New York Age
Thursday, December 21, 1911
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
VOL. XXV. No. 12.
BOARD MEETS AT THE WHITE HOUSE
President Taft Presides at Session of Jeanes Fund Board
KEALING MADE MEMBER
Head of Quindaro University Selected to FM Vacancy Caused by Death of Bishop Grant.
PRESIDENT GILLARD'S REPORT
Fund Expanded Over $40,000 Within Past Year in Interest of Negro Education in Rural Communities.
Special to THE NEW YORK AGR.
WASHINGTON, D. C., Dec. 19.—On Thursday, December 14th, at the White House, an important meeting of the Jeanes Fund Board was held, at which President Taft, who is a member of the Board, presided by courtesy. The report of Prof. James H. Dillard showed that the fund expended in the past year in the interest of Negro education in the South was over $40,000, and in conjunction with the Slater Fund Board there are busily engaged in 2,500 communities in the South giving advice relative to how Negro children can be educated along practical lines, two field agents and 106 supervising teachers.
Prof. H. T. Kealing, President of Western University, Quindaro, Kans., was elected a member of the Board, succeeding the late Bishop Abram Grant. Prof. Kealing's election met with the favor of all the other members, as he is highly conversant with Negro rural life. The colored members on the board are Dr. Booker T. Washington, Hon. J. C. Napier, Register of the Treasury; Maj. R. R. Moton, of Hampon Institute; Hon. R. L. Smith, of Waco, Tex., and Prof. H. T. Kealing.
The Jeanes Fund Board and the Slater Fund Board are working harmoniously together to uplift Negro life in the rural communities of the South, and the result has been gratifying. Prof. Dillard, as general agent, has $3,000,000 under his supervision to expend for educational purposes in the rural districts of the South, $2,000,000 of which has been set aside by the Slater Fund and $1,000,000 by the Jeanes Fund Board. The two boards combined expended $200,000 during the past year for Negro education.
It was reported at the session that the directors of the Phelps-Stokes Fund had set aside a scholarship of $12,500 each at the University of Georgia and the University of North Carolina, to be awarded yearly to the successful student from each institution, who must be in sympathy with Negro education and who shall be sent out in the rural communities to study Negro life and education in all its phases for one year and write a treatise on his findings.
INDORSE PRESIDENT TAFT
New Jersey Negroes Meet at Trenton and Pledge Alliance to Republican Party—Rev. Roundtree Indorsed as Leader—The Age Made Organ of Organization.
Special to THE NEW YORK AGE.
TRENTON, N. J., Dec. 19.—Resolutions indorsing the administration of President Taft and pledging allegiance to the Republican Party, both National and State, were adopted at a meeting of the Taft Colored Republican Association of New Jersey at a meeting held last week at the Mt. Zion A. M. E. Church. The leadership of the Rev. I. W. L. Roundtree was indorsed and THE NEW YORK AGE was indorsed as the organ of the organization.
The meeting of New Jersey Negroes was called by the Rev. I. W. L. Roundtree, of Trenton. W. R. Gullins, of Princeton, was made president, and W. E. Rock, of Red Bank, secretary. The principal speech was made by the Rev. Dr. Roundtree, who urged the Negroes to present a united front in New Jersey and bring about the success of the Republican Party at the polls.
Among the resolutions introduced was the following:
Whereas, In a very short time the country will be called upon to place in the Executive Chair of the nation a President for the ensuing four years, and
Whereas, The present incumbent, William H. Taft, has for the past four years had an administration which has successfully grappled with some of the most perplexing questions of public policy, both foreign and domestic. Therefore, be it Resolved:
1. That we, the colored voters
NEW YORK, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1911.
D.L. SANTA'S VISIT
here assembled, representing all parts of the Commonwealth of New Jersey, most heartily indorse the administration of President Taft for its adherence, under his leadership, to the great principles of government as set forth, advocated and enlarged by the Republican party through which this country has become one of the greatest nations of the world, and that we commend the President for having been outspoken and clear upon questions pertaining to us as a race and for having appointed Negroes to higher offices than they have ever before held in the history of the country.
2. That we hereby renew and pledge our allegiance to the Republican party, through whom we obtained the right of franchise, and under whom hundreds of Negroes are to-day holding positions of honor and eminence, and the
OLD SANTA'S VISIT
only party either federal or State government which has given us anything the recognition of our rights citizens of this great republic. 3. That we shall such a State organization shall here in New Jersey durc hold the Presidential campaign to the party of Lincoln, Bunnea Grant, and to effect this end a strong local organizations in a county of the State, and end to ways and means here and to carry out this purpose.
this purpose.
4. That we in the Republic
can support of them, and believe
it is fully propab continue its
well begun weand carry out
whatever reform developed
condition may shapen necessary.
5. That we open the Legislature to take action may be necessary restores to the clergy of the same use of clerik-
cal orders, given by the railroads, by which each minister was permitted to travel at half rates, but of which they have been deprived by the action of the Democratic party, which controlled the last Legislature. That this action has fallen harder upon the Negro ministry than any other, as they are the greatest paid claim of professional men in the State. That we also call upon the Legislature to make such modifications in the general election law as will make it possible for all men who have not had the same benefit of education as others to vote intelligently.
6. That we must currently advise the Negro voters to go to the polls and exercise their franchise as the moral duty of every American citizen.
SOLOMON PORTER BOOD,
T. R. FREDERLIN,
BARRISON BLINDER.
INSIST ON THEIR RIGHTS
Old Line 'Republicans in Louisiana Make Charges Againa "Lily White" Faction Before Republican National Committee.
Special to THE NEW YORK AGR.
WASHINGTON, L. C., Dec. 19.—Louisiana politics was last week injected into the quiet and orderly proceedings of the Republican National Committee when Walter L. Cohen, as the representative of the Black-and-Tan faction, presented a complaint, signed by Emile Kunts, chairman; Joseph Fabacher, secretary, and J. Madison Vance, complaining that the "Lily Whites" have not dealt fairly with them. At the Chicago Convention in 1908, when a similar complaint was made, it was decided that three members of the National Committee as a sub
committee, should visit Louisiana and try and harmonize the differences and reorganize the party.
The complaint against the "Lily White" committee organization, of which Frank B. Williams is chairman, says in part:
"They have ignored every friendly overture. They have refused to face the voters in a primary election under their own auspices, and as a last resort to escape the pitiable spectacle of having no real Republican voters behind them in the State they have appealed to the courts, by way of mandamus proceedings against the Secretary of State to save them from a display of their political impotence.
"We send to you our representative in the person of Walter L. Cohen, who will, with your permission, lay before the committee documentary proof of the most convincing character showing from
Special to THE NEW YORK ACE.
WASHINGTON, D. C., Dec. 14—The recent visit of Dr. Booker T. Washington to this city was the occasion for a brilliant dinner party given in his honor at the Arlington Hotel, one of the most famous hostelries in the country, both Thursday evening. The dinner will served in that portion of the host known as the "Charles Sumner House," the name it has borne since the days of that great statesman and champion of the rights of the black man.
It was here that Sumner lived during the sessions of Congress, and it was here that he died. It was peculiarly fitting then that those in charge of this function in honor of Dr. Washington should have selected this particular place.
There were no set speeches in the dinner, the brief, informal when the seeming we have found their importance in the atmosphere, sentiments and the sociation of the historic building with interiors and windows. The trustees of the Annex are responsible for $1,000,000 for the admission of the rural Negro population of the South were the other guests of the occasion. They were in the city to attend the annual meeting of the board, which has always been held at the White House since Mr. Taft has been President.
The dinner party was arranged by a committee of which the Hon. William H. Lewis, Assistant Attorney General, was the chairman, and its splendid success in all of its features is due to the energy and effective work which he put in the affair. The decorations of the dining hall were beautiful, and an of chestra played throughout the dinner.
Those at the Dinner
Thoe present to honor Dr. Washington were: Hon. J. C. Napier, Major R. R. Moton, of Hampton; Robert L. Smith, of Texas; Prof. H. T. Kealag, of Kansas; Prof. E. C. Williams, Dr. M. O. Dumas, Dr. J. R. Wilder, Dr. W. A. Warfield, Hon. Jamea W. Johnson, of New York; Hon. Chas W. Anderson, of New York; Wilford Smith, of New York; Dr. C. Sumner Wormley, Robert J. Harlan, W. Calvin Chase, Dr. Samuel G. Elbert, of Wilmington, Del.; Dr. John R. Francis, Prof. Kelly Miller, Prof. R. C. Bruce, Gov. P. B. S. Pinback, Wyatt Archer, Dr. A. S. Gray, Hon. Henry Lincoln Johnson, Hon. Corus Field Adams, Lieut. T. R. Clark, Dr. Geo. W. Cabanis, Prof. George W. Cook, Dr. W. C. McNell, Hon. John C. Dancy, Dr. E. D. Williston, Dr. A. M. Curtis, Hon. Whitefield McKinkey, Prof. L. B. Moore, Ocea Taylor, George Harris, of New York; Hon. James A. Cobb, Capt. Walter Cohen, of New Orleans; Judge Robert H. Terrell, Hon. Ralph W. Tyler, Prof. W. Bruce Evans, H. C. Tyson, Hon. William H. Lewis, Prof. W. J. Hale, of Tennessee; Pred R. Moore, of New York; Prof. A. T. Glenn and Prof. Ernest Just.
Later in the evening Dr. Washington was the guest of honor at a large banquet given by the Odd Fellows of this city. No man ever received a more enthusiastic welcome than he did. When he entered the hall where the function was held and again when he arrose to speak. The genuineness and good spirit of his reception surely must have touched him deeply.
Past Grand Master William L. Houston presided at the banquet and induced Dr. Washington in an able and eloquent speech.
At noon on Friday the Principal of the Tuskegee Institute spoke before the student body of Howard University and made one of his usual strong and impressive addresses.
A complete muster of the Provided Regiment is being prepared by Col. Pilmore and his staff this week and will be forwarded to Gov. Dix on Christmas Day, with a petition that the regiment be accepted as a part of the National Guard of New York. It is within the power of the Governor to add to the National Guard of the State at any time, according to Col. Pilmore. In case the regiment as presented to the Governor is not accepted, a course of preparation will be imposed simultaneously in the beginning simply providing for the
New Harlem A. M. E. Zion Church.
The New Harlem A. M. E. Church will hold farewell services at 11am on all day sun day. The Rev. J. H. McMullen will preach.
St. David's
Last Sunday at St. David's the rector,
E. G. Lifton, D. L. preached both morning
and afternoon. At 11 o'clock on Christmas day services
will be held in the church. Special Christ
mas music will be used.
There will be a special musical service at 9 p.m. fasting
one hour, and at 11 p.m. the watch night
service will occur.
There will be members of St. David's
extend in the great spirit of christmastide
a hearty invitation to come and worship
with us at the Rassons' services and celebration
of the Holy Communion on christ
Salem M. E. Church
Sunday morning the Rev. Harris of Petersburg, Va., preached to a large audience. F. A. Cullen, the pastor, preached to a packed house. Both sermons were instructed at 2:30, the Sunday School and Young Men's Bible class was largely attended. The men's class was taught by J. E. Hickman. At 3:30 the Lyceum contended and a large and appreciative audience was present to listen to a musical and literary program of Bethel A. M. E. Church. Sunday at 4 p.m. the Christmas program will be in charge of president elect William Will deliver the Christmas oration.
Bethel Notes.
Thursday evening the Senior Mite Missionary Society of Bethel Church hold a reception at the church in honor of Mrs. Teresa Taylor, who was a successful mission of revivals in New York last winter. Mrs. Taylor also preached an inspiring and intellectual sermon Sunday morning, there was a large audience to greet her. The men's meeting convened at 4 o'clock. At 6 o'clock the Christian Endowment met with a good attendance during a service. Dr. Ransom filled the pulpit.
Friday night there will be a mother's
church. All mothers
are invited to attend
New Mission in Williamabridge
A new mission was organized in Willambridge Sunday afternoon, December 10, under the supervision of St Mark's Methode, a small church for the two thousand or more people who live in that section, many of whom own the property in the church. After a short follow by the pastor, Wm. H. Brooks, followed by a forceful adress by the Rev. Bullos, pastor of the Olla Methodist Episcopal Church and a vigorous organization was effected, and the Rev. Gilbert Wilson, a local preacher of St Mark's, was appointed pastor of the new church worship in portion of the Olla Church building, instead of in the common hall of the town. A committee was appointed to make necessary arrangements for the new church structure in the near future. As the late Dr. W. P. Butler was the founder of all our New York work, the pastor suggests that this new work bear his name Butler Methodist Episcopal Church.
Abyasinian Baptist Church.
When the auxiliaries of the Abyssinian Baptist Church made their second report on the church, they knew that the church had taken up 12.25.00 during its one hundred and third anniversary celebration. The pastor, the minister, being more than satisfied with the results, and desires to express through this paper his thanks to his members and to the pastor for his service during his New York ministry, and to whichever one and all a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. The special Christmas exercises at the church next Sunday, morning and evening. At 11 a. m., the pastor will greet from the subject, "The Birth of Christ." At 12 a. m., the pastor will render appropriate music. At 7:30 p. m., subject, "Christ the Lord of the World." The Macedonian Orthodox Church of the Maritim will attend this service in a body.
St James' Presbyterian Church
Quite a large audience greeted the Rev. W. R. Lawton last Sunday morning at the service. Taking for his text *Hill, M. S.*, he preached the strengthworthy me," he preached a strong, practical and inspiring sermon. Mrs. Lousiana Ford united with the church after: "The Sabbath School was well attended. Most Sunday is the last Sunday before the Christian exercises and a full attendance. Oh, who took as his subject the three parables given by St. Luke, 'The lost sheep, the lost corn and the lost son.' His plan to the young people of the church to keep within the fold of the church, society and Christian homes. The choir and Mrs. Matthew B. Russell of Concord Baptist Church, Brooklyn, sang appropriate solos. Next Sunday the Rev. R. W. Benjamin the morning service on "The Mission of Peace. The Women's Missionary Society will have charge of the evening service and the Sunday service on "The Mission of Peace. Special music has been arranged for the day. Don't forget that the day has been set apart as a day for your Christmas offer."
Union Baptist Church
Dr. G. H. Sims made a flying trip to Virginia to visit his mother, who has been missing for a long time. He found her as well as might be depressed, and, although unable to walk, is very cheerful. Dr. Sims spent three days in which time twenty-one rabbits were killed.
Dr. Muss preached at the First Baptist Church in Farmville December 3.
The Baptist Youth People's Union held its regular session at 7:30 a.m. The Gethsemane Counsel. No. 25, was out in full rainfall and made a grand showout.
Mother Zion.
Faster Bolden spoke Sunday morning from the text, "And she was in bitterness with her husband. And she vowed a vow, and said, O Lord of Hurt, If then Will he keep on the afflictions of Thee hand, and the afflictions of Thee hand, but will give unto Thee."
CHRISTMAS WEEK SERVICES
At ST. JAMES PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
11 A.M. CHRISTMAS SERMON. R. W. B. Benjamin: "The Mission of Peace." 8 P.M. SPECIAL - THE MESSAGE OF Grace Campbell: "The Practical Mission of the Gospel."
handmade a man child, then I will give him unto the Lord all the days of his life, and there shall no razor come upon his head. I. Samuel 1. 10-11 verse.
Subject, Hannah and her man child
Sarquel
Eikhanan, an Ephratthite, had two wives, the name of the one was Hanahsh, and the name of the other children, but Hanahsh had no children up to the time she uttered this prayer and promise to the Lord. Eikhanan the Ephratthite as the one of the people who usually up to his church and sacrilege, unto the Lord of hosts of Shiloh. The priests in charge of the religious affairs of the people of sons of Old-man Ell, the High Priest of the temple of Shiloh, Indrum High Priest Ell's physical and intellectual strength, the ability to practice the practices of his drinking immoral priests sons. We wonder at times if the charge is true that High Priest and Judge Ell and the priests sons are active in the practice of
The Sunday School and Christian Endeavor will interesting services. Christmas exercises will be held at the church day evening. Presented by the pastor, pastor of the Price Literary Society, President, R. Justice; vice president, J. Humphrey; secretary, M. Parrish; treasurer, Mrs. Parrish; correspondent, Pastor Holden was called to Yankee to preach the annual sermon to Hero Lodge, G. U. O. of O. K.. He arranged with the Roy Dr. F. M. Jacobs of Brooklyn to preach, and delivered a force-
for Christmas. Eve, Pastor, Roblen will
proceed to firecrackers; at night special
Eveing Night, Eveing Night
Mount Olivet Baptist Church.
At the Mount Olivet R. Y. P. P. Wednesday evening, December 15, the following officers were installed by the pastor, the Rev. Royer; the vice president, R. A. Staten; recording secretary, Nettie Flah South financial secretary, Miss Grace Branch; sorgent attorneys, J. B. Porter; editor, Miss Richetta G. Randolph; scribe, Miss E. Greenin and Miss Rosco Jackson; chairman of Usher Board Clarence A. Williams; chaplain, Johnson Avery; secretary of the presiding program under the supervision of ex president Charles C. Allison, Jr. presentations were made by the R. Y. P. P. and to Miss Richetta G. Randolph from the R. Y. P. P. Choral Club refreshments were served to all present by a committee
The exercises Sunday afternoon were in charge of the Junior B. and Miss Edith Hagley, president, under whose supervision the following program was rendered: Reception. Miss Teresa Hagley, Miss Frances Worrell, Viola Worrell, piano solo. Miss Emma White; reactivation. Mrs. Cornelius Gowens; violin solo. Mrs. Caroline Hagley; violin solo. Flora Greyfrey; predication, Mrs. Mattea Brown. Short addresses were delivered by James Jallus, assistant superintendent of Sunday School and George W. Marsh. Sunday was Sunday School Day at St. Olive Olive at the charge of three services during the day, morning, afternoon and evening. In the morning a special sermon was delivered to a musical audience and pupils delivered by the pastor. In the afternoon short addresses were delivered in addition to a musical audience and pupils delivered by the pastor. In the afternoon short addresses were delivered in addition to a musical audience and pupils delivered by the pastor. In the Weeks of New Bern, N. C. delivered in most appropriate sermon to the Sunday School in the evening. Sunday School under the direction of Emily S. A. Page. Among those who delivered addresses during the day were Prof. Robert W. Weiler, Norman
After the wedding ceremony the wedding party required to the home of the groom where they were greeted by fully two hundred of their friends.
Rev. W. R. LAWTON, Pastor
Mr. Lee was formerly of Hampton, Va., and has made his home in New York City for eighteen years. He wishes to thank his friends all over the country for their kind support and Mrs. W. Lee received thirty three and fifty-one letters of congratulations.
BROOKLYN NOTES
Kings Haughters will give a drama and dance in Crosby's Hall Brooklyn, January 18, 1912. Don't fail to see the Billikens, Friday evening, December 29, at Harmony Hall, formerly King's County Palace, owing to the burning down of Kapital Daina, formerly Atlantic Park and the town is forced to cancel its game on December 28 until some future date. The Penelope Club held its regular meeting and was entertained by Mrs. Ludlow E. Werner at her residence, 14 Doughs street, last Saturday afternoon. Those present were Mrs. V. Van Doughs, Mrs. N. Winn, Mrs. W. H. Smith, Jr., Mrs. J. Tan Triple, Mrs. L. Debarte, Mrs. W. Beckman, Mrs. Harry Doughs, Muster Wm. H. Smith, Jr. Beckman, Ludlow W. Werner, Jr. and Gwendolyn Beckman. The club will hold its six-room dance and dance on December 27, 1911, at the residence of Mrs. Wm. H. Smith, 451 Marry avenue.
The services at Bridge Street A. M. E. Church were very interesting and largely attended. Presiding Elder Joel Styles preached in the morning; the pastor, Rev. C. R. Coles, preached in the afternoon, and a crowded house greeted Bishop Wm. A. Heard in the soon to come day. Africa. The offering on the day was $100. Twenty-three dollars was handed the bishop for his work in Africa.
A testimonial benefit was given at the Bridge Street A. M. E. Church in appreciation of the services of the Rev. J. Harris Accoce, D. D., who, on account of illness, has been confined to his home for nearly a year. The vurtured minister, who was unable to music for the occasion was furnished by Concord Baptist. Fleet Street A. M. E. Zion and the Bridge Street A. M. E. chorus. In the absence of Bishop W. E. Derrick, D. D., LL. D., who was stricken with illness in Pittsburgh, Pa., where he was on route to his home in Philadelphia, D. F. M. M. of the Bridge Street A. M. E. Church, presided. Appropriate addresses were made by the Rev. W. A. Alexander, D. D., pastor of Shoam Presbyterian Church, the Rev. A. C. Crooke, D. D., pastor of the Fleet Street A. M. E. Zion Church, Rector G. E. Miller, pastor of St. Augustine's P. E. Church, and pastor of St. Augustine's Church, whose purse was presented by Wiley G. Overton, who was chairman of the committee to Mrs. Accoce, who was present
Cowing to the removal of the Howard Colored Orphan Asylum from the old landmark, 15.50 Dean street, to Kings Park, the annual Southern dinner, which has for the past six years been held through the generosity of the Bedford Avenue Presbyterian Church, the annual dinner has held in the lecture room of the church. It was largely attended. The children of the asylum entertained the dinners throughout the course with plantation and other models, greatly to the delight of all present. The menu was as follows: Southern fried chicken, Southern fried chicken, Southern coast mini potatoes, baked sweet potatoes, Southwestern turnips, relish, apple sauce, pickled cabbage, cranberry sauce, sweet potato pie, apple pie, apple dumplings, rice pudding, tea and coffee. Among those present were the Rev. and Mrs. S. W. Timmus, Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Turner, Mrs. C. A. Dorser, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Curtis, P. and Mrs. James G. Trimble, Mrs. C. A. Dorser, Mrs. G. W. Imogen Saunders, Miss M. R. Lyle, Mrs. M. C. Lawton, Miss Florence and Cordella Ray, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Fayerweather, Miss Mary McClain.
LOOK! LOOK! READ!
Elegant five rooms, bath, hot water
supply and good yard for children to
play; rent $17.50, $8, $19.
Also basement of these elegant, light
rooms; rent $8. App. Owner
422 West 45th St.
Quilet Respectable Families Only
Apartments of 3 rooms, newly renovated, very light: all improvements, Tubs, toilet, etc. Quilet received section, Rents $14.50 and $15.00. Apply Janitor, or POCER & CO.
dec 21 41 26 West 34th St.
431 West 16th St.
(Bet. 9th and 16th Aves.)
3 large rooms, tubs, gas and toilet; newly renovated, Rents $10 to $11.50. Apply Janitor, or JOSEPH F. FEIST
dec 21 41 26 West 42nd St.
Apartments To Let
225 West 63d street. 3 rooms $11.50.
Fronts $12.50.
208 West 61st Street. 3 rooms $9.00.
4 rooms $12.50.
127 West 6 st Street. 3 rooms $9.00.
4 rooms $13.00.
JANITORS ON PREMISES
Frank Kayne, Mrs. F. B. Washkin, Mrs.
B. Washkin, Mrs. P. H. Plummer,
Mrs. Lydia C. Smith, Mrs. A. W. Hun-
ton, and Mrs. Agnes L. Kemp.
The second annual Southern dinner which was given at the Lincoln Settlement House 105 Fletch place, last week under the auspices of the Lincoln Neighborhood Club, was well attended. Beaudes is most appointing menu prepared by Mrs. Laura Ann Simmons, assisted by Mrs. L. D. Kennedy, Mrs. E. J. Alexander, Mrs. Amanda Adams, Mrs. Anna Walker, Mrs. Carrie Bryant, Mims Anna Layton and Mrs. Taylor, Mims Anna Layton and Mrs. Taylor, and toy tables were in charge of committees attired in Japanese, Chinese, English and American costume. The dining-rooms were beautifully decorated with tepee paper and bunting of various colors, miniature American dolls, and toy tables which presented a gala scene. This was the work of Mrs. J. D. Mosey, assisted by Mrs. F. M. Jacobs and Mrs. Hill. Others who contributed to the success of the affair were: Mrs. Mims Anna Layton, Mrs. Mary Dudley, Mrs. Maria Hanlin, Mrs. Candice Adams, Mrs. Mary Sheppard, Mrs. Kelso, Mrs. Nora Johnson, Miss Maria Saunders, Mrs. Peter Brooks, Miss Mila Overton, Mrs. M. R. Vrankin, Mrs. J. Gassaway, Miss annie Dudley, Mrs. Julia Briggs, Rosa Merrick, Mrs. Hattle Hayley, Mrs. Sarah Filmore, Mrs. R. E. Wendell, Mrs. Benjamin Williams, Mrs. E. J. Parker, Miss Hattle Willis, Mrs. Ida Swindell, Mrs. Lucy Johns, Mrs. A. R. Cooper, Mrs. J. C. Lawson, Mrs. Anna Carl-Prophet, Miss Carrie Downing Mrs. William Fuchs, Mrs. Dora Freeman-Smith, Mrs. Brown, Mrs. Taylor, Mrs. Maggie McCulough, Mrs. William, Mrs. Ida Bly, Mrs. M. C. Lawson, the president was by Mrs. Cynthia Walker-Simms, assisted by Miss Beatrice Wilson.
PATERSON, N. J.
Regular Correspondence of THE ACK
Patterson, N. J., Dec. 20.--The leading social event of the season was given in the C. M. A. Hall, December 14, under the suplies of the Silk City Club, Matt Hland, president; H. Dumont, vice-president; T. Brown, treasurer; J. H. Smith, Scott financial secretary; J. Roundtree sergeant-at-arms; W. Kent, general manager. At 8 p. m. the members and guests arrived and were met by a special committee of arrangements, consisting of W. Miller and W. Haker. The occasion was a compilation of the company activities of the club. At elaborate collation was served by Caterers Monroe and Jones. Killine and Roy entertained the company in a most acceptable vaudeville performance. Dancing was engaged in till labour one o'clock, and then the company dispersed for time. At the end of the hour about 100, nearly all were present and wit hits friends made a company of nearly 200.
The Household of Ruth, 1718, celebrated its tenth anniversary in the C. M. A. Hall, December 18, giving a birthday party. A fine collation was served, consisting of ments salads and desserts. A memorial poem was rendered. This lodge is making progress in the city, and has for its members the best element of ladies. Mrs. Nora Brown is M. N. G., and Mrs. Minerva Miller, W. R. There have recently been three marriages, James E. Gilles Mrs. Resilien, and James R. Miller married at the residence of the bride's parents in Hillburn, N. Y., by the Rev. R. Gunner. Caesar Van Dunk and Miss Anna May Haisley were married in Paterson at the residence of the bride's mother by the Rev. Thomas H. Amon. Frank H. Haisley were married in Paterson were married at the parsonage of the St. Augustine Presbyterian Church by the pastor. Four births have recently been recorded. The Rev. N. Cutler and wife a daughter, "To Mrs. and Mrs. Clarence Hinton, daughter, and Mrs. Samuel Banks, a son
The funeral of Miss Guille Slaco took place December 18 from the parlor of Undertaker William J. Greene, The Rev. C. C. Williams officiating.
HARTFORD, CONN.
Harttown, Conn., Dec. 30—The home of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. W. Cole was dilled the fifth anniversary of their wedding. The toastmaster was I. L. Browne. L. L. Johnson.
312 West 59th : t.
Six and seven large, light rooms and
bath. Half back to Subway, "L" and
all surface cars. Rents $40.00 to $35.00
Inquire Janet, or
HUBERTH & GABEL
147 Fourth Avenue ue
JUST OPENED
5 rooms and bath, floors through. Rents
low-$16, $20, $22.50. Also Janitors
Wanted.
BASEMENT, 70 W. 100TH ST.
554, 556 & 560 W. 126th $1
Elegant Apartments of four
large, light rooms First-class
College neighborhood near Broad
way. Apartments kept in first
class condition. Rents moderate
Apply MANAGER
800 . 124th St
July 8 James
TO LET-CHEAP RENT
226-230-232 West 64th Street
Apartments of 3 rooms, modern
improvements; to respectable colo-
lord tenants; will pay moving ex-
penses. Call to office of
W. M. SMITH
218 West 64th St.
Or Junior on Premises
dec 14
Robert R. Ladson
REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
412 WEST 56TH STREET
(Near Ninth Avenue)
Noter public
NEW YORK
SEE ME FOR QUICK SERVICE
SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
IF YOU WANT TO BUY
OR SELL A HOUSE
FOR CASH
INO. M. ROYALL
21 7.13th St
New York
Phone 7.936 Harrow
1st 3m
44 w. 27 in Street
3rd 4 large, light rooms, gas,
toilet, wash tube, ranges and hot
water supply. Rent $13.50 to
$16.5. Apply to Janitor or
JSEPH LEVY & SON,
nov 24 389 Eighth Avenue
[ORNER BRADHURST AVE]
4 extra large, light rooms: ranges and
boilers. Two weeks free. $16 to $18.
dec 741 INQUIRE ANIATOR
530West 45th St.
3 and 4 rooms, quiet house, a
newly decorated. Two weeks free.
Rents 15 to $13.50.
Best apartments in New York
2. 26. 28 West 136th St.
Beautiful, airy, light apartments of 4
and 5 rooms with bath, steam heat, hot
water apply. Comfort of tenants
looked later. Select tenants only.
142t Apply Janitor on Premisest
48 W. 54th St.
room apartments. $15. Res-
table colored families only.
MRS. RANDALL,
dept. 4t Housekeeper
rends one of her choice selections; a
rends one of her choice selections; a
J. F. Winter and Master Providence
dipinted to look O. T. R. has been app
pointed to look the Connecticut divi
sion.
Miss M. Heath secretary of the Union
Fair Child Fair Committee reports receipts of
mrs. Jennie K. N. G. Household
paintist her address from 3d
Chesapeake street. Mather street
mrs. Mrs. Heath is quite at
home in Martin Is quite at
mrs. James Rowma Brook street, and
tide holidays withounding the New York
James. Heath is in Hot Springs,
speedy recovery wish for him
mrs. McKinney center place, left
will spend three trips South. She
James, who is a artist in the Norfolk
Mission school, will visit her sister
creative in Elmington, N.C.
Your correspondent A Merry Chirp and a Happy
mrs. Samuel Robbin
36 & 38 W. 139th Street
3 and 5 rooms and 1 bath, steam am
ments. Rents from $19 to $26.
Renting office on premises.
and 5 rooms and 1 bath, steam and hot water. Rents. Rents from $19 to $26. Esting office on premises.
4 and 5 rooms and 1 bath, steam and hot water. All improvements. Rents from $19 to $26.
Renting office on premises.
2093 Madison Avenue
(Bet. 131st and 132nd Streets)
$20 to $23.
Apply to
NAIL @ PARKE
Phone 7683 Morning
t. 131st and 132nd Streets) 5 rooms are to $23.
to
NAIL @ PARKER, Agen
3 Morning 145 West
(Bet. 131st and 132nd Streets) 5 rooms and bath. Rents $20 to $23.
NAIL Q PARKER, Agents
Phone 7683 Morning 145 West 135th St.
TO LET
TWO PRIVATE HOUSES 440-442 L.
132nd Street). 9 rooms and bath.
45 WEST 138th STREET
4 rooms, bath, hot water, stee
215 EAST 73RD STREET
3 and 4 rooms. Rents, $8.00
32 WEST 133RD STREET
5 rooms, bath, hot water. R
181 WEST 134th STREET
5 rooms and bath. Rent $20.
350 BROOK AVENUE (Bet. 141st and
4 rooms. Rents $15, $16, and $17.
New House for Sale or To
Large, light, rooms, hardwood fini
hood, electric light and steam heat. Re
PHILIP A. PAYTON, J.
New York's Pioneer Negro Re
Telephones, 917 and 918 Harlem
IVATE HOUSES 440-442 LENOX AVE.
(Street). 9 rooms and bath.
138th STREET
rooms, bath, hot water, steam. Rent, $10.
73RD STREET
and 4 rooms. Rents, $8.00 to $14 00.
133RD STREET
rooms, bath, hot water. Rent, $21.00.
134th STREET
and bath. Rent $20.
K AVENUE (Bet. 141st and 142nd Street).
Rents $15, $16, and $17.
House for Sale or To Let. Orange
light, rooms, hardwood finish, in excellent
light and steam heat. Rent $30.
LIP A. PAYTON, JR., COMM.
New York's Pioneer Negro Real Estate Ag.
1917 and 1918 Harlem
67 W.
TWO PRIVATE HOUSES 440-442 LENOX AVENUE, (Corner
132nd Street). 9 rooms and bath.
New House for Sale or To Let. Orange, N.J.
Large, light, rooms, hardwood finish. in excellent neighborhood, electric light and steam heat. Rent $30.
PHILIP A. PAYTON, JR., COMPANY
New York's Pioneer Negro Real Estate Agents
Telephones, 917 and 918 Harlem
67 W. 134th St.
Just Opened
54 & 56{West 140th Street
steam heat, tiled baths, private bath
and 6 room apartments. $19 to $3
47 & 49{West 139th Street
and all strictly private 4 room
month.
6 to 20{West 137th Street
balls and rooms, tiled baths. 4
$17 to $2 per month.
66 & 68{West 142nd Street
Lenox Avenue. $19 and $21 per m
1022{Pacific St., Brooklyn 4
way station and Classon Avenue.
APPLY} JNO. M
Or JANITOR on Promises. 2
Telephone 1865 Harlem.
