New York Age
Thursday, March 5, 1914
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
BETTER ACCOMMODATIONS FOR NEGROES ON SOUTHERN RAILROADS
Booker T. Washington Writes Letter to The Age on the Subject
VOL. XXVII No. 23
BETTER ACCOMMEN
NEGROES ON SOU
Booker T. Washin
to The Age
WHAT RAILROAD MEN SAY
Heads of Several Lines Operating in the South Admit the Negro Is Not Getting Square Deal in Way of Transportation
SUGGESTS A 'RAILROAD DAY'
Tushegeeon Believes Railroad Officials
Are Now Willing to Cooperate with
Newly-Imposed Conditions
Railroad officials of lines operating in the South are in a state of mind and willing to recognize the justice of the Negro's claim for better accommodations on trains and in railroad stations, in the statement made by Dr. Booker T. Washington, principal of Tuskegee institute, in a letter to The Age.
Dr. Washington, in his letter, says that if the Negro citizens go about it in the right way they will be able to do away with what has been a long source of complaint.
The Tuskegee suggests that Negro citizens set aside one day in the year, to be known as "Railroad Day," when members of the race throughout the country might go to the officials of railroads, wherever conditions demanded such action, and seek the co-operation of the railroad heads to improve conditions.
Dr. Washington's letter follows:
To the Editor of The Age:
Some months ago I sent out marked copies to railway officials in every part of the South of an article written for the Century Magazine in which I referred to the most treatment of colored people on railroads. In addition a letter was written, calling attention to the portion of the article marked.
It might interest those of our people who are seeking to improve the bad conditions that exist on many railroads to read some of the replies from these officials to these communications. In one case, for example, the president of the railroad had a copy of the Century Magazine article placed in the hands of every officer on his road.
I am asking that you publish the extracts from these letters, because a little later on it is my purpose to urge our people to set aside one day in the year that might be called "Railroad Day," upon which throughout the country wherever conditions demand it we can go to the officials of the railroads and speak to them about the bad conditions that exist with a view of our co-operating with these railroad officials in order to bring about better conditions.
I think the extracts from these letters indicate that the railroad officials are now in a state of mind where in most cases they are willing to recognize the justice of our claim for better things; in fact, some of them have already acted.
When the proper time comes, we should take up with the officials concerned, the matter of accommodations provided in restaurants, sitting rooms, street cars, steam cars, steamboats, etc. For the present, I am giving you these extracts for publication in order to show that there is an opportunity, if we go about it in the right way, to do away with what has been a long standing source of complaint.
Round to Receive Attention
C. J. Millis, assistant to President William Sproule, of the Southern Pacific, writes "Am very much obliged by your letter of October 9, transmitting your printed article 'Is the Negro Having a Fair Chance,' and note with interest your reference to transportation facilities afforded in the South. These matters are bound to receive attention, and we hope the objections will be overcome in due course."
Already Making Improvement.
black passenger manager
Koala & Santa Fe Rail
stores follows. I am
in favor of the 5th
article by yourself
in the Century Man-
ual way. I invest
planned to learn
already provided
travel in con-
tained in your
current time 75 per
used in Oklahoma
people have two
being a smoking com-
mander for men and
an separate toilet
As new cars
ones are con-
dent of that type and
have all of
the same
instants Well-Founded.
and general
Louisiana
company, says.
It will endure, being
an article which re-
lates to the Century Wage
sine. I shall take pleasure in reading this article and from glancing through it. I am inclined to think that the statement that the Neuro is not getting a square deal in the way of transportation facilities, is well-founded."
Appreciates Colored Patronage.
W. Coughlin, general superintendent, Missouri, Oklahoma and Gulf Railway Company, writes: "I have carefully read the article to which you have called special attention and in connection therewith wish to say that while no doubt there is ground for complaint at times, am inclined to the opinion that as a whole the situation alluded to is improving. In fact, accommodations for white and colored passengers on our motor car trains are identical. On other trains there is not much difference except in emergency cases where it becomes necessary to use temporary equipment that was not intended for passenger trains, but such cars as are used for the handling of both white and colored passengers, as well as employees on freight trains. I assure you that our company appreciates the patronage of the colored people, and that it is our desire to do what we can consistently for their comfort and convenience while traveling on our road."
Railways Not Philanthropists.
W. B. Biddle, receiver and chief traffic officer of the St. Louis and Can Francisco Railroad, writes: "I have read yours of October 10, and the pamphlet enclosed with a great deal of interest. I am quite sure that there is a disposition on the part of the carriers to do anything that they properly can to improve the conditions of the colored race. The conditions under which the carriers are operating at this time are, in many respects, so burdensome as to leave very little opportunity for the adoption of any philanthropic movements. I shall be very glad, however, to discuss this subject with the executive officers of other lines as opportunity offers."
Does Not Apply to Missouri Pacific.
B. F. Bush, president of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, states "The conditions cited in the article are not applicable to the Missouri Pacific It is a fact that separate cars are maintained on the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern for the Negroes, but my information is that they are cleanly kept and adequate to meet all demands however. I thank you for bringing the matter to my attention."
Are Making Improvements.
N. M. Leach, traffic manager, The Texas & Pacific Railway Company, writes: "In recent times the T. & P. Railway has made some improvement in the service afforded our colored patrons, and we are making an effort to further improve this service. We have received a number of expressions of appreciation from our colored patrons in Louisiana and Texas. I have read all of your article with a great deal of interest."
Given Careful Consideration.
W. G. Van Vleck, writing for the president, W. B. Scott, of the Sunset-Central Lines, says: "The matters referred to in your letter October 10 have been given very careful consideration by these lines. A few months ago we installed in our Sunset Express all steel equipment and precisely the same character of car is used for colored as well as white passengers. Later on we did the same thing with Nos. 7 and 8, and still later Nos. 11 and 12. These cars are all-st steel and all of the same kind. On the Central Lines north of Houston, trains 15, 16, 17 and 18, and on H. E. & W. T. trains 1 and 2 are similarly equipped. Local trains will be taken care of as fast as more equipment of this kind is available."
Letter Forwarded to Mr. Gould.
George H. Taylor, vice-president of the International and Great Northern Railway Company, writes as follows: "I have your letter of the 11th instant, addressed to Mr. Frank J. Gould, enclosing copy of your article recently printed in the Century Magazine, entitled 'The Greatest' Source of Dissatisfaction to the Negro in the South', namely, railway travel conditions. I have forwarded your letter and its enclosures to Mr. Gould in
Statement Entirely Right.
L. f. Franklin, president of the San Antonio, Uvalde & Gulf Railroad, replies as follows: "I think you are entirely right in what you say in the pamphlet you enclose me. So far as this railroad is concerned, we are in a section of Texas where there is no much Negro travel, but we are giving the Negro just as good accommodations as we are giving to the whites."
Appreciates the Colored Travel.
I. C. Hinkle, general passenger agent of the Georgia Railway Company writes, "Yours of recent date will marked copy of an article which recently appeared in the Century Magazine has been duly received. The copy will give consideration and I hope to write you further later. The management of this company appreciates the colored travel and we desire to handle it satisfactorily."
WHITEMAN'S
STORE
FAMILY
MARKET BASKET
Russell
Subject Receiving Attention.
A. A. Matthews, superintendent of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway System, says: "I have read with interest your article entitled, 'Is the Negro Having a Fair Chance,' which you enclose with your letter of October 9. The subject of better accommodation for Negro passengers is one that is receiving much thought by the railroads of the South, and I think, as our lines are improved and better coaches are used, that the Negro will share in the benefit. As for the Texas Central except for a short distance, we very seldom handle Negro passengers, but when we do their compartment in our coaches is upholstered the same and receives the same care as the part provided for white passengers."
Received the Article.
C. B. Rhodes, general passenger agent of the Georgia, Southern & Florida Railway Company, replies as follows: "I wish to acknowledge receipt of your letter of the 13th inst., enclosing marked copy of an article of yours which was recently printed in the Century Magazine, for which please accept my thanks."
Will Look Carefully Into the Matter.
Albert T. Perkins, president of the New Iberia and Northern Railroad Company, writes. "Your letter of October 8 with copy of article reprinted from Century Magazine was duly received, and I have read the article through with care and much interest. I have realized to some extent the situation as to railroad accommodations which you described, and I hope I have been instrumental in some cases in bettering certain features on various roads in Texas, Louisiana, etc., in which I have been concerned. As to the New Iberia and Northern Railroad, the passenger service is for the most part given by large steel motor cars in which the accommodations for whites and blacks are equipped in identically the same manner. Your letter will have the effect of my examining with some greater care the arrangements on several other railroads with which I am connected and I thank you for sending me your article."
Will Be Glad to Read It.
C. H. Hix, president of the Northern
Southern Railway Company, says "This
is a acknowledge receipt of yours
from the 14, with enclosure which I will
be left to read."
Policy Is to Improve.
W. W. Finley, president of the Southern Railway Company states: "I have noted what you say as to the treatment of Negro travelers on railways in the south. The matter of accommodations for Negroes is one which has been saving the attention of the management of this company and it is one to be taken more acclimatization for our staff practically for our needs."
. . .
I am sure your readers will be
received in the above extracts and in
hope which are to follow next week
(Similal) BOOKER T. WASTINVORT
Tuskegee Institute, Alabama.
February 28, 1914.
THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1914
TEMAN'S
STORE
FAMILY
MARKET BASKET
OF YOUR OWN MEANS ST
NINE-STORY HOTEL IS PLANNED FOR HARLEM
Hostelry To Be Built For The Accommodation of Negro Patrons
TO HAVE A BRIDAL SUITE
Promoters Have Option on Plot in West 138th Street, between Lenox and Seventh Avenues.
One hundred and fifty thousand dollars will be the estimated cost of a nine-story hotel to be erected for the accommodation of Negro patrons, according to a statement from the Workers' Realty Company, 1931 Broadway, which company is composed of Negro business men. Jesse W. Watkins is the president and W. J. Greene, Jt., manager.
Negotiations have been pending for some time and the announcement was made last Saturday by Mr. Greene that an option had been secured on a vacant plot, 75x100 feet, located on West 138th street, between Lenox and Seventh avenues, owned by the Mary G. Pinckney estate. Work on the building is expected to begin May 1, and the company announces the probable opening of the hotel for early in the fall.
The hotel will be complete in every detail, the fittings and decorations elaborate and tasty, and the equipment and conveniences will be up-to-date.
In the basement will be the engine room, laundry, a dining room for servants, an officers' dining hall, a safe deposit vault, the boxes of which will be rented to the guests, a store room, the kitchen, a billiard room, a barber shop and a tailor shop.
On the ground floor will be the restaurant and dining room, a cafe, a ladies' reception room, a paler garden men's waiting room, the office, and a news and cigar stand. The parlors and bed rooms will be on the upper floors. On the second floor an apartment will be fitted up in luxurious style and designated as the bridal suite. More than 150 bed rooms will be provided single and en suite, many of them with private baths. The scheme of decorations is not complete, but it is intended that harmony and good taste will prevail in this important part of the work. On the second floor will also be provided a banquet hall with a seating capacity of at least one hundred and a half of the building will be fitted in a room garden. The plaza call for two stories on the ground floor and it is reported that several applications have been made to leave them one of which is a priest or one from a real walking case marathon.
Mr. Greene states that the main feature of this hotel will be in residence and red people from out of town who come to New York on business. He praises trins or on the theatre have been introduced be inadequate and inferior accommodations. This need will be provided for in the proposed new hotel.
THE CLEF CLUB (INCORPORATED) Wishes to correct the erroneous statement made in regard to its appearance at Carnegie Hall on March 11. We are not connected with this entertainment in any manner. DANIEL KILDARE, President of The Clef Club
JAMES H. GORDON DIES
AFTER A SHORT ILLNESS
The Rev. James H. Gordon, for ten years superintendent of the Howard Colored Orphanage and Industrial School, King's Park, L. L., died at the German Hospital, Brooklyn, early Tuesday morning, after a ten days' illness. The Rev. Mr. Gordon suffered from a complication of diseases and underwent an operation at the German Hospital from which he never recovered. A little over ten years ago the Rev. Mr. Gordon became superintendent of the orphanage, coming from the Baptist Temple, New York, where he had successfully served as pastor for two years. Previous to filling the pulpit at the Baptist Temple he was located at Nicetown, Pa., where he organized and built up a congregation. When the deceased succeeded Charles
THE LAIL REV. J. H. GORDON
Lee as superintendent of the Houston Orphanage and Industrial School to institution was located in. Deer street Brooklyn. As the quartz was to small the orphanage was moved to Kings Park. Long Island, on a large
plot of land, where the deceased worked hard to model his institution after the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. He was loyally supported in his endeavor by white and colored friends. The Rev. James H. Gordon was born fifty-six years ago in Sparksboro, Va. He is survived by a widow and daughter, Edith. The body will lie in state at the Concord Papi-t-t Church, Brooklyn, Friday from 10 to 4 o'clock. Puneral services will be held over the remains at the church Friday evening at 8 o'clock, the Rev. William M. Moss officiating.
B. F. THOMAS ASSAULTED
BY BURLY, POLICEMEN
Four plain-clothes men, led by Police Officer Byron, entered the place of business of B. E. Thomas at 213 W. 53rd street. Saturday afternoon about 3:30 o'clock and insulted Mr. Thomas by speaking disrespectfully of Mrs. Thomas, whom they saw busily engaged about the place Mr. Thomas resented the insulting remarks, and he was pounced upon, roughly handled and dragged to the police station where he was again roughly treated and insulted by the attendants.
An unusually large bail was fixed, but Mrs. Thomas and Dr. E. P. Roberts were on hand with collateral to cover the amount asked. Mr. Thomas was given his liberty.
Sunday morning in the Fifty-fourth Street Court, Mr. Thomas was tried before Judge Corrigan, who, upon hearing the charge, rebuked the officers and promptly discharged the defendant. Judge Corrigan is well known for his fairness toward all. Fred R. Moore, Counselors J. Frank Wheaton and John William Smith, Rodney Dade and other prominent citizens were in court in Mr. Thomas' interest.
50TH ANNIVERSARY
AT WILBERFORCE
Special to The New York Age
Wilberforce, O., March 3. Bishop C. T. Shaffer was one of the chief speakers at the celebration of the fifteenth anniversary of Wilberforce University On February 25, the opening day, Bishop Shaffer, in his address, made this statement: "The man, race or nation that sits down and waits for others to do its thinking will never amount to anything in this world." Every Episcopal district in the A.M. E. Church was represented at the celebration, and letters and telegrams were read from representative ministers, who sent substantial contributions to the institution. Among the speakers, were Dr. Thomas H. Jackson, the Rev. Horade Talber, President Scarborough, Dr. D. A. Scott and Miss Hallie Q. Brown. Emery Hall, a dormitory for girls, was dedicated by Bishop Shaffer, assisted by Bishops B. F. Lee and Joshna A. Jones.
NEGRO BOUGHT HOME.
COULD NOT LIVE IN IT
Special to The New York Age
GREENSBORO, N. C., March 3.--After purchasing a home or block occupied by white people and moving in, Prof. W. B. Windsor, principal of the colored graded school, was forced by a special ordinance passed at the meeting of the city commissioners, called for that purpose to move out and sell the house.
When Professor Windsor moved in the white people on the block became incensed and demanded that he vacate. The meeting of the commissioners followed, and an ordinance was passed segregating the Negroes, the law taking effect immediately. Mr. Windsor paid $3,100 for the property and was forced to sell for $2,700, suffering a loss of $400.
A further development in the case has been the signing of a petition by five hundred white citizens, asking the school board to dismiss Prof. Windsor from his position as principal of the colored school.
PULLMAN PORTERS
GIVE ENJOYABLE DANCE
The Pullman porters were in their glory last Thursday evening at Manhattan Casino, and they made good their claim of being exceedingly courteous to the ladies and very graceful dancers. They certainly were in demand.
Quite a galaxy of the gentler sex was out, fashionably attired and displaying their sweetest disposition. Music was furnished by the New Amsterdam Orchestra, and ancing was indulged in until the wee hours of the morning.
MAUDE ALLEN AGRI
MAUDE ALLEN AGREES TO WEAR FEMALE ATTIRE
Special to The New York Age.
Has Largest Circulation
PRICE FIVE CENTS
SOUTHERN PAPER FLAYS VARDAMAN
Waco "Morning Times"
Accuses Mississippi of
Playing Politics
THE NEGRO DEFENDED
Influential Southern Daly Says Vardamam's Views Do Not Represent Fair Progressive Sentiment of the South.
NEGRO NEEDS FRIENDLYHAND
Texas Publication Says Negro Agricultural Schools Should Profit by Government's Agricultural Extension Plan.
Waco, Texas, March 3.--Asserting that his views by no means represent the fair progressive sentiment of the South on the Negro question, and accusing him of playing politics and seriously reflecting upon the intelligence of the state he represents, Senator James K. Vardaman, of Mississippi, was recently lambasted editorially by the Waco Morning News, one of the leading papers in the South, which has joined the ranks of daily papers to tire of Vardaman's cowardly effort to keep in the lightlight by vilifying the Negro. Under the caption of "Vardaman and the Negro," the Morning News:
James K. Vardaman is a United States Senator from the State of Mississippi. He is an ex-governor of that State which has given to this and other commonwealths of the nation some of their brightest men.
Judging from his long career in public life he enjoys the confidence of a large part of the electorate of that State. On many subjects, doubtless he will engage in a tangent occasionally. And this occasion arises every time he meets or hears a Negro mentioned for any favor or consideration.
These poor, unfortunate blocs, on the prejudice against whom Mr. Vardaman has risen to political station and remained there, are made the objects of his vitriolic abuse every time anyone suggests giving them a fair chance. And while these diatribes may succeed in bringing the Senator votes and building up his political barkers at home, they force people from other states to regret that a man with so contracted a vision was ever sent to the Federal Senate, which ought to be composed of the broadcast-gauged and best informed men of the country.
In his debate with Senator Jones, of Washington, on the proposition to allow the Negro agricultural colleges of the South to participate in the expenditure of the funds contributed by the Federal Government for agricultural extension, Mr. Vardaman belittled himself and seriously reflected upon the intelligence of the State which he represents. In the United States Senate questions should have wide discussion among its members, unhindered by such lightning prejudices as the gentleman from Mississippi. He was sent there to represent the whole people of his State and when he declares that the "white man would do more for the Negro than the Negro could do for himself" we would but congratulate the Negroes of the South that their welfare is not wrapped up in the hands of white men of the same view as that represented by Mr. Vardaman.
We agree thoroughly with Senators Jones, Clapp and Gallinger that the Negro industrial and agricultural schools of the South should share some of the Federal appropriation for farm demonstration work in this section of the country. They are citizens the same as the whites. Many of them own property. Those who own property pay their taxes. The large majority of the Negro citizens are law-abiding, and the gentleman from Mississippi was playing politics—and very small politics at that—and catering to a reproducible race prejudice when he beaten by him in the street. All leaders of the Negro race are agreed that the farm is the best place for the black man. Every effort should be made to keep him there. But if the stronger white race denies to the Negro the knowledge that will enable him to make farm life profitable, we will continue to see the disafflicted black striving to the city and into document of the worst kind. The Negroes are anxious to better themselves. They are willing to meet the white people half way. They are in proving now and will continue to do so and on a higher level if they ever a helpery hotel.
To give it a portion of the farm demonstration the appropriation would be held to two races. It would be held to the two races to demonstrate their race and make it better farmed and it would inspire confidence in them to win them an opportunity to show the world properly handle the government funds.
Governor Vernonman spoke one truth. It was that the men who live in the South where the Negroes are most numerous are better prepared to handle the North question than those living at a distance who have no intimate knowledge of the problems involved. But the road which the Negro has to travel would be much rougher than it is now if all the Southern men entered the same view does the ratie Mississippi. His views are no means represent the fair, progressive sentiment of the South and we trust the other Senators from this section of the country will roundulate his harsh utterances and show to the country that we of the South are in favor of fair play, even for the poor Negro, who politically, at least, is down and out.
NEGRO PRESENCE
BIG FIGHT IN LONDON
Cable advices from London, England,
all of an exciting incident in one of
o London's leading clubs on March 3,
occupied over American women to
the presence of Negroes.
The cable to the New oYrk Tribune
says:
"A wild scene in one of London's
est known night clubs was described in
the Bow Street police court yesterday
when Ferdinand Mariaux, director of
the club in question, was fined $25
and costs for assaulting Miss Hilda Ray-
nond. It seems that the disturbance
rose owing to some American women
objecting to the presence of Negroes.
The defendant told the court that the
lab's waiters and others tried to get rid
of some women who were throwing
hisses at the faces of some Colonel
An American woman was swinging a metal mesh bag. He denied as-
sulting complainant in any way.
The club porter, describing how the isturbances originated, said an American girl threw a bottle at a looking lass. Another did the same thing, and e interposed. In a few seconds a ozen girls were struggling with him, the sitting magistrate said he had heard enough evidence to justify his calling ie attention of the police to the disorders at this night house.
PHILADELPHIA, Pa., March 4—The Rerean, Building and Loan Association largest financial institution that the stored people have in the North, with capital of $1,000,000 and assets of $25,000, held its annual meeting lastursday evening.
The following officers were elected: Matthew Anderson, president; H. Cooper, vice-president; John McGill, treasurer; W. W. Still, secretary co. S. Graham, solicitor; John Hower, Irvin Shupp, Sr., Dr. Reuel ewart, Robt. S. Jackson, John Saunus, John W. Harris, Wm. A. Drain, G. Rumsey, Cyrus L. Phillips, Wasil Webb, Dr. J. Henry Boothe, Irietta Johnson, Edward F. Glenn, directors; Philip Fisher, W. P Stewart, J. Gray, auditors.
Net gain per annum to date was eight and forty-six one hundredth per cent; $14,500 of matured stock was paid for. The stockholders paid were Mary Taylor, Dr. Reuel Stewart, Harrison forman, Mary A. E. Evans, Susie Hcott, Albert and Margaret A. Gildin-rothy Shipp, Susan McGill Shupp, unnie Robison, Marguerite R. Woodward, S. J. M. Brock.
OLD BALTIMOREAN DEAD
40 YEARS IN BUSINESS
special to THE NEW YORK ACA.
BALMSTER, Md., March 4. The funeral of Thomas J. Hilliard, who died last Thursday after a lingering illness, was held at Waters A. M. E. Church Monday afternoon. The services were largely attended, prominent en and women fro ; all sections of the city being in the audience. The principal eulogy was delivered by the Dr. Gains, Gains, Gains of the church. Others who took part in the prizes included the Revs, L. C. Curry, J. W. Noiris, P. J. Jordan, Josephyn James A. Briswig.
The deceased was born in this city 62 years ago. He was in the housefurishing business for 40 years, the business having been established by his andmother over a century ago. Theiness was probably the oldest conrn run by colored people in this county. He was an active member of Watersurch for years and had been a laylegate to the last three general conferences of his denomination. He was direct descendant of Daniel Coker. he was elected first bishop of the A. E. Church, but who declined to live. His wife, three daughters and no grandchildren are among the surviving relatives.
EALOUS WHITE MAN
PHILADELPHIA, Pa. March 4.—Ora Griffin, the colored girl who was shot and seriously wounded by Charles Kinlock, a white man, will recover according to the latest report from her bedside. Kinlock, who was so infuriated that he turned the weapon on himself after shooting Miss Griffin, is reported to be out of danger. Kinlock, who was madly in love with the colored girl, went into Ilancom's restaurant, Market, near Seventh streets, where Ora Griffin was employed, and, after whispering in the girl's ear, drew a revolver and shot her. A white woman standing neatly attempted to seize Kinlock's arm and was shot dead. Then the infuriated man shot himself. The shooting is the chief topic for conversation here.
Prominent Newburgh Woman Dead. Resolved to Tear New York Ago.
Newburgh, N. Y., Feb. 25—Mary A. Thompson Alsdorf, widow of the late Prof. D. B. Alsdorf, and daughter of the late Bishop Joseph P. Thompson of the A. M. E. Zion Church, died at her home, 91 Liberty street, Tuesday, February 17, from a stroke of paralysis. She was born in Williamsport, Pa., and was 71 years old. She is survived by three sons, Charles T., Simon P. and Ullysses J. Alsdorf.
