New York Age
Saturday, August 16, 1919
New York, New York
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Teachers Want Provisions of Constitution Enforced UNION LABOR LEADERS FOMENT TROUBLE IN CHICAGO
Recent Riots Condemned at Sixteenth Annual Session of National Teachers Ass'n.
Orangeburg, S. C.—More than three-hundred teachers attended the sixteenth annual meeting of the National Teachers' Association which was held from July 30 to August 2. The white press was commended for its increasing attitude of friendliness to the Negro, the Towner Educational Bill was endorsed and the Southern Sociological Congress thanked for its splendid service in promoting better conditions in the Smith
VOL. XXXII. NO. 47.
Teacher
UNION I
Recent Riots C
Sixteenth Ann
National Te
(Special to T
Orangeburg, S. C.—More tha
the sixteenth annual meeting of t
which was held from July 30 to
commended for its increasing att
the Towner Educational Bill was
special Congress thanked for its sp
pecial conditions in the Smith
The Association pledged itself to co-ordinate with the National Security League and allied organizations in observing Constitutional Day, September 11 provided that day be set apart for
NO YOUNG WOMEN TRAINING
FOR Y. W. C. A. WORK
Ten young colored women are attending the Y. W. C. A. training school at National headquarters, 600 Lexington avenue, this summer which is a piece of information worthy of more than passing consideration, for not until this year have race representatives entered into the activities of the whole school.
Conducting in 1912, and in all succeeding years until this summer, candidates were instructed in groups to observe, leaders of courses coming to the headquarters. This method of instruction was not put into effect by the Young Women's Christian Association with a view to drawing the color line. Not until this summer have colored candidates possessed the experience and qualifications required of all who apply to address to the training school.
The young colored women attending these special courses are of the highest type and compare favorably with the hundreds of other students. All are graduates of some well known institutes of learning. They are: Miss Caroline Bind, Raleille, and Miss Jeanette Bristol, University of Chicago, Student who will be special Student with the National Board; Miss White, University of DeNA, Special Course; Miss Emma Sawyer, University, Industrial; Miss Frances Gunner, Howard; Miss Willie Sears, Wellesley; Miss Philips, Training School; Miss Mass, and Hampton Institute; Princess Curtis Harris; Annie McCary, Howard, and Annie Sims, Howard; Girls' course.
The opportunities for taking these special courses are pointed out by Miss Eva D. Sawyer, that one must be a college student or the equivalent. She says there are many splendid strong young women who have the equivalent, for example is regarded by the Association as asset and is needed. For a such as this there will be given by preliminary and Extensive Training System of the National Board special instruction during the fall, the dates and places where courses will be given inside public later. In discussing the option for leadership Miss Boudes exposed herself as follows:
The Young Women's Christian Association is bending every effort to further the race with trained leaders who measure up at any and all times. Individual development is essential in order to successfully cope with acute situations and question of self should be a priority consideration. Those who are the duties of a Y. W. C. A. are taught not to think in terms of salaries, but to regard what they are doing as an exalted position with affords a golden opportunity for service. They are further true leadership is not self-satisfied grows out of the position and the contribution you are the advancement of human life it is not a question of the what the individual re-counts in the final analysis."
LANGSTON MADE ROBERTS'
CAMPAIGN MANAGER
Langston, one of Harlem's and most experienced politician, has been selected to manage Mr. Roberts' campaign for the 27th Aldermanic Disposition Mr. Langston is the request of the regular Ree candidate.
Langston has taken charge of Roberts' campaign with marked enthusiasm and assays that there is no question Dr. Roberts winning in the race in September and is confident in November. The amity colored and white people of the district look with favor on Roberts candidacy. Mr. Langston
the purpose of beginning a nation-wide crusade to make the provisions of our National Constitution operate and effective for all people.
The recent race riots in Washington and Chicago, were condemned, but the Negro race was asked not to lose heart or hope; for in spite of the eddied and whirlpools in the stream of racial progress "the main current is flowing steadily and strong in the right direction."
The Resolution Committee was composed of W. T. B. Williams, Hampton Institute, chairman; R. S. Wilkinson, South Carolina; R. L. Douglas, North Carolina; John E. Ford, Florida; J. M. Frazier, Louisiana and Miss Edwina N. Wright, Georgia.
Among the speakers were President N. B. Young and Major W. H. A. Howard of the State A. & M. College, Tallahassee, Fla.; President S. G. Atkins, Slater State Normal School, Winston-Salem, N. C.; Prof. L. B. Thompson, Georgia State College, Savannah, Ga.; President R. S. Wilkinson, State College, Orangeburg, S. C.; Prof. Chas. A. Lawson, Lincoln School, Sumter, S. C.; President John M. Gandy, State Normal School, Petersburg, Va.; Mr. W. T. B. Williams, Field Director Jeanes and Slater Boards, Hampton Institute, Va.; Prof. J. M. Fraser, City High School, Baton Rouge, La.; President J. S. Clark, Southern University, Baton Rouge, La.; Prof. R. S. Greesley, Assistant Supervisor of Schools, Jackson, Miss.; Principal G. W. Hill, Walker Baptist Institute, Augusta, Ga.; Principal D. G. Jacox, Booker T. Washington High School, Norfolk, Va.; President F. A. McKenzie (white), First University, Nashville, Tenn.; Dr. W. T. Holmes (white), President Tougaloo College, Tougaloo, Miss.; President Z. T. Hubert, Jackson College, Jackson, Miss.; President F. A. Sumner (white), Tallahassee College, Tallahassee, Ala.; Prof. Daniel A. Brooks, Principal Reynoldsatz School, Philadelphia, Pa.; Prof. T. L. Duckett, Benedict College, Columbia, S. C.; Prof. R. L. Douglas, Bidell University, Charlotte, N. C.; President John Hope, Morehouse College, Atlanta, Ga.; Prof. J. T. Williamson, State College, Orangeburg, S. C.; and Prof. Monroe N. Work, head of Department of Research, Tuskegee Institute.
Special evening addresses were delivered by Dr. R. R. Moton, Principal of Tuckekeeg Institute; Dr. John E. Ford, President of Leland University, Alexandria, La., and Mrs. Mary McLeod Bethune, Principal of the Dayton Training School for Negro girls. The Saturday (August 2) sessions of the Association were held at the Voorhees Normal and Industrial Institute, Denmark, S. C., the delegates arriving there from Orangengch, twenty miles away, at 8 A. M. After breakfast they were enclosed about the grounds by the teachers and local committee and were permitted to inspect the great plant of the "Tuckekeeg of South Carolina," as the school is justly called. President
ELKS WILL MEET AT ATLANTIC CITY, N. L
(Special to THE NEW YORK ACE)
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.-Elks from all parts of the country are expected to attend the twentieth annual session of the Grand Lodge of the Order, which will be held here August 25 to 28 inclusive. The Daughters of Elks, the woman's section, will also meet at the same time. Lighthouse Lodge of Elks will be host of the session, and business sessions will be held in the main auditorium of the new house in the lodge, 1613 Arctic avenue. The new Robert J. Johnson, of Newlearn, N. N. grand chapel, will preach the annual sermon at Price Memorial Church on Sunday evening, August 24. Welcome services will be held at Lighthouse Lodge the following evening. A big street parade will take place August 26.
An interesting fight is expected over the position of Exalted Grand Reuler, Armond W. Scott, who has held the position for the past three years, has announced that he will be a candidate for re-election. George W. F. McMechen, who withdrew from the race just before the Order met in Baltimore last year, is also hustling for the position. City Councilman Thomas W. Fleming, of Cleveland, O., and Andrew Brown, of Richmond, Va., the present esteemed leading knight, are also regarded as candidates.
PRINCE DEDJAS MATCH NADAO and other members of the mission from Abyssinia, being greeted by the Rev. W. W. Brown, pastor Metropolitan Baptist Church, N. Y. City, just before their departure for home.
THE MAYOR OF BROOKLYN IS SAYING THAT THE NEW YORKER IS A MUST-READ MAGAZINE.
Photo by Baker.
It is announced that one-half of the $5,000 which was pledged has been collected and placed in the bank under the name of the Boyd Welfare Association of which Dr. E. P. Roberts is president and John D. Saunders acting secretary. Work will begin at once with the boys pending the collection of the balance pledged. An efficient worker in the person of George L. Johnson, to be known as community secretary, has been secured. Mr. Johnson is late of the Army Y. M. A. where as field religious secretary his work has been of natural scope. He is a man of high ideals, possesses a strong personality and Christ character.
For nearly the work will be located at the School No. 89, Lenox avenue. Business to become members in the Association may be enrolled there. Parents or friends interested in the welfare of the boy at large may get in touch with Mr. Johnson at the stated address.
Secretary Saunders in speech at the work audition.
We want it distinctly understood that this organization will hold fast to the accomplishment of the purpose for which it was founded—service for the boy. We hope to be out of that a better boy physically, mentally and morally of the underprivileged boy of New York City, and so far as we are able to help each boy coming under our care to raise himself to the highest power of efficiency and respectability. We welcome the co-operation of all organizations or influence which will assist us in the realization of this object. We hope that any contemporary effort now in operation or any organization considering work among the boss of Harlem will co-operate with us. The field is large and affords a tremendous opportunity to help the underprivileged boy and make of him a better citizen for our common country." All friends of the Boys' Welfare Association having made pledges which have not as yet been paid are urged to write these pledges at once, since a complete list of all paid pledges amounting to $100 or more will soon be published. Mr. Johnson may be seen for this purpose at Public School No. 89 during the afternoon and evening or will call by appointment.
POLITICAL INTEREST IS SHOWN IN BALTIMORE
(Special to The New York Acr)
Bairnworm. Mt-With a Republican Mayor and two Negro members of the City Council, colored voters here are beginning to show a lively interest in matters political. Albert Cornish has entered the race to represent the Fifth Ward on the Republican City Committee, opposing the present white incumbent. Charles E. Williams and Walter S. Emerson will oppose each other for committee from the Fourteenth Ward and Daniel W. Richardson and Charles E. Hall will lock hoops in the Seventeenth Ward. The last named two wards will also have colored candidates as delegates to the forthcoming Republican State Convention. Franklin F. Johnston has filed his papers as a candidate for delegate from the First Legislative District of Baltimore City.
One of the mosticious guilders ever held in this city was the banquet tendered Dr. John Hope, for many years president of Morehouse College Atlanta, Ga., on Friday evening, Aug. 8. Dr. Hope during the past year has represented this country in France, being in charge of Y. M. C. A. work among colored troops. The banquet was under the direction of the Morehouse College Association of New York City. Many warm tributes were paid by representatives of various organizations. Prof. W. D. Abercrombie, President of Worcester Academy, Worcester, Mass., Dr. G. Rise Hoyes, Superintendent; English Home Mission School, and Mr. D. G. Garabambian Trustee of Morehouse College, were among those who welcomed Dr. Hope. Miss Eat Bowles spoke on behalf of the Y. W. C. A., Dr. W. H. B. Duloux referred to Mr. Hope's record as a teacher during the past twenty-five years. Fred R. Moore spoke of the large opportunities awaiting the southern colleges. Expressions were also received from Captain Boutte of Fisk, Wm. M. Ashby, Lincoln University; W. M. Colson of Virginia University and Jeye O. Thomas, President of New York Tuskegee Association.
James H. Hubert, who acted as tourmaster, was presented by the Rev. B. T. Harvey. He referred to the work which the Morehouse men are doing in various parts of the country, offering to Mr. Hope and to the colleges throughout the country the full support of the Morehouse men of New York City. Among the messages received were telegrams and letters from Dr. R. R. Moton, Dr. Charles L. White, American Baptist Mission Society; James Welborn Johnson and Benjamin F. Hubert, South Carolina State College. This gathering was plainly a tribute to the cause of higher training for Negro youth. Among others present were A. G. Dill, V. W. Tandy, Dr. V. Morton Jones, Lt. O. E. McKaine, Dr. W. H. Holder, Lester A. Walton, Dr. Chas. H. Roberts and Dr. Louis Wright. Dr. Hope returns to America thoroughly optimistic and with a feeling that when the truth is told about the colored man's part in the war there will be much of which we can just feel proud. May we not hope, said he, "that at this time the colleges will realize the bigger job that lies before us and get a larger vision of a redirected life, whether in the city or on the farm. In this movement our colleges must lead in making it possible for the great mass of our people to live and develop most completely. This is the job of college men today."
(Special to The New York Ann)
Tanv. N. Y. - The Grand United Order of Odd Fellows of the State of New York held their biennial convention at Germania Hall last week. Tuesday, the first day, a joint session of the lodges was held followed by a picnic at Brookside Park to delegates and friends. Wednesday morning memorial services for deceased members were held and in the evening a grand reception. Thursday was the election of officers. The entire cabinet of both lodges were re-elected. The next Convention will be held in Albany in 1921.
(Special to Two New York Am)
Nashville, Tenn.—The following letter was addressed to the Rev. F. E. Clark, D. D., head of the Christian Endeavor movement, Buffalo, N. Y., by Julian C. Caldwell, general secretary of the Allen Christian Endeavor League:
"Dear Dr. Clark, I am indeed sorry that it is impossible for me to attend the International C. E. Conference in Buffalo next week, but previous engagements will prevent my being there. I am sure it will be a conference full of information and inspiration and a splendid program will be mapped out for the next two years, which will mean much for the young people of the world, as we are thinking today in world terms. God has wonderfully blessed you and yours to see the splendid growth of Christian Endeavor and today more than five millions of young people are marching under its banner for Christ and the Church."
"I was in the Atlantic City Convention in 1911, which started the slogan 'A Saloonless Nation' by 1920 and thank God it has come to pass. May I suggest to you that you insert in your platform for the next two years this slogan, 'A Lynchless Nation' by 1925. It is a sad commentary upon the Christian manhood and womanhood of this country that not a body representing the Christian Church has thrown down the gaudlet to overthrow this dhincic curse, which is a blot upon the escutcheon of our country. When we consider that twenty-eight persons were lynched during the first six months of this year and of the riots in the capital of our country, Norfolk, Va., and Chicago, I ask in all sereness is it not time for the Christian people of our land to call a halt and say that this must stop.
"Christian Endeavor is interracial and one of its cardinal principles is Fellowship. Therefore I beg of you and the delegates assembled, in discussing matters for the upfit of the people, to not forget to consider this most vital question and go from that meant of privilege to make this 'A Lynchless Nation' by 1925." Praying that God may give you wisdom and courage to launch this campaign, which will mean the perpetuity of our Nation, when lynching is stopped, I am
"Young for 'A Lynchless Nation' by 1925."
OLDEST CHURCH LOSES
(Special to The New York Am)
PHILADELPHIA, PA.-St. Thomas Protestant Church is the oldest church for colored people in this country it being founded in the latter part of the eighteenth century. The Rev. Thomas A. Garrett has been named as missionary in charge. The appointment was made by Bishop Rhinelander. The church has surrendered its right to call a rector because of financial difficulties. In a letter to the vestry the Bishop stated that the church may resume its independence in the matter of choosing a rector, when it takes upon itself the paying of a rector's entire salary. At present part of the salary is paid out of diocesan funds.
Representative of the Urban League Gives Observations of Race Riots in Chicago
The points in connection with the recent Chicago race riots that have stuck in my mind after a visit to Chicago and after personal observation there are those that are industrial in nature. There is no one underlying cause for the race riots to which one could point as bearing almost directly on the general situation.
Of course the so-called encroachment by Negro tenants and purchasers of homes on the sections of the city occupied by white people infuriated certain white people of a class with which Negroes are well acquainted—those who periodically and for obvious reasons, psychological in character, object to the proximity of Negro neighbors because of the alleged depreciation of property values.
sponsible for race riots, the pay were taking steps to feed the violence, urging the Negro return to work while the union labor leaders were threatening a strike of all the white packing house union workers—Negroes included—on account of the return of Negro workers and the presence of armed guards, whose express business in the stockyards was to pro
With all our good points, we know that there are the gambler, the "necro-do-well" and the idler, who not only add to the delinquency statistics of the community but embarrass very greatly their fellows, who in the main are thrifty, ambitious and law-abiding. Further, in almost every community in America where Negroes reside in considerable numbers there are white people in sufficient numbers to start violence against Negroes, provided newspapers and white leaders conduct a campaign of race hatred against the Negroes by mentioning the bulbear of race equality in America—it is a disease from which our white brethren have not thus far been able to recover. Chicago is no exception.
All White Participants Not Ruffians
The Chicago white mob was made up of roughs in the main, but from the casualty list of the white participants, it will be seen that there was some brain and leadership of more than ordinary caliber actively involved in the "affair." The much dreaded social equality menace was made the basis for the mob's activities, this cloud being seen in the desire of Negroes of Chicago
There are certain economic facts which white men, labor leaders, statesmen, newspaper writers, and others must appreciate in this difficult labor situation.
First, the industrial conditions in America call for the proper provisions of the American people with the necessities of life, and with the proper adjustment of a labor supply of the country; and this calls for a pull of Negro labor from the South, and the Negroes have come to Chicago and other places where they are needed in answer to this unerring demand which makes it self felt by offering better wages and better conditions of labor to those in demand.
Second, to avoid chaos both in the world of industry and in the relations of men to each other, these leaders are called upon to toil the hearts of men to each other in order that they may live together without friction. Parents must stop teaching their children almost at birth that individuals of race that have different color and facial characteristics must be disliked and spurned. It is too difficult to change their point of view when they become men and for better housing conditions and in the desire for an opportunity to work on terms of equal pay with similar hours and under the same conditions of labor which existed for the white men who worked in the "Windy City."
It is a strange coincidence that at the same time that the Union Labor Sheet was accusing the packer of being re-
Dr. Mason Awarded $1,000 Damages Against Dr. Jon
(Special to The New York Age)
Rochester, N. Y.—That the Rev. James E. Mason, financial secretary of Livingston College, North Carolina, is entitled to $1,000 damages in his suit for libel against the Rev. Edward D. W. Jones, pastor of the A. M. E. Zion Church, of this city, was the decision of a sheriff's jury last week.
While in New York the Rev. Mr. Mason declared that he received a card from the Rev. Mr. Jones which read as follows:
"jimmie e.—Come back, you and your allied assassins, and give some more instructions how to destroy me for I knocked your plans high-sky last night.
The people gave me $80 to put the whole business in jail, they voted maniously for my return. Come back jee."
On the face of the card Mr. Jones is alleged to have written as follows:
"Jones, the beloved money still comes in. Gone up to $60. Talk against it and the bishops. We are out at plans. Come, jimmie, percentenary is on. Jones voted confidence by great crowd of citizens. Jones has all the people."
Dr. Mason was pastor of the Zion Church here, from 1890 to 1894, when he became a member of the faculty of Livingston College. His work was to solicit funds for the upkeep of the college and he testified that this letter was detrimental to his work in the United States.
"I have never been questioned about my integrity," the Rev. Mr. Mason testified, "and I have always carried credentials from the best of people."
The summons and complaint of the action for $10,000 damages was served on the Rev. Mr. Jones in Elmira on June 21, and at that time the process server said that the Rev. Mr. Jones refused to take the papers, so the server was compelled to shove them inside of his vest.
When he failed to answer the summons and complaint the matter was taken before Justice John B. M. S. phama who ordered the case to g: for a sheriff's jury to determine the test of the damages to which the Rev. Mr. Mason was entitled. The result was a $1,000 verdict.
Enforced
CHICAGO
of the Urban
Observations
riots in Chicago
J. JONES.
With the recent Chicago race riots
or a visit to Chicago and after per-
that are industrial in nature. There
the race riots to which one could
in the general situation.
sponsible for race riots, the pa-
were taking steps to feed the vi-
de of mob violence, urging the Negro-
return to work while the union labor
leaders were threatening a strike of all
the white packing house union workers
-Negroes included-on account of the
return of Negro workers and the presi-
ence of armed guards, whose express
business in the stockyards was to pro-
tect the Negro workers while at work.
Many White Non-Union Men.
No mention was made whatsoever of the fact that a large number of white workers were non-union men who had not been disturbed while at work. It would seem to the most casual reader of labor news that if the unions really wanted Negro workers in their ranks, that this would be the supreme occasion in which the already suspicious Negro non-union workers would receive sympathy and support of their fellow white workers even though unionists. Most assuredly, the Negroes would be much more favorable to the advances of the unions after the return of normal conditions if they had known that when they needed work most, union labor did not add to their troubles by making it difficult for them to return to their previous employment.
