develop them If you fall for want of ambition or ehneacter vourn alone In the blame The world tn Wefore von, It In ready to receive vou if you are worthy Success can only be attained through in- duatry. morality and laudible pur- pore ‘Bome of you will rise to greater heighte than others This is the inexorable rule of life, Some vevtgaduhnandeg ee peeenenie ieanhhaphtaiedsleansahenbestaptndienipbidemmalnetbiaasoaiamoonaatog <e ee ae a me Dae PS Ti ewes a Greenberg's Ladies’ Hair Dressing Parlors MANUVACTURER OF HUMAP HATR GOODE Afro-American Hair Goods .a Specialty ats saos pramyu Bln st free tap par tes mee Cee 589 Eighth Avenue soghly WRAR Sub STREBT itchiness ee «» MME. BAUM’S HAIR~ EMPORIUM +1: Greatest Colored Hair Goods Store of its Kind... . IMPORTER AND MANUPACTURER CP REAL AFRO-AMERICAN HAIR wics Our Specality wigs : ‘We manufacture the natural looking parted ventilated Wig-ean- net be éetected from your ews hair. We match all shadce of bair; mene toe dificult, We guarantes eur goods to be as represented and abssiutely stand combing witheut loosing hair. We carry the largest steck of Real Afro. American bair as Wigs, Braids, Switches, from 30 up. Pempadour, 890 up Front pieces, Ic. up Cluster Puffs, 490. up Gur epeeeey: Onty Manufacturers ef Res] Human Hair Transformations orders Shuare Ola Maliabie Hale ‘omio for faling sare tou Gascon eines” Uns, straightening Cemb and Pemade Send trial erder. 486 EIGHTH AVERUE (Sear 24h Street) ton 30 ‘Des biteas Soll ts Pounesivonus ea Leas Line Det Now’s the Time Te make application to Learn one of the most independent and best payable of all Professions Hairdressing, Manicuring, Facial Massage, Scalp Treatment, Hair work in all its branches taught under Mme. Baum’s perspnal supervision. Reduced summer rates. | The Baum's School of Beauty Culture 486 EIGHTH AVENUE — (Near 34th Street) NEW YORK | gaa 3 dese, A perfect Hair Dressing and Hair Tonic combined. It will make the hair roft and pliable, will cure Dendroff, ard keep the scalp in a clean, healthy condition. PRICE 25 CENTS Quinade may be used in conjunction with our “ 29 QUINACOMB A comb made of specially tempered metal « as to retain the proper degree of heat. Will remove the curl frem, and straighten the hair, * PRICE 50 CENTS * SEEBY DRUG COMPANY, NEW YORK Sold by the following Druggists In Manhattan Wen Havenstein, 513 Lenox Ave RB, Rotbins, 539 Lenox Ave Harlem Pharmacy, Madison Ave , Nyanza Pharmacy. 25 West 135th and 13lat street street Louis Berger, za ate. & 134th St. A. Ewenbud, Sth ave. & 136th St. Chas. M. Kischeln, Sth & 132d St. S. Ketctim, 31d Ave. & lOist St J J. Keyser, 75 Amsterdam ave, Garfield Fharmacy, 448 Lenox ave, Brooklyn Alexander Gardner, Myrtle ave Myrtle Ave Drug Co,, Myrtle ave cor, Jay street cur, Duffield St. Seeby Drug Company jun 22-3mo =—- 79 BAST 130TH STREET, NEW YORK more ability, and with equal op- portunity, will go further than others, Know Thyself. First let me urge that you com- mune with yourselves. Do not foster an ambition to be that which you cannot be. Be brave enough Yo map. out your life within the scope of your abilties I urge an unfaltering ambition to succeed and progress, but misplaced ambi- tion to attempt that in which you cannot succeed, fs not an ambi- tion, but a delusion. Follow the admonition of Shakespeare, “ ‘Tis vaulting ambition which oft o'er Teapa Iteelf and falls on the other side” And another old philoso- pher says that “He who hews above his height may have chips in his eyes” I do not say this by way of discouragements, but I have seen too many food men and women fall rons misplaced ef- fort, through thoroughly msunder- standing thelr own limitations, and the man and woman ls as- sured of success who is courag- ‘eous enough to analyze himself and frankly acknowledge his short- comings. You will find much of @iscouragement, but that only gives rest to the great delight of fivtow successful, upright, future fe. Be Proud of Your Race. Tet