56{ West 140th Street Two beauties
Houses; elec
on beat, tiled baths, private balls and private
5 room apartments. $19 to $30 per month.
49{ West 139th Street New Law
ceptionally
all strictly private 4 rooms, $20; 6 roo
th.
00{ West 137th Street New Law
hot water su
and rooms, tiled baths. 4 and 5 room
to $2 per month.
88{ West 142nd Street 5 rooms and
water su p
x Avenue. $19 and $21 per month.
Pacific St., Brooklyn 4 large, beat
newly decorat
Station and Classon Avenue. $14 and $15 p
LY} JNO. M. ROYA
Or JANITOR on Promiss. 21 West
1865 Harlem.
54 & 56{ West 140th Street Two beautiful New Law Houses; electric lighted, steam heat, tiled baths, private balls and private rooms; 4, 5, and 6 room apartments. $19 to $30 per month.
47 & 49{ West 139th Street New Law House, exceptionally large rooms and all strictly private 4 rooms, $20; 6 rooms $26 per month.
6 to 20{ West 137th Street New Law Houses with hot water supply, private balls and rooms, tiled baths. 4 and 5 room apartments. $17 to $2 per month.
66 & 68{ West 142nd Street 5 rooms and bath, hot water supply. Near Lenox Avenue. $19 and $21 per month.
1022{ Pacific St., Brooklyn 4 large, beautiful rooms; newly decorated, near subway station and Classon Avenue. $14 and $15 per month.
APPLY} JNO. M. ROYALL
Or JANITOR on Premises. 21 West 134th Street
NOTICE
Half-a-Month Free, at
Harlem flats, one block from subway; 51
Gas, stone tubs, bath, range, hot water su
suitable for barter or other business.
6, 10, 12, 14 West 13
dec 21-2t
A-Month Free, at Reduced Rate, one block from subway; 5 large, airy roof, subs, bath, range, hot water supply. Also be for barter or other business. Rents $20 to 10, 12, 14 West 136th Street APPLY A
Half-a-Month Free, at Reduced Rents
Marlem flats, one block from subway; 5 large, airy rooms through.
Gas, stone tubs, bath, range, hot water supply. Also ground floor,
suitable for barter or other business. Rents $20 and $21.
6, 10, 12, 14 West 136th Street.
dec 21-2t APPLY AT JANITOR
To Respectable Families
310 EAST 80th
4 large, light rooms, with tube, toilet and g
Two families on a floor. Only house with Colored
Rent $15.00 a month.
EAST 80th STREET rooms, with tube, toilet and gas, in a well-hep on a floor. Only house with Colored tenants in the month.
310 EAST 80th STREET
4 large, light rooms, with tube, toilet and gas, in a well-kept, quiet house. Two families on a floor. Only house with Colored tenants in the neighborhood. Rent $15.00 a month.
JUST OPENED
2147 & 2149 FIFTH AVENUE, near 131st and bath. Hot water supply, halls heated. Rent.
155 WEST 132D STREET, 5 rooms and bath block. Rent $23.
12 WEST 133rd STREET, 5 rooms and bath
64 W. 133rd STREET, 6 rooms and bath, bath
73 W. 133rd STREET, 6 rooms and bath, hotel Lenox Avenue.
70-72 WEST 142nd STREET, 4 rooms
Rent $16 and $18
37-39 WEST 132nd STREET, 5 rooms and 1 Rent $21
151 WEST 133rd STREET, 5 rooms and bath
49 E. 129th STREET, 3 and 4 rooms, hot water
C. R. HUTCHINSON 5 W. 134th S.
TO LET
Rents Reduced—New M.
243 WEST 11st S
Three large, light rooms, decorated
FAMILIES ONLY. Apply to
MRS. FLORENCE
Three large, light rooms, decorated to suit. RESPECTABLE FAMILIES ONLY. Apply to MRS. FLORENCE RUSSON
Apartments to Let
40-42-44 WEST 135th
Pour and five roo n apartments, steam
Improvements; rooms handsmely decorat
iles only need apply. Cheap rent
CHEAPEST
RENT IN
HARLEM
Open for Inspection, the finest new
somely decorated throughout. Exc
light, airy rooms, all improvements, n
baths and open plumbing. Rents, $1
See Dwrser or Jennifer, 214-18 E. 127th St
Under New Man
309 & 311 WEST 37th
STEAM-HEATED FLATS TO LET
42-44 WEST 135th STREET
five room apartments, steam heat, and all
rooms handsomely decorated to suit.
apply. Cheap rent
Open for inspection, the finest new fireproof apart-
mely decorated throughout. Elegant entrance
light, airy rooms, all improvements, ranges, hot water
thats and open plumbing. Rents, $8 to $16.
See Dwner or Jennifer, 214-18 E. 127th St., nr. 3rd Ave.
Under New Management
09 & 311 WEST 37th STREET
Four and five room apartments, steam heat, and all New Law Improvements; rooms handsomely decorated to suit. Quiet families only need apply. Cheap rent
Open for inspection, the finest new fireproof apartments, ha
somely decorated throughout. Elegant entrance. 2, 3, 4 large
light, airy rooms, all improvements, ranges, hot water supply, nite
baths and open plumbing. Rents. $8 to $16.
See Bower or Jennifer. 214-18-127th SL. 3rd Ave.
STEAM-HEATED FLATS TO LET:—Four large, light rooms, bath, steam-heat, hot water supply. Rents $20 and $22. See MRS. MATTE CATTEN (last 2011) 311 WEST 37TH STREET
Apply to
CHEAPEST
RENT IN
HARLEM
42 LENOX AVENUE, (Co
nath):
r, steam. Rent, $21.00
$8.00 to $14.00.
r. Rent, $21.00,
(at and 142nd Street)
$17.
To Let. Orange, N.J.
and finish, in excellent neigh-
bors. Rent $30.
N, JR., COMPANY
Gro Real Estate Agents
67 W. 134th
Two beautiful New Law Houses; electric light, state balls and private rooms; 4, 9 to $30 per month.
New Law House, ceptionally large rooms, $20; 6 rooms $26.
New Law Houses with hot water supply, private 4 and 5 room apartment.
5 rooms and bath, water supply. No per month.
4 large, beautiful room newly decorated, near suue. $14 and $15 per month.
M. ROYALL
Since 21 West 134th Street
ICE
at Reduced Rents
; 5 large, airy rooms through water supply. Also ground floor business. Rents $20 and $21.
At 136th Street.
APPLY AT JANITO
th STREET and gas. in a well-kept, quiet hou Colored tenants in the neighborho JANITOR ON PREMISES
131st Street—5 large, light room
Rents $20 to $23.
and bath, hot water supply. Private
and bath,
bath, hot water. Rent $21.
bath, hot water, private hall, faci-
rooms and bath, hot water supply.
and bath, hot water, halls heater.
and bath, hot water supply. Rent $16
4TH ST. NEW YORK CITY
NEW Management
ST STREET
Corporated to suit. RESPECTABLE.
ENCE DYSON (1st floor rear
16th STREET
steam heat, and all New Lau-
de decorated to suit. Quiet fam-
decet new fireproof apartments, ha-
dway. Elegant entrance. 2.3.4 ing
restraints, range, hot water supply, in-
ents, 38 to $16.
27th St., w. 3rd Ave.
NEWS FROM -
THE CAPITAL CITY
Special to THe New Yoax Aca
Washington, D. C., Dec. 19.—Rankin
MemorinL Chapel, Howard Univeratty,
wast tilled last Thursday evening when
Prof. Kelly Miller delivered his new
jectre, “Higher Education In the
Light of Changed Conditions,” before
the Council of Upper Clasamen. Keen
interest became evident am soon as the
lecture Wan unnounced and long before
the doore were pen a ‘crowd had
guthered to hear Howard's distin-
Kuished profersor on the new subject.
Frofeanor Miller opened hin lecture
with spectal emphasis upon the fact
that “new occaaions teach new duties”
and for nearly an hour dwelt in. the
reulme of phelosophy and history,
showing very Clvidly the vast differ
ence between things temporary and
permanent. He watd in part:
‘The old education was & conditional
provese, It Mtted man for hna sup-
fumed deatiny, He war considered |
demixod—a son of heaven, created tn
the hinake of God. The older theolo-
kiee plied cmphnsie on the calte oF 8
peu
“The new education, on the other
hand, enables man to make « Uving.
Man bas become # social and a polltl-
eal machine. Industrial education cre-
Ates an instrumentality while higher
Aducation creates a personality, |The
tld idex of education, while 10 wax to
an extent correct, “wan Incomplet
Man is essentially a personuhty, self
conscious and hin own moral agent
The higher education In crenting
Personality was brought about Chrough
Physical, Intellectual and moral die-
Cipline and thereby gave out knowl
fake ThAL WAR CxHEL ANG Fefined, -AOt
factual data and information,
‘The chief end of man In to glorify
and to enjoy. Literature, mugie, ple-
tures, stirs and Mowers are all necen:
sities, Without there min would be-
come a savage, The kum and aim of
higher education ia nothing but man-
hood and that is tte own Justification
Manhood thit in’ever on the alert wit
inttlative and eflcienes. The old New
England farmers, who wan asked whit
they could nue on those New England,
Pill, exclaimed” “We raise men,
caught the right idea. ‘The mane man:
hood In munifented. In all chinses af
the New Englanders. Rockefeller,
morgan und Harriman were the men
who were money mukers: Emerson
and Longfellow represent New Eng-
land culture; Howard and Peabody are
fair samples of philanthropy, while
Phillips #nd Garrison stand for moral
reform. Man in more thin meat and,
more thin work
“As applied to the Negro race hie
gducation Is dependant on his atutude
The Nexro in new at the parting of
the ways, He may be deprived of bin.
righte but he cannot be deprived of his
manhood, He may he Jimerowed, but
Ris rout cuinet te Jimerowed He
riust awake, arise ar be forever fallen,
The tual be not in ear mars but in
ourmelves, He tnust te infused with
Few Glood, hte Hew Keleals and a bet
ter spirit. By faith and energy he
might accomplish all things. He must
delleve in himself, aineert hin righta,
show no cowardice and tUmidity and
be prepared to xtite hin care, Finally
he munt hecome a minaionary, not &
Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity to Meet.
Special to Tas Xew Yom Aon
Washington, D. C., Dec. 20.—The
fourth annual convention of the Alpha
Phi Alpha Fraternity. the fret Nexro
satercollegiate Greek letter fraternity.
wil convene December 27, 26 and 28
1 the seat of the Epaion Chapter, Uni-
versity of Michigan, Ann Arbor, “Mich.
Since the establishment of the frater-
nity at Cornell In 1806 it has xrown to
ten active chapters in the best univer
nitien of thix country and Canada, and
& thriving Kraduate chapter at Louls-
Ville. Everything pointe to thin being
the ‘mont successful convention ever
held. The officers for the yenr are
Prenident, Frederick Miller, Michigan:
vice-prenident, Geo. W. A. Scott, Co:
lumbla general secretary, Charles
Garvin, Howard: treasurer, Joneph R.
Buxett, Cornell
NEW ROCHELLE. N. Y.
Wekalas Coneeceuacace of Tae Aen:
New Rochelle, XN. ¥.. Me. 20.—The Ne
grow of ‘New fiochelle” are. making elebor
fe separations" te elvbeate the’ sang
Sf" ir Emancipation Proclamation, Jaa. 1;
Tore” Atv Tocoting beid in feagoe’ Halil
Wedorsdas “eening aboot axty torn, were
Dresent nod ‘pinan were mrrauaed ‘Bd orm
Eitices appointed. “The remainder” of the
freuibg “war seat tn. geveral dlecumsion
Erot “soneph ates han charge, of toe
Monicai "aide of the afair’ and bts. name
Sine ‘sn chairman af the mate Intares ex
feileat’ more for Cue oceanion, | The cele
Gratien will’ ne "beta" fn the igh. School
Roliding.” wich "bar ‘excellent saccosaimo
Gitioon” Secrtary’ avis tn. Sanyo
Breed io nendlar ont, Roticen and all Fou
Se hear nthe celebration of Emanelpa:
Hon" Troclamation, "Ail ehurchen tnd
Meares in Weetehestre county bare beea fo
rited” aod a tecord.bromking crowd Ine
becied in New Rochelin on New Year's Day
‘The Celenration will conclade ta the ered:
oe witha dinner and reception at Lene
veh, MeCleodon, wan the uctt of the
low Nirook dairy Company ‘Thursday at
Bete ats Pagar” farm, Ralgwio. SY
The" anctorn “fram New Rochelle and Mt
Wimmer were taken tn the tarm to. taepect
the certified ‘milk “of ‘the “Willow - Brook
Dairy, after whleb a vere elaborate aio:
are Wan ncreed at the Tendlog hotel Toe
Soctor reporte a oort_enjeyapie time Abd
Bae rosslig treated Dy hin host abd. coo
Fitts Noo the white fraternity
POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y.
Reeolar Correapondence of THE ACE
Puughkeepale, N. Y., Dec. 20.—Mrn.
Jamex H, Harden, who has been alek
Is able (0 be ut asain
Mra. Trane Daniels In on the sick
Met
The nineteenth annual concert and
reception of Rome Laat Lode, No.
2,538, GU. 0. of 0, F., wan held. at
Coluinbur Inntitute ‘Thursday evening.
Thin event alwaye bringn out & large
kathering of the most representative
colored people of the city. There wan
the unual array of handsome gowns
and the floor of the ball room with ita
Kraceful dancern pracented a most at-
tractive scene.
‘The stage, upon which Sconeld’s or-
chestrr of ‘geven plecen waa scated,
wae decorate: with palma and bay
tron and the @hring tation at (he weet
end of the hall, where an elaborate
Collation war served. were curtained
ot with huge American flags. The
catering was by the Wallace restau-
rant. The orders of dance were taate-
fully gotten up and contained the em-
blem of the lodge on the cover. There
‘were twenty-four numbers on the pro-
ram,
jhe committee were made op ax fol-
Committee of Arrangemente—Nathan
8. Wye, PN. F. chairmen; James K.
Lewis, P. N. secretary; Béward T.
Gray, P| N. F, treasurer; Johan W.
bo} P.M. F.; ‘Heréee Van Dusea.
PON. B: Baward Sanders, V. G.:
‘George :H. Johnson, P.N. F-; Charles
J. Lawrence, P..N. F.; Jacob C. Smith.
Reception’ Committee — Jucod. C
Smith, chairman: Hugh Maytield, Car-
ter Roberts, Emery Franklin, Jucob 7.
Smith, James Tunison, N.
Foot “Committeesjohn WV. ase,
chalrmun: Clarence aliiden, Robert.
Washington, Jumen W. Smith.
PHILADELPHIA. PA.
Philadelphia, Pa. gee. 20.--The com:
mittee on wocla) Centres, pluygrounda
and prevention work met on Mond
afternoon, und the membership con.
mittee will meet Prldas. There wil
Ne ne general meeting of the club this
month.
The Bachelor Benedict Chub Swit
xive @ts annual ball Decamber 28. at
Natitorium “Hail, Brond and lascant
treet,
Dr. AL J. Overby, the dentint at 706
South TO street, will apend the heli
dase in the South. He wil return
about January 2.
Dr, Charles AL Webster, a student
at Temple Universdty, lent un Satur:
day for a ten days’ viekt to hin home
In PRosbureh. He will be greatly
miard by the young Indies during
Chrintmas week.
John Mitchell, the colored banker of
Richmond, Va. spent several dase in
the elty hast week
Mrs. Mary Roberts left for York,
Bu.. Taat Monday ta be with her sinter,
Mrs Rose Meads, during the holidays
Miss Annie McCain in viniting her
mother if Wilmington, Del
Mrs. Hannah Jacobs, comein of
Mix. Rebecea W. Ramsey, of 107
Tadntrldge street, whe hax been visit
ing in the city fore week, left Satur-
Quy for Tacnoaster, Ta, where she will
Fenian until ter the holiday «
BALTIMORE. MD. §
——
| Baltimore, Md, Dec. 20. The recent
Inehings of vokired men and” women
fh varius nectine of the country Rav
Mirred the Ieadihs men oF This chy,
Ata. (hey purpose MAKING w country:
Wide Hebe wacanst the etl AL mans
Mecing wee het at Jahn Wesles M
Ee Church Sunday night, and specehen
Menounelng Ienchitign were mde by
Dr. Ernest Laan, pater of the ehureh:
COunciinan Harry 8, Commings, Jobn
1. Murphy, editor af the AfresAmer
can Ledger, und others, | Resolutions
ere adopted denouncing the eal and
Committers “appoiited tw kee the
Maryland members af Congresn In or-
Qer teenlist their interert In the fight
At uhe menthiy, testing of the Sin-
isterial Athance Monduy the | Revn
Ernest ton and Garnett Ro Waller
hades ajwecben denounenig the etl
find the allitnes aypodnted a commit
Cee tee tuhe ape the matter with Con:
Kross and President Tatt
The VOM CON feattax” ended rt.
day matt with no conteat for the ment
Fonular bute, Clantentin., daughter
fe Mes and Mrs Daniel TE Murphy,
Wag auinded the pris, a 22300 Kb
Pewee far ree china the Minat vate
Mee Taft, wife af President Tart sent
Cate ne the winner Quite a eat
Sums wun realized for the YMC. AL
The Grillin Sisters, a strong vaude-
Salle touan cite Becbbinge thee Datars at
Dates Pheatre this eek
Pout Prayer, whe is tn the theatrical
adivertiaine Wiigineds, Sas A Ue EHS
Chie weeck
The anges! installation af stticers
for the Grand Pastitne af the Order sf
Nogarieee was Weld Eat plight. A cate
Intion Followed
The Rev. GK. Stewart, a Raptist
minsionary {nthe Went indies, wan
the principal speaker ata Talvalonary
fant meeting ut Enon” Haptat Church
Wednendny
The Rev WH, Sheppard, who apent
twent yyrars an a minmionary. in the
Congo, delivered 4 Incture describing
hin African experiences Monday night.
Mr. and Mra, Albert H. Peck of S21
Mosher street celebrated the twenty
fifth Anniverwirs wf their marriage on
Saturday (ening, December 90 The
house wax beautifully. decorated with
cat Rowers iad palms, the color
Rcheme being silver und white.
There were 2h0 invitations extended
to their any friends and. hiberal re
Aponses were recetved.
The Indies anaisting Mra. Peck tn
recelving Were Mra William Eich wf
Brooklyn, N.Y.) Mra, Henry Robinson
of Washington, D.C, Mra. Harold
Harrett of Orange, N. Jo: Mra Carroll
Webater of Washington, D.C: Mra. G.
Wo Hryant of Boston, Masa... Mra,
Garnet Wilkinson of Washington, D.
Cand Mrx, Robert Spotaweod of New
York. The Rultimore ladies sestattnn
In receiving were Mrs. James Hunter,
Mra. Samuel Hackett and Mrs Wille
am Tangles.
TAmonse the other out-of-town gueats
wore Mine Julla: Taylor af Washinton,
DG! Mw Le Pryor of Omaha, Neb
Mr. and Mra, ‘Traverae Pina of Wash
incon. D.C Mr. and Mrs, Walter
Singleton of Waxhington, D.C. Mr.
and. Airs, Charles Johnstown of Nar
rebuN, Pa. Mr, and) Mra, Chupman
of Hennings, 2 C: Mr and Mra. HT.
Reed of Jersey City, Nod: Mesarn
Garnet Wilkinson, Carroll Webster,
Henry Robingon, GW. Scott, Thomas
Short, Dr. Philip Rrooks and Muster J
Conatintine Webster af Washington,
D.C. In cadet uniform, attended the
dior, Mewars, HW "Barrett of
Grange, Ned George W. Ranks and
Robert’ Spoixwied af New York, and
Wealey Po Willims af Youngstown,
Onie:
‘An elaborate rollation was served
from S until 10.20 fim, and Sunday,
December 1%, Me and Aire: Peck en
tertained thelr mutenf-tewn gests at
rvatkfant and dinner
Mire Emma Nicholy and Mew
Gladsa Whahington cared for the pres
cats, whieh Were tery nuemorug Kd
costly.
Mumie far the wt canton waw furninbed
Ws UProf, Chafles Eo tinges
Mr, and Mr. Ulurence Dent, of 1616
Diinion street, celebrated their wedding
reception ‘Thorny evening. December 7.
at T'aca Hall. ‘The hall wan beautifully
decorates with palms and. chrraanthe-
mame. Kerr Orchestra furnished the
music for the evening. The bride was
gowned in white satin meteor aud carried
& showed bouquet of bridal rons and
Chryaanthemutns. ‘The receiving party
were: Mrx. Blanche Yeaking, sinter of
the bride (wore white milk, with xileor
trimming); Mrs. Samuel Soyer (wore
white silk), Mine Martha Jackson (wore
white silk). Mine Maggie Sewell. of Pbila-
jeiphia. (wore white chiffon) : Mra. Harry
Iyuckett, of Thitadelphia (wore pink mes-
Inet. Mian, Margneet_ Flosd. Odieer
a Tmire maite mie). The oabern. were
feanre. Samuel Josce. Ecnent Purviauter,
Jamen Lee. of Washington, and Geors:
Clements. ‘Those present were Mr, apd
Mre. Féward Irwin, Sr, and Mra A. C.
Crane, Mr and Mrx Wm . H. Cornish,
Mr. and Mex Joho Hughes, Are Wa
Jackson. Mra, George Wilkes, Mra. Comp
joa Machel. Mra. John C. Yaeger, Mra.
Sherman Hill, Mrs. N. Johnson, Mrs. I,
R Flemmings and many others,
‘The will of Blsbop James A. Handy.
who died here two months ago, hes bees
Amitted to probate in the Orphane’ Coert.
te Payee Theslegical
Keren, Oy apd toveee a ST
a this city. and thet
be dtigeal beeen the we
Tintitutone "ite ala directa Chat
Ueract amide to pas the taxes fot the wert
feven Searm ‘ona piece af ‘bee
hich "Ri" eo “eeundehltaren ho the
Tider that ‘in Seperight on
SSiiape el COM Hiiorre! be left 06
the AU ME, Tulilishing Hote. at Pula:
deivina, with, the roving, that 8 rogalty
Of ta conta be paidvhiw widow, Mra, Mary
Frinbe Handy on each book sold, and
that the remaiader of hin personal eifeety
te well ne the. residue of the estate, be
eect ite. widow. Binbop” J. Albert
Yotumon, who han charge-of tbe work of
the NL Church int South “Africn, be
the exewwtinr of the will,
NEWs FROM BOSTON
sisaGine ‘Cartaapoaarace cf TaR aks
| Boston, Mam. Dec. 20.— The Age tn ot
aalevat Grays barber shop.” Dertmovth
Street
ONTRE and Mee Woof) Mend have jus
‘moved ino their pew bow on Wiggles
worth street, Roxbury,
‘amor “Harti of the Moston Concer
Company. way principal entertalncr “at 4
Concert held at Mt. AugOsting aod Marcio’
(Murch nse Thuradas. ie appeared Jp
Tuonolegue and 0k peated cucoren. Th
Other artiate eb the (program were MTs
Carnie, Holt. “Mise Nadia Radno,. atte
Grace Weodx, Mim. Caropers and. Moen
William Wooten, "Samer Weadier, J. i
Moore." George’ Honteid. 1. Ttrown. rare
Braxton, 1, Waite, George Foster aad Mie
Rona Bonde.
Mee ON Ricker of Willtaine street as
Jone Feturaed from Attlehoro, Mann. whers
she treet a revk vintiog ritivor and
Major Wiliam 3, Wiliinwe of Ward Four
Cheleca, formerly commander of Ca 1. th
fait, SVM. wan elected ap. ailerman
from” ble ward Tesdag. Teeember 1s
‘Pournday. Toccrinter 4, the wingd rere
tee ofthe Wet Ipdia! Wandererm lerirkrd
Club Sean held at the Palry Garden’ Munic
San furnivied 8s Comminge Orebeatra, a0
Ghocing wa 10 order froin to 2 km
The Boor was io charge ot Ashert ‘dom
Ming The ennunatter fallow. Seamed
Cher: chalrman. Mesars.Gnroee, Weike
Valley. ‘Meciame nod Worrell,
‘The Howard ee ‘Service. which, fran
beld ae the Hits MR chureh. sh{ries
fd. Set Vernon stherts, December 10 was
P’Qpienaia sucerme $130 belug realarg
Howard. the Witle mo af Me. aod Mfrs
Rast Fiutcnine. Ie doing aleciy the
Mrmouth Honpital, where be underwent 20
operation,
Ere ORe Stanter Mealthwentte and bit
dren, wiv have tewo spendiog tbr tél ip
Newpore, RY, ‘are tn the Hiab’ for tbe
holidare
Mra. Samurl Rrowo. wife of the Re. &.
A. Brow, In visiting “frieedy on anh
ington.
Sr David Crawford. of Welltgton
whe hae heen, wericusie Mt, with Beart
Treohirs In viowty convalenciog,
The geaduate pure of the Plrsouth
Moapieat held to Tafarmal reception the
Robert Gould Show House om Pridareres
Woe. December Th fram © to 10 welok
Tart Tormtay evening © very Inrrest
tog program wat frodemd he the Clarfnnd
Wiheteat chat at the home of Mew. Selle
ie UMitencit inerman stgret. Rovdury The
Fiut In piagolog to predace am opera {a
the lent totare a
Special mine consteting af anthen and
catwin wilt her rendered a€ the Churchot the
SMemefad no Christmas evs
Wine Mary He Pare will spend t8 tt
nee wiih frends ine Peet idee 1
Tast Sunday evening the Noung Peles
Union ot the Church af the Meany wae
Dddrenced ‘be “Rurrenter Washingt, "a
Mfaealte Under the Yeaderabin at ite
energetic president. Warry Lewin, th Ualoa
inidecetoning raplate
faring her sojenrs io thin elty lat wok
Men’ Mary Church Terrell wan the Boat wf
Mev and Mrs. tilitert Harrie wf “wretch
street
MiP be "On to-Dayton’ cial of Ekg mah
OR Rinne form Leap Year [moce. toe het
jot Froruare. . ‘
Mary Sheppard. formerly of Neraxnn
sett Hier. died. Sunday. December io. at
Ba Sawyer street. The romaine wer taken
io charge by SH Prainn apdsnipped
fo Narrarannete Pier, where fone! serv
Seon were bel on ‘Thursday. a}. tater
foent wan made in the sate cliy.
JERSEY CITY. N. J.
re Rb, Whe of Cabridne,
Shwe ag ‘the guene ot Me aly
Bitte of Sis Grand levee iat week
Bhean ch soon fre Wemngion:
ana connie having hed @ ver bican-
Bit Chat) ane alae emyeied he aber
layin Bersey Cay
Phe Morte Choe held ste annual
section oC oblcers Lintreaboesie aie
tho alleing were chosen 1s arte fo
the soue 1st fea Ac Willuen, grea:
UaratPhh, Cus rhmats) Siertpeaiten
Thane fi Wititame trewnure, Sule
einlee, evanedine’ atcretee: ews
(Fave, ‘aasintant Tocordiay acces
far Heiner ae hnlinee, ehapn:
Sitien te" Mertlit, “Ste nerwant tt
Arme” ae clue te we the greene tone
fathe helght wt the harketat sewsony
Shane She easulent.inecammeey
Hhoman tf, Witlarn ably cupained 1
Gtintan CHivers The: Mouse pill pla?
nrattat the foward University basket
Teh tam” Pekka ceventag iecemnt
Bh" Stun ty the Exerinice ‘event
BP tN York.
See SNE coleman and grande
SSP spename tee ese multe
eee ie tet: nereteein Heo
Pitgabeth Sotte mother at Mra. ©
man, She attended the wedding?
er unin, “Leander Sonen ero
ANDERSON SPEAKS AT BANET
ten Hotel, Washington, D,, oss
Thursday ever ing, was Collectciarles
W. Anderson, who said in par
T know of no group of B) whe
pructive hospitality so, poraQtly an
the ten of Washington, Od New
York wee aprout out our pick fen
thers If we can give a ding? & din-
Unetixhed man ance te a rum, but
here you give a dozen mucf Fs Sear,
In fact, this ts the grea tog ner RIN~
tne and dinnerceating IR the
cmntry. The varions dint t@ Lewin,
tind Fie, saat Napter J Jovnnon,
find the aihers of that AY line of
race personalities, im aif appalling
f now believe that thaf, Kuatative
kentieman, Lucullus, have Hved
und feasted in Washing “nd not in
Rome and Tuscdlum, among my
eternal regrets that Soe 28
hecept some of the oufeurtcous 1n-
Vitationn 9 come oveg’ and break |
Uread wih yon diepPhias. | My,
fullure wan not due gy Ick of in
clinntion bat to lack Metional cur
Feney. Jt wan thaty
“eternal want fence
Which vexes f Men”
Tam eid Tend have accepted
one-half of your Hund courteous
inviuitions withoug! Hing mynelf of
CRUDE HAT ceRtRtR
However, Tn | (Be here to-
night although tz] Atmosphere of
reataticns cloqueng? Wit and hu-
mor and good felf!P and reminis-
cence and rulogy, preset find my-
self qreatly emi l. But, gentle-
men. you have iq Deld me a very
Gelicate complimpt@ one that has
gone straight t& heart, In asso-
clating my ne that of the man
with whom, tn, tick and thin,
wind asd fe Mved and loved,
Ind the man p I Jove best on
‘earth now, ef homor, Decter
Booker T. W#'” MY friends,
“MY: ROGER EDUCATION
= Being Chapters from sy Espertences
KET NASHINGTON
‘A coatinustion of Dr. Washing wa's avn biogrophy besinring where he
Jett of in “Up from Sivey. The ‘eederof tee Reno Nace sella frankly
ile He and wok. Itie a Gevcription of e¥Ente ard changes, taking in
a large past of the mow interesting activities and men cf our time.
“Hi one thing 1 Gh thoe shotber Neve tang bt mere be Bare consdence ie the esas o0 of mir
Snip ebectves tnd Sepced wpoe tormucites voce ms tiny bane hareriene dome
Sere See ree ame rome woven toca 30 S09 on einee ave ress RUS wo Gn.eeT
BOUr Lr DAT, PAGE & CO..) wblishers, Gardew City. New York
ton WORE Rated Bind BLS tor wBsen please ead wr ceoy 1%) Larger duce
i ADDREME ooccscseeecesseeeeen .
ame |} ME Raa, esecmae
A Great Combination
or
HIS:ORY |WEGFO SCLOIERS IN SPANISF-FMEFICAN WAR
with -
- History Negro Race in America
900 Pages, 50 Illustrstions No Librery
complete without it. Liberal Comnission
fo agents
i PRICE, $1.25
Grreral Clarkson addressing the Culorrd Republican Cub
in New York, said: “You must devel pa li erary taste are wre
historval your great pen, such ap the wbie mer hive done
vut ith the hands «f your children sethas they may krow what
their rice has dume.""
Address, F. A. JOHNSON,
154 Nassav St., New York City
$$ $$$
peannnrnnror dp tOOOAAARAAEOCOR DEAN reat rronnnnnnrnrnereoneen
WILBERFORCE UNIVERSITY 2Augets,o"».
WILB ed TUESDAY Im StPrrmo ER,
Locatgl in Greens Ceurty, $4 miles from Xenia, Obi peated |
| gurrogndngs, | Kel ‘murity _ Foculty of 32 members Ex-
Klittry: Nonmel erd Burinews Deiter Ten kaoreactioaee, |
Great opportunities for High School: graduates entering College of
+ Professional Courses. Two new buildings for girls will be erected
this year. Catabg and Special Information furnished, Address ‘
eer 26n0 W. S. SCARBOROUGH, President, 5
Michigan Land Free!
In allotmentsof 40, 80 and 160
acres. All U, 5S. pobtic’ land,
Good farmingland, choice of loca-
tion We » ill also advance wane
ef from $250 to $500 as expenses
in moving, buiding, aed improv-
ing property. Why pay rent’
Genta poene af your own Ne-
tbing like a be me of your ewn.
Send stamp fer particulars, Ad-
dress
© A. WRIGHT,
Joct 26 3a Bedfurd City, Va.
————
WANTED AT OSCE
_ Collectors of names aad addresses
ae eet
Si oe ASS
0. AUGUSTUS WRIGHT |
ose Benferd City, Va.:
eer bentent Ore
OLD DR. BRYA:
ie Tian ipermens
20S ast 17th Street
New Sed Avenue > NEW YOE
Git ple orate enon ts 0
Qt es pio
a Se ace
* Speen eh ty eae
the xreat white light of the twentieth
fcentury in a0 full of refractions that 1
via dimcult for men to see one another
Yin their true relations, and I am there-
‘fore delighted to know that you recor-
nize und appreciate the greatness of
Dr Washington, whose titles to honor
und appreciation are multiple. Me in
not only +loquent and influential, but
in all is words and works he han
never, in great or mall things, de-
breckited others In order to Rain’ suc
ces for bimaelt. In the utterances: of
this man, no modest and unobtrusive
jan to bimaclf, so Kenerous and hearty
{ nthe recognition of merit in every
body else, you have revealed to you
the highest and beat qualities of mah
hood. “He haz made the town of Tus.
kegee famous—in whort, he has pot
Turkegee on the map, und its fanivus
achool tx a living monument to that
Indomitatle energy, that. perseverance,
that power of Organization and that
supreme cupacity for leadership which
the whol eeivilized world has recog
nized, and which we are here to-night
to honor. He has earned the confi-
dence und the respect of our white
fellow-citizens, and while earning it,
he has been ws true and loyal to ua as
the needle in to the pole. Race los alty,
much too frequently mens nothing
more thin ‘Toms denire that Hick
should do something for Harry. That
hax never been Doctor Washington’
conception of the term. He has put
his creed Into hin deed, and his creed
hus been rervice to hig fellow-men.