Another incident, isolated but significant, impressed me: One of the best and most renowned hotels in cage which had used Negro workers, marry decades, informed their New workers on their return to their on Monday, August 4 (the week a the riot) that since they were needed the week previous they did not report to work their places had been filled by others. It will be recalled that Negroes were not permitted by the police to go into the "loop," the business section of
EPISCOPAL CONVOCATION
HELD AT PETERSBURG, VA
PETTINGER, VA.—The 27th annual convention of the diocese of Southern Virginia met at St. Stephen's P. E. Church, August 4 to 7. There was a very large attendance, nearly every one of its 36 churches and missions stations being represented. The opening service on Monday night was in the nature of welcome service. Welcome address were delivered by the Mayor of city, the Rev. J. B. Brown on behalf the Baptist conference and J. J. H. on behalf of the International conference. The discussions were on a high order and drew forth many helpful ideas. More money was raised for missions and conventional purposes than ever before. The closing service was held Thursday night in commemoration of the three hundred years anniversary of the Negro's coming to America. Thrilling speeches were delivered by many of the delegates. The next annual meeting will be held at St. Paul's School, Laurenceville, Va.
pared $1,000
ainst Dr. Jon
Rev. James E. Mason, financial North Carolina, is entitled to $1,000 at the Rev. Edward D. W. Jones, arch, of this city, was the decision solicit funds for the upkeep of the college and he testified that this letter was detrimental to his work in the United States. "I have never been questioned about my integrity," the Rev. Mason testified, "and I have always carried credentials from the best of people." The summons and complaint of the action for $10,000 damages was served on the Rev. Mr. Jones in Elmira on June 21, and at that time the process server said that the Rev. Mr. Jones refused to take the papers, so the server was compelled to shove them inside of his vest.
When he failed to answer the summons and complaint the matter was taken before Justice John B. M. S. pham who ordered the case to be for a sheriff's jury to determine the tent of the damages to which the Rev. Mr. Mason was entitled. The result was a $1,000 verdict.
PRICE FIVE CENTS
(Special to THE New York 'Aca)
WADLEY, GA.-The fifth annual farm-
demonstration mass meeting held
the last part of July was largely
ended and the proceedings showed a
living for improvement in methods,
either with an increase of material
apperity during the past year. The
ening session was called to order at
Brinso Hill Baptist Church by Prof.
A. Williams, state demonstration
ent. The devotion exercises were
adducted by the Rev. W. D. Alexander,
esiding elder from Savannah. The
v. E. W. Williams, presiding elder of
Southern Birmingham District, read
scripture lesson.
Prof. Williams gave an excellent welcome address to all the farmers and iting friends present. Prof. B. E.ist, district agent from Statesboro,ove an interesting lecture on the boll evil. In his speech he carnestly ged the farmers to grow cotton under ill weevil conditions, and plant more dstuff. Peter Washington, of Wadley, was used as president of the mass Dr. Bradford, assistant state on Atlanta, made an instructive on the growing of wheat. Mr. one of Wadley's leading citide a practical address on difarming.
Amos George, president of the Farm Institute of Chatham County, said it county was coming up to the involved methods of farming. Mr.orge invited the farmers to attend fair that they are planning to have the fall. Seipio Wilson of Chatham unty related the destruction the evil had done to the cotton. He said the farmers will be forced to ret to diversifying their crops to meet demands. Mrs. Anna Artson repented the White Bluff Home Demonation Club of Savannah and told how club had prospered in the last four years. She said they canned over 1,000 arts last year. The Rev. W. D. Alexander, presiding her from Savannah, referred to the cement made by the Wage Earners' ink of $7,500 in real estate on one the most popular business streets in city, with the intention of building department store, theatre and hotel, of improvements that will cost about half million dollars.
Mrs. W. G. Hill, head of domestic ence department in Georgia State llege, spoke to the delight of the etung.
The farmers continued the representation of the various counties. Mr. nah Gilda of Burke County, said he sold 99 bushels of corn to the acre as a result of the demonstration workough Pogol, Williams. Efringham unty was represented by R. T. Upwood, who said that his county was alive and the women were doing elently in their canning. Screen unty was represented by Henry Wilms, who said that before Prof. Wilms came we used to buy corn and at, but now we have plenty to sell.
I. Monthly said: "I went to ance and did the best I could; when returned there were lots of inducements offered me for high wages, but said I must return to my home ear I can continue the demonstration." Mr.
Mrs. H. Veldman, the leader of the work
woman who died in Waddley, Miss
W. Veldman, died on the campus.
The woman has been already
situated in LAS spirit. Miss Clara
was read a memorial. She has been
made a memorial in Waddley. Can-
tell us more.
OTTER TELLS OF
OPENINGS IN FRANCE
(BOSTON) TO THE NEW YORK
Boston, Mass., Collar Segregated all man-
dom competition are the causes of
Holly's race riots in Chicago, ac-
cording to Win. Monte Froster, secret-
ry of the National Equal Rights
men who are just returned from
League's Lawmen headquarters at
521 Franklin Avenue, New York.
"In the United States does not ap-
pose the colored laborer enough to
him work for his bread by the
cut of his town mandated. I know
satisfy that the Republic of France,
nich knows no color line, will welcome
a black American worker for the res-
toration of the devastated regions,
exclusively unskilled labor," declared Mr.
Froster, who says that France is the
old id of rights.
HOWARD STUDENT WINS
APPROVAL
Assoc. Officer D. C. The Command
Officer of the recently held Camp
vans R. O. T. C. Infantry Camp, am
nurses in an official communication the
mes of certain students who have won
proval by exceptional zeal, enthusiasm,
aptitude displayed by them in their
ork at the Camp. Out of a list of
only two men representing such insti-
tutions as the University of Maine,
eward University, Yale University,
w York Military Academy, Cornell
niversity and institutions of that char-
ter, the name of Alsten Burleigh,
award University student, appears
ward is the only one of the colored
tools whose representative won this
recitional mark of approval at Camp
vans.
Enclosed find $3.75. Send me the Self-Explaining Bible in cloth, size 10x6 3-4 luch.
The leather edition, shown above is $7.50.
SEND ME YOUR ORDERS FOR BOOKS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
CIRCLE'S LARGEST UNIT
(Special to The New York Asc)
NEW LONDON, CONN.—Unit No. 50,
New London, from its organization a year ago has been most energetic and effective in its work. During the winter when hundreds of soldiers and sailors were passing through New London and many more were stationed there, the members manned a canteen in cooperation with the War Camp Community Service and served, in the course of a few months, eight thousand soldiers. Sweets and smokes were, at the same time, supplied liberally to Camp Devens. A southern canteen with pieuromia and money was taken to this Unit Unit No. 50 has, at every point, asked and received the co-operation of city officials, other individuals and local firms. At one time, a committee of four ladies—Mrs. Laura Coleman, Mrs. Margaret Bradley, Mrs. Anna Sampson and Mrs. Elizabeth Jeter—caused stories and assured material for comfort pillows for convalescent soldiers and sailors. Another example of local interest and support was Circle Night at the Crown Theatre, the largest motion picture house in New London.
At the two Sunday evening performances, which are always conducted by the W. C. C. S., the work of The Circle was presented by the executive secretary and silver offerings to the amount of 17.00 were given. This was made possible by the untiring efforts of Mrs. Anna Sampson and because of the splendid work the unit has done. As a fitting close to the first year's work, the unit conducted a membership drive which has put No. 50 at the head of the list. The workers in the drive were as follows:
RELIEF FUND GROWING
FOR BOMB VICTIM
The fund for the relief of the unfortunate young woman who lost both of her hands and one eye by the explosion of a bomb intended for a Georgian Senator, is growing slowly. The policy of the Circle is to give constructive relief whenever it is possible and this fund will, if possible, be used to train Miss Williams for some kind of work. Modern science can do for her one of the wonderful things that it is doing for our trained soldiers. A bill has been introduced into Congress appropriating a small amount of money for Miss Williams' relief. The circle has written every Senator asking that he support this bill. Twenty-one have already replied. These repolls have all been have raised and about half of the man have stated their opinion that he will
A Bible Verse that isn't Clear is a verse lost
SUN NEW YEAR AUG. SATURDAY AUGUST 14, 2016
BROWN LEAGUE REPRESENTATIVE
ON RACE RIOTS IN CHICAGO
(Continued from first page.)
Chicago, while the riots were in progress.
1. One of the union officials in Chicago was heard to remark that "Surely they could have nothing to do with this hotel episode, inasmuch as this was the line of work in which Negroes and whites came in personal relation with each other and therefore could very easily be the result of the objection on the part of white people to Negroes coming into close proximity to them." I did not, of course, let the opportunity slip to say that this was the first incident in which I had ever heard of white people objecting to Negroes waiting on them or serving them in a capacity of servant.
The Lithuanians, who were the chief sufferers in the fires which occurred in the latter part of the riot, resulting in the loss of homes by three hundred families, were known to be friendly disposed toward the colored people. Simultaneous with the reports of the fires, rumors were very general to the effect that Negroes were seen the evening before in the neighborhood of the houses that were burned; although to reach these houses, Negroes would have been forced to pass through a cordon of police and soldiers, through the most antagonistic group of white people with whom Negroes of Chicago have had to deal, not only during the riot but for years prior, and also through the stockyards which contain many city blocks in area. While the theory that the houses were set alire by Negroes has been discarded by the police and the press alike, the Lithuanians are still raising the inquiry why the Negroes have turned on their friends, thus fanning the feeling of the foreign union leaders and members against the innocent, non-union Negro workers, who not only have not had a chance to join the unions but had not felt that that they were welcome because of such incidents as those mentioned above.
Third, nations cannot, if they will live unto themselves; and their domestic troubles become of international interest, if for no other reason than in the relations between the countries of the world nations hold their prestige and leadership by virtue of the calm that prevails among the heterogenous groups of peoples that comprise their own population. America is in a peculiar position in this connection, because of her leadership in the new peace that is yet to be signed, and the local leaders as well as our national leaders must contribute their part in keeping down racial strife and group animosities.
Police Slow to Act.
In the Chicago riot it was not until the second or third day of the riot that the police could see that it was to their advantage personally, as well as to the interest of the community, that they themselves with the Negro defenders of the black belt to the end that the white mobs might be dispersed. In the beginning the police were slow to act, which left the Negroes under the impression that they were not only defending themselves from the mob but from the police as well, and many police were victims of the determination on the part of the Negroes to defend themselves against all comers.
In this connection, it is to be noted that through Governor Linton would be in the control militia to support the other state militia in the Battle of Paterson were the backbone of the existing militia in the New Jersey and probably were responsible for unilining the Negroes to the point where they appreciated the fact that the police had initially done what the police had the right to do to protect the Negroes from the malicious that can be done on doing them violence. As the limbs and arms of the malicious were held by the Negro leaders of Chatham who right to claim the Negro were intended to not the car of what they were and infiltrated in some way within white New Jersey. Colored clergymen, Young Men's Christian Association and Urbania League workers were one in counseling the difference of law and order. In the will of restoring order, the Red Cross using the office of the Urban League's headquarters and the Y. M. A. would move other places as relief for those without food or
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Before I left the city steps had been taken looking forward to the declaration by the Chicago Federation of Labor that the Negroes would be welcomed to their old jobs and that the leaders in the union movement did not personally favor violence.
Men were under consideration for a commission to be appointed by the Governor of an equal number of white and colored citizens to study the relations between the races in Illinois and to suggest means of improvement. This commission was to be appointed not only because of the Chicago race riots, but because of the fact that three of the most serious clashes, between the races in the past seven years have occurred at Springfield, East St. Louis and Chicago, all in Illinois. The leading business men in Chicago have had several meetings for the purpose of launching a big housing scheme which it is hoped will dispose of many dilapidated and unsanitary dwellings occupied by Negroes and provide in their at least many sanitary and modern apartment houses at reasonable rents.
Undoubtedly, the whole tragedy could have been averted by wise equitable adjustment on the part of many individuals all of whom are equally responsible for neglecting their plain duty when they saw the situation turning into what could, not be other than chaos. Apparently, the horse is now being brought in after the cart, but it is our hope that the lesson of Chicago will not only be a stern and solemn warning to Chicago people of their duty to the community but also to other cities throughout our country. The fact that the germs of the same kind of disorder have already been sown in their midst, means that the antiseptic must be applied at once and constructive steps must be taken to meet the social needs of their population, white or black.
MANHATTAN BRANCH
HAS FINE SUMMER CAMP
On July 1, the Manhattan branch opened the first and only Y. W. C. A summer camp for colored girls in the northeast. The camp which is ideally located on Lake Carpenter up in the Ramapo mountains is operated in connection with the Negro Fresh Air Committee. A staff of trained workers is maintained for the entire season and everything is being done to make the young people grow strong and happy. The recreation program, which is being carried out: Hikes, morning dips, boating, wood-craft, nature study, swimming lessons taught to beginners, community sing, bats and "nest of all" as the girls themselves put it, is the Council Fire at eve in the woods and a good night song.
The success of the camp thus far has surpassed the fondest hopes of the promoters and up to date the applications for the remaining four weeks far exceed the number that can be accommodated. Already Mrs. Cecelia Cabanis-Saunders, executive secretary of the branch, who is ever seeking ways and means to bring to our girls and young women the things which tends to real happiness and "more abundant life" is planning to have a larger camp next summer.
new chapter in the camp are Miss Voll L. Chapman, membership and relations work secretary and Mrs. Earle Day. Saxon is with the secretary.
Volunteer number is provided in the management area. Bert W. Williams, Mrs. Lilian Timmons of the University of Iowa, Miss Waller of the University of Iowa, Miss Farnes Miss Linn Reid form the Committee of Management. Miss Dehler of the city schools in charge of nature study and Miss Z. Perry in charge of teacher in Miss Kate Parson, E.B. Brooks, N.W. C. A. is recruited to help in the minor high schools with Miss Stephanie in charge. Miss Elizabeth Townsend and Miss Earle D. Saxon are used by Miss Anna Shorten in charge of girls. Miss Lina Hayes of Missouri Camp director for the season and is regarded one of the best and most efficient directors on the grounds by the Interstate Park officials. To Miss S. Euterson, secretary of the N.Y. Fresh Air Committee, is due with profit for the profession and general management. Camp closes September 1st.
Making Up for the Occasion
Bobby, aged six, answered the door when his big sister's new bean called, "Where's your sister?" he was asked, "Upstairs, putting 'Yourself on.'" was Bobby's rather startling answer. Boston Transcript.
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EX-PRESIDENT TAFT ON
LESSON OF RIOTS
From Philadelphia Public Lodger.
The evidence seems to show, as is
usually the case, that in Chicago the
whites were the aggressors, and displayed man's inhumanity to man in stoning a Negro lad into a watery grave because he had passed a supposed line of segregation between white and Negro' bathers on a city beach. Soon, however, both sides were guilty of lawless assault and murder. But, of course, the Negroes suffered the more. They always do.
Doctor Moton, the wise and able head of Tuskegee, anticipating the possibility of such distressing outbreaks, described in a commencement address at Hampton last May a state of things at Birmingham some weeks before. He said that rumors spread that the Negroes of that neighborhood were getting arms and drilling with the purpose of attacking the whites on a certain Saturday night. It gave him and others great concern. They investigated. They could find no basis for the report of such a plant. But they did find that Negroes and white men alike, stirred by the reports, were arming themselves and that the supply of small arms and ammunition at the shops in Birmingham had been completely exhausted. A committee of leading white men and colored men met and did everything possible to allay alarm, and the dread Saturday night passed without incident, or outbreak.
The appalling number of the dead and wounded in Chicago should lead the authorities of every city with congested Negro quarters and population to call together leaders of both races, who, acting jointly, should take appropriate measures to stop hysteria, to allay alarm and to artest loud-mouthed agitators and criminals before the trouble begins. The editors of the colored press should be reasoned with, to cease publishing articles however true having inciting effect.
The educated extremists among the Negro leaders must certainly see that, however great the injustice done to their race, due to blind prejudice, "direct action" is the worst possible remedy. The more white victims the greater the colored victims will be, and in the end the feeling out of which this evil has come will be increased and the slow and steady improvement in the agricultural and industrial status of the Negro shown by statistics will be obstructed. Such leaders should use every argument to quiet their followers and to condemn further lawlessness as an offset to white outrage. Those who suffer from such riots are often, one might say, usually not participants in the fighting but are followers who happen to be in the line of fire, either through unwise curiosity or because they can't help it. Momentum, peaceable, law-abiding Negroes are besieged in their own house, where they with difficulty secure needed food and supplies, or they go to their daily occupations at the risk of their lives. Negro house owners are threatened with arson.
Those riots have a lesson that the whites should take to their souls. It is that on home of us has a responsibility to the community in dealing with our alleged fellow citizens. Every time a white man might a Negro every time a black man might an overreaction to a Negro every time an overreaction to a Negro every time an overreaction to a Negro. No race can wrongs as easily by superior cooperation and proper time.
If this trouble spreads to all the large cities, the authorities and the prominent I trusted leading citizens of those cities must have forced and take quick action. No doubt must it of the intention of the city have to suppress lawlessness in impoverished and unimproved areas. Moreover, the point is meant to be building whites and Norwegians, Norwegians know better that the city will protect them and that the community will be unarmed in the matter of civil and gunmen will be much more prepared.
An effort to prevent this trouble rises among the people of the large communities in which they live in western Norway. Norwegians their plants, for their property, have they one it to the community in which they live to see to it that they are in the sowing good plots of roots and hardiness in their quest for labor.
Madam C.J. Walkers
COLO CREAM
ASSOCIATED BY
Yours Truly, Mrs. Madam C.J. Walkers
INDIANAPOLIS, U.S.A.
GRAND HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH HELD AT TROY
(England to Tan, New York, Aca)
Taylor, N. Y.—The eleventh biennial session of the District Grand Household of Ruth, No. 7, of the State of New York convened in this city August 5, 6, and 7, and was one of the most successful meetings held by the order. A large number of delegates and visitors were present from all over the State. The following officers were elected: Mrs. Leena M. Johnnann, Auburn, district grand most noble governor; Mrs. Lillie Prattth, Jamaica; district grand
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Scott's Official History of The American Negro in the Great War
NEGRO HISTORICAL PUBLISHING CO., P.O. DRAWER 1821 Washington, D.C.
NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y.
Nigara, Palm, N. Y.—M. Jr. J. Rudolph, Main street, has been called by Montgomery, Ala., on account of the illness of her mother, Mrs. Scott. First street, has returned from Subnetectady, where she was a delegate to the Presbyterian Convention. Mrs. Vay Alstent, of Cincinnati, has her daughter, Mrs. H. Harris Chester street, Miss Alice McCrary is the host of her sister, Mrs. Rudolph, Main street, Mrs. M. Harris, First street, will hold a kiva social at her home August 16. Mrs. Barry and family, Cherry street, have left for Detroit, where they will make their future home. Harold Dary, Cherry street, Mrs. K. Dary, Montgomery, Montgomery, of Pittsburgh, is the guest of her brother, D. Montgomery, Main street, Mrs. K. Henderson, Cherry street, is the guest of Miss M. Holmes, of Windsor, Ont.
UTICA. N. Y.
URICA, N. Y.—A large congregation was out to hear the Rev. R. J. Shoester on "Christ, the Light of the World," last Sunday evening. Subscriptions to the amount of about $30 were taken up for the winter's coal. John Washington and Misa Hazel Murray were married by the Rev. Gibbons last Friday evening. J. K. O'Connor is seeking the Republican nomination for mayor.
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Grant motored to Saratoga last week, meeting Mrs. B. Andrus and party from New York. Mrs. M. H. Villodas of Rome will occupy the pulpit of Hope Chapel during the absence of the pastor. Mrs. H. J. Wilson little Falls is visiting her grand daughter. Mrs. Fronia Wilkinson, Whitesboro street. Dr. Nathan Haynes, Washington street, has had his place of business painted and renovated prior to his removal. Mrs. F. A. Morehead was taken to a local hospital recently. Mrs. Edward Randolph of Albany is sparing a few days with her son and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Randolph, Broad street.
ELMIRA, N. Y.