The funeral was held Thursday, February 19, at the house, and at the A. M. E. Zion Church. Thursday morning the Hew. Thomas F. Prenlergast, representing Dr. Salley, pastor of St. Patrick's Church, visited the house and offered prayer, and the Sisters of Charity of St. Patrick's School and the Dominican Sisters of St. Mary's School called to pay their confluence.
The service in the residence was held at 7:30 o'clock. Then the remains were taken to the church, a clock and a half distant, in Washington street. As they were borne up the centenaille, Collins orchestra of six pieces rendered Beethoven's Funeral March. Zion church choir to an accompaniment played by Miss J. C. Taylor, organist of the Church and the choir sang the hymn "The Every Hour." Then the L. E. G. Manon, presiding elder of the A. M. E. Zion Church for this disheartled read, the Scripture lesson, the
Jev. J. W. F. Carlisle of the First Covenant Church, offered prayer, and the choir sang "Nearer, My God, to Thee." The Rev. J. F. Waters, pastor of Zion Church, pronounced the catholy, and the Rev. Dr. Mason spoke briefly. Pastor Waters sang the solo, "Death is Only a Dream." Remarks were made by several visiting clergymen. While friends passed in single file to view the remains, the orchstra played "The Death of Ase" from Greig's "Peer Gynt" Suite. As the casket was carried down the aisle the musicians played Chopin's Funeral March. Th casket bearers were Robert S. Bailey, Simon Jamison, Solomon Venable, Samuel Rose, Joseph Peterson, Lafayette Hunter and Jacob Clow. The floral bearers were Robert Hawkins, Charles G. Bell, Charles Frint and Joseph Hart.
Members of the choir taking part in the funeral service were the Misses Marie Hawkins Dotry, Viola Rose, Madeline Peterson, Margaret Bell, Hattie Clow and Victoria Waters, Mrs. Almena Pritchett, and Messrs. James Plummer, John Waters and George W. Ford.
The floral tributes included a wreath from the orchestra of Cohen's Opera House; wreaths from the Zion Church's Willing Workers, Hillside City Lodge, Mr. and Mrs. W. Brush, Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Fuller, Mr. and Mrs. Ready and son, Mr. and Mrs. Simon Jamison, Mrs. F. Delano Hitch, Mrs. M. A. Hashrouck and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. A. Marsh and son, ticket bouquets from Mr. and Mrs. George Milden, Fay Holds, Mr. and Mrs. W. Decker, Lincoln Patricia Jague, Daughters of Connie, Mrs. M. Mulholland, Mrs. I. Low and Mrs. M. and Mrs. J. P. Peterson, Mrs. E. J. Wallace, K. P. Gavin, Mrs. and rs. L. P. Pelham, Hasis and mother, r. Johnson, D. Dimons.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Collins, Mr. and Mrs. J. Collins, Mrs. J. F. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. J. Dickey, A. M. E. Zion Church, Mr. and Mrs. M. Donoghue, the Martin family, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. thur Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Hicks, Mr. and rs. C. H. Decker, Miss Fannie Campbell, J. E. Judson, Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Whitaker, Mr. and William Cook, and family, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Moscow, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Perry, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Kneeer, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Miller, Mrs. Anna D. Jordan, Miss Melissa Jackson, Eastman & C. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Fitzgerald, Mr. and Mrs. B. Corwin, Zion Church Meets Club Mrs. Virginia Academy Meets Mrs. Cameron Academy of Music orchestra, Mrs. Van Duzer and daughter Jennie, boo kand wreathe, A. M. E. Zion Church; sheaf of wheat and cut flowers, Mrs. and Mrs. Robert Barclay; palms and cut flowers, Robert Hawkins and sisters; palms and carnations, Andrew S. Dell; mounted crest and star, Zion Church Sunday School; broken column, from the family.
Letters and telegrams of condolence have been received by Mrs. Alsdorf's children from Bishop J. W. Hood, of Fayetteville, N. C.; Rev. L. G. Mason, Highwood, N. J.; Miss Cordella Brown, Orange, N. J.; Sisters of Charity of St. Joachim's School, Beacon, N. Y.; Mrs. Christina Robinson and Mrs. E. F. Garner of New York City; Mrs. Harley, Kingston, N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bell, Mrs. Goldsmith D. Johns, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Robinson, Mr and Mrs. W. J. Wygant, iss Gerrude I. Khoe, Miss Collys, Miss Jennie Van Duzer, Mr. and Mrs. Roosa, Miss Anna E. F. Deisseroth, Mrs. S. E. Herrington, Mr. Nelson桑-and mother, Mrs. Geo. Rudolph, Miss Kathryn M. Flood, Mr. and Mrs. Cunningham, Mr. F. S. Goldstein and family, Mr. Linwood Underhill, Miss Jennie Ladue, Mr. and Mrs. John Cunningham, Dr. and Mrs. Stanton Gleason, and Mr. and Mrs. R. P. McGovern, of Newburgh; Mrs. Sarah E. Bailey, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Mrs. Elizabeth Brown, Orange, N. J.; Mrs. Fannie S. Brooks, Washington, D. C.; Mrs. Martha E. Gray, Newark, N. J.; Mrs. Julia O'Neil, Springfield, Mass.; Mrs. Carolyn Stevens, Ossining, N. Y.; Mr. anad Mrs. W. E. Burton, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Hardie, Syracuse, N. Y.; Mrs. J. Bohlin, Beacon, N. Y.; Mr. John W. Hoffman, Ossining, N. Y.
The interment was in Woodlawn Cemetery, under direction of M. Donahue & Sons.
PAINESVILLE. O.
Painesville, Ohio.—The Colonial masquerade given by the Ladies' Social Club was held at Mrs. J. G. Smith's and was largely attended. Miss Ruth Freeman won first prize for being dressed the most like Martha Washington. Mrs. Wm. B. Palmer and Mrs. C. A. Wouten have taken suites in one of the North State street blocks. Wm. Palmer has opened another barber shop in Fairport. Mrs. Mary Waytes, of Cleveland, recently purchased some property of M. L. Gordon, where her sister. Mrs. Frank Barnsley, will reside. The Ladies' Social Club met at the home of Mrs. Chas. Cledge, where a delicious luncheon was served. The Summer Club met at the home of Miss Anna Willen to discuss some important business. The Plus Ultra Clu bmet at the home of Miss Mary Buhel, where Miss Viola Jackson entertained.
WHEELING W VA
WHEELING, W. Va.—James Thompson entertained a few friends last week in honor of Mrs. Alberta Graves, who is to leave for Atlantic City to spend a season. The following were invited to the竿 Hill. Eminent Miss Carrie Jones, Mrs. Alberta Graves, Jack Alexander, Orival Gray, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Banka, Kia Thompson.
The Easter assembly will be held in the spacious auditorium April 16. The Williams Jubilee Singers appeared at the Market Auditorium Thursday night and entertained a large audience.
Let Your Child Learn Business
The children of white people bring the business career by selling papers and other things. Let you child begin business in a way. I can start your career and be a producer in a business. All A.B. Williams Auditorium. All A.B.
MASTERPIECES OF NEGRO ELOQUENCE
The ONE VOLUME that contains the best speeches of 51 of the ablest Negroes of the United States, England, Africa and France from 1818-1913. The WONDERFUL ELOQUENCE OF THE MOST POWERFUL NEGROES—men and women—of the world is contained in this book. Nothing more interesting and inspiring has ever been written. If you would know the history of the race, appreciate the sacrifice for principle, understand the struggle for liberty and properly place the oratorical achievement of the NEGRO, you should embrace the opportunity to place this book in your library.
THE MASTERPIECES OF NEGRO ELOQUENCE will take you back to 1818, when Prince Saunders in his fascinating style eloquently pleaded for the abolition of slavery. It will give you the speech of Prince Highland Garnett, the first Negro ever asked to preach in the United States House of Representatives. It contains the speech of Frederick Douglass, who in 1852, with unexcelled eloquence, demanded at Rochester to know "What to the slave is the Fourth of July?" The speech that made Booker Washington famous. An estimate of Toussaint L'Overture by James Smith that ranks with Wendell Phillips' enology to Toussaint. Charles M. Lafayette's enology to Fugitive Slave Law delivered in 1859, of which the Boston Transcript said at the time "Future generations of Negroes will be proud to say this speech was made by a Negro. Judge Rulin's tribute to a crisp Attacks, a speech that should be read by every Negro boy and girl.
These are but a few of the gems from this book: a book that is a library, a reference book and an historical work indispensable in every intelligent Negro's library. It is a fascinating resume of the Negro's achievements of 100 years. A book that shows in the best manner the best Negro has done. It is carefully edited, well printed in large type on the best quality paper, and thoroughly indexed. Bound in gold top with uncut edges. We want every reader of Tum. Ask to have a copy of this book, and we have set aside 20,000 copies which we are going to sell the readers of this paper, allow to sell them to pay 50 cents down and 50 cents on or four months. Clip the cover down and send to us with 50 cents in coin and a copy will be sent to you by return mail THE DOUGLASS PUBLISHING CO. HARRISRUG BENNEL U.S.A.
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Enclosed find 50 cents for which
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Name
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Important to School Teachers.
Many school teachers, men and women, can only a small salary. I can help them supply
their students with books by work hours a shoebag. This will be regular employment. For further information write
A. J. Stewart, Douglass Institute, Ala.
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE
To represent Instant Relief Assn., a sick or
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Let Your Child Learn Business.
The children of white people begin their business career by selling papers and other goods. A small way. You can start your own or dangle out in a profitable business. For further information, address A. B. Stewart, Teckendorf Business, Aub.
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OUT OF TOWN CORRESPONDENCE
POUGHKEEPSI. N. Y.
POUCHERFELM, N. Y.—The marriage of Payton C. Mallory and Miss Estella J. Ellis, both of Poughkeepsie, N. Y., took place at 7:30 p. m. Thursday, February 26, at the parsonage of the Ebenezer Baptist Church, 11 Winnicke avenue. The Rev. Chas. S. Fariess performed the ceremony, Walker was as best as Miss Martha L. Ellis, a sister of the bride, was the bride's maid. The wedding was quiet, only relatives and a few friends being present. The couple will reside in the city. Mrs. Eaiah Gordon, who has been in the Sadliers sanitarium for an operation is able to go to her home in Millbrook, N. Y.
Mrs. Lotta Green is in St. Francis Hospital very ill.
Services were very interesting on Sunday as Ebenezer Baptist Church, while the attendance was small on account of the blizzard. the pastor, the Rev. Chas. S. Fariess, preached at 10:45 a. m. and at 7:45 p. m.
FLUSHING. N. Y.
FUSHING, N. Y.—On Saturday evening, February 21, Mrs. Sarah Fleet, 145 Lincoln street, celebrated the marriage of her daughter, Eleanor, to David Henry Corse, of Little Neck. The bride was dressed in a becoming gown of white satin and duchese lace. Mrs. Spencer, her eldest sister was matron, Mrs. Fleet received many useful gifts, including furniture, linen, China, silver, and glassware. Among the guests were J. Hunter and Mrs. Hunter. Mr. and Mrs. Lowry, Mr. and Mrs. Thornell, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Gusling, Mr. and Mrs. Williams, Mr. and Mrs. J. Derrick, Mr. and Mrs. Johns, Mr. and Mrs. Raye Woodin and the Misses Hines, Mrs. M. Mur Bailton, Mr. and Mrs. James of Bayshore, Mr. and Mrs. Gregorius, Mrs. N. Williams, Miss Lucille Jackson and James Porte of New York, Mrs. A. Godwin of Philadelphia, and Mrs. M. Cummings of New Haven.
YONKERS, N. Y.
YORKERS, N. Y. — The great show storm that nocked New York and vicinity Sunday morning did not hinder the members of the New A. M. E. Zion Church from attending regular services. The morning and evening services were well attended. The sacrament was administered at the evening services. The Sunday School, at 3 o'clock, was well attended. The evening only the venerating members of the school. The 1914 social given by Mrs. James Foster for the benefit of the New Zion Church was a great success. The program was excellent. Every church in the city was represented. Little Miss Sidney Skinner is growing in popularity as a soloist. Her services are constantly in demand. The many friends of Mrs. Annie Johnson are glad to see her out again after a short illness. Miss Evangeline Sinto was well received as a violinist at St. Marks church, New York City. Sandra afterment. Charles E. Borden skipped and fell on the ice last Wednesday and injured his left arm so badly that he has been confined to his room for several days.
NEW ROCHELLE N Y
New Rochelle, N.Y. The basketball game between the Triumvirate A.C. and Excelsior A.C. both of New Rochelle, resulted in victories all around for the Triumvirates. The girls won by a score of 11 to 7 and the boys by a score of 25 to 5. Both teams are young, having been organized this year. The Triumvirate boys and girls would be glad to hear from any girls and boys team around New York. This was the first match game and they played well. A large crowd attended the games and went away well pleased with the evening's entertainment.
On March 26 the Triumvirate A.C. will play a team from Yonkers, N.Y. at League Hall.
Miss Katie Richardson left for the South last Thursday to attend the funeral of her mother.
Lucust Wilcox and Richardson are strong supporters of the TAEA.
The Lucus Wilcox Richardson Association has a masquerade ball and dance at League 24 Brook street, Thursday evening, March 19. Admission: 35 cents.
Communion services were well attended at Bethesda Baptist Church Sunday. The day was so stormy that some of the worshippers were complained about the afternoon to the evening services. Revival services are in progress at Bethesda.
JAMAICA. N. Y.
JAMACA, N. Y.—Mr. Green, Willett street, died Friday, February 20, after an illness of three days. Interment at Babylon, L. N.
The Talent Center Allen Church held their meeting at his residence of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jones, 108 Douglas street. Oleander Holden was installed on a new member.
Mine. Margaret Brown, Humboldt, boulevard, is spending the winter in the Hudson.
Miss Catherine Hicks, 101 Catherine street, is convalescing and Chas. Jones, 130 Prospect street, is able to be out after an attack of the gripe and pneumonia.
The Rev. Percy Jones, 505 South street, is confined to his bed with the illness.
Only a morning service and Sunday School was held at Allen Church on Sunday. Evangelist Anna Hingstin prescheduled at the morning service. The only Communion held Sunday night. March 8 A Ten Virgin service will be held Sunday night, March 15.
The Young People's Literary Society will have a debate between Misses Eleanor Fariera and Helen Jackson. Friday night, subject, "Resolved, that the present high school system is of no material benefit to the Negro student." The annual fair of Allen Church is announced for March 11 to April 3. The Rev. C. E. Wilson of Allen
Church celebrated his 37th birthday
Monday, March 2.
The Rev. W. F, Coffey of Hunting-
ton, L. I., was the guest of the Rev
and Mrs. Nelson, Tuesday.
The fourth quarterly conference of
Alen Church will be held on Monday,
March 23.
UTICA. N. Y.
UTICA, N. Y.—The services at Hope Chapel were well attended last Sunday. The pastor, the Rev. R. J. Strother, who has been sick for the past three weeks, was able to preach. He baptized John Henry Webb and administered the Lord's Supper. Mr. Webb is one of the leaders of Hiram Lodge No. 18, F. and A. M. His wife is the accomplished organist of Hope Chapel. The secretary of Phyllis Wheatly's Social-Club has sent the agent the following: "In the Frankfort letter, in last week's Acq. the reporter omitted the names of some of its special invited guests to the patriotic social held at the residence of Alozo Schuyler, viz.; Mrs. James Grand, Broad street, and Mrs. Jane Johnson and Elizabeth Miss Gladis Johnson, Elizabeth street, Miss Johnson and Miss Bavaria played roles. Floyd Persette, Charley Thomas and William Smith will leave in a few days in their automobile for California. Their friends will give them a grand send-off, besides wishing them the best of good times. They will be provided with every convenience.
Great preparations are being made for the fifthth anniversary of the organization of Hope Chapel, and its fifth anniversary as a corporate church under the laws of the State of New York. The Rev. I. Howard Hoob, pastor of Westminster Presbyterian Church, will preach the sermon, assisted by the Rev Dr. K. L. McMenon, of Plumton Congregational Church of this city. It will be followed by a bazaar on March 31 and 32. The enrollment of members to date numbers of all departments of the church are flourishing. The presidents are: The church commissioner, Mrs. Arthur Buckingham, Webb, presidential board, Webb, presidential board, Mrs. Catherine Suggle, president, church aid society, Mrs. Carry Pell, president; trustee board, James Wormsworth, president; Theodore Pell, chairman; superintendent of Sunday schools, John Simmons; church clerk, George S. Hanson.
AUBURN. N. Y
AURORA, N. Y.-Mrs. S. Ross of Syracuse, the Rev. F. Fisher of Ithaca and the Rev. J. McMullen of Rochester have returned to their homes after a day in Auburn last ween on business. The Rev. C. A. Smith entertained them at dinner. The host will be held Friday, March 5, at the home of Mrs. Francis Cooper, 68 Fitch avenue. A fine supper will be served.
Mrs. C. G. Cannon is severely ill at her home on Fitch avenue
Col E. F. E. Davis and Liat. Arthur Ames of Syracuse were the guests of Cant. James Sanford over Sunday.
Mrs. Stephen Murray, who has been quite ill with an grippe, is slightly improved.
Wr. Armandso, who was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Resk has returned to his home in Rochester.
Mrs. A. Clarkson of Skaneatales was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. Stewart and Miss Alida Stewart and Mrs. D. Brown made a trip to Syracuse last week.
Mrs. G. Mowat Pleasant is on the sick list.
Percival Johnson made a trip to Syracuse Sunday.
Mr. Bryant of Skaneatales was the Sunday guest of Chauncey Depew.
Friends of Mrs. George Parker, nee Ella Baynor, were shocked to learn of her death, which occurred in Springfield, Mass. Mrs. Parker formerly lived in Auburn and was well kitted. She possessed a soprano voice of rare quality. Her charming ways allowed her to all who knew her her voice attracted considerable notice in New York for the past year Mrs. Parker had been traveling in opera, and she possessed a repertoire of songs which never failed to please. A host of friends extend their sympathy to the bereaved husband and sisters.
TRENTON, N.
TRESTON, N. J.—The friends of Mrs Rufus Pierce, 21 Walnut avenue, gave her a surprise rose shower in honor of her birthday, Thursday, February 20. The guests, many of whom presented roses, included the following: Mr. and Mrs. Ioagian, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Gaines, Mr. and Mrs. James Bryant, Mr. and Mrs. Listen Carson, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Griffin, Mr. and Mrs. Theo Hall, Mr. and Mrs. Presion Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Savington, Mr. and Mrs. Jacobi Thornhill, Mr. and Mrs. John Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kinney, Mrs. McLoughlin, Miss Laura Teal, Mrs. Mary Larkey, Mrs. Helen Simms, Mrs. Google Browne, Mrs. Ananda Browne, Mrs. Hannai Pierce, Mrs. Daisy Johnson, Miss Anna Prior, Miss Mary Thornhill, Mrs Henry Reynolds, Samuel Duncan, Howard Asher Pierce, Charles Galler; Bernard Lemnard, Larry Kershaw, Joaquin Tasker, Dr. Paul Collins and Rufus Pierce.
A most interesting meeting was held at St. Paul A. M. E Zion Church at which the Mayor of the city spoke, with a number of prominent men of Zion, including Bishops Clinton and Caldwell, J. C. Dancy and Dr. S. L. Corrothers. The Mayor made a contribution of $10 to Livingstone College. $570 in pledges and cash were raised.
Thursday evening the students of Bordentown Manual Training and Industrial School gave an interesting program at Mt. 7tion A. M. E. Church under the direction of the vice-principal.
the Rev. J. Francis' Gregory. Practical illustrations of the school work were given, first in carpentry, by a table being constructed before the audience, then the agricultural department represented by a line chicken being shown, corn, and a large ham, with remarks upon poultry raising, etc. The sewing department was represented by some finished garments and the exhibition of a chart which showed the latest scientific method of pattern making, cutting and fitting. A finely ironed shirt and some table linen were shown as the products of the work of the laundry department and a full explanation of that work. Cheese, butter and milk were shown as dairy products, and the work of this department also explained. The department was presented by a fine leaf of bread already prepared and some very nice ginger bread which was given to the audience to sample. Solos and choruses were rendered an da commendable rendition of Shakespeare's quarrel scene between Brutus and Cassius by two boys of the school.
The fair at Mt. Zion has been interfered with by the severe weather, but a good program was rendered by home talent Friday night under direction of the chairlady of the program committee. Mrs. E. Corse Rodman. Sunday services in the evening at all the churches were slimly attended.
JERSEY CITY. N. J.
Jersey City, N. J.—The seventeenth annual ball of the Pullman Palace Carrier and Railway Employees Beneficial Association was held Thursday evening, February 26, at White Eagle Hall, Newark, New Jersey. It was largely attended, about five hundred being present. The ladies were handsomely groomed and the glittering lights and gorgeous decorations were a flitting background. The salute number of the president, Fred N. Carter, assisted by John A. Allen, chairman of the committee of arrangement, were uniting in their efforts to promote the enjoyment and comfort of their guests. Musia was the center of New York and the elaborate supper was served by J. C. Gunnison, caterer of Raynoys, Officers of the association are: Fred N. Carter, president; W. T. Williams, first vice-president; George Williams, financial secretary; Richard S. Norrell, assistant financial secretary; J. T. Everett, treasurer; Thomas H. Williams, recording secretary; F. H. Jewell, assistant recording secretary; F. H. McBrayer, scott, chaylain; L. Mabrey, secretary of the board, Members of the board of directors are: J. T. Brown, chairman; Fred N. Carter, W. T. Williams, L. Williams, J. T. Everett, John A. Allen, Forrest Hayes, T. A. Spraggle, Clay Thomas, the committee chairman; John A. Allen, chairman; Thomas H. Williams and Forrest Hayes.
The Social Relief Club met with Mrs. Frances McCoy, 101 Eagle avenue, on Thursday, February 26. An enjoyable lunch was served.
Joseph Freeman, 258 Van Horn street, is slick.
Mr. Charles Johnson, 101 Eke avenue, is present.
Miss L. A. Lee, with her music class, rendered a program last Sunday at the lyceum of the Mother A. M. E. Zion Church New York City. The pupila were all present, notwithstanding the absence of the teacher, Mrs. Kennedy in charge, Participant Mrs. E. Pellum, A. Dancy, Miss Pauline Wyatt, Miss Helen Stannard, A. J. Gary, Miss Bargley, Mrs. E. Ward and Benjamin Greenler, violinist; Henjain Chorister, Purdy, chorister, and the junior choir, day. March 8, Miss L. A. Lee will present her music class, assisted by Mme. Strother, W. H. Wigwigs, R. E. Douge, Jacoe Passe, Miss Lilla Beeks, the Men's Brotherhood of Lafayette Presbyterian Church meeting Monday night, March 9, with Stevens of the Brotherhood of the Reformed church as the speaker. Increment weather caused postponement to the meeting from last Monday night.
Services last Sunday at Bethel A. M. E. Church were not very well attended owing to the weather, and the regular first Sunday communion was not served because of quarterly meeting to be held Sunday, March 8. The services will be conducted by the Rev. A. L. Murray being assisted by the Rev. R. W. B. St. Paul of St. Paul p. m. service. We preach at the 3:30 p. m. service. The Rev. W. E. C. Gumms of Elizabeth, the Rev. W. J. Wilson of Newark and L. O. Vicks of Montclair will be present Holy Communion will be administered at the morning and afternoon services. The pastor, the Rev W. H. Burrell, and members are planning to make this meeting a success, as it is the last quarterly meeting this conference year. The pastor has organized a parsonage committee with Mrs. Aureleaude Marshall, presiding, and Miss Ethel Wosby, treasurer, gave their first parlor social on Thursday, February 26, which was largely attended and placed a neat sum in their treasury. The stewardess board will give a volunteer concert Thursday evening. March 12, for the benefit of the church. They have arranged for a fine
program. The president, Mrs. Addie Banks, is getting back to real work again. Mrs. Florence Wallace and Mrs. Eliza Williams have been appointed stewardesses. Mrs. Eliza Walker is very ill at her home in Duccan avenue. Mrs. J. White, the leader of the Bethel choir, is out again after a severe illness. Mrs. Bertha harris is confined to the house. J. T. Sockum was at his post last Sunday at Bethel A. M. E. Church after an absence of two weeks on account of an operation. The Oriental Circle of Bethel A. M. E. Church has been the leading auxiliary of that church in raising money with a close second in the Tribe of Levi, but the pastor said last Sunday, "Look out for the parsonage committee."