me admonish you, and T apeak from the bottom of my heart. never be ashamed that you were born of colored blood Go ant inte the world fll of pride of Faee and take nat with von race Prejndiee and mee hatred Pride Af race In proper. but ane of the Grentemt obatructinna te the proc Fenn nf \out rare has been’ race hatred and prejudice beth among the whites andthe, Newrnen You are here bs right. Fou are entitled to equal righte under the Taw Thia in gunrantede von he the Fonatitation Thie 18 Negros Home You eannet unmake in a das aeetianal pretudler but von enn Te hattenti. atehiing toward. cand Fiizenahip be indiatrtonely work ing ta erent ramethine ot the firatn ar the hand that the peaple tennt tring about mare. rpldts than hy ape other meann a proper Undiratnnding with the neante of anther meer and nationalttion We Ing nnder the game fing You have'na caune ta he aghamed nt the past hintory nf veur race The raromd af the Ingt fifty vearn shawl hond you forth full of encourage Ment nnd enthuaianm far the fi tare. When you take up your fen work, Go 90 a8 American citizens Our Exact Status, Thie te your exact political and economical statue In thla coun. try. Every man, woman and child born under the flag of our coun- try, 2 an American citizen and it should be your ambition, and will if I read your faces right today, to be American citizens that other American citizens, regardless of race or color, will be compelled to take pride In. Remember the Fourth Annual Frolic of the Frogs at Manhattan Casino, Monday evening, June 26, 1911, Pen. nants for ladies free. MONTGOMERY IN NEW ORLEANS. by the Crescent City. Special to Tas Naw Yoax Ao New Orleans, La. June 20.—The great welcome ‘given Hon Isaiah T. Montgomery by the citizens of New Orleans was significant in many ways. Tt demonstrated that the Loulstana Negro ts not behind when ft comes to doing things. It brought the atten- tion of the laymen to the wonderful capacity of Rev. W. R. Butler. D.D. pastor of one of tho largest churches in the South, to lead a great mass of people along constructive religious lines. It has beon said since the moet- Ing that it was the greatest and most attentive crowd that ever assembled in a church tn tho history of New Orleans Dr Butler has systomatized his chureh work tn such a way that It brings the greatest results and furn- ‘inhes an excellent exchango in mod ern church work. “Another fart bronght out bv Mr Mantgoine roe stett wan the ability at the bane Ite te enre for aueh a dis Hngulshed person ne Mr. Montgomer: Meese the eueat of WE Raberaan. + prominent contractor and builder 0t Mia palatier home 2418 South F therts stron Upon Mr Monteumers «ar How he ne couetied tes Mew Rater fan's fur hroakfant Mire Relersr Teun teal hunts ee patter, bre iktast the tina) dé Nether Inveampins Wink Mr Taherann vice prenident of the Muon Facer 1 MIN @ Manufacturing Co baw 1 Rell a direstar in the company bean AO Mie, Victor Peurnter and Hon ty AW Rhodee went for a Arie over the SAGO Sint ing tinny pinee af histort fat and tieines inte rest On returniiue from the Arise many of New Orlaina mast prominent ev ple gathered nt the perannnl inten ton of Mr and Mra WF Reheraen to meet Mr Muntgnmers Amons thors present swore Hon 1 Deol Sr wha wan Mr Monteom ery'n aperini guest af the evening. J 1D Rutler, one of Mound. Rayon's strongoat friends and supporters, Vic tor Fournier, leading contractor and hullder Hon J Madison Vanen, tend ing cotored attorney-ot-law, and FA Mix, a large real estate owner and business man, and a director of Mound Rayou ON Min & Mfg Co JAMES C. THOMAS * UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER 89 West 134th Street 123 BAST 8TH Stteq, Near Lenox Avenue New Yeux Crrr Tel. 2682 Gramercy | ROT SETS, CAMP CHAIRS AND COACHES TO LET FOR ALL PURVian | HELLO CENTRAL? sanen Obits bicnce gi Sara gene eres that wo ule extremely careful) and sunttery ip our methods. Ebel we ecud cer expremets| Ais oe aro all og werd the