ELIMIRA, N. Y.-Mrs. Susie Strange and Simeon Fitch have received their license to preach. Mrs. Daniel Chaney and son Harry and Mrs. D. T. Williams and children are spending their vacation in Virginia. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith entertained Mrs. Loyd Brown, Mrs. E. Howard and Louis Brown at dinner recently. Louis Brown of Monroe Falls accompanied Mrs. Loyd Brown back to East Orange, N. J. Mrs. S. E. Howard entertained at tea on Mrs. Sunny May Mrs. Cory Coch, Mrs. Cornellia Mrs. Mrs. L. L. Woods, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Vance and Clarence Howard.
A large number of Elmirans attended the concert given at the Zion Church in Corning. Mrs. J. D. Wilson of Syracuse is the guest of Mrs. J. C. Moore. Mrs. Emma Davis of Newark, N. Y., passed through the city last week, enroute for Williamsport, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Johnson left the city last week to reside in Ithaca. Wm. Alexander is spending ten days in Atlantic City. Isthmus Allen the Buffalo city. Isthmus Allen the city last week enroute for Williamsport. Mrs. Thomas Davis left the city on Monday to reside in Chicago.
Mrs. and Mrs. Walter Fitch and son George and Gertie Fitch are-spending their vacation in New York, White Plains and Atlantic City. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Powell entertained at dinner last Friday Mrs. Philip Robinson and Mrs. Fanny Gibson, of Williamsport. Wm. Crampton of Scranton, Pa. spent a few days with Mrs. Geo. Williams, Mrs. Cora Munson of Towanda, Pa. spent a day with her daughter, Mrs. Lucy White, Mrs. John Brown of Newark spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Smiley. She was accompanied home by her sister. George Anderson has gone to Akron, Ohio to reside.
Mrs. Minnie Gaines of Belmont, N.Y., is spending two weeks with Mrs. Emma Jackson. Mrs. Philip Higgins spent the week end with her daughter, Mrs. Arthur Mann of Corning. Mrs. Matilda Gordon, of Columbia, S. C. is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Steele Katherine Munson, of Washington, the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Lucy White. Any one wishing to buy real-estate see Mrs. Philip Higgins, 203 Crete avenue—Adv.
A Proud Chapter in the History of the Negro Race
The official and authentic history of the part played by the Negro in the great World War, written by a man whose valuable experience, intimate connection with every phase of the direction of the great struggle, makes it possible to publish the true facts.
A great historical volume that should be in every Negro home.
Gives inside facts and accurate and official data and pictures which will ill show the book. Every chapter is full of the very information which you have been anxiously waiting to know.
This Great Book tells all about the Negro Everywhere in the World War—How He Did His Duty, in every capacity—from right up in the front line trenches and on the battlefields—clear back to the work of keeping the home fires burning; on the farms; in the mills and munition plants; on the railroads and steamships; in ship yards and factories. Men and women with the red cross of the War Camp Community Service, the Liberty Loan Drive, etc. Scott's Official History was written for the Negro by the Negro that the wonderful record of daring deeds, gallant bravery and undying bareness of our black troops might never perish. A great tribute to the patriotism of the Negro Racca.
POUGHKIEPLE, N. Y.
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.—Miss Eve
Washington of North Hamilton street
with the wife of Mr. M. Kline.
Pine Hill, N. Y. Miss Millie Tumeske
of North Clinton street has returned
home after spending ten days visiting
friends and relatives in South Carolina.
Mr. A. Creek and Miss Geygwail
of New York City are the guests of
Mrs. Chan, Lawrence, 35 North Clinton
street, the past week.
AUBURN, N. Y.
AUMUN, N. Y.—Last Thursday evening Mr. and Mra. Arthur Smiter and Mr. and Mra. Henry Jones, two of the leading families of central New York, entertained in honor of Mra. Gertrude Robinson of Buffalo, and Mr. and Mra. William V. Merritt of New York City. The affair which was attended by a brilliant assemblage was held in Andley's Dancing Academy. Dancing was inducted in annual concerts. The evening was finished by Baker's Orchestra. During the evening a bountiful luncheon was served by the young men under the direction of Willard Smiter. The ladies vied with each other in gowns of the latest, creation, while the evening clothes of the men made a pleasing contrast.
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y.
Saratoga Springs, N. Y. -The guests at Mrs. Alice Reid's cottage, Park street, are Mr. and Mrs. Templeton, Mr. and Mrs. Clark and daughter Catharine, Mrs. I. G. Brangman, Mrs. Lotte Payne, Mrs. Dabney, H. Parker, Mrs. E. Willhams, Mr. Scott, Miss Irene Boxfield, Mr. Hayes, Miss Kathleen Cunningham, Mrs. Susanson, Washington, D. C. and Miss Beatrice Janking, Philadelphia Pa.
Recent arrivals at the cottage of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jones, Cherry street, are Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Bloome, Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Wymans, Philadelphia; Miss Mary Brent, Clarkshire, West Virginia; Miss Mary Washington, H. H. Judd Turner, Franklin Turner, Jr. Richard Ballard, J. Ralph Carter, Miss Mattle Faymal, New York. The guests at the cottage of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Perry, Cherry street, are Mr. and Mrs. L. Brown and daughter Dolores. Montclair, N. J. Miss Lotta Washington, H. H. Judd Turner, Nash, Atlantic City, Mrs. Luce King, Mrs. Ellizabeth thurley, Miss Mary Turner, Mrs. W. L. Jenkins, Mrs. C. F. Taylor, Mrs. Alice Campbell, J. W. Toney, J. O. Thomas, New York; Mrs. S. E. Graham, Mrs. Emma Hicks, Hempstead, L. L. Mrs. Frank Glbbs, Hempstead, L. L. Mrs. George G. George, B. Kelley, Troy; Mr. Richardson, Mr. Holbrook, Brooklyn; Parker Jackson, Chester Holmes, G. Bankerville, Ithaca; J. A Carew, Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Patterson, Mrs. Noble Brown, J. W. Woney, New York; Miss Rushford Washington, Inc. Mrs. Federal Street, the cottage of Mrs. Tapping Samuels, the Federal street.
The guests at the cottage of Mrs. Whitfield Brown, Federal street, are Mrs. Grace Simmona, Mrs. Jattle, Mrs. Mira Gradil, Mrs. Fox, Mrs. and Mrs. Henry Anderson, Jules McDowell, Mr. Searcy, Earl Thomas, Carl Whitling, Miss Marionne Whitfield, New York; Bishop Smith, Detroit; Hodder, Montreal; Mr. and Mrs. Ray, Washington, and Mr. Nash, Alabama.
Miss Marionne Whitfield entertained a party of friends in honor of Miss Mona Burke of New York.
Miss Lizzie Collington, the daughter of Miss Lizzie Collington, Federal street, are Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Fuller, Savannah; Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Prater, Washington; Mrs. and Mrs. Green Philadelphia; Mr. and Mrs. Brooklyn; William Jason, Rochester.
Mrs. Daphne Crooms, Miss Daphne Alexander, Walter Crooms, Theodore Joomas, Orlando, Pla, Thomas Broussard, Michael W. Howard, Washington, D. C., are guests at the cottage of Miss Virginia Johnson. J. Coon gave an entertainment for the Zion carpet fund at Ryans Academy Wednesday evening. The underdog Doug Litteron, Soon presented the program. The Helping Hand Society was entertained at the home of Mrs. J. R. Lane August 1. J. R. Bishop and Major. H. Bell repellent. The States hotels at the rally at the A. M. E. Zion Church last Sunday. The collection was $151.00. Douglass Literary Society will present a fine program at the church. A piano recital will give the audience evening August 18, by Prof. H. Caldwell of Syracuse University.
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ALBANY, N. Y.
ALBANY, N. Y., and Mrs. J.
Queens and daughter Marie of New
York City were the week end guests of
Mr. and Mrs. W. Evans, Orange street.
The Rev. E. T. Curtina, pastor of the
Morning Star Baptist Church, is spending
a week in Philadelphia with Mrs. J.
and select a four-day Sunday
in this month to be Fourth Sunday.
Morning Star Baptist Church, Miss R.
Carter is arranging special services for
all day.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Bedell and baby are spending a week in Newburg, guests of Mr. Bedell's sister, Mrs. H. Smith. Wm. H. Evans, Grand Chancellor of the K. of P., is greatly elated over a most beautiful ring adorned with the emblem of the order, presents to him by the members of the lodge, clad in faithful and elegant attire. Mrs. Holloway is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Marlene Stickles. Mrs. Lippins of Syracuse is the guest of Mrs. C. Lewis, Monroe street. Mr. J. Turner, a student of the Boston Conservatory, of Music, is in Saratoga preparing for a recital.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Cobbs of Second street entertained at dinner, Wednesday evening in honor of W. D. Brown, State Grand Master of Odd Fellows and his cabinet. Miss Catherine Hakcus of Second street, entertained Miss Robena Hightman, high school teacher, nore Jordon of New York Friday afternoon. Master William Cobbs has returned from a visit to his grandmother in Catskill.
ROCHESTER N. Y
ROCHSTER, N. Y.-M. E. Latimer gave a dinner party at the Gibson Dining Room on his return from his vacation last week. The following were present: Misses E. Walker, Foster, E. Lewis, E. Lowden, A. Pitman, B. Mines, G. Mines, Messrs, S. Latimer, G. Bishop, F. Williams, L. White and J. Boyden, Alex Alexander, 1150 East avenue, entertained a number of friends on Monday evening, August 4. Games and music were the diversion of the evening attenue which supper was served. Among the guests were Mrs. E. R. Tyler, Mrs. Ernest Wilson, Miss Margaret Ivens, Miss Mary Bynum, Miss Dorothy Jarrettte, Mrs. J. Brown and Miss Sands of New York City. Private William A. Cole took a few days in Rochester visiting friends, having recently been discharged from the army after eleven months service overseas.
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Sprague, 48 Wabash street, entertained Mr. and Mrs. John Roe last Sunday with an auto ride to Honore Falls, visiting relatives, Mr. and Mrs. B. Franklin Bundy entertained Miss Ellen Austin and Private Cole at the home Knickerbocker Hall Sunday at their home Eveany and daughter Ruth spent the week-end with her sister, Mrs. W. A. Sprague. Miss Austin entertained at dinner last Wednesday in honor of Private Cole. Private Cole left Friday for Goldsboro, N. C., where he will visit his mother. Dr. E. D. W. Jones preached morning at Sunday. His subject at the evening service was "Gospel Warfare." Collection for the day was $276.08.
Mr. and Mrs. William Wallace, Mrs. George Gibbs and Mrs. R. L. Kent motored to Scottsville last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Clayburn, Prof and Mrs. C. M. VanBuren spent last Sunday in Scottsville attending the rally at the Iowa State Fair. Mrs. J. W. Clark motored to Buffalo and Niagara Falls last Sunday. Wilson Clark left for Philadelphia last Sunday. Miss Amy Jarrett, Mrs. J. G. Lee, Miss Nettie Bennett and Miss Liza Jones are attending the Christian Endeavor convention in Buffalo. Dr. Jas. Brown, past pastor of the Church in New York, was the guest of J. G. Lee, Monday, en route to the convention.
In the city championship swimming meet at Seneca Park, August 9, Howard Lee won second place in boy's open 100 yards, and second place in men's open diving.
Last Sunday, the Rev. A. M. Tearney preached both morning and evening at the Mt. Olive Baptist Church. The superintendent had a full school and many visitors. Among the visitors were Mrs. Marshall, Mr. DuBois, of the Presbyterian Church, Mrs. Davis, of New York City, and Miss Johnson, of Hampton, Va.
Emmett J. J., Scott, A. M., L.L. D., Special Assistant to Secretary of War, Newton D. Becker.
Assisted by the following notable individuals; Dr. Carter G. Woodson, Director of Research, The Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, Inc. Rabbi W. Tyler, Accredited Representative of the Committee on Public Information, who accompanied, the colored troops to war fronts in France. William Anthony Aery, Publication Secretary, Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute. Monroe N. Work, Director Division of Records and Research, Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute.
Mrs. Alice Dunbar Nelson (formerly Mrs. Paul Laurence Dunbar) leader in the mobilisation of colored women of the country for war work under the suspices of the Women's Committee, Council of National Defense. Miss Eva G. Bowles, Executive Secretary, in charge of the colored work of the Young Women's Christian Association. Lieut. T. T. Thompson, Historian who accompanied the famous $80 Division, U. S. A. to France.
Practically Inspired with nearly 150 French French and American Guests, the Worst War Aesthetics and New Ballet Lists from the Call to the Cottage on Through the Tragic Cottage. Then through the Beautiful Cottage, back to the Majestic Home Counting.
ELIZABETH, N. J.—The Sunday evening services at Silicon Presbyterian Church are well attended. Lest Sunday evening the Rev. Phippe of St. Kittan, B. W. I., but recently a missionary to Africa, had charge of the services. Mrs. Susie Purseller of 218 High Street, announced the engagement of her daughter, Miss Valkena to Charles S. Rone, of Westfield, N. J., Miss Lillian Coward spent last Sunday in Greenwich, Conn., visiting friends. Miss Pauline Jordan of Belmar spent the week end with her sister Mrs. Harry Hearn. Mrs. Anderson MacDonald of Public Lane entertained on last Thursday evening in honor of her husband, who recently returned from overseas after an absence of one year. Mrs. Anderson
bullets and ornaments made from bullets, souvenirs from the battle-field, as well as handsome souvenirs of France, gifts for his wife, made by the deft fingers of the French women. Singing, dancing and various amusements kept the guests in happy mood during the evening. The hostess served an elaborate repast. Those present were Mmes. Margaret Squires, Hagar Vandosen, Harry Hurd, Mabelle Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Coward, the Misses Sarah and Emma Bess, Measur. Percy Taylor, Ernest Sanchez, Robert Major, Arthur Major, Frank Hodge and George Coward. The Young Men's Club, Inc., will give a benefit concert on August 14th for Archie Serrugs, who has been in the General Hospital for seven weeks and is yet unable to leave the institution.
Mr. and Mrs. William Langhorne, 141
Catherine street, announced the engagement of their daughter, Martha Augusta to Ernest B. Taylor, 354J, West Grand street. Miss Martha Simmons, 1087
Lafayette street, is very ill, having been combined with her husband. Miss Lillian Conrad-Sant-Stead at Adsbury Park. Private Caleb E. Freeman, son of Mrs. Mary Freeman, has returned from overseas.
RAHWAY, N. I
RAINWAY, N. J.-Miss Alice Pierce Alexis of Haiti gave an interesting talk at the Second Baptist Church last Sunday in behalf of her missionary work. Miss Georgie Pippinger is spending the summer with Miss Laura Evans of Jersey City. Miss Elizabeth Jackson has returned home from her vacation. Miss Laura of Brooklyn has been her missionary, Madison of Main street, accompanied by her nieces, Gertrude and Dorothy Hazard of Waterbury, Conn. Mrs. Mary Kinch is much improved. Mrs. Jarvis of Brooklyn, N. Y., is spending two week's vacation with Mrs. Mamie E. Shell Scott avenue. Chester Smith is home from France and is now residing with his sister, Mrs. Mary See, 229 Maple avenue. Enoch Roberts has returned to his home at Newbern, N. C., after a visit to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Brown, East Milton avenue, Birmingham, L. I., Birmingham, L. I., Mr. and Mrs. Treadwell of Flushing, L. I., spent Sunday with Mrs. Anna Jackson, 77 Lafayette street.
An excellent and popular entertainment program was presented by the Rahway Colored A. A. before a large audience at Ebenezer A. M. E. church for the building fund of the church and a substantial sum was netted. All of the numbers were well renamed and accepted the numbers with special time and refreshments followed the program. The Rahway Colored A. A. will present an entertainment program for the benefit of the Second Baptist church on Thursday evening, August 29. Harold Hopson acted as master of ceremonies. The Ruth Missionary Circle held a very successful melon feast and parlor social at the home of Mrs. Sidney Archer, 30 Main street. Tuesday, Thursday. The excellent piano selections by William S. Maire, Mrs. Thomas Shell and Miss Jessie Love and solos by Mr. Hopson and others.
Buffalo Visitors.
Mrs. Francie St. James, accompanied by Mrs. Addie. Satterwhite and Mrs. Belle Simmels of Washington, D. C., are the guests of Major and Mrs. Ollie C. Hall. They will visit Niagara Falls, Toronto, Detroit and Cleveland before, returning home.
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BURLINGTON, N. J.
Burlington, N. J., a welcome home surprise party was tendered Mrs. Vili Redout Branch by the former students of the Wm. R. Allen School, of which Mrs. Branach was at one time principal. The party was fully managed by Mrs. Locille Robinson, half of the students told of by previous days and stated that the most treasured memory of their dear principal was her charming personality. She was treasured prevailed the guest of honor, treasured silver dress and set. A bountiful repast and dancing followed.
Mrs. Rose Robinson and daughter Ruth and Mrs. Henry Walton were visiting Mrs. Harry Richardson of Newark and Mrs. Martha Walton of Newark was visiting relatives here. Mrs. Florie Waters of Bristol, Pa., was the guest of Mrs. V. J. Junarez. Miss Robinson of West Philadelphia spent Saturday and Sunday with her family. Mrs. Summers was married by the Rev. W. G. Porter and is now Mrs. Robinson.
SUMMIT. N. I.
Summit, N. J.—Among the social events of the week was a dinner given by Mrs. R. W. Boland, widow, of honor of Dr. Boland of Roanoke, Virginia. Mrs. Boland is the house guest of Miss V. A. Johnson, 152 Summit avenue, among the guests the occasion were the Guild, Hinckley, and Detroit, Michigan; Miss I. Matthews, Orange; Miss Edith Morgan, Brooklyn; Miss Hope Lyons, Washinah, and Dr. George A. Johnson of Summit, and Dr. George A. Nelson of Philadelphia.
The Sunday School of Fountain's Baptist Church ran an automobile excursion to Chauqua Day and the celebration of the Sunday School's annual outing.
Mrs. Chas. Burney. 82 Fairlroad Avenue, entertained some friends at dinner in the lobby of the Poland. Marcel Parotte has purchased through the agency of William H. De Paur a beautiful home at 118 Springfield avenue, East Summit. Richard Carter, Phar. D., has recently opened a store on Bloomfield avenue, Montclair, N. J.
HILLBURN, N. Y.
Hillburn, N. Y.-Mrs. Sprague of
Jersey City has rented the brick cottage on Hickory avenue for the summer.
Miss Geneva Weeks and her
sister Ella were the guests of Mrs.
Fred Suffern of Brook street on Sunday.
Mrs. Mary E. Milligan departed this
life at her home on Boulder avenue
Friday morning, August 8, aged
17 years, after a long illness. Interment at Mahwah, N. J. She leaves two
daughters, Mrs. Geo. E. Powell of Hillburn and Mrs. Peter Suffern of Paterson, N. J.
A welcome home beef steak supper
was served to the soldier boys of Hillburn who saw service in France by the Welcome Home Committee at the fire house on Monday evening. Miss Katie Savary, who has been very ill in St. Joseph's Hospital in Paterson, has returned home somewhat improved.
WESTFIELD. N. I.
Westfield, N. J.—Services at St. Luke's A. M. E. Zion Church were well attended Sunday. The Rev. J. H. Lewis filled the pulpit. The pastor and congregation are planning a $1,000 rally on Friday evening. Dower Avenue, gave a parlor social last Friday evening which was largely attended. Proceeds for the rally, Mrs. Emma J. Brown, president of the Miracle General A. M. E. Zion missionary convention held in Ashbury Park last week. Mrs. Susan Manning, Mrs. Chas. R. Jones and Miss Jennie Boston also attended the convention. Bethel Baptist Church were well attended, in charge of the Rev. Mr. Pierce, who preached two instructive sermons. Friday evening the Men's Club tendered their wives to the Rev. Wm. E. Smith left for a month's vacation in Virginia.
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PATERSON, N. I.
Paterson, N. J.—Mr. and Mrs Joseph Adam, M. J.—Mr. and Mrs Week-end at Summit, N. J. Mr. and Mrs M. Walker are receiving congratulations on the birth of twins, a boy and a girl. Boise Walker, Gertrude Walker, Lila Easton and Edan Mahar spent Sunday with Armilde B. Hugge, Mr. and Mrs. Walter G. Hugges and Mies Watson, of Washington, D. C., were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Louis S. Rouser Walter B. Hugges and Mr. and Mrs Martin toured through Virginia for three weeks.