The secretary of Bethel Church will read the report of all moneys received and expended during this quarter Sunday at each service. The fourth quarterly conference will be held Tuesday, March 10
NEWARK N.
NEWARK, N. J.-Mrs. Lansing Nevius entertained the whist club on Washington's birthday. The ladies enjoyed a pleasant evening.
Mrs. M. C. Lawton, of Brooklyn, N. Y., president of the Women's Federation of Clubs, delivered an address at St. James A. M. E. Church Sunday afternoon, February 22. The meeting was inspiring from beginning to end. St. James C. Flaherty, Atlanta, Ga., preached at St. James A. M. E. Church Sunday night, February 22.
The Haymakers, a comic operetta was presented at the New Auditorium under the direction of Prot Wilson Lamb. It was well attended despite the inclementity of the weather. A large number were present from Orange. Among those noticed in the boxes were Dr. and Mrs. Sutherland, Miss Aura Raimon, Mrs. J. E. Churchman, the Rev. M. Dum, Mrs. the Rev. R. B. Rithmuth, Mrs. the Rev. Marr. Mr. and Mrs. Robbins. After the operetta dancing was indulged in and refreshments were served in the dining room.
Mrs. Robert VanKline, Mrs. Veron Green and Mrs. C. M. Warrigave an afternoon tea on Monday. February 25, at the residence of Mrs. Garrett Rogers, 113 Somerset street, in honor of Mrs. A. W. Pettigrew, of Edenton N. C., and Mrs. A. Miller, of Philadelphia. Mrs. A. F. Egglesby, Mrs. Peter Anderson, Mrs. B. Purvis, Mrs. J. Van Kirk, Mrs. J. M. Stoute, Mrs. R. B. Thomas, Mrs. William Lewis Mrs. E. Nemcely Mrs. M. Demmund, Mrs. Adam Smith, Mrs. Chas. Lone, Mrs. William Thompson Mrs. E. Conover, Mrs. I. Johnson, Mrs. M. R. Lackom, Mrs. George Voorhees, Mrs. M. C. Clark, Mrs. Harry Brown, Mrs. Oscar Pride, Mrs. Chishaw, Mrs. E. Garden, Mrs. N. Braydon, Mrs. Hattie Groves, Miss N. Newton, Mrs. J. Schonck, Mrs. B. Peterson of Souville, N. L. and Miss Mary Lee of Brooklyn, N. Y. The table was beautifully decorated with flowers and cut flowers. Mrs. John Schonck pointed to Mrs. William Davis on the floor. Mrs. Joseph King, Mrs. E. Johnson, Mrs. Thompson, Mrs. E. Vankline, Mrs. Parsons, Mrs. I. Van Kirk, Mrs. J. Smith, Mrs. M. Green, Mrs. M. and
Colyn Quick, Ireland, of Mrs. Elizabeth Quick, died Saturday, February 15. The funeral was held from 12:40 a.m. late home, 21 Clinton avenue. Wednesday evening, February 18. Interment at Morristown, N. J.
The serious illness is reported of Arthur M. Wright, of H. J. Brown's office, and Joseph H. Cooley, newsdealer, Broad and Bridge streets. His son Rodney Cooley, has been summoned from New York City to superintend the business.
B. J. Gordon announces his candidacy for chairman of the Colored Republican Association of Essex County. Other candidates are H. Handy, Walter White and Hamilton H. Travis.
The New Hope Baptist Church congregation has moved into a new church house on Sussex avenue under the leadership of the Rev. T. R. Redd.
News has been received of the death of the Rev. Dr. John H. Travis, of East Orange.
The Thirteenth Avenue Presbyterian Church has inaugurated a canvassing squad to extend as far as possible the plan of systematic giving throughout their church, both as to church support and missionary objects. George A. Webb, of the Newark High School, is taking a special course at the Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute, Petersburg. He has been elected chief of the editorial staff of the "Chiarion" the school paper.
PATERSON. N. J.
PETRASSON, N. J. The annual spring fair at A. M. E. Zion Church in Godan street will open Wednesday evening, March 11, and close March 18. An excavation program has been arranged for each night and a large number of booths in the church and in rooms of earnest workers. The Rev. C. Williams, pastor; Mrs. Carrie Mason, president of the fair; Mrs. Jennie Lockan, secretary.
Calvary Baptist Church will close a successful fair on March 6
Undertaker Wm. J. Greene visited
New York City Saturday, February 28
in the guest of the National Casket on
Good Will Lodge 4330, G. U. O. O. F
observed Peter Ogden day with a very
interesting program on Sunday, March
1 at the C. M. A. Hall.
St. Augustine Presbyterian Church
has lost one of its most earnest benefactors by the death of the Francis C
Van Dyk, of Broadway, Paterson, Mrs.
Van Dyk, of Broadway, and husband were frequent visitors to St. Augustine and their generous financial aid made possible the erection of the parsonage and the C. M.
A. Hall next door. The funeral was
held from the residence on Monday
March 2, and a committee from St.
Augustine attended the services. An appropriate floral pillow and a set of resolutions of condolence were sent to Mr.
Van Dyk by the pastor and trustees.
Miss Mary E. Perry, 230 Summer street, died Sunday, March 1, after a brief illness from pneumonia. Miss Perry was a faithful member of Canaan Baptist Church. The funeral services were held from the church and the remains taken to her former home in Chalotesvilles. The Keys delivered a timely discourse. Miss Priscilla, Miss Sarah and Emanuel Perry, sisters and brother, accompanied the remains to Virginia. Undertaker Greene was in charge.
Mrs. N. T. Cotton was the guest of Mrs. Dr. Burnett, of Montclair, last Friday evening.
ORANGE: N. J
ORANGE, N. J.-Miss Marcia B. Stillwell came from Camden, N. J., to spend Washington's birthday with her mother.
Miss Pinkie Anderson, president of the B. Y. P. U., took the leading soprano part in the "Haymakers," which was given in the New Auditorium, Newark, N. J.
Revival services have started at the Union Baptist Church, Orange, N. J., the Rev. W. P. Lawrence, pastor.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Travis, 473 Main street, East Orange, N. J., entertained a small party of friends with a dinner dance at their home on Monday evening, February 23. Bridge and five hundred was played until 6:30 when dinner was served. Dancing was indulged in after dinner until 12:30 a.m. Those present were Dr. and Mrs. LeRoy Baxter, Miss Grace Baxter, Mr. and Mrs. Erskine Bell, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. William Roane, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Thomas, Mrs. B. Baxter Smith, Miss Alice Sonsa, of Jersey City, Mrs. M. W. Wolfe of Richmond, Val. Mrs. W. Wolfe, Miss Ida Wilson, Miss W. Wood, Miss Lenora Wilson, of Newport, R. L. W. H. Dewarte of New York City, Dr. William Green, Dr. W. S. Kennard, Ms. Taylor, Dr. W. H. Washington and Larry Wentworth.
The Fan Tau Club, North Jersey fashionable ladies' social organization will hold a post-lenten subscription dance in Davis' P parlors, Broad street, Nark, early in April.
Miss Lemo Wilson, of Newport R. L. has been the guest of Dr. and Mrs. W. W. Wolfe, of Newark for the past three weeks.
Friends of Mrs. Lillian Johnson are making the visit of Mrs. Hodges, mother of Mrs. Johnson, as pleasant as possible.
The Hands Whist Club, made up of male christ exponents of Newark and the Oranges, are talking of arranging a tournament with similar clubs in New York and Brooklyn.
Miss Alice Sousa, of Jersey City, N. J. was the guest of Miss Grace Baxter over Washington's Birthday
FAST ORANGE N J
EAST ORANGE, N. J.—Mrs. Alice Moore Dunbar, of Wilmington, N. C. widow of Paul Laurence Dunbar, the poet, addressed the Sunday Afternoon Lexicon of the Calvary Baptist Church, East Orange, N. L. She was introduced by the president, Miss Pendleton, Mrs. Dunbar spoke on "The Series: Sights of Dunbar." Her address was inspiring, and gave new light to the audience so to the depth of thought and love of taste of our greatest poet. Mr. Dunbar was asked its seating capacity, Mrs. W. R. Burden, William Moore, and Mrs. Pinkie Anderson sang. Mrs. Lattie Cooper, 11 Egert street, entertained at dinner in honor of Mr. Paul Laurence Dunbar. The color scheme was pink and white and plates were laid for eight. The guests were Mrs. Dunbar, of Wilmington, Del. Robert J. Nelson, Philadelphia, Pac. Mr. Mederith, New York City; Miss Pendleton and Mrs. Alexander, of Oranje
The Rev. W. S. Smith, of Jersey City, gave a stereolecture lecture on "Up" holder of Freedom, at the Sunday Afternoon Lyceum, East Orange, N. J., Sunday.
PLAINFIELD, N. J.
PLAINFIELD, N. J.—Mr. and Mrs. Jas Hampton gave a reception at their room on Manning avenue Friday evenings February 27, in honor of their sister's birthday, Mrs. Clara Mickens. The evening was spent merrily with card games, solos and dancing music by Miss Bertha Edwards and Edward Watson. The following guests were treated to a supper specially prepared, unknown to Mrs. Mickens, for the occasion. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Watson, Bruce Ford of New York, Miss Bertha Edwards of New York, Miss Lucy Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shelton, Mr. and Mrs. Golston, Andrew Foster, Stellia Stellia, Miss Wagge Mr. and Mrs. Jess Brown, Miss Anna Davis, Engelhardt Henricksen, Miss Roberta Jones, Robert Arondale, Joan Williams. The guests departed for their respective homes in taxicabs furnished by two enterprising men of our race.
No services could be held in any of the churches last Sunday night on account of the feed wires from the power house that furnished light being broken down by the severe storm. Hundreds of men and boys who have not made a dollar for many a day were able to earn cleaning away snow from 50 cents to $5 a day for one or two days. The storm did thousands of dollars damage to the property. Appreciation of good race paper will be proven by having your orders at 125 Plainfield avenue for THE NEW YORK AVE.
ST. LOUIS MO
Sr. Louis, Mo.-Mrs. Cora Carter has as her guest her son, Albert F. Carter of Presidio, Cal., who is here on a three months' furlough.
A pretty Japanese tea party was given on the evening of February 24 by Miss Dora Whittler. The guests were clad in Japanese attire and seated upon the floor, partook of a delightful Japanese repast.
Messrs. Frank and Arthur Wilson have returned after an eight month's tour in the East.
February 22 Miss Mabel Lewis en-
tertained at an afternoon lunch, at which time she announced her engagement to J. Lawrence Williams of Boston. Twelve young ladies were present.
The Rev. B. T. Kenmater, vicar of St. George's Chapel, will be the speaker at All Saints Church lent servers every evening, March 6. Miss Maryall Tallam, Bram of the University of Illinois has been appointed instructor of mathematics in Summer High. She comes from the high school of Baltimore, Md. Miss Brown is the daughter of Prof.
AGRICULTURAL AND M
Maintained by the Governments of New
Open all the year round. For make of
Successful graduates. Board Judging and T
begins December 1st 1933. For catalog or o
page 1-197 JAS. B. DUDLEY, President.
Negro Farmers
Have you ever stopped to
began, everything has increased.
Have you any idea how far
try is increasing?
Do you know that every
other countries are coming to
lands right from under you?
Has it ever occurred to you
South, goes higher and higher.
Now wake up and listen to
in which is located the great T
opportunities to the Negro far
the entire South.
If you want to be inep
write to me and say so, and I w
the two or three bales of cotton
each year as rent, go towards
best county of the best State in
Be sure to write at once, be
these bargains, and you may be
A. F.
Box 51.
The Tuskegee
Dr. Booker T. Was
WHOLE SET ONLY ($2.00
and the balance at $1.00 p
"UP FROM SLAVERY." A history of
told by himself. In this book also is give
and Dr. Washington's famous Atlanta A
15 cents extra.
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tains advice with reference to the importance of
importing same. Price $1.50, postage B
"CHARACTER BUILDING." A collecti
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alks have become widely known and fame
"STORY OF THE NEGRO." (Two Ve
race from its beginning in plain, simple
school child. This history also contains
women who have succeeded in various
a part of the education of every Negro
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contains Dr. Washington's experiences in
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Price $1.50, postage 15 cents extra.
FARMERS A
Never stopped to think that every thing has increased except large many idea how fast the population?
Now that every year, thousands are coming to the South under you?
Occurred to you that the price higher and higher each success up and listen to me, Macon noted the great Tuskegee Institution the Negro farmer than any.
To be independent and to say so, and I will show you see bales of cotton that you want, go towards buying you the best State in the South.
Write at once, because people and you may be too late.
A. R. STEWART
Tuskegee Edition
Dr. T. Washington
ONLY ($2.00) TWO DAYS at $1.00 per month.
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Negro Farmers Attention
Negro Farmers Attention
Have you ever stopped to think that ever since the world began, everything has increased except land?
Have you any idea how fast the population of this country is increasing?
Do you know that every year, thousands of people from other countries are coming to the South and buying farm lands right from under you?
Has it ever occurred to you that the price of land, in the South, goes higher and higher each succeeding year?
Now wake up and listen to me, Macon County, Alabama, in which is located the great Tuskegee Institute, offers better opportunities to the Negro farmer than any other county in the entire South.
If you want to be independent and stop paying rent, write to me and say so, and I will show you just how to make the two or three bales of cotton that you have been paying each year as rent, go towards buying yourself a farm in the best county of the best State in the South.
Be sure to write at once, because people are snapping up these bargains, and you may be too late.
The Tuskegee Edition of Dr. Booker T. Washington's Works
THE
STORY
OF THE
NEGRO
WASHINGTON
THE
STORY
OF THE
NEGRO
WASHINGTON
NYLAPO
EDUCATION
WASHINGTON
DOCUME
VOLUME
DOCUMENT
DOCUMENT
WHOLE SET ONLY ($2.00) TWO DOLLARS DOWN and the balance at $1.00 per month for six months
D AR OFF HERE AND MA'L
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DEAR STAR
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Enclosed please find two dollars, for which please send at once your Tuskegee Edition of Boobee T. Washington's Worls. After examination, if I am satisfied with the book's agree to send you $1.00 per month for six months. If not satisfied, I agree to return books in good order within five days; and you are to return my two dollars. Title not to be to me until the books are fully paid for.
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Write at once to
Charles Brown, principal of Dumar school of this city, and a graduate o. Summer High, 1903.
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ERS Attention
think that ever since the world had except land?
just the population of this coun-
year, thousands of people from
the South and buying farm
that the price of land, in the
each succeeding year?
name, Macon County, Alabama,
Tuskegee Institute, offers better
mer than any other county in
dependent and stop paying rent,
will show you just how to make
on that you have been paying
buying yourself a farm in the
the South.
because people are snapping up
the too late.
STEWART,
Tuskegee Institute,
Ala.
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RACE IMPROVEMENT NEEDED
Prof. Cookin, of Princeton University, whose specialty is biology, says more babies are needed to protect the race from degeneration. That is queer. Most people now have more babies than they can properly rear and educate. "More attention must be given to the improvement of heredity," he says. He is quoted further as follows:
At the present rate of reproduction the more highly educated women would be more likely to have children, and the more educated, in teaching that the higher classes pay more attention to reproduction, and the proportion of it will be the higher, the chances will be increased by the lower, the chances will be decreased of today becoming a more noticeable share of women attending the duty of the men to be held.
It is plainly to be noticed on all sides and everywhere, that the small person physically, both male and female, appears more in evidence than the large person. And the average person appears to have more education than in other days but far less common sense. They appear to talk and do things more like educated machines, following the letter and word of the text book or machine shop, with little deviation from the text. Educated machines are needed; so are educated people to make and direct the machines.
There is no room for argument that the feminist movement is leading women away from the home and motherhood, but that is not much loosen, as it is said the strong-minded woman, the most self-willed, produce the poorest wives and children. The average woman, who loves her home and husband produces the best and strongest average children. More babies are not needed to save the race from degeneration, but fewer and better babies. In a multitude no man can number, there may be but few people, while in a select company of twelve there may be many persons, strong physically and mentally and entirely human, with none of the heart in them.
Among white people there appears to be on all hands a dwindling of the size of the body in bulk, with little corresponding shrimping of the mind, the intellect. The average white man is as a commonplace and stupid in his manners and talk as the average colored man, while the average intelligent white man talks and sets the commonplace of his trade or profession just as does the average intelligent colored man. There is nothing more stupid than a convention of allowed wise men or women conferring and wrangling over how to or how not to do commonplace things in a commonplace way.
There is nothing to show that the world has not now more babies, more people, than it needs, with conditions of living growing harder all of the time, in all quarters of the earth; but there is everything to show that it needs fewer and better babies, fewer and better people, smaller and better family groups that will be able to live decently in the home and secure proper education in the schools.
PLAIN TALK IN ALABAMA
In adopting the "pay-as-you-center" system on the surface cars of Birmingham, the company answered white complaints, that trouble might result because all race colors entered by the same gars, ingest, "the Negroes are all standing back and allowing the white people to enter first." This statement very nat-
The efforts made by Senator Vardaman and his sort for selfish advantage are fast producing a condition of nauseaation and disgust which must ultimately redound to the benefit of the colored people. Truth is the only weapon with which to crush falsehood. And it is, on the other hand, as Miss McAdoo states, true that such misrepresentation as they are subjected to by Southern white men, "is causing the Negroes to unite for their own good," pot as a menacing factor, but as a helpful factor for their own uplift and betterment. Their settlement building, church building and support, banking and insurance growth, and slow but steady enlargement and development of business enterprises, together with home building and beautifying and increasing of farm acreage, from Norfolk to Jacksonville, to New Orleans, to Dallas, to St. Louis—all this shows that injustice and misrepresentation are doing for the Negroes of the United States what it has done for the Jews of Europe, drawing them closer together for their own good.
It would have a sobering effect on the Southern Democrats in Congress if it would in a body visit Richmond and thoroughly inspect the Mechanics Savings Bank and the St. Luke's Penny Savings Bank, two as up-to-date institutions of their kind as can be found in the country. But they do not want demonstrations of this kind, that the old slave Negro is dead and that the new free Negro is getting strictly, on the job of doing for himself what he should not expect others to do for him and what his Southern white enemies insist that he cannot do for himself.
"Facts are facts and nae to be disputed," said good Bobby. Let us continue to multiply our facts. "United we stand; divided we fall."
TROUBLES IN THE HOME.
There have been troubles in the house the serpent man and deceased her husband was a long time ago, Biblical chronology reasonable suspicion that it began long issue ever since. First, the man deceived the man, because emily was the thing has been going on, in an art is at the bottom of the trouble all of us at the top of it, and however it turns to the most in all directions, because the house, the church and the nation.
There are already so many causes tax the time of the police and the cost that the introduction of a greater cancunction of the law, and at the demand a matter of the most serious concern. It is a distinct surrender to the masseoman woman who wants no home and the woman suffrage principle involves forming the most ordinary duties of a service, army service, administrative service in the Balkan war, but what an enemy's army composed of women the march and in the text a woman, hell!" cclaimed General Sherman.
Then, as to mental capacity, it has woman possesses it in equal measure average man is rather stupid and silly the equal of the exceptional man. The countries; while in Asia and Africa all can continent women are not rated out of any thinking. Perhaps that is why a principle that degrades womanhood devel- these thoughts are drawn out by of last week, in which 47,000 women work public office. What was said and done was really anything scandalous, but the woman in Chicago and Illinois, as it which is bound to make more confusion the politics of the country.
And woman suffrage, the equality in the church and in the nation is no laws of Moses or the teachings of John taken 1914 years to establish the Christ large fraction of those years to destro- are allowed to dictate the fashions in already degenerated into dissipations of character—and in the making and enfo- The masculine, the Amazonian woman and to destroy it after having been all mankind before the Christiancera. The woman in her proper sphere as the heir devoted to her husband, as the mother to rear and educate her children to be redeemed womanhood from the demoral home, with one husband.
urally riled Editor Adams of the Bir- mingham Reporter, who replied, in part, as f Hows:
There have been troubles in the home ever since Eve got tangled up with the serpent man and deceived her husband Adam in the Garden of Eden. That was a long time ago. Biblical chronology says 5.918 years ago, but there is a reasonable suspicion that it began long before that time, and has been a running issue ever since. First, the man deceived the woman and then the woman deceived the man, because enmity was placed between them in the beginning, and the thing has been going on, in and out, ever since. To say that the woman is at the bottom of the trouble all of the time is to say that the man is always at the top of it, and however it turns out he is held responsible for it and suffers the most in all directions, because the inheritance is his as head of the house, the house, the church and the nation. Both law and public opinion hold him to it.
There are already so many causes that lead to troubles in the family, that tax the time of the police and the courts, causes small and big, big and little, that the introduction of a greater cause than any heretofore existing, with the sanction of the law, and at the demand of the weaker party to the home life, is a matter of the most serious concern. Such a cause is the woman suffrage one. It is a distinct surrender to the masculine woman in the home and the Amazonian woman who wants no home and can keep none when she gets one that the woman suffrage principle involves. Woman is physically incapable of performing the most ordinary duties of active citizenship—police service, jury service, army service, administrative service. Abbanian and Monte-Negro women fought in the Balkan war, but what Christian soldier would desire to shoot into an enemy's army composed of women and men! Or to have as his mate on the march and in the tent a woman, however pretty and agreeable. "War is hell!" exclaimed General Sherman. So it is, and no place for woman.
Then, as to mental capacity, it has not been generally acknowledged that woman possesses it in equal measure as man. The average woman like the average man is rather stupid and silly; while the exceptional woman is seldom the equal of the exceptional man. This is the accepted opinion in Christian countries; while in Asia and Africa and among the Indian races of the American continent women are not rated as having any brains or as being capable of any thinking. Perhaps that is why their men have fallen so low, because any principle that degrades womanhood degrades childhood and manhood.
These thoughts are drawn out by the primary election in Chicago Tuesday of last week, in which 47,000 women voted and some were candidates as well for public office. What was said and done was not pleasant reading, not that there was really anything scandalous, but because it marked the legal unsexing of woman in Chicago and Illinois, as it had before in several other States, and which is bound to make more confusion than existed before in the home and the politics of the country.
And woman suffrage, the equality of the woman with the man, in the home, in the church and in the nation is no where authorized or sanctioned in the laws of Moses or the teachings of John, Jesus and Paul. Far otherwise. It has taken 1914 years to establish the Christian home, but it will not take a very large fraction of those years to destroy it. If the whims and follies of women are allowed to dictate the fashions in clothes, in social recreations—that have already degenerated into dissipations of a distinctively intemperate and immoral character—and in the making and enforcement of the laws of the land.
The masculine, the Amazonian woman, naturally tends to usurp authority and to destroy it after having been allowed to usurp it. That is the history of mankind before the Christian era. Christianity will fail if it does not keep the woman in her proper sphere as the helpmeet of man in the home; as the wife devoted to her husband, as the mother who has no higher mission on earth than to rear and educate her children to be worthy of the Christian faith which has redeemed womanhood from the demoralizations of the Harem and given her a home, with one husband.