Do you suppos ethat when Leigh Hunt
wrote thoe lines upon Abou Hen Ad-
hem, he was thing of some concrete
Hen Adhem of those day, or wis he
joking Across the Atlantic and- down
he century, with the prevision of &
ner, and thinking of Doctor Wasbing-
on? Jf we cannot find out in any
yther way, Jet's have Judge Terrell
mandamaar ancient history and pluce
Abou Hen Adhem beside Doctor
Washington, and see whose name
tanda higher in the Book of Gold.
just how he has managed to gain the
ove and respect of the one race in
hin ceuntry without forfeiting the
ove and the respect of the other in te
ne a4 Ope of the Keuainian myeterinn
ut he Rua done Jt, and any man. who
an do that, cap properly lay claim to
he certainty of human endorsement
ere, and the possibility of divine fa-
or hereafter. Doctor Washington hax
ne regard and hemor not oaly of our
wce, but of both of the races in this
ountry, and thie will go far, as age
dvances upen him. toward making the
alley and the shadow vanish, and the
electable mountaina, and the perfect
ey appear. I only hope that the day
miled to his great Tower bet whet
to wi
io veies anal’ bo bean ie’ sce
,
Money's Worth or Money Back
Buys Xmas Presects From Us
and Save Money
vs rete teat od hngved rene ener
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JAR DIAMOND CO.
siiteeeanen Deity
THE ROYAL CAFE
tis DARMODTH St.” BOSTON. BA
BFE Fo eonitnPf |
When you wish a good meal, drop ti.
Good meals, good and quick ere
specialty. Rooms te let; hot and c+
water iv. ¢very room.
inly T3e H. S. Jonme m, Prov
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“THE IDLE HOUR”
77 ©. 13478 STREET = wan
Mander rtrd gene eto tagore
Biot a nt Citic
nov 304 MRS. P. BROWN
pray heaven, “that in the years to come
some other ‘leader niay be given the
strength. the moderation and the wis-
dom to lead this people as wisely and
as successfully as he has led them, and
who will be to them what be has been
—elwaye their advocate, but sever
their Gatterer.”
Se SS ge
| Hair T roubles |
Have been cured for years by , rts, dressing the hair ard dew
KINK-INE the most wonderful bair | teying da: aruft ite equal haw
grower and scalp cleaner ever | never been found. Its years of
koowa, lie bair growing pro: | repuratios proves ite reliabirity.
Petties are. simply marvelous, and; KINK-INE is suid by all drag-
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KINK-INE whe have written us of | prefer. ggawill send you a bottle
ite satiafactoryreau ts For tailing | of KINK INE anda cake of KINK-
hair, itchiny scalp, keeping the | INE SOAP b: th worth SO cents)
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DIXIE SUPPLY COMPANY .
247 West 46th St. New York City
3
;VpowmMan Ss Hair | omade
ee Mal ala od ate ele atta
| ‘The Wonderful Hair Grower and Beautifier
a HAS...
--. NO...
j ... EQUAL
i This pomade is undoubtedly onc of the best hair
preparatioos ever placed on the market. No ose
will ever know what a fine pomade is until they
; have tied it. Words cannot express how beautiha
i and soft it will make your hair. Thousods of jare
- have been sold. and every case seems to gwe
| general satisfaction~-we have never received a
word of complaint.”
Quite » number of ladies who had given ap
i ever having their hair grow in on the sides, now tel!
% RENEE ws that our pomade has thickened and made thei
hair grow in beautifully.
It is a postive cure foc dandruff and makes a eplendid hair dressing for both men
‘ad women. This pomade having such superior qualities in aiding the growth
and beauty of the hair, it will be oly a short time when every lady in the lend
wil be using BOWMAN’S HAIR POMADE.
Only One Size, 50 Cents Scod 10 Cents for Sample and Circular
Address all mattes to VV. LL. BOW MAN, Mer.
2959 WABASH AVENUE CHICAGO, ILL.
+ Ou sale at the tellewieg Dewg Stores: :
BROOKLYS DHCGGISTS comme Dee eet de
Rigiieter “CerSoer, wyrtie evens, con Marks Sreae °
*urrdle “Avenwe Drug Co, Myrtie avenee, comer maiph avweea 7” Serinen straw,
ase
~ MOUND. BAYOU
Oil Mill G&G Mfg
1 b g.-
Authorized Capital, $100,000.00
Stock subscribed and paid for
more than - - = $75,000.00
Shares at par $1.00 til January 15th, 1912, after thet |
date $1.50 per share
“To inc ease tke efficiency$ of Negroes’? and
make them self-supporting isthe policy of Mousd
Bayou. You should be interested. Send your sub-
scription fora few shares, or write us for informa-
tion. Address,
W. P. KYLE, Asst. Secretary
Or GEO. H. MAYS, JR.,Gen. Fin Agent
Mound Bayou, Miss.
TR Ed ga i a
' MME. MARY BELLE BECKS’
New Tailor Adjustable Fitting Machine
“eed Drem-
The Uptiniog Deeting on nT is the ony maphing ever inwented
sata Fees oe ee ees incter’ et oe wae
X fitting, twiee an quick ae By pattern "Fike
(Al >: machine ie oo simple ard, eaey” that” dress
<i] new beginners can learn the sntice wet’ beng
CN / very short time. When @ pattern le met Gen
sired, the operster can use tresit vectyoed
SS and Tun areund the machine upen the arees!
I] lining and so save time in her werk. Dream.
i] makers will find it te their interest te consult
(| yoni elena ie ee nrg te comet
| fed | \ special terme to dresemakers fer appremtion
supplies, etc. We want the leeal deese-
ft makers to become our losal agents in the
Gitorent ‘towne tnd aition
a) Address all communications to
| ae \\ [MA MME. MARY BELLE BECKa,
Inventor and Manufaeturge
{\ 208 Weet U8d St, nor, 203m New Verk City.
FOLLOW THE CROWD, THE NEW ARDERSON NOOSE
Aad occare 4 good panne postion, No che
elem Since” Several places, soy Sane =| 485 LENOX AVE.
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un
Shine beans eke
¢ incr jerate renta,
¥ Mzs. A. T.
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Hes proven its supremacy fer the pas! § yuars.
The Empire Restourant
70 West 138th Street
Eue? Fa eee
oy
Tae
Pa eee
Published on Thursday of every week
Moore, 247 West 46th street,
New York.
The old soldiers of Cuba insist that they be allowed to run the government as they want to, and there is trouble hatching for Cuba.
Anyhow, Col. Roosevelt's boom for nomination for President is growing quiet, despite the fact that the Colonel frowns upon it with both eyes.
The demand for a direct primary vote for nomination of candidates for office, both great and small, is a growing sentiment among the Republican masses.
Distrust of party leaders and those sent direct from the people to nominating conventions is abroad in the land.
There was an important conference of Negro Republicans of New Jersey at Trenton, December 12, called and dominated by Rev. I. W. L. Roundtree, D.D. There were some eighty present and a permanent organization was perfected, the details of which will be found in the news columns of THE AGE.
---
A lot of German Americans, who should be ashamed of themselves, broke up the mass meeting of citizens at Carnegie Hall; Tuesday evening of last week, called to support the ratification of peace treaties with Great Britain and France. They refused to stand for what they called discrimination against Germany.
The new mayor of Philadelphia has closed up the saloons so "tight" on Sundays that bibulous persons are compelled to make the Saturday night "fill up" last until Monday. The mayor has not yet been found with the will to close up the New York saloons on Sundays. The latch string is always on the outside the side door. When a mayor has a will a mayor will find a way to do as the new mayor of Philadelphia is doing in the Sunday closing saloon business. In all of the relations of life the man with the will is the decisive factor.
Pearl Wight, the National Committeeman for Louisiana, has evidently no relation to the pearl of great price, but is a gem of the baser sort. It was not expected of him by those who created him at Chicago that he would depart from the principles of orthodox Republicanism and adopt that of spurious Lilywhitism. The story of his treachery, as published in the last issue of Tux Act, is not pleasant reading. The regulars, under the leadership of Hon. Walter L. Cohen, should have no trouble in unhorsing Mr. Pearl Wight. If a poll of the party by primary is necessary to do it, poll the party.
The Harlem Negro who murdered his wife and himself belonged to the new type of Negro, the place from whose coming is as much a mystery as the place of whose going. That is to say, we do not know where he came from nor where he goes to. But the new type, which does not hesitate to commit murder in jealous rage or wrath and then to commit suicide, self-murder, to justify himself, is very much in evidence in all of the large cities of the country, being a development of the past two decades. Such people may be interested in knowing in advance of perforating the double tragedy that they are not only moral but physical perverts, degenerates, who destroy both the body and the soul.
Physical education has long been regarded as essential to health among those whose employments compel them to remain indoors or to maintain a rigid condition of the muscles for hours at a time, and among those engaged in mental work, which eats up more vitality, red blood, than physical work. The discretion of common sense demands a sound body for a sound mind. But too much of any sort of good thing is often more injurious than none of it. Exhibitions of physical endurance, such as the six day bicycle contests, held in Madison Square Garden, have been, and the one on the past week, are of doubtful benefit, even financially, to the contestants of the spectators, both of whom are brutalised rather than ennobled by the plibid exhilation of the contestants.
That Ain extends to its host of readers and well wishers the compliments of the season. The season is one, which, celebrated in all Christian lands, serves to gather together in closer sympathy and helpfulness all family relationships, all brotherhoods, and all nations of kindred faith.
Shakespeare's "One touch of nature makes the whole world kin" is the prevailing sentiment of the season that has been wrought in the hearts of men by the philosophy of Him who spake as "never man spake." In the main, He so spoke to the people of their own times that they did not understand Him nor His words; nor can it be said that the men who have come after Him have understood better the mystery of it all. That He taught the philosophy of love, of patience in well-doing, of brotherhood in the equality of men, of the dignity of womanhood, and that He gave His life freely that others might have life more abundantly, and that His philosophy has revolutionized for better the conduct of man towards man and of nation towards nation, in so far that it is accepted that even savages and dumb animals have rights that man must, respect—this much all men know who celebrate the natal day of Jesus. December 25.
The world is so much better nineteen hundred and eleven years after than it was the same number of years before the birth of Jesus, which approximates to the date of the birth of Ishmael, in 1913 B. C., that we cannot adequately appreciate what we have come into the inheritance of without comparing the condition of mankind in the two divisions of time. But most of the necessaries, the comforts and the luxuries we now have, at comparatively small cost, were unknown to the ancients, and are even now unknown to the people of some parts of Asia and Africa. But the chief blessing we have received is that of the destruction of the barem with its plurality of wives and the consequent debasement of manhood, and the institution of the Christian home and home life, along with the adoption of the principle of the co-equality of men under the civil law. Ignorance and superstition have been vanquished by the institution of the home, the church and the school.
It is not a season for intemperance in eating and drinking, and it is matter of regret that of late years it has become so much so as to be cause of scandal; it is the season, on the contrary, when of all seasons of the year, people should be more temperate than any other, because the thoughts it gives birth to are "long, deep thoughts."
Again, Merry Christmas.
FIGHT ON "LILY WHITE-
ISM."
The original old-line Republicans of Louisiana are well within their rights when they continue to insist that the Republican National Executive Committee and Republican National Conventions shall place the seal of disapproval upon "Lily Whiteism" throughout the entire South. Although the Negroes make up two-thirds and more of the Republican party, the organization machinery is in the hands of a band of "Lily Whites" who insist that the Negro shall be counted for representation purposes, but at the same time insist that they shall have no part whatever in connection with the affairs of the party in the several Southern States.
Cecil Lyons, of Texas, is, of course, the leader of this "Lily White" movement in that State. Not a Negro ever comes from Texas now to Republican National Conventions under his beneficent reign. Not a Negro now comes from the State of North Carolina as a delegate under the beneficent reign of E. C. Duncan. Only one Negro delegate at large as a rule is allowed to show his head from Alabama and Florida. The organization in Georgia is now in the hands of those who are seeking to make it "Lily White" in all its parts.
the nastiest and most relentless light on Negroes because of their manhood, however, is that fostered in Louisiana by Pearl Wight and Frank B. Williams. Unlike the Negroes in the other Southern States, to which we have referred, there are still remaining in Louisiana enough white Republicans and enough stalwart black Republicans to resist the efforts to "Lily White" the party in that State. At the last National Convention it was decided to reorganize the party in Louisiana, recognizing neither faction. Nothing has been done, however, to change conditions. All of the offices are still in the hands of the "Lily Whites," and Negroes are not allowed to show their heads at all unless as servitors of their "Lily White" masters.
At the recent meeting of the Republican National Committee Hon. Walter Cohen, as the representative of the "Black and Tan" faction, appeared before the Committee with a petition insisting that the decision of the National Committee be carried out with reference to the reorganization of the party in that State. We honor the black men and the white men of Louisiana for their dualwart manliness. We reprobate at the same time the cowardice of those black men in other Southern States who spinely permit a handful of white men to scourge them from the party to which
The meeting of the National Republican Committee at Washington on the 12th instant served to bring out in ugly boldness the fact that the National Republican party is in a storm, that threatens to grow in volume and violence from now until the meeting of the national convention, at Chicago; June 18, 1912. All good Republicans must be alarmed at the condition of affairs as developed at the Washington meeting.
Opposition to President Taft and his renomination made such a brave front, especially in Ohio, his home State, and Indiana, and the predominance of sentiment in favor of ex-President Roosevelt was so pronounced, as to overshadow the heavy-lunged aspirations of Senator Robert Marion La Follette and his Progressive Republican Mix-up, and their programme to progressize a whole lot of rules and regulations that have governed the party from its early days. The La Follettes wanted to elect delegates to the national convention by primary instead of by convention vote, and to reduce Southern representation in the convention, but the committee refused to change the old order, and the Progressives had to swallow it, as well as to have Senator La Follette shoved aside as a Presidential possibility for the more healthy and vigorous possibility of Col. Roosevelt.
The Hon. Job E. Hedges of New York, who was a looker-on in Washington during the week of the meeting of the committee, had the following to say of the situation to the Washington correspondent of the New York Sun:
"The Republican party is a party and has succeeded because it has advocated things and has merited support through its force of leadership and courage. I have listened for two days to political talk in the corridors of the hotels and am ashamed of the still shaky and half apologetic tones of the conversations. The party has nothing to be ashamed of. The present administration has made substantial contributions to national and international history and has conducted itself with dignity in international matters and been with some without being spectacular.
"There have been statements by some high in authority that have created false impressions. Mr. Taft, has conducted himself as President with dignity and conscience and has been President without endowing to be a party head."
"The success of the Republican party next fall in the national elections depends largely on the unselfishness of its leaders and their willingness to contribute toward the party success at the expense of their ambition."
This is a fair statement of the case by a Republican trained in the science of politics in the New York school, to whom Ohioans who make of politics a business and live by it, are constrained to give the seat of honor as a prophet. President Taft has made a wise and safe President, honest and brave in performing his duty to the party and the people of the nation as he understood it, and dissension in the party, and the ambition of others who desire to be President should not be allowed to observe the fact.
THE BRIGHT SIDE
One rarely picks up a daily paper whether published in the North or in the South that the worst side of Negro life is not exploited to the exclusion of the things which make up his progress and higher life. If one scans the news columns of the daily papers he rarely finds the name of a colored man or woman mentioned unless it has to do with some fortunate aspect of life. The Negro has either been shot, crippled, arrested, put in prison or has died, in a word has gotten into trouble in some way. If not this, the Negro has committed some crime or is accused of committing some crime. In every community there should be a committee composed of one or more persons whose business it should be to see that the daily press gets hold of another side of the Negro's life.
When the white man organizes a bank, builds a church or secures money for the endowment of a college, these facts are given to the public through the daily press. It should be a part of the duty of individuals and committees in every Negro community in the future to see that the white press is given the facts relating to Negro progress in the direction of constructive effort. In many instances the white press is willing and even anxious to publish the favorable facts, but in some way the press does not get them. It should be some one's duts in every community to see that the white press does get hold of the facts that illuminate the progress of our race as well as the criminal side.
Might it not be well to have each church, literary society, local Negro Business League, etc., appoint a "Lookout Committee" whose duty it should be to put into the white press something concerning the brighter side of the Negro's life in that community? No matter how well disposed, individuals may be, if people see from day to day in the newspapers nothing about the Negro except that which relates to crime and misfortune, they are likely to form an fortunate opinion concerning the whole men.
We assume that the president will be to my position during the next medium collapse of the Washington Union action—the aspiration of the Governor of New Jersey to lose from the White House by means of the Democratic nomination for President. All sorts of influences contributed to give the Governor's aspiration a menacing enlargement, helped along by inspired interviews and biographies and reminiscences in the Outlook, the World's Work, the New York Evening Post, and other newspapers; but we had a premonition that a candidacy born so soon and heralded by so many wise men, including the Governor, who is a rapid-fire personal advertiser of the William Jennings Bryan and William Randolph Hearst type, was liable to die if its youth and long before the Democratic convention should gather itself together in the dog days next summer. We had not, however, calculated that the Governor would harpoon himself, that, in fact, he had done so before he had deserted the Princeton shades of scholarship for the Trenton glare of politics.
The collapse came about in this wise: The New York Sun, which has no love for Gov. Wilson without any special reason for disliking him, unearthed the fact, with all the frills of it, that Dr. Wilson, when he had determined to abandon the certainties of scholarship as President of Princeton University and take up the uncertainties of politics as Governor of New Jersey, leaving a salary of $8,000 a year to embrace one of $10,000 a year, made application to the Carnegie Foundation for a pension as retiring President of Princeton, because, as he explained, after the Sun's exposure, "a man who goes into politics bound by principles of honor puts his family at the mercy of the wheel of fortune." But the Trustees of the Foundation denied the application, crushing the life out of it with a unanimity that must have been surprising to one so devoid of humor as Dr. Wilson.
The Trustees of the Foundation must have been surprised to get an application for a pension from a man so young at fifty-three as Dr. Wilson—from one who can talk as long and write as rapidly, and who can create as much confusion in any situation as a Bull of Bashan in a modern clina shop.
The application for a pension from the Foundation which was established to benefit poor professors and instructors who had served twenty-five years and reached the age of seventy-five years and the reason, subsequently given, for asking for it, together with the observation, "I cannot see why the matter should be brought up at this time," made such an exposure of the character of Gov. Wilson as to close up the mouths of his friends and his enemies alike Gov. Wilson is only fifty-three years old, when a man, normally, is in the full flower of his intellectuality, and had not served quite twenty-five years as a teacher. No one asked him I put aside the clean certain work of a scholar for the questionable, uncertain work of politics, to put himself at "the mercy of the wheel of fortune," bound by as queer a lot of "principles of honor" as ever actuated a bundle of bumptious egotism.
Gov. Wilson is a Virginian by birth. He belongs to that lordly aggregation of Southern high brows who not only think they are better than other men but who do not hesitate to ride roughshod over the rights and feelings of others in order to have their way. We are glad of the collapse of his inflation.
Joseph Roberts, the West Indian Negro elevator man at 125 Canal street, who, it is alleged, killed Isaac S. Vogel, a traveling jeweler, robbed him of his stock, and left the body in the basement of his building, after failure to burn it, because the body could not be got into the furnace, must belong to that sort of creatures, so very common these days, who are so entirely controlled by the beast of them as not to be responsible for what they do. We must regret more than others the perpetration of such crime by Negro people because of the bad impression it creates.
With all of the hard conditions imposed upon them since 1876 by the Ben Tillmans and the Cole Bleasees, the Negroes of South Carolina are planting for the future by getting a firm hold upon the soil. He who owns the soil owns him who cultivates it. The census figures show that of the 176,180 farms in South Carolina the Negroes own 96,696, or 17,212 more than the dear whites own, who, fifty years ago, owned all of the land of the State as well as the blacks who lived upon it and cultivated it. Fifty-four years from now, or one hundred years after their emancipation, the Negroes may own the larger acreage of the remaining farms of South Carolina. In that day what will the Tillmans and the Bleasees say and do about it! Meanwhile the Negro should stick close to the Patience which keeps on buying here a little and there a little until the total becomes the dominant factor of the whole land holdings of a given county or State.
IN AFRICA.
All the readers of The Ace are interested in a discussion of the present status of the Negro membership of the Methodist Episcopal Church and plans and efforts to better that status; to this end they have read with interest and profit the discussion of the subject, published in THE Ace from time to time, by Dr. Ernest Lyon and Rev. S. H. Norwood. But the readers of THE Ace are not interested in what Dr. Lyon thinks of Rev. Norwood and what Rev. Norwood thinks of Dr. Lyon. That is a personal matter with the two of them.
If Rev. Norwood were not a man of great force of intellect and character he would not occupy the high and responsible place he does in the Baltimore Conference of his church. We all appreciate that fact.
What sort of standing has Bishop I. B. Scott made in West Africa as a Bishop of his church? What record as Minister Resident and Consul General to Liberia did Dr. Ernest Lyon make prior to June, 1909? We are all interested in those questions, as they involve the honor of the church and of the government.
In the Southwestern Christian Advocate for October 21, 1909, Hon. Emmett J. Scott, one of the three commissioners of the United States to the Republic of Liberia, in an appreciation of Bishop Scott and Minister Lyon, says of Bishop Scott: "His genial personality, his 'common common sense,' his tactfulness and delightful charm of manner made the deepest impression upon my fellow commissioners, and the attaches of the commission." Of Minister Lyon he says: "I could not help appreciating to the fullest his splendid ability, his superb grasp of Liberian problems, and his unselfish interest in the preservation of the integrity of the Little Black Republicon the shores of the West Coast of Africa."
The high character and good works of Bishop Scott, Dr. Lyon and Rev Norwood, then, are not in question; they stand or much for themselves and the Negro people, as a race is judged by the history of its individual, acting for all of them. What the Negro people need in this country, and in all countries, is history made and in the process of makig, and written, so that mankind can react, in order to be able to judge whether such people are worthy of confidence and therefore of such assistance as all must have to achieve the best results.
A CONSCIENTIOUS BISHOP
Bishop Johnson, of the A. M. E. Church, has just returned from Africa. All home to such a servant of the church a Bishop Johnson has shown himself to be! In a few other instances individuals have beerelected to the Bishopric with the district understanding that they would go to Africa and spend a sufficient number of years there. In a majority of the cases, persons so elected under their promises have not fulfilled these promises. They have gone to Africa and remained only a few months and spenta large part of their time in traveling. Bishop Johnson has honestly fulfilled his promise. Not only that, but he has one fine work in Southern Africa, he is a man of whom the A. M. E. Church can feel proud every day in year.
a seaching arraignment of the National Pension policy, in *The World's War for December*, Mr. Charles Francisams, who served in the War of the bellion and is a Brigadier General brevet, estimates the existing pension expenditures at about $160,000,000 Punnum. The House of Representatives has passed the Sherwood bill which is estimated, will increase the pension expenditures by $40,000,000. A peculiar use of the passage of this measure that it was due to Democratic votes and in the House, which is a violent versal, due to the increase of the soil vote of Democrats now in the House. Adams says of pension extraction that the world has not heretofore, as respects volume, anything like Forty-four years after the war our pension expenditures have increased from $50,000,000 to $160,000,000, with a post addition of $40,000,000 more. Theion situation is scandalous.
Bishop Benjamin Tanner, one of the glories of our sound scholarship and moral uprises of the African Methodist Episcopal church, says, in the Christian Recordat "we place our well-night worsnourers at the disposal of the fresherived Bishop"—J. Albert Johnson, is home for the first time from hisk in South Africa. As a worker on Tanner says Bishop Johnson has taught mightily as did Bishop Lev Coppin, in the South African field, unlike the latter, he has written rex of his work from the field. We with Bishop Tanner that a book Bishop Johnson about his work, the les in South Africa, and the charm of the government which the Brative the natives, would be a contion to liter
cared in the little way of Alabama college Bishop Coppard book was a good treat to all of us. What we need more and more is the Negro's viewpoint in every quarter of the globe of himself, of his condition, of his needs, of the white strangers among whom he lives.
A FAMOUS CLASS REUNION.
During the Reconstruction administration of the government of South Carolina Negro students were admitted to the University of South Carolina, some of whom became very successful men. After the seating of Gov. Wade Hinton, by the terms of the Electoral Commission which seated President Hayes in 1876-7, the doors of the University were closed against Negro students. The class of 1879 recently had a reunion at Columbia. The Star of Zion furnishes the roster of the class as follows:
In this class were such men as Lawyer E. J. Sawyer of Bennettville, B. C.; Prof. J. E. Wallace of Clifton University, Grangeburg, B. C.; Drs. W. D. Crum, U. B. Minister to Liberia and A. C. McCillean of Charleston, B. C.; Rev. James A. Johnson of Columbia, S. C.; Ex-Congressman G. W. Murray, Murray, Collector Whitfield McKlushan, Dr. W. Murray, Collector Whitfield McKlushan, New York Conference; Ex-Minister to Liberia, O. L. W. Smith; Hon. L. H. Smith of Texas; Dr. J. J. Durham of Alken, S. C.; Hibbop George W. Clinton of North Carolina.
Commenting on the interesting reunion, the Star of Zion says:
The occasion was a reunion of the surviving members of this class and other students of this famous school. Timely topics were discussed and a very interesting and enjoyable meeting was held all the members of this class which lacked only one year of obtaining the A.B. degree from the great Southern institution that went forth men as Paul Y. Hayne, Duffie Legare and other of like fame, have proven themselves to be men of splendid parts and achievements. Most of them went to other schools and received the B.A. degree after one year's study. Would not the University of South Carolina honor itself if thirty years after it left the university, they would have the surviving members. Recently the University of North Carolina so honored them who left her walls to enter the army fifty years ago. That those who were turned out were members of a race not far from slavery is no excuse.
- All who have made an honorable record and have distinguished themselves in their fields of labor should be thus recognized by their Alma Mater (of course to exemplary things like the fact that the governor is propossous, but fair and just nevertheless.
There was no Christian spirit in the animus that denied the young Negroes of the Class of 1879 of the University of South Carolina the opportunity to graduate, simply because of their race; there is no Christian spirit, thirty-two years after, in the animus that denies them the degree to which they are entitled, equally with the white students who left the university, fifty-one years ago, to fight to destroy the Union of the States and to perpetuate the institution of human slavery. Such a sentiment has no proper place in the conduct of a people who declare they believe in the Christian religion and philosophy. Their works give the lie to their declaration of the Faith of Jesus "by the hand of St. Paul."
JUSTICE FOR ULRICH
We cannot repress a broad smile of satisfaction at the retribution which has so swiftly overtaken Ulrich, the ruffianly assailant of Dr. Washington. The punishment meted out to this fellow in New Jersey is in sharp contrast to the miserable travesty on justice so recently enacted here in this city, in which the Tamanny justices, Moss and Zeller, played the stellar roles. There is a certain type of undesirable citizen which society likes to see punished. The wife deserter is one of these. No truer representative of that class exists than Ulrich. It is our earnest hope and prayer that no one will be foolish enough to go his bond. The sentence of the New Jersey court is only a title of the punishment so richly merited by this criminal scoundrel.
Edward A. Johnson, author of "The School History of the Negro Race," combined with "The History of the Negro Soldiers in the Spanish-American War," and for fourteen years dean of the Law Department of Shaw University, Raleigh, N. C., was born in Raleigh and educated in Atlanta University. He was elected principal of the Washington School of Raleigh on his return from Atlanta, and after serving six years resigned to accept the chair of Professor of Law in Shaw University. He has held many positions of honor in his city and State, having been twice elected a member of the Board of Aldermen of Raleigh, and elected a delegate to the National Republican Conventions, at Minneapolis and St. Louis, and assistant in U. S. Attorney's office under Department of Justice. He is a lawyer of recognized ability, and during his practice in the State won every case he had in the Supreme Court of North Carolina. He enjoys a literary practice in New York and is properly regarded as a man of influence and power, and with all his numerous office duties finds time to complete this most excellent history above mentioned, which was reviewed in last week's issue of THE ACK, and leserves the appreciation of the race generally.
THE AGK is always ready and willing
and the actions of the race who are
trying to do something to help along in
the great uprift of a great people.
PEACE AND GOODWILL
(By ALBERT W. SCOTT)
As lowly, shepherds watched their rocks,
When silent night of earth bled home.
Glad, born-born about reach hills and
rocks.
"Peace and Good Will!" "Good Will and
Pace!"
An angel band had filled the skies.
Then, was first heard, such sweet owlry,
While whispering gates raise their eyes,
And greet the "Prince of Glory" reign.
O. may on earth, His Will he done,
His Kingdom, among men, increase;
Through all the ages may it run,
"Peace and Good Will!" "Good Will and
Peace!"
May war and strife be full forgot,
Nor passign, malice, yet remain;
May each be joyful in his lot,
May sorrow be no more, nor pain.
O. never may the blissful strains,
Produced that night, by angels' choir,
Stop or be lost on life's domains,
Till all are one with heaven's desire.
Beam brightly on, 0 radiant stars,
And sean be calm; 0 wild winds, cease.
O. may be bold of light and arm,
Have peace, good will, and will with
peace.
OPINIONS OF THE NEGRO PRESS.
8stalwarts 8standpatters
Stalwart Republicans have always been standpatters and the advocates of progression. —Wagoner (Okla). American.
How Long Ago Was That?
Time was when a man's word was hung up. But that time has long since past. —Orburglue (S. C.) Peoples Recorder.
Where Got He the Name?
Deputy J. H. Hamm dropped in to see us last Thursday. He reports things in fine shape in Northeast Georgia.—Atlanta Truth.
That is the Cherished Hope
The American Negro is in preparation
for our purpose--San Antonio
(Texas), Illinois.
Fools and Their Money
Every day brings fresh Illustrations of the truth of the old adage that "Foods and their money soon part."—Huntsville (Ala.) Journal.
But They Have To Do It.
No lady, colored or white, wants to force her way through a crowd of joystick men and boys such as is want to congregate before Negro places of amusement or worship—Charleston (W. Va.) Advocate.
Let Our Boys See Our Papers
A number of industrious colored boys could find profitable employment after school hours and learn a valuable trade if they could be induced to put in a few hours around either or both of the local colored printing shops. There are too many colored boys wearing uniforms and more commerce street smoking cigarettes and going to the lead generally.—San Antonio Inquirer.
Remain Out of the Courts
A New Orleans paper takes great pain to point out the desirability of giving the Negro a square deal, and the Negro laborers in the South under which the Negro laborers in the South formation. Some injustice may be expected under the circumstances. When it comes to the courts it is better that the Negro stay out of them. The Negro learns how to attend to his business and to avoid clash with any and everybody the sooner he will learn the lesson which present unfavorable conditions are designed to teach. The point is not to be concerned too much about the privileges that are afforded to the Negro, but to point the right use of those which are retained. ~Durham (N. C.) Reformer.
Fraternals Taught a Lesson.
The Negro fraternal organizations, in this State especially, have been taught a most forceful lesson, in the fact that they can't very successfully conduct mercantile business in connection with fishing. In order to make a success of such establishments there must be a great deal of money invested and people must be secured, who understand the kind of business it is intended to conduct in every essential detail. The most of these concerns are run upon a business plan and the people who take stock are always selfish about who should conduct the business and in consequence sentiment controls the affluence instead of cold business, and we can never hope to make any business succeed if it is run upon the most strict business basis.—Newport (Va.) News Star.
NO; EDUCATE THEM.
West Virginia's Increased Negro Population and Alarm.
(From the Charleston Advocate)
There is no occasion for alarm on the part of the white people of this State because the Negro population allows a slightly larger rate of immigration. The Negro people about eighteen to one, thus making the fear of "Negro domination" groundless.
The Negroes, however, cannot view the increase of their number with an little surprise. The Negro population has about very large through migration from other States of a type of undefragrables, of men brought here to labor in the industrial centers, who frequently maltake license for lilies from Virginia, North Carolina, who take from Virginia, North Carolina, where wages are lower, school terms are shorter and the attitude of the whites toward them is more hostile than in this State, they are endangered, and political privileges not only of maltaghees but of the entire race in West Virginia.
This state of affairs has come about through the development of coal mining and the consequent demand for jobs. In but few instances have the low salary property-owning Negroes of other States been able to have heeded the call are, for the most part, the unattached, ignorant, lazy, go-lucky element who are the best patrons of the saloon keeper and form force from which the population of the State is being drawn. This being the situation those Negroes in the State who have any record for their civil and political status must "view with alarm" this inflow and hope that it will either be diverted or that they who come hereafter may be of a higher status and be given an investment for Jim Crow cars and disfranchisement will grow space.
The New York Age.
BY DR-BOOKER T. WASHINGTON Principal of the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute
I left Berlin, Germany, at eleven o'clock one Saturday night in the latter part of September, 1910, and found myself next morning in Copenhagen, the capital of Denmark. I had been traveling for several weeks among people who were strange to me in manners, custom and language. No sooner had I come within hailing distance of Denmark, however, than I began to feel that I was among friends, again—old acquaintances, in fact—with whom I could not only talk but even venture now and then to crack a joke, with some confidence that I should be understood. My experience is that the final test of the understanding between people of different countries and different languages is their ability to laugh at the same joke. I do not believe there is much hope of universal peace until everybody learns to laugh at the same time at the same things.