MORRISTOWN, N. J.
Morristown, N. J.-Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Robinson, Anderson street, announced the engagement of their daughter, Mamie Patrick, to Williams, William, Spring place, has opened a restaurant at 71 Water street. The lecture and entertainment given at Union Baptist Church Tuesday last was a success. The entertainment given by the franks on Saturday evening for the benefit of Bethel Church was a success. The Rev. and Mrs. Stiles, Mrs. Emma Johnson, with other members of the church, have been holding open service on Sunday afternoon. Charles W. Dorsay, of Louisville, Ky., son of Mrs. Sarah Arnold, is spending a few days here.
Is There a Deserving Young Man or Young Woman in Your Community who needs a Chance?
A COLLEGE that has its students devote one half their time to actual useful work is in line with common sense that we are amazed that the idea had to be put in execution by an ex-slave as a life-saver for his dishontrished race. Our great discoveries are always; accidents; we work for one thing and get another. I expect that the great universities are long, when the great universities of the world will have to put the Tuskegee Idea into execution in order to save themselves from being distanced by the Colored Race.
It helps the worthy student to help himself.
Location unsurpassed for healthfulness. Party trades and industries for young men and women.
Excellent Literary and Normal Course.
Smith-Hughes Vocational Courses for advanced Students.
TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE is no place for sluggars. From rising bell to taps, there is a full program—drills, classrooms, shops, far etc.
Maybe your boy needs just a
ing which Tuskegee
Write for Catalog and
ROBERT R. MOTON,
Tuskegee Insti
AGRICULTURAL & TECHNICAL
OF GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLI
OPEN ALL YEAR
FALL TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER 1, 1915
DEPARTMENTS
Agricultural Mechanical and Teacher Training
leading to degrees of B.S. in agriculture,
or in mechanical science.
Officers' Training Corp., United States officers in
north $160 furnished free, last two years Federal
or college domiciles will provide for only 15
degree in the City should secure lodging reservation
other information or catalog address.
J. B. DUDLEY, President.
GREENSBORO, N. C.
SCHOOL OF DESIGNING AND DRIVE
31 Montgomery Place, Trenton, N.J.
taught where buildings can cut all the latest patterns
for story brick building with all the latest patterns
for course completed in three weeks.
DIPLOMA GIVEN
MRS. AGNES L. KEMP, Prin.
Enclose stamp for reply.
PER'S SCHOOL OF DOMESTIC SCIENCE
AND NEGLECTED EDUCATION
OPENS
1919, to students of both sex with a Department of Neglected Education, and with subjects:
DOMESTIC SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
Duplex of Standardboard
Duplex of Switchboard
Hain and Elevator Operators
Buttle
Plain Cooking
Duttle
Pork Cooking
Duttle
Clubs
Manicuring
Duttle
NEGLECTED EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
Arithmetic
Writing
Hygiene
Elemt
The school is to produce a high standard of In-
struction. A college may enter
a number of students. Students entering
for admission required. Students leaving
each week day between the hours of 9 A. M.
or write for terms to MISS I. E. HARPER,
York City.
Maybe your boy needs just the sort of training which Tuskegee offers
Write for Catalog and Information
ROBERT R. MOTON, Principal,
Tuskegee Institute, Alabama
NURAL & TECHNICAL COLLEGE
NORTH CAROLINA.
OPEN ALL YEAR
FROM BEGIN SEPTEMBER 1, 1919.
DEPARTMENTS
J. Mechanical and Teacher Training courses
degree of E.S., in agriculture,
or in mechanical arts.
Corps, United States offers in charge. Suits for
school free, last two years Federal Government allows
conferences will provide for only 10 lodges those wi-
should secure lodging reservation immediately;
or catalogue address.
DUDLEY, President.
GREENSBORO, N. C.
OF DESIGNING AND DRESSMAKING
Primary Place, Trenton, N. J.
applies can cut all the latest patterns by tape mosaic,
building with all the improvements for Students.
in three weeks. DIPLOMA GIVEN.
GNES L. KEMP, Prin.
pose stamp for reply.
SOOL OF DOMESTIC SCIENCE
SELECTED EDUCATION,
OPENS
of both sex with a Department of Domest-
Neglected Education, and will give a full course.
SCIENCE DEPARTMENT.
Articles of Strawberry
Articles of Switchboard
And Elevator Operators
Bulletery
Cain Cooking
Cain Cooking
Offering
Aniluring
Aniluring
Duties of Porter
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT.
Arithmetic
Writing
Hygiene
Elementary Geography
United States History
Elementary Physiology
produce a high standard of Independent manbo
dictionary and will provide board a
students. Students may enter at any time,
required. Students desiring to enter the school is
between the hours of 9 A. M. and 6 P. M. and
arms to MISS I. E. HARPER, Principal, at 123
Training School
—Elbert Hubbard,
In "A Little Journey to
Theksees."
THE AGRICULTURAL CENTER OF GREENSBORO, OHIO
OPEN A
FALL TERM BEGIN
DEPART
English Agricultural, Mechanical leading to degrees or
Reserve Officers' Training Corps, U.
four years worth $160 furnished free, $100 per year. As college domestics will willing to lodge in the City should pay for further information or崇拜.
J. B. DUDL
Aug. 2—1yr.
GREENSBORO
TRENTON SCHOOL OF DESIGN
31 Montgomery Place
French Systems taught where pupils can call
A nice 8 always brilliant students
Course completed in three weeks
MRS. AGNES
Enclose star
HARPER'S SCHOOL OF AND NEGLECTED
O
July 1st, 1919, to students of both Science and a Department of Neglected in the following subjects:
DOMESTIC SCIENCE
Baking
Plain Sewing
Dreammaking
Cleaning and Pressing
Table Waiting in Clubs.
Private Families.
Hotels and Restaurants.
DOMESTIC SCIENCE
Duplex of B
Duplex of B
and Elevator
Fancy Cook
Janitoring
Manicuring
NEGLECTED EDUCATION
Reading
Spelling
Grammer
Arthmet
Writing
Hygiene.
The aim of the school is to produce a and womanhood. The school maintains a judging for a limited number of students, previous training for admission required, each week day between P. M. and P. P. M. or write for terms to B 11st Street, New York City.
English Agricultural, Mechanical and Teacher Training courses leading to degrees of B. S., in agriculture, agricultural science, Reserve Officers' Training Corps, United States offices in charge. Suits for four years worth $160 furnished free, last two years Federal Government allows $100 per year. As college domitioriles will provide for only 150 lodges those unwilling to shoulder secure lodging reservation immediately. For further information, see www.agricultural.gov.
TRENTON SCHOOL OF DESIGNING AND DRESSMAKING
31 Montgomery Place, Trenton, N. J.
French System taught where people can cut all the latest patterns by tape me on.
A nice Avery booklet that will aid teaching of Students.
Course completed in three weeks. DIPLOMA GIVEN.
MRS. AGNES L. KEMP, Prin.
Enclose stamp for reply.
HARPER'S SCHOOL OF DOMESTIC SCIENCE
AND NEGLECTED EDUCATION,
OPENS
July 1st, 1919, to students of both sex with a Department of Domestic
Science and a Department of Neglected Education, and will give a full cour
in the following subjects:
DOMESTIC SCIENCE DEPARTMENT.
Baking Duties of Stewartdes
Plain Sewing Duties of Switchboard
Practicing Duties of Operators
Barbering Plain Cooking Duties of Chamber
Cleaning and Pressing Fancy Cooking Duties of Ladies
Table Waiting in Clubs Janitoring Duties of Valet
Artists, Families Manicuring Duties of Porter
Hotels and Restaurants
The aim of the school is to produce a high standard of Independent manbo and womanhood. The school maintains a dormitory and will provide board a lodging for a limited number of students. Students may enter at any time. Training training for admission required. Students desiring to enter the school *c* *call* and *request* training for the hours of *9 A.M.* and *5 P.* M. *and* P. M. and $ P. M. or write for terms to MISS I. K. HARPER, Principal, at 128 131st Street, New York City.
National Training School
National Training School
DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA
A School for the Traine
Men and Women
Though it is young in history,
pride in the work thus far acco
already filling many responsible
the aim of the school to train m
zenship.
DEPARTMENTS ALRE
The Grammar School T
The Academy T
The School of Arts and Sciences T
The Department of Music The
For the Training of Colored
Men and Women For Service
this young in history, the Institution
work thus far accomplished, for its g
ing many responsible positions, thus de
the school to train men and women for
DEPARTMENTS ALREADY ESTABLISHED
Ar School The Teacher Training
y The Divinity School
Of Arts and Sciences The Commercial De
ment of Music The Department of Hor
Training of Colored Young Women For Service.
In history, the Institution feels a far accomplished, for its graduates responsible positions, thus demonstra train men and women for useful c
S ALREADY ESTABLISHED
The Teacher Training Department
The Divinity School
Sciences The Commercial Department
The Department of Home Economics
A School for the Training of Colored Young Men and Women For Service. Though it is young in history, the Institution feels a pride in the work thus far accomplished, for its graduates already filling many responsible positions, thus demonstrate the aim of the school to train men and women for useful citizenship.
President Jas. E. Shepard, Durham, N. C.
TRENTON, N. I.
Trenton, M. J.-Sunday, August the communion service was observ both morning and evening at 6 P. A. M. B. E. Boe Church. Four wee church during the da the pastor, the Rev. I. B. Turner, spo at each service. The automobile party given by Mr Saddle Wyatt, 244 Church, street Thursday evening of last week was decided success in interest of B. Burlington, the Sunday were well attended. The Rev James Lewis preached the mornin service. The Rev. C. H. Brown, Burlington, preached in the evening One was added to the church. The Rev. C. P. Johnson preached at Bur. Burlington, the Sunday were well attended. I. B. Turner preached at the Unite Baptist Church to the Missionary Society Sunday afternoon and at Shite Baptist Church in the evening. Mrs. Susie Quander attended the Missionary Convention at Ashbury Park in representation of the Missionary Society and Buda of Promise of the church.
"Good. Didn't the landlord object your six children?"
"I don't know, I talked to him so far that he forgot to ask me whether or if we had children."—Detroit Free Press.
OPEN8
A Good Talker
FRED: L. MOORE - Publisher and Editor
LESTER A. WALTON
Managing and Dramatic Editor
JAMES W. JOHNSON
Contributing Editor
London Office, 47 Green Street, Charling
Cross Road, B. C.
Address all letters and make all checks
and money orders payable to THE NEW
YORK AGR.
Dean William Pickens, of Morgan College, found much in admire in the characteristics of the Japanese whom he found doing business in the State of Washington, especially in Tacoma. He not only confirmed the statement that a Japanese will take a garden plot on which a white man was starving and make money, but he adds that one can buy more and better food in a Japanese restaurant than in other places. Best of all, they do not draw the color line. When the whites wanted to bar colored Americans from their places and wanted a Japanese to join in the movement, it was reported that the refusal of the Oriental to join the barring out was conveyed in the laconic response, "He pay." As Dean Pickens adds, "he was doing business with people who pay, and not merely with people who had the misfortune to be born white and bigoted."
That is a laudable ambition voiced by the proprietor of a department store at Laurinburg, N.C., to become the biggest Negro department store in the world. He argues that "If we could get our people to patronize our own, like they do the Syrians, Greeks and Jews, thousands of young colored men who are forced to hotels for a living, would be owners of respectable business houses all through the South." This sounds very probable, especially as he adds that "the banking accommodations here are just as liberal to me as to any white competitor." With the essential qualifications of good service and fair dealing, those who have the courage to plunge in the sea of business, should go far toward success.
Julian C. Caldwell, secretary of the Allen Christian Endeavor League of the African Methodist the International Conference of Episcopal Church, proposed that the International Conference of the Christian Endeavor, held in Buffalo, should insert in its platform for the next two years this slogan -- "A Lymedless Nation by '1925.'" He recalled that at the Atlantic City convention in 1911 the Logan was started of "A Saloonless Nation by 1920," which he thanked God had come to pass. If the leaders of the Christian Endeavor movement are zealous of opportunities to live up to their title, there could not be a greater question to enlist their activities than the one suggested by Dr. Caldwell.
The designation of Assemblyman J. Clifford Hawkins for renomination is justified by his record as a first year legislator in the present legislature. The first term of every member of a legislative body is usually devoted to familiarizing himself with the routine of legislation and establishing himself in cooperative relations with his fellow members. His usefulness to the late and to his constituents should increase with his experience and successive re-elections. Harlem voters will do well to support Assemblyman Hawkins for another
term.
VIEWS and REVIEWS By James Weldon Johnson, Contributing Editor
THE FATE OF THE FOURTEEN POINTS.
Like the fate of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel the fate of the Fourteen Points will become one of the riddles of civilization. And yet, the mystery of their disappearance was partially explained by the testimony of Secretary of State Lansing a few days ago before a committee of the Senate. Mr. Lansing did not explain where the Fourteen Points had gone, but he showed plainly why it was that they got lost.
No paraphrase of what the Secretary of State said would show so clearly how it happened as his own words do, so we quote at some length from his testimony:
Inquiries About 14 Points.
Senator Johnson: Did you have a foundation or a basis on which it was agreed you would act in the proceedings at Paris?
Lansing: I must confess that I do not quite understand your question.
Johnson: Did you have fourteen points that you were going to take as the basis for your activities in the Peace Conference in Paris?
Lansing: Yes.
Johnson: Had it been agreed among the American delegates that those fourteen points should be the mode and the measure of the peace?
Lausing: I do not think it was discussed
Johnson: It was not discussed at all?
Lansing: No.
Johnson: Was there any agreement as to any particular policy that should be pursued or did you wait until you reached Paris and then expect to be guided by the circumstances and exigencies as they arose?
Was there anything in the President's instructions touching the fourteen points that had been laid down as to insistence on those points by the American delegation prior to your activities beginning at Paris?
Lansing: I do not recall any such; possibly.
Johnson: Any agreement or any understanding among the peace delegates prior to setting at Paris as to the draft of a league of nations?
Lansing: Yes.
Johnson: Was the draft agreed upon by the American delegates prior to the meeting of the conference at Paris?
Lansing: No, because what we had was the American plan.
Johnson: That is what I mean. Had you agreed on an American plan?
Lawning: Not definitely.
Johnson: Tentatively?
Lawning: Well, possibly. It was largely, of course, in the hands of the President, under whose instructions we were and who gave oral instructions to his representatives.
Johnson: But I assume, of course, that you saw that plan?
Lansing: I did.
Johnson: You read it?
Lansing: Yes.
Johnson: Generally speaking, you recall what was in it, do you not?
I am not examining you now as to what was in it, but do you not recall generally what was in it?
Lansing: Well, I have rather a hazy idea because it was not followed up.
What Mr. Lansing reveals here is almost inconceivable; namely, that the American delegation to the Peace Conference went over without any understanding among themselves as to what they were going to demand, as to what things they would stand for and what things they would not stand for.
* Not even the so-called American plan for a league of nations had been discussed and agreed upon. All of the plans and plannings, if there were any, seem to have been in President Wilson's own individual mind. It is true that he had four accredited colleagues and a host of technical experts at his service, but it does not appear that he made any use of them; for if he did not consult his Secretary of State, it is hardly to be supposed that he consulted any of the others.
Mr. Wilson went over, armed only in the moral strength of his Fourteen Points, to give battle by himself alone against the entrenched strongholds of European politics. There is nothing in history or fiction comparable to this venture, except the ventures of Don Quixote.
As he himself put it, he went over to "match minds", and he seems to have gotten a keen enjoyment out of the game. Mr. Wilson might have fared better had he been matching his mind merely against the mind of Lloyd George or the mind of Clemenceau, for he has a mental machine as good, no doubt, as that possessed by either of the European statesmen. What he did not seem capable of realizing was that he was not matching his mind against the individual mind of the British Premier or the French Premier, but against the combined political brain of the British Empire and of the French Republic.
The old and experienced statesmen of Europe went into the Peace Conference backed up by the best political brain that they could draw on from their respective countries. They went in with a definite policy as to what they wanted; and with what was more important still, a definite policy as to what they would not under any conditions agree to. Without a doubt, the British delegation went into the Conference firmly decided that they would not under any conditions agree to President Wilson's Point demanding "the freedom of the seas."
On the other hand, President Wilson did not, in the first place, draw upon the best political brain of his country. Where he might have taken an Elihu Root or a Charles Evans Hughes, he took a lot of mediocrities. But even such brain as he did take, he did not utilize.
The European statesmen at once took Mr. Wilson's measure. They estimated his strength and they estimated his weaknesses. And upon his weaknesses they played. They saw that his vanity deluded him into the idea that he by himself alone could do the job for America. They flattered his vanity. They let him make the "new world" speeches for his country, while for their own countries they grabbed the same old world which we have with us today.
And so it was that the Fourteen Points were lost.
SOUTHERN JUSTIFICATION FOR THE BIOTS.
The Southern press had just begun to get into good form at sending out misstatements and lies in explanation of the Washington riots, when the Chicago riots burst out, but explanation and justification of the white man's cruelty and blood lust in Washington do not fit the happenings in Chicago.
The explanation and justification given for the white man's lawlessness in Washington was attacks on white women by Negroes. For example, an article in the Wilmington (N. C.) Dispatch in answer to that great editorial in the New York World, after telling of dozens of brutal cases of rape and murder and robbery, gives this picture of the beginning of the riots:
At last there was a comparatively mild outbreak of mob violence against Negroes indiscriminately, and straightway the Negro mob rose and heavily armed hands of Negroes seized automobiles and ripped and snorted and shot and killed through the streets of Washington, while the raiding and the robbing went merrily on—and the soul of "The New
York World is filled with a delight that is mourn marred by any thought of pity for white women entraged and beaten into insensibility by Negro brutes, of peaceful merchants robbed and killed in their places of business, of a whole city terrorized by roving bands of armed Negro criminals.
What are you going to do to make a man who lies so sincerely as that listen to the truth?
The fact of the matter is, according to data given to me by the Washington chief of police, there was only one case of rape in the District of Columbia during the five weeks preceding the riots and three cases of attempt at rape. And the suspect in three of these cases was in jail.
The writer in the Wilmington Dispatch in the same article has the following to say about Washington as a place where the Negro "has enjoyed a full equality of civil rights with the white race—not theoretical only but in literal fact":
Lincoln's proclamation of emancipation was fully effective in Washington from the date of its promulgation, and it is known of all men that from that day, now more than fifty-six years gone, to the present outbreak the large and ever-increasing Negro population of the District of Columbia has enjoyed a full equality of civil rights with the white race—not theoretical only but in literal fact. There has been no pretence of race segregation; absolute equality of right and privilege has been frankly recognised and rigorously enforced.
Of course, the writer of such lines does not know that the Negro never has received equal civil rights in Washington. He does not know that since this Democratic Administration came into power, the Negroes in the very civil service have been segregated in the very government buildings. He does not know that since the present breed of Democrats came to Washington, a Negro cannot even get a cup of coffee in the lunch rooms in the capitol building.
He knows nothing about civil rights for Negroes in the national capital, and he knows no more about the true cause of the riots.
JUSTICE TOWARD THE NEIGRO, NORTH AND SOUTH.
The Southern press, generally, is making much of the riots in Washington. It is using them as an argument to prove that the South is a better place for the Negro than the North and that the Southern people are fairer toward the Negro than the people of the North:
For example, the Americus (Ga.) Times-Recorder in a long editorial gloats over what it considers to be the embarrassing position, of the Chicago Tribune following the riots in Chicago. In closing this editorial it says: "But the Southerner cannot help smiling a bit over the consternation and chagrin that must now be experienced by the Chicago Tribune, that sheet which has so often held up its 'holy' hands in horror at the diabolism of the South in its treatment of the Negro. No more may these holy hands be lifted up without bringing forth a national merry ha-ha."
It cannot be denied that the Southern press has good grounds for taking this attitude. In the one state of Illinois there have been in recent years three disgraceful anti-Negro riots, at Springfield, at East St. Louis, and now at Chicago. It is true that the Negro is the victim of mob violence both in the North and in the South. But there is a difference between what he suffers in the two sections.