That is plain talk in Alabama and you hear the same sort of talk in Virginia where, when colored and white occupy the same car the rule is "whites front; colored back," and the expectation is that the colored people shall wait patiently until the white ones enter and go front. If there are enough white persons do occupy all of the seats the colored people have to stand up or wait for another car. In the Norfolk, Hampton and Newport News district intelli-
home ever since Eve got tangled up with band Adam in the Garden of Eden. This biology says 5,918 years ago, but there is it before that time, and has been a running divider the woman and then the woman does relace between them in the beginning, and out, ever since. To say that the woman the time is to say that the man is always out he is held responsible for it and suffers the inheritance is his as head of the house. Both law and public opinion hold him to that lead to troubles in the family, that hurts, causes small and great, big and little, than any heretofore existing, with the aid of the weaker party to the home life. Such a cause is the woman suffrage on culineus in the home and the Amal and can keep none when she gets one the woman is physically incapable of pervasive citizenship-police service, jury service. Albanian and Monte-Negro woman soldier would desire to shoot in men and men! Or to have as his mate of it is, and no place for woman. It has not been generally acknowledged that as man. The average woman like the jury, while the exceptional woman is soldier. This is the accepted opinion in Christian and among the Indian races of the Americas having any brains or as being capable their men have fallen so low, because angrades childhood and manhood. The primary election in Chicago Tuesday noted and some were as well for was not pleasant reading, not that there because it marked the legal unsexing of had before in several other States, and then than existed before in the home and of the woman with the man, in the home to where authorized or sanctioned in the Jesus and Paul. Far otherwise. It hasristian home, but it will not take a very it, if the whims and follies of women clothes, in social recreations—that have a distinctively intemperate and immoral treatment of the laws of the land. woman, naturally tends to usurp authorityowed to usurp it. That is the history of Christianity will fail if it does not keep the mopee of man in the home; as the wife who has no higher mission on earth than worthy of the Christian faith which has realizations of the Harem and given her a
gent colored people are beginning to show open content and disgust at the workings of the system and the mandatory insistence of the trainmen, who act toward and speak to colored patrons as if they were not people at all.
It is not a safe condition of affairs to allow to grow, as colored people of intelligence have as much sensitiveness as white people and think as much of their women folk, as the Reporter says.
But there seems to be no disposition among the white newspapers or the white people to correct the growing condition. Their attitude is, plainly, that "anything is good enough for colored people." That thing only is good enough for them, as for others, that represents in actual values the money they pay for it.
The separate car system is an outrage that will never grow to be any less so. The graded fare system, such as used to be in force in North Carolina, is the only just and honest system. By it the travellers regulated their own separation, by purchasing the class of ticket they desired. the better sort of both races buying first and the ronger sort second and even third class tickets. The effort to class all white folks as the salt of the earth and all colored people as the silt is having some queer developments; the commonest white man is fast
making an effort to accomplish in being fair, and to the best white man, with the result that they are both being dug down to the same level of courage and valgence in their manner, especially in public, while deceit colored people are so scandalous drawing away from their course and vulgates members. "The average black man thinks as much of his wife as the average white man do of his," says the Birmingham Reporter, but it will take a lot of years and education and rough experience to make the average white concede and regress the fact.
THE PERSECUTION OF SAM
MOORE
The following letter from the pen of Julian Hawthorne, son of the great novelist, Nathaniel Hawthorne, appeared in the New York Sun of February 22. It is a terrible indictment of conditions in the Federal Penitentiary at Atlanta. We would urge President Wilson and the Department of Justice to look into this case on its merits. The fact that Sam Moore is a black man should have nothing whatever to do with preventing a thorough investigation as to the terrible treatment he has received in Atlanta. We very much hope that the Attorney General of the United States, despite his Tennessee traditions, and anti-Negro proclivities, will not fail to see that this poor black man receives all that is coming to him.
No such newspaper as The New York Sun would publish a story as this without feeling that a great injustice was being done a man who has already suffered greatly.
The article as it appeared in The Sun, headlines and all, follows:
SAME MOORE IN BLACK HOLE.
Julian Hawthorne Tells of Prisoners in Atlanta Penitentiary.
To the Editor of the Sun: -Sir: A news item in The Sun this morning quotes Robert Cameron, just released from Atlanta Penitentiary, as saying, among other things, that Sam Moore, a fifer in the black hole awaiting torture to be released, having been adjudged insane by the prison officials.
Sam had already apprised the guard that he had reason to fear this man, Sam now, seeing his scouted car, sat on a shovel lying at hand and as the man made a rush at him brought the implement down on his head; the man came up, the back of his protection and was dead when picked up. Sam, without influence or friend, was rushed to judgment and was seance to die. The sentence was commenced by the book of his life imprisonment. He was finally sent to Atlanta. Life imprisonment for strolling one billion miles of defence: His many misdeeds in prison—nothing worse than that—made him the object of abuse and attack by the officials; at one time he was shot by the hospital room, where he told me, as he lay on the floor, the warden entered with a revolver in each hand and curried and menaced him. He recovered, I have seen them.
There is no form of prison "discipline" which Sam has not undergone; of his twenty-two years in jail, eight of them have been sent to the inole. He has a remarkable talent for ornamental work in wood—inlaid boxes and the like—and found mental relief in cultivating it. While he was a guard in the guards, his work and tools were removed, some of the things he had made broken and he was forbidden to do any more work of the kind. He was a guard in the Saturday outings, forbidden to witness the baseball games, put in the hole for the slightest pretest, and in every manner hounded to a degree, that would have made him a man of the highest undoubtedly had for its object either his suicide or the establishment of some grounds for committing him to an asylum. He recognised this and immediately began to hit his nose with the torture have shaken his nervous system and undermined his health and strength, without however, in the least despairing writing, that he was the best teacher he has more than a match for the ward he is more than a official in the prison.
During my stay an inspector was sent to question the prisoners and question prisoners as to abuse. I
Some information has got out, however, and there is more coming. I am sure that there will be more, and there who had been released that the rule against cigarette papers has been abolished since I left, and that one day the police would be men at dinner. This is the first time in the jail's history that even a single fowl has appeared in the jail dining room, and the farm was the exclusive property of the prisoners, having been donated to them from outside benefactors. WILLIAM WYLTHORNE. New York, February 28.
THE NEGRO FARMER.
We have now received three copies of the Negro Former, published at the Tuskegee Institute and edited by Mr. Isaac Fisher.
It is a well edited publication and calculated to help any man who cultivates the soil or who is interested in the cultivation of the soil. There are about 2,000,000 black farmers in this country, and a large proportion of them ought to be readers of the Negro Former.
It will pay all of them to subscribe for it and reap the benefit growing out of the many interesting articles that this publication contains.
Great is American baseball. King Gorman and the Irishman the Chicago White Box defeat the New York Giants by a score of 5 to 4, Thursday of last week, in London. The United States has taught the African people many things, including race prejudice, that they did not know before.
"The Arkansas Negro Suffrage League" is a very new thing, a state organization being being held the court held that they could not recognize the signatures of Negroes on petitions allowing whisky to be sold in the community, but only the signatures of community members count before we does not state which side of the whisky question the league is on. Local option is good.
The United Colored Charities of Norfolk has been incorporated, with the purpose of providing the Organization is composed of women, heretofore known as the Hamper Basket Society. There should be a colored center of population. Our "poor we have with us always," and we should organise to protect them and our interests as other race groups do.
WHAT THE PEOPLE SAY
PROF. SPINGARN CRITICISED.
To the Editor of The Age:
The editorial in last weeks Age touching on the criticism of Prof. Joel Spingarn directed against the teachings and leadership of Booker T. Washington, was timely and in order.
In the first place, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which Prof. Spingarn represents as lecturer, is not strictly a Negro organization, for the chief features and management are under the supervision of the white members and officials. While it is true some of the officers of limited importance are filled with Negro features, it is allowed to participate in minor deliberations order to prevent the statement from being circulated that the society has been founded on race prejudice. Another objection of the promoters seems to all hazards.
A certain class of "prominent" Negroes have affiliated themselves with this organization but it has been of interest to the press that the masses has not been of a very tangible nature. In other words, they can be claused in the category with the well-known attorney, Butler R. Wilson, Born in Boston, who has scribed in a recent issue of The Agr. The promoters of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People have evidently realized that the deocrates have not as yet caught the "joining fever" and that the only way to secure the timid into joining is to savagely attack the deocrates of Dr. Booker T. Wingate. The attack by Prof. Spinberg is evidently in accord with a line of action the promoters have planned to follow in order to ultimately do away with the end of the organizations membership.
It is, therefore, only a question of time when the elimination of the Negro population is already the retirement of Bishop Alexander A. Walters, Mrs. Mary Church Terrell, of Washington, Dr. N. B. Mosai, Philadelphia, and the Rev. C. H. Mosai, Philadelphia, and that the organization's methods in its vital parts, are not to be studied intelligently by loyal Negro men and women, and are now giving their time, money and lives for the uplift of the race. If Prof. Spingar and others are in earnest concerning the welfare and upkeep of the advancement society, its members, and the race greater good by focusing their verbal attacks on the man that is at present doing everything possible to progress. Firing shots at Dr. Washington at this late day are merely shots, thrown away, for the work allaying monuments that neither Prof. Spingar nor any other heavier light can tear down. Dr. Washington's work shall be for they are realized facts. Prof. Spingar's work of the race problem, even from a white man's point of view are only theories.
BUGENE A. WATSON.
Providence B. L.
Time serving and decaying human time. Social reconstruction, political policy, party politics, civic order, social reconstruction and world arbitration. Courage, courage, courage, courage, aiding to a community or a nation only in proportion to the truth in the minds of the groups mentioned.
The tendency of Operating Emanuel is to set forth in clearest speech and illustrate daily living that they worship Father, God, that they, according to their ability and growth in purity and truth, are yielding themselves by the Lord. They worship God as taught and was demonstrated in the human historical life of the only begotten Son of God, who they believe is the God of creation, the way of all children of the flesh on the mother's side; he His Father, the Holy Spirit, made His conception and birth of his son, the nomenon in human history. This God Incarnate was clothed that perfectly in man that from His early childhood to his mature age, he was the mention of His life that would indicate His Lordship. We believe that for three years after this He manifested Himself, and at the close of those three years, he was sent to the ghost, terminated human animation, was buried; after three days was changed to an Immortal Person by the power of the Holy Spirit, and according to His promise He arose above and beyond human limitations and in due time ascended, in human form, to the station on the right hand side of the Throne of God. We believe that He hath redeemed us from sin; we reacquainted with the Lord of our source and given of Eternal Life; the bestower of the Holy Spirit; the true and righteous Ruler of humanity; the Monarch, who in thefulness of time for that purpose will come to judge the quick and the dead. We believe that wicked will be punished and miserable the righteous rewarded and happy.
Our adoration to Him is this conception that he is one Lord in the unity. We believe that this King clothed in beauty, is our first real Brother. The force of His love going into our energy between and within our wills which makes us conscious of the fact that in Him we live, move and have and He has promised to them. He will, and He has promised to us the glories of His eternal, active and reefful life. We are calling upon the spirit to look above and beyond the humanities and attitudes. We would have them to become conscious of the fact that by willing they become spiritual children in Jesus the Christ, the Son of God.
We would have them to commit their souls, minds and bodies into the keepers of the Holy Spirit, to exercise themselves the Holy Spirit, to fire the soul, to move according to the tendency of their thoughts, and speak as the Spirit gives them utterly joy for we believe that it is by and through the Spirit our relationship and effort that peace on earth and good will to men is to be consummated. An ecclesiastical nation, a world with an ethical system, a political propaganda system, and a political system may reform men, but it takes Overate Emanuelian, or the loving Jesus Christ's life exemplified by believers in Him to transform humanity into a peaceful community. The Emanuel is the wielder of this spiritual fellowship. He gives the thought, supplies the energy and sustains the life through the unity of good love. Love is a reality in human society. This is the substance that we are endeavoring to preach, teach and practice. Would be pleased to have your prayers answered. RICHARD M. BOLDEN. Faster Emanuelian Church. New York, N. Y.
To the Editor of The Age:
I am inclined to believe that the segregation mania so strongly articulated by the Southern white people will eventually drift into the mercantile channels—and I unhesitatingly say, "God speed the day." For when Negroes are told in unmistakable words that he is not wanted to stand up and buy goods and the same counter and white people, then, and not until then, need ambitious Negro merchants hope to succeed in the mercantile sphere. For when Negroes are educated and uneducated Negroes deliberately past a Negro drygoods store, grocery store, hat store and enter a white mana store for the purpurea business, same goods that his Negro brother has oftentimes the would-be purchaser is forced to stand and wait until all the white customers are served. Negroes are put on to the trend of events coming rapidly in the South. We need more Negro merchantia, more Negro banks and the like. We need to emulate the Jews in the mercantile sphere and teach our teachers pound this fact into our students ourselves on how we can wonderful progress along many lines, but we my little or nothing about our schools and college mercantile sphere. Our schools and college mercantile sphere. Our young men and women by the threes
sands each year, who find no avenues for employment, save as hotel-waiters porters and social jobs. Raleigh, with two thousand, and nearly as many in the country who come to town every Saturday to trade, has but one drygoods store, employing two cleaners, two cooks, and two employees, employing and they are idle more than half of the time waiting for trade from nearly 20,000 Negroes who pass and repaint their doors to take us to day. We Negras get to wake us and see ourselves as others see us.
Our preachers must take the lead and give some of the time consumed by them, and give lines of race pride and other things that would tend to our general uplift. Our school teachers can and must improve upon the mindset of the children, and before the day had whispered, I speak, for not long ago I engaged a few Negro boys to sell Negro papers, and before the day had whispered, I spoke, for not long ago papers, saying, "We cannot sell them." To the question "Why?" the answer came almost in one voice: "The colored people have been selling Negro papers because there is nothing in them worth reading." Stories of white school boys can be seen every Saturday, going from house to house to school, and the papers edited and published by men who would not grant a Negro one inch of space in those papers to correct a wrong through misrepresentation in public print.
On the other hand, the Negro journal is always willing and ready to put his side before the public. We want to teach Negro students in every town selling Negro newspapers and they should be encouraged to do so by our preschools and teachers. Negroes will buy Negro papers when their attention is properly called to its importance. In this city I started with twenty-five copies of Negro papers every week, and more than two hundred copies every Saturday. F. L. MOOY.
Sometime ago there appeared in The Christian Republic the following statement: "We must care for the whites and blacks. What the Negro people need is not a colored bishop. The Negro people require a bishop's care, and the Negro people need an annual visit of a bishop up North, the session of a conference, and hurry on to another section does not furnish the Negro people. Do not need the Negroes in our church as much as the Negroes need to be in our church. If the Negroes choose to be in our church, one great Methodist church, that is their privilege." This editorial concedes the unequal membership. It claims that colored bishops are not a necessity in securing an equal supervision over all the Negroes, and so much needed in the church, and then owing to their grievance about this unequal supervision by the Negroes they are invited out of the church.
I conceive this unequal supervision by the bishop in spite of each member's desire to be treated with their support. Alle unequal supervision once existed among the presiding elders and pastors, but was remaining unchanged of its colored members without lowering the dignity of these offices, and even if the extension did, which is the greater of the ongoing or of the lowering of the dignity? If organization knows that some of its members are not getting equal treatment, its bishop is not giving an unequal treatment rather than invite them to the bishop can now be made out of a white one any more than in the past a black presiding elder and pastor whose bishop is not white presiding elders and white pastors.
Black bishop are the only solution of this unequal supervision of members with the practical life of the church in her growth. The church can succeed only by adjusting herself to her memorial in the church whose in line means 'place' with everything was made for man, and not man for everything else. Please give us blue bishop. SLYVESTER H. NORWOOD. Baltimore, Md.
South Carolinas New Schoel Law.
To the Editor of the Age:
Please allow me to express my opinion on the following which appeared in your issue of February 4, quoting from the Columbia (S. C.) State, in regard to the assured means passed by the South Carolina legislature.
The article reads thus: "The bill to prohibit white persons teaching in Nebraska to drive the Nugrogs of South Carolina back into the original savagery whose they came. The southern Negroes know nothing of civilization that they have not learned from the white people. The people of the Anglo-Saxon, the people of the Anglo-Saxon, or Caucasian since know nothing of the civilization which they have taught the Negro, exceptin what they have learned their civilization from the Romans.
I would like to know, however, how the passage of this act can materially increase $1,200,000. Negro school teachers our races should have a force sufficient to meet the demands f the schools of the Negro community, wealth where a similar law might be passed. I consider the article in the Columbia State State an inault to the capable men and wofen in all trades and professors, who in their chosen vocation are the equal of any member of the Negro. Despite the spirit in which this négrophobe Bloates and his allies passed should wofen the Negro of South Carolina open the door of opportunity to more of the teachers of our race. We have not the privileges of teaching the Negro in South, therefore I heartily recommend that no white teachera, some of whom was appended to the Negro studenta, other
In conclusion I would recommend the legislation of South Carolina to pass the following segregation acts: No prison keepers for Negro arrest; Negro law violators; and no white judge to try a Negro law violator. When this has been done Bless will have accomplished his illly-white aim (probably).
CHAS. BARRY.
Yardley, Penn.
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TO BE BUILT IN SAVANNAH mage 2 Wee re Ds prise to ber Gopertore te| Cs brat W. Owens wariatraraae| Betaley, of Pree kates Sete | Se
: fF Tuggle has recovered trom a| Washinetoe D.C aa ie Vigan Now and Industrial tall, of Macon, ta. The focal tayttane yen cov out for 0 pion evening, dow’ Garget w etap ts tho
cians slight Hines, pease Pei Taste, eve Vas and the Rev.| were Mr. Sad Mire, AG" Sepomett | WM. BANKS
Negro Contractors Havel coved trons spcsined eck alter = WASHINGTON, D.C. . Jinstroctive lectures oa “ras ‘ot ur A ilncia ii ond ae i . :
Ping ‘coofined Jasuinoren, D. C—Philig E. Over, | agricultere. Berry, Tay tac | 4 f ;
Begun Werk on Me, ‘and irs, Alford have ‘beeswe | 10m of Mra Anna ‘DBL. Over, ad the| SoC. opobe oa’ the of Mr. and re FF. Jones, Mr. and | Cafe. and Restaurant
New Structure a Se Mare Lincrary weTaddreased | nome oi bus suotbes, 1106 U'carest Ne Lpsrts of the sone were, present and | Kenckis, Mer and Bice]. B Davie Me ‘
last Sunday” by Mrs. John “Lemeley.| W- Wednesday morning, February 25,Pjoined id discussion Of baterest. ted Mrs. M, O: Johason, Mreand'Mrc| | 206 Weat 37¢h Street New York City
—— The subject was “Land of the Mid-| aftr juwe a long ilneis. The fmm-| Prof, Kelley Miller, dean of Howard] M. B. Branham, Mr. and Mrs. Joseoh| # Tel. 334 Masri EB
TO BE 3 STORIES MIGH| st Sun Sirs. Nation’ Davis sang] eral was ‘held at the reaidence of is | University, will addiees the medial | King, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Keid, Mr] j :
a solo. augt Mrs. Mary E. Auanson, 2Jo| students at Shaw University March 15.Jand Mrs. Eugene Edwards, Mr. and | , geegemrge-cggyesnpesinggy)enyeenysnppeyyy= ppg aE
a5 A srorise party was tendered. Now| Hlovouh ‘sree 75.5 Eriday after —— Bre, A Beard Grand Mire. eee ge Mereagaas”
Ware Carners' Lean and lavestmemt Cou] iis twenty tear bisehday Mary Teleons IPN, Kane pastor of the Metropolitan a ce N. Se ; Koos, = Me tnd. Albert "Faseon, e 7 resce t t e
a Large Negro Banking taethetion, te] Wcre present |. E. Church, officiated. 7 Ricks, N. C.—The farmers’ ‘confer-| Mr. and Mra. jackson, Mr. ani N 1 4 r A n a
i ray, a wd Sunday tid Brick Scbock, Febre-| Mrs, Job ‘Histerdkant Me and’ Mrs, s
tava ew: Wome: » | Mis. Mammie Bray, 665 | Shawmut) (A larue crowd was present Sunday| cnce was held at Brick School, Febru-| Mrs. Joba Habersham. Mr. and Mrs. 192% WRET 128th STRBeRT
Special 1¢ Tas New Yeas Aca.
. Savawwam, Ga, Marck 3—Work has
been begun on the $40,000 bank building
to be erected by the Wage Earners’ Loan
and Investment Company, the oldest
Negro banking institution im the State
of Georgia. The new building will be
built at the northeast corner of Alice
and West Broad streets; one block south
‘ef the Union Depot
‘The Pharrow Construction Company
‘of Atlanta, a Negro firm, which put up
the $100,000 Odd Fellows’ Building, in
Atlaita, has promised to have the build-
ing ready for occupancy some time dur-
img the sumener.
“fo. telling of the plans of the owners
the Savannah Tribwne says:
“The building will be constructed of
‘buf brick and will be three stories high
@ a basement. The bank will occupy
the major portion of the first oor and
ks quarters will be laxuriously equipped.
The front of the first story will be of
white-Georgia marble.
“Aside from the bank, there will also
be one store on the-ground floor. The
second and third stories will contain
about thirty-two office rooms. In the
basement, which will extend several feet
above the strect, thereby allowing ample
ight and ventilation, will be a beauti-
fully fitted-up barber shop. a steam heat-
ing plant and several storage rooms.
Entrance to the two upper floors of the
boiling will be fest Broad street.
“The Wage Ear Loan and Invest
ment ‘Company seooad lanrest
Negro banking institution in the ogun-
Neer
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Grinnage, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
innage. daughter of Mr. and Mrs
James H. Grinnage, graduated from
Spe Ror Me Danley, i Bi
tev. Mr. , pastor of Bix
Bethel Church, occupied the pulpit a
Wesley Chureh, 18th and Lombard, thi
Mr. and Mrs. Maria Cowdery. 121:
South 19th street, are entertaining Miss
Téa Freeman, of Washington, D.C.
. Agoes P. was a guest o!
Merand barn. Bert, Widlares Lat: Sem
day in New York City.
Arthor Schomberg.-of New York.
was in the city last week, 2 gucst of
Dr. Algernon BR Jackson
‘The chrysamthemam | committee _ of
Mercy Hospital will give a, secepsien
in honor of St. Patrick’s wife at Fi-
delity Hall on Wednesday, March 18.
John F. Gargol, of New York City.
asd Miss Virgins Yaecy, of Germas-
town, were married last Saturday eve-
ning at tbe home of the bride, 222
W. Center street, by the Rev. R. A.
Armstrong. They left for New York,
where they will reside.
Deaths during the week were James
Williams, Alfred Anderson, John Brant-
key, James Anderson, Alvia Johnson,
Robert Moore, Frederik Brown, Thos.
Coursey, Susan Graham. Frank Barses
oo ‘Minmy ey ing, Feb 2.
y evening, February 23.
Miss Kate C, youngest daughter of
Lawyer, Everett J. Wasing, was married
to C Leo Taylor by the Rev. John
B. Reeves. They will reside at 2327
Catharine ‘street.
0. V. €atto Lodge, No, 28, 1..B.
P.O. E of W., gave a emober at their
hall on Wednesday evening, March 4.
W."Basil Webb is celebrating bis
fourteenth year as messenger to. the
different mayors who have presided
over the city in that time. His duty,
is to greet all of the mayor's visitors.
On ‘Thorsday evening, March 4, at
Union A. M. E Church, there will
be held the first celebration ever held
in this city for the commemoration of
the birth of Crispus Attacks, the pa-
triot and martyr.
The Rev. Dr. W. W. Spencer Car-
renter, pastor of Alien A. M. EL
Church, went to Washingtoa, D.C.
on Tuesday to lecture for Bethel
Literary.
Prof. B. B. Purvis, of Newark, N. J.
was the, auest feor 8 few dae of the
Rev. and Mrs. George E. Bennett, 1525]
Peencli street:
BOSTON, MASS.
Bosrow, Mass—Massichusetts Lode,
No, Bald. GU. 0. 0. exserisine’
a large crowd at its saver
ball and banquet im Paul Revere
The reception was from 8:20 to 9:20.
Guests of honor were District Grand
Master Potter and Past District Grand
Masters G. Henry Bowell. Col. G. L.
Tucker, Hea 7 Harper, John” W.
Johnson, J. & Epps. Committee of
arrangements. C_W. Harrison, M. L.
Webb, G. Fred Seaman, O. L. Payne,
George Jackson,"Z. R. Fountain, A. P.
Russell “and Mathew Walton,
Atiae “Skinner addressed the J. C.
Puce Literary February 7,. He spoke
on “The Negro of 186." Miss Es-
thee 1 Washineton rendered # piano
Past District Grand Master G. Hen-
Fr: Powell delivered an address on a
belie mecting at Lowell on Washing-
‘on'e Birthday under the auspices of
Ateural Farragut Camp of Sons and
‘eterans,
Edward Dugger, the crack runner of
Faelish High School,. broke the record,
atthe meet with “Lyman Classical
School for the 20 yard dash. He was
already the holder of the schoolbey
standing high jamp record. ;
Mrs Marie Crawford related condi-
tion surrounding the colored people in
the ‘South at the Reston Literary and
Historical Association. The Hub, City,
Mandolin Ouartet furnished music.