I began to be acquainted with Denmark before I left Germany. Just as I was taking the sleeping car in Berlin for Copenhagen, a newspaper reporter, who introduced himself as a correspondent of one of the Copenhagen papers called upon me and said he wanted to have an interview with me for publication in his paper in the morning. This looked enterprising and was so much like the experiences I had had in the United States that I began at once to feel at home.
When I was within fifty or sixty miles of Copenhagen the next morning another reporter was admitted to my compartment. He told me that he had been sent forward by his paper to interview me on "certain subjects." This second correspondent spoke in broken English and I could not for some time make out what he was driving at. We had not gone far, however, before I gathered from what he said that, among the other parties or factions which divided Copenhagen and perhaps all Denmark, there were what he described as a "religious and an anti-religious" faction, each of which was represented by different newspapers. This man represented a religious faction and he had, apparently, been sent ahead to pick something out of me that would serve the purpose of his paper and party by putting me in the position of opposing the liberal or as he described it, the "anti-religious" party and favoring the religious, or conservative party.
I did not have the slightest disposition to get myself embroiled in a quarrel, whether religious or otherwise, the exact nature of which I did not understand, but it was a real comfort to me to find myself again among people who were sufficiently acquainted with, and interested in me, as to want to have me on one side or the other of their controversies. This also helped to make me at home in Denmark.
Although I did not feel it necessary to hide the fact that I was a professing Christian, I tried, as best I could, to avoid committing myself to one faction or the other. I do not know how far I succeeded, however, for although I was able, when I reached Copenhagen, to recognize my picture under flaring headlines in the papers, I was not able to read what the different reporters who interviewed me had written.
I have had, in the course of my experiences, a good many surprises, but, next to receiving an invitation from the President of Harvard University to be at that seat of learning for the purpose of receiving an honorary degree, I think that the following letter which was placed in my head just as I entered my hotel in Copenhagen, gave me my greatest surprise:
American Legation, Copenhagen, Oct. 2, 1910.
My Dear Sir:
His Majesty, the King of Denmark, has, through his Master of Ceremonies, commanded you to be at the Amalienborg Palace at ten o'clock on Monday (to-morrow). You will be received on your giving your name to the Marshal of the Court.
I am delighted to inform you that the King and the Queen are greatly interested in your work and very sympathetic with it. They show this by granting you, on their own initiative, the honor of a private audience.
The Legation will be glad to be of any possible use to you. I want especially to call your attention to my friend, Pastor Strom's, invitation to you. I am, Yours sincerely. (Signed) MAURICE FRANCIS EGAN.
If anything further were necessary to make my welcome to Copenhagen complete it was the unexpected arrival of this friendly letter from the American Embassador, in which he expressed the interest of the King in my work and his desire to honor me, as the letter stated, with a "private audience."
As this brief interview with the King and the subsequent dinner at the summer palace at which I was present seems to have aroused considerable interest, probably because it was an unusual honor to have been conferred upon an American Negro, perhaps it will not be out of place for me to tell what the interview and dinner were like and give some of my impressions of royalty at close hand. Before I describe my interview with the King, however, I want to say something of what I saw of Denmark on my way from Berlin to Copenhagen. Of all the places that I planned to visit during my brief sojourn in Europe I think I can safely say that Denmark was the country from which I hoped to learn most, the one in which, therefore, I felt the most lively interest. In order not to miss anything that was worth seeing I was out of bed early in the morning.
Of course the first thing that I encountered was another change of language. During the past few weeks, however, languages had changed so frequently that I had grown accustomed to that. Besides, the difference between Danish and German is not so great as that between German and Hungarian, for instance, and both are more like English than any of the strange tongues to which my ears had been accustomed.
The first thing that attracted my attention, after crossing into Denmark, was the appearance of the children. They seemed to have a sparkle in their eyes and a rich color in their faces that indicated vigor and health they had, too, an alertness and activity in their bodies which was in marked contrast with the appearance of the children which I had seen in many other parts of Europe. The Danish children, in a word, seemed to be enjoying life.
And then, too, I soon began to note that the women of all classes were better and more sensibly dressed than in most places I had visited. They seemed happier, they talked more, laughed more, and, apparently read more than any women I had seen in Europe. I confess, however, that I was a little started when I saw women in a first-class restaurant sitting at a table with gentlemen smoking and apparently enjoying it.
The change that I have indicated in the appearance of the children and the women was equally marked in the case of the men. I have referred particularly to the changed appearance of the children and women, however, because my observation has taught me that the appearance of children and women is a pretty good indication of the civilization of a people.
As the train journeyed onward toward Copenhagen I soon noticed the fine farms and stock which were in evidence on every hand. I had recently been in portions of Hungary, where the government is spending large sums of money in teaching the people better methods of farming, but it did not seem to me that the Hungarian government was succeeding to the same extent as Denmark in getting results from the money spent on the education of its farming population. The difference, it seemed to me, consisted in this: Hungary was forcing her methods on the people from the outside. Denmark was bringing about a change in the methods of farming from the inside, that is, by making each individual man and woman more intelligent, more skilled and more patriotic.
As my train approached nearer to Copenhagen it seemed to become pretty generally known that I was on the train, and long before I reached Copenhagen many sorts of people approached me and bade me welcome to Denmark. This welcome was not the usual formal, stereotyped greeting. There was something in the words and the manner of the people that convinced me that, much to my surprise, they knew about my work in America. In fact, several of the persons I met told me they had read my
VOL. XXV. No. 12.
My Dear Sir:
1930
COPYRIGHT BY C. M. BATTEY. NEW YORK.
DR. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON
books. So numerous and hearty were the greetings that I received that I found myself holding a sort of informal reception all the way to Copenhagen station. There I was met by a reception committee composed of journalists, educators and other distinguished persons.
I was immediately conveyed to my hotel where I found a suite of rooms had been placed at my disposal. I spent a tremendously busy day. All kinds of invitations, from all kinds of people, poured in upon me. They were invitations to speak at various functions and to see this and that interesting object. As my sojourn in Denmark was limited, I determined to follow the plan which I had previously found advisable elsewhere, namely, of letting myself be guided during my stay in Denmark wholly by the committee of gentlemen in charge. This meant that I had to disappoint a great many people, but I found that the committee was well informed as to who and what I ought to see and what not to see and had my program mapped out. The chairmen of committee wwas Mr. Veggo Cavling, editor of the "Politiken," the leading paper in Denmark, to whom I am indebted for many courtesies.
Soon after I had finished brushing the dust from my garments and had gotten myself into some sort of presentable condition, I was taken by the committee to a famous restaurant on the water, for breakfast. From this restaurant I had a fine view of the harbor. Among other things, my attention was attracted by the English man-of-war which was occupied I was told, by the Queen Mother of England, who was then on a visit to her royal relatives in Denmark.
Soon after breakfast we called upon the American Minister, the Hon. Maurice Francis Egan, to whose kindness and consideration I am indebted for much of the pleasure and success of my visit to Denmark. I might add that lest he should be absent from Denmark during my visit, Mr Egan had previously sent a cablegram to Mr Carnegie at Skibo Castle in order to learn the exact date of my arrival in Copenhagen. Then having informed himself on that point, he shortened his vacation and returned to Denmark for the express purpose of being of what service he could to me during my stay in that country.
After calling upon the American Minister we spent 2 good part of the day viewing the many points of interest about the city and that evening, in accordance with the program which had been arranged for me, I spoke in one of the large auditoriums of the city.
If I had not been prepared for the hearty welcome which I had already received, I was still less prepared, upon entering the hall, to see the audience, which filled every part of the building, rise to its feet and cheer as I came upon the platform. I had been uneasy all day for fear that my speech would not be understood, but I was positively frightened when I saw this large audience and, from the enthusiasm with which I was greeted, got some idea of what was expected of me.
I had already had some experience with translators. While, at the beginning it was not so bad to have to be compelled to stop at the end of every few paragraphs, to have my words translated, I found that when I was fairly launched on my address, and reached the point where I began to feel my speech in my blood and bones, it was very trying to stop, with my mouth open, so to speak, until the audience, by the aid of an interpreter, caught up with me.
I had not been talking more than a few minutes, however, until I found that the majority of my audience were able to follow me almost as well as if I had been speaking in their own tongue. Even the anecdotes I told, which were based very largely upon local conditions in the South, were for the most part understood, and so I went right on to the end of my address without stopping. I think I must have spoken for at least an hour and a half. One of the professors in the Royal College of Agriculture, whose name unfortunately I cannot now recall followed me. This gentle man took notes during my address and, after it was over, translated the substance of my remarks to the audience. As near as I could judge, he performed his part of the program with great success. At least it was better than the halting method with which I had previously had experience. At the close of this meeting I was entertained at supper at one of the hotels by a committee of representative people of Copenhagen.
The main thing which led me to go to Denmark, however, was that I might get a clear and definite idea of agricultural conditions, especially the dairy industry. I wanted not only to see the condition of farming and dairying, but to learn, if possible, how the Danish farmer had been educated
NEW YORK, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1911.
"Wendell Phillips was not a child of the backwoods. He was born in Boston. He did not spring from the common people. Providence worked through six generations of the best Puritan stock of New England, to evolve in him an American gentleman of the highest type. His was not a struggle against poverty. The child of wealth, he was ennobled by an atmosphere of reinforcement in the most cultured city in America. A graduate of Harvard; he was admitted to the bar as a member of the legal profession with every prospect of a brilliant career. While a young man, as yet comparatively unknown, he stood in Pannett Hall and board James T. Austin, the Attorney General of Massachusetts, justify the men who murdered Lovejoy at Alton, fill Hot with indignation, he mounted the platform and delivered impromptu, a reply in soothing terms and with such crushing effect, that at a single stride he stopped from obscurity to fame. From that hour he broke the barriers of his social position; became deaf to the blandishments of wealth and honor, and with a self-abandonment akin to that of the Son of God, he made himself of no reputation to become the friend and advocate of the lowly and despair.
The surroundings amid which these commemorate exercises here to night are not, are significant, while bending added inspiration to the hour. We are within the walls of Plymouth Church, whose pulpit Henry Ward Beecher made famous through out the English speaking world. At a time when the American pulpit was, for the most part, either dumb upon the evils of slavery, or threw about the inquisitive institution the sanctions of religion, Henry Ward Beecher stood here, a mighty Jove, burling the hot thunderbolts of his wrath against it. He was one of the host friends the cause of freedom ever had. He has demonstrated the power and influence of the unmazed pulpit. He was much more concerned with the acts of the supporters of slavery than he was about the Acts of the Apostles. He had the courage to do that, for lack of which the church and the unchurched masses are perishing today: he stood on the banks of the Hudson instead of the banks of the Jordan and applied the Gospel to the moral, political and sociable problems of his time. That which concerns us now is not that St. Paul, a member of a deplied race, had his Roman citizenship insulted, but that ten millions of black American citizens may be robbed of their most sacred rights under the protection of our flag. Which today is of more vital importance, that St. Paul received thirty-nine lahses upon his back, or that thirty-nine American citizens have been lynched with flandish ferocity in this year of grace?
"After he had been mobbed out of two halls in New York City, Mr. Beecher, with characteristic courage, opened Plymouth Church to Mr. Phillips, to whom he refers as "the unagitated agitator—so calm, so fearless, so insolite—every word a bullet."
"Wendell Phillips"
WENDELL PHILLIPS" was the subject of an address delivered at Plymouth Church, Brooklyn. Wednesday evening, November 29, by Dr. Roverdy C. Ranson, pastor of Bethel A. M. E. Church. He said in part: "The tree of liberty will only bear fruit after its kind. It will not flourish when the foul birds of tyranny and oppression nest amid its boughs. It will not yield vitality or strength to any wild branch of slavery or serfdom that may be engrafted on its limbs. There are many, both at home and abroad, who are slow to learn that, while ready to acknowledge our debt both to England an dto Europe, we are a new nation, in a new world, with a new form of government whose type of democracy is distinctively American.
"When John Hancock laid down his pen and George Washington sheathed his sword, the fathers of our constitution completed the task of launching this republic to take its unique place among the nations of the earth. The compromises growing out of the slavery question, that were inserted in the constitution, were the chief blight of their otherwise almost perfect work. This vital flaw prevented the realization of their high ideals and the fulfillment of their hopes. It at once arrayed against each other two hostile forces; it undertook the impossible task of uniting two irreconcilable principles, freedom and slavery.
"The Negro question is the pivot around which this nation has revolved at every crucial hour of its history, from the foundation of the government until now."
"While the Indies really like against us in judgment, the Negro is now and ever has been, the sure and final test of the strength and progress of American democracy and Christianity. Would you behold the skyline of our Christianity and democracy today? I point you to the present attitude of this nation toward the Negro.
"From the adoption of our Federal Constitution until the abolition of slavery, there were those who saw and felt the enormity of the crime of ownership in human flesh. Of this increasing company, worthy to be called American's Immortals, William Lloyd Garrison was the chief, while Wendell Phillips was preeminent among those who stood in the foremost ranks.
One hundred years ago to day, Wendel Phillips was born. His unselfish devotion to the cause of humanity has made not only black men, but liberty-loving men and women everywhere, his debtors. His career is unique in the annals of American achievement. He has been called, "The Knight Errant of Humanity." His noble figure moved among us with all the kingly grace of a knight of the days of chivalry. He met the burning question of his life with dauntless courage and a faith that never wavered. His sword once drawn was never abashed until the foe was vanquished. He counted not the odds against him, his confidence in the righteousness of his cause.
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Dramatic Section
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A COMPARISON AND A CONTRAST
I HAD just filled on the night preceding a lecture engagement- at the capital of one of the great states of the Middle West. While sojourneying in this city I was the guest of the pastor of the church under whose auspices the lecture was arranged. It was necessary for me to take the next outgoing train in order to meet my appointment at another point. As I had the fullest confidence in my guide and friend touching his knowledge of local schedules, I did not follow my usual custom to make inquiry of the train crew as to the destination of the train about to be boarded. I had ridden but a few miles, when the conductor approaching, called out in familiar tones, "ticket." Upon handing him a diminutive piece of pasteboard which bore the imprint of a great railway system, he politely informed
i
me that I was on the wrong train going in the opposite direction from the desired point as fast as wheels could move. There was no return train until the next day. It is a mistake that very frequently happens, the sympathetic conductor assured me.
"I can carry you to the next station, sixteen miles ahead, where you may stay over night and return on the early morning train and perhaps make your engagement in time."
There was nothing for me to do but to submit to the inevitable and make the best of my predicament. At nine o'clock p. m., I found myself at the dingy station in the midst of an agricultural community. The population consisted of 600 inhabitants, all white, so far as I had any reason to suppose. The shades of night were falling dark and fast. A colored person thus beattled is in a predicament difficult to appreciate. I walked up and down the platform for a few minutes, sizing up the situation, not without inward misgivings. I studied hastily the men in shirt sleeves and sun-down hats, loitering about the little station just before the lights were to be extinguished for the night. But these one by one began to take their several ways, leaving the little station to darkness and to me. This was an occasion to make use of my psychology on the wing. As Robert Burns would say, I, "tint my reason all together," and accosted the individual whom I judged would be most responsive to my plea. Moderating my tone in a manner which I judged would be most effective to the man addressed, I stated my predicament and asked if he would point out some place where I might stop over night.
"Sure," he responded in a tone of pleasant surprise. "There is a nice colored family that lives several blocks away, who would be glad to accommodate you." Of course, I said nothing about color in my inquiry for a stopping place; but my good friend proceeded on the basis of prima facie evidence.
"I will be glad to show you the place and I am sure that they will take good care of you. Let me carry one of your satchels," he persisted with sincere politeness. "Ben is a nice boy and his wife is a splendid woman. They are very well liked by everybody in the community."
We chatted pleasantly while finding the house of Benjamin the Black. I asked, "How many colored people are there in the town?"
"Only Ben and his wife," was the reply.
"How do they get along?"
"Very nicely, indeed. They have no trouble whatever. They own their own property. Ben is a tyler and does work for everybody in this section. His wife is a very industrious woman and works for the best families in the town."
"People who behave themselves can usually get along anywhere," I broke in, rather to humor the conversation than to express a sure conviction.
"Yes, Ben and his wife were both born here and everybody knows and respects them."
By this time we had reached the cottage which was the last house at the end of the street where a new concrete walk had been recently laid.
"Mrs. Jones, here is a gentleman who missed his train and wants you to take care of him over night."
"I will be very glad to do so Mr. Smith responded the chocolate-hued mistress of the cottage.
Of course, I was very profuse in tendering thanks to my guide for the good and kindly turn he had rendered me. I offered him a high-grade cigar, or rather the price of one, as I do not smoke myself; but he politely declined, stating that he was only too glad to oblige a stranger, having himself had experience in being thrown off at a strange place at night. With polite dismissal, he took his leave and went unto his own company, and left me to mine.
I stated to Mr. and Mrs. Jones that I hardly knew how to thank them for taking me in, being a total stranger dumped upon them at such an unseasonable hour.
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My Visit to the King and Queen of Denmark (Continued from Page 1.)
to the point which made it possible for Denmark to lead the world in the dairy industry. Much as I should have been inclined to accept some of the numerous invitations that would have kept me in the city, I determined that on the following day I would cut everything possible and get right out into the heart of the country, where I could meet the farmers, study their methods and observe the results. I wanted to see, also, some of the high schools, agricultural schools and common public schools. All this, however, the committee, led by Mr. Cayling had carefully thought out and planned to in advance.
The only thing that disturbed me and led me to hesitate in carrying out this decision was the command for me to appear at the King's palace the next day at ten o'clock. No one seemed to know just what further command the King might have in store, but everyone was certain, at the same time, that it would be an unforgivable thing for anybody to fail to accept an invitation from the King.
So it was decided that, Monday morning everything else must wait until I had been to the palace to see the King. On the previous day I had been carefully instructed by Minister Egan as to the exact time to appear at the palace and as to the kind of dress that I was to wear. Fifteen minutes before the homi of my reception, the American Minister's carriage drove up to my hotel, and I was conveyed in quite a ceremonious manner to the entrance to the King's residence. Before reaching the entrance of the palace we encountered a rather formidable array of soldiers and bayonets. Reaching there, however, thanks to the good offices of Minister Egan, there seemed to be plain sailing.
I was met at the entrance by some official, clad in imposing uniform, and by him I was conveyed through several rooms or halls until finally I reached the reception room of the King's Chamberlain. The Chamberlain, as soon as I entered the room, greeted me warmly and asked me to take a seat. In the meantime he himself stood through the whole proceedings. In fact he did all of his writing standing, with his sword by his side, and I did not see him sit during the whole time I was in the room.
Soon after I entered, the Chamberlam went in and presently returned to tell me the King would be ready to see me in about five minutes. At the end of the five minutes exactly, the door was opened and I found myself in the king's chamber. I had expected to see a gorgeously fitted apartment, something to compare with what I had seen elsewhere in the palace. Imagine my surprise when I found practically nothing in the room except the King himself. There was not a chair, a sofa, or so far as I can recall a single thing in the way of furniture nothing except the King and his sword. I was surprised again, considering the formality by which he was surrounded, by the familiar and kindly manner in which the King received me, and by his excellent English. Both of us remained standing during the whole interview, which must have lasted twenty minutes. I say we remained standing, because, even had etiquette permitted it, we could not have done anything else because there was nothing in the room for either of us to sit upon.
I had been warned by the American Minister and Mr. Cayling, however, as to what might be the result of this interview. Among other things in regard to which I had been carefully instructed by the American Minister was I must never turn my back upon the King, that I must not lead off in any conversation, that I must let the King suggest the subjects to be discussed and not take the initiative in raising any question for discussion. I tried to follow Minister Egan's instructions in this regard as well as I could, but I was not wholly successful.
I had not been talking with the King many minutes before I found that he was perfectly familiar with the work of the Tuskegee school, that he had read much that I had written and was well acquainted with all that I was trying to do for the Negroes in the South. He referred to the fact that Denmark was interested in the colored people in their own colony in the Danish West Indies, and that both he and the Queen were anxious that something be done for the colored people in the Danish possessions similar to what we were doing at Tuskegee. He added that he hoped at some time I would find it possible to visit the Danish West Indian Islands.
As I have said, I had been warned as to what might be the result of this visit to the King and that I had best be careful how I made my plans for the evening. As the interview was closing, the King took me by the hand and said, "The Queen would be pleased to have you dine at the palace to-night," at the same time naming the hour.
The Minister had told me that this was his way of commanding persons to dine, and that an invitation given must be obeyed. Of course, I was delighted to accept the invitation, though I feared it would wreck my plans for seeing the country people. The King was so kind and put me so at my case in his presence that I fear I forgot Minister Egan's warnings not to turn my back upon him, and I must confess that I got out of the room in about the same way I usually go out of the room when I have had an audience with President Taft.
Leaving the King and the palace, I found out on the street quite a group of newspaper people, most of them representing American papers, who were very anxious to know, in the usual American fashion, just what took place during the interview, how long I was with the King, what we talked about, and what not. They were especially anxious to know if I had been invited to the palace for dinner.
As soon as the audience with the King was over, our automobile was weedy and we went straight to the country. The automobile had been provided by Mr. Cavling because he was anxious that I cover just as much territory during the day as possible. We drove through magnificent farming districts, saw some of the finest cattle that one can find anywhere in the world.
Our first stop was at a typical Danish high school, at Roeskilde, the former capitol of Denmark, one of the unique institutions which has made education in Denmark famous. The usual term "high school," however, has little meaning in connection with the Danish high school. A Danish high school is an institution that has for its object the instruction of the masses of the people regarding Danish history and Danish traditions; in a word, its object is to inspire the people. These high schools are not only attended by the youths of the country, but during certain seasons of the year they are attended by men and women. For a given number of weeks the wives attend these schools, living in the institution. At the end of their time the wives go home and their husbands come and remain several weeks.
The first high school at which we stopped was, I think, about forty miles from Copenhagen. Though it was during the vacation season, much to my surprise, when reaching this school I found a large audience of people from the surrounding country gathered for the purpose of giving me a reception and listening to me speak. After being introduced to the members of the faculty and inspecting the surroundings of the high school and partaking of a well prepared lunch, a large audience assembled in the chapel and I spoke for twenty or thirty minutes, telling them about our work at Tuskegee and elsewhere in the South. But as I mingled with the people, men and women, I was surprised to find that they already knew almost as much about Tuskegee and its work as any similar audience in America.
From this high school we went into another farming district to visit a typical Danish agricultural school, and this school was one of the most interesting sights that I saw in Denmark. It was located right out in the country. The buildings were not costly nor showy, but everything indicated that it was a real farmers' school. Here again I found a still larger audience of people from the surrounding country gathered, and I had scarcely gotten within sight of the school buildings when I saw a large American flag hanging across the roadway. Not only that, but American flags were flying in all parts of the school grounds, as well as on many of the buildings. The people received me with many cheers. They sang Danish patriotic songs and American patriotic songs. In fact the heartiness and warmth of their reception nearly took me off my feet. What interested me as much as anything else was to note that the women, the wives of the farmers, were just as intelligent concerning Tuskegee and its methods as the men.
What interested me especially about this school was to see that all the teaching was adapted to meeting the needs of the students that district, that any farmer could come there and see, for example, the best breed of pigs, and within a few days learn how to care for and grow them on his own farm. Any woman could come there and see the best garden, the best fowls, and be taught how to improve her own garden and her own fowls. Here, again, I found that it was the custom during certain weeks in the year for the farmers' wives to come and live in the institution and be taught the best methods of cooking, the best methods of table serving, the best methods of doing everything that a farmer's wife is called upon to do. At the end of two or three weeks these wives go home and
THE NEW YORK AGE, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1911
Several days later I found myself in Mound Bayou, the well known Negro town in the Mississippi Delta. Here is a Negro town of something like a thousand inhabitants, surrounded by a black penumbra of ten times that number, owning and operating thirty thousand acres of fertile land. Mound Bayou is located in Bolivar County, where the blacks outnumber the whites, fifteen to one. I found here an orderly community conducting appropriate activities with business system and method. The stores were well kept, neat and orderly; the bank and building association were in successful operation; the Negro ticket agent was business like and courteous; the mayor was a local merchant whose time was taken up in selling goods more extensively than in performing municipal function, a cotton seed mill, costing $100,000, was nearing completion; the postmaster was none other than Ishah T Montgomery, the founder and pater families of the town. The initiative, directive energy and intelligent method were in striking contrast with the more service pursuits ordinarily followed by Negroes when overshadowed by their more numerous and powerful white neighbors. There were in this small town as many as half dozen Negroes that were as well off in this world's goods, and far more enterprising and thrifty than any like number that can be picked out from among the hundred thousand Negroes in the capital of the nation.
On reaching the town I fell into the hands of Charles Banks, who, like "Bret rabbit," was born in the briers. Charles Banks grew up as a plant out of the turtle soil of the Delta. He is a full-blooded and full-souled Negro, an autoethonous growth, the untempered product of Negro life and environment. He was educated, to the point of essential intelligence, on the spot, and gained his experiences and inspiration here. If Isaiah Montgomery describes the title of the Paul who planted Mound Bayou, Charles Banks should be styled the Appellas who watered it. May God give the increase. Mr Montgomery was a domestic in the household of President Jefferson Davis of the Southern Confederacy, and enjoys the absolute confidence of both races. He is a man of sound judgment and far seeing business acumen. Observing the vigor and enterprising spirit of young Banks, he invited his association in this gigantic community project. The man title of Eligah fell worthily upon and titted well the shoulders of Elisha.
On reaching town, I must dine with Mr Banks. He lives in a beautiful cottage with surrounding grounds, laid out in grass plots and flower beds, impressing one with the air of prosperity and retinement, such as he might expect to find in the surroundings of a successful business man in a New England village. Charles Banks is a man of many activities. He is a cashier of the Bank of Mound Bayou, promoter of the cotton mill project, operator of city realty and farm lands, a large and successful planter, and cotton buyer. Indeed, he is easily the leader in the several lines of activity calculated to develop the community. His interest is not limited to this town alone, but extends throughout the state. He is president of the Negro Business League of Mississippi, and first vice-president of the National Negro Business League, of which Booker T. Washington is founder and president. The term "Banks of Mississippi," no longer suggests to the Negroes of that state the riparian borders of the Father of Waters, but the actuary and guiding spirit of Mound Bayou.
I saw only one white man during my stay in this town, and he was a drummer for a Mississippi house trying to place a bill of goods in a local store. He was in every way as affable and courteous as the success of his mission requires a drummer to be. I could not help contrasting his attitude with the hauteur often assumed by clerks when the Negro goes into a white store to make a purchase. The Negro is fast learning that if he would secure the courteous consideration of his neighbor, he must some times have something his neighbor wants, and not always want something he has. During my stay in Mississippi Mr. Vardaman was making his campaign for the Federal Senate, with the bitterest appeal to racial passion and hate. The Negroes anticipated that he would win, as such appeals usually do. But they were no whit affected thereby in their constructive purpose as the wisest policy under any political eventuality. The Negroes of Mound Bayou have no effective political privileges outside of their own bailiwick, their civil rights are narrowly restricted. They do not fail to understand their limitations and to desire the fulness of the stature of American citizenship. But they have made up their minds that they will do their best in spite of restrictions which they cannot overcome. If they should sit down supinely and wait in idle expectancy for the desired measure of civil and political privilege, they would indeed wait for many a long and weary day.
The Negroes here enjoy that which neither political rights nor civil freedom can bring, viz: free and unconstrained social satisfaction of their own making. They have their own lodges, churches, benevolent orders and social circles, with no one near to molest or make afraid. There is a club room fitted up for the social enjoyment of men, in as good style, as any I have seen for Negroes, although I have visited and observed their ways in almost every city in the United States. They are sending their sons and daughters to Howard University, Fisk, Atlanta, Hampton and Tuskegee, who return as happy and contented co-workers in the life and spirit of the place. I was pleased to find a group of Howard University graduates adjusted to this work. On asking a young lady now a senior in Howard University College Department, whether she preferred Washington or Mound Bayon, without hesitation the response was in favor of the Mississippi village.
On leaving Mound Bayou I could not refrain from comparing, rather contrasting, the lot of the Negro in the two communities just described. On the one hand, the Northern village contains but a single couple whose number is not likely to increase; on the other hand, Mound Bayou appeals to colored men with the spirit of thrift and enterprise. The Negroes in the Northern community enjoy full political and civil freedom; while in Mississippi, they are nullities in the state and are harshly restricted in their civil freedom. Unusual to be said, the Northern Negroes in this comparison have full industrial opportunity along the line of mechanical skill, but it is merely incidental without any assuring basis of permanence; while Mound Bayou is building an enduring industrial structure. Our isolated couple receive all from their neighbors that they can reasonably ask them to give and inevitable. In the one case their neighbors are "a little more than kind and a little less than kin," which is the most uncompatible possible social predicament, in the other case, kinship of blood easily manifests itself in genial social relations. The Northern family has no children, and if they had it would only intensify the pitiableness of their lot; the child life of Mound Bayou is joyous and happy.
After looking upon this picture and then on that, let each determine for himself which situation holds the larger promise for the future; which points out the way, which points the way out?
the husbands come and are given instruction in the same way. The farm surrounding this agricultural high school I noticed, while not large, was a model of perfection. The people who came to these two meetings, to which I have referred, were happy, joyous and prosperous people. It was evident that they took pride in their country and in their part in its success.
As at my former stopping place, the people assembled in the chapel. In this case the audience was so large that it could not get on the inside of the room, and I spoke to the people standing in an automobile. As I drove away at the close of my address, American and Danish flags were waved and a familiar American song was sung with great heartiness. All this warmed my heart, taught me to love Denmark and made me feel that it was and is one of the happiest countries in the world.
After making further inspection of farm life and farm conditions, we turned our way toward Copenhagen. We had to hasten on in our journey because of the dinner at the palace, and I confess that, notwithstanding I was seeing so much that was new and instructive, all through the day I was trembling a little in anticipation of the ordeal that was awaiting me at night. I had never taken a formal dinner with a King and Queen, and I did not know exactly what to expect or exactly what to do. Here again Minister Egan came to my rescue. He had carefully instructed me as to what time to appear at the palace for dinner and exactly how I was expected to conduct myself.
Before speaking more at length concerning the dinner, I must mention that, notwithstanding the fact that it was getting dangerously near the hour when I had to start for the King's summer residence, we stopped to inspect one of the gardens maintained through the generosity of "The Politiken" some few miles cut of Copenhagen. These gardens or farms, so far as I know, have no counterpart in America. They are small bits of land which the people are encouraged to cultivate. On Sunday and at other times when the city people care to do so, they can go out into these gardens and cultivate their little patch of land and live for the day if they wish to in a tiny house constructed on this land. Thus from the crowded city they are permitted to get a touch of real nature.
The dinner was not at the palace where I was received in the morning, but at the summer palace several miles out of Copenhagen. When I reached the hotel from the country, it soon dawned upon me that I was in great danger of being late. To keep a King and Queen and their guests waiting on one for dinner would of course be an outrageous offense. I dressed as hastily as I was able, but just as I was putting on the finishing touches to my costume my white tie bursted. I was in a predicament from which for a moment I saw no means of rescuing myself. I did not have time to get another tie, and of course I could not wear a black one. As well as I could, however, I put the white tie about my neck, fastened it with a pin, and earnestly prayed that it might remain in decent position until the dinner was over. Nevertheless I trembled all through the dinner for fear that my tie might go back on me.
I succeeded in reaching the summer palace about ten minutes before the time to go into the dining room. Here again I was met by the King's Chamberlain by whom I was conveyed through a series of rooms and, finally into the presence of the King who, after some conversation, led me where the Queen was standing and presented me to her. The Queen received me graciously and even cordially. She spoke English perfectly, and seemed perfectly familiar with my work. I had, however, a sneaking idea that Minister I gain was responsible for a good deal of the lambarity which hone to King and Queen seemed to exhibit regarding Tuskegee.
As I control the reception room there were about twenty or twenty five people who were to be entertained at dinner. I will not attempt to describe the elegance, not to say splendor or everything in connection with the dinner. As I ate food for the first time in my life out of gold dishes, I could not but recall the time when as a slave boy I ate my syrup from a tin plate.
I think I got through the dinner pretty well by following my usual custom, namely, of watching other people to see just what they did and what they did not do. There was one place, however, where I confess I made a failure. It is customary at the King's table, as is true at other functions in many portions of Europe, I understand, to drink a silent toast to the King. This was so new and strange to me that I decided that, since I did not understand the custom, the best thing was to frankly confess my ignorance. I reassured myself with the reflection that people will easier pardon ignorance than pretense.
At a certain point during the dinner, each guest is expected, it seems, to get the eve of the King and then rise and drink to the health of the King. When he rises he makes a how to the King and the King returns the how. Nothing is said by either the King or the guest. I think practically all the invited guests except myself went through this performance. It seemed to me a very fitting way of expressing respect for the King as the head of a nation and as a man, and now that I know something about it, I think if I had another chance I could do myself credit in that regard.
During the dinner I had the privilege of meeting a very interesting old gentleman, now some eighty years of age, the uncle of the King, Prince who spoke good English. I had a very interesting conversation with him, and since returning to America I have had some correspondence with him.