When the Negro is mobbed in the South it is generally without any chance to defend himself, and always without anything that approaches justice in the courts when the mobbing is over. When the Negro is the victim of mob violence in a Southern community, the whole community goes against him, and there is no reaction in his favor when the violence has subsided. If there is any sentiment in his favor, it is crushed down by the preponderating sentiment against him.
When the Negro is mobbed in the North he always feels that he has some show for a fair fight. He does not feel that he has the force of the whole community, the whole county, the whole state, and the whole section of the country against him. He also feels that after the trouble is over he stands a chance to get something that bears, at least, a slight resemblance to justice in the courts. He knows also that there is sure to follow a reaction of sentiment when the better elements of the community assert themselves.
Take for instance the action of the Grand Jury in investigating the Chicago riots; after indicting fifty or more Negroes on evidence submitted by the State's Attorney it declared to that officer that it would indict no more Negroes unless evidence was also submitted against white men who were engaged in the riots. Such an action on the part of a grand jury in a Southern community is inconceivable.
In our opinion, if the Negro is compelled to conflat mob violence in the North as well as in the South, he will prefer to take his chances both against the mob and before the courts in the North;
A SIDELIGHT ON THE WASHINGTON RIOT.
A part of a letter written on Government stationery was picked up a few days ago on the street in Montgomery, Alabama. The official heading on the stationary was as follows:
WAR DEPARTMENT.
Finance Service
Office of the Director of Finance.
Washington.
The first page of the letter was missing, but the second page began with these words; we strictly observe the original spelling, etc.:
"soldiers and Marines from nearby camps and they shoot every time they see a crowd collecting. So it has kinda broken up the idea but I am for giving the nigger every thing he deserves. And he deserves a lot here in Washington. They think they run the city, and it takes the common white people to show them that they don't. They have had about a dozen white women attacked here in the last two or three weeks and the police force is so small here that the white men just took it in their own hands and were getting it back on any nigger they saw. If a nigger attacked a white women in the south by morning you would see the nigger hanging on a pole. They won't stand for anything like that. So you see Wash. has had some HOT times here lately."
The letter is signed by a woman and her address is given. We pass over this lady's qualifications for holding a Government clerkship, which evidently she does, and take up the matter of the misinformation which she had as to the causes of the riot. She states that a dozen white women had been attacked in two or three weeks. Some people in Washington had the figures as high as forty or fifty.
According to the records of the Washington Police Department there occurred in the District of Columbia during the month preceding the riot one case of rape and two cases of attempt at rape on white women.
There is no doubt that the idea which this woman had in her mind was in the minds of thousands of people in Washington and millions of people throughout the country. And it is upon such exaggerated falsehood as this that innocent and law abiding Negroes are mobbed on the streets of the capital of the nation.
SOUTHERN PRESS COMMENT ON RACE RIOTS.
The recent race riots in Washington and Chicago, especially the latter, have given the Southern white newspapers the opportunity to indulge in considerable recrimination against their Northern contemporaries, of which they have not failed to avail themselves. Much has been said as to the hypocrisy of the attitude of the Northern papers in announcing lynchlaw in the South, when such race riots are possible in the North. Proceeding in this vein, the Lynchburg, Va.. News, said:
The conditions which have obtained in Chicago for the past several days constitute, we were about to say, a revolution of the real soul of the north in respect to the Negro, when it is stripped of hypocrisy and seen for what it really is. But it is not so much a resurrection in itself as it is a confirmation of the lessons taught and the truth discovered by revelations which have gone before—by such revelations as New York and Pennsylvania and Ohio as well as Illinois and other northern states have been affording within the past ten or fifteen years. It may be, and indeed it is said, that the Chicago Negro have brought this trouble upon themselves; that they are to blame; that they were the first to resort to the lawlessness and thus provoked the tragedy which subsequently followed. We are not passing upon that question—the point which determines to be kept in view in that the conflict, however originating, portions of distinctly racial nature, it was conducted upon strictly similar lines, and in last analysis was prompted by the thing that is called race prejudice—that it has formed furiously, more dramatically, more uncontrollably, more uncontrollably in the north than it has in the south for the past quarter of a century at least. Manover it suggests a source of danger in the north which increases in its greatly with the increase of Negro immigration to the north—and tends to prove that the southern Negro is in best analysis enjoying the protection of the law and the generous and kindly treatment at the hands of the whites, very much more certainly and securely than the Negro in the north—that the north is the seed-bed for race riots, that the south is not.
The glaring falsity of this conclusion is apparent at once to those whose memories can recall the Wilmington, N. C., massacre of some twenty years ago, the murder and burning of the postmaster and postoffice at Lake City, S. C., or the recent riots at Houston, Tex., to say nothing of the countless hangings and burnings by white mobs during the same time. The Winston-Salem, N. C., Journal followed in the same strain, with equal forgetfulness of the record in its own State, when it said:
Nothing even resembling the Chicago riots could ever happen in any Southern city. It has happened in Chicago because the white people of Chicago do not understand the Negro. It could not happen in the South because the white people of the South do understand the Negro. That is the conclusion of the whole matter. Much as has been said about race trouble in the South, nothing half so bad as the Chicago race riots has ever happened in this section.
The Knoxville, Tenn., Sentinel tackled the question with somewhat broader vision and handed out this provocative message:
All of us are more interested in how to stop these race conflicts than in the inquiry as who started them. The good and wise advisers of both races will study how to prevent and discourage race friction rather than to foment and promote it. It does not affect our views or judgment in the matter that we know or feel pretty confident as to which race would go to the wall and which survive if the conflict should eventually be forced and fought out to the end. We advocate fair play and justice to the Negro. We wish to see him get all of his natural rights in so far as these are consistent with the public welfare and perpetuation of organized society. But the colored people should remember that no one obtains and enjoys all of his rights—or what he regards as his rights. The Negro should remember that very few of the human races enjoy all of their rights. The Anglo-Saxon people, the dominant American race, have been fighting and struggling for thousands of years to achieve and enjoy their rights as freemen and a self-governing race. And today they can't boast that they exercise and enjoy all of their rights.
The Baltimore Sun made a half-hearted attempt to get at the fundamental facts of the situation, with the following result in the way of advice to the Negro, which advice might with equal propriety, have been given to the whites of the same class:
There is only one way by which the lot of the Negro in this country can really be improved, and that is
by making him increasingly responsible and self-respecting: The white people can help by lending their aid in such matters as improving the sanitary conditions of the homes and working places of the Negroes, but for the most part the Negro must work out his own salvation. He must learn to keep himself clean and to tell the truth and to obey the law. He must avoid insolence and belligerency and must abandon for all time the English idea of social equality. By christ and the right sort of education, by the acquirement of property and the exercise of the primary virtues he can improve his position. This is a slow person, but it is the only one, and the more the Negro diaries are the worse off he will be. As he increasingly deterves respect, so will he increasingly be granted
Many of these Southern papers sought to emphasize the futility of the Negro seeking equality of citizenship rights, or as the Americus Ga., Times-Recorder phrased it, "the illusion of equal social and political rights," regardless of the fact that social rights as it designates them, are outside the question. It continued:
There is no doubt in the minds of well informed people of the ability of the South to handle its race problem, and the leaders of that race should忍辱 this as well. It is, therefore, manifestly the first duty of Negro leaders who have the real interests of their race at heart to begin at some superior counteract and disunsequence this dangerous and manchistic propaganda, which found its imposition at the North, and which can only result in harm to the Negro if permitted to circulate in the South. For years the whites and blacks of the South have lived here in complete harmony and record, each realizing and recognizing the rights of the other, and the intelligent leaders of the Negro should not permit those harmonious relations to be disturbed by chasing after the illusion of equal social and political rights which never have and never will be accorded the Negro by the white man:
It might be well to close this symposium with the following caution from the paper first quoted, the Lynchburg News, which warned its readers as follows:
Clauses between blacks and whites such as are now under way in Chicago, are to an extent suggestive. They operate to insidiously appeal to race prejudice everywhere. Even in quiet and conservative communities they often induce to reckless behavior and inflammatory talk which in turn may develop into exhibitions of mob violence. And therefore it is timely to warn both the white and colored populations to have a care—to keep cool heads, and to put a reasonable curb upon the tongue.
It is interesting to note that the News carries at its head the name of Carter Glass as owner, which name has won additional fame as being on the rolls of Congress for many years, until the owner accepted the post of Secretary of the Treasury.
THE BIGGEST DEPARTMENT STORE
To the Editor of THE NEW YORK ACKEN
Enclosed, find check in payment of renewal subscription for one year. I am hoping that your paper will grow to be the largest Negro journal in the world. It is possible because ten million Negroes should read their race paper or pay for some one to read it to them. Less talk and more reading will be of the agencies of relief to the Negro ills.
Being inspired by the success of the North Carolina Mutual & Provident Insurance Co., I have a desire to be the biggest Negro Department store in the world. We are already the biggest in the South and possibly one of the largest in the United States.
If we could get our people to renize their own, like they do the Sarians, Greeks and Jews, why then of educated colored young men, who forced to hotels for a living, would owners of respectable business home all through the South. With ten million Negroes behind us, we would have a black Sears & Rochuck Mail order house. I am proud to say that the banking accommodations here are true as liberal to me as to any white competitor I have, and the same would true to any number of colored men; they will only establish themselves business.
W. P. EVANS, Professor
Evans' White Front Department St.
Laurinburg, N.C.
TRIBUTE TO ROOSEVELT
Negroes lose a friend, a true friend in the death of Theodore Roosevelt, because the man who is big enough to give the Negro a square deal is hard to find. He believed in all men up and none down. When he appointed Dr. Crum Collector of the Port at Charleston, S. C., and the Southerners protested because he was a colored man President Roosevelt said there would be no collector if Crum couldn't serve When he appointed Mrs. Cox postmasters at Indianapolis, Miss., and the Southerners "kicked" because she was colored, President Roosevelt said he would abolish the post-office at that place if Mrs. Cox couldn't serve. When the Negroes were massacred at East St. Louis, and our people the country over needed a word from the station, Theodore Roosevelt apologized to St. Louis Argus.
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Special to The New York Age
DUBHAM, N. C.—John Merrick, widely known as the founder and president of the North Carolina Mutual and Provident Association, died at his home the Wednesday night after an illness of several months. The deceased was born in Clinton, Sampson County, September 7, 1859. About twenty years ago he came to this city, being at that time a bricklayer. He served with all of the money he made and in a few years he opened up a baker shop which became the favorite place of his kind in the city. After many years of this work he founded the North Carolina Mutual and Provident Association, the largest organization of its kind in the world.
In 1854 together with others he founded the Lincoln Hospital. All his life have large donations to the hospital on which he served as president on the board of trustees for more than 50 years. About the same time the hospital was founded Mr. Merrick, together with Prof. W. G. Pearson founded the order of the Royal Knights of King David. Other institutions established by the deceased are the colored library and the Mechanics and Farmers Bank, the latter being established in 1908.
The funeral services took place at St. Joseph's A. M. E. Church Friday afternoon, conducted by the Rev. W. C. Cisland.
The palbeacre bears C. C. Spalding,
Dr. P. H. Williams, Dr. W. H.
Bruce, Thomas Raven, Jr. J. T. Merck
and Dr. A. S. Mumer.
RECENT RIOTS CONDENDED AT NAT'L TEACHERS ASS'N
(Courtesy from New York.)
J. S. Clark, Batten Ranga, La., presided at the sessions held at Voorheen School, the speakers being President Summer, President Haga, Principal Jacox and Mrs. Helen R. Irwin.
Following the morning session a business session was held and officers were elected. Dinner was served at the school and the guests returned to Orangsdorp on the 4 of check train. The Rev. E. R. Roberts, the new principal of the school, delivered a short address of welcome to the delegation. Martin A. Menfee, treasurer of the school, and the chaplain, the Rev. Dr. Jones, deserve special thanks for the manner in which the large number of delegates were cared for and entertained.
Baltimore was chosen as the next meeting place, and among the officers selected were Dr. John M. Gandy, President of the Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute, Petersburg, Va.; president: L. J. Rowan, President of the State A. & M. College, Alcorn, Miss.; vice-president, and Mrs. Mary McLelland, Bethune, Daytona, Fla., second vice-president.
The Girl Scouts of Tonga Man. III and 130 enjoyed a world visit in which they indulged in athletic sports at the camp of the Church of the Crucifixion. They all returned home looking rumped and hearty. The Union A. M. B. Church dedicated their new organ on Sunday. Prof. Leon Adger is the organist. James W. Caldwell made the presentation speech.
Corporal Samuel ed. Mander, who has recently returned from overseas, in visiting his many friends, Miss Bula M. Carr of Washington was married to Lawyer Charles A. Wilson of Boston in this city. They are spending their honeymoon in Chicago. Miss Marion Anderson, our noted young singer, is taking a six weeks' course at the Conservatory of Music in Chicago. John C. Duncy, Jr., a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, has been appointed superintendent of the new Community House, in Detroit, Mich.
At the graduation ceremony of the second First Aid Class, under the North Philadelphia Community Club, fifteen women received their certificates from the instruction department of the Red Cross.
Peter Postell, a prosperous business
sense of Hopkinsville, Ky., and his wife
are visiting relatives at 4047 Augen
street. Mrs. Vernell Rinkola, daughter
of the Rev. and Mrs. C. H. Farraca
of Germantown, died July 11. She was
buried from Bethel A. M. E. Church,
the Rev. Oliver officiating.
The Chauquan of the First Episcopal District will be held this year at Bethel A. M. E. Church, this city, September 24, Bishop Evans Tyree presiding. Lincoln Post No. 80, American Legion, Seventeenth and South streets, intends to establish a club for race soldiers in the southern part of the city.
A Delicate Subject
Knew the Containers
"You mean pneumonia," corrected Willie. "Ammonia comes in bottles; pneumonia comes in chests."—Detroit Free Press
Wielding to the earnest solicitation of friends all over the country, Armand W.Scott, Grand Excaled Ruler of the Elm, has consented to the use of his name as a candidate for election to a fourth term, subject to the decision of the 20th Grand Lodge, which convenes at Atlantic City, August 26, 27 and 28. J. Finkey Wilson and R. W. Thompson, well-known newspaper men, will accompany Grand Excaled Ruler Scott on an automobile journey to Atlantic City, starting on the 22d.
Dr. and Mrs. Henry W. Freeman of 13th street are on an automobile tour to Philadelphia, New York City and Atlantic City. Miss Mary Baltimore, a trained nurse of Harvinson, who has been under treatment at Freedman's Hospital, left the city on Wednesday last for Southern Pines, N. C., where she will spend the fall and winter.
On Sunday, August 3, the Hon. Marion E. Rhodes of the 13th Congressional District of Missouri, delivered a patriotic address to a large and appreciative audience at the Third Baptist Church. The address was both instructive and inspiring, and is but another demonstration of the fact that there are men in the Congress who love justice and the right and truth, and are going to see to it that every man is protected in the enjoyment of his rights as an American citizen. Congressman Rhodes said that so far as he is concerned and in so far as it is in his power to do so, he is going to see to it that the Negro gets every right and enjoys every immunity guaranteed him by the Federal Constitution. He spoke in glowing terms of the deeds of valor and heroism in the colored soldiers across the seas and held them up as the finest type of soldiers this country has ever produced.
Miss Maud Barker is among the sick at Freedman's Hospital. General H. Forrest, Grand Deputy Travelling Agent of the Independent Order of Elks of the World, was a caller at The Ack Bureau. James Welborn Johnson, Field Agent for the N.A. A.C.P., was in the city looking after the interests of the victims of the recent riot.
Among the prominent visitors to our City the past week were: Dr. Frank J. Hawkins, a prominent dentist of Dallas, was; Attorney Roy S. Bood of Baltimore; Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Williams, New York City, and William Taylor, Princeton, N.J.
LERSEY CITY, N. J.
Jossey City, N.J.—Sunday services at Bethel A. M. E. Church were largely attended. The pastor, the Rev. Albert Carter Saunders, delivered a strong and funeral sermon at the 11 A. M. service from the theme, "Tell It to Jesus." Two united with the church. Mrs. Keith read a letter to the congregation from her son, who was an eye witness of the race riot at Chicago. The Orphanage children of Columbus, S.C. were present and rallied a feeling trio after which a collection of $18 was lifted for the orphanage.
The Sunday School held its session at 9:00 A.M. Mrs Ida Lewis and Mrs Venice Lee are the delegates to represent the school at Fair Haven, August 2021. Bethel held its annual election of trustees Thursday evening. The following persons were elected for the year: Charles Kelly, George Epps, William Williams, James Payton, Frank Hill, A. F. Thomas, Richard Ruffin, A. S. Shelton and Charles Davidson. The pastor, with church clerk Brodie, left Saturday for Atlantic City. The church has granted the pastor fifteen days' vacation. On his departure a purse was presented to him by his officers, also a new suit of clothes. Drs. Smith and Steward will occupy Bethel's palit during the absence of the pastor.
PLAINFIELD, N. J.
PLAINFIELD, N. J.—Charles P. Phillips, South 2nd street, left Friday for Cary Brook, Va., where he will be married to Mollie Billard of this city who is spending her vacation there at her 81st house, after which they will return to permanently reside here.
Mrs. Henry Keith, 40 Richmond street, on Sunday, August 3, entertained her brother, a soldier recently returned from Prairie; Miss Nettie Burdette, Miss Fish, Miss Johnson of Roselle, Miss Annie Johnson of Annapolis, is visiting here, the guest of her sister, Mrs. Jeanne Mitchell, 51 Plainfield avenue, Mrs. William Barton, Burdman street, entertained at dinner Sunday Miss Margaret T. Rood, Plainfield avenue, Miss Thelma Taylor of New York is here for the summer, the guest of her munt, Mrs. W. T. Wright, West 3rd street, Edward Ford, Richmond street, was the week end guest of Officer Ray at Atlantic City. William Perry of Plainfield avenue left last week to spend the summer at Rangely, Malin in Danbury, Conn. C. O. Urquhart, Miss Estelle Harvey, Miss Gertrude and Carrie Cruse were last week end visitors of William Cruse, their uncle West 3rd street, met with a serious accident where he was employed last week and had one of his legs broken. He is in Muchenburg Hospital. Miss Alma Gilbert, a public school teacher of Augusta, Ga., was the guest of Mrs. William Dempsey, West 3rd street. Mrs. William A. Jones, 631 West 4th street, last last week for a visit with relatives and friends in Virginia. Jas. Ross, Sr., East 4th street, who has been ill for two weeks, is much improved. Mrs. P. J. Simmons, East 4th street, left Sunday for ten days' owing at Saratoga. Mrs. Seay, Richmond street, after three weeks' illness, is able to be up and around. Mrs. Geo. Shadon of Brooklyn, N. Y., was on a week's visit with Mrs. Cabbell, guest of her mother, Mrs. Scruggs, Jefferson avenue.
Mrs. William Daniels and daughter,
Miss Veeda, left last week for a month's
visit with Mrs. Gon. Gray, Berno Blind,
Va. Mrs. J. B. Austin, East 3rd street
is rejoicing since the extraction of a
needle from the fleshy part of her left
hand that had been there for twelve
years. Sherman Cole, a student of Bardentown Institute, visited his parents
Sunday. Miss Robinson of New York
and Mr. Fisher, a graduate of Brown
University, Providence, were work and
guesses of Mr. and Mrs. John Yates,
East 3rd street. Mrs. Dayle, Plainfield
avenue, is much improved. Robert
Stevens, East 3rd street, attended the
convention of Odd Fellows held in
Trenton, August 12 and 13, representing
Union Locker 4026 of Plainfield.
The Rev. E. W. Roberts, pastor of Shiloh Baptist Church, leaves this week on his annual vacation. Miss Bessie Booker, 609 East 3rd street, gave a luncheon Saturday in honor of Miss Robeson of New York and Mr. Fisher of Providence. Miss Wilhelmma Cook, Fillmore avenue, left Sunday for a month's visit with her aunt, Mrs. Pearlie Collier of Jersey City. Miss Roberta Attles of Chester, S. C., is the guest of Miss Mary Jones, East 3rd street.
Tom Burton, formerly of Plainfield but now of Chicago, writes that he was in the hothole of the riot, but escaped injury and stated that conditions had quieted down wonderfully.
The concert and dance given at Washington School Friday evening was a great success financially and socially. Much credit is due those who took part, also the promoters.