Many prires were given at the Zion
‘uviay entertainment. Among those
Dresent were Otis Skinner, Charles Wil-
rome Ton, Weame Betas Ror
‘Mr. and Mrs. Joep Myers . ave
on their place of residence from
Ss wrest to 26 Ws
ee io
ir. Tuggle has recovered from a
slight ‘iiness.
it, Brown, Warwick street, has re-
covéred from a sprained beck after
being confined to his bed for a week.
secant Mis Alford have become
u rents’ of a r.
eee Lie rae addr
*
The subjes ws “Land NOE the Mid-
aight Sun Mrs. Marion Davis
ven we
A surprise party was tendered Nor
man N. Rayner, 60 Allston street, -on
his twenty-first birthday. Many friends |
Mrs. Mammie Bray, 665 " Shawmut
avenue, and Mrs. Izetta Johnson, 630
Shawniat avenue are ill at their home,
NEW HAVEN. CONN.
New raven, Conn—asirs. Lhomas
Jennings gave a birthday party for her
son LeRoy at their home, 153° Goffe
street, Monday evening, March 2. The
party lasted from 4 p.m. tu 9 p. m. and
seas ong of ‘the finest children's parties
of the Séason. :
Last Sunday a fearful rain storm
raged all day, causing the attendance at
the churches’ to be very small. The
Immanuel Baptist Sumday School had a
geod atvendance. Next Sunday J. Les-
ter Pugh will imtroduce his class rexis-
ter system, which is expected to make
a great improvement over the old way
of keeping the records.
A giTRe number of@gMasons and
Knights Teroplars turned Wut in a pour-
ing rain Sunday, March 1, to attend the
funeral of Marcellus Speaoer, who died
at his home, 5? Charles street, Thurs-
day, Februaty 26. The services, were
under the auspices of OHental Lodge
No. 6, F.and A.M. Se Paul's Com-
mandery No. 9, K. T., and Eureka Chap-
ter No. 2 were escorts. The ceremonies,
which were very impressive, were con-
ducted by James W. Pugh, worshipful
master of the lodge. The fumeral was
held in Zion A. M. E. Church. of which
he was a member. Mr. Spencer leaves
2 widow. Susie Spencer, amd a daugh-
fer, Mrs. Ida Thompson, Baker &
Brown » re the fumeral directors. .In-
terment in Evergreen Cemetery.
James Ward died at the New Haven
Hospital Monday might at 8 o'dock
after a shert illoess, aged 17 years.
He leaves bis mother and sister, Mrs.
Rath Taylor. of this Gty. He was a
meraber of Se. Luke's Church aod Sum-
day School. The funeral was held
Wednesday moraing in St. Luke's, the
Rev. Father Bowles officiating.
The Rev. H. O. Bowles left New Ha-
wos wt neca Witossday for Detroit.
where he will conduct a ten days’ mis
sion: He will step over in Cleveland.
His pelptt bere will be aupplied by spe-
cial ministers each Sunday.
Oscar B. Ross is at work after three
weeks’ tines.
The Dixweil Avemwe Church troop of
Boy Scouts will xive-a concert in the
chapel every, Fitdey eveninat at § o'clock.
pert Pugh a boner aker seversi
weeks" iTiness, and is able to be out.
Sunday, March 8 the Rev. A.C. Jones
will preach at St. Ladae’s Church. Whal-
Se cee
MARTFORD, CONN.
Hagrrons, Conn.—Jokm Mitchell and
Arthar Lynch, of New Haven, Conn.
were in town Saturday, February 28.
to ateend the wedding of Miss Louise
Henderson, Mr. Mitchell remained in
town over Sunday as the guest of Rob-
ert Jones.
Mrs. Mattie Carter, Warren street.
is again om the sick Ket.
| Miss Carolyn Peterson was injured
in gp, accident, but is) convalescing
Dancy Jones took a fying trip to
Th *e bie of
ebm of the scasom was
the Tango Tea givea Moaday. _Feb-
ruary 23, at the residence of Mrs. Shaw.
Paviben’ street. It was the rat of the
kind to be given bere and the appear-
ance of things 4id credit to the com-
matter om arrangements, Wm. Service
Bell, chairman. Everyone _ looked
“classy” and the affair was enjoyed by
all present. Thetea was from 6 to 10
Din.
The marriage of Miss Louise: Hen-
derson to. James H. Virgin, of Bur-
lington, Vt.. was an affair of interest.
Mr and Mrs. Virgin will be at_ home
at 211. Elmwood ‘avenue. Burlinatoo.
Vt. The wedding, which was at the
bride's home. was largely attended and
many beatiful gifts werg received.
NORWICH CONN.
Noswicm, Conn.—The Rose of New
England Lodge 2364, G. U. 0. 0. F.
held a very interesting memorial service
in the hall Sunday aftermeen at 3 o'clock
in honor of Peer Ogden, founder of
the erder in America. L. Dabney was
the first speaker, followed by Capt. John
Williams, Wm. Sgivery aed _ ethers.
Me segen oo the Ele and work of
pee tes ae
on
Honschotd of Ruth arc laa fase condi:
tian.
aNogeitnatanding the baed etre Son
servions_ were ia
Mokinicy Aranee A ME Zien Coorch,
Sunday evening the pastor, the Rev.
Biddle, spoke on “The Seven
Words from the Cross.” Communion
service was postponed to Sunday even-
ing, March &
PORTSMOUTH. N. H.
FoarsMOUTm, N. fH.--The regular
mrecting of the Teachers’ Union was
held Tuesday evening, February 24,
with P. R. Allen, Richmond street.
The Tuesday Night Whist Club met
with Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Moore. Dan-
iel street, Tuesday night. February 24.
A mass meeting of colored voters
was held at the Peoples’ Baptist Church
Wednesday evening. February 25. to
consider the question of sending repre-
centatives'to the National Negro Con-
res te be held at Washingtea, D.C.
May & F
Young Ladies’ Bible Class of
the Peoples’ int Baptist ‘Sunday Schoo! was
omeertained 4 ‘Martha K. Harris
Bow street. Monday evening, March 2
‘Sunday, March 8 hee beca designat-
ed_by all_the churches in. the city
Mor (penne oe. oecial tet
oar as fort to
attend cherch on that day. :
‘The colored saliors on the U. S..S
Tacoma will give an invitation dance
ss. Ma Pilfay euning
Tocatag, Night Whine ‘Cheb. wilt
‘Mr. and
SS Lapras Pee roe
Wathingwe'D. CS
* WASHINGTON, D.c.
Wasminaren, D. C—Philip E. Over
som of Mra. Aana BM. Over, amd th
late De. Walter S. Over, died at the
ome, of bis mother, 108 U street, N
W., Wednesday morning, February
after jute a tong illness. The frm
See “Mrs, Mary “ie "“Rueason 26
rs. Mary E.
Elevemah street, S. eiday “alter
won, February 27, at 1:30 o'alock. Dr.
LN, Ross, pastor of the Metropolitan
4, E. Church, officiated. 7
fierenoss February 22 ov Metropolias
aftersooa, February 22, at Metropolitan
dion Methodist Church at a sacred
concert by Hoffman's orchestra. On the
program were Miss Arneita Lee Gos-
tou, soprano; Josefa H. Carroll, tenor;
Jacob Hi. Hopkins, cornea; Miss
Jewel Janifer, ‘accompanist; Excelsior
Male Quartet,’S. J. Warner, érst tenor:
JG. “Warner, bagitone; J. H. Dale,
second tenor;’ j. "F...Warner, basso:
Jopeok, Newman, aires
Sunday evening, February 22, the Mt.
Carmel Baptist Church gave a sacred
concert in counection with its week of
religions services at is new place. of
worship. Philip | Worde, organist:
Scott Siayo, bafftone; Miss Reth Cox,
soprano; William L. Offord, baritone;
Seer) cad cht Set pre ee
tenor: made ‘participated.
Miss Elsie H. Ware, who was oxe-
ployed im the Bureau of Engraving amd
Printing,’ died at_her residences 925
Lamoet street, Northwest. Saturday
Right, “February 15, after a lingering
lineas.
Chat, M. Thomas, James Chestnat,
W. S. Montgomery asd LM. Hershas
visited the meeting of the Farmers’ Al-
linnce, at the Manassas Imdustrial
School for Colored: Youth, on Monday,
Febraary 15.
‘On account.of the severe saew storm
on Monday evening the stewardesses
of Union Wesley A.M. E. Zion Church
were compelled 10 postpone their en-
tertainment -until March 11, at which
time the Orphan's Cantata” Company
will appear.
Miss Margaret M. Kellen has_béen
omoted to succeed the late E. K.
Buchanan in_the offee of Recorder of
Deeds by Recorder Henry Liecoin
Jolson.
Miss Dorothy Syphax, of Baltimore,
Md, is visiting the city and is the
house quest of her aunt. Mrz RW.
Wills, ‘Sherman avenue.
The funeral services over Alexander
Howard were held from Zion Baptist
cherch oa last Sunday at Ip. ao The
Rev. Walter H. . of tae Nim
centh Street Baptist Crarch, preached
be sermon. Mr. Howard was com-
nected with every branch of both Odd
Fellows and Masons. Many beautiful
Noral “tributes were scat.
At the Bethel Literary and Historical
Association Teesday evening. March 3,
he Rev. W. Spencer Carpenter, pastor
of Allen A.M. E. Church, Philaseiotan,
Pa, delivered an address; subject.
The Divided House.” at Mctropottan|
ME Church Dr. LN. Row,
asior, Music was ty the chair of the
harch. Prof. John 7. Laytoa, director.
5M. Dudley is president and Miss
A.D. Bell secretary.
‘A woman's mass meeting will be held
or all women under the Lend-a-Hand
Association of ministers’ wives of Me-
ropolitan A.M. E. Church, Sunday,
March 8 xt 3 p.m,
Services were well attended at the
Cosmopolitan Baptist Charch all day
Sunday when Dr. Drew preached.
The National Convention under_the
lendersoa National Memorial - Civil
tights League of America held its ses-
ion Wedeesday, Februry 25. The
allowing fieers were ‘decid: Dr
1 Seton, seersany: Be Ae B. Calle
. Nelson, secretary: Dr. A. B. Calis,
¥ Baltimore, Md., treasurer: Dr. E. E
ackson, of New p. corresponding
ccrcary NAF Drew of Nee Yok
scietent ‘treasurer; Aiton Purell. of
rennsyivania, chairman: of the board
{grea =
ise Blanche shter en-
sratned arte tells se teatro
cnet. 7M Fart sires $.'W_ Tuesday
vening, |. ata pre-Lenten
ancake party. The most enjoyable fea-
are of the evening, besides the selec
ons by Dr. Bishop of Baltimore. was
pe palatable 2s well an seasonable pan-
akes prepared by the hostesses. Miss
innie Cattlet and Dr. Edward Harris
resided altermetely at the pamee during
ne dancing. Others present were Miss
folie E. Magruder. Profs. Oswald J.
jurke and David V. Greene. :
RALEIGH, N. C.
Ratan, N. C—James W. Yearuin
Shy tha eck. “Mrs "Yeung. poome
ir. 2 youn
man, has che distimesion of being the
only Negro whe ie eweer and manure
of a brass and iron foundry. may:
roll cach month runs up into hundreds
of dollars.
Prof. RL. Lynch, of the St. Aneus-
tine School, assisted by pupils, enter-
tained last ‘Friday evening mm Taylor's
Hall with a taleaux ‘entitled “An Eve-
ning in France
"The Rev. Geo. W. Moore is home
with his family’ after an absence of
several weeks visiting hia- churches,
Spring Brawch, Wagrars, H.C; Sandy
Grove, Moxton, N. C; First Baptist
Church, Holly Springs, N.°C.: Wake-
field Baptist Church, Zebulon. N.C.
J. C, Scarbrough, undertaker. of Dur-
ham, N.C., was in the city this week.
Thomas Price, a hockman. died Wed
nesday and was buried Friday, the Rev.
Mr. Matthews. pastor of the Christian
Church, officiating. Lighter Brothers
were the undertakers.
‘The-Odd Fellows of this city cele
brated Peter Ogden's Day Monday
evening, March 2. They marched to
St. Paul's A. M. E. Charch, where the
exereises_ took place. District Grand
Master Col. J. H. Young delivered an
address,
Thomes Price. a hackmen. died Wed-
nesday, the Rev. James K. Hatterwhite.
recter ef St. Ambrowe P. E. Church. ad-
niniwered communion te his parishon-
ors at Zand V1 a.m. He has placed
in the hende of hie members a. neatly
nrinted program ef seyrices dura the
forty days of lant, with his pastoria!
letter.
‘Dr. 1. H. Love and Berry O'Kefler
are attending the Farmers’ Conference
at Bricks, N.C. Pref. T. 6. Inboréen
AH Kinds of bottttag Prompay ammnesa to. Preee 6756 Moraingstde
A. R. MOTBN
MINIUAL CIURACTIA 7
107 West 185th Street New York
ately Sas at Btacta: Fictarod Wate « Sarton Toe Covare, Deer Corete Pauses,
Pau dre PUMCE, Decormeg ood Clockie: Werke nn nes: Timaitleg, Cos.
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RELIABLE AGENTS WAYIED CVERYA ACRE ON LARGE COMMISSIONS
Metal Prien of ee Mitery oe S12
Write for seras to
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Tebepboe: 2876 few hem Open Duy oat Migh:
JAVMIES C. THOMAS
UNDIERFAKER and CWBAL BER
89 West 134th Street 128 Mast 18th Street
Near Leaxs Aveuse New York FR Tet. M44 O-nmerey
pADY ATCEADSST. Camp Contre and Conches to Lat Bor Aut Parqamee
“ Ke Brtk Sebeel
Ce ee cee arte
Atkins. priatipel of States Normal ind
C. G. W. m merietrarals
of the Novwal and Indaseria
Jnstitute, Va. and the Rev.
L. Bolden, of Dediey, N.C. gave very
instructive lectures om ject of
agricultere. Berry of
N. °C. spoke on the of
school farms. Negro farwers from all
parts of the state were presest and
joined id discussion of interest.
Prof. Kelley Miller, dean ef Howard
University, will address the medical
students at Shaw University March 15.
BRICKS. N. C.
Baicxs, N. C—The farmers’ ‘confer-
ence was heid at Brick School, Febru-
ary 21. The program was interesting.
A speech was ade by the Rev. Mr.
Baldwin om the subject of canning
fruits and vegetables and the raising
of poultry and hogs. The Rev. Mr.
Baldwin ts a progressive Ni aed
owns a large farm in or ‘near Dediey,
NC. “Prof Owen of the Petersberg
Normal and Lapigiiny Megpeseay Pet-
ersburg, Va., spoke on.the cora grow-
ing of the North Carolima and Vir-
ginia sections. Prof. Owen is super-
intendent’ of the agricultural depart-
ment of the Petersburg Normal
Schoo. =~
by Prot Atkin principal’ of te
y Prof. Atkins,
State Normal School, Winston Salew,
N: C. He is ome of the leading Me-
kroes of our state, and is dome a
xreat work for the colored people of
his city and county.
The Jubilee Club remdered some
jubilee songs, which .were enjoyed by
the farmers and their wives.
Mrs. J. C. Olden, a graduate of Fiak
University, wife of oer present trea-
surer, appeared before the public im
the schoo! chapel and readered a me-
sical recital which was of real artistic
value, She was assisted by Mra. J. J-
Fletcher, Mrs. Roberts and Pick
Olden. teachers at this place. The re
cital was given in behalf of the senior
class at Bricks.
Richard B. Harrison. reader, a7-'
peared March 4, amd Miss Patti
Brows oa March 28.
The ¥. P.S. CE. is looking for-
ward to its amaual banezet, which will
be beld Saturday, March 7, at 7:30
o'clock, at which time will occur the
installation of the officers for the next
twelve months beginning April 1.
The Young Men's ristian Asso-
ciation is doimg 2 good work for the
apkft of the young people around
Bricks and the adjovemg towns and
coaowsly writing for March 2 when
jously waiting for . when
the new officers will be imstatied by
W. A. Hunton. one of the interna-
tional secretaries of Washingto.- D.
C. On Sunday, March 22 Mr. Hun-
on will deliver the anwual address.
The-¥. M. CA. brass band is do-
ing fine work with its leader, J.-W.)
Porter. under the guidence of Prof.
. . Bleecker.
SAVANNAH, GA.
Savammam, Go—Duretiog its chey-
cree sie
prearessive
atmosphere of the cty i sarcharged
with cometructive effort. At present
there is im course of comstruction a
children; 2 $12000 Carmegie Library
for colored people is being built. and
the contract for a, $40,000 building by
2 local colored bamk has been awarded
to R. E. Pharrow, of Atlama. Ga Mr.
Pharrow ie im the city making plans
to push the baak beilding to comple-
Sen
“The social season came to a clove by
a brilliant party given in bower of Mrs.
Cheries Ramey. of Mew York Cy. by
Mr. aad Mra A. L. Tucker on Tues-
ee es, Co
H. Adolph Howell
Fuaeral Directer 204 Gabaimer
22 WEST t23ad ST. MEW YORK
‘aoe s. "Fates wean eaten Sock soot
hee sist Ses Cae Creme Roel Ta
Pees arto sare
CHAS. &. HOLMES
FUNSRAL DIRBCLOR
62 WEST aed SteeeT
Prewe cast toratne :
J. WESLEY LANE
Undertaker & Embalmer
62 WEST ted STUEET = eae Lament Ave :
ove Pener Purge ont
Bet eS Se
enfaten QinBidein Vac’ Cade’ ann che
ny wight were sis
nee eae teat
‘invited to mest Mrs. were Mts.
‘Chas. H. and Mrs, Rate Dicker-
som, of Bi N. Yi; Mrs, Lula
Beasley, of Chicago: Mra ‘Minnie Sbef-
tall, of Macon, Ga. ‘Tie focal
were Mr. and" Mrs. AG. AicDowell,
Seo da ie
os 3,
PE Mr. RB. E. Scott,
Mr. and Me FF. Jones, Mr. and
Mra. H. P. Benson, Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
Kinelde, Mr. and Mrs. J. R Davis, Mr.
and Mrs. M. O: Jobason, Mr. and Mrs.
M. B. Braskam, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
King, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Reid, Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Edwards. Mr. and
Mrs. A. P. Barnard, Mr. and Mrs. J.
H. C. Betler, Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Wil-
lems, Me ed (Mrs. Albert Jackson,
r. and Mrs. jackson. Mr. an
Mrs, Job Haterdkam“Mrvand’ ‘Mrs.
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ira, 1. D. irs. FAL
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Se Sees
See ern eee SAS
“dagtone 1109 Cotamtres
Dr. Charles H. Roberts
SURGGON D&NTI3T;
242 WEST $3e@ STREET
New Yous GIy =
ae ate fae: 6. a. Desotare oy
Telephone 7189 Merningwtse 4
Or, JAMES A BAMKS
SURGEON DENTIST
Ges sdainistered. Porceleia Crows and
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Bid Woot (38rd Strent New York
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MORRIS HOUSE
‘Ww. M. Morris, Paap. .
140 Prince St
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| THE SMITH House
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Vesiences. Convenient t all ont
‘tod Pesan. R. R. Station Permanent as
twaneclent guests, MRO. A. OMITH
* 302 West 37th Strest
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BARRY MCORRIET, Prep,
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Seno eel, DRAMATICS AND ATHLETICS [oo
“DIPPY” OVER THE Moves { « . ; s a J | } THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 19
3 12-00-2620 0S SOOO OSES OROSOSESORISEEPRCREE | “EO RERANHn-+ HeneenteseseteestototetesegEtbeeentceStctoeony: .
ee ERUADWAT EINVASEUN
(SY LESTER A WALTON.)
EW YORK hes gone wiki over
the latest dances, and the muqh
dapibus Sele 2 iS
ing such imported ap
pelletions as Jardin de Danse, Folie:
‘Masiqny, Palaic de Dunce and Persios
Garden, bear ow the truthfulness of
io sapetion. Bat if “wild”, is the term
wwaed & depict the state of miimd of the
matives over dencing, then-# will’ be
‘macemeary to-cmploy a term gortraying
& more turbuleat and rictows mentality,
when welling of the New Yorker's fond-
was for the movies. Probably the slang
exgreasion “dippy” woukd 62) the bal.
‘The Burens of Licenses bas bees
(ned enough to furnich me with the in-
formation that there are from 950 to
‘ABO licensed motion. pictures thestres
tm Grester New York, and it must be
Dnuses devoted to motion picteres arc
qpening im the various sections of
Grester New York daily. If im New
‘YWerk thty continnc to manifest such
‘wmmeuel interest im the movies, aad
ethers conch the fever, which seems com-
tegious, there is every reason fo believe
‘thet the waiaber of motion pictere thea-
tres will bave passed the one thousandth
wrk by the time our ambitious posts
find it opportane to write about the gio-
slows might: im June. And as to the
Brbbabie member of motion picture thea:
fees to dot the local amusement map in
@e Geta future, this calls for con-
‘tmaplation wherein the imagination must
bbe very elastic indeed.
* The greatly changed attitude of theat-
sical promoters toward the movies with-
im the' last twelve months has been in-
weresting. Three or four years ago—ir
fect, mot that far back—representative
‘theatrical managers, those who produced
first-class attractions, turocd up their
meses at the motion picture industry and
‘motion picture theatres, and this turning
wp of moses was more in a literal sense
then Sgurative. Bat recently their olfac-
tery organs quickly assumed a different
angie, and for a wumber of months these
meme managers have been as busy as
(bees organizing motion picture manu-
facturing concerns and opening theatre:
@ pat om exhibition thar wares. The
largest corporations being formed to-
dag in the smmscmest world deal with
(he movies, and it is not unusual to
peed of acorporation organired to menu-
fectarc flee capitalired im six figures.
At frst thé popalar-priced theatres in
Wew York and elsewhere where dra-
mastic and masical offerings were pro-
dmced were the objects of attack by the
invasion of the movies. Three seacors
ago the Stair and Havlin route resem-
Med a depopulated village aiter a sc-
siews flood or conflagration. Many of
the best houses on the route were turned
ever to the movies. and instead of being
able to offer a road show thirty-odd
pemsccative weeks as heretofore a route
ef Hittke more than ten weeks was all
Stair and Havlin conld give. This con-
itiom wade it necessary for the retire-
ment of many melodramatic and musical
sw .
Wet now the movies have struck
Breedway—Broadway, New York. 2:
well as the Broadways of other Large
wien. And the force of the shock sus-
maimed by the advent of the movies i
ping Sek all along the Riako. But the
mest aewusing part is to sce the bic
managers in their scramble to get on the |:
oad wagon. Brosdway theatres, where
pount acters of the past and presen: |.
pom sumer and fame im serices dramatic |’
wesemations ; Broadway theatres, known
er amd wide for stupendous musical
feewe—comcéitions of mckody, mirth.|
memty aad gorgeous costumecs—have
epiteleeed to thc onslanght of the
povies. .
At Weber's Music Hall Broadway
ed Twonty-ninth street, where Weber
mt Pickds, Liltian Resscil. David War-
ahd, Willie Collier and a. score of other
wars ago, motion pictures reign se-
weme. “The Gangster” is the tithe of
Rai Oy Sa la
ee gia ade an ys eet ie ea
eeqpiteleerd to the onslanght of the
movies. .
At Weber's Music Hall Broadway
end Twenty-aiath street, where Weber
gut Picids, Liltian Resscil. David War-
field, Willie Collier and a. score of other
Jeers ago, motion pictures reign se
poume. “The Gangster” is the title of
Gee Sider being shown. Near by is the
‘Bweu Theatre and further mp is the
Garrick, Theatre, both of which enjoyed
saputations in former days as kading
Broadway theatres. Motion pictures are
mew im complete control. The Savoy
‘Thaentre, situated in Thirty-fourth street
maar Broadway. here Wilton Lackaye
and others gave impressive evidences of
tteeir drametic ability, has been a motion
picture house for ‘some time. It was one
of the first, if not the first, Broadway
Inswocs to change its policy:
‘The Herald Square Theatre at Broat-
way and Tharty-filth street, recent scenes
ef conquest im musical comedy by Eddic
Bey, Icw Fields and many others. is
mow a confirmed motion pacture howse.
amd there are no indications that wrait-
al productions are apt to get another
fewtbeld. at the Herald Square smnin
seen. The seme condition exists at the
Breedway Theatre, Broedway, and For-
Qe mtrect, where once the Rogers
Brothers handed owt many 2 laugh and
‘Marie Cehili, Blanche Ring and hoas oF
@eentrica) stars won enstinted apnlause
end it certainly seems qorer to think 2%
@e Breodway Thastre 20 anything be.