As I have already said, the Queen Mother of England was at this time in Copenhagen, and as I afterwards learned her sister, the Queen Mother of Russia was also there. As both of these were in mourning on account of the recent death of King Edward, they did not appear at this dinner. I was reminded of their presence, however, when as I was leaving the King's palace after my interview in the morning, one of the marshals presented me with two autograph books, with the request that I inscribe my name in them. One of the books, as I afterward learned, belonged to the Queen Mother of England. The other belonged to the Queen Mother of Russia.
After the dinner was over, my next problem was to get away in time to catch the night train for London, where I had a very important engagement to speak before the Liberal Club. At the time of my audience with the King in the morning, I had told him that I was compelled to take a night train for London. I very much feared that he had forgotten this, and I knew, of course, that it would have been entirely out of place for me to have left the King's palace without his command. At a convenient hour after the dinner, the King very kindly and graciously came up to me, shook my hand, and gently and tactfully reminded me that the Queen would be glad to bid me goodnight, as I had to catch my train. In this way I got away in ample time for my train.
I went straight from the King's palace to Minister Egan's residence. I told him all about my adventures and he seemed quite as much pleased as I was that I had gotten through with it so successfully as I did. I was accompanied to the station by a committee of Danish gentlemen, who looked after every possible comfort. Thus ended one of the most pleasant and eventful days of my life.
A Comparison and a Contrast
(Continued from Page 1)
"O, don't mention it. We are too glad to accommodate one of our own color. You are entirely welcome to our little home, such as it is."
A hasty repast was prepared and several hours were spent in general conversation. I asked a series of questions calculated to bring out the main points in this interesting sociological situation of a single Negro family in an entirely white environment. I learned that Benjamin's parents had moved to this community from Missouri immediately after the Civil War; but all the rest of the family had either died or moved away, leaving this solitary survivor. Mrs. Jones was born in a village about twenty miles distant and was the product of somewhat similar conditions as her husband. They had both attended the district schools and had gained all their experiences in life from their white environment. They exhibited about the same grade of intelligence and range of ideas as might be expected to prevail in such a community as this. Their language and forms of speech conformed to the standard of the ordinary farmer folk. Indeed, Ms. Jones was the only one of her occasional errors of grammar into glaring evidence.
In response to my inquiry, if she had ever traveled East, she replied: "I have been as far East as Pittsburg, once."
Benjamin had learned the trade of a tyler from his father, who brought the craft with him when he immigrated from Missouri. He plied his trade throughout that neighborhood for a radius of ten miles. His only difficulty consisted in getting helpers in his work, as the whites showed a marked indisposition to work under a colored boss. However, he was able in one way or another, by tactful handling, to secure the needed assistance.
Mrs. Jones, although there was no apparent necessity for it, serves as household helper in the more wealthy families about the village.
With a far-reaching implication which I hardly expected my hosts to comprehend, I asked: "Do you feel lonely up here among these people?"
The quick reply impbed previous meditation, if not premeditation: "We keep too busy to allow ourselves to think about it."
"Don't your neighbors treat you all right?"
"O, yes, but you know how white people are."
"How many churches are there in the village?"
"About six, representing the several denominations."
"Of course, you attend church?"
"Years, we do."
"Which church do you attend?"
"O, we go to the Methodist church in——"
"Now is the capital of the state, sixteen miles away?"
"Of course, we feel more at home among our own people," they continued beyond the necessary response to any inquiry. "We take the train early Sunday morning and spend the whole day in the city with our friends."
"Do you ever think of moving away from this community, so as to come into closer touch with your friends?"
"Probably we would, but we have bought our property here and understand how to make a living among these people."
"Have you any children?"
"No, thank God, we have only ourselves to look after. If we had children, reckon we would move to town."
The night was spent in asking and answering questions of this import.
By six o'clock next morning the husband and wife were on their way to their work, and I was moving to the station. As I rode through a wide expanse of country without seeing a single colored face, I found myself musing upon the lot of this isolated Negro family. But while I mused the fire was burning.
"Wendell Phillips"
time of the chief distinctions Weed a Phillips justly earned and so well deserved was to be called an *Axilator*.
"Agitation," said he, is an old word with a new meaning. Sir Robert Fell defined it to be "the marshmallow of the conscience of a nation to mould its law. Its means are reason and argument, to appeal to arms. Eternal vigilance is the pulse of liberty; power is ever stealing from the many to the few. Only by continual oversight can the Democrat in office be prevented from hardening into a depot, only by unintermitted agitation can people be kept sufficiently awake to principle not to let liberty be anothered in material prosperity. Republics exist only on the terms of being constantly agitated. Never, to our latest posterity, can we do without prophets like Garrison, to stir up the monotony of wealth and rewake the people to the great ideas that are constantly fading out of our winds...to trouble the waters
R.V. REVERDY C. RANSOM
that there must be health in their flow.
that there must be health in their flow"
"This figured epithet of injustice and oppression is to day brought forth from its pre-servancy archives, to be hurled at the noble men and women who are standing for justice to the Negro. 'Imprisonment' 'Breeders of strife between the races'"
"We should not count it strange that many who have enlisted in the unpopular cause of our poor and deprived race have had their ardor chilled by the cold indict forence and unresponsiveness of their friends, while many who continue with us as advocates of our cause would comprise our blood bought and invaluable rights for political gain and social peace to please oppression and silence the vote of ridicule andensure from the weather one press of America."
"I vote the sentiments of millions of our race when I take the liberty to use the rostrum of Plymouth Church as a megaphone to light to say to the American people that the Negro wants neither the money nor the sympathy of those who do not believe in his counties of mourn and who do not record to him the same political rights; the same educational advantages and the same freedom in every pathway of opportunity. He is neither grateful nor unresponsive but having been so often plundered and betrayed, he prefers to stand and mark time rather than follow the leadership of men, organizations or parties, the gentulness of whose credentials he has not thoroughly examined and the unrightness of whose motives has not been clearly disclosed. The traitors within the ranks of our race are known. They have neither our confidence nor our hearts. What standing they have is due to the powerful support which is given by misguided men of great wealth, by politicians, who for personal or partisan advantages would use them to profit by the vanishing remnants of the Negro's political power, and by a newspaper press whose approving vote is the mouthpiece of a defendant public opinion which would let the Negro question work itself out under the baneful influence of the many degrading forms of Jim Crowism.
At a time of recurrence of sentiment against the Negro, the friends of freedom have eagerly acted upon the celebration of the one hundredth anniversary of the birth of William Lloyd Garrison, John Greenleaf Whittier, Elijah P. Lovejoy, John Brown, Charles Summer and Harriet Blocher Stowe, as a means of awakening the public conscience and creating a public opinion in favor of justice to the Negro. So tonight in this celebration of the centennial of the birth of Wendell Phillips we are here not so much to tell what he did then, as to point to what we, who would honor his memory, should do now. He stood for truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, for equal right and justice to all, without equitocation or compromise. While his spirit looks down upon us tonight from the star crowned heights to which he has ascended to enthroned high by the side of Garrison and Summer, we are here to reconceive and dedicate ourselves anew, not only to the cause of justice and equality to the Negro, but to humanity, without regard to race or color to creed. The carrying power of our voices may not reach, perchance, the ears of this might metropolis, much less the county at large, but if under the power of this new baptism we continue to cry aloud with no uncertain sound, the nation, the Supreme Court, the press and even the pulpit will hear. The spirit in which we agitate is needed for rescue and perseverance of our American democracy; it is needed to uprove the Negro themselves to write and take an unyielding stand while a vengeance of the rich dower, which was handed down on the point of a million bounties remains. This is not the time to make a drawing room, to paraphrase the words in which Daniel Connell justified his purpose in seeking to write from England justice for Ireland. The hearts of North America are arrogant, that it needs independence, living on insolence and a defiance that will touch extreme limits, to breathe into any own race, to teach our own attention, and to enter into our attention.
Wendell Phillips was a clerkship for twenty years. At the beginning of his career he was a clerk on the side of the church; he wore the tail of no political party; he refrained from voting and repudiated the Constitution as a slave without a country. Thus he stood against slavery within the church. He was a clerk in his own work.
It was Phillips's clerkship that led to his arrest. He was arrested on November 11, 1837. Slave Holders was on all occasions. Mr. Delphina de Carthage. The clerkship Mr. Phillips persistently followed until he was imprisoned in his own words.
"I was a Disunionist who was twenty years. I did hate the union, union meant the in the political union meant the in the political white man hypocrites and black men. I did prefer purity to peace. Iacknowledges it. I did prefer disunion to being a light man of wrants. Iacknowledges man more of more constitutions, humanity and justice of more worth than law.
Wilberforce University and Its President
Wilberforce University and Its President
WHEN the Negro race in Ohio took the first organized step towards its own education in the state, it could never have dreamed of the institution which sixty-four years later would stand as the outgrowth of that initial effort. If Daniel A. Payne could have foreseen what Wilberforce University, the child of his heart and prayers, was to become in these years so long after he came in 1852 to the little but fashionable watering place of "Tawawa Springs," his discouragements would have been greatly lessened, and he would have been able to push forward the work with a zeal and enthusiasm which only the prophetic vision of the present prosperity of Wilberforce University could have aroused. The Wilberforce of today is the realized hope of the prayers and faith he had in its future.
As a friend has recently said: "The first epoch of the history of the school determined its community character and influence which to-day is
1
PROF. W. S. SCARBOROUGH President of Wilberforce University
of the best—a community of color—exceptional in material possessions, in character, in heredity and in social standing."
The school received a severe blow when the Civil War broke out. Then "its Southern patronage ceased and the institution passed from the hands of the white leaders into ours. It was bravely taken up, however, by the Negro, when Daniel A. Payne purchased the property for $10,000. A poor people was henceforth to guide and manage its interests. Then came a crowning disaster in the fire that swept away its one main building just as the debt was reduced to $2,500. Even the most optimistic could then have hardly seen the vision of its present greatness in the ruins that shouldered that April day in 1865.
Out of these ruins and a few small summer cottages—out of the watering place of "Tawawa Springs" has issued a great transformation. For years the material growth was slow, but to-day it stands with four large united departments in operation, college, theological, normal and industrial and military, with some four hundred students. Its military department is equipped and sustained by the United States Government, the only Negro school in the country thus supported. It now has twenty-three completed buildings, including five large halls, a library and cottages and farmhouses. Aside from this there are two large brick halls at present in process of erection, while the fifty-two acres have become 350. This is a long step from one building, a few small cottages, a primary department of instruction, two teachers and a handful of students. To-day there are thirty-two teachers giving instruction in classical and scientific courses, in theology, in normal, academic and English preparatory; in music, art, military and in some twelve industries.
It has a fine museum, a new chemical laboratory lately installed, a splendidly equipped machine shop for applied mechanics, and its business department is provided with every up-to-date facility for work. Its teachers' course has been enlarged to equal that of the best normal schools in the state and standards for college entrance and graduation have been raised to the highest. Its industries are rapidly being planned to meet the best scientific requirements.
With both its material side and its intellectual making such prodigious strides, it points to its output of over seven hundred literary graduates and its thousands of undergraduates who are out in the world "making good" in various lines of usefulness.
Wilberforce is the first school of the race, a school for the race and by the race, though its creed from its charter principles is broad enough to include the world of mankind. It makes no distinction in color, race or religion, though in the changing attitude of the public in these days of growing race prejudice, it finds that the patronage now is confined to the race.
It has had two principals beginning with its earliest inception, followed by six presidents in fifty-two years, beginning with Dr. Richard S. Rust in 1859, who was followed by Bishop Daniel A. Payne. Of the former's work at Wilberforce, a recent writer has truly said: "Loyally and royally did he push forward the interests of the institution, rejoicing in its daily increasing prosperity and popularity, until the cloud of war darkened its shining way, necessitating the close of the school for those for those few months after the Civil War broke out." No one took this more to heart than its honored president, and no one so joyous as he when its life and usefulness were renewed under a new regime, when the race took up the work. Doctor Ruat was secretary of the Freedman's Aid Society for thirty years until his death not long ago.
The present president is William Sanders Scarborough, a graduate of Oberlin College. For nearly four years he has now stood at the helm where he was vice-president for some ten years previous. President Scarborough brought to the position, broad scholarship a long and successful teaching experience, a thorough first-hand knowledge of the problems and necessities—the strength and weaknesses of the school, culture and urbanity of manner, tact and earnestness, a high Christian character, and a scholarly name and fame won as a writer in the world of letters at home and abroad. Hampered at the outset by many obstacles and confronting grave and peculiar perplexities in a trying situation, he at once showed himself master of it. In these years he has brought the University forward as by magic into the front rank of scholarly institutions.
By his wide acquaintance with men of affairs everywhere, he has brought influential friends to its support, and has increased largely its financial stability. In no previous era have there been such immense forward strides on all sides. It is a new building era for the university. A
THE NEW YORK AGE, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1911.
THE CHURCH OF THE NATIONAL SCHOOL OF CHRISTIANITY
ARNETT HALL, WILBERFOR E UNIVERSITY
large hall is about completed by the state, and an English friend has given a cottage which with the dormitory secured through Mr. Carnegie's gift will provide for the girls. He has also started a campaign for a new science hall with most favorable prospects and has a college chapel in mind. The trustees at his request have formed an investment committee which has done good work in properly caring for the properties of the school. Gifts have been more abundant than in any previous period. The state has been encouraged to be more generous in helping to improve all conditions and promote general interest. Several new scholarships have been added. Bishop Derrick has erected a magnificent fountain in memory of his wife at a cost of $1,000. Mrs. Foraker has given a most valuable painting of its life long friend, Senator Foraker.
While President Scarborough has raised standards everywhere, he has also forwarded harmonious reciprocal relations between various departments, obliterating old antagonisms. He has the confidence of all his boards and of the legislators, of the influential men of his community, of his state and of the nation, for his name is known everywhere as a scholar and educator. The many learned societies to which he belongs are another evidence of the general esteem in which he is held. The governors of Ohio without regard to politics have endorsed his work at all times and the leading magazines and newspapers have lent their influence to aid him.
In the magnificent meeting held in Washington last year by the Wilberforians, President Taft said, "What I am anxious to do is to testify by my presence to the deep interest that I have taken in the progress of that institution of learning (meaning Wilberforce University), which for fifty years has been in my native state and has been so full of usefulness for the race and the country." Senator Dick spoke of the work thus: "She (Ohio) is as proud of Wilberforce to-night as of any other institution of learning within her boundaries and in the effort that my friend, Dr. Scarborough, is making to broaden its field of usefulness."
The late Justice Harlan, among other things, said: "When we find an Ohio university with the personnel of which Ohio public men are acquainted endorsed by such men as our honored President and Senator Dick, we may be satisfied that if we help it we are making a good institution."
The university is situated most strategically and is destined from now on in its rapid growth to draw an increasing contingent of students to its walls. It has been kept wisely before the public eye by President Scarborough, who can even now look back over these few years of unintermitting hard work with profound satisfaction at the growth under his supervision which is little less than marvelous to any acquainted with the task he undertook. His has been a constructive administration from the beginning, which is an evidence of executive ability far beyond the ordinary. With it all he has gone on in his quiet, unassuming way, without brag or bluster. His work shows for itself; and if he is allowed to carry out his plans, Wilberforce University has before it a wonderful future of prosperity and usefulness.
The Legal Profession BY WILLIAM H. LEWIS Assistant United States Attorney General
The Legal Profession BY WILLIAM H. LEWIS Assistant United States Attorney General
THERE is nothing so certain as that when we cease to be students of the law we shall cease to be lawyers. This is, therefore, merely the
beginning of your labors; there is no end if you would attain even modest success in the profession of the law. Success waits on those who work; and works for those who wait. The law must keep pace with human progress, and what a pace is set these days; new fads of government, new forms of business enterprise, and the unparalleled industrial development of to-day. Yesterday her dominion was confined to the land; to-day she rules the sea; and to-morrow she will navigate the air. The student or lawyer who would keep up with her must keep on "this seven league boots" and a standing engagement with the "wings of the morning." The greatest enemy of the student and lawyer is the hook-worm of ease and idleness, and that most human failing commonly known as, and called, laziness. Avoid these as you would fire, pestilence and famine. I know lawyers who have not looked into a law book for five, ten and twenty years. They are like Grover Cleveland's friend-practice by ear and not by sight. They are obtaining a legal or rather an illegal livelihood by false pretenses. Don't get into that class.
If not the noblest, the law is certainly the most important of all the professions. The ministry and medicine fail because men must die, the law deals with the most vital things of life. Man in his relation to organized society preserves his rights even before his birth, insures his person and property, regulates his conduct, defines and regulates his personal and property rights during his lifetime and looks after his property after death, at least for the period of the lives in esse and twenty-one years thereafter. It is the great connecting link of the generations of mep; it concerns nothing less than the security and happiness of the individual and the peace and progress of human society. Man attains his highest development only under the state, the state must be governed and the very end and object of all government is the administration of justice among men to compel them to keep peace and settle their disputes by law and not by wager of battle; to compel them to satisfy their wants by labor and not by plunder. Lord Brougham, speaking upon the law reform in the House of Commons in 1828, said "All the establishments formed by our ancestors and supported by their descendants were founded and are chiefly maintained in order that justice may be daily administered between man and man." Law and justice are not yet synonymous, but I believe the time will come with the development of man and the evolution of human society when no one will be able to detect the difference. What would our present civilization amount to or these glorious institutions by which we are surrounded but for a body of men learned in the law to assist in the making and interpretation and the enforcement of the law.
The man who desires the office of the lawyer, indeed, desires a great office. The student should examine himself carefully to see whether he is really fitted for the profession. Put yourself upon the witness stand. Administer solemn oath and cross examine yourself to the limit and see
whether you have been really called to the bar. If a man seeks the profession simply as a personal adjustment he will probably do no great harm either to himself or the profession. If he seeks the law simply because it is a gentleman's calling or because it will enable him to earn an easy livelihood, he is destined to failure and disappointment. Unless the student seems irresistibly drawn towards the profession and unless the study of the law is little less than a passion, he had better let it alone. The student should examine himself seriously, but once having made up his mind, as Lord Eldon says, "To live like a hermit and work like a horse," should plunge in and work and wait and wait and work.
Another question which the student of the law should seriously ask himself is "Am I prepared by previous literary training to take up the study of the law?" The law is pre-eminently a learned profession, it lays heavy tribute upon every field of human knowledge. The practice and the proper application of the principles of the law to particular cases calls for a greater variety of information upon a greater variety of subjects than any other profession. The day is tar pist when six months' schooling and a six weeks' study of the law will suffice to make a great lawyer. Patrick Henry and Abraham Lincoln were exceptions. Genius is always an exception especially if it has been inspired by some great eras like the revolution or the war of the Constitution which gives us respectively Henry and Lincoln.
Great advances in the intelligence of the people as a result of popular education and multiplication of the subjects with which a lawyer must deal requires a more liberal training on the part of the lawyer than ever before. Besides, we live in a competitive age. Democracy is essentially competitive, it grants no monopoly. Manufactures, industry, commerce, mining and farming are open to all and each individual is up against the fiercest kind of competition, and in it the trained intellect counts. Of all the pathetic sights that climb up some courthouse stairs, none compares to the illiterate lawyer with his pompous and asinine airs. If any one feels that his previous training is defective or wanting in essential elements, he should supplement his study of the law with the widest and most varied reading. "Reading," says Bacon, "maketh a full man." There are other ways of getting full. Avoid these. Read history, literature, government, politics. These are easily read and easily retamed. Read the lives of the Lord Chancellors, the lives of the Chief Justices, study the great masters of our profession—Coke and Mansfield, Story, Erskine, Burke, Choate study their styles, their methods and the results obtained by them.
In the study of the law itself, I commend you especially the mastery of the Common Law, that great body of "Principles and Usages and Rules of Action applicable to the government and the security of persons and property," which the early colonists adopted from England and which formed the basis of our American jurisprudence. It is said that there is no common law of the United States, but the Federal Courts are engaged in applying the principles of the common law every day and the "rule of reason" asserted in the trust decision is simply a guarantee of the common law. You may not agree with Blackstone that it is the perfection of reason and common sense, but this is certain that it is the accumulated wisdom and experience of the Anglo-Saxon race for upwards of a thousand years. The statutes of the states are important, since in some instances they adopt and in other cases modify the common law and deal with subjects that the common law does not touch, but do not make the mistake of Ben Butler's law student.
Equity, admiralty, constitutional and international law you will probably get only a glimpse of unless you specialize and you will have little use or call for either until you are well advanced in your profession, but it is safe to say that no one ever became a great lawyer among the English speaking race who had not mastered the principles of the common law.
Let me advert for a moment to a few personal traits which I think so essential to a good lawyer. In the first place, character counts for more and more in the profession, a quality not acquired by purchase or descent as a coat to be worn or put off at will, but as something, a part of the man, in fact the man himself. There is no longer any great public worship of the mere smartness and trickery of the shyster and charlatan. The public ideals of the lawyer have changed. The people will not trust their affairs of state or their liberty or property except to men of proved integrity and inflexible honor. Reputation for fair ability and acting honestly will go further and last longer than talent of a higher order, or even genius if coupled with knavery Bluff, bluster and blackguarding will get you nowhere. The legal bully browbeating, herating and bulldozing of witnesses, insulting and hectoring the bench, appealing to the vilest and lowest prejudices of juries belongs to the dat. ages of the profession. Above all things pray God to be gentlemen
Again, a reputation among the members of the profession for keeping your word, being a man whose agreement can be relied upon without always having to reduce them to writing is a most valuable business asset. Reputation with the court for intellect and honesty, never attempting to deceive or mislead, coupled with thoroughness in the preparation of cases, readiness to assist the court by authorities in point are the greatest capital the lawyer can have. Be master of yourself at all times, collected, calm and self poised. Don't lose your head and don't let anybody "get your goat." Anger is a waste of energy and the quality of little minds. Demean yourself always with becoming modesty, with due deference to the opinions of others, yet never say die, and act with persistence and pertinacity in protecting the interests of your clients. Cultivate simplicity, straightforwardness, directness, sincerity and earnestness of speech, these are the qualities that exalt and which carry conviction. The client in your office, the judge in court are both too busy to listen to mere words and senseless declamation, what they are both after are results. The less you say, the less chance of anybody knowing how little you know and both are a decided advantage.
The law is indeed no respecter of persons, the honors and emoluments are open to all who serve faithfully and live up to her high ideals. The state and nation to-day just as in former times are calling on the lawyer for services and leadership and the great business enterprises of our day more than ever before are demanding trained legal talent for business administration. We shall probably not snatch any laurels from Moses and Solon and Napoleon as makers of law, nor is it probable that we shall find a place by the side of Bentham and Romilly and other great reformers of the law; we may not take rank with Marshall and Webster as interpreters and expounders of the Constitution, but each one of us in his community in which he lives by character, conduct, attainment and achievement may stand for civic virtue and for disinterested public spirit, and be a great conservative force so necessary in the affairs of man. When we contemplate the immensity of the subject with which we deal, that ours is a universe of laws, spiritual, civic, economic, social—all informing, protecting and guiding men through their earthly existence. When we contemplate that human law emanates from the Divine will, the student is filled with reverence and awe and deepest humility as he enters the lofty temple of jurisprudence.
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WILLIAM H. LEWIS
Assistant United States Attorney General
3
C. W. OSLEY
C. W. Moseley is proprietor and manager of the well known little Pikin Theatre at Norfolk, Va. The theatre is one of the most beautiful little vaudeville and picture houses in the South. Mr. Moseley is a baker and the third owner of one of the few colored houses in the South. He manages his own theatre and has no white person connected whatsoever. Mr. Moseley is the pioneer show man in Virginia, being the first colored man to open a vaudeville and picture house in that State. For three years without closing a single day he has conducted his house on stetty business principles, and has won the respect of both the public and his vaudeville acts (placing small time about the country with his fair and square dealings at all times).
Mr Moseley is a statistic member of the C.V.R.A. in good standing. Mr Moseley is a native of Georgia, and came to Virginia in 1906. He conducted an up-to-date hotel and buffet for two years in the City of Richmond where he is also well known, he married one of the belles of that city, and he is the author of that who is a trained nurse and one of the first graduates of the famous Richmond Hospital training school. They have one son, little C.W. Moseley, Jr. three years old, and a chip, off the old block. Mr Moseley has made a success in the show business as he owns his own home as well as a 40 horse power automobile. Mr Moseley is also associated in business with his brother, G.W. Moseley, Richmond, Va. They own the Tolkien Theatre in Richmond, Va. They own the Idlehour Theatre in Petersburg, Va. These three houses, with one exception, are the only houses in Virginia owned and managed by colored men.
[Name]
HARVEY BAKER
Harvey Baker is to-day one of New York's leading and most popular teachers of vocal and instrumental music. His most movement in organizing the Harlem Bowl Singing School is considered one of the most directive and generally beneficial to those desiring to study music at alight once ever before inaugurated. It aims to give its patrons a general idea of vocal music, the solfegraph being taught through the most valuable system. Its pupils will be in time capable of reading the vocal scores of classmates he has never been taught to the public by his teacher "The Japanese Girl" a charming operetta in two acts, full of brilliant spirit and harmony, will have its first presentation to the public. The first musical was given December 6, 1911, and was declared a success, there being over one hundred people in the hall at 60 West 24th street, the first performance of a professionally trained solo of Prof. Baker's pupils. They showed superior training and reflected great credit to their teacher. The public has much to look for from Harvey Baker.
A MERRY CHRISTMAS
WM. PARQUETTE
Manager of That Scandless Trio, new entertainment at Hotel Traymore, 309-310 West 58th street, near Columbus Circle
A Merry Xmas
The Best Small Theatre in New York
NEW FAMILY THEATRE
5c. 551 EIGHTH AVENUE 5c.
NEAR 37TH STREET
HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE AND MOVING PICTURES
Always a Good Show Always Good Music
COLORED ACTS SEND IN YOUR OPEN TIME
THE LIFE OF MARY JACKSON
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THE LIFE OF MARY CATHERINE BURTON
STUDIES IN RACE DEVELOPMENT
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THE NEW YORK AGE, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1911.
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THE MAYOR OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
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Supplement to the New Dork Age
ae
Loeg i
“THE WATER GIRE”
A MERRY CHRISTMAS TO THE PROFESSION All glittering new except its fame. Now Booking, 17th Season, 1912-13 THE ORIGINAL BLACK PATTI SHOW Management: R. VOELOKEL. Home Office Room, 601 Times Bldg. Presenting the Laughing Musical Comedy—"IN THE JUNGLS"—In 3 Acts, by J. Ed Green & W. A. Ccoke BEST COLORED SHOW ON EARTH
THE
Whose marvelous voice and lyric triumphs are unparalleled. The most popular Prima-Donna in the world, with the people of all nations and all races. Countless millions in every part of civilization have been charmed by her phenomenal voice. H. M. King Edward VII, the Duke of Cambridge and other members of the Royal Family of England have honored her with their distinguished patronage. Was also present at several White House functions at Washington.
1
"HAPPY" JULIUS GLENN, the Wangdeedle Comedian
May come, Shows may go, but the "BLACK PATTI" Show goes
Shows may come, Shows re
Yuletide Greeting to Friends and Well-Wishers
DEAS, REED & DEAS
THE LAND OF THE LION
The Finest Dressed
Finest Dressed Act in Vaudeville with Special Scene
The Finest Dressed Act in Vaudeville with Special Scenery
The Original SOME ACT
FE88ION
, 17th Season, 1912-13
PATTI SHOW
Times Bldg.
Tests, by J. Ed Green & W. A. Cock
PATTI"
the world, with the people of all nations
omensal voice. H. M. King Edward VII,
mer with their distinguished patronage.
' Show goes on forever
AS
pecial Scenery
111
---
THE NEW YORK AGE, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1911.
BION
7th Season, 1912-13
SHOW
Bldg.
by J. Ed Green & W. A. Ccoke
A Merry Christmas
Now Playing
arkd, with the people of all nations
voice. H. M. King Edward VII.
h their distinguished patronage.
now goes on forever The Only Col
S-Singing
O-Comedy
M-Clothes
E-Class
30
Musical Spillers
Defined and Original Rag-Time Mu
6=Musical Spillers=6
Refined and Original Rag-Time Music
Miss Mildred D. Creed William (Cricke Miss Haidee L. York William N. Spill Miss May York Chas. H. Brady The Only Colored Act of Its
The Only Colored Act of Its Kind
HARRY KRATON ETHIEL KRATON JOHNNIE KRATON
Will sail for Europe in January to be gone seven months
```markdown
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Spillers=6
Rag-Time Music
William (Cricket) Smith William N. Spiller Chas. H. Brady, Manager Act of Its Kind
```markdown
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Miss Walker Wishes All A Merry Xmas and A Happy New Year
The Royal Poincinia Quintet wishes all A Merry Xmas and A Happy New Year
The image provided is too blurry and pixelated to accurately recognize any text or content. It appears to be a grayscale photograph of a group of people standing in a room. Due to the low resolution, no specific details can be discerned.
GEORGE JONES, JR., Bartone (Manager)
WALTER HILLARD, Second Tenor
H. J. SUTTON, First Tenor
CHAS. B FOSTER, Basso
CHESTER A. HAWKES, Bartone and Accompanist
A Merry Christmas and A Happy New Year
Wilbur C. Sweatman, the Latest Sensation of the East
THE NEW YORK AGE
Extends Christmas Greetings to the Theatrical Profession and the Public. Publishes the best and most up-to-date Theatrical News.
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Miss Walker Wi
The Royal Poincinia
WALTER HILLARD.
THE MUSICIAN
Wilbur C. Swea
THE NE
AIDA OVERTON WALKER
Mintet wishes all A Merry Xmas
STILL AT REISENWEBER'S
GEORGE JONES, JR., Bartone (Manneker)
Tenn.
B FOSTER, Basso
H. J. SUTT
CHESTER A. HA
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man, the Latest Sensa N YORK Christmas Greetings t
THE NEW YORK AGE, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1911.
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A Happy New Year
and A Happy New Year
N, First Tenor
KES, Hartone and Accompanist
THE MASTER
ion of the East
THE LIFE OF JOHN W. HARRIS
The above is a likeness of Wm. McCabe, proprietor and manager of the Georgia Troubadours, one of the most successful Colored shows on the road, now en route through Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Utah and California, with the following company supporting Mr. McCabe, the refined Comedian, in his Minstrel Musical Comedy:
Members of the company: William McCabe, Edna McCabe, Gordon Collins, DeWayman Niles, Leon Donaldson, Vera Donaldson, Emma Phoenix, Lorian Booker, Beatrice Saunders, Ola Allen and Max C. Elliott.
The entire company joins Mr. McCabe in wishing all A Merry Christmas and A Happy New Year.
Mr. McCabe will be pleased to hear from all good performers - ladies and gents - at all times as per route in all theatrical papers.
a Colored Quartet under his management, thereby breaking a verbal contract without just cause.
A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to All.
"Maple Leaf Bag," "Euphonic Sounds" and "Treemonisha" (an opera in 3 acts)
Compliments of the Season
FINE WINES, LIQUORS & CIGARS
HARLEY'S HOUSE OF WINDS AND MUSIC
126 W. 135TH STREET, NEW YORK CITY
WILL STARKS, Manager
Xmas Greetings and a Happy New Year to our many Friends
A. B.
BIG HIT IN THE EAST
CREED JOHNSON, fami- liously known as "Deacon"
Johnson, is one of New York City's most popular entertainers. For four years he has done all the principal entertaining at the Hotel Martinique, Broadway and 32d Street, assisted by other Colored singers and musicians. Mr. Johnson also furnishes entertainers at the Hotel Cadillac, Broadway and 43d Street; the Kaiserhof, Broadway and 39th Street; and Bretton Hall, Broadway and 86th Street, having in his employ 17 men. He recently won a suit for damages against one of the large hotel firms of New York for discharging
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THE FROGS
---
Frog BERT A. WILLIAMS, President
Frog LESTER A. WALTON, First Vice-President
Frog JAS. REESE EUROPE, Second Vice-President
Frog ALEX ROGERS, Treasurer
Frog EDW. C. CONICK, Recording Secretary
Frog JOHN E. NAIL, Financial Secretary
Frog R. C. McPHERSON, Corresponding Secretary
Frog GEO. W. WALKER Frog S. H. DUDLEY
Frog J. ROSAMOND JOHNSON Frog J. A. SHIPP
Frog TOM BROWN Frog SAM LUCAS
Frog BOB COLE Frog BOBBY KEMP
Frog SAM CORKER, Jr Frog HENRY TROY
Frog MATT MARSHALL Frog G. L. YOUNG
Frog ARTHUR TALBOT Frog EUGENE KING
Frog ROBT. R. CHURCH, Jr.
Frog EDGAR CONNOR Frog JAS. E. LIGHTFOOT
Frog GEO. L. ARCHER Frog W. L. E. STARKS
Frog CAPT. W. HUBERT JACKSON
Frog ARTHUR H. PAYNE Frog GEORGE CATLIN
Frog HENRY C. PARKER
Frog HON. EMMET J. SCOTT
(Tuskegee)
Frog HON. EDW. D. GREEN Frog ROBT. T. MOTTS
(Chicago) (Chicago)
Frog JAS. W. JOHNSON Frog W. H. HUNLEY
(Corinto, Nicaragua) (Cleveland)
Frog DR. ALGERNON B. JACKSON
(Philadelphia)
Frog FRED WILLIAMS (Honorary Member)
A Happy New Year
Merry Christmas
and a
Happy New Year
to my many
friends and patrons
Telephone 6971 Spring
John P. Wharton
Electric : Power : Printer
27 Carmine St. New York City
Merry Christmas
AND A
Happy New Year
IS THE GREETING OF
MME. BAUM
OF THE
Baum's Hair Emporium
sends to every reader of "The Age," to her many friends and patrons. I appreciate your generous support in the past and hope my efforts in the future will meet with your approbation.