Mrs. Vaughn, widow of the late Rev. Vaughn, was the week end guest of Mrs. D. Y. Campbell, West 3rd street. Mrs. Florence Jones, West 4th street. Mrs. Sobin Mabin and Mrs. T. Goldstone spent Sunday in Atlantic City. Mrs. M. J. Rhodes of Chicago, Mrs. T. R. Rhodes and children of Leonia are here visiting Samuel Rhodes, West 4th street.
The debate at Shiloh Church Thursday evening was fairly well contested.
3
HOT SPRINGS, VA.
Hor Saunders, VA.—Mrs. E. R. Derly is in a hospital in New York and may undergo an operation. George F. Taylor has returned from a ten days' trip to Washington, D.C. C. H. D. Herd, Sr. from Portland, Oregon, is visiting his family here. Among recent arrivals here are: A. L. and R. W. Burrell, Scottsville, Va.; W. F. Spillard, Washington, D.C.; Glascow Hawkins, Camp Lee; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Taylor, Fincantle, Va. Mrs. Victoria Harston has returned from a pleasant visit to Martinsville.
OPEN JUNE 1, 1919
THE STAGE-MUSIC-ATHLETICS
ORGANIZATION of the big circuit of colored theatres was given additional impetus this week by presence in New York of two pretreatment colored bankers, John Mitchell, of Richmond, Va., and L. E. Williams, of Savannah, Ga., who came East to confer, with the representatives of the Quality Amusement Company relative to putting houses in which they are directly interested in the circuit as well as co-operate toward improving colored theatricals generally.
Mr. Mitchell has taken over one of the most modern theatres in Richmond which will be opened for colored people, and Mr. Williams is heading a syndicate of Negroes which is erecting a house in Savannah to cost $100,000. Mr. Williams held an important conference with E.C. Brown of Brown and Stevens and the moving spirit of the Quality Amusement Company touching the building by Negroes of up-to-date theatres in many of the large cities of the South for Negroes.
The Savannah theatre will be at the southeast corner of West Broad and Wayne streets and is expected to embody the latest ideas in every feature of its construction, design, furnishings and dramatic convenience. It is being financed by the Wage Earners' Savings Bank, with assets of a million dollars.
Officers of the institution are: L. E. Williams, president; Sol. C. Johnson, vice president; R. A. Harper, cashier; E. C. Blackshear, assistant cashier; Samuel J. Brown, G. H. Bowen, Thomas M. Holby, J. M. Ferreebee, John F. Jones, Dr. J. W. Jamerson, Daniel Simmons, J. C. Lindsay, Nathan Roberts, E. Seabrook, A. B. Singfield and H. B. Wright.
BILLY KING IN NEW SHOW
AT LAFAYETTE NEXT WEEK
Patrons of the Lafayette Theatre will be treated to another musical extravaganza next week that bids fair to surpass the brilliant and successful offerings which Billy King and his talented entertainers have been presenting on Seventh avenue. In making the forging statement, we have not lost sight of the fact that Mr. King has had the most remarkable run of any producer at the Lafayette since it has been built. The vehicle which the comedian has prepared for the entertainment of the large crowds that will without doubt continue to flock to the Lafayette Theatre is "Exploits in Africa" and one that will give him and his co-star, Billy Higgins, a wider scope for their brand of humor. A few of the scenes will be on the river Nile with appropriate scenery that will give the most exacting audience feel fully for the trip to the Lafayette. The costumes and scenery will again come in for a large part of praise, for keeping to the standard set in "Over the Top," a great deal of attention has been paid to this part of the entertainment.
Gertrude Saunders, Theresa Brooks, Berlina Blanks, Ernest Whitman and the others with the King Company in leading roles will be well provided with material to please an admiring public, and the dance ensembles and the individual song numbers together with the fascinating evolutions of the chorus will all combine to make "Exploits in Africa" an offering for which seats should be secured early in advance. The Billy King Company can well be said to be different to most musical companies of the present age, in that Mr. King is striving to special material for the Negro audience, Mr. King is supplying the book and part of the music, while J. Berni Barbour, the Chicago composer who is traveling with the company, is writing the incidental music and acting in the capacity of press representative. Mr. Barbour has five song numbers in the new show.
"They're Off" continues to draw crowded houses to the Lafayette Theatre this week and the demand for seats remains unabated. The sensational submarine scene is a feature which is roundly applauded at every performance, and the sailing of the aeroplane over the audience with the captivating Theresa Brooks as the pilot is a feature that takes the breath away. Next Sunday afternoon and evening another monster bill will be offered at the Lafayette Theatre. Splendid first run pictures will also vie with the acts as entertaining features and those who attend naturally get the benefit of a program which combines the best in variety offerings and releases from the picture world have successfully withstood the exacting scrutiny of Broadway audiences.
TUNEFUL MARCH
Among the recent musical numbers recorded by Ford Dabney's Orchestra for the Aeolian Company, is a march composed by Frederick M. Bryan, entitled, "The Allies' Triumphal," and placed with the Pace & Handy Music Company through Lester A. Walton through whose efforts many of New York's best musicians are turning their attention, also their compositions toward this popular publishing company. For further information about these rolls and records write to Lester A. Walton or direct to the Pace & Handy Music Co., Inc., whose address can be found always in THE ACE.
Greenley and Drayton are at Proctor's, 5th avenue and Proctor's, 23rd street, New York City.
Wilbur Sweatman and Company are at Proctor's, Schenectady, N. Y., and the Crescent, Syracuse, N. Y.
The Four Cliffords are splitting the week between Loew's Fulton, Brooklyn, and Greeky Square, New York.
READY FOR THE BIG
TENNIS TOURNAMENT
The National Tennis Championship this year bids fair to surpass all others in numbers as well as class of competition. Valuable prizes have been offered, and real excitement is promised. Ballinger Kemp, champion of California, is on his way, and will reach New York this week. Miss Rac, 1918 champion in Ladies'Singles, is returning to defend her title. She is accompanied by Clarke; the champion of Jamaica W. I, and the island's crack doubles team, Campbell and Aris. The Washington contingent will contain the great Tally Holmes, Sylvester Smith, last year's champion; Harold Freeman, Murray, spoken of as Smith's partner in doubles; Wilkinson and the champion doubles teams Richardson and Monroe. Baltimore will bring Dr. Cardozo, R. Reckling, Dr. Rhetta, Dr. McCard, and the 1917 lady champion Miss Lucy Slowe. Many other crack players are expected from Philadelphia, Wilmington, Boston, Annapolis, Waterbury, New Rochelle, New Jersey and New York.
A new grand stand has been erected by the Ideal Club for the convenience of spectators, and everything has been done to make both patrons and players feel welcome. The stand is with red blood in his veins should miss the wonderful tennis of next week.
READING, PA
Reading Pa.—Services of Washington Street Presbyterian Church were suspended for August except the Sabbath School session at 12:50 P. M. The Rev. William R. Rutledge, pastor, is spending his vacation in Detroit, Mich. The Sabbath School picnic will be held at Egelman Park Thursday, August 14.
Services were well attended at the Zion Baptist Church. The Rev. Mr. Spraggans of Lancaster preached. In the evening the pastor administered the Lord's Supper.
Mrs. Bell of Culpepper, Va., has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. Leroy Morgan, 139 North Third street. Mrs. Reed, 522 Buttenwood street, spent the week-end at Parkersburgh, MD.
Bethel A. M. E. Church, North 10th street, the Rev. Wm. D. Daniels, pastor, is growing financially and spiritually, and attendance is increasing satisfactorily. After conference $593.75 was raised for all purposes. Preiding Elder Byrd was well pleased with the work of just a little over two months. Mr. and Mrs. Daniels, of the General of Mr. Robinson's grandfather in erickburgh, Md. Mrs. Livena Dill and daughter are visiting Mrs. Dill's mother at Torneytown, Md. Mr. and Mrs. McGhee and Miss Pauline Warren, Miss Robinson's grandmother, notices to Philadelphia. Sunday Mrs. John Stokes, who has been ill in the Homeopathic Hospital, has been removed to the home of her sister, Mrs. I. R. Rerry, North Sixth street. Ernst Daniels, of the Miss Carry Johnson, 419 Pear street. Mrs. Virginia Byrd, 435 Pear street, who underwent an operation at the Reading Hospital, is able to be about. Dawson, 441 Gulstonwood street.
THE NEW YORK, AGE, SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1912
LINCOLN GIANTS WIN TWO
In two well played games the Lincoln
Giants added to their list of victories
when they trumped over the
Federal yipyards nine and the New-
burghs at Olympic Field. The popular
Harlem team came out in front by 10
to 5 and 10 to 3 respectively. Next Sun-
day the Lincolnns will play the Maujies
and Robins Dry Dock Team. The scores:
LINCOLN GIANTS: NEWBURGH.
R HOAE R HOAE
T.All'n,nb 1 3 1 2 2 Isch,nb 1 1 1 4 0
orsef,nb 1 3 1 2 Fiat,nb 1 2 1 3
Jawson,nb 1 0 1 2 Jiff,nb 2 2 1 3
Wilky,nb 1 0 1 2 Wendell,nb 4 1 1 2
Petrum,nb 1 0 1 2 Gow'da,nb 0 0 2 3
Mabon,nb 0 0 2 2 Dahm,nb 0 0 3 0
Mallon,nb 0 0 2 2 Fnbofft,nb 0 1 0 2
Wabb,nb 0 0 2 2 Garcia,c 0 0 5 1
McLb,lb 1 0 1 0 1 Totals 124 14
Garcia out, binned third strike.
Nicolas Giants, 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 x-
Lincoln Giants, 0 1 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 0
First base on errors—Newburgh, 5; Lincoln
Giants, 2. Two base hits—Menela, Wendell
Sacrifice hit—Bornhoeft, Stalem base—Moe
Sacrifice hit—Bornhoeft, Stalem base—Moe
Newburgh, 8; Lincoln Giants, 8. Base
on balls—Off Web, 2; off Bornhoeft, 5.
Struck out—By Web, 10; by Bornhoeft, 5.
Wild pitch—Bornhoeft. Fanned ball—Garcia.
Umpire pitch—Fanned ball—2 hours.
At Olympic field, first game—
Federal Hrydock Co. 4 1 1 0 0 2 2 0 9 - 1 9 1 5
Lincoln Giants. . . . 1 2 0 2 6 0 0 0 - 10 1 7 5
Batteries—Emmons and Flierger; Smith and
Forest and Treadwell and Wiley.
Royal Gianta, 8; Haekoneack, 3.
HACKENSCK B.B.C.
ABR HOA
Asethcf, 6 2 3 5 8
kling, rf 6 2 3 5 8
Marcell, jb 6 2 3 5 8
ugell, jb 6 2 3 5 8
Smidt, lb 6 0 16 1
Gidib, 2 0 5 1 9
nWgil, f 6 0 2 0
Ruby, f 6 0 2 0
Norton, c 6 0 2 0
Thman, 3b 5 0 4 1
Corby, f 2 0 0 1 0
Wenselp, f 0 0 0 0
Totals 5 1 32 19 17
Royal Giants ..... 0 0 0 2 10 1000 0 0 0
Hackenack ..... 0 0 0 0 0 1000 0 0 0
Ryder, Van Wenselp, Van Wenselp
Thomas, Douglass, Santop, Brooks, Howell
Two base hits—W. Johnson, Douglass, Marcell,
2: D. Johnson, Three base hit—Santop, Home
Johnson, Abbensht, Kenyon, Kenyon, Sacrifices
Johnson, Abbensht, Kenyon, Kenyon, Sacrifices
—Gaddish, Howell, 2: Double play—Santop
to Douglass, Base on balls—Ballr, Brinkerhoff,
to Brooks, Out—Ballr, Brinkerhoff,
to Brooks, 11, Hasselp, Norton, Umpires, Spellman and Falato.
Bacharach, 5; Treat 'Em Rough, 1.
BACHARACH GT'S, TREAT 'EM ROUGH
ABR H OA
Poles,1f 3 1 2 0 0 Haffle,rf 4 1 0 0
Nice,1f 3 1 2 0 0 Haffle,rf 4 1 0 0
Handy,2f 3 1 1 3 0 0 Curran,1f 2 0 0 1
Lloyd,as 3 1 2 4 2 0 Meaura,cf 4 1 0 3
Taylor,1f 3 1 1 3 1 0 Kav,gb,1f 4 1 1 0
Brown,fi 3 1 0 0 1 0 Kav,gb,1f 4 1 1 0
Brown,fi 3 1 0 0 1 0 Halla,n,2f 4 1 0 2
Jhnson,ci 3 1 0 0 1 0 Hob.wtc,ci 5 0 0 1
Wick,rep,ci 3 0 1 1 3 0 Clinton,ci 5 0 0 1
Treaure 1 0 0 0 0
Total 31 51 27 12 Total 33 1 5 27 11
Bacharach Gts. 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3-5
Treat 'em Rgh 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3-5
Doublet-Haffle, Brown,ci
Lloyd, Wickrure, Homers=Poke, Taylor,
Stolen bases-Hollahan, Sacrifice=Cooney,
Hutchinson, on base ball=Off Clinton, 4; off
(Cickwrure, by Clinton, 1 (Handy), Umpires,
Newer and Walker, Scorer=H. Nickel
BACHARACH GTS.T IREAT 'EM ROUGH
ABR H ROA
Police.If 4 2 2 0 0 Hafflele.If 5 0 2 1 0
Hairy.2b 2 0 0 Courill.If 4 0 1 1 0
Lloyds. 5 0 1 3 4 Meaura.cf 5 0 1 1 1
Taylor.1b 1 1 1 35 Kav.1b. 5 1 1 1 3
Brown.1b 5 0 1 1 Halla.n'2b 3 0 1 1 5
Gate.wc. 5 0 1 1 Hebt.e. 5 1 1 1 10
Wick. p 2 0 0 Dana. 1 0 0 1 0
Wick. 2 0 0 0 Dana. 1 0 0 1 0
*Pugh 0 1 0 0 'Schwartz 1 0 0 0
Totals 42 6 10 33 13 Totals 28 3 92 131
Bacharach Giants... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 4
*Treat 'Em Rough... 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 2
*Double Bubble play - Meraa to Kavanaag, Brown to Handy, Stolen base - Curtan, Shirey, Pugh, Sacrifice - Testaea base
*Double Bubble play - Meraa to Kavanaag, Brown to Handy, Stolen base - Curtan, Shirey, Pugh, Sacrifice - Testaea base
*Wick. 1, Struck out - By Treauae, 10; by Redding, 6; by Wickware, 2. Passed ball - Gatewood, Hitze Off Redding, 7. Umpires - Scoreer. H. Nichols.
FLORENCE. S. C.
FLORENCE, S. C.-Mrs. C. F. Gaudy, after visiting soldiers and friends in Eastern Caroline, returned to her home at Greensville, where her husband, the Rev. C. F. Gaudy, is pastor of the Springfield Baptist Church. Miss Carmille Levy, a student of Fisk University, is home here for vacation. Miss Leona Mae Webster has returned from the annual session of the National Association of Teachers of Colored Schools which convened at Orangaub, July 30.
RALEIGH, N. C.
RALEIGH, N. C.-The concert given by the Presbyterian Convention and local talent last Sunday night at the Presbyterian Church was quite a success artistically and financially standard. Mrs. Elizabeth Williams left last week for Princess Anne, Md., where she will be gone for a month. While away she will visit Mrs. Mary Ann Williams in Jersey, also visit Stamford, Conn, and Philadelphia. Miss Maude Smith spent last week in Wake Forest visiting relatives and friends. Mrs. Louisa Clark and grandson, and Mrs. Maggie Shambley of Lewiston, are the guests of Dr. and Mrs. G. T. Jones. Mrs. Clark is the mother of Dr. Jones. Mrs. Minnie Pearl Hackney left for her home in Washington last week, after spending two weeks in the city visiting relatives and friends. Dr. John P. Turner of Philadelphia is in the city for a few days visiting relatives and friends. Mrs. Ella H. Perry has returned home, having been instructor at the A. and T. summer school. Miss Virginia Johnson Greensboro is the guest of the Mrs. Johnson Haywood stopped a few days with her M. D. Haywood, enroute to Norfolk, where she will visit her son and his wife. Dr. K. C. Holt, presiding elder of the Raleigh District, held the third quarter at St. Paul's last Sunday. He preached an inspirational sermon. George Harris, Lee Smith, J. J. Weaver, and Mrs. Nora Jones attended the Grand Lodge of the Knights' of Gideon in Wilton last week.
CARLISLE, PA. Mr. and Mrs. Neaby Washington and grand daughter of Counterville spent a few days with their cousin, Mrs. Arthur Blake. Miss Mary Robinson of New York City is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Robinson of West street. Mrs. John Furman and Mrs. John Scott of New York City are visiting Mrs. Mrs. Furman's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sipe of Metagers avenue. Mrs. John Wood of West Philadelphia and daughters are visiting her aunt, Mrs. Arthur Blake, North West street. The union picnic held at Williams Grove, August 6, was largely attended despite the rainy weather.
Mrs. George Blake of Martinsburg W. Va., is visiting her sister, Mrs. Frank Butcher, Baltimore street. Mrs. Laura J. Jordan of North West street died Wednesday evening of dropay and was buried Saturday afternoon in Union Cemetery. the Rev. R. I. Napier offering. Private- Harold Gatewood is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gatewood, having been mustered out of the service. Mrs. Jermore Ware of Washington, D. C., is visiting her mother, Mrs. Samuel Jamison, North West street. Mr. and Mrs. David Robinson announced the marriage of their daughter, Miss Mable Robinson, to Richard J. Graffin, of musical was given in the West street A. M. E. Zion Church on Sunday. A fine program was rendered. Mrs. Alice Weaver, chairman; Mrs. Manuel Robinson and Mrs. William Hoggette of Hairrishburg spent Thursday with Mrs. Lillian Howard, Lincoln street.
BALTIMORE, MD.
BALTIMORE, Md.—Yielding to the strenuous protests of whites, the state has released its option on a tract of 50 acres at Towson, a suburb, which was to be used as a site for a colored tuberculosis sanatorium. The whites have had one for years on an adjoining tract. The seventy-first annual session of the Maryland Grand Lodge of Masons will begin at Frederick, Md., next Monday. The biennial session of the Maryland District Grand Lodge of Odd'Fellows will be held at Hagerstown on Wednesday and Thursday of next week. Prof. Stephen H. Long, of Pocomoke City, is the district grand master, and Jesse L. Nichols, the district grand secretary. Joseph P. Evans was elected supreme ruler of the Supreme Tabor-nacle of Game Fisherman. A meeting in Washington last week. A number of gentlemen met at the War Camp Community Club Monday afternoon to hear the Rev. A. C. Garner, of Washington, tell of the plans of the National Race Congress to raise a defense fund of $250,000.
William Garrett, James M. Seward,
Alfred Nixon, Louis H. Davenport,
Mrs. Bettie Satchell, Mrs. Gertrude
Wright and George Robinson are
among the Baltimoreans attending the
annual session of the Fishermen of Galilee
at Brooklyn, N. Y. The Monumental
Tennis Club will have several
entrants in the national tournament,
which opens in New York City Saturday.
A large delegation will go to Atlantic City from the Monumental Lodge of Elks to boost George W. F. McMechen for the Grand Exalted Rulership of the Order. Alfred Washington, of Park avenue, has returned from a visit to relatives in Pennsylvania.
lin, Edward Walker, J. C. Harrington,
Mrs. A. Mrs. Henry Gee wristwrapped
Sunday morning at Zion Baptist Church
in Phoebus, Va. D. J. Lewis visited
Norfolk last Friday on important
business. I. P. Evans, Joe Blackwell,
Robert Wilkinson and William Carr
have returned from Fortress Monroe.
The Rev. H. L. Austin will leave
Tuesday for a visit to several places
in North Carolina.
Captain Lewis White left Monday for
an inland visit in Norfolk, Ed.
Rohmann is back from a pleasant vacation
at Clearmount and several other
Virginia towns. John Drummond is in
full charge at the Chamberlain-Hotel
during the vacation of Mr. Wilkerson
and is meeting with success.
Among those who visited Buckrow
last week were R. Hammond, John Calhoun,
R. Forney, Cola Garvis, Robert
Williams, W. F. Brooks and Natelle
John Rose, N. J. N. J. two days at Old Point last week.