vem Cirniag bine fo leet aad'(orpes {at carpets and vars inyoe Bone? Jou vaty mock, 1 has sate Sou til be pleura” New York Carefnl Cleaning Bureau eb S6mcs 12 WEST 13Bve STREST ‘M,C. Brevxax. Pro, 7 = [Tp MME BECIS - SS LM New Tallor X\ i Fling Machin . Vast improvememeot o all complicated synem 4 f Row In use. The chat a tee ie adjustible to all aame Set by mest perfect mess a ‘ | ine yee, “ara ’ és I, to all 1d oe tnd eo simple is hs ob i ! vanced cutting and 6 Co ia ' 1 m ting system that it may "ak { 5 [1 be tearned in a few ler \ | Woy + one . \ st i 1 Mme. BECKS ie { 0 School of Dressmakieg a af ‘2a8 Weat Sir Street 2 WEW YORK CITY | Phoos 6417 Moraingnide Notary Public | ©, FRANKLIN CARR Funeral Director nor CONNRETED WITH ANY FIRM 247 W AB4tD SU, (Pet,7822¢) lew York doc itm : Untous Once Pacas Downer cee orm aut wont porany vom TURNER © HOLMES FUNERAL DIRECTORS 257 Weet 38th St. 7 Ess S Formac 200 0 280 8. urea anrlaungtet * aid eked Goud, © BCL, Proms oct 273m Phoae 6%3 Morning ~ J. WESLEY LANE Undertaker & Embalmer 12 W. 1334 Street Near Leaps Ave. Open al! aight. Foneral Parl Chapel cee ee MRS. IDA WHITE-DUNCAN 19 Prescott St. Jersey City, NJ. HAIR WORKER eae eee ene Bee ae Beanse: Area Yond | Telephoae ‘REST CLASS PeSTORS FOR AEST Ces BEL Atlantic Servant Exchange 8 WEST 134th STREET, near Fith Ave. Register now for Grat class positions in nearby summer resorts. fon 17 Bo F.S. GRANT, Prop. Telephone Bryaut 2650 Neo Bar ED. GREENHOOT FINE WINES AND LIQUORS POR PAMILY AND MEDICAL TRADE 778 Eighth Avenue Bet. 47th & 48th Sts. New Yor et OUR PATRONAGE SOLICITED ROYA AT TNICRU TREY Hone Eerasted at $49.98 Containing the following articles ie | ee. Be ‘10 Yds, Matting SW sca conti | 33 $M ooam LIBERAL CREDIT TERMS | ‘$1.00 Weekly @pens an Account Make Your @wa Terms ian erg secant 2188-2190 S° Aye a ra eeeoes New York City wor Ott TREATED COURTEOUSLY. Haterson NJ June 20— Thomas 1 Amos, Jr. in company with Miss H Otnhe Krygan of Fast Orange, at tended last Fridas the high school dance, which was given in the audi torium © There were three hundred couples present, all white, but these young people They are the first cal ored ever to attend an annual dance and were treated most tourteoucly. by all present ROBBED COLORED WOMAN. Little Rock, Ark, June 21—Bob Marshall was convicted ‘and given one year in the penitentiary for embezzle- ‘Teleshoos 304 Calemten (BOTANY Pay W. David Brown HIGH GRADE Fuaeral Director and Embateg, Parasherasle, mate end earic of te tg Puneral Parlor and Chape! (46 WEST 53RD STREET ‘Between 6th and Seventd Aveears Madam Brown ln ttendaace st Peewun Branch Puan 8 Weores sper decisive | Telephose 5352 Harlem HH. Adolph Howell UNDERTANER “AND EMBAURE 22 W. 1334 St,, New Yor : oo ane wari BENJ. F. JONES | Undertaker & Embalmer | 639 SHAWMUT AVE. ete Smo Boston, Mass telephone 4H) Col. Mme. CRAWFORD’S SALE OF REAL HAIR REs HAIRDRESSING PARLOR 341 West 59th St. ew York Cy Onane as May JRE a Got ian, rma pmo ra ap etereae see iy RRALRTGTS "rales Seer Ey Geant Paces Sine Pee neem eae ke ease Balen 100. Large Cloue ‘Mme. |, 1; SRAWFORD, cde tet ET (caine Your Seeip ts Bry and You Know itt Try Macy Re Hair Renewes and Denérefl' Zee ee ae Sea ha Hes eo ii = * Tel G72 Morningtide 453 Lanes fs, pea dg TOUS SKOISKT'S Dry Goods Store Te ota ig Cah fe i 399 8th Ave. Bet. 29th & 30th Sia ih A & 3h Se O’FARRELL'S 410-12 Eighth Avenue Furniture, Carpets, Bedding, Ble, Bows, Fists ené Apartments Porshe! . Cash or Credit ment The jure returned 1 9 tet of guilty and left the panistn.er ss court James A Gray wh “si over the tral by consent 1 t= th pat tes, fixed the punishment ar + yak Marshall was charged with +g CO herrled $200 from Emma [ys ob ored woman, for the purpose * hrs furniture to start a boarding h 3° woman received neither ‘hy * nite nor hee money Remember the Fourth Annual Frolit of the Froge at Manhattan Cesimh Monday, evening, June 26, 1911 Pat nants for ladies free Advertise in The Ag*