Gan base of musical comedy.
‘The Bresdweg houses succembigg
BASKETBALL and DANCE
HOWARD UNIVERSITY
COLUMBIA ALUMNI
—— a ee a SS
mamed the Vitagraph Theatre, at Broad-
way and Fosty-fourth street, and the
New York Theatre, next door. Never
were the mames of famous stars adver-
tised im the lights as brilliantly as the
names of the pictures being shown at
these two houses. At the Vitagraph
‘Theatre, which came imto being about a
wmosth ago, three feature reels are being
shown amd the management could be
suspected of being over friendly with
the Gaght trust, 20 durrling has been the
electrical display im the frout of the
theatre. But this week, when the New.
York Theatre made its debat 18 a mo-
“The Three Musketeers,” the electrical
display im frost of the New York be-
dimmed the luster of the Vitagraph
Theatre's electrical exhibition. At no
time im the history of New York theat-
ricals has an actor been featured in the
lights as Dumas’ “The Three Mus-
keteers.”
‘The Republic Theatre, in Forty-second
strect, mear Broadway, was-one of New
York's favorite theatres for dramatic
cutertaimment mp to acveral weeks ago.
00 sublet the bouse to a ‘firm for the
preseatation of motion pictures. To this
plan Oscar Hammerstein, the owner.
vigorously demurred and sought to en-
jon Mr. Belasco in the courts from
carrying it out. The courts decided
agains: Mr. Hammerstein, pointing out
that other first-class theatres were be-
ing used for motion picture purposes
and there bad been no decrease in the
value of? properties. So the theatre
where Francis Starr and “The Girl of
the Golden West” once captivated hun-
dreds is now being devoted to motion
pictures.
Then there is the Park Theatre at
Columbus Gircle, formerly the Majestic.
which, too, has succumbed to the hyno-
tixing influences of tle movies. It was
at this theatre that the hearts. of Will-
jams and Walker, Montgomery and
Stone, Clifton Crawford, etc. wee made
giad by the friendly greetirss of New.
York theatregoers. Only a few months
ako the Park found it atlvisable to fol-
low in the wake of other Rroadway
houses.
And so the conquest of the movies
gocs_merrily on. Additional surrenders
are likely to be chronicled at any mo-
nent. It would not be surprising to
wear that the Empire Theatre. the home
f Maude Adams. John, Drew and Ethel
arrymore. or that the Casino. whose
cputation as the sheltering place of
wetentious musical offerings is world-
vide. had fallen a victim to the winsome
nd aflaring wiles of the movies. The}
rovies have gained a foothold on
roadway. and there is no telling when
nil where these encroachments will end
WHERE THE SHOWS ARE
MY FRIEND FROM KENTUCKY CO.—
Ageia Tate 30 Enea! Next we
SMART. SET 00.—Ashyille. XG. March
e: Spartanbare. S.C; 6: Statesville, NC. 5:
Danville, Var tc: Roanoke. tt: Eynehbure,
fre. Petersbarr. 18
THEATRICAL JOTTINGS.
Clarice Wright is at the Foraker The-
atre, Washington.
_Leona Marshall is at the Lincoln
Theatre. Cincinnati.
The Hill Sisters are at the Disie
Theatre, Richmond. .
Green & Green are at the Chelsea
Theagre. Washington.
Hester, & Kenton are at -Pike’< The-
atre, Reidsville. S.C.
Marion Brooks is “manager of the
Lincoln Theatre, Cincinnati
Anderson & Goines are at the Cohen
Opera House. Newburgh, N.
The Taylor Due and Bessie Edging-
ton are at Ford's Theatre. Lynchburg.
Inzy Ringgold and Chadwick & Crip-
pea are at the Columbia Theatre. Dan-
vile.
Waitier & Green and Francis Barton
and Picks are at the Hippodrome. Rich-
mond. .
Lewis & Lewis and the Frazier Bro-
thers are at the Boston Theatre,
Rearake
J Rosamond Johnson and Tom
Rrown are to appear ia vaudeville in
te United States wader the manase-
~emt of M. S. Rentheen
or. ee
oT. Se Og
a Sea Rg
be \
Pee eo ba
res Be es
of Rese:
eS ; aS:
7 . 3 a
5 a ai
ee rs % |
Met |
ise —
Se, ee SRE eS
Pay PA Se Be FO
ALEXANDER DUMAS;
Whose ~The Three Musketeers” is being sensaticraily { aturcd in thejn.ov.es=
| Murphy & Walker and Tim and Hes.
ter Moore are at the Ruby Theatre
‘Louisville.
aoe
| Minus & Bryant. Taylor & Price and
Susic Sutton are at the Duntar The:
atre, Dayton.
De Forest, Burton & Smith and Hick:
& Talbert are at the New Circle Thea
tre, Philadelphia.
Thompson & Cross, Sam Evany os:
| ertrude & Price are at the ‘t.¢ The-
ae, Pittsburgh.
| ete
Cas ie Stithe.‘Jefre. & Delyons and
Bessie t.lver are ay the Howard The-
atre, Washington ‘
Mate! Whitman and Picks and Min-
strel Morris are at the Majestic The-
atre, Washington.
Copeland & Payton are at the rvstal
Theatre, Milwaukee, with Miles, Min-
neapolis. to follow.
Thomas A Brooks is with the Happy-
land Co. Gayety Theatre. Huttal., swith
Rochester te follow
The Reese Erothers aml Conary,
Gillam & Cook. the Mervalin Trin, Davis,
S Tyler ant Vanebres, 'fedwtay goed
Vompany are at the Standard Theatre
Philadelphia.
eee
The Auditorium Theatre. Philad-!
shia, was compelled. to put on motion
ictures only the first hali of the week
is every act hooked was unable tu reach
he Quaker City owing to the <now
torm
Following is the reute of the Dixie
Duinte: Yeungstowr, Q0 March §
‘ranklynville, NY @ Angelica, 10
Varsaw. 11: Kendall. 12: Rergen. 13;
Syron. 14: Spencer. 16: Matawan. 17;
Selfact. Me. 18
Clarence Logan, advance man oi the
{y Friend From Kentuck Company
rrites from St. Lonis that the shew
as been doing a fair businese cone
idering unfavorable weather conditions
1 the Middle West.
ass
Aida Overton Walker was the feature
EK. E Miller, of Millér & Lyles. is the
father of a gir) weighing nine and a
half pounds. which was presented to
him by Bessie Ot ver Miller February
6. Miller & Lyles are at the Temple
Theatre, Rochester, this week.
CRESCENT THEATRE.
The Crescent Theatre hac returned to
the old order of things --vaudeville and
motion pictures—and an unusually
strong hill was piven the first half of
the week. A. stock company. composed
of Billy Ward, Joe Bright, William Ray,
Katis and’ Ella Jones, presented “The
Widow's Ranch.” As the Crescent pa-
trons are fond of gun plays, the sketch
wes well received:
HOWARD UNIVERSITY "src
(Big ond White)
veRsUS
‘ST. Peeps POET .W. Y.
Svea OV. CHRISTOPHER CLUB.
Manhatten Casino 155 St. sn 8th Ave. N.Y.City
PREDAY CYTE GC. BAR M201, 19 4
se fe EN, ii
SPECIAL NOTE, For nearty tra yours Alp 4, Smart Christopher
Owte, the fowr reprecenters tone, In gocter how Yoru ord Surry, beve been
bringeg Rowerts wom jerk, traveiing to Weebeagen, B.C. te
aan citort bo Gcleat Dis re-t Codioge best written! sees eme ln nme ptm po on ho
thee mighty University tram trompird em the coters of these tour tig clubs This seo-
sen, however, it: Chvistepher’s tamees “Ted and Mtock Machine” expects te apect
a precedents and o complish soue® ind thet me Mew York ctu hes ever den in
the history of she goee An ent « incentive to win this game will be tre handeome
wives Wophy & ave by, ‘SPFaw M. Ment. United States Conca! ot velet Etivmnc,
treme. Tre Ben Ches W. taderson United States Coliecte: of baternal Revenee,
wil mohe the presempation of this vatucbis prin to the winning team.
ADMISSION 50 CENTS BOXES $3.00
WALL ANTRONT AASOFN, Mencge JAMES M. COMICK, Acsintent
Mimat are baske -ball: oi!) b+ ¢iven to every hox-belder end lady
ae + snavenir of this greet rame
Sam Lucas, who has no equal when
it comes to telling jokes; Josephine To-
bias in songs; Hunter & Howell. Billh
Watts and Henry Thurman all contrib-
uted to one of the biggest and best bills
the Crescent has had for some time.
LAFAYETTE THEATRE.
} Jvhneon & Flucgelman have assume
the managerial reins of the Lafayett
‘Theatre afd are trying their hand a
pleasing theatregoers: residing in the
jetecisit ection Monday, March 2
marked the date of their official debut
and a number of floral offerings, th
xiits of well wishers, were scen in the
Tobby.
According to Johnson & Fluegelman,
the impression exists in Harlem tha:
they intend to draw the color line as
did the former managers upon_opening
tic house in November. 1912. That such
a policy is to be inaugurated they em-
piatically deny. Thomas Johnson is 3
colored man, and [, Flucgelman has al-
lowed colored theatregocrs the privilexe
0%, sitting in any section of all his thea-
tres. In justice to them this erroneous
charge should be refuted by all lovers
oi iair play.
The new management seems to i
laboring under the impression that i
bill made up of all colored acts is pre-
ferred by the Lafayette patrons, [i
such is not tie case. Good acts, colored
aust white, are desired OF course it is
panera! tar the people ai the district =
evinces a preference for coml colored!
eis, tut too mrgh: of anything is as hart
as per enough + Variety. they sav. is the
spice oi lite Se give us colored and
white acts. -acts of quality And as a
tip to Johnson & Fluegelman, the pa.
trons of the Laiayette enjoy a dramatic
sketch now and then-~farce comedy pre-
ferred. 2
Margaret, Scott opened the bill the
first half of the week. and she recetved
2 cordial greeting at each periormance.
Mise Scott's voice has lost none of its
‘igor and flexibility, and her tones are
yc hell-like as af yore. George Lander
ventriloquist. worked well with his
dummics and Arthur Simmons sang sev-
eral songs and gave a recitation The
Three Nashville Students have a neat.
‘lean dancing and singing act. which is
sppropriately costumed. The two voune
men are some dancers. Kelly & Davis,
ald favorites in Harlem. returned after
many months” absence. and their comedy
gets them just as many laughs and th-?
dancing as much applause as in *". vast
Ray Thommon and Horses were hichly
apneeciated. This act is of Me time
catiher,
A HIT WITH WHITE SHOW.
Thomas A Brooks. the well anown
singing and dancing comedian whn has
tonred the United States and anda
with Toe Murtiv'’s Girls from "anny
ond Comnany. headet by Pers W.
Watson, bas heen with) the scan ny
for several seasons plavine his ovininal
rale of + mischievore norter ering
the rendition af a sane Me Elpronce
Pelwans Mr Rranks hac the chance
to render bic arjninal aed mack tated
anf eccentric Hance which ic one of the
Bite af the chaw The camnsay vill
he at the Columbia Thane Mave * aele
Cite the weet of Ane PY WUE te
ine in St Park Mr Rronte civnad for
cee weenie
COMING EVENTS§
Many interesting athletic event:
‘are scheduled to be pulled off in New
York during the month of March, and
there will be basketball games galore
Devotees of the basketball will have
ample opportunity to see the various
representative quints in action.
‘One of the big athletic mects of the
seacson will be held under the aus:
pices of the National League on Ur-
tan Conditions Among Negroes at
the Oth Regiment Armory, 26th
street and Leximgton avenuc, Tues-
day evening, March 24, A basketball
game between St. Christopher A. C.
and the Smart Set A. C. of Brooklyn,
an indoor tennis tournament between
the Turf Tentis Clab of St. Mark's
Catholic Church, and the Flushing
‘Tennis Chub, and track events have
‘been arranged for.
St. ‘Christopher A. C. is destined
to lead a. strenuous existence this
month, This quint will meet its old
Harlem rival, Alpha P. C.. in a reture
engagement at Manhattan Caso Fri-
day evening. March 6 Then the St
C. team will clash with Howard Uni-
versity at Manhattan Casino Friday
evening, March 20.
The Smart Set A. C. has arranged
an indoor tennis match between. Dr.
R. S. Fleming of New Haven, and
William M. Franklin. of | Brooklyn,
which will be held at New Star Casino
Wednesday evening. March 18. The
Smart Set A. C.,and Alpha P. C. will
engage in a basketnall contest on the
same evening. This game will be
played for the lightweight champion-
ship of New York.
Howard University will make an-
other visit to New York on Wednes-
day evening. March Il, when the
Washingtonians will mect the Colum-
bia University Mlumni ac Manhattan
Caataa,
ST. CHRISTOPHER NOTES.
If St. Christopher deicats Howard’ a
Manhattan Casiio on, March 20 she wii
be othe champion of the country
Om Monday evening. March 9% tit
Criterion lghtweixhts will come to St
Christopher's court and line_up agains
the champion “Tigers” The second
game will be between the Cyma heavy-
weights and the “Machine.”
The double-header at St. Christopher's
court on Monday evening, March 2. wai
won: by the home teams. The “Tigers”
won the preliminary shy defeating the
Cyma lightweights by the score of 70 to
17 In the feature game the “Machine”
swamped the Ossining tive bv 116 to 15.
On Wednesday evening. February 3.
the St. Christopher “Machine” met the
Imperials of Fast Orange on their home
court in the return game of the season
and defeated them by the score of 34 to
2. After the game a_collation was
given in Loner ot the St_ Christepher
tearst
The miniature basketialls te Ix civen
te each bexholder on Friday evening.
Maron 20, ot the Howard-St Christopher
game, are without a doubt the mast
Revel and appropriate souvenir that
could possi be given away Aiter the
Faxtotters are sunplied the talance will
be distributed among the ladies. Come
carly so as to be sure of” securing one,
Keane owing t6 the expense of Raving
them trade dere wil he a limited nam
© ae
Competent avd Petistte
COLORED GIRLS WANTIDIOR IFT STACE
Bring Reference
Aron at ‘ eu
107 West 32nd Street
eri
Crescent Theatre
36-38 West 135th St.
Veudeville and Moving Pictures.
Bal changed twice @ week. Prrtormences
continuous, 2p m. to 11.30 p.m.
PRICES: Evenings © Crs Matloves S Cos
dential
PhotoplaysWaaled —
(Clears cteriet ic ster iv s wanted for the Negre
st ch cor pany of the C: medy secticn of
ules Sarees
«Tell reridess
enclose samped mod oclf ‘oddreeecd re
tare epvel -pe.
LUBIN MANUFACTURING COMPANY
7S@ Riveride Avenue
Jecksouvilte, Fle.
Forthe latest
Theatrical News
‘THE AGE
59th St: THEATRE
313 W., SOth St. . NEW YORK:
WILLIAM M*CK FELTON, Maeneger
‘Vaudeville and Motion Pictures.
Stage performances aftermoons and evenings.
Bay itt. GENERAL ADMISSION Ocents: BOXES 25 cents.
: Seventh Avenu-, Between 1318t and 132nd Sts.
NOW UNDER THE MANAGEMENT OF
| THOMAS JOHNSON & I. FLUEGELMAN
‘High Class Vaudeville
: CONTINUOUS 1TO1 P.M. |
Prices. Afternoons(.c2% ) AllSeats 10c Prices
ant Evenings - 15 & 25 ditwe
i a,
A Grand Concert and Dram or
GIVEN UNDER IME AUSPILES OF
The Wa tal Irccs'tial ard Benevolent Fsccialicn
“Conducted by West Indian Artists assisted hy / mericans *
At LAFAYRTTR HALL, 165 West 13ist Street
THURSDAY EVENING, MARCH 12th, 1914 |
‘Asdre ees will be,dettverrd: by Corscior CB. MeDiveal Dive Been tte |
‘MK. jowes Director of the Rational League dm Trl an Comditicus emirg beeicer
‘ Aamission 23 Cents. Doors opem at 7 43 P.M. {
———— Er
. GRAND
OPENING ENTERTAINMENT AND BALL
or
THE MICHAELS AMUSEMENT CCWPAKY
MANHATTAN CASINO
Music by New Amsterdam Metical Anecciation, Prot, Russel), Leader
; MONDAY, APRIL 2na
CHORUS OF ONH HUNDRED VOICES |
Boxes Sea ing 10, $2.00, 93.00 and $5.00
Admission - - = - 50 Cents
: Tickets on Sale 77 West 131st, Street ;
— Novelty of the Season —
INDOORS TENNIS MATCH
DR. R.S. FUUMING = vs.) MR. WM. M. FRANKLIN |
Now Maver, Cone. Breethyr, N.Y.
ume Smart Set Athietic Club hk
NEW SIAR CASINO, 107th Street, beineen Path and Lexington Avenves
Wednesday Evening, March. 18, 1914
BASKETBALL GAME SWART SET A.C. ve. ALPHA P.C. CLUB
: For the Lightweight Champiowship of Grester New York
Music'by MF. ALBERT LEGARD.M. A.D. A. ADMIESIOR s0c
BOERS $9.0n.— How on rale. how York News, 185 W. 18th St. G. W. Lattimore, si)
McDenouah Street. Brook iy: Interboro Pres, «7 Rockwell Place. BicokIsa.
~ ** Faith, Nope sind Charity, the Greatest of these, is Chority””
NINTH ANNUAL RECEPTION
: ——or Te —
LUCY . LANE. . LEAGUE
Bonet of Maines Normal snd ladustria! Scheel, Augesta, Georgia
At Manhattan Casino, 155th S : & 8th Ave.
. FRIDAY EVENING, MARCH 13th, 1914
A Musical-Extraveganza includ ng ‘* Don’t Blame it on Broad-
* way.’ A Comic Sketch The Girl From “‘The Livya’’
“THE CAI DRENS’ GRADUATION DAY" presented by children
Dromati. Fcatzs= o-cer direction of Mrs = Bebby” Kemp assisted by irs. Wille
Rewe Carter. Musica! Feature ender direction of Prof. tt. G. Marshall, assisced by
les Lenobia J. Comber. Jomes N. Anderson, Fleer Manager. supper will be
served by G.B. Brenhom, Caterer, Music by New Amsterdam Orchestra, Prof. M.
G. Morshall, Leader. Program begins at 8:30 o'clock
ADMISSION (Incheding werbrobe check) $@c BOXES (seating 6 persons) $2 Fxtra
Boxee may be seenred.from the Amstercaw hewn ¢ fice 17 W. 1S8th street hone
sero Meriem: Dy. t Hillery. 1:2 W. iMod aurert. Phone site Morningside: Chae C.
Davie, 94 Ww 194th street, feta
OT SOS S29 20292929000" "-0™
| ATHLETIC CARNIVAL
UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE ees
National League on Urban Conditions
Among Negroes
At the 69th REGIMERT ARMORY
bth Street and 1 exingicn Ave nue, New York.
Tuesday Evening, March 24th, 1914 |
MUSIC BY E. E. THOMPSOP’S BARD
Basket Gel Game, ST. CHRSTOPNER A C of % Philip's P. £. Church, verse
= SS4RT SET A.C of Brecttyn |
Indoor Tennis Tearnement, TURF TERMS CIC of % Mark's Catholic Cherch
verses, PLUSMING TENNTS CLUS
‘TRACK EVENTS. DIAMOND PRIZES. Gomes called at 8 o'clock shop
Comcing tmenediately after Games. ADMINS N Shc. RESERVED SEATS 78¢
Sate sabe af the Mariem Ciice of the National Urban Leagwe. 127 weet ii
BORAT a's SoS A Ra Niest omen Mere, WE BARA Sires he Oe |
FoRigee Om't Ta'nsat seen sree sh A
— ™ ene Reward Unrversity. Weehingtow, D. C., aed misess a "4
A FLA ene See
On Wednesday evening, February 25,
the colored billiard players met and
compicted a permanent . organization,
electing the following officers: Oscar
Rich, president; Fred A. Stevens, secre-
tary; Thomas Beekman, treasurer: T.
Vogalsang. scorer; FE. Gibson. referee.
The, association will arrange tourna-
ments and match games in carom and
pocket billiards... The first exhibition will
be held at the Franklin billiard room
this week, when a match game will be
played every evening.
Much interest is, being shown among
the players and patrons as to the out-
come of Thursday's and Friday's special
billiard and pocket billiard game, be.
tween J. E. Stradford (College Boy)
and Chas. Sommers, champion pocket
billiard player of Brooklyn. In the bil.
liard game Friday will be scent for the
first time properly handicapped JE.
Dosewell- and A. Richardson.
The Cuba' Social and Literary Club, which was incorporated February 25 under the laws of the State of New York, has opened club rooms in the specimen parlors of the Hotel Macon, 213 West 53rd street, New York City, where there will be conducted a first class club where a man and his friends may spend an evening of enjoyment, with athletics of all kinds, including a first class billiard and pool parlor, smoking rooms, where citizens may play games of all kinds and
[Picture of a man with a bald head and a white shirt. The background is black with a white border. The man's face is partially obscured by the shadow. The image is cropped to just the head and shoulders.]
BENJAMIN F. THOMAS
President and General Manager
entertain their friends in social and high
class manager.
The club is composed of business and
professional men of the city. The char
ter members are: Benjamin P. Thomas,
president and general manager; Dr.
Charles H. Roberts, Reddy Dade, Geo.
Young, Counselor John William Smith
and Dr. George Marshall.
It is strictly understood that there
will be no gambling of any kind in the
club and the public has a standing invi-
tation to come and look it over and to
join where they will be welcomed and
royally entertained. The club intends
later to run off weekly smokers, which
will be announced.
MEMPHIS. TENN.
MEMPHIS, TENN.—Miss Flossie Jackson, who has been very sick, is able to be at her duties.
Hugh Burrell, who has been attending St. Paul's Normal and Industrial School and Hampton Institute, is home on account of sickness.
A Colored American Board of Trade has been organized in Memphis. The Emmanuel Church Club is growing in influence and power; the meetings are interesting and instructive; a large number of the most thoughtful men of the city are members of the club.
The Lenten services at Emmanuel and St. Anthony churches are well attended. The priest at Emmanuel parish gives instruction Sunday mornings on the catechism; nights on subjects of vital interest to non-churchmen; Wednesday and Friday nights on chief facts of the history of the Anglo-Catholic Church.
Prof. Ed. Honesty is one of the leading principals in the public school service.
The Solvent Savings Bank and Trust Co and the Fraternal Bank are doing a great business. There is talk of another bank being opened in South Memphis, where there are at least 20,000 Negroes.
Miss Odessa M. Dixon has been appointed, vocational teacher in the Hoffman-St. Mary Industrial Institute, Tipton County, near Keeling.
The new LeMoyne Institute is nearly finished. Several thousand dollars are needed. B. M. Roddy will receive contributions for this institution.
The new Collins Chapel will be ready for Easter. It will cost about $30,000. The Rev. J. K. Harris is the pastor.
The New York Age is handled by all the news dealers in the city.
Prof. A. J. Sanderlin, president of Sanderlin Academy, who has been in Collins's Chapel Hospital under the care of Drs. Wilson and Nesbit, is able to return home.
The lecture given by Bert M. Roddy at St. Stephen's Baptist Church Sunday was well attended.
The fancy party given by the young people of Emmanuel Church at Church's Theatre, Monday, February 23, was a success. Plans are being made to make it an annual affair.
Miss Pearl Christian directed a high-class musical concert at Metropolitan Baptist Church.
The Rev. Father E. Thomas Demby, archdeacon of the diocese of Tennessee, president of the Hoffman-St. Mary Industrial Institute and rector of Emmanuel Church, is trying to get a strong priest, for Emmanuel Church. Father Demby has built a beautiful church, well furnished. Plans will soon be put on foot to build a parish house. Father Demby has been the rector of Emmanuel church for seven years.