NOTICE TO PERFORMERS
When in Washington, D. C., stop at
"AUNT JANE'S"
522 You Street, N.W.
Theatrical Boarding House. Good Home
Cooking. Catering strictly to performers.
Reference: Andrew Tribble, Same Suggest
and others.
Notice to Performers
Have You Played the New Howard Theatre?
Manager, Howard Theatre
T. bet. 6th & 7th Sta., N.W.
---
A Hap
Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to my many friends and patrons
Merr
Happ
is
MM
Baum's
r to our many Fr
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E EAST
NOTICE
For information concerning space in
The Frogs' elaborate Art Souvenir
Program, address: Corker & Rogers,
40 W. 136th St., Phone Harlem 1023
WANTED: A bright boy about 14
or 15 years old. dec. 14-4
The playhouse beautiful. Leased by ANDREW J. THOMAS, Washington, D.C.?
The only place of its kind in the world. Refined Vaudeville and selected Photoplays. Instructive, entertaining and inducive of Race pride. Address
Season 1909-10-11-12--Starring with Chas. E. Barton's SOUTHERN SMART SET CO. SEASON 1911-12.--Presenting a New Musical Comedy in three Acts and Seven scenes written and staged by S. Tutt Whitney, Lyrics by J. Homer Tutt, lentitled "The Mayor of Newtown." The Comedy contains 21 musical numbers, written by Trevor L. Corwell, Henry Watterson, S. Tutt Whitney and J. Homer Tutt.
Comedians, Vocalists, Producers
Season 1909
SEASON 1911-12...Presenting a
J. Homer Tutt, lentitled "
S. T.
Prop
son 1909-10-11-12
resenting a New Music
entitled "The Mayor
THE MUSICIAN
S. TUTT WHITNEY As "George Washington Bullion"
Christmas
S. H. D
stmas : Gree
. DUDI
Christmas : Greetings
and the Famous SMART Presenting the greatest of all its accl "DR. BEANS FROM
ART the greatest of all its ac
Presenting the greatest of all its achievements "DR. BEANS FROM BOSTON"
"The Mayor of Newtown" WITH
MANAGEMENT Chas. E. Barton Enterprises, Inc. N. 8. FELDMAN, GENERAL MANAGER
THE HOOSIER COMEDIANS
Proprietors of the WHITNEY MUSICAL COMEDY COMPANY
THE LORD'S SUNSHINE
S. TUTT WHITNEY
A
MONDAY, DECEMBER 25 AT COLUMBIA THEATRE, Newark, N.J. Plenty of fun, plenty of music, dancing and song, and a bewildering bevy of bewitching beauties.
8
J. HOMER TUTT
A
J. HOMER TUTT
MAYBELL BROWN NINA MARSHAL
J. LEUBRIE HILL
Writers of Plays, Sketches, Lyrics
ART SET CO.
by S. Tutt Whitney, Lyrics
written by Trevor L. Corwell,
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J. HOMER TUTT
As "Just Plain Sam"
J. LEUBRIE HILL
EXTENDS
Christmas
Greetings
TO ALL
ON OF
IXIE COMPANY
EMBER 25
L Young Consumers Deal Accounting to Over 510,000—New Site at Fort Avenue and 134th Street.
Before many months the colored residents of Harlem who take delight inipping the light fantastic will have an opportunity to two-step and waltz to the strains of sweet music only a hop, hip and jump from their respective places of abode: for New York is soon to have a large, up-to-date dance hall, which will be owned and managed by Negroes, and which will furnish employment to many colored people.
Last week G. L. Young, familiarly known as "Gib" Young, and proprietor of Young's Cafe, 126 West 135th street, consumed a deal whereby he came
1.
into possession of a plot of ground at Park avenue and 134th street, 100 feet wide by 140 feet deep, for twenty-one years, with the permission to renew the national twenty-one years thereby making the life of the lease forty-two years.
Work will at once be begun erecting a fireproof brick building, 85 feet by 140 feet, to consist of two floors. The first floor will be used as a roller skating rink and the second floor as a dance hall. The second floor will be provided with a stage twenty-five feet wide, with four dressing rooms, so that amateur theatrical entertainments can be conveniently given. This floor will be able to seat 3,800 persons at one time. There will be forty-eight boxes built in the dance hall.
Mr. Young announces that work will be rushed on the new structure so that it will be read for occupancy some time in April. The design includes land lease and the cost for erecting the building, involves $105,000, and it is estimated that by the time the place is fitted out with all interior equipments many additional thousands will have been expended. The dance floor will be forty-four feet wide by ninety feet deep.
The new amusement place will overlook the Harlem River and during the summer months the management will construct a roof garden atop the building.
INSIST ON THEIR RIGHTS
(Continued from Page L.)
every angle the relative attitudes of each contending faction in the effort to harmonize political differences in the State, to subordinate personal ambition, to rid the national assemblages of continuous rancorous and bitter criminals of race feeling, and what not, by representing to the approaching National Convention one organization, and, for once in the history of Republican politics in Louisiana, an uncontested delegation. We respectfully urge you to try and bring order out of chaos—to restore manhood rights and privileges in the party organization to all Republicans, for fair and equitable representation in party management, without regard to condition, creed or color, and the placing of the seal of condemnation for all time upon the destructive, unrighteous and unrepublican doctrine of "Lily Whiteism."
ROSENWALD MADE TRUSTEE.
Chicago, Ill., Dec. 19—Julius Rosenwald, of the firm of Sec. 9, Rockefeller & Company; Chicago, has consented to become a trustee of the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, of which Booker T. Washington is principal.
MADE DIRECTOR OF ESTATE.
TUSKEGEE, ALA., Dec. 19—Booker T. Washington has been made one of the executors of the estate of the late Emmett Densmore, in Brooklyn, N. Y. This involves his also being one of the directors of the Garfield Tea Company, located in Brooklyn.
AUSTIN, TEX.
Austin, Tex., Dec. 19.—Austin is looking forward to several dates that she has booked. The first one was December 15 when Black Patti and her company gave us a visitation made possible by the Church Alliance was December 18 when ex-Congressman Geo. W. Murray of South Carolina, now a resident Chicago, delivered his famous lecture titled "Take the Advantage of W. Chapel M. E. Church, Thursday afternoon."
Alexander Lincoln, the artistic tailor, will address the young men of the Y. A. at First Baptist Church, and finally the young men of J. B. Pius of First Baptist Church, Madam E. Azala Hackley will include
WONDERFUL SECRET AT LAST REVEALED
By a Solon of the Illustrious L'Ouverture Family
His dying message, a most remarkable story, is contained in a wonderful
Book, entitled THE LOADSTONE, MOTHER OF MAGNATISM
SENT ABSOLUTELY FREE
Two Loadstones, Instead of One—The L'Ouverture Famil
Secret
The Secret of Personal Magnetism, I. Is Marvellous and Mysterious Force,
Which Gives Womanful Manual and Physical Strength, Luck,
Success and Power, Removes Evil Inducment, all Revealed at Last.
GOOD LUCK HAPPINESS LOVE RICHES
POWER INFLUENCE HONOR
SUCCESS
IS IT your desire to have that strange, mysterious power that charms and fascinates men and women, shape their thoughts, control their destinies, and make you supreme master of every situation on. Do you wish to know the secrets of Magnetism? Learn how to win the friendship and love of others, gratify your ambitions, increase your income, dispense worry and trouble, banish dimentions, unhappiness, and develop a wonderful magnetic will-power that will enable you to overcome all obstacles to your success?
Our Book: "THE LOADSTONE, MOTHER OF MAGNETISM—FREE—it contains wonderful sayings of the greatest scientists philosophers scholars and writers of ancient and modern times. It is a scientific treatise on THE LOADSTONE, based upon years of study and experience of this wonderful MAGNET which learned men claim, controls the destiny of man.
Sir William Gilbert, Physician and Scientist to Queen Elizabeth of England, says: "Two Loadstones possess a more power and retain their magnetism longer when kept together."
We have just issued 9,000 copies of a new illustrated book entitled: "THE LOADSTONE, MOTHER OF MAGNETISM." We propose to give three 9,000 copies absolutely FREE to interested persons, in order to show the starting position of this great magnetic stone. We want you to have a copy FREE! then tell your friends to send for one at the regular price of $1,00. Remember it will cost you nothing, if sent for NOW. Write for it to day.
FREDERICK, 62 East 125th Street, N. Y. City
WORLD'S GREATEST BALANCE
CLAIRVOYANT
PSYCHIC
GOOD-LUCK
SUCCESS
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HAPPINESS
HEALTH
Pensyry, Cards and Crystal Readings. The only true Dead Trance Medium.
So or perhaps this week some adult Frederick's gce Pensyry Book Park.
Awesome Rites Respects. Set the Quotient. Renew Pulp
Influences. Rehearsed Spells in need. Brings good luck, energy and happiness
with the one you love, gives lucky names and numbers, tells name of
Penner Matter. Sweetheart. No questions asked. River the most bidon
takes. Guarantees Satisfaction or N.F.A. Accepted. Week Modifications developed
495 Others Faced and Given Up in Destroy? If so, come to the roe with the Reputation who can help you. READS mailed goe. Give date of birth, make of family, FRE R.L.K. President of Pacific College, Palmary lessons given by milt or preemily. Write terms for FRE RIICK'S Books and Courses used. Maid Attendant, Price 3655 Harlem. Near Madison Avenue.
Austin in her last tour, appearing in some editions January 9, 1912.
Ben Perry, a prosperous business man and a financial member of the American Woodmen, died. Services at Third Instalt Church, Interment at Manchester. He leaves a wife and a large number of relatives and friends to mourn his loss.
Tony Wicka, 44 years old, died after a lingering illness and funeral services were conducted from Wesley Chapel M. E. Church. He leaves a wife, son Henderson Jackson, a well known church man and for a number of years connected with one of the State departments in the big granite capitol, died Wednesday and services were held at First Baptist Church, the Rev. J. B. Abolishing. He leaves a wife several children and a host of acquaintances.
AME. FREDERICK Palmist, Gladstone 62 E. 126th St. Near Madison Avenue.
Frederick's Illustrated Palmist Book, with an airing. The Only Free Book. The Only Medium. Can be commited on all matters pertaining to the lives of the deceased.
Readings Mailed 550 readings by mail, entomology, Glandware, bark, Maid Attendant, HOUSE 10 a.m. 10 p.m. Daily and Sundays.
PADUCAH. KY.
Regular Correspondence of THE AOK
Paducah, Ky., Dec. 19.—The Home Dramatic Company played last Tuesday evening at the new Masonic Temple "Brebec's Triumph." This was the first of a series of dramas that it will play. There was an appreciative audience present notwithstanding the inclementy of the weather.
Mrs. West, who is visiting her daughter on South Ninth street, is ill. Prof. J. A. Carnegie paid the High School a visit last Thursday afternoon. The Dunbar Literary Society met at the Burk's Chapel A. M. E. Church Tuesday evening. December 12. A short but interesting program was rendered and enjoyed by all present. The Rev. S. E. Tull, pastor of the High School, presented at the Harrison Street Baptist Church Sunday afternoon in the interest of the West Kentucky Industrial College. A neat sum of money was realised for the school. The seventh and eighth grades of the High School presented a price of programs in the High School auditorium last week to the delight of the High School teachers and pupils. Salem Tutt Whitney and his band of funmakers in "The Mayor of the New Town" entertained a large audience at Kettering on Thursday evening. December 14. The show was enjoyed by all present.
Popular Woman Dead
Birmingham, Ala., Dec. 12.—The late Mrs. Lizzie A. Spears, wife of Prof. M. I. Spears, Jr., principal of Tuggle College, regarded as one of the leading women in Georgia, where she was educated, receiving her education at the Normal High and Industrial School of Fort Falken, and the University of Georgia, Mother of the International Order of Twelve, Sir Knights and Daughters of Tabor, and was very popular.
Bristol Women Discuss Business.
Briestel, Tenn., Dec. 12.—The Negro
hustress League held a very creditable
and enjoyable meeting at the A. M. E.
Zion Church Thursday evening, the
participants all being women and the
general subject being "The Colored
Woman and Business."
The paper read by Mra. Bonn de-
M.E. FREDERICK Palmist, Giallopam
Phyllis Head
62 K. 1856th St. Near Madison Ave.
FREE
Frederick's 80+ Literature
Bibliography, with all
inquiries. The Only
Dead Trance
Museum. Consulted on all matters pertaining
to the collection. Warranty
inquiries. Live brings about sympathy and happy marriages
with the one you love; reunites the separated; presents
a question; she reveals the most hidden
secret through her mysterious power, gives
facts, dates and figures of the life you will
wish to know.
Readings, Hailed 85 60 readings by mail to
birth (field) Attendance 10 00hrs 8 am of
Dallas and border.
serves special mention. She said among other good things that while all work is honorable, common labor itself will never lift the Negro above being mankind; that in pioneer days the mankind needed the assistance of the women and the men were so slow in taking up the gainful pursuits the women should come to his rescue; that profitable employment prevents mental stagnation and paper by saying that education is power; respectability is power; religion is power; but money is powerful, and the Negro can never hope to be powerful unless he enters the business pursuits and gets money. Being absent on account of illness, Mrs. Clay took her place on the program and rendered very acceptably a couple of selection from Dunbar. The vocal selections were of the usual high order and covered the entire gamut from the old plantation mode to the classics. The following program was rendered:
Music by A. M. E. Zion chor, prayer
music by A. M. E. Zion choir; "The
Business Woman," Mrs. Susan Penn;
quartet, Mrs. C. B. Bank, Mrs. Hester
Mrs. Cochran, Mrs. Georgia and
Mary Cobbs; "How Colored Women
Can Create Business Sentiment," Mrs.
M. F. Wilson; quartet, Mrs. Banka,
Mrs. Parka, Mrs. Gains and Mrs.
Cobbs; "The Interest that the Colored
Woman Should Have in the Negro
Community," Mrs. D. Johnson;
duet, Mrs. Naomi Johnson and
Miss Mack.
LYNCHBURG, VA.
Regular Correspondence of THE AOR
Lynchburg, Va., Dec. 13.—A very pretty wedding was solemnized November 28 at 6 o'clock p. m. in the chapel of the Virginia Collegiate and Industrial Institute, the contracting parties being Miss Elaine U. Trigg and John M. Pollard. The Rev. W. H. Dean, the bride's pastor, was the officiating minister. The brother, the Rev. C. Y. Trigg. The ring service was used. The bride was given in marriage by her father. The bride is a daughter of Prof. and Bria. Frank Trigg. Prof. Trigg is the per-
sonal industrial institute. The bride was
A new theatre is being built on the site of a former house
occupied by the owners. The new central dining room of
new York theatre occupies is in off.
NEDALS 25c SUNDAY DINNER 25c
Printer owner obliging management; Music every Sunday
LYMAS WILLIAMS Prop.
Cafe Wilkins No.2
Cafe Wilkins No.2
(formerly the CAPE ASTORIA)
Cor. 134th Street & 7th Avenue
For many years this Cafe is seekers of Harlem and needs the management of BARC be pleased to welcome all evening of pleasure
"A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND
Mme. Zoldella
Chairvoyant, Medium & Palmis
151 W. 14th St., New York
$5.00 READINGS
For many years this Cafe has been the resort of pleasure seekers of Harlem and nearby places. It is now under the management of BARON D WILKINS, who will be pleased to welcome all patrons who are looking for an evening of pleasure Telephone 30 Morningside
"A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL"
Coolest Place in the City
WM. BANKS
Cafe and Restaurant
206 W. 37th St. New York City
Tel. 331 Murray Hill July 6-3w
MME ZOLDELLA
The Greatest Chairvoyant, Psychic,
Palmist and Yogi Mediator in America.
DOWNHEARTED, DISCORTEED, DI
BATTERED, WORRIED AND DIS
COUCHED IF SO, CONCELT
M. K. ZOLDELLA
Without Amusing One Question, Before You
Uttar a word, Wonderful Bound.
Tullah Everything, Great Institution,
This Joe of Living and Dread, You
Brush, Brush, the Cause and Beauty,
Part, Tullah Everything, Great Institution,
Marriage, Business Transactions and
Operations, Overwomen Unaccomplished,
Brown, Broun, Allotton, Lawn, Inane
I never hall to make the separated, Cause
and happy marriage. Overwomen
fruitful and beautiful and be back of all
things you see in your life. If I
you set of your sorrow and trouble
and you pen on the path of happiness
no, I do not so, no heart to drunk,
but she can bring comfort and happiness.
I am here with a strange and remark
noveur, not meant to getty the difference,
but to direct, advise and help me
and women who are in trouble and impaired.
Everything stricken mind and contend
tall
M. K. ZOLDELLA
World's Famous Californian and Palmer
151 West 50th Street, New York
and 25 Avenue.
gowned in white satin, en train, and carried brides' sister, Miss Gladys A. Triggs, her oldest sister, Miss Gladys A. Triggs, was mall of honor, wearing pink magazine over pink silk and carrying pink carnations. The groom's brother, Prof. Ernest Pollard, of Howard University, was best man, Mrs. Cora Berry played the best man, Mrs. Cora Berry, theception was tendered at the close of the ceremony. Refreshments were served.
Among those present were: The Rev. Dr. Morris, the Rev. O. L. Lewis, Prof. William Monce, Washington Scott, Mrs. Ella Bolling, Mrs. Jennie Ward, Mrs. Alice White, Mrs. Lula Clemmena, Mrs. Torn Colea, Mrs. Samuel Hill, Mrs. Mildred Clark, Mrs. Cora Berry, Thomas Thorn, Harrison, Boldie George, Seena Prida, Mildred Geo, Arma Bolling, Della Payne, Mabel Coles, Alpha Ward, Bessie Alexander, Imogen Perry, George Singleton, Emma Anderson and Dalay Royal.
The couple left on the 9 o'clock train for St. Paul School, Lawrenceville, Va., where the groom is director of the Academy of Performing Arts. Lynchburg is to have a house of amusement on Fifth street. The promoter is a Mr. Johnsen from New York City.
Mrs. Hamlet, of Derrington, was buried Sunday.
Mrs. Halley Taylor Frucis, of Atlantic City, N. J., is visiting her mother. James Glover, one of the oldest deacons of Eighth Street Baptist Church, will be visiting bible Sunday helping in the annual rally of the church. He and his son age visiting his daughter, Mrs. S. A. Garland. Deacon Glover is making his home in Boston.
The Rev. L. O. Lewis filled the pulpit Sunday. Street Baptist Church is making special preparations for its Christ-copy of The New York Age, Fifth music.
Stop at Dallas Christians and get a copy of The New York Age, Fifth street.
St. Paul Town Bishopsman Meet annual conference in Johnson Street M. H. Church Monday and Tuesday. The church was opened.
NEW YORK CITY
has been the resort of pleasure
nearby places. It is now under
MOND WILKINS, who will
patrons who are looking for an
Telephone 30 Morningside
A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL"
Oldest Place in the City
WM. BANKS
info and Restaurant
W. 37th St. New York City
Tel. 331 Murray Hill July 6-3
Lady Gonzales
and name Zarreta
CLAIRVOYANTS
Located at 236 Bargen St. Brooklyn, 23 Years
SUCCESS
IN
Your Fortune Told by Head, Curtis and Crystal
If You Are Going to See a Clairvoyant Why
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TYT GONALLEA MAIN TONIC. In more pairs
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MRS. G. B. NEEDLES
Prodictor: Furter
24 Went 13th St. New York City
All kinds of furnishings, required and re-
lained. White furs cleaned equal to new. Coat
guaranteed to fit. Price includes 0-15 S.
Meeting of Presbyterian Ministers.
Special to The New York Age.
Englewood, N. J., Dec. 12.—The Atro-American Presbyterian minister of the Synod of New Jersey met in their semi-annual session in the Bethany Presbyterian Church, of which the Rev. W. E. Griffin is pastor, Thursday, December 7. Two sessions were held. From 3 to 6 p. m. a business session at which encouraging reports were received from the delegates, with plans for more efficient work in our several communities and the broadening and integration of church pel which alone is the salt of all that is for humanity. The annual election of officers for the ensuing years resulted as follows: The Rev. T. H. Amos; D. The Paterson, treasurer; Rev. C. S. Freemann, Jersey City secretary; the Rev. E. F. Eggleston, Newark, president.
At 6 o'clock the delegates partook of a bountiful repast prepared by the Art Club of Bethany Presbyterian Church. At 8 o'clock a people's meeting was held in the church. The newly elected president, Dr. E. F. Eggleston, presiding. Mrs. Elizabeth Jenkins made a welcome address on behalf of church. Address. The Need of Men in Our Dear Ancestor in Our Dear Ancestor by choir; address, "Our Young People," the Rev. G. S. Stark, Princeton; address, "The Family-Altar," the Rev. C. S. Freeman, Jersey City. After a resolution of thanks had been presented by the Rev. G. S. Stark for the work of the members and members of Bethany Church, the adjourned to meet in Atlantic City the first Thursday in June, 1912.
Two hundred steam with restaurant attached to and from all stations moderate
THE
Clio School Studio
121 W. 14th STREET NEW YORK
This studio located in a restricted neighbor
house, is admitted by all the most comfortable
and luxurious home in Greater New York.
Convenient in its security and care. Lodging
with or without a dining room. Accommodate
designs Only, at popular prices.
ADENA C. E. MINOTT, Supt.
Phone 2095 Audubon
The Lupree House
136 W. 47th STREET NEW YORK
Nicely furnished rooms, home privi
legs, and if desired. Best attention
to transients, moderate prices to week-
ly roomers. Best neighborhood in the
city.
Telephone 26.7 Louis
White Rose Working Girls Home
217 Kearns 50th Street
Between Broad and Third Aven.
Plantation temporary lodging for workin-
g the Home office. Temporary rela-
tion the Home office orders for workin-
g the Home office. Address
MRS. FRANCIS E. KETTER PAST
Telephone 448 Columbus
Iong Women's Christian Association
143 W. 50th Street New York
Rooms and board for women at respon-
sible rates. Employment Agency open from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Educational classes in singing, physical
culture, and Bible study. Religious service
buses daily 4 p.m.
MRS. E. S. RANSOM, Pros.
MRS. G. JOHNSON
196 Patraam Ave. Brooklyn, N.Y.
First class boarding accommodations.
Rooms with or without board; refer-
ence. Fine location. Terms reas-
onable. Special attention to transients.
8:30
FLETCHER IN TAYLOR, TX. CORPORATE
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
Our specialty is the management of Colored
AGENTS. BROKERS AND APPRAISERS
67 W. 134TH STREET
Phase 917 Harlem NEW YORK
ATTORNEY AND COUNSULTOR-AT-LA-
MORTGAGE LOANS
154 NASSAU STREET NEW YOU
Room 722, Tribune Bridge. Phone 6926 Lexington
Telephone 3757 Cortlandt: JAMES L. CURTIS
Alterey and Counselor-at-Law
Office: Suite 400 Temple Court 285 W. 1848 ST.
5 Business Street Phone 7259 Morningside
NEW YORK CITY
Phone 5574 Beckman
WILFORD H. SMITH
LAWYER
150 NASSAU ST. NEW YORK
dec 27 w ROOMS 906-4
Telephone 504 John
Llewellyn C. Collins
LAWYER
Office: 82 Wall St. New York City
General practitioner; damascus suits, admissions,
probate, wills, divorce contracts. This
treated, and all civil matters given prompt
attention. May be consulted at residence even
then. 172 W. LIND STREET. apr 13-3m
New Amsterdam
Musical Association
[INCORPORATED]
FIRST CLASS COLORED MUSICIANS
Furnished for all functions
HEADQUARTERS
222 W. 59th Street New York
Send a communications to
W. A. SCOTT, Cor. Secretary
jan 28-3m
322 W. 59th Street
Best Dance Music in New York
Walter F. Craig's
ORCHESTRA
340 West 59th Street
Phone 2267 Columbus NEW YORK
Required to be the BEST BALL ROOM
ORCHESTRA in New York, barring mose,
white or black
DR. CHARLES H. ROBERTS
SURGOBON DENTIST
296 West 53rd Street
NEW YORK CITY
Office hours 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sundays by 11 p.m.
guests only. Robert's Tooth Powder is the Best!
Telephone 718-7357 Mortonstreet
Dr. James A. Banks
SURGOBON DENTIST
Gas enclosed. Porcelain Crown and
Bridge W. specialty. Ten year
with Dr. D. C. White
294 W. 132rd Street
New York
"A Quiet Place for Quiet People to Live
THE BRADFORD
72 WEST 18TH STREET, NEW YORK
Bst. 8th and Lower AVE.
Oyster, chapel, stained, marble,
club amphitheatre, etc. REGULAR DAYS
1 p. to 8 p. Mo. Morn. engag
at all hours. Private. No
nibbled rooms to let, perennials or
interiors.
JOHN E. BRADFORD
HARRY'S CAFE
HARRY REINING EMPIRE FOOD
240 WEST 50TH STREET
Pool, Billard, Father, Friend
instrumental and vocal music
Beef Stock Parties, Flags and Pictures
tertainments.
July 19
Estab. Jan. 1977. Tel. 806 Coben
HOTEL MACEO
318 West 50th St. New York
First-class accommodations ONLY. Bury some stairs furnished rooms per day or week. Headquarters for bachelor men and the chaperge. First-class Broadway accommodations for 65 people Music every day. Orchestra Rooms 65 per week and appares. Attached. Automobiles to hire.
THE RUSSALINE
128 WEST 29TH STREET
Nearly furnished rooms for permanent
and transient guests, day or week. Portrait
work, gallery, ballroom, guest room.
MRS. EDWARD D. SMALL. Program
Sept 20-8m
Phone 2710 Murray Hill. Serially Post L.
European Plan.
THE WALL
The most elaborately furnished
decorated house in the city for the good
motion by decorated indians and grouperes.
ALLEY STREET.
460 Seventh Ave. S.W. Corner 300
MISSE IRENE JOENBON. PHO
MISSE IRENE JOENBON. PHO
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FORMERLY THE WALKER BOOK
19-21 W. 185th Street, New York
First-class room by the day or
best life and restaurant connected
partners to let for rent
feb 8-Bm
THE LAWS HOUSE
245 W. 20TH STREET
Between 7th and 8th Aven.
Handwomen Paralined Rooms, First
Accommodation for Either Furniture or
Transient!
MRS. L. D. LAWS, Prog.
Phone 8396 Chelsea.
ARVONIA HOUSE
5 W. 1357 STREET
First class accommodations, steam pear
and hot water. Bath on each floor. $75
per person. 20% off room rate.
city $1 per day. Also res. 20% off
city $1 per day.
MRS. P. B. WEITE, Gen. Mgr.
Phone 5008 Harlem.
THE GORDON HOUSE
J. GORDON, Proprietor.
269 W. 134TH STREET
Bot. 7th and 8th Aven. New York City
Purchased all rooms with all
improvements.
By Day or Week. Never Closed
oct 19-5pm.
The Eyck House
335 W. 356TH STREET
Bot. 7th and 8th Aven. New York City.
Nearly furnished rooms furnished on
transit routes. Day of closing.
MRS. THOMAS L. TEN STOCK.
oct 12-3m.
THE PARK HOUSE
Pearl Columbia Street
Nicely furnished room, with both
all commissioned for permanent or from
all commissioned for permanent, yearly, quality, Custom
Park West, Museum of Fine Arts
MRS. R. P. JOHNSON
ap. 28-8n.
Property
MISS MARIE MORMONDS'
First-class Roaming House
FOR PERMANENT AND TRAINMENT GUEEN
349 W. Bird Street
New York
Restaurant Attached
Meets all hours, first service, home catering
jb 24 Jan
STEP ON AT THE AT ...
THROUGHCOBB CLUB, Inc.
308 W. 30th STREET
Good Music. Some of New York's Great
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every evening.
JENNY JOHNSON, President
HEBERT JOHNSON, Vice-President
THE ELWIN
138 WEST 132ND STREET
Beautiful furnished rooms, steam bunked,
refined patronage. Hot and cold water in over-
room; all convenience.
E. HESFORD, Prop
dec 14:7m
449 7th Avenue
(Near Pennsylvania Station)
Between 34th and 35th Streets
Neatly furnished rooms for trans-
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Centrally located
nov 30 2010
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Tel. Bryant 2680 No Ban
ED. GREENHOOT
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For Family and Medical Trust
778 Eighth Avenue
Bst. 47th & 48th St.
NY 10001
Your patronage verified
WE DO JOB PRINTING
MUSIC AND THE STAGE
EDITED BY
LESTER A. WALTON
Harlem's Newest Theatre, to be Controlled and Managed by Negroes, Located in West 138th Street, Between Fifth and Lenox Avenues.
THEATRICAL COMMENT
ARTICLES of incorporation were issued at Albany last week by the Secretary of State to the Johnson Amusement Company, which has perfected plans to erect a modern theatre with lodge rooms for colored people in
Harlem's Newest Theatre, to
West 130th street, between Fifth and Lenox avenues.
Saturday the plans of the proposed theatre were filed with the Building Department, and work will soon commence on the newest of Harlem playhouses.
A meeting of the directors of the Johnson Amusement Company was held Friday evening, and John E. Nail and James Reese Europe were elected on the board. The officers are: Thomas Johnson, president; Harry Kraton, vice-president; Fred R. Moore, treasurer; Lester A. Walton, secretary, who are directors, together with G. L. Young, B. D. Wilkins, Maurice Runkle, John E. Nail and James Reese Europe.
A New Stage Spectacle.
From a standpoint of realism, the stage reached its high-water mark on Thursday, December 14, at Jackson, Ga., when William, Tuner, colored, was hanged in Kink's Opera House. All modern producers who enjoy distinction for staging plays of dramatic interest true to life have been compelled to doff low their various styles of headgear to the latest theatrical promoters under whose auspices such a ghoulish, ghastly and gory, spectacle was presented. Advices from Jackson, Ga., tell us that William Tuner was not hanged in the jail yard because the weather was disagreeable and the Sheriff was fearful that the spectators would get wet; so the prisoner was taken to Kink's Opera House and put to death on the stage of the playhouse.
Information has not reached us just why the Rev. William Tuner (for it is said that he was a preacher) was taken to a theatre to come in such close proximity to the noose instead of a church, a school house or a hospital. Probably it was because his Christian name was William suggested the stage by reason of William Shakespeare's connection with the world of make believe; or maybe the surname of Tuner, a rather musical name, was responsible for the bright idea.
The entertainment was very exclusive, as the Sheriff issued only a certain number of tickets. The press dispassionate in state whether the audience was roused to a high pitch of enthusiasm by the spectacular production and if the Sheriff was called before the drama to make a speech, who, with the same trickling down his rugged cheeks, suddenly thanked those present for the elaborate appreciation shown.
For nearly three hundred years the drama has been one of the chief sources of entertainment, culture and entertainment, and it is rather difficult to determine what influence this weird Passion play will have on civilization.
FROG SPECIAL, No. 3
AT 8.15 PRECISELY
ON MONDAY EVENING, JANUARY 29th, 1912
"THERE IS A REASON"
PART FIRST of the FIRST STAGE PERFORMANCE of THE FROGS will consist of a Series of ALLEGORICAL TABLE AUX, and to miss the first picture you will fail to get the story.
45—Dance Orchestra—45
22—Show, Orchestra—22
Reserved Seats 50s, 75s, 81.00
Boxes & Lodges, not incl. admission, from 82.50 to 88.00
GENERAL ADMISSION 50 CENTS
New Star Casino, 107th Street, Lexington & Park Aves.
P. S.—William Tuner was put to death charged with inciting a race riot.
DARKEY DAFFODILS.
If Billy and Ann got into a fight and Ann scolded Billy would Billy Kersard?
If Jack Johanson had an aeroplane and dled, and willed the aeroplane to S. H. Dudley, would that make Dudley an aeronaut (heir or not)?
to be Controlled and Managed by Negroes.
If the "beanery" blew up where where would Coppeland?
If Jim White would rob an old lady would Erb Robertson?
Would the same medicine that made Clarence Powell make Stanford McKenzie?
WHERE THE 8HOW8 A
DR. BEANS FROM BOSTON—Park Theatre, Indianapolis, Ind. Next week, 50 Louis, Mo.
BLACK PATTI CO.—Victoria, Tex., Dec. 21; Wharton, 22; Bay City, 23; Galveston, 21; Whitney, 22; Hattiesette, 21; Longview, 28; Marshall, 29; Tennantara, Ark., 30; Shreveport, La., 31.
SOUTHERN SMART SET CO.—Columbia, S. C., 21; Birmingham, Ala., 22; Montgomery, 25; Solna, 26; Hattiesburg, Miss., 27; Mobile, La., 28; Pennacola, Fla., 29.
MCABER GEORGIA TOURADOURS, Monroe, Paris, 23; Moberly, 25; St. Louis, Glangaw, 27; Armstrong, 28; Marshall, 29; Higbble, 30; Contrailla, 30.
STAGEOLOGY AT CAPITAL CITY
The headliners at the Howard Theatre last week were easily the Two Sweets who made their appearance before the footlights, with all the ease and grace that goes with clever performers of their class. The rest of the bill comprised The Hatchers, who were fair; and Vaughner and Lorraine, who filled the place left vacant on account of the failure of Ray and Williams.
The Griffin Sisters were at the Blue Mouse and filled the theatre at every show each evening. They closed their sixth week last Saturday. They are simply a scream here.