Mrs. A. L. Purdie is enjoying a delightful vacation at her home in
Phoebus, Va.
THE LATE SONGS
FROM OUR
COLORED PUBLISHERS
IN SHEET MUSIC AND
PLAYER ROLLS
"Though We're Miles and Miles Apart"
"A Good Man is Hard to Find"
"Beale Street Blues"
"I'm Dying with the Worried Blues"
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And a hundred other late songs
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Address, W. C. HANDY,
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1547 Broadway New York
DALLAS. TEXAS.
DALLAS, TEXAS-J, T. Fox, after spending about one year in War Work Service as Y. M. C. A. Secretary, is home again. Secretary Mott commanded Mr. Fox for his loyalty to the cause of the great war. Mr Fox was twice selected by the War Work Council for oversea duty. Mrs. S. A. Fox has just returned from San Antonio. Miss V. C. Smith, sister of Mrs. Fox, after completing a successful year as teacher in the Deaf, Dumb, and Blind Institute at Austin, passed through the city enroute to her home in St. Louis.
Mrs. M. J. Garner of Beeville, apent a few days with Miss Patterson, a 300 Munger avenue. Miss P. L. Tyler, one of the city teachers, has gone to Mineral Wells for a few days. Mrs. Island on State Street left last week for Seattle. Wash., for the remainder of the summer. Mrs. Susan Fifer of English street visited her, mother in Denton, where she joined her brother who had been in the army in France. Mrs. Tillie Tubbs, the wife of Prof. Tubbs, is ill at her home on Liberty street. Charlie Sneed came over from Fort Worth to visit his brother, J. L. Sneed on Sunday, August 3. E. D. Burson of Munger avenue has just returned from Marlin, where he has been taking the baths. Jeff Reed is back again from Camp Pike. A. S. Tims is merely a maker in Dallas, came from Honey Grove, for a few days. W. C. Robertson has established a furniture department in connection with his real estate office. Mrs. Amanda Rutherford left last week to visit her mother in Columbus, Ga.
First Sgt. Saunders was in for a few days from Camp Travis, where he is still in service. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Talley of Chafute, Kansas, have sent out cards announcing the marriage of their daughter, Bertha Mae, to Cecil E. Rowe, August 19 at Tulsa, Okla. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Riptoe left for Phoenix, Arizona, Grand Canyon, San Francisco, and other points in the west. Rubenus Graggs, son of Chas. Graggs, was badly scalded last week and is under medical treatment. Miss Leola Willard, formerly of New Orleans but more recently of Austin, is serving in the capacity of stenographer for attorney A. S. Wells. She is domiciled in the home of Josh Smith on Allen street. Little Miss Danela Valler, daughter of Prof. William Valler, Thomas avenger suffered last week from severe cut on her foot. Little Miss Gladys Berry left to visit her grandparents, Mr. and Mr. John Vaultz at Denton. Mrs. Ida Rodgers is home again after visiting her sister in Paris, Texas. Miss Callie Rodgers is home after an extensive visit with her sister in Texarkana.
Prof. M. M. Rodgers is off on his annual trip East. Prof. I. M. Terrell, President of Houston College, was in the city this week. Miss L. A. Shaw, who has been clerk in the office of Baptist Headquarters in Pythian Temple for a number of years, resigned that position to take effect August 1. Moses Taylor, 1910 Casey, is remodeling his home and adding a coat of paint. Mrs. Isa Ramsey accompanied Miss Clara Mitchell on a visit to points in Oklahoma and Chicago. The young people who rendered an excellent program at New Hope Baptist Church on a day right, August 5, received a mention employment afforded all present. The Chauatqua is in full sway at Macedonia Baptist Church. A ten days' camp meeting is being held in Oak Cliff, under the auspices of the Methodist Church, the Rev. S. G. H. Johnson, pastor.
The N. T. Baptist Association of the General Baptist Convention is in session in Queen City. They are raising means to support the colleges, two orphan homes and the foreign mission work. Dr. James Kelly, National Foreign Mission Secretary, addressed the meeting and was given $100 cash. Dr. S. R. Prince of Fort Worth is moderator and Dr. J. W. Burton of Itasca preached the initial sermon. The N. A. A. C. P. held a very interesting meeting in the large tent used by the Seven Day Adventists behind the Little Gem Drug Store. The president addressed the meeting on the personnel of the National Meeting in Cleveland. O. Scott, representative of the Overton Hygienic Co. was introduced and made some encouraging remarks. The membership was brought up to 1108. These delegates were appointed to attend a state meeting at San Antonio, August 20; attorney A. S. Wells, the Rev. A. S. Jackson; alternates G. E. Porter and M. S. C. White.
The Budget Manager of the W. C. C. s met a large number of representative men and women of the city to lay planks for the maintenance of the Community House, when the government shall have finished its work. The Diamond Charity Club held its regular meeting, Friday afternoon, August 8. The Wiley University Club held its annual party in the Assembly Room, Friday evening. Twenty-eight sailors received their discharges last week; six new sailors came in. Send or mail all news items to The Miss L. A. Shaw News Agency, 1717 Hall Street, Haskel 495. The Age is for sale at Little Gem, Hooper's and Williamson's Drug Stores, Pride and Richerson's Cafes and Simpson Tailor Shop.
NORWICH, CONN
Norwich. Conn. — Mr. Powell McHna returned after spending a few days with his sister and friends in Trenton. Miss Eva Marshall of Boston is the guest of Mrs. Ernest Lewis of School street. The personage drive at Mt. Calvary Baptist Church started Sunday. Mr. Taylor of Washington is the guest of his aunt and cousins, Mrs. Lula Thompson and daughters. Mrs. Iacy Brown is visiting friends in Providence. Mrs. Speed-Evans has returned from Providence. She was a delegate to the Northern Federation of Colored Women's Clubs.
"EXPLOITS IN AFRICA"
EVERYTHING NEW-ALL NEW SONGS, NEW DANCES-NEW NOVELTIES.
NEW COSTUMES AND NEW SCENIC AND ELECTRICAL FEATURES
An Exciting New Offering.
SURPASSING IN GORGEOUS SPLENDOR ANYTHING EVER ATTEMPTED
BY MR. KING AND HIS INCOMPARABLE CAST.
40——WONDERFULLY CLEVER SINGERS,
DANCERS AND COMEDIANS——40
DOZENS OF DAINTY, DASHING, DARING DAMSELS GORGEOUSLY GOWNED
Secure Scents Early—Phone Morninggrade 1211—Box Office Open Daily from 8 A. M.
to 10 P. M.—Reservations Mild Limit 144 for the Matinee and
7:50 Evening.
Seventieth Anniversary
POSTPONED PIC-NIC
Siloam Presbyterian Church and Sunday School
Thursday Afternoon and Evening
August 21, 1919
at
Gerken's Ridgewood Grove and Pavilion
Music by N. A. Orchestra—Prof. Harry P. Fisher Leader
Admission 35c—Children under 12 Years 15c
Afternoon Feature—Adults Medals Awarded
(Events Open to All)
Juvenile Orchestra for Children and Young People
Refreshments on Sale
::: Grove Opens at 2 P. M
Surface cars to Refreshment, L. L., to teacher to Cypress Hills trolley which passes
the Grove
GET ACQUAINTED
OPENING TOURNAMENT DANCE
OF THE
New York Tennis Association
At Music School Settlement
131st Street near 5th Avenue
Monday Evening, August 18, 1919
ADMISSION (Including war tax) 35 CENTS
Tennis players, fans, visitors and wall-wishers will all be there
COME EARLY, and enjoy ourselves
REMEMBER—Novokly Open-Air Dance on Ideal Courts, Friday Night, August 22
HALL TO BE USED IN CASE OF RAIN
CHAMBERSBURG, PA
Chamberbury Pa. — Friday afternoon, Mrs. Royal Christian gave a reception in honor of Mrs. Moore and Mrs. Brown, visitors from Pittsburgh, Mrs. Rebecca Krunkelton and Miss Elizabeth Spencer, visitors after spending a delightful time with Mrs. and Mrs. David Thomas, Senior N. J. Mrs. Stevenson, Senior street, visited friends in Cartleast last week. Mr. Strange, of Pittsburgh, is visiting his mother-in-law, Mrs. Mary Lewis, East Washington street. Miss Grace Starka, the efficient teacher of the school on the hill, very successfully completed summer school. Mrs. Burke, burying in School, Edward Chase, West London street, enjoyed a week's rest at home with his family last week.
The services at Hope Church for the past two Sabbaths showed signs of renewed vigor. The attendance has been greater than in August for many a year. Last Sabbath many visitors in the church preached from James 4, 21, emphasizing the power of an ideal and self-discipline in character building. An excellent Sabbath School session was held in the morning. The Rev. Burton, the church on the banner. The pastor, is busy, preparing for the district Sabbath School Convention, which will convene here August 27 and 25.
BATON ROUGE, LA
BATON ROUGE, LA.-Prof. J. M. Frazier is back from his trip to the National Teachers' Association, which met in Orangeburg, S. C. The teachers of the training school extended him a hearty welcome. Prof. Frazier has been for eleven years the real head of colored schools in this city. He is also president of the State Teachers' Association. The recent membership drive met with remarkable success. Prof. Green who is conducting the training school at Lutchers, sent his check for 100 per cent. membership. The Odd Fellow's Grand Lodge will hold it annual session in this city, beginning August 12. The session promises to be the best in the history of the organization. Under the leadership of B. V. Baranco, this organization has grown rapidly. The old folks' home is receiving deserving support from the Odd Fellows.
Robert Franklin has a host of friends in the city who are admiring the splendid modern improvements, being made about his home. The Rev. W. M. Taylor, leader of the Baptists of this state and pastor of Mt. Zion, has the support of his congregation in the big financial drive. All the leaders are talking "over the top." Chas. Roberts of Shreveport will speak at Mt. Zion on the night of. August 13. He has just returned from overseas.
PETERSBURG, VA.
PETERSBURG, VA.—Mrs. Rebecca Brichett of Norfolk who died on a visit to this city, was laid to rest in East Vine Cemetery, Sunday, Deceased is survived by two sisters, Mrs. Agnes Mason and Mrs. Katie Brown and one brother, Brown. Actively ball-bearers Werner, Arthur Robinson, James Powell, William Harris Geo. Johnson and Wm. Thomas, H. Tucker & Co. conducted the burial.
William Wilson, better known as "Duke" Wilson, of this city was convicted of breaking in and Brot, wholesale grocers, and stealing $2,000 $2,000 worth of cigarettes, etc., in Corporation Court, Friday and his punishment was fixed at 5 years in the penitentiary. Wilson is a well known character about town and in New York City also. In plying his various operations he used little boys, as was brought out in the trial; but he was the brains of a system of crime and the responsible head. No sympathy is expressed for him, as his attitude toward even his fellows of the underworld has been such that they rejoice that justice has overtaken him. His counsel asked for a new trial which was granted. Measwhile he was forced to languish in jail until his sister arrived in town from New York to arrange his bail.
Nathaniel Banks who has been lit
his home; 215 New street is improving
PORTSMOUTH. N. H.
Portsmouth, N. H.—One of the leading social events of the season was the lawn party and social given last Thursday evening by the Booker T. Washington Sunday School Class in the residence of Clarence W. Tilley in New York. A private dinner was well entertained. The residence of C. J. Gilbert in Jefferson street was the scene of a brilliant reception last Tuesday evening in honor of Mrs. Gilbert's birthday anniversary. She was the recipient of many handsome and useful tokens.
Leut. Clifford L. Miller, chaplain, U. S. A., attached to the 5060th Engineers' spoke to a large congregation at the People's Baptist last Sunday evening.
P. R. Allen Richmond street, returned last Monday from a week's vacation in Providence, R. I.
What Every Woman Knows
Any woman knows that it is easy to get a new dress for the party to which her husband wants to go.-Detroit Press.
SCHOOL OF MUSIC
PHONE GREELEY 2257
418 W. 36th St., N. Y. City
THEATRE
7th Ave.-132nd St.
The Rev. W. A. Sutton, 16 West
street, and Leo La Beer ot 604 Le
menue are both very ill.
Mrs. R. E. Berkeley, 438 West 45th street has a location to Atlantic City for a vacation of two weeks.
Neree DuPree of New York was suddenly called to Macon, Ga. to attend the funeral of his mother, Mrs. Gilford Davis.
Mrs. E. A. Mattin of the F. A. M. State College of Florida is the guest of her sister, Mrs. A. B. Kellough, 22 West 11th street.
Theresa H. Hill, left Wednesday for Asbury Park, Paterson and Washington for a four weeks' trip.
R. W. Tynes and family of Newport Neas, Va. with C. Nicholas of the same place were in town the first of our week on their way, home from Boston.
Mary Watson, 127 West 130th street; Marie Duges, 125 West 135th street; Liz Macon, 2493 Seventh avenue, all members of Mother Zion Church, are on the list.
James A. Hopkins, chairman of the
Park Board of Leaders and
Class No. 3, left Sunday for
Dark and other points for a two
week visit to THE AGE office
were Dr. W. S. Scarborough,
Wilberforce College, Ohio,
Mitchell, Jr., editor of the
Planet.
Agents and canvassers wanted to sell
first class, big article. Sells on
Spent. Money made easy by right kind
man and women. Call or write, 362
Cumbus avenue—Adv.
Virick Christian Endeavor So-
hold an open air service at the
157th street and Seventh ave-
thursday. August 10. The
Afford E. Piggott will be the
C. Rivers of Oakland, Cal., a
New Yorker, was in town the
of the week and made a pleasant
Tirz Age officer. He will attend
meeting of the Knights of Pythias
inantic City, before returning West.
cant callers at the Branch Y. W.
A. were; Mrs. Pearle Sanders, and
M. Lena Johnston of Indianapolis;
W. Win, Daniels and Miss Rosa Heard
linda; Clarence Dumpl of Indiana
the key, Keverdy C. Ransom.
A. B. Thomas, president of the
Association of Colored Graduates,
while attending the twelfth
convention held in Boston, Aug.
22 will be the guest of Dr. and
aries Kerr in Dorchester, Mass.
James Sherman Foster, of the
Dramatic Club and Charles B.
Superintendent of the Grade
Zion Sunday School, left Sun-
a three weeks' trip to Philadelphia
City and other places.
W. Brown of Mother Zion
C. vacation by attending the
Christian Endeavor Con-
test week, and the A.
Price Lyceum will enter-
nure University Summer
lunewhour, 4 oclock,
intermission. A time pro-
gramme and a collation
Community Street: Sing
the held every Wednesday
everybody in the com-
plex West 132d street, under
the Blue and Red Tri-
C.A. and Y. M. C. A.)
Service of New York City.
C Lawton, Miss J. Hofes,
Lawson and Mrs. Dempsey
speakers at the women's mass
at Solem Lyceum last night.
A large crowd of wom-
nants discussed the wom-
nants home and business. Mrs. J.
J. president of the civic de-
partment.
president of the United States, August 17, C. O. Wilson, a member of the British Academy in London and the American Library Council under the chair of Women's Literature Miss Miss Sara There will be the charge of and readings of New York city an opportunity of hearing great organizations that the race face. Mr. O'Brien has won fame contiments and is now writing in the United States. His contribe the public square of his native always attended by high government and persons of the public is cordially invited
Miss Laura W. Durham Entertainers
Ana W. Durham entertained
Tuesday evening, August 7
of her sister, Mr. J. J.
West 12nd Street, Miss
Bill and mother, New York
Reddick, Newark, N. J.
R. Brown, pastor M. J. Zion
Newark, the Rev. Wm.
pastor Litch, Mt. Zion
New York City. An enjoy-
was spent by all present.
OR BOYS AND GIRLS.
Leaming, 2383. Seventh
school is a juvenile em-
ployment, handling those loca-
tions old. It is a
school, and its effort is to
provide boy and girl most
of the best fitted for. In
mothers are guided in
the work. If the job
must not make a suggestion
the next best until the
found. Parents are
for girls boys, and girls to
be in office between the
11. If so they can be regi-
sions are now waiting
NURSES TO BE MET IN BOSTON.
The twelfth annual convention of Colleged Graduate Nurses will segment in Boston, Mass., August 19-22. All nurses planning to attend the convene please communicate with Mrs. T. Illingworth of Local Nurses of Boston, No. 1 Heisen street, Dorchester, Mass.
The meeting will be held at the Columbus Avenue A. M. E. Church, and the headquarters will be at the Women's Municipal League on Massachusetts Avenue. The meeting will be completed arrangements for the meeting which promises to be the most interesting in the history of the association.
NEW WOMAN WELFARE WORKER
Mrs. Eva Deever, a new welfare worker, has been installed in the Women's Day Court by the Episcopal Church Mission of Help, to succeed the late Mrs. Adelphia B. Holmes whose work among the women of her race was of such a nature as to elicit a marked tribute to her memory by the Judges of the court when her unfortunate death was announced a few months ago. The use of a Negro woman worker in welfare work is a comparatively new idea and the Mission of Help is the only Church organization in the city which has enlisted the services of one to work among the members of her family who are aware of their role on the law. Mrs. Deever has had special training in social service work, and is devoting her efforts to the care and redemption of young women of the race that come either within her own notice or within the scope of the Mission.
NEWS OF THE CHURCHES
ST. JAMES CHURCH
The subject treated at the morning service last Sunday was "The 'New Birth' Dr. Hyder said, "The new birth is a mystery to the finite mind just as birth from any kingdom to the one place it is beyond the grasp of the human mind. There are however, certain signs attending birth in any kingdom which enable us to study life in all its forms. It is just so in the world of spirit. Spiritual life is accompanied with a great many signs." The session received one member into the church and three infants were baptized during the day. The congregation surprised the pastor at the close of the service by presenting him with a vacation purse of $100.
SALEM M E CHURCH
Last Sunday morning Miss Mary E. Taylor preached an interesting sermon and at night the Rev. Dr. E. M. Gillard, of Columbia University, delivered a scholarly discourse. Both services were largely attended. The Sunday and Men's Bible are keeping up well.
A large audience gathered at the room and listened with great interest to the address on education, delivered by Prof. W. N. Huxgins, of Chicago, and the Rev. E. M. Gillard, of Columbia University, with an impassioned interment. Prof. E. A. Grant, of Columbia, rendered two classic solos, which pleased the crowd greatly.
ST. MARK'S M. E. CHURCH
ST. MARK'S M. E. CHURCH
On Sunday, August 1, the morning and evening services were attended by unruly large communications, Dr W. H. Brooks occupied the pulpit at the memorial service and preached from Isaiah, no. 10-11, theme, "God is the only key of Nation's security." Dr Brooks stood that God responds to one beacon of what he may respond to, that he does respond to God to anyone man who responds to His will, to people of unfavorable environments, that is the only refuge of people will use not only individuals, all nations in carrying out His purpose. God will never reveal the regime and depth of His love to a soul. He knows the individual loves Him, in the evening the commission was administered by Dr Brooks to the hundred and twenty-nine communities. Several practitioners from the right hand of fellowship and were admitted into full membership.
MOTHER ZION CHURCH.
IN MEMORIAM
We will meet in some length in the
following: Monday, June 10, 2015
Jane's parents and all friends and peer
friends.
He devoted to me, MARY A. SWEET and
JANE A. SWEET.
He is a M. A. MELENA N.
KATHY A. JOHN, J. J. SMITH, J.
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July 12-3 mo
Judie the presiding officer, presided accordingly at the continuation service in and conducted a successful quarter conference on Monday evening.
This Daily Vacation Bible School still holds its closing exercises on Wednesday evening, August 18. The principal, Mrs. Anna E. Mayo has arranged an attractive exhibit and program for the closing. Mrs. C. E. McKinna, the teacher, in the Kindergarten, has Haskins as the other teachers in the school, which shows an enrollment of sixteen Vocation Bible School beds at Van Cortlandt, Putnam, or Saturday Mother Zion School, the only colored school represented, scored enough points in the various races held to rank second. Mrs. Mayo is recognized as being one of the best principals in Greater New York, and her school is regarded as a model.
Commencing August 14, dinner will be served every Thursday at the School House, 128 West 138th Street. Meals at the lowest possible price.