The University of West Tennessee, with President Lynk, hopes to erect this year a large brick building.
The only colored moving picture theatre in the city is the Tully Theatre, corner Polk avenue and Orleans street. Every Negro should attend this playhouse.
Dr. C. H. Shelby is growing in popularity as a physician.
The Congregational Church, under the leadership of the Rev. Dr. King, is doing excellent work. The members are talking of building a new church on Walker avenue, near the LeMovne Institute.
The Old 'Folks' and Orphans' Home is in most excellent condition.
Dr. John Q. Taylor lectured before the Emmanuel' Church Club Sunday; object "How We See and Hear."
Messances Jessie Jones and Bessie Traves conducted the fancy party Monday.
When you come this way call at theasonic Temple for whatever information you desire.
Don't fail to get next week's Acz. There will be something in it of interest you.
The image provided is too blurry and low-resolution to accurately recognize any text. It appears to be a blank or heavily pixelated area with no discernible content. Therefore, no text can be extracted from this image.
The Rev. R. S. Lee, the new pastor of St. Andrew A. M. E. Church, is making good. He was transferred from Pittsburgh, Pa.
Arthur C. Smith has left for Fresno, Cal., where he will probably make his future home. Mr. Smith recently married Miss Alice Hodges, of Cruger, Miss.
The Rev. T. R. Montgomery is visiting Mt. Pleasant, Miss., as the guest of Mrs. H. Moore.
Mrs. Mary Harper made a flying trip to Collierville, Tenn., visiting her daughter, Mrs. A. Walls.
The funeral of the late John Galloway was held at the Metropolitan Baptist Church, Sunday, February 22. The funeral was preached by the Rev. D. D. Williams (white), pastor of the First Presbyterian, of which Mr. Galloway had been janitor for twenty-five years. The Rev. T. J. Searcy assisted. Many white friends of the deceased were present. Mr. Galloway was a member of the Pilgrim Rest Lodge, 1829, G. U. O. O. F.
Mrs. M. E. Smith and her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Susie Smith, of Renova, Miss, were in the city recently visiting Author C. Smith before he left for California.
The annual Thanksgiving committee of the G. U. O. O. F. met at Unity Hall. Representatives were present from thirteen lodges, ten Householders, one P. G. M. C., two Patriarchies, two auxiliaries to the Patriarchies. Annual thankgiving services are to be held the second Sunday in May. Collins Chapel C. M. E. Church and the St. John Baptist Church were selected for the services. The Revs. B. J. Perkins and C. J. Smith were elected to preach the sermons. The following officers of the committee were elected: Albert Stringer, chairman; L. E. Harrison, vice-chairman; R. J. Taylor, secretary; Miss Marie McColough, corresponding secretary; Fred Smith, treasurer; P. H. Binford and Terry Rogers, chaplains; Frank Burk, marshal; J. C. McNeal and J. M. Sharp, masters of ceremonies; I. D. Walker and A. L. Scott, masters of receptions. The thankgiving anniversary requires two churches to accommodate the people.
AUSTIN TEX
AUSTIN, Texas—B. K. Teniny and W. F. McElroy, of the Theological Seminary, spoke at the Colored Y. M. C. A. last Sunday.
Chas. Alexander, of Boston, appeared at Samuel Huston College March 2 in "An hour with Paul Laurence Dunbar."
A neat sum was realized in the educational rally in the contest between the Dunbar and John Wesley clubs, held under the auspices of the Epworth League, Monday night. J. C. Dukes, president; Mrs. C. Jackson Brown, pianist, and the Rev. L. H. Richardson, pastor.
Prince Condebe, an African, will lecture at Wesley Chapel Thursday night.
The Tallison young men rendered a Lincoln program February 12.
The, Y. W. C. A. gave a play Fridav nighty for the purpose of sending delegates to Y. M. C. A. convention at Warco. In the cast were Misses Hamilton, Raleigh, Rector and Dolphine.
The Rev. H. M. Kingsley and Jas. Saunders, of Tillotson, spoke at the Sunday School reception of the Ebenezer Baptist Church.
Mrs. L. A. Trapp, who has been seriously ill, is recovering, to the delight of her many friends and family.
Thos. Touchett, of Forth Worth, was in the city last week on a visit to his mother.
Thos. Scroggins is in the city on a visit to relatives.
Alfred Darby., Sr., and L. M. Medaris, two of our prosperous farmers, were stricken with paralysis.
Death has claimed the following persons in the past few days: Morris Givens, D. Passon, Robt. Organ, Mrs. Ellen Woods, Mrs. Mary Richer and others. All were pioneer residents and high tributes were paid to their deeds and memory.
The Galedas and Metokas are cause quite an interest in the Sunday Schools. They unjustified their many friends at St. Ames Hall last Friday
night.
The Boy Cadets are very enthusiastic and will report with full strength at Beaumont in 1915. THE ACE can always be had at the American Woodmen office, on East Sixth street. P. A. Williams, agent.
YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO
YOUNGSTOWN, O.—Mrs. James Cowin, SNS East Federal street, is around after her illness.
Mrs. Rachel Bidle, 16 North Watts street, lost her watch between her home and the Oak Hill A. M. E. Church Sunday morning.
Arrangements for the Elks' annual banquet, March 12, have been completed.
Mrs. Agnes Lucas and daughter Thelma and Miss Sarah Shaw were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel West in Poland Sunday.
Mrs. J. Ramsey, 21 Chestnut street, is the guest of relatives in Pennsylvania.
Steve Clark has opened a rooming house at South Walnut street.
The little son of Mr. and Mrs. James Sanders is very ill.
'Mrs. Aspy Johnson is improving.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Jones are still on the sick list.
Mrs. Don Burney, Foster street, remains the same.
The social given by the Y. W. C. A. at the home of Mrs. Queen Robinson, the founder of the society, was well attended. The people should in every way encourage Mrs. Robinson in her work, for it will benefit the girls. The St. Augustine Episcopal Mission will hold services every Thursday evening. Mrs. Edward Carr. Bogguest street, is on the sick list.
BALTIMORE, MD
BALTIMORE, Md.-John Henry Smith, one of the best known residents of Maryland, is seriously ill at his residence, 2143 Druid Hill avenue. He is 77 years of age and for a number of years was a clerk in the local postoffice. He has been a prominent member of Sharp Street Memorial Church for years and of the Masonic fraternity. He has served on several city grand juries. He was the executor of the estate of the late Joseph Thomas, which amounted to $130,000. In an address before the A. M. E. ministerial meeting Monday, Bishop L. J. Coppin urged the ministers to cooperate with the ministers of other denominations.
The annual session of the Baltimore A. M. F. Conference will open at St. John's A. M. E. Church on April 30. The two Baptist ministers' meetings here, at a joint session and by a close vote, refused to adopt plans looking toward concerted effort. William I. Butler, grand chancellor of the Knights of Pythias, Eastern and Western Hemispheres, is ill at his home, 1230 Etting street. Councilman Harry S. Cummings, who has been ill at his home, 1318 Drusd Hill avenue, is reported to be in an improved condition.
DONNER, LA
Donner, La.—Among those from Donner who visited New Orleans for the Mardi Gras Carnival were Mrs. Agnes Williams, Mrs. Eliza Dent and her daughter Elmora, Mrs. Josephine Bannon, Mrs. Julia Washington, Mrs. Kattie Bradley, Mrs. Odeal Rutledge, Mrs. Daisy Stein, Willie Rutledge, Dave Nance, Add Morrison, Samuel Lewis.
Mrs. Rosa Pimilton visited the carnival at Morgan City.
Those who attended the Houma Carnival were Mrs. Lizzie Whittaker, Mrs. Kattie Ringold, Burl Robiceaux, Kid Wilson, the heavyweight pugilist, and the Mexican Kid, the lightweight pugilist.
Kid Wilson and Kid Cotton, who was Jack Johnson's trainer in his recent fight with Tem Jefferies, spared a few rounds in Houma Monday night
HOLLY SPRINGS MISS
HOLLY SPRINGS. Miss--Dr. Whiteside the evangelist and member of the East New York Conference, conducted the revival services at Rust during the past
The Stratford
514 and 516 LENO
High Class Apartments of
All rooms large and
Only quiet fa
Halls newly renov
Call and see the Ap
The L
48 WEST 136th ST
Highest Class Apartments
Under new
All rooms are light and large
Call and see the Ap
NOTICE
REDUCE
329 and 331 West 39th
3 large rooms with improvements. $9
Apply to ANITOR or
oct244 JOSEPH LE
REDUCED RENTS
329 and 331 West 39th St. Four large rooms with lim-
ments. $14.50 to $16.50.
3 large rooms with improvements. $9.50 to $150. Well kept houses.
Apply to ANITOR or
JOSEPH LEVY & SON, 389 Eighth Avenue
Attention,"JustOpened THE ONLY HOUSE IN NARLEM 230 West 124th
5 large light rooms, bath and range. Everything new. Moderate rent. Apply Janitor on premises, or
TO LET
1 West 136th Street
Large, corner basement, suitable for
any business steam heat, rent reas-
sable. Inquire of Janitor, or
MORRIS MOORE, 2121 Madison Avenue
ATTENTION
NEW ELEGANT HOUSE,
2299-7th Avenue
7 large light rooms, bath, hot water,
steam, single flat, separate toilet room.
Only best of select families. Apply
Janitor on premises or
Chris Schierloh
776 - 9th Avenue. Tel. 821 Columbus
mar. 5-2t
4 Room House
Large lot $1700, $200 cash; $15 monthly 5 Room House, all improvements. Large plot $2200, $300 cash, $16 monthly mar5 st LOUIS MONECK, Englewood, N.J.
week. He was successful with his meeting and more than thirty souls were brought to Christ. On Sunday morning he preached to the congregation at Asbury M. E. Church.
At a special meeting held Sunday at 4 p. m. by Dr. Whiteside for the converts only. Mrs. Chiss, assistant matron at the home, spoke briefly, commending them on their new stand and offering them inspiring words of advice for their future lives as Christians.
PERTH AMBOY N
PERTH AMBoy, N. J.-Miss Maggie Wilson, 381 East avenue, has been ill at her home and has not been able to get out for the last week. She is much better. Mr. and Mrs. Alfonso Peterson of Perth Amboy will make their home in New York City.
St. Mark's M. E. Church.
Notwithstanding the inclement weather of Sunday morning March 1, a goodly number braved the elements and listened to a soul-reviving sermon. The Rev. William H. Brooks occupied the pulpit and took ris text from Isa. 53:5. E. Williams sang a tenor sob, "The Lord is My Light," and the choir rendered "I Waited for the Lord," by Mendelssohn At night the Rev. J. J. Phillips presched.
TO AGENTS
ADVERTISE
YOUR HOMES
IN
THE AGE
IF YOU WANT
RESULTS
OX AVE, at 135th ST.
of 4 and 5 Rooms and Bath
light, decorated to suit.
families received.
decorated and decorated.
departments and get prices.
Bingham
, Cor. LENOX AVE.
of 5, 6 & 7 Rooms and Bath
management.
and will be decorated to suit.
departments and get prices.
D RENTS
St. Four large rooms with large
ments. $14.50 to $16.50.
50 to $150. Well kept houses.
VY & SON, 389 Eighth Avenue
Do You Want
TO
LIVE IN PEACE!
Avoid Congested Localities!
Have Respectable Neighbors!
Try Chelsea Park
Sunshine and Fresh Air
Only a few vacancies at
444 W.27th St.
(OVERLOOKS THE PARK)
Cony, homelike, 3 and 4 large, light rooms, gas, toilets, wash-tubs, ranges, hot water supply Near P.R.R. & 9th Ave L. Sta.
SAVE CAR-PARE AND WALK TO YOUR WORK
Rents $13.50 to $16.50
RESPECTABLE COLORED FAMILIES
Apply to Janitor or
JOS. LEVY & SON
389-8th Avenue
FOR SALE
House 6 rooms, hot water and gas
Near Jackson Avenue;
CORONA, L. L.
B. L. CLAYTON
780 Park Avenue, N.Y.
Telephone N52 Lenox
feb 12-3t
530 West 45th St.
3 Rooms to let, all light; house
newly decorated Rents $11-12.50
Inquire Jan tor or
BENJ. LEVY,
feb 12 4t
37 Liberty Street
422 W. 40th St.
FLOOR THROUGH
Apartments of 4 large, light rooms
with improvements. Rent $16. Apply
Jauitor on premises or
JOSEPH LEVY & SON
nov. 13 4t
139 - 8th Avenue
219-229 West 40th St.
NEAR BROADWAY
5 and 6 rooms and both with improvements, for respectable colored people.
Rentals reduced Apply JANITOR or
JAMES BAILERY, 3 W. 42nd St.
July 31-41
174 EAST 77th ST.
Cheapest
Cleanest
Best
3 Rooms. For quiet people
174 EAST 77th ST.
april 24-26
430 WEST 52nd ST.
4 and 5 light rooms, hot water supply
at reduced rents.
Apply janitor on premises
JONES & SON, Agents
mar. 20-24
383 West 43rd Street
522 LENOX AVE.—Elevator apartments, 6 rooms. $43.
2044 FIFTH AVE.—5 extra large rooms, hot water $17 and $18.
13 E. 131ST ST.—6 large rooms and bath, hot water. $23
3 EAST 134TH ST.—5 large rooms and bath; quiet house; $16 and $17 per month.
144.WEST 134TH ST.—3 and 4 beautiful rooms; hot water; $16 to $17.
1 EAST 134TH ST.—5 private rooms and halls; hot water; corner house; $21.
10 EAST 132D ST.—5 large, nice rooms; hot water and bath; only $18 per month.
14B WEST 134TH ST.—5 large, nice rooms and bath; $18 and $19.
JUST OPENED
71 WEST 133D ST.—5 rooms and bath, hot water.
10 WEST 133D ST.—5 rooms and bath.
73 W. 133D ST., 6 rooms and bath; hot water.
2214 FIFTH AVE.—5 rooms and bath, hot water.
14 W. 133D ST., 5 rooms and bath; steam heat
37 WEST 132D ST.—5 rooms and bath, hot water.
53 & 55 EAST 130TH ST.—4 and 5 rooms and bath, steam heat.
C. E. HUTCHINSON
5 West 134th Street
APARTMENTS
2170 FIFTH AVE.—5 rooms and bath, hot water.
57-59 West 90th St. 6 rooms; rent, $25 to $27.
1136 to 21 West 137th St. 4 and 5 rooms and bath; rent, $19 to $26.
6 East 133d St. 4 rooms and bath; rent, $17 to $18.
26 and 28 West 132d St. 7 rooms and bath; rent, $17 to $18.
107 to 145 WEST 135TH ST.—4 and 5 rooms and bath.
2188 FIFTH AVE.—5 Rooms and Bath; hot water.
Apply to JANITOR on pro
NAIL & PAR
Phone 7682 Morning 145
Philip A. Payton, Jr.
Real Estate and Ins
9-11-15 WEST 135TH ST.—6 and 7 rooms and bath.
414 EAST 124TH ST.—3 rooms. Rent, $7 to $7.
61 EAST 133RD ST.—3 rooms; hot water supply.
28 WEST 134TH ST.—6 rooms; all improvements.
128 WEST 135TH ST.—6 rooms; all improvements.
239 WEST 143D ST.—5 rooms; all improvements.
444-446 WEST 163D ST.—5 rooms; all improvements.
PATMENTS T
rooms and bath, hot water. Re-
rooms; rent, $25 to $27.
St., 4 and 5 rooms and bath, st-
rooms and bath; rent, $17 to $18.
St., 7 rooms and bath; rent, $35.
TH ST.—4 and 5 rooms and bath.
Rooms and Bath; hot water oper-
tory to JANITOR on premise.
NAIL & PARKER
145 West
A. Payton, Jr. C
real Estate and Insuran
ST.—6 and 7 rooms and bath. Re-
—3 rooms. Rent, $7 to $7.50.
3 rooms; hot water supply. Re-
—6 rooms; all improvements. Re-
—6 rooms; all improvements. Re-
5 rooms; all improvements. Re-
T.—5 rooms; all improvements.
APARTMENTS TO LET
2170 FIFTH AVE.—5 rooms and bath, hot water. Renta, $18 and $19.
57-59 West 90th St., 6 rooms; rent, $25 to $27.
1136 to 21 West 137th St., 4 and 5 rooms and bath, steam heat and hot water rent, $19 to $26.
6 East 133d St., 4 rooms and bath; rent, $17 to $18.
26 and 28 West 132d St., 7 rooms and bath; rent, $35.
167 to 145 WEST 135TH ST.—4 and 5 rooms and bath; steam heat; rent $20 to $28
2188 FIFTH AVE.—5 Rooms and Bath; hot water open plumbing Renta, $29.
9-11-15 WEST 135TH ST.—6 and 7 rooms and bath. Rent, $29 to $26.
414 EAST 124TH ST.—3 rooms. Rent, $7 to $7.50.
61 EAST 133RD ST.—3 rooms; hot water supply. Rent, $8-$14
28 WEST 134TH ST.—6 rooms; all improvements. Rent, $23.
120 WEST 135TH ST.—6 rooms; all improvements. Rent, $23.
230 WEST 143D ST.—5 rooms; all improvements. Rents, $22.
444-446 WEST 163D ST.—5 rooms; all improvements. Rent, $24-$23.
1008 BROOK AVE.—4 rooms; bath. Rent. $17.
PRIVATE HOUSES
FOR SALE OR RENT.
Telephone 917 and 918 Harlem.
Jamaica Is 20 Minutes From H
BUY A QU-RE-CO
Telephone 917 and 918 Harlem
Jamaica Is 20 Minutes From
BUY A QU-RE-C-O
BACKED BY OUR GUARANTEE
IN BEAUTIFUL J
We are building in Jamaica, Long Island rooms, tiled bath, steam heat, hardwood concrete cellar. They are the biggest money. We guarantee the building material the houses are as comfortable in a blizzard.
RENT MONEY BUYS A QU-RE-A Qu-Re-Co. Home, means a building or REALTY & CONSTRUCTION COMMERCIAL comfortable housing. Beauty of appearance appointment are two strong characteristics. You pay $200.00 deposit, and a house plans. Installments of $20 to $25 months you full ownership in a short while. Owner and 2 family houses for sale. Come out
Queens Realty & Cons
BRANCH OFFICE AT 363 Pulton, St.
Union Hall St. Station, L. I. R. R.
Three Five Cents Routes To
Jamaica Is 20 Minutes From Herald Square
IN BEAUTIFUL JAMAICA
We are building in Jamaica, Long Island, houses of 6 and 8 rooms, tiled bath, steam heat, hardwood trim, electric light, and concrete cellar. They are the biggest value offered for the money. We guarantee the building material and can prove that the houses are as comfortable in a blizzard as they are in June.
RENT MONEY BUYS A QU-RE-CO. HOME
A Qu-Re-Co. Home, means a building erected by the QUEENS REALTY & CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, for safe and comfortable housing. Beauty of appearance and convenience of appointment are two strong characteristics of these homes. You pay $200.00 deposit, and a house is built from your plans. Installments of $20 to $25 monthly by our system, gives you full ownership in a short while. Other attractive cottages and 2 family houses for sale. Come out and let us show you.
Queens Realty & Construction Co.
BRANCH OFFICE AT 363 Pulton, St. JAMAICA, L. I. Union Hall St. Station, L. I. P. R. REFERENCE Three Five Cents Routes To New York City
12 WEST 133rd ST., 5 rooms and bath, wich
24 WEST 133rd ST., 5 rooms and bath, stene
JUST OPENED--3 EAST 133rd ST., 5 rooms
S E. 131st ST., 5 rooms, bath and hot water,
S. W. COR., 133rd ST. and 5TH AVE., 12 rou
LADSON & LAN
31-33 W. 139th Street
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
12 WEST 133rd ST., 5 rooms and bath, with improvements. Rent $19.
24 WEST 138nd ST., 5 rooms and bath, steam. $25.
JUST OPENED—3 EAST 131st ST., 5 rooms and bath. Rent $19 to $21.
5 E. 131st ST., 5 rooms, bath and hot water.
S. W. COR. 132nd ST. and 5TH AVE., 12 rooms and bath, steam heat.
31-33 W.139th Street Phone 3056 Harlem REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE BROKERS
Open for inspection, the finest new fireproof apartments, handsomely decorated throughout; elegant entrance; 4, 3, 4 large, light, airy rooms; all improvements; ranges, lot water supply, tiled baths and open plumbing. Rents $9 to $16. See OWNER or JANITOR, 214-16 East 127th Street, near Third Avenue.
ESTATES MANAGED.
CHEAPEST
RENT IN
HARLEM
N. Y. CITY
18 and $19.
heat and hot water.
ram heat;
ta $20 to $28
habling Renta, $29.
35th Street
mpany
$29 to $26.
$14
13.
23.
22.
$24-$23.
d Square
OME
NEWS OF GREATER NEW YORK
---
The New York Age may be found at Mrs. Albert, 17 West 90th street, weekly.
Archel B. Roberts, 114 West 132d street, has been combined at home with a heavy cold since February 24.
Mrs. John Reynolds, the new Mrs. T., had her face newened. She received special care, and is recovering gently.
Don't forget the big game—Howard St. Christopher, at Manhattan Cemetery, Friday evening, March 20. See advertisement.
Miss Estelle Dyson was married to Harold Russell Glascio. Wednesday evening, February 8, at 131 West 134th street, Dr. Brown's exhibited.
I. H. Robinson's barber shop, formerly of 14 Fifth avenue, is now located at 119 W 134th street, between Lenox and Fourth avenue, where he is placed to meet his friends—spirit of Agnes V. Pinkard, aged 14, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Pinkard, 150 sixth avenue, graduated January 28 from Public School No. 41. She will Manhattan Trade School, April 1814.
One of the most successful real estate men in New York is Aaron Coleman, 360 7th avenue. He gives personal attention to his properties and is very comfortable. He has the Lauchham, 48 W. 26th street and the Stratford, 514 and 516 Lenox avenue.
* Post-Lenten Concert and Assembly at New Star Casino, Easter Friday, April 14. * 42nd present for the evening in New York. * The Johnson male chorus (50 voices) of Philadelphia, assisted by prominent solo artists and Craig's famous orchestra. Walter F. Craig, manager.
Monday evening, February 23, was the occasion of a pleasant blended apperance by the soprano. The evening was spent in games and congratulations. Mrs Netto Brown made the presentation, which was a beautiful painting of Ruth's wedding. The apperance was served by the committee led by Mrs Washington, of 137th street.
The Inner Circle Whist Club meet Thursday evening at the residence of Mrs. Frank Neavis, 326 West 59th street. After the routine business was truncated whist was played until 11.30 p.m. a palladium perier was served by the hostess. The out of town members present were Mrs. Moses Magles of Newark, N. J., and Mrs. Edward Thomas of Jewsey City.
Mr. and Mrs. William Gaines Grayson gave an informal tea at their home, 90 West 67th street. Thursday after the perier was served, Mrs. Hannibal, a well known young artist of Greenport, L. I., who is visiting his mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. W. Hannibal of Brooklyn, Mr. Hannibal exhibited a few of his water colors. Those present beside the host and Mrs. Hannibal, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Hannibal, Butt, E. Gholston, Mrs. Thomas Wright, Mrs. Cordray Grayson.
The Lucy Lanyon League will hold its regular monthly meeting Friday evening at 54 West 134th street at 8:30 o'clock. Members are requested to pay their annual assessment at this meeting. Preparations are going forward the next month, except for the league which will be held at Manhattan Casino, Friday evening, March 13. Procedures are for the benefit of the Haines Institute, Augusta, Ga., Miss Lucy Lanyon, founder and president. President Charles C. Davis and his corps of assistants have prepared a splendid and well-organized reception to a musical extravaganza "Don't blame it all on Broadway," a comic sketch, "The Girl from The Libyan," and "The Children's Graduation Day," presented by children. Mrs. "Bobby" Kemp, assisted by Mrs. Willie Rowe Carter, will have charge of the dramatic feature, "The Great War," assisted by Miss Zenobia J. Cumber, Supper will be served by B. Brenham, caterer. Program at 8:30 o'clock.