The Ginger Girls played at the Star last week. Their act was a little too "high-brow" and did not go as well as one would expect. This week they are at the Fairyland, where they held forth six weeks last summer with success.
Merryweather and Brown were on the bill at the Foraker Theatre last week and went big. This team is from the west and seem to have won big favor on eastern soil. They have developed a large following here.
FROG SPECI
AT 8.15 P
ON MONDAY EVENING,
"THERE IS A
PART FIRST of the FIRST ST
of THE FROGS will consist o
RICAL TABLE AUX, and to n
will fail to get the story.
45—Dance Orch
22—Show Orch
W. P. B.
The Mimans are at the Columbus Theatre, Detroit.
Peat and Hayes are at the Warreis Theatre, Hudson, N. Y.
Jones and Moore are at the Majestic Theatre, Calton, O.
Sam Lucas is playing at the Grand Opera House, Cleveland.
Housley and Nicolas are at the South End Theatre, Boston.
Alberta Whitman of the Whitman Sisters, is much improved in health.
Thomas, McDonald and Thomas are at the Lyric Theatre, Charles City, Ia.
The Arntes have taken over the management of the Imperial Theatre, Jackson, Tenn.
es, Located in West 138th Street, Between
Thomas A. Brooks is with the Girl from Happyland Company, Gayetey Theatre, Omaha, Neb.
The Six Gum Drops, with Somers and Dawson, are at the Crystal Palace Theatre, Philadelphia.
Carter and Goodlow and the Seven Singing Philies are at the Victoria Theatre, No.1, Philadelphia.
Carlisle and Wellmon are at the Palace Theatre, Leicester, England, with the Pavilion, Glangow, Scotland, to follow.
Walter Forbish, a western manager, has become the partner of R. Voelckel in managing the "Jolly" John Larkins Company, which is now enjoying success.
Copeland and Payton were compelled to lay off this week, owing to the illness of Andrew A. Copeland. He underwent an operation Wednesday for tonsillitis.
On the bill at the Auditorium Theatre, Philadelphia, this week are Trubble and Dumont, Rogers and Wiley, Simma and Thompson and Sandifer and Gant.
T. Haynes Thompson is filling with credit the position of pianist at the New Family Theatre on Eighth Avenue, and James Williams attracts attention as drummer.
Shettall and Mitchell are meeting with success at the Paradise Theatre, Boston. Act opens next week over Loew's New England time, Colonial Theatre, Nashua, N. H.
The Cubanola Trio is at the McKiley Square Theatre. Laura Bailey entertained the members of the trio and friends Monday evening at her residence, 24 West 136th street.
At the New Circle Theatre, Philadelphia, this week Billy Spicer, Thelma, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd, Helen Bunnibru, Shonzo Moore, James Crosby and the Two Seals are on the bill.
The Sambo Girls, with Edgar Connor and Blanche Dee, are at the Orpheum Theatre, Brooklyn. The act was one of the big hits of the bill at the Alhambra Theatre last week. Next week, Howard Theatre, Washington, D. C.
CIAL, No. 3
PRECIBELY
G, JANUARY 29th, 1912
"A REASON"
STAGE PERFORMANCE
list of a Series of ALLEGO-
to miss the first picture you
Orchestra—45
Orchestra—22
50c, 75c, 91.00
Nielson, from 82.50 to 86.00
Minnesota City is the most populous municipality in the state. At the Twelfth District Court, Boston.
Bruce Newman is back in New York City while several changes are being made in the theatrical organization with which he travels. Minnesota New York weather in the winter, balmy and springlike, compared to what you strike in Minnesota these days.
---
Last week the Kratons played at Dockstader's Garrick Theatre in Wilmington, Del., and were the hit of the bill. They were the second colored act to play at the Garrick in seven years, the first being Stewart and Marshall about two months ago. Strange to say, both acts went big.
Sam Patterson of the late team of Grundy and Patterson, writes: "I want to thank the Smart. Set Company, the Colored Vaudeville Benefolent Association, the Goats of Chicago, and all friends, through the columns of Tall Age, for their expressions of
ten Fifth and Lenox Avenues.
sympathy at the death of my partner, James A. Grundy. Their kindness shall never be forgotten.
Season's Greetings
"JOLLY" JOHN LARKINS
Now Appearing in "Royal Salm"
A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year
WILSON AND CUPERTY
```markdown
```
M. B.
Manager of Royal Cake, and President of the
Royal Giants, wishes a Merry Xmas
and Prosperous New Year
to the Happy World.
Last Friday evening the St. Christopher Club of St. Philip's P. E. Church, held its first set of monthly games for members in the gymnasium of the Parish House, 133rd street, west of Seventh avenue. All of the events were brilliantly contested and some sterling performances were recorded.
The feature event of the evening, an done which brought out a very large field, was the two-mile road race, with handicaps ranging up to 1 minute and 30 seconds, with W. Stokely their sterling performer, on the honor mark. The start of the race was from the Parish House, to Seventh avenue, to 153rd street, and return. Stokely took it easy on the way up, and caught his field on the turn at 153rd street, and from there to 145th street it was a pretty race between himself and De Stiva, but from that point Stokely lengthened his stride, and finished in the creditable time of 10.05, which was remarkable considering the inclementy of the weather.
The race brought out the largest number of competitors, requiring eight heats, to reach the semifinals, and on that account could not be completed, each heat was hotly contested, and kept the spectators in a fever of excitement, some of the fastest heats were, C. J. Greene, 0.20; R. J. Hargrove, 0.19 1-5; A. N. Archer, 0.19.
Summary of the events:
Twenty-yard Dosh (Handicap)—E. Wilson (4 ft.), first; R. Waller (3 ft.), second; A. N. Archer (2 ft.), third. Time, 0.4 3-5.
Standing Broad Jump (Handicap)—C. German (5 in.), with a jump of 8 ft. 9 in., first; C. Greene (6 in.), with an actual jump of 8 ft. 6 in., second; J. Wilson (5 in.), with an actual jump of 8 ft. 6 in., third.
Running Broad Jump (Handicap)—C. Norwood (6 in.), with a jump of 5 ft. 1 in., first; C. Greene (7 in.), with a jump of 4 ft. 11 in., second; E. Perkinson (7 in.), with a jump of 5 ft. 10 in., third.
Twelve-Lan Relay (Handicap)—Senior, Clayton, Titus Greene, first; Juniors, Sumner, Waller, R. Wright, Perkinson, second; Intermediates, Cornell, Brown, Norwood, J. Wilson, third. Time, 2 minutes and 30 seconds.
Two-Mile Race (Handicap)—Won by W. Stokley (scratch); F. De Silva (1.00), second; C. German (1.00), third. Time, 10.05.
Ba. ketball Notes.
The Howard University Basketball team of Washington, D. C., will meet the Mozart. Regulators of Jersey City at Arlington Hall, Jersey City, Friday evening, December 23.
The Planetes A. C. of Osning, N. Y., would like to meet the second teams of the following teams: Jersey City Strollers of Newark, Salem Crescent, Williamsburg A. C. Alphas and Smart See A. Canipa at home Tuesday evening. Songs and other addresses address all letters to Burnett Gholaton, Dr. Holbrook's School, Osning, N. Y.
More than ordinary interest is being shown in the coming basketball games and dance of the Alpha Physical Culture Club, Christmas evening. This will be the third invasion of New York by a crack team from Washington (this time representing Howard University), and it is expected to continue the long string of victories. However, the Alpha boys are practicing hard and hope to change the "three straight" idea of the Howardites. The public requested to start at 9 o'clock sharp. There will be no delay, and if a good front seat is expected, those who want to see both games must be on hand at the appointed time. Clubs and individuals having boxes are urged to bring banners and flags, and decorate the front of them.
J. SIMON
Theatre and Masquerade Costumes of every kind.
Specificity: Minstrel Shows.
422 THIRD AVENUE
April 16, 1914 New York City
1881 W. F. C. 1881 MERRY CHRISTMAS Thirty-First Grand Annual Christmas Reception GIVEN BY
Monday, Christmas Night, December 25th, 1911
Music by W. Craig's Famous Orchestra
Dancing from 9 p.m. 15 a.m.
TICKETS
Including Hat Check
50 CENTS
PROF. WILLIAM H. VAUCHN, Floor Director
dec 14
Officers: Oscar R. Camell, Exalted Ruler; Chan. Struck, Esteemed Leading Knight; Branch A. Stokes, Esteemed Legal Knight; Roger E. Taylor, Esteemed Lecturing Knight; Samuel, Esteemed Marine; David W. Taylor, Esteemed Cellar; Secretary; Howard L. Pierce, Chaplain; Lewis E. Mitchell, Enquire; Daniel E. Gant, Inner Guard; Dr. Berry, Tiller.
Truckers: Dr. Jas. B. Williams, Chairman; Dr. A. A. Kellogg, Clarence N. Johnston, Sandy P. Jones, Joshua H. Williams.
MEDICAL EXAMINER: Dr. A. A. Kellogg.
COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS: Samuel A. Bentley, Chairman; James H. Anderson, Albert N. Brown, Daniel Gant, Joseph L. Madocer, Frank Reed, Hilton Walker, Fred L. Wilcoxin.
GENERAL ADMISSION - 50 CENTS
Boxes seating 8 Persons $2 to be had at Amsterdam News, 17 W. 135th street and from Samil A. Bentley, 230 W. 40th street.
WASHINGTON vs. NEW YORK CHRISTMAS BASKET BALL GAMES AND DANCE OF THE ALPHA PHYSICAL CULTURE CLUB INCORPORATED AT MANHATTAN CASINO 155th Street and 8th Avenue, N.Y.
AT LENOX GASINO 116th St. & Lenox Ave.
In aid of the Hope Day Nursery
ON TUESDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 26th, 1911,
Music by the New Amsterdam Orchestra
Admission 28c.c. Program at 8.30
No. WM. RUSSELL JOHNSON. Master of Compassions
Boxes寄付 six persons $3.00, including admission, may be bad of Mrs. P. A. Payton.
No. L West St. West Phone 48 Harlem.
OFFICERS OF THE NURSERY—Mrs. E. A. Dorsey, president; Miss F. J. Murray, vice-president; Mrs. C. O. Thomas, treasurer; Mrs. C. H. Hall, secretary; Miss E. B. Magan, corresponding secretary; Miss Alice C. Carr, assistant treasurer.
COMMITTEE—Miss E. B. Magan, chairman; Mrs. C. Henry Hall, vice-chairman; Mrs. J. W. Dian, secretary; Mrs. F. Murray, treasurer; Mrs. J. R. Bruce, Mrs. Everard W. Daniel, Mrs. A. A. Wells, W. T. Wrank Wright, Mrs. Susan Gray, Mrs. C. O. Thomas, Mrs. F. P. Downing, Mrs. H. T. Mara, Miss Florence Walker, Miss Rosa Cottman, Mrs. T. M. Lee.
FLOOR COMMITTEE.—Mr. Wm. H. Vaugha, Mr. Jas. N. Anderson, Mr. J. Hillard Bowen.
UGHERS—Mr. Allen D. Wood, chairman. Measure. Eugene Anthony, J. G. Price, Joan A. J. Hewlett, F. W. Stewart, Wm. A. Gardeen, D. W. Parker. dec 14, 2012
The Billikens
(Winners of the $50 prize of the Hope Day Nursery Contest of 1911)
Take subway to Borough.Hall, walk up Fulton street to Smith street.
WILL ANTHONY MADDEN (the Original Jimmy Valentine) will open the pro gramme as usual.
1881
Thirty-First
WAL
Al
Monday, Chr
Music by W. Craig
TICKETS
Officinae: Oscar
Knight; Branch A. S.
Lecturing Knight; Bar
E. Murray, Asst. Secre-
quire; Daniel E. Gant,
Taosguese; Dr. J.
IS NOW REHEARSING MY FRIEND FROM DIXIE COMPANY WILL OPEN SOON
Hello BILL, We Are Coming!
OF THE MANHATTAN LODGE Of Elba No. 45, I.B.P. O E. of W. At MANHATTAN CASINO, 155th St. & Eighth Ave. FRIDAY EVENING, JANUARY 5, 1912
NANHATTAN AND BRONX.
ALL ADVERTISING MATTER Must
be The, Age Office not later than
today evening, 5 p.m.
in major publication in the current
LOCAL NEWS MATTER should
be The Age Office not later than
today.
telephone Bryant 3815
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
AND CORRESPONDENCE MUST BE
THE AGE* OFFICE NOT LATER
ON MONDAY EVENING OF
WHEN WEEK TO INSURE PUBLICATION.
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS—MIS-
SLANEOUS OR DISPLAY ADS
will BE RECEIVED IN THE AGE*
PIICE FOR PUBLICATION NO
TERTHAN WEDNESDAY, 9 A. M.
EACH WEEK.
For human hair goods go to Greenberg's
Eighth avenue, near 59th st. Apt.
4vv-1yr
A good chance for a new beginner in addressing. Apply F. S. Grant, 6 W. 9th street.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Scott, 28 West 230th street, have taken apartments at 6 West 129th street.
John Tate, of South street, Harrisburg, Pa., spent a few days visiting his sister West of 129th street. Herbert Clay of Pittsburgh's indus- tory youths of the East End, endured several days in the city on busine- nest.
A. G. Turner, of 46 West 126th street, entertained a number of friends at his apartments Saturday evening.
Benjamin Anderson and prospective bride were dined at the former's mothers home, 2228 Fifth avenue, Sunday.
Lewis McKayney, 43 East 132d street, will resume his duties at the Custom House in a few days.
Mrs. Charles H. Roberts and daughter have returned from their visit to North Carolina.
Numa P. G. Adams, a recent instructor of the scientific department of Howard University, has been a long graduate course at Columbia University.
J. Ester Gardner, the manufacturer of the bai roll that bears his name, has removed to 44 West 135th street.
Miss A. E. Stoken is still very sick with the grip at the home of her parent in Rockville Center, L. I.
Miss Cherry Atkinson has returned to the city of Chicago, Ohio, and the holdings with her cousin Mrs. John Burdett, 66 West 139th St.
Miss Marjorie Gardner, 43 East 132nd street, left New York Friday morning over the B. and O. for Storer College, Harper's Ferry, W. Va., where she is attending school.
The annual election of officers of Publicomathian Lodge, No. 646, G. U. O. F., will be held Monday evening, O. F., will be present J. Stewart Brown, H. Q. D. Amya, P. B.
Mrs. John A. Green, of the Bronx, returned from her former home, Wilberforce, O., after a pleasant visit of two weeks with her mother, Mrs. Emma Shorter-Anderson, and brother, W. A. Anderson.
Henry E. Barnett of 75 Crane street, Newark, N. J., formerly the Union New Co., is an agent for the New York Age.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Randolph of Lynchburg, Va. were in the city last week and visited The Age. Mr. Randolph is a practicing lawyer in that city.
The fourth annual dinner of the F. W. C. A. Branch, 112 Lexington avenue, will be Thursday evening, January 25. Dinner tickets only 50 cents—adv.
The New York Age is on sale at Kensinger lawyer shop, 28 Bond street, Treston, N. J.
Mrs. E. P. Roberta, 243 West 53d street, who has been indisposed, is much improved and able to be about the house.
Mrs. T. B. Francis, 917 Lafayette avenue, will be guest at Mrs. Christmas week of Mr. and Mrs. of 1331 U street, Washington, D. C.
Ivanhoe Commandery, No. 5, K. K. will hold its annual reception Thursday evening, February 1, at Harlem and Casino, 17th Street Second avenue. Advertisement will appear later.
You will come to our hall. You will answer this call. There will be welcome for all. Elks will be there. Young, old and fair. At the hall, at the hall, January 12, 1912, at Manhattan Cosine. Mrs. Tillie Cabello was the accidentally accidental carmobile accident Saturday, December 9, and died at the Harlem Hospital the same evening. Mrs. Cabello was the foster daughter of Jeremiah Schanck, a respected and wealthy resident of Arbury. She leaves one son, Mr. Frank Schanck. You must own an automobile don't mindwreck. Consult R. B. Thomas for expert advice. Care always on hand for mids. Hotel Mason, 128 West 53d street, New York City.—1014-8m.
Greetings of the season. An expression of sincere thanks and deep appreciation to those who devote their lives to joy, love and recognition of our efforts made the success of our venture possible. Allen & Inglis, milliner, 436 Lenox avenue.
The Troster Advertising Company, 185-637 West 53d street, is authorized to receive ads, etc. for The Troster. The troster firm will be in the future known as the Harlem office of The Arc.
The Herculesan Club is contemplating a departure in its dance by giving a dinner or supper dance in the city, and the club's male admirers have requested something out of the ordinary that the club feels very strongly that an attempt along the lines of the ultra smart set of Manhattan will appease them. Mina Lawson, for years one of the leading hairdressers on 13th Street, has been forced to retire from active business because of her husband's serious illness in Cuba. She has hastening to be hired as a hair poudre is used you will see indies with beautiful hair. Thousands of ladies are now using this wonderful hair grower. Adv.
Hon. J. C. Naper, Registrar of the T. H. Herculesan Club, Chair of the Bank of Monsul Reynolds, Monsul Magen, Magen and Hon. R. L. Smith
president of Farmers Improvement Society in Texas, and president of the bank at Waco, Tex. were visitors to The Age office this week.
When you like to earn $25 a week and desire to instruct you how to run, repair and keep running an automobile, Cosmopolitan Automobile Company, Hotel Dacey, 212 West $2d street, New York W. 114-741-50.
Mrs. Nora Taylor, an able woman evangelist of Chicago, was the guest of Mr. John C. Tanguay, C. Tanguay West, 13th street. Mrs. Taylor preached in Thomas' chapel for the Metropolitan A. M. E. Church Sunday night.
The Drama-Dance will be given for Hope Day Nursery, Tuesday evening. Drama-Dance will be held on street and Lenox avenue, will be THE event of Xmas week. Don't miss it.
J. A. Roberts, proprietor of the Home Garage, after three years' of great success, has sold his lease at a large profit, and has connected himself with the Hudson River Garage Company. The will open a six-story garage at 2 West 11th Street, 1, 1912, which is second to none in the city. Mr. Roberts, his wife and baby will spend a much-needed vacation in Ithaca, N. Y., with relatives over the holidays.
You and your friends are invited to attend a charity dance given by the Mines Bank of St. Cyrinna, Parish Hall, 175 West 63d street, Tuesday evening, Dec. 30, 1911, at 5:30 o'clock. The program will be readied under the supervision of Mimi Vivienne A. Ward. The proceeds of this dance will be used as an emergency fund and need cause gagged by the probation officer. The work of the National League on Urban Conditions Among Negroes.
Arrivals at the Macee: L. A. Andrews, Atlantic City; R. L. Johnston, Boston; E. J. Warring, Philadelphia; J. E. Page, Langston, Okla.; R. L. Smith, M. W. Mackenzie, Boston; M. and Mrs. W. H. Brown, N. J. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Boucher, Seatright, N. J.; Joseph Montgomery, Highland Falls; Isaac Lewis, Highland Falls; Warren M. Keels, Highland Falls.
Miss Lucy Shaw, a teacher in the public schools of Washington. D. C. Will be holiday in Iowa. The will be memorial of Mr. and Mrs. Doppe Wilmsh and Mrs. M. Witers of 26 West 152d street.
The Hotel Bellman's Benefolent Association has commenced extensive attributions on its building at 342 West 52th street, at a cost of $1,525. Tandy & Foster, architects.
James C. Thomas, the well-known undertaker of Harlem, and Captain Commery, the Provisional Regiment, is still holding his bed. It is expected that he will be able to leave his room this week.
Bible lectures for men under the auctions of the Parish Chapter of the brotherhood of Saint Andrew delivered Tuesday evening at 8:15 o'clock in St. Philip's Parish House, 215 West 133d street, Mr. Daniel's philosophical methods in dealing with intricate matters of the Bible interest among those who have been so fortunate to hear him, and a hearty welcome will be extended to all who are anxious to learn more of the wonderful teachings of the Holy Scripture.
A very interesting and amusing program was rendered by the Ladies' Aid Society of Harlem at Lenox Casino on Thursday evening. The large and elaborate program was treated to a dramatic recital by Prof. Harvey Baker, entitled "The Ghost from Hamlet. The piece was splendidly acted and acted by Prof. Baker, William Holland, and the Landelero" accompanied by Mrs. McDonald. A recitation by Mina Louise Bethune entitled "Yes, I Am Gravity," was next in order. Then the Lord Man, presented by Anche Thomas but the leading part and played it well.
The statement appearing recently in the local daily papers, which is said to have been inspired by the Thirty-sixth Street Branch of the so-called Harlem Tenants, which plan is on foot to oust Negroes living on 136th street, between Lenox and Seventh avenues, and another charge that the association is going to have a receiver appointed in connection with certain premises on the block are denied to the Tenants, the property owners, Adena C. E. Minot, who has given some of the white-property owners much concern by purchasing one of the finest houses in the block, denies that a Frank C. Tinell holds a mortgage against her tenant. The premise is threatened because of its connection with the Clio School.
Mardi Gras and Fancy Dress Carnival Friday evening, January 19, 1912, at the New Star Casino, 101th street and the New Star Casino, given by the Neighborhood Club. A fun place to establish a home for delinquent colored girls. Admiration, 50 cents; boxes $2 and $3. Officer of the club, Mrs. A. B. Reed, president; Mr. E. A. Reed, place of D. Smith, secretary; Mrs. William H. Tyler, assistant secretary; Mrs. C. F. Taylor, treasurer; Mrs. Rosa McClendon, chairman of reception committee. The King and Queen will vote. Each admission ticket has attached two voting coupons. The lady or gentleman receiving the highest number of votes over one hundred will be crowned that highest king and Queen of the carnival will receive a prize of two dollars in gold.
Equity Congress in session Sunday was treated by a delegation of Republican speakers, including Leader Frank Howers, Alderman Percy L. Davis and others, pled for the colored voter to show more honesty in the exercise of his citizenship rights, saying that it always required more than twice as much "dirty" money to carry a colored district than white on the ballot. Alderman Percy L. Davis were deavoring to disfranchise the colored voters in New York. Mr. Howers advocated a colored civil service school in Harlem, and promised to support such a move financially. He also offered to implement Alderman Percy L. Davis said the Tammany Half Democrats were against colored men on the police force and fire department, and promised to keep up his reputation for being a friend of the colored man. He also pledged to work New York politics and its relation to the Negro, and replied to an attack on Republicanism in a masterly manner.
Appointed Referee by Justice Porsh.
The Negroes of New York received signal recognition at the hands of Mrs Justice Porsh.
The Negroes of New York received signal recognition at the hands of Mrs Justice Porsh.
Lawyer Willford H. Smith referred in a lawsuits case pending in the Supreme Court, involving the sale of a high class apartment house on Washington Heights.
The Negroes of New York received signal recognition at the hands of Mrs Justice Porsh.
Specially Ready to sell them their interest if they
go to their interest if they
forward their names and address
with their business
Bond Committee: A. M. Raeon, B. West 138th St.; J. R. Good, 118
Nassau St.; C. D. Lloyd, 4-5 Court
Square, Brooklyn; C. Lloyd Butler,
438 West 5th St.; C. Franklin
Carr, 127 West 136th St.
Name
Address
City
Fill in the above space and mail at
one.
act 12:30
Save Money in Your Business
Have your accounts audited, and
systematic your work
Consult
MORRIS CITRIN
Public Accountant and Auditor
21 WEST 21ST STREET
Office of M. R. CITRIN
1500 S. 1500
TO LET-BROOKLYN
GTH ST. 233—Furnished room to man and wife. Private house; nice location. convenient. Call enrolings.
DOWNING ST. 4. Nice large room all light, hot and cold water, equivalent to "L" and trolley. Mrs. Austin. dec21-4t.
FULTON ST. 941. Neatly furnished room for man and wife, or lady; all improvements. See Granderson, enrolings only. dec7-4t.
GATER AVE. 293. Two elegant front rooms in private house, select neighborhood. Call or write Mrs. Mary R. Folded. dec21-4t.
HERKIMER ST. 296. Neatly furnished rooms in private house; for gentlemen only, convenient to "L" and trolley; rent reasonable. or t24-4t.
HERKIMER ST. 296. Large back room, neatly furnished, with heat and all improvements for gentlemen or married couple, private house.
QUINCY ST. 298. House, eight rooms and bath, all improvements. Inquiry 570 Quincy street. dec21-2t.
WASHINGTON AVE. 152. departments of rooms including improvements. Inquiry on premises, first dat.
TO LET- Flats and apartments, 4 rooms
and at baths at moderate rent. The location
Call or write B. P. Edmond, 26 Court st.
Brooklyn, N. Y. T. Tel. 7524 534. ars211
CARD OF THANKS
The funeral services of Robert L. Robinson, late of 240 West 40th street, held on November 26, 2014, at the Four Seasons Hotel, November 26, 2014, at Robert L. Robinson, widow of the deceased, wishes to thank her many friends and societies for their time and opportunity to reader such valuable services. To Dr. A. Carlton Powell, chair and associate of the funeral service, Miss Curtis W. Orr and Mrs. L. Ross Henson, not forgetting Mr. J. Mahood of Flushing, L. I. rosetnet.
IMPORTANT TO SCHOOL TEACHERS.
Many school teachers men and women earn only a small salary. I can help them to supplement their salary by working a short while after school hours and in other employment. For further information write A. R. Newart, Tuskewer Institute, Ala.
Judges in the administration of the high office. It will be recalled that a few judges have served as jury for the man as assistant for jury service for declaring he would not sit on the jury under the judge's forman. The appointment of Mr. Ruthie will be the recommendation of Hon. Chas. W. Anderson.
Tenth Assembly Club Opens Robins.
On Friday evening, December 15th, the Tenth Assembly District Club of the H. H. Garnet Republican Club of Brooklyn, the club rooms at 905 North street, Brooklyn, and well-wishers. An excellent vaudeville entertained was presented, under the management of Walter F. Abbott. The talent, which served to render the evening enjoyable, were Nodie B. Williams, Charles A. Algram, William M. Thoune and the Boozo Bronzes, under the management of James A. Heckton.
At the conclusion of the vaudeville concert, addresses were made by Judge Callaghan of the Sixth Municipal District, Charles F. Murphy, equitable member of the Tenth Assembly District, and Hon. Fred M. Ahern, Assemblyman from the Tenth Assembly; George E. Wibecan, A. B. Logan, and others. William F. Abbott, who has been an active influence in, for twenty years, received an affirmative agreement of all the assembly districts represented, as a candidate for a position in the city government.
WILLIAM&BRIDGE NOTE8.
John A. Smede entertained the Ladies Home Circle Wednesday, the Culture Club Friday the Williambridge Colored Men's Association gave an entertainment and rehearsal program for the program greatly applauded. Addresses were made by Mr. Black of the Y. M. C. A. Great interest is being taken in the Saturday night basketball games given by the Williambridge. "Gym" Last Saturday the boys played two games, the Williambridge. Seasons defeating the Salem-Crested Seniors, 3213, defeating the Williambridge, 206, defeated by the Laitttia Juslings, 20-6.
The weather nor the W. C. M. A. reception did not prevent a large attendance of the students to hear the Rev. B. T. Harvey lecture on "Men That I Have Met." The Rev. Gilbert Wilson preached an in-depth lecture on morning afternoon at the services of the mission.
The Laddie' Auxiliary services Sunday at Welcome Hall were attended by a large audience, Manhattan, Mrs. Gordon Watkins presented an excellent program, among which were a vocal solo by Mrs. William Terrell of paper, "Educational Instruction to Young Men" by George Johnson; baritone solo by Thomas W. Hawthorne; piano solo by Henrietta Morris; piano solo by Miss Marian Johnson; piano solo by Miss Mattie Johnson. These services are becoming more and each program improves upon the other.
NEWARK. N. J.
Special to THE NEW YORK ACE.
Newark, N. J., Dec. 20. The Young Women Christian Association, 186, Place 10, Newark, N.J.
John's M. E. Church, Academy street, Monday evening, which was attended with success, was preceded by the formal opening the Rev. W. R. Palmer, pastor of St. John's A.M., which marks were made by the Rev. A. A. Collins of St. James A. M. E. Church, Mrs. M. A. Collins, many years, and Mrs. Kline Cook, a well-known philanthropist in all Christian literate. At this meeting many new women were
We provide the value as stated. Standard American
music of the Dupuy, Vaucel and Simon Ferns.
Every hat guaranteed as represented
NEW YORK STORE MAY 15 AT $1.99
for this great value giving, not offer FREE choice of
website worth 50 cents, to every purchaser of a hat
saturday 11:11.
by Rail from New York. Philadelphia
Washington to Jacks-myville Fl. over
railway for
John, 30th street, noon December 27 h. Information
A. M. THOMPSON or his representative, 128 W. 53rd
sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays between 3 and 5
dec 7 3t.
To properly introduce this great new
pure Silk English Needles worth $50
... Friday and Saturday
$15 All the way by Rail from
phila and Washington to
Southern Railway for
Leaven Pena Starkm. Soth route
may be obtained from A. M. THOMPS
street, New York on Monday, Wedn
F.M.
The Webb-Draper Agency
Under the management of
JAMES L. CHRISTIANII
A large demand for high-class
Colored Servants by this Agency.
305 Stub St.
Phone 6238 811 990
Sunday 2 A.M.
TO LET
140 West 31st Street
MILLER
To properly introduce this great online giving, we offer FREE choice of
pure Sale style Nordic worth 50 coins, so every purchaser of a hat
... Friday and Saturday... LY.
$15 All the way by Rail from New York, Philadelphia and Washington to Jacksonville Fla. over Southern Railway for
Leaven Powns Starlin, 30th street room December 27 b. Information may be obtained from A. M. THOMPSON who representative, 128 W. 53rd street, New York on Monday, Wednesdays and Fridays between 3 and 5 P.M.
(8 days from Penn. Station)
Nearly furnished rooms hot and cold water baths
35TH NT. 35T. W.—Nearly furnished room,
hot and cold water, steam bath, bath,
paint house, permanent guest
only—dec14-35.
35TH NT. 35T. W.—Large and small
furnished room; price $2 and $3 a week.
Apply Warborough—dec14-47.
60TH NT. 117. W.—Near Columbus
avenue, neatly furnished room, quiet
neighborhood. H. Davis.
60TH NT. 141. W.—High-class apartments
of four and five rooms and bath; steam
bath; kitchen; neighborhood.
Neighborhood, inquire of jail on premise
—dec7-3moon.
60TH NT. 424. W.—Four large light rooms
for respectable colored families. $16;
for large light rooms. $50. See
Janitor.—dec22-47.
67TH NT. 28. W.—Amusement, best location
in New York; refined families only; near
sabay and elevated Rooms decorated to
salt Janitor.—dec16-tf.
119TH NT. 315. W.—Nitrate light rooms;
bath, steam, bat, hot water, privathall;
all improvements; moderate rooms;
all improvements; Eighth avenue.
Apply Janitor.—dec21-47.
119TH ST. 313 W. between 6th and Manhattan Ave. ; six light, light rooms, all improvement; steam heat, hot water supply private hall. Apply to jailor;—nov 23-4 l.
112TH ST. 37 W. near 110th street;—nov 23-4 l. steam heat, with all improvement steam heat, tall enclosure. Eggleston;—nov 20-4 l.
113TH ST. 4 E. Nestly furnished rooms for permanent guest. Mrs. K. Bittner.—dec 21 l.
in each month.
Welcome to all.
apr21-1y
ST. CYPRIANS CHAPEL, PROTECT
TANT KFISCOPAL, 177 W. 634
STREET.
RV. JNO. W. JOHNSON. Priest in
chapel.
Sunday services—11 m. and 8 p. m.
Sunday School 8:30 p. m.
A CORDIAL WELCOME TO ALL.
jun20-1y
ST. JAMES PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH.
132D ST. 122 W. Large neatly furnished room; thoroughly heated; moderate rest; private home.
132D ST. 158 W. Large furnished room; strictly private; all light. Mrs. Jennie Battier.
132D ST. 155 E. Second floor to let in private house; all convenient. Hot and cold room; running water, hot and cold in room; lamp and light. Terms also reasonable. dec14-2t.
135D ST. 162 W. Just opened, private house; neatly furnished room by day or work, running water, hot and cold in room; call a F. G. Morrison, prop.
126TH ST. 102 W. Very large, warmed front room, for man and wife or groommen; telephone service. dec12-2t.
163D ST. 449 W. Elegant four and five room apartments. All modern improvements. Supervised on premises. 444 West 212 street. dec14-4t.
SEVENTH AVE. 2290, corner 135th street. New, neat light, all front rooms; modern, well furnished, permanent or transept. L. Graham. dec14t.
7TH AVE. 586, between 41st and 42nd St. Nearly furnished rooms for transit or permanent goods. Convexed to all cars. Mrs. Anne A. Henry. dec14t.
The Mission Home for Industrious
Women wants several houseworkers to
fill positions as general houseworkers,
cooks, laundresses, waitresses and day
workers. Furnished rooms supplied
by the Mission Home for Industrious
Write or call 11 Cliff St, New Rochelle,
N. Y. Tel. 2203 N. R.
IN MEMORIAM.
RANDOLPH.—Rarah, in loving memory of my
beloved sister, Sarah Randolph, who
wrote December 22, 1810, at Petersburg, Va.
23.8 Saven'b Ave.
Just a whisper width of 135ft.
TO LET
HELP WANTED.
IN MEMORIAM.
- The strife is over, the battle done;
- The victory of life is won;
Other Stairs 817 Wentchester Ave
57 Bromyard
RELIGIOUS
ABBESIANIAN BAPSTEST CHURCH. 242-
FOR 40th ST. 5th, between 7th and 5th
BASILICAN.
Sunday Service—11 a. m. and 7.30 p. m.
Holy Communion every first Sunday at
1 a. m. and 7.30 p. m. Sunday School
2 p. m. Sunday Morning Band prayer
meeting 6 a. m.
Weekly prayer Meetings—Tuesday and
Friday at 8 p. m.
R. Y. P. U. at 8 p. m. Thurdays.
UNITY MISSION SERVICE—Second Wed.
m. day in each month at 8 p. m. Rev.
A. C. Powell, D. D. Pastor, residence
225 W. 134th street; phone, Morningside,
450b. At home from 1 to 2 p. m. daily
and Thursday from 1 to 7 p. m.
MOTHER A. M. E. ZION CHURCH. 127
M. BOLDE. M. BOLDE.
Past 24, 140th street. 147
Sunday services—11.00 a.m. and 7.45 p.m.
Holy communion, every second Sunday at
11 a.m.
Sunday Morning Class - 12.30 p. m. m. Christian
Express, 6.20
MARKER METHODIST EPISCOPAL
NEW YORK, near Eighth Ave.
NY 10038
Egyptian League—Sunday at 6:30 p. m.
Junior League Friday at 4 p. m.
Basketball League Sunday evenings
at 8:30 and Sunday at 1
Holy Communion—Second Sunday evening
457 West 51st street, bet. Sth and 5th
and 6th floors of New York City.
Bryan William Lawnow. "Rated
Supply."
Preparing at 11 p. and 8 p. m. Prayer
welling Wednesday at 11 p. at
Sunday School at 1 p. m. Y. P. B. C. 7
p. m. Sundays.
Sunday at 11 p. Sunday in each
MT. OLIVET KAPSTHIST CHURCH.
158-161 West $5d street, between 6th and 7th avenue.
Rew. W. P. Hayes, D. D., pastor.
Pronaching Services every Sunday at 11 o'clock a. m. and 7.80 p. m.
Sunday School at 2.30 p. m. Sundays.
B. Y. P. U. meet every Sunday at 5.30
B. Y. P. U. Literary meet every Wednesday at 8 p. p.
The Church Meeting on Friday evening at 8 p. p.
Church Aid society second Monday evening in every month.
Young Social Club every month on third Monday evening.
Vidalia are made welcome.
11 k. m. Franchising 2 p. m. Sunday
Schools 3 p. m. B. I. F. U. 7. 30
Praoching
Second Sunday evening in each month
Communion
Thursday evening of each week—The
Garden of Literary Society (Literary
Exercise).
Principal Meeting each Friday evening at 8 p.m.
Pastor's residence. 290 West 90th street.
Telephone 10290 Columbus
LET YOUR CHILD LEARN BUSINESS.
The children of white people begin their
business career by selling papers and other
items from a small way. I can start your son or
daughter out in a profitable business. For
further information address A. R. K. Wurt,
Tunkerwurt Institute, Ala.
Mike of human HAIR wholesale and retail.
Hall of our store description made up of
dressers, hairstylists, and dressers started in business for 95. Kansas and belts goods at special low prices. Mail
over a attended to
Mike of MESSING PANLORS
Formally starts under mine management
dial 72W. 133d St., New York
J. R. Lyle's Barber Shop, 1820 Dean street.
Thompson's Barber Shop, Rochester avenue
Barn Barber Shop, 772 Fulton street.
B. Wright. Barber Shop, 400 Ralph avenue.
Simon's Barber Shop, 9 Hull street.
Basil F. Glorer's Barber Shop, 1718 Fulton street.
Basil F. Glorer's Barber Shop, 1718 Fulton street.
Programme teachers from all over this country are seeking for our hosts of Diahann Richard Allen, Hon. Frederick Douglas and Dr. Rooker T. Washington, to be placed in their school rooms in Christmas presents to their pupils. Our agents Mr. J. M. Smith, sold 18 beds to one school for the several rooms in Mordant. His people, this proud of the will supporcing a gift of this kind will welcome a Negro in your school room, office or home? If not, one will be sent to you immediately upon receipt of price. Daily $1.25 each. Eleven inches in height, and of perfect likeness. Insatisfaction guaranteed. Modelled by Inner Hathaway, sculptor. Against warrant, everywhere.
NATIONAL, APO-ART CO., 1224 YOU ST. N. W. Washington, D. C.
N. S. FELDMAN Importing Tailor AND THEATRICAL COSTUMER
Clothing to Order, as You Order
A NEW STOCK OF FALL AND WINTER GOODS
... NOW ON HAND ...
A Saving of $2 50 to $8.10 on a suit
523 SIXTH AVENUE (North of 31st Street) NEW YORK
Guaranteed best value in town
Special attention to mail orders
It rids the scalp of dandruff by destroying the dandruff germs, invigorates the scalp, cultivates the roots of the hair and produces a new and luxurious growth of soft silken hair.
Mme. Ceruti has 19 years' experience and is the only Cultivist who handles the Creole Crimpy Hair. It is a perfect match to the most curly hair. She also handles the Britain natural wavy hair.
PRICE is 00 with Cream and Shampoo
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It rids the scalp of dandruff by de-
ates the scalp, cultivates the roots
luxurious growth of soft silken hair
Mme. Coruti has 19 years' exp
handles the Creole Crimpy Hair. I
hair. She also handles the Britain
PRICE is 00 with C
Wanted 100 Live Agents—Ag
Call o address
Phone 2659 Harlem
FOR $20
A Complete Course in Millinery.
Begin now, and be ready for Spring
work. Evening classes, 7 to 10.30,
except nature. Will arrange for
out-of-beware Pupils.
LEO HAT SHOP.
379 Sixth Ave. Near 23d St.
st. dec 14-47 L. L. HARDIN, Prop.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE - Three-story and basement brick. 10 rooms; all improvements. Call 212-765-3200. Apply "Forgi." New York Age office.
A BARGAIN.
Will macrize magnificent black fur set, latest Paris design, for one-quarter value. For particular address M. M., 425 W. 51st Street, New York, N. Y. 647-2328.
WANTED
WANT to dispose of my diamond pia, worth $55, loaned $12, ticket $5. Dispose, 247 W. 46th street.
WANTED—Table boarders, special home cooking, $8.50 weekly;继 family, Mrs. Mimmin, 221 W. 134th street.del-14-47.
An. Unusual Opportunity
T. buy an excellent Steinway Baby Grand Piano of beautiful tone, at small cost. For particular, address
B. N. BROOKS
201 Clifton Place Brooklyn, N.Y.
FURS
Hudson Seal Coats, value $15, only 5 50
Pernan Lamb Coats, value $17,50 only 15
Poney Coats, value $58, only 27
Marmot Coats, value $68, only 30
Short Lynx Coats, value $40, only 22
Russian Lynx Coats, value $20, only 6 50
Painted Fox Sets, value $45, only 10
Red Fox Sets, value $30, only 20
Raccoon Sets, value $30, only 10
**IF** We do repairing and exchanging at reason-
able price.
Siberian Fur Shop
et 249 Murray Hill 20 5 W. 40th Street
Straighten Your Own Nair
WITH
If your hair falls out, in this about the temples, is affected by the harshness of the climate or otherwater Secure at once one of Mine. Ceruti's Cultivator Comb, a jar of her African Cream and Tar Shampoo. Will have a life-time.
The Ceruti Cultivator Comb is her invention. It is made of highly magnetized steel, nickle plated in perfectly sanitary and constructed on non-antic lines. Absolutely harmless, destroying the dandruff germs, invigorating of the hair and produces a new air and persistence and is the only Cultivator who it is a perfect match to the most curly natural wavy hair.
Cream and Shampoo
Gents earn from $3 to $10 a day.
D. GRANT, Mgr.
6 W. 134th Street, New York City.
OUT OF HIGH RENT DISTRICT YOU SAVE HELP
50
69
FOR COMPLETE RENT
MOTORCYCLE
OPERATED AN ACCOUNT
LAHN
MME. S. MACKEY LATIMER
HAIR DRESSING PARLOR
MANICURING. Manage. Scalp Treatment.
Human Hair Goods for Sale and in Order
Combustion Made Up. Work Satisfactory.
237 & 239 West 1344th St.
nov 23m
NEW YORK CITY
Sam's Second-Hand Shop
492 NINTH AVENUE
(Between 73th and 33th Streets, N.Y.)
You will get everything in Gown,
Dress Suits and Furn at the above
shop; also House Furnishings.
est 26 Jan.
FEVER DESTROYED MER HAIR
Two years ago I had had which caused
my hair. I used your Furnishings and gave
it to the Poisonous L. Gown. I came to
St. George, MN.
reserved for himself and for the state
reserved for himself and for the state
reserved for himself and for the state
Lake When John Lester is in a body
immediately upon application. After
that about these conditions, he may and
may be the Governor of the State
Grant.
Says Demand is Offense Mode For White
Walwens at Pardon ...Liam Good Leaf-
ed Walwens Are Hard to Find
Special to THE NEW YORK ACK.
PIRRAUSC, Pa., Dec. 19.—All the colored waiters at the Rittenhouse cafe, one of the leading restaurants in this city, have been discharged and their phones filled by white men. The Rittenhouse Cafe is the last of the big eating phones to dispense with the services of colored waiters, and the latest removal of Negro help has occasioned much talk.
An Ace representative called on W. R. Kuhn, the senior member of the Rittenhouse establishment, who freely discussed the matter. He stated that his firm had always advocated a square deal for colored workmen and referred to the fact that the concern still had colored help in its employ, but admitted that it was to the best interest of the cafe that white men were installed in the dining room.
Upon being asked if the change was made at the demand of the patrons, Mr. Kuhn said: "Such a demand is seldom made, but in serving outside parties quite often we are asked to send white waiters. Of course in most cases it is left to the discretion of the house." Mr. Kuhn spoke of a party given recently in Pittsburgh in which the host gave as his reason for wanting white waiters was that he desired them to dress as Japanese. According to Mr. Kuhn the request for white waiters is generally made by Jews.
It was denied by Mr. Kuhn that the colored waiters were discharged because one of them rified the cash register, as had been rumored. While he admitted that the cash register had been robbed several times he declared that these incidents had nothing to do with the removal of Nestroes.
Mr. Kuhn concluded the interview by saying that good colored waiters were hard to find in Pittsburgh; that many Negroes who stop driving wagons, etc., put on a good suit of clothes and apply for jobs as waiters when they are not worth $1.50 a day.
John F. Pinkney, the first Negro employed as headwaiter at the Rittenhouse Cause, and who is now engaged in business for himself, deplores the ousting of colored waiters in the leading cafes of Pittsburgh, and coincides with Mr. Kuhn in that there is much room for improvement among colored waiters from headwaiter down.
BACH TO THE PENTENTIARY
University Assistant of Dr. Washington
Supported for Wife Desertion
Unable to Secure a Bondman.
Special to THE NEW YORK AGR.
NEWARK, N. J., Dec. 19.—On complaint of the Children's Aid and Pro-tective Society of the Oranges, Henry A. Ulrich, Dr. Washington's assailant, pleaded guilty on December 6th of wilful neglect and desertion of nis wife and two minor children. Ulrich was arraigned before County Court Judge Davis, in Newark.
The following sentence was imposed upon Ulrich: "That he placed on probation in the custody of the Chief Pro-Probation Officer of Essex County, John J. Guscoyne, for a term of three years and to furnish a bona fide bond of $1,000, to pay $10 a week to the Probation Officer of Essex County during that term for the support of his wife and children."
In default of furnishing the bond, Ulrich is to stand committed to the Essex County Penitentiary at Caldwell, New Jersey, for one year or until such time as he can furnish the bond within that time. It is said that Ulrich has thus for been unable to secure a proper bondment in Essex County and that he will stand committed to the penitentiary to serve out his sentence.
SYRACUSE, N. Y.
Buracca, N. Y., Dec. 20.—Mrs. Farren entertained a few friends at whilst at her home in Cedar street last Wednesday evening.
The Salt City Social Club was entertained by Miss Helen Karr at the house of Mrs. W. Q. Rogers on East Browns street last Thursday night. Karr a gracious hostess and a large number were present to enjoy the evening. Thursday night, December 21, Mrs. Thomas Hazard, of East Adelaide street, will be the hostess of the club.
The first big ball and reception of the New Year will be given Monday night, January 1, by the J. H. Foraker Co. No. 4, U. R. K. P, at Freeman's Hall. The committee handling the affair is William Beach, Thad. Smith and Cust. James A. Sanford.
The Bethapy Baptist Choral Union held its first monthly musical at the church last Thursday night. An excellent program was given which all attended.
The Willing Worker Club is planning to hold an open house Thursday night, December 28. They have arranged a good program for the event and cordially invites the public to the event.
Singer Johnson, employed at the Hotel for some time, has secured a position in New York City.
Singer Lillian White is the guest of honor in Binghamton, N. Y., for the event.
Bruce and Mrs. Glen C. Shell entered the Bathynah Choral Union and joined the Sunday evening in the Bedford nipa, Miss Trypheline of Columbia, S. C., who has their guest for several months who expects to return to her home at Miss who enjoyed the evening of the Minneapolis Anderson, Jen-Charleston, Wilmington Butler, Jane and Mary Crocher, Mary Geaselman, Tyrannus, Rita Duncan, Frances and Sandra, Percy and William, and Mason, Albert and Barbara, Caldwell, Harrington, David, S. A. Bronson.
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Ladies' Hair Dressing Parlors
MANUFACTURER OF HUMAN HAIR CARE
Afro-American Hair Goods a Specialty
All kinds of Wigs, Frank Thorne and Stephens in South, and Made in Orlando that indent promptly filled out from any part of the country. Just now.
The Kelsay School of Beauty Culture and Hair Dressing
(15 Years' Experience; 7 at Whitier Hall, Columbia University.
New York City)
Teaches all Branches known to the Hairdresser's Art.
A thoroughly equipped Parlor; catering to a select patronage, connected with the School. All day sessions.
Night sessions Thursdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays, 7 to 9.30. A thorough practical Course given to pupils in their own homes. Diplomas awarded.
Send for Booklet-Directory of recently graduated students.
SAMUEL A. KELSET, President
Ben A. CANTER HELSET, Director
Dr. WIL. J. CANTER, Superintendent
328 Lenox Avenue (126th St.)
oct 19-3mo
New York City
CARRY a full line of Human Hair in every conceivable style. Transformations, Puffs, Switches, etc. Give me a trial on my FIRST and SECOND QUALITY HAIR GOODS. No third quality. Prices moderate.
QUINADE
A Perfect Hair Dressing
QUINADE will make the
Dandruff and keep the scalp in
PRICE
A liberal sample
SEEBY'S QU
A comb made of specially the
proper degree of heat, used in or
remove the curl from and strai
PRICE
Seeby Dru
sept 21-30
79 BAST 130TH
The J. G. HUMAN H
A Perfect Hair Dressing and Hair Tonic Combined
QUINADE will make the Hair soft and pliable. Will cure
Dandruff and keep the scalp in a clean, healthy condition:
PRICE 25 CENTS
A liberal sample sent on application.
A comb made of specially tempered metal so as to retain the proper degree of heat, used in conjection with our Quinade, will remove the curl from and straighten the hair. PRICE 50 CENTS
sept 21-30 79 EAST 130TH STREET, N.Y. CITY
The J. G. HUMAN HAIR GOODS PARLOR
Puff on half moon shape 50c
honor of Miss Marguerite A. Reynolds Thursday afternoon.
Attorney M. Raymond Atwell was given a pleasant birthday surprise last Tuesday night by a large number of friends. Mrs. Atwell was the principal offender, but it is believed that she had some accomplices and that the case was framed up by them. A pleasant evening was spent in the playing of games. Refreshments were served, after which remarks were made by several of those present. A number of useful presents were received.
WILLIAMSPORT, PA.
Williamsport, Pa., Dec. 20.—The Adult Bible Class held a special meeting Wednesday night at 725 Park avenue to elect officers. The election resulted as follows: Albert Dockens president; T. Floyd Taylor, secretary and assistant teacher; David Kilson, vice-president; John C. Harrison, treasurer; William Branson, teacher; Dr. Joseph T. Beete, historian; Albert Colson and M. R. Steele, social committee; William M. Robinson, journalist. Among others who took part were Wm. Payne and C. Clay. Very able addresses were delivered by the Rev. Dr. G. W. Williams, pastor of Bethel Church, and Mr. Harris, superintendent of the Sunday School. After the meeting a very tasty lunch was served Mr. Rebecca Robinson and Mrs. O'Brien. Mrs. Martha Fisher, on Spruce street, was unexpectedly called to the bedside of her mother Sunday, who is very ill at her hme in Virginia. Mrs. Fisher will be joined by her sister en route at Harrison, Pa.
Mrs. Hattie Jones, on Maple street, will leave the city on Friday with her son, Harry, for Jacksonville, Fla., to spend the holidays with her brother-in-law, Dr. Anderson, the dentist.
The sudden death of Mrs. Jennie Tilman, at her late home on Washington street, Saturday morning, after an illness lasting only two days, has thrown a gloom over the entire city. The deceased, who was loved and respected by all who knew her, was one of the oldest members of Salem A. M. M. K. Church, and for years has been a member of the choir. The funeral services were held Monday at 2:30 p.m. of Salem Church, the Rev. M. A. Shalom, for adoring attending. The deceased leaves a brother and a host of friends to mourn her loss.
If you have not the time to stop at 7:36 Park avenue to get The Age, call up William H. Robinson, 211-7 and he will gladly deliver the name to your name.
Rinsing and Hair Tonic Combined
the Hair soft and pliable. Will cure
up in a clean, healthy condition:
E 25 CENTS
applse sent on application.
QUINACOMB
ally tempered metal so as to retain the
in conjunction with our Quinade, will
straighten the hair.
E 50 CENTS
rug Company
90TH STREET, N.Y. CITY
HAIR GOODS PARLOR
2478 Eighth Ave.
Bet. 132nd & 133rd St.
NEW YORK
Switches, Pompacours, Hair Goods of every description at unheard of prices to advertise our new location. Ladies' Combing made up in any style. Hair dyeing, bleaching. Old hair pieces renovated or re-made.
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y.
Saratoga Springs, N. Y., Dec. 20.—Mrs. M. J. Harrell of Cambridge, Mass., was called to the bedside of her daughter, Mrs. Jessie Fishburn, who has been quite ill, but is now convalescing and able to be downstairs Sunday for the first in two weeks. Services at Mt. Olivet Baptist Church, the Rev. J. W. Fishburn, B.D., pastor, were well attended. The pastor preached in the morning from the 25th psalm and in the evening from "The Necessity of Knowing the Law." Many of our members and friends are leaving to spend the holidays in other parts, among them being Mrs. S. Holmes, Miss Lillian Pope and Miss Edna Wayland. The Rev. Polk, ex-pastor of the A. M. E. Zlon Church, is proving to be the man for the church.
PLAINFIELD. N. J
Regular Correspondence of The Ace.
Plainfield, N. J., Dec. 20—Mrs. Wm.
Mayhew, 535 West 4th street, who has been ill for five weeks, is improving.
Those who like good things from afar were highly entertained at the Lyceum Sunday. The Rev. M. Gunnur, of Hillburn, N. Y., delivered one of his famous discourses in "Influence", which was very inspiring and highly appreciated. Dr. J. C. Anderson and Mr. A. B. Cosey, of New York also made some very timely remarks. The choir sang the Great White Throne, which held the audience spellbound. The Lyceum quartet sang Come Unto Me. Mrs. Liggins and Stearns, Messrs. Ganaway and Lambert compose one of the Lyceum's quartets. The critic, N. Pollard, was at his best. Too much praise cannot be given this program which was in charge of Mrs. Stuie Snars.
Mrs. H. Scott, of Darby, Pa., is spending a few days with her daughter, Mrs. E. W. Grobes, of 607 West 3d street.
Mrs. E. Johnson, 768 Webster place has returned home from New Boston, Mass. She reports a pleasant trip. While there she was the guest of Mrs. Oliver Perry. The Dramatic Club was entertained Mozday evening by Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Maury at their home on Webster place. The playing of cards was the feature of the evening, which lasted until a late hour. After the game an elaborate collation was served. Morn-
If you buy Hair, buy only such which is guaranteed to stand combing. Special sale on Cluster Puffs worth $2.00, now while they last 98c
SWITCHES- Three Switches come in all sizes and shapes can be combined without having any loss of hair. 75c. $1.00. $1.50. $.00. $ 50 and up.
Mme. Baum's Straightening Comb
Rest on the market. Will not bore or break the hair. $1.00. Objects at 25c. 50c. 75c
Mme. Baum's Old Rustable Mair Tonik—For falling hair and Dandruff
50c per bottle.
Straightening Pomade—25c. 50c per jar. Face Cream of all kinds.
Mail orders filled to any part of the country. We match any shade of hair;
none too difficult. Send us your order as a sample of hair and be convinced.
Also manufacturing of Hair Goods of all kinds Practical instruction under Mina, bouns's own supervision. Unlimited practice. Complete courses Twenty Dollars ($30).
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CORONET PUFFS—All shades; can be
confined without losing hair. 50c 75c
$1.00, $1.10 a dip.
TRAN-FERMATION—For bifurc or all
strokes the breasts in all shades.
Can be dried for losing hair.
10c 15c, 20c, 25c 40c, 50c up.
SWITCHES—These Switches come in all sizes and loss of hair. 75c. $1.00. $1.50. $
SINGLE PONPADOUB- Used as front or back piece. All shades. Made on wire. Special 34c, 75c, 51 00, 1.50 and up. Will mand combing.
COMB $1.99 STOVE 3hr
Price complete $1.99
Mme. Baum's Str
Red on the market. Will not burn or be
Mme. Baum's Old Reliable M
50 per bottle.
Streetkeeping Promoade—St. Nc. po-
Mail orders filled to any part of it a
none too difficult. Send us your order
Mme. Baum's School of Masoning,
Also manufacturing of Hair Goods
under Mme. Baum's own supervision.
Twenty Dollars ($20).
HP Hairdressing and Psychedal Sash
days. 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Masonry from 7 a.m. to 1 p.
The Baum Hall
the MONTHLY AYUMEN
One minute walk from Mme-Pu-
here present were: Mr. and Mrs. C.
J. Mackay, Dr. and Mrs J. C. Anderson,
Miss B. Chaguan, Miss A. Mann,
Miss R. Johnson, R. Serven, W.
Groven Dr. G. P. Witte, J. W. Maury,
W. J. Willis, Guest of H. hester,
Mr. and Mrs G. Witte, Miss M. Winn and
Joseph Robinson.
Mr. Mary Sackville and Mrs H. Sebannah,
of Sackville, H. by the queens of the
st. and the st. M. A. Sackville
of the st.
O
CORONET BRAIDS—For all around the head, all shades. Can be combed with out losing any hair. Special. $1.00, 1.50, 2.00, 2.50, 3.00, 5.00 and up.
DIN·M PUFFS—Oblong can be combed with out losing hair; ad aides. Special. $1.00, 1.50, 2.00 per class.
CRESCENT PUFFS—Same as above. Cut shape like a ball moon. Contains ab, ut 18 puffs
en-shaped sheds can be combed without having
50, $.00, $.50 and up.
DOUBLE POMPADOUR—For all around the bead. All shades 75c. $100. 1.50. 2.00 and up. Will stand combing.
CRIMPY BANGS—Made on wire 15c. 25c. 5c per piece. Can be combed.
WIG, POMPADOUR or Natural parted, all shades. Made of natural human, soft, glossy hair which can be combed and washed. $8.00, $5.00, $8.00, $10.00, $20.00, $25.00 and up.
straightening Comb
b ask the hair, $1.00. Others at 2c. $0c. 75c.
Flair Tonic—For falling hair and Dandruff
per jar. Face Cream of all kinds.
In the country, We match any shade of hair;
under as a sample of hair and be convinced.
Wig, Hairdressing, Facial, Soap Treatment
code of all kinds Practical instruction
in Unlimited practice. Complete course
Treatment done by experts. Hours; Week
to 1 p.m.
Hair Emporium
(30th & 31th St) NEW YORK
France, and Long Island Depot
EAST ORANGE, N. J.
Best Orange, N. J., Dec. M—Keystone Lodge, G. F. O., of O. F. of East Orange wishes to thank its many friends, Patamarche No. 1 of N. Y., and the adjacent lodges for their generous patronage in attending the 16th anniversary held at new edifice, Bennett Hall, Brooklyn, N. J. Newport M. The second group but less great: White Plains M. Pinehurst, Nassau Beach, N. J.
A beautiful house on a beautiful Grown
with RUBY POMADE—Tousands have done
it—So can you.
With unique Right Pomade—Looks for the 'Ruby Lamp'
people mark on the label—all others are installed.
Pink Child Drug Place on SLC, 924, just, double quantity.
15 year drought does not have to provide article him to
is for you. Write to our Main Office for PNRE-ANVIE.
BAER and SBYDES 15th and Tasker St.
PHILADELPHIA, PENNIA
Undertakers
Open Day and Night
S. C. THOMAS
STAKER AND EMBALMER
Street
123 EAST 18TH STREET
New York City
Tel. 2662 Gramercy
CAMP CHAINS AND CDACHES TO LET FOR ALL PURPOSES
R. R. MONT & CO.
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Building: 32 West 123rd Street
Department of bodies given special attention. Camp chaise
apt and courtese service. Modern conveniences; open
monographer in office
jun 29-31
Mottery Public
CARR
Actor
BARLOR
ANY FIRM
NT
New York
Midway House 2366 Columba
MIDWAY FURNITURE
W. David Brown
HIGH GRADE
Funeral Director and Embalmer
1 graphenmille, material and services of the best
Funeral Parlor and Chapel
146 WEST 53RD STREET
Between 6th and Seventh Avenues
Madam Brown in attendance at Funeral
Branch Parkers, 613 Washington Street
Newark, N.J.
dec 13-19
Telephone 2300 Marlton
Telephone 2076 Harlem
JAMES C.
UNDERTAKER
89 West 134th Street
Near Lennox Avenue NEW YORK
LADF ATTENDANT. CAMP CHARLES
mar 1-23v
Telephone 3718 Columbus
REV. R. R.
FUMERAL
0a Office: 200 West 33rd Street
Embalming and shipment of bed
and coaches to hire. Prompt and courte
day and night. Public stenographer i
89 West 134th Street BRANCH
123 EAST 8TH STREET
New Lease Avenue New York City Tel. 2602 Gramery
LADY ATTENDANT. CAMP CHAINS AND COACHES TO LET FOR ALL PURPOSE
or 1-3-2
Phone 6477 Morningide Notary Public
C. FRANKLIN CARR
Funeral Director
LARGE FUNERAL PARLOR
NOT CONNECTED WITH ANY FIRM
LADY ATTENDANT
127 W. 1850 St.
New York
dst 1:30
Uptown Office Phone
276 Harlem
OFFICE ALL HOURS
Downtown Office Phone
1776 Montgomery
DOWNTOWN FUNERAL
TURNER & HOLMES
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
267 West 35th St.
Fountain W. 35th St.
7 K. 139th S
Every registrant for the burial of the dead.
R. Mishler, presidents, up to date Undertakers.
MRS. K. WILSON & SONS. K. BALDWIN, Permanent
cust 17-30
Phone 6477 Morning
J. WESLEY LANE
Undertaker & Embalmer
112 W.132nd Street
Near Lanex Ave.
Open all night. Funeral Parlor and Chapel free. Lady in attendance. Funeral service.
Moderate rates. Jun 1-June
Not with hot water. But do it with (Kink-no-more) the greatest hair straightening preparation on earth. Kink-no-more will straighten the kinkiest kind of hair. Think about it—a preparation that all you have to do apply it on the hair and write it down. It will not stay on your hair, not to stay for one day or one week, but to heat from one day to eight months. Water not nothing else will make it kink again after it has been straightened. Kink-no-more is a wonder worker. So marvellous does it do its work that one can hardly believe their hair works the magic, and maybe because the hair is straightened in the world like it. We offer a reward of $100 for any head of hair the Kink-no-more will not straighten.
LUCK IS IN YOUR HAND
Send birth-date and $5c. for Home
scope. These Question Answer
Clairvoyantly. Call or write.
Klank-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; positively removes dandruff; provides a furious growth of healthy hair and helps it to grow. But that Klank-no-more is sold under a guarantee to do all that is claimed for it or money refunded. We will send to anyone on the receipt of $1.00 a; regular size box of Klank-no-more, enough toighten from one to two heads of hair. When ordering send registered letter, post, money order, or cash. Mail to: Larkin Meadows offices offered to hepals. Write to day for special thrush. Browse 2 cost changes to reply. Agents wanted everywhere. Address Stephen & James, 1819 Burton
Try Macy Re Hair Reserver and Dandrel Curr. Your hair cannot grow until you remove the dandrel. Macy Re Hair Reserver and Dandrel Curr can do that. Price, 25c. Mail adorned by M. M. MASON
453 Lennon Ave. New York City
Hair Goods Retail at Wholesale Pricon. Mail orders promptly attended to. 10 a.m. 10 p.m.
A FREE SAMPLE
of my REMEDY for the HAIR will be sent with advice on the Scrap and Hair if you will need your name, address and stamp
W. A. JOHNSON, D.S.
401 Seward Avenue
BOSTON, MASS, U.S.A.
A visit will convince you that our School is the largest, oldest and best equipped in the world. First, we guarantee and refund your money and the small sum of $35.00 will start you. Our Taxi cab Service is second to none. We have some of the best equipped cars in the city, and we solicit your patronage.
BROSSON RIVER BROADWAY
J. A. DOEBS, M.D.
Telephone No. Burton
FIRST CLASS FURNISHES FOR FIRST CLASS MIL
Atlantic Servant Exchange
1 WEST 100TH STREET, near Fifth A.m.
Your full fee refunded if not placed.
Im No. F. S. GRANT Prow
Information," by Wm. L. Edwards, and
a "image note" by A. Brown.
A Christmas wigwam on Christmas
night.
Hundreds guests on Tuesday night
at the A. M. A. Church.
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STRAIGHTEN YOUR HAIR
A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
Your Sock is Bry and You Know R.
A FREE SAMPLE
of my REMEDY for the
HAIR will be sent with
advice on the Scrap and
Hair if you will need your
name, address and stam
W. A. JOHNSON, D.S.
681 Shannon Avenue
BOSTON, MASS, U.S.A.
A LIFE THIS POSITION FOR YOU. GOOD PAY
This Paper Free for one year
We want you for Manager of our Co-operative Business.
The only security school in that area must be suitable
for four shores and pay $1 monthly. Send message
for full particulars.
MRS. IDA WHITE-DUNCAN
19 Prescott St. Jersey City, NJ.
HAIR WORKER
Wife, Brink, Bunny, Pemphamphure and Com-
bines up in the latest style. Sculpt. Trust-
ment. Shannonston Hair Dressing. Dane Hamm-
ger. Hairdresser. Collected Pince in Com-
bines. Hairdresser. Collected Pince in Com-
bines. Browd Gillette. New York Street New Raven. Cemeter. J. A. Hammerson Agent.
School for Corset Making
Tuition $20. Morning and Evening
Classes. Write or call to arrange
orma, MRS. HELEN CURTIS,
act 5 June 223 Warner 134th St.
M. Langhorn, Mr. and Mrs. Puren, Mr. and Mrs. Trott, R D., Mr. and Mrs. Robertson.
LIMA, O.
Lima, Ohio, Dec. 19.—Mrs. Shawru, who has been visiting in Cleveland, brought her daughter back with her. Since of the special fondness of Sister of the special fondness of Sister of the special fondness of the A. M. in Church will be a witness by Mary Galway, a guest on the program.
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H. Adolph Howell
UNDERTAKER AND ENGALINE
22 W. 1334 St., New York
FUNeral Pallor
LAST STATEMENT
DURD SERVICE
MOSQUITE DATE
all Hours
BENJ, F. JONES
Undertaker & Embalmer
639 SHAWMUT AVE.
Boston, Mass.
oct 6 June
ARTHUR Q. MARTIN
Undertaker & Embalmer
178 BOSTON ST. BROOKLYN, N.Y.
Special Attention 10 Shipment of Bedding
South. First class Service. Open Day and
night.
Consult the best Chairvoyant—Removes Evil Influence, brings Quid Results. Positive satisfaction guaranteed. Mme. Julia, Australia Gypsy just returned: 423 SIXTH AVENUE near 36th Street. Fee 28 cents. ang. 12
CAAN DRUG CO.
Prescription Specialists
613-514 Lexington Ave.
Noir 12th St.
Prescription carefully compounded by high
clair chromite. The only drug store in this
position that is OPEN ALL NIGHT.
oct Dates
NEW AND UP-TO-DATE
Auto School
2 West 90th Street
(Firmly MORE BADGE, 57 West 90th St.)
DR. J. R. HILLERY
CHIROPODIST
Office: 152 West 1224 Street.
Special attention given in the treat-
ment of the feet.
MRS J. R. BOLSEN, Musicians
041 12-0m
CAN'T SEE WELL? SEE ME.
We publish articles when your urgent life,
disturbance asks for your attention.
MRS J. R. BOLSEN, Optometrist,
Physical Rehabilitation.
15 West 1224 St., NEW YORK CITY