Kildare Issues Statement
President Daniel Kildare, president of the Cef Club, has issued the following social for publication: "I take this opportunity to refute any and all statements that the Cef Club will take part in the entertainment to be given at Carnegie Hall, March 11. While the Cef Club is always willing to render aid to all worthy organizations, and while the members of the club have the highest regard for the Music School Settlement and Mr. Adams, yet we find it necessary to take the step we have in order to prevent the infringement or our corporate rights by commercial organizations."
Visitor Bolden Cofehratte Birthday
About one hundred friends and participants of the Rev Richard Mahulib Mahulib gathered at his house, at What 100th street, Monday evening, March 1 to lend his a reception on the occasion of his birthday, which was Sunday, March 1. Mr. Mahulib Mahulib, the guest, was the hostess and received the guests, assisted by her husband.
The college in which Mr. Bolden is was amply shown in the many bokens received, many being sent by friends who were unable to come in for the visit. The bokens were received expressing regard and appreciation. Among the letters was one from John M. Royall, the real estate dealer, who enclosed a check for the purpose of Phantom Bolden in his The College interesting program was rendered: Introductory remarks, the Rev. Goo W. Hinton; sketch of the life of the Rev. R. M. Bolden, Miss Edna Horan; the Rev. R. M. Bolden, Miss M. Hinton; the Rev. O. M. Therm Green; remarks Ellis Fairclough; piano solo, Mrs. Sarah C. Jackson; remarks, the Rev. William Hogans; recitation, Master. Thomas Wernham; solo, Miss Carrion; Master. A. M. Townsend and Philip A. M. Townsend, the Rev. Richard M. Holden.
Among the remembrances received were the following: Necktie, James Hinton, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. William Hooks, Ellie Moran, and Mrs. and pocket comb Mrs. George Thomas, Mrs. Dorothy Proctor, socks, Mrs. L. Swathmey, Mrs. Diana Blizzard, Mr. and Mrs. J. Kelly, Minerina Campbell, Mrs. Clara Jones, Miss Mary Overton; telephone register, Miss Elma Moran; books, Miss Genevieve Thomas, Miss Emma Shirt and scarf, Mrs. Diana Haird; gloves, Miss Tempsey Ware; speakers, William Jones; writing
paper, Mrs. W. A. Coakley; hand-made picture of Pastor Holden, E. J. Tikinson; brass book rest, Philip A. Payton Jr., and Miss S. A. W. Payton; paper cutter, Miss Carrie Quick; handknecht, S. D. Jones; brass clock, Miss Mae and Sadie Caldwell; palamena, Mrs. Mae and Sadie Caldwell; Charles Rose of Bridgeport, Conn., fountain pen, Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Brown of Bridgeport, Conn.; check, John M. Royall; cut glass vase, Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Auford; canned good, Mrs. Watts, Mrs. Wooding, Miss Nulle Caldwell; birthday cakes, Mrs. Hattle McDewell, Mrs. Sarah Jackson, Mrs. Berguson; in addition to these tokens, number of plaidd proportions was contributed by nearly every one of the guests present.
Among those present were: Mrs
Sarah C. Jackson, Mrs. Lillian Tuckett,
Mrs. Georgia Thomas, Mrs. Mary
Williams of Boston, Mrs. Cora Ellott,
Mrs. Virginia B. Napoleon, Mrs. J. Kelly,
Mrs. Minerva Campbell, Mrs. S. Hooks
Mrs. Mabel Wernham, Mrs. Martha
Cox, Mrs. Louise Marshall, Mrs. Clara
Jones, Mrs. Edmond Watt, Mrs. Aul-
frey, Mrs. Ellis Watt, Mrs. Ella
Mills, Mrs. W. A. Cookley, Mrs. Mary
Curney, Mrs. Priscilla Wynne, Mrs. Ella
Gilbert, Mrs. Jennie Hunter, Mrs. Edna
Francisco, Mrs. William Hawkins, Mrs.
Greene, Mrs. Mattle Shaw, Mrs. James
Brown, Mrs. W. A. Cookley, Mrs. Mary
Marie Carrington, Miss Pauline Jackson,
Mrs. Genevieve Thomas of Long
Branch, Miss Sadie Ellott, Miss Edna
Horah, Miss Maggie Johnson, Miss Lil-
lion, Miss Cherese, Miss Greene,
Miss Annie Burwell, Miss A. H.
derson, Miss Tumpy Ware, Miss Mary
Overton, Miss Mary Bonner, Miss Carle
Quick, Miss Dorothy Hunter, Miss
Susie Caldwell, Miss Misa Caldwell,
Miss Geronimo, Miss Geronimo,
Miss Adelyne M. Mery, William E.
Townsend, Fred. R. Moore, Wm. H.
Hogan, Philip A. Payton, Jr., James
A. Hinton, George W. Winton, Ellis
Fairclough William Jones Luke T.
Taphure Harold Ellis William Smith
E. E. Klinker William Smith, Ed.
Hawkins S. D. Jones and L. H.
White.
Memorial Services For Monroe Heroes
Notwithstanding the terrific snow storm and blizzard which swept over New York last Sunday, the National Marine Association, Incorporated, of New York City, carried out its program of the memorial services in memory of the six members of the association who lost their lives in the sinking of the steamship Monroe of New Old Dominion Island on Virginia on January 30. The service was held at Noether A. M. E. Zion Church, West 89th street, the Rev. J. W. Brown, pastor.
The men whose memory was thus honored, 'all of whom sacrificed their lives in saving women and children from death, were as follows:
PETER DAVIS.
JAMES DELK.
WILLIAM H. GARNER.
JAMES P. MARTIN.
OSCAR TREADWELL.
JOSEPH BURNSDALL.
An elaborate program was arranged for the service-by James E. Lindsey, Henry H. Smith, William Johnson, David E. Grange, Louis S. Jones, Geo. Clark and Phil Fredericks. Chairman Lindsey presided and introduced the speakers. The memorial sermon was preached by the Rev. J. W. Brown. Henry H. Smith, financial secretary of the association, read a statement of the aims and purposes of the association. The officers and employees of the Old Dominion Steamship Company and the officers and members of the St. Mark's and Hamilton lodges, G. U. O. O. F. were invited guests at the service. Hamilton Lodge being represented on the program. A memorial service was conducted at the same time in the Queen Street Baptist Church, Norfolk, Va.
In his statement concerning the association Mr. Smith said that the purpose of the association is to unite the colored men employed on coastwise and river steamers, enabling them to guard against discrimination, to improve the status of the men generally, to furnish a central place for the entertainment and commemoration of seafaring members and to spur employment. The association has 300 members and maintains headquarters at 105 North Moore street, at an expense of $3,500 a year. Speaking of the men's conduct when the Monroe was wrecked he said:
"The steamship employee comes in closer contact with the traveling public than those in any other business and their opportunities are greater for either gaining a friend or creating an ennemy for the company." Often the public forms its opinion of the company from the employee's personality. Peter Davis and the other coloured members of the crew of the Monroe were not unmindful of this fact even under the most trivial circumstances. In the face of death and looking into his grave he was true to his calling. When a woman's strength was shipping away from her he gave her his life preserver. The cohorted men on the Monroe by their course of conduct created an opinion favorable to the race and in a way that nothing but credit could result to the steamship company."
• EWS OF THE CHURCHES
St. James' Presbyterian Church.
The storm affected the attendance at the services last Sunday. The Holy Communion which was to have been celebrated at the evening service was postponed until next Sunday, March 5. Dr. Jesse Forbes, stated clerk if the New York Presbytery, will preach Sunday, 11 a.m.
There will be services at the Y. W. C. A. building, 121-123 West, 123d street, at 1 p.m. Subject, "The Attraction of the Cross." The choir will render special music.
"A Free Lance" meeting will be held under the auspices of the Brotherhood Tuesday, March 5. Married to Pam, the church is urgently requested to be present. Ladies are welcome.
Abysinian Baptist Church.
Last Sunday morning the Sunday Morning Band under the leadership of Thadeu Irby, celebrated its twelfth anniversary from 6 to 8 a.m. The Rev. A. C. Powell, pastor delivered the annual address. Representatives of Early Morning Praying Bands were from St. Marks, Bethel and Mt. Gilead churches.
The servant by the pastor was followed by praying service. At the close of the exercise free breakfast was served to all present.
Last Sunday being the first Sunday in ninth month, the committee as usual large number of communicants at 11a. m. and 7.20 p. m. the pastor officiating. Twenty-five new members were added making a total of 145 for the past three months.
The pastor will presach at both services next Sunday and several candidates will be baptized including Waker A. B. Y. P. U. Literary Society was largely attended last Thursday evening. Miss Milda Cottman, a junior member was in charge. The rendition of the various selections by the young people elicited prolonged applause, and a rising vote of thanks was extended to all participants.
The storm last Sunday. Miss Kennedy kept her engagement to render her program at the Presbyterian Church. Jersey City
Salem M. E. Church
In spite of the severe storm good audiences attended Salem all day. The Rev. Charles Andrews preached a practical sermon in the morning and the Rev. W. H. Brooks administered the afternoon sermon. The Sunday school and men's Bible class were well attended at 2:30 p. m. A. P. Randolphs taught the class and the men discussed the subject with great interest. At 4 o'clock in spite of the raging storm a large audience gathered at the church to hear the program rendered by the R. Y. P. U. of the Union Baptist Church, T. Horace Tibbs in charge. Last Thursday evening a large and attentive audience assembled, at the byceum and listened to a debate between Salem and St. Mark's debating teams, subject. Reasonable evidence would prove an effectual remedy for the race-problem. No decision was rendered. The debate will be repeated at St. Mark's March 19.
The congregation was delighted to see the pastor in the pulpit in the morning, although he was not able to attend the sermon. He returned to Lakewood Monday for another week's stay.
At the leum next Thursday N. H. Hurkins of Columbia University will read a paper for discussion, subject, "The second order of Freedom."
St. David's
The lenton season began with services on Wednesday, February 25. Ask Wednesday, at 8 and 11 a.m., and will continue through the entire period. The wek night services will be on Thursday instead of Wednesday. Special chaperons will take care of services also on Sunday mornings and evenings. On Sunday, March 8, the special preacher at the 11 o'clock service will be the Rev. Samuel H. Bishop, of the Church Institute for Nerroes. On Sunday, March 18, the special speaker at the 11 o'clock service will be Dr. T. Scott Williams, dean and professor of School of Journalism, Columbia University and dean of the after at both morning and evening services there will be a special preacher.
On Thursday, March 12, at 3 p.m., the bishop of New York will visit the parish and administer the rite of Holy Confirmation to a class now receiving preparation. The Friends and well wishers of the parish are urged to make an effort to attend all the services during Lent. The speakers have been very carefully both for the mid-week and Sunday Special music will be used at all the services. On last Sunday despite the inclementity of the weather large numbers of members and Friends were present at both services. The rector, Dr E.G. Coffey, the pastor of both services and celebrant at the Holy Communion at 11 o'clock.
Emanuel Church
In spite of the heavy snowstorm which heralded in the month of March the services of the church were well attended all day. In the morning Pastor Foster, the Eucharist teacher, attended the 2 o'clock the Sunday school,sembled for the usual session. Supt James Hinton opened with prayer. At the conclusion of the lesson the children rendered an excellent program. A feature of the program was the singing by Braxton and his brother, and Chad McCormick, and Maggie Johnson had charge if the program. Three new members were added tl the roll.
At the meeting of the literary society Mrs. Hercules had charge of the program. An excellent program was presented.
At Mabel Girham and James Hinton had charge of the prayer service. James W. Smith read a paper on "Prayer."
At the 8 o'clock service Rector Holden continued his talk in Emancipation.
A grand price Cinderella party will be grand at a house on M.R.A. Wilson, W. West 135th street, Monday evening, March 9, for the benefit of the church. Admission 10 cents.
An old maid's conference will be given by the ladies of the missionary society on Friday evening, March 26. The conference will be held at Miss Lena Red and William Hayward were married at the parsonage Tuesday night, February 24.
Mother A. M. E. Zion Church.
Bishop George L. Blackwell will preach at Mother Zion Church Sunday morning, March 5. S. Sunday was a busy day for the Mother church. In the morning, pastorDr. Brown, preach in Leont.
At 1 o'clock funeral services of Mrs Harriott Washington, 59 West, 98th street, were held. Mrs Washington was a member of the Mother church for 50 years.
Sunday school hour was shortened so that Supt. Revess, the teachers and scholars might enjoy the excellent program rendered by Miss L. A. Lee a music class if Jersey City. This entire class of young people faced the storm to fill their places on the program. Miss Closely vellin, Prof. E. F. Douge, charlottet, and Prof. Jacob Pelle, cello. The program was under the auspices of the Junior Christian Endeavor Society. Mrs. W. Johnson, superintendent. Mrs. W. Johnson, superintendent. A Hopking at the usual hour. Next Sunday Counselor Thomas has been asked to be the principal speaker, Mrs. E. Gordon, president.
Ms Adams presented $10 as a balthert token to Mother Vincent on her 77th day from friends and members if the counselor
A musical entertainment will be given by the Daughters of Conference
at the Mother Church Tuesday, March
5. Mrs. Ida. Ainata, president.
Tuesday, March 18, jubilee concert by the New York Female Quartet, and drama by the Junior C. M. Society. Aru. E. Gordon, president. Mrs. M. Digua and Mrs. Mayo, program committees.
Richard Clark is confined to his home on Park place by illness.
Charles H. Lansing, who has been ill for some time, is convalescing and able to be up in his room.
Mrs. Lewis H. Berry of Governors Island, who has been quite unwell for some time, is slowly recovering.
Mrs. R. Lincoln Powell, 145 North Portland avenue, was reported as being too ill to leave her home last Sunday.
Miss F. V. Hodges of Brooklyn and Joshua Jordon who were recently married, will make their future home in Portsmouth, Va.
Peter H. Fisher, the faithful clerk of the Concord Baptist Church was born from his post last Sunday on account of being too ill to leave his home.
The Carlton avenue branch of the Y. M. CRA. is making arrangements for holding its annual turkey dinner the latter part of this month or the first week in April.
News comes from Mrs. M. B. Talbert, president of the Engineer State College of Veterans Club that also is regaining her health after a serious spell of sickness.
The annual report of the Society of the Sons of Virginia, issued March 1, shows a balance on hand and in bank of $3,844.75, and a membership of 134. Of this number, 118 are financial. Friday evening for the Mothers' Club of the Lessee Avenue Branch of the Y. W. C. A. Miss Adams of Pratt Institute demonstrated chafing dish cooking. A very enjoyable evening was spent. Mrs. Alice B. Scott is making satisfactory progress toward recovery since being operated by the hospital of Jamestown. The hospital authorities say that Mrs. Scott will be strong enough to leave the hospital next week.
The Gum Hair Parlors, 225 Duffield street, Brooklyn, will send upon request one of their beautiful illustrated catalogues, showing the latest styles and prices of up-to-date goods. Do not miss the event. It does not matter; we need them free.
Miss Estelle M. Jones, formerly of Parvillace, Va., who has recently made her residence in Springfield, Mason, is visiting her sister, John H. Watson, who has visited friends in New York City also. She will return to her home 21 Elliott street, Springfield, Mason. Mrs. Lottie Green, wife of Saxton H. H. Green of the Concord Baptist Church, died early last Sunday morning. Funeral services over the remains were conducted at the church Wednesday evening by the pastor, Dr. W. M. Moen, in the presence of a large audience. Gee H. Harris has removed his undertaking establishment from 61 Fleet place, where he has been located for the past 27 years, to 602 Klimker St. Phone 6219 W. Bedford. The same courtesue treatment will be extended as was the policy at the old establishment. Prompt service always—feb26-3t.
The annual musical and social of the Concord Literary Circle was held in the lecture room of the Concord Baptist Church on Thursday evening of last week. A large audience was present for junior and senior members of the featured features of the evening. President Walter K. Taylor presided and Miss Dorothy May Scott recorded and called the roll of members, which was responded to with quotations from the novel Endearer Lycium of Jersey City was represented by its president, C. B. Jones, Miss A. Miller and Roscoe Perkins. Those who took part in the program were: Miss Marianne H. Mrs. Hrs. Mrs. R. Runnell, Mr. Mrs. Perkins Davis, W. H. Major, Miss W. D. Moss, Miss Irene Henderson, P. A. Myers, L. H. White and the Metropolitan quartet.
WANTED—A head landress with experience in running a steam laundry. Also two underlandresses. Colored Orphan Asylum, West first St. N. Y.
EXPERT STENOGRAPHERS AND TYPEWRITER with manuscripts revised by J. E. Morningside, 123 W. 135th St. Phone 3898 Morningside.
WANTED - Pursued room between 8th and
8th Avenue. Coth and 8th Street. Convenient
half. Write Matthew A. Moore. W. 40.
8th Street.
40TH ST. 219 W. - 80 to 810 for two rooms, gas and telephone in every room. Office and responsible tenant only - 813-600-6000
45TH ST. 216 K. - 3 rooms; tuba, gauges, quarter meters; rent $12 to $12.50; near "L" and atrolyte; half month from. Janitor.
132D ST. 147 W. - Pursued rooms to let; light and airy; newly renovated; all rooms private. Feb19-4t
132D ST. 133 W. - Pleasant furnished rooms; private; house; Southern exposure; all conveniences. Jan24-7t
135TH ST., 120 W. - Pursued room to let; lady or gentleman. Chase.
TO LET.-Two large rooms, furnished for two gentlemen or man and wife; go with street, between 6th avenue and Broad. Dec. 4th.
TO LET-BROOKLYN
WARREN ST., 225, between Court and Clinton St.-Two floors to let; also furnished rooms. Apply Tennesse Pierce. Feb19-4t
TO LET.-Fine opportunity for colored laundry with living apartment; only $1 a month. Apply J. McCoy, 398 Throw Av. Feb19-4t
ST. PRIX ST. 217 - Large and small rooms, each weighed and running water with or without meals by day or week. Call or phone 7911 Main, Mrs Ida Jackson
ST. MARKS AVENUE, 122. - Top floor of 3 or 5 rooms with all improvements, convenient to ear; private house. Call, write or telephone 1432, Bedford.
ASHLAND PLACE. 50-Large furnished room, suitable for man and wife; also small rooms for lady or groteman. All conveniences, near subway. M.T. C. McArthur.
WANTED. The phantom of Leeds F. Major
J. Major, J. Major, 1916 Main Ave.
Atlanta City, NY.
IN MEMORIAM.
To the memory of Alma Stanley Gaines, adored wife of Jan. A. Gaines, who departed St. Joseph's Hospital, the Bronx, Owing to the severity of the weather and the traffic conditions the funeral arrangements were made, she will be buried no way of letting our many friends know immediately. Instead of a service at Abysinian Cemetery, our most service was conducted by the Rev. Wah-wright in his funeral chapel. Inmembrance in Cyrillic Mill. With prayers for God's blessing, she will be adored by her most expressions of gratitude and interest, and for floral tributes, I am. Gratefully, her bereaved husband, JAS. A. GAINES.
FOR SALE IN JERSEY CITY.
$800 each will purchase 7-room house with bath. Price, $3,000. $800 will purchase 6-room house with bath. Price, $2,900. Torms easy. Bergen section. Call or write owner, 180 Union St. Jersey City.
MOTHER A. M. E. R. ZION CHURCH 187
A. M. E. R. ZION CHURCH, New J. W. Brown, Pastor
110 West 182nd Street
Adys Services—11 a.m. and 7.45 p.m.
Moly Community every second Sunday at 5 p.m.
Monday Morning Class—12.90 p.m. Sun
day School at 2 p.m. Various Christian
Ensurer 6.30.
Weekly Meetings—Class Meetings every
Tuesday and Wednesday evening.
Prince William School at 5 p.m.
SEATTLE FREE, PUBLIC INVITED.
MY OLIVIE BAPTIST CHURCH,
189 181 West 58rd street, between 60th and
70th Avenues.
Bor. Wm. P. Hagen, D. D. pastor.
Preserving Services every Sunday at 11
o'clock a.m. and 7.80 p.m.
Sunday School at 8.00 p.m. Sundays.
R. P. U. month every Sunday at 8.50
p.m.
B. Y. P. U. Literary month every Sunday
at 8 p.m.
The Weekly Prayer Meeting on Friday
Church Aid Society, second Monday over
ing in every month.
Young Men's Social Club, every month on
the third Monday evening.
Notices are made welcome.
62. DAVIDS CHURCH, 184 Bapst 109th
Street, New York, Bapst Edward George
Chrism, D. D. Bapst, 518 Bapst 157th
Street Services, All Roads Prev.—11 a.m.
Sunday School at 2.00 p.m. Sundays.
Sunday School at 2.00 p.m. 8 p.m. evening
service. A cordial welcome to all.
63. COPPIANE CHURCH, PROVINCIAL
BOOKSTAL, 177 W. 600 B.
Bapst J. W. JOHNSON, Pastor l.
charge.
Sunday Services—11 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Sunday Services—11 a.m. and 5 p.m.
A CORDIAL WELCOME NO ALL.
JAMES PRESTERBURY
CHURCH.
187 West 51st street, both 5th and 9th
Rd. William K. Lawson. United States
Pupilly.
Counseling at 11 a.m and 8 p.m. Program
meeting Wednesday evening at 8:15
Sunday school at 1 p.m. Y. P. S. C. R.
Golf Community first Sunday in early
month at 8 p.m.
CORDIAL WELCOME TO ALL.
MARK A. METHODIST BISCOPAL CHURCH, 58d street, near Highland Ave., New York City. Father William H. Brooks, D. D. Best-dance, 816 West 58d street. Preaching—11 a.m. 7:45 p.m. Prayer Meetings—Friday evening at 8:30 and Sunday morning at 8 o'clock. Lympheas—Sunday at 8 p.m. Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. Sporouth League—Sunday at 8:30 p.m. Sunday afternoon at 4 p.m. Lympheas Tuesday and Wednesday evening at 8:30 and Sunday at 1 p.m. Holy Communion—Second Sunday evening in each month. Welcome to all. nov21-11
WALTER F. CRAIG
483 Mancock St., Brooklyn
July24 10m Phone 5220 Bufford
THE YOUNG WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION
121 and 123 West 132d Street
Phoenix 1082 Transportation
IT OFFERS COLLORED YOUNG WOMEN—
Bale, comfortable and reasonable access mode
particular in which to entertain company. Social
events. Gymnasium and athletic sports.
myspy.com GUBBED K. J. HAMMER, Gwyn. Boc.
Phone 5574 Beckman
WILFORD H. SMITH
LAWYER
150 NASSAU ST. NEW YORK
dec. 28-31. ROOMS 906-7
Telephone 3787 Cortlandt
JAMES L. CURTIS
Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law
Office Suite 415 Temple Court 225 West 134th St.
5 Beckman St. Phone 219 Mo. ningside
NEW YORK CITY
TELEPHONE 5084 JOHN
Chas. E. Toney
...LAWYER...
80 Wall St. New York
jan 19
E. A. JOHNSON
ATTORNEY & COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW
MORTGAGE LOANS
154 NASSAJ STREET NEW YORK
Boehne 732 Tribune Midg. Phone 4990 Buckman
GEM HAIR PARLORS
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THE CLIO SCHOOL OF MENTAL SCIENCES
ADENA C. E. MINOTT, Principal
135 West 136th Street
Between Lenox and 7th Aves.
In Session TUESDAYS, THURSDAYS, SATURDAYS, W. m. m. to 5 p. m.
The need of the Present Day is for SUCCESS1 Social, Financial, Domestic
The CLIO School of Mental Sciences insures These to you.
ALL CAN LEARN
Telephone 2496 Audubon
A RELIABLE INSTITUTION WELL ENDORSED
NEW YORK CITY
Re-Union St. Mark's M. E. Church
Rev. W. H. BROOKS, Pastor
NEW STAR CASINO, 107th Street and Lexington Avenue
Thur-day Evening, March 26, 1914
Program and Music under direction of W. J. Goodlette.
Exercises will begin 8:30 a.m.
ADMISSION includes ball clutch, 50c CHILDREN, 12 p.m., 2:30
BOXES $2.50 and $3.00. Can be purchased of W. J. Handy, 26 West Strd street
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