FIRST EMMANUEL CHURCH
At the 11 o'clock service Pastor Bolden preached from this text: "Then Samuel took a stone and set it between Misphe and Shen and called the name of Ebeneser; saying, Hitherto hath the Lord helped us." Samuel vil, 12. The sermon was very inspiring and several slowing testimonies were given. The Reva, Hogans and Edwards School was well attended. The Sunday School was well attended. The student Hogans and teachers are preparing a grand time for the children. August 24th the annual picnic at Pelham Bay Park.
At 4 o'clock the following program was presented at the meeting of the Library Society by Mrs. M. Shaw. Select reading, Miss Pearl Pilcher; invitation, Miss L. Roxborough; closures, sessions and remarks by Pastor Thomas. The L. Roxborough Society held a dinner during the day. Miss Maude Holloway presented $9.00 in trustees' proceeds from the Society. The sermon at the evening service was preached by the Rev. Jasmin from Isaiah xxl, 11-12; subject, The World Church and Its Relation to Jankind. The Rees, Smith, Howard and Watts were presided over by Mr. John Cooke. An offering was given the L. Roxborough, who will leave in a few minutes to the South.
BROOKLYN
N.Y. U.S. Scanman, 12 Bancroft Acc
heart trouble, Saturday
N.Y. Mary Powell, 17.13 Atlantic ave.
Monday afternoon, after a pro-
blem.
N.Y. Virginia Jones, 17. Sumner
street, is returned from a visit to Vir-
ginia.
The Rev. J. C. Thompson, presiding
older Birmingham, M. was a visitor
to the city and preached at Fleet Street
Church, at Sunday morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hubbard and
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Montgomery of
Toronto are the guests of Mr. and
N. W. H. Hackley, 498 Monroe
street.
Mr. Reginal Menelik Christian,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Curran,
Hickory Street, is spending
with C. Latham, his wife
York.
Mr. E. Slam Presbyterian
Sumner School was opened
Tuesday, August 21, at
Grover and Pavilion. See
Mr. E. Slam included in extra
classes last week or else
the primes and other car-
sels vary during the
res at the Wayne Cottage.
N. Y. included J. Aso in
City. Mr. and Miss H. C.
H. Marilyn, Teacher, Miss
Brooklyn, Miss Nette
and Hill, Edward Conick.
The Brooklyners who are
our visitors at Harper's Pier.
Van. are Mrs H. A. Willis,
M. Laming and Miss Mena
all teachers in the public
S. Mey. Earle Hamilton and
M. Dollard, minister of the Royal
Council of Scotland, G. am.
Scott, last week on this
with his family. He was on
L. H. troop North in a minor
camp, who went to
BETHEL CHURCH, BROOKLYN.
At the morning service the sermon delivered by the Rev. M. F. Gibson in St. Luke XVII, 1. At the evening service the Rev. Wilson preached in St. Luke XVII, 5, subject "Some Combinations in Human Nature." The station reported was $60.00.
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By using
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If your scalp is dry, Itchy, scaly,
hair falling out and full of dandruff,
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in, feed the roots and hair will
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stamp or colk. AGENTA
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HEROLIN HAIRCURE CO.
BISHOP STREET CHURCH.
On Sunday morning Pushing mansions
of the Quincy Theater present
an impressive sermon. In the afternoon
the pastor, the Rev. W. Jameson
Carpenter the pastor, the Rev. W. Jameson
Carpenter from the subject, The Guild
Power on Earth." The sermon was
administered to 287 and three were
received into full membership. In the
evening the church was crowded to
see the closing of the ministry of the
Christ. The sun of $131 was collected.
Next Sunday morning the pastor will
receive the Power on Earth. The
stereo-touch pictures will close for the
year with three parables under the
heading "Teachings from Jesus."
FLEET STREET CHURCH
Large and enthusiastic congregations attended both morning and evening services at the Fleet Street Memorial A. M. E. Zion Church, Brooklyn, last Sunday. The Rev. J. C. Thomson, presiding of the North Alabama Conference, whose home is in Birmingham, occupied the pulpit at the morning hour, preaching an interesting and helpful sermon. In the evening Dr. P. A. Wallace preached the annual sermon to the G. U. O. of Fishermen of Gallia, persons joined the sermon by $1461.7 and Next Sunday is Communion Day. Dr. L. G. Mason, presiding elder, will be present at 3 p. m. A member of the Connectional Council which is in session at Paterson, N. J., will preach morning and evening.
RECOMMENDED FOR PROMOTION
(Special to THE NEW YORK ACE)
A Camp Devens, Mass.-Llew, Robert L. Campbell, who was recently transferred from the casual officers' detachment at Camp Dix, N. J., to the Agricultural and Technical College, Greensboro, N. C., as professor of military tactics, has been on temporary duty as an instructor at Camp Devens, Mass., in the R. O. T. C. Infantry Camp, which contained colored and white students, and ran from June 19 to August 2. Leight, Campbell was recommended for promotion and decorated with the Distinguished Service Cross' and awarded the Croix de Guerre with a bronze star by the French Government for bravery in the Argonne.
WHERE TO GO TO CHURCH
MOTHEP A. M. E. ZION CHURCH
151-153, 1306th St. Rev. J. W. Brown,
D. D. pastor, Parsonage, 155, W. 190th
St. Rev. J. W. Brown, 155, W. 190th
and 746 p. m. Baptism and Communion
every second Sunday, 3 p. m. Sunday
School 2 p. m. Alonzo A. Hueve, Superin-
dent, C. J. O'Neill, Joyce W. Warkie
C. E. 630, m. Classes meet
every Tuesday evening. Prayer meet
every Friday evening. Brotherhood and
dies. Brotherhood House, 129, W. 180th
St. Junior Endearor every Friday afternoon
4 p. m. Pastor's Office Hours at
Church, 10 to 1. Phone Audubon 7509.
seats free. All welcome.
ST. MARKS METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CATHOLIC Church, 53D street, near Eighth
Avenue, New York City. Pastor, William
Brooks, Brooks, Residence, 237 West 53rd
St. Brooks, West 53rd St. Prayer Meetings, Friday evening at 8:30
and Sunday morning at 6 o'clock School at 2 p. m. Lyceum, Sunday, at 4
and Sunday morning at 6 o'clock Junior League, Friday at 6 p. m. Classes
Eworth League, Sunday at 6:30 p. m.
Sunday and Wednesday evenings at 8:30
p. m. Holy Communion,
second Sunday evening in each month.
Welcome to all.
UNION BRAVIST CHURCH 204-206 W. 61d Street, New York City, NY 10014. H. Shin, pastor. Order of Services—Sunday. H. a. m., good singing by the choir. An enthusiastic sermon by the choir. 2 p.m. Sunday School. under a guidance of Mr. W. H. Johnson. Mr. W. H. Johnson. Sunday, 3:30 p.m. Community Service the 2nd Sunday in month. Sunday, 4 p.m. Missionary School the 6th Sunday, in each month. Sunday, 7 p.m. Direction of Mr. W. H. Lloyd. Sunday 7:30 p.m. Praise Service, followed with good singing by the choir, led by Prof. L. Cormier, Prof. H. Richardson, organist. A special service for Sunday, 8 p.m. Literary and Socializing Day, 8 p.m. Praise Service.
RUSH MEMORIAL A. M. E. ZION
CHURCH
18:50 W. 135th Sj. A. A. Crooke, D. D.
Pusser, President. 127 West 141st St.
St. Louis, Audrey 74. Sunday services 11
Sunday, 11 a.m. Job Center, 10 a.m.
Sunday at 11 a.m. M. Sunday School,
Sunday, 11 a.m. C. 630. Class meetings
on Tuesday evenings. All are cordially
welcome.
SALEM METHODIST EPISCOPAL
TURBISH. 162-4 West 133d street. The
President, Frederick Airbury, pastor,
Brendan Fraser, Sunday School, and
days. Sunday School, 2:30 p. m. L. B.
Perry, superintendent. Mene's Bible Class,
2.3 to 4 p. m. D. N. Toamison, instructs
Lyceum, 4 p. m. Sundays, 8:30 p. m.
Epworth League, 6 p. m. Sundays, 8.8
day and Wednesday nights and at 1 p. m.
Merry, president. Classes, Monday, Tue.
Sundays, Prayer meeting, Friday night,
8:30 p. m. Job Center, 10 a.m.
Gotts, president. Holy Communion,
Sunday in each month. All are welcome.
SANO MANUFACTURING CO.
P. O. BOX 216, NASHVILLE, TENN. PYTHIAN TEMPLE, BIRMINGHAM, ALA.
A Million Eyes Turned Upon it Daily
AGENTS EVERYWHERE
MADAM C.J. WALKERS
WONDERFUL
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SUPREME IN REPUTATION
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WE BATT THE GLOBE
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ONCE A USER ALWAYS A USER
Pine C.J. Walher
640 West of
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Great opportunity for Agents
Wants for Lance
If You Want a JOB Read the Help Want Advts on Page 8.
SCRANTAP, PA - Herbert M. Smith preached at the Pine Street Baptist Church that Sunday morning on "Daniel in the Loon's Bed," or the Potency of Prayer." In his discourse he alluded strikingly to the present friction of the races in this meeting. His subject in the evening before the Call of Christ." The membership is looking forward to capacity congregations during the special meetings.
On Monday night, August 4, Chester Ward entertained a few friends in honor of Gilbert Patterson, younger son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Patterson, who was recently discharged after valiant and faithful service overseas. The guests were Misses Helen Jefferson, Mannie Whitted, Elsie Tinker, Ruth Harrison, Alice Scanks, Marieta McCloe, Amy Dorsey, Mrs. Addie Tankard of New York City; Bernard Crampton, Walter Scott, Fred R. Myers, Quinn T. Shell, brother Ashon and R. D. Dorsey, brother Paul and Leon Patterson. A large number attended the picnic of the Pine Street Baptist. Sunday School last Thursday at Rocky Glen. W. L. Fields has been on the sick list for three weeks. Mr. Fields intended visiting Utica, N. Y., but on account of sickness was compelled to return after two day's stay in Norwich, N. Y.
Last Sunday was Quarterly Meeting at Bethel A. M. E. Church. The presiding elder, the Rev. W. H. Truss, of Pittsburgh, preached two excellent sermons; morning subject, "Fear not for I am with thee"; evening, "The only True God." Communion was administered in the evening. A social session was held in the lecture room after the evening session.
Mrs. Addie V. Tankard of New York City has returned home after a few days visit with her father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Crampton, Sr. Mrs. Burns of Wilmington, Del., is in our city. Mrs. Mabel Tollier is home after a short stay in Stroudsburg, Pa. and Mrs. Joseph Smith is home after atrip through the South: Reginald Dennis, of Wilkes-Barre, was a Scranton visitor last Sunday. Miss丽格 Greendy, of Philadelphia, is visiting her aunt, Mrs. J. L. Brown, 117 Penn avenue.
Alexander Brackochki, a protege of
```markdown
```
Premier Iguacu Jorge Pudaderowi, the great Polish pianist, was a guest-iday afternoon of R. D. Cannon Dussey, Henry Brown is visiting in Maryland.
FORAKER AND ROOSEVELT
Militiation generated hostilities between Foraker and Roosevelt. It up, doubtfully caused the dismissal of the Black Soldiers charged with shooting up *Brownhillville*, for which Roosevelt afterwards expressed deep regret. Those close to the two great men knew long ago a meeting and explanations brought them together again, that ex-President Roosevelt made the amende honorable. The pipe of peace was smoked and we may say that they now roam the Happy Hunting Grounds in peace, harmony and friendship—Cincinnati Union.
Beautifully located farm of 8 acres.
9 room house, plenty of fruit of all kinds, hogs, chickens, tools and out buildings, 10 miles from New York.
Also 6 room house, all improvements, at Hackensack, N. J. 5 minutes from depot.
Plot 50 x 185, electric lights, in fine location. Several apartment houses and Bronx property for sale.
For particulari, CHAS: MAHALEY, 127 W. 133d St. Phone 6522 Mora.
Real Estate Bargains
Private houses, from 10 to 16 rooms; two family house and apartments and suburban property for sale. Easy terms. MAHALEY, 127 W. 133rd St. Phone Morningside 6522
For Sale
ENGLEWOOD, N. J.
8 room cement block house, all improvements, hot water heat; six lots, all for $5,000; reasonable terms. Address F. Bisig. Forrest Ave., Englewood, N. J. aug9-3t
WHEN DEATH OCCURS AND AN
ECOLOGICAL FUNERAL IS
DESIRED
—CALL UP—
H. ADOLPH HOWELL
PHONE 800 835 8100
100 W. 100th St. New York
Renaissance Shipped To All
Party of the World.
Average Open. Lady Attendant
PHONE 855 801 8011
J. WESLEY LANE
Undertaker & Embalmer
OPEN ALL NIGHT, FUNFUL
PABLOR AND CHAPEL, FREE
Lady, in Attendance, Prompt
Bearer, Moderate Ration.
112 W. 189rd St. Near Lancet Ave.
Council to Mine. Group Charles to Lot.
NOTARY PUBLIC
W. DAVID BROWN
HIGH GRADLE LICENSED
Undertaker & Embalmer
MAIN PARLOR AND CHAPEL.
146 West Fifty-third Street
(Bet. 6th and 7th Avenues)
TELEPHONE 2094 CIRCLE
Lodge Room 12 AT Renaissance
Rates
HARLEM PARLOR AND CHAPEL.
2313 Seventh Avenue
(Bet. 12th and 13th Stree
Telephone 1898 Morningside
FOR RHEUMATISM
Constipation and kidney trouble take Mary E. Spalding's Southern borne, the manymoney on the market. For sale at the Arkansas avenue, Bronx; George L. Wagner, J. J. Williams, 130 Myrtle avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Address all orders to M. E. Spalding.
15 George street, Owpea, Thora Co., N. Y.
1200 Pinewood and BLW; 6 bottles for $6.00.
April 28-60s.
IF U DON'T C
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- ETent
[Se
‘WOMAN MURDERER
«S1 ay i SPRIM
eaTha New Youn
Hor "Somses, Van-The 1
set of ouy Danatifal line rc
aot Me Wikie Dickey.
Glen "Dickey, “ebend of te vit
cae bere from Louisville, Ky.
weat to the cottages where his \ was
Smployed, ‘There be was cordially wel
Gomed Soon after Kaving the comple
atone nthe dining for cher “em
yyees heard the report of a gun, snd
feturning fownd the young woman Bad
Seen ant ‘three or four tiwes te the
head and body. ‘She died ‘shmost is-
etantly, bi
The cottage is situated on the moimn-
tain side, near am almost. impencirable
thicket, and it was easy for the aur:
derer to make his escape. The police
were notified but no trace of the crimi-
cal mas found The next diy vod:
unde were brought from Lexington,
Van aad put on the tail, but they fol
jowed & for a short distance.only’ and
the search was abandoned. The body
of the murdered woman was shipped to
Louisville, Ky.
AMERICAN LEGION ORGANIZED.
‘The George P. Davis Post of tn
Ameriean Legion helé an exvaniaaiion
meeting Men@ay evening in Teatomia
Hail, Pushing Avenve aad. Tompkins
avenue, fot the purpose of revetving
the charter granted the post by tie
national headquarters and Also Lo start
@ membership drive In Brooklyn. Major
John H. Clark, of ‘the 16th Imfamry,
told of the value to the men of an
American Legion Post. To Gate thie te
the only colored poat in Brooklyp, but
the enthusiasm among the service man
has been so great that other posts are
expected to be formed, Charles Dy
Davis, 366 Ralph avenue, who has os-
anized the post, is especially anxious
that all colored service men of Brook-
lyn affiliate with it.
‘The post for colored service men in
Manhaftan also reports good progress,
‘This i the Willlam Lloyd Gartison
Post, one of the very first to be formed
In New York State. D. Lincoln Reld,
205 West 137th Street, is the organizer.
THE NATIONAL RACE CONGRESS:
OF AMERICA, SUFFRAGE
i BESBION
To the Colored Folks of America.
Greetings:
The Natlonal Race Congress of
Ameriea by Ka Executive Committes
authorizes us to Issue the call for the
Fourth Annual Meeting of the sald
Congress to meet. In Washington, D. C.,
Oct. 7 to 11, 1919 Inclusive, at the
Metropolitan Baptist Church, R Street,
between 12th and 13th Streets, N. W.,
the Rev. Dr. M. W. D. Norman, pastor.
All Local Units are eligible to be
represented according to the Constitu-
tion. Churches and auailiaries of
churches, clubs, asxociatiuns, fratern!~
ties, and organizations are Aluo ad-
mitted according go the law now Jn
force, $2.00 per delexate,
This Conaress ta known ax the SUF:
FRAGE SESSION, Every interest of
tho-Culored people hinges on the bal-
lot. Every man in America should be
Interested in the franchise: there ts
no more important subject before us
an u prople. You are called to meet
us, If there is no organization in your
district (o send @ delegation, Ict a few
Public spirited men make such an or-
wanization; one that desires the
stowth ef the Negre manheod, the pur~
ty of Negro womanhood and the op-
Dortumfty of Negro childhood. Come,
all ye leaders of the great Black race
in Ammerica. Come to bring the truth
{rom your cemmunity, come to hear
the faets about other sections, come to
hear the story of the Colored people
of England, France, Liberia and Haitl,
come to help make @ program fer the
reconstruction of the higher life. of
the Negro in Ameriea,
All prospective delexates and vist-
tor are axked to write Rey, M. W. D.
Norman,’ chairman committee on ar-
rangements,
For further information write Head-
quarters, 202 Third treet, NW. Waahe
inxton, D. C. i
H. J. Calis, Chairman Executtve f |
Committee: J.J. S, Holloman, Seere- |
tary, Executive Committee. W. H.[?
Jernagin, President; C. 1, Stepteau, |
Secretary, Haltimere,* ata, <h
Where to Spend Summer.
Where to spend the summer en a farm
not far from Towanda, Bradford Ca,
Penna located one high elevation Raat
Toad within walking distance, Large airy
Fooma, Term reasonable," Fer partion,
iare address, sing. gM. DORSEY,
Powell, Bredion Gon fa.
Seiie 8
lo Mew Lebetes at
soe ORY anti Ayanus,
‘we nice nomeeae adore
tee all het
"Reais "ee poe
a
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ir neensh tgeeees ot ORs
oF Se Satin ag eat eS foto
Nit Sot wll a reform, or Ry not Ieee thas (Rzo
See ee ose
s 2 te Sew we te eet
Beat yee eee
oa “sabe, Seed chee’ Se
sin oe ees &
Saat aes ee
SCO aaa Fee Le ee
Seed TT ee es
2 Jets SSeS
Se Pee gee ee
bg SOE ap oy Bs
Sy soe Sees mee Sa eS
ingeel Sore Steps, Seaton
ries St Cli pt Leva Sh
oenits pat ee ee asa et
aramage moy nae, otile, or peih
og “nites! a's
aaa ite a See Sete, Se
We Reale! SROs Sones
men Saal cat eS Sota Ae
seal Sate ES ate Se eae
she eects eee pies ea
ats hea eatRah Betis el
er iia Laat" dad" Beciy a tied
Sra ant ad meer, cient
re Sat Cae ese cea a eas
re FN ee ee
Be ne ie a ate ae a
rina fh atta sed mary hae been ap
rr atreet a0 te mettee’ Ween ne ‘remaieée?
ag tt oe ate |
UE RTE ee eaciee cee, vat |
eater Mbon rah ate tae get Tee s.
oben the peat sloctema ecg eT
orm. im securlance with fhe ‘Provisions of the |
paar ac :
‘STATE. OF NEW YORK. » ‘
IN SENATE ‘
The toeeing teste wey Malle |
ayerity ot a“ the” Sepaters clected voting’ ts
So
by sae ot tos sig
: Taam
STATE dr new TorK! :
The fereroing reeeturion wae duly ‘paunes, .
ene Geert See
ae a eee 7
WR see 3
TEABOSoe onic,
STATE OF NEW YORK, i a
J eve comianns the prceaton cvoy ot eae. | f
rreot resolu'lew with foe ericiast cestureeei |
rtify thet the eame te @ rorrert trapecript | of
a gana lige cate :
wa a Mae cates a
icc nabts RI | 2
Ls FRANCIA M. ICAN. «
is Serene! ete | F
ou vou stoninsion. en AtsreChash
‘ball th reend a te *
eR te, secs nachdannd ae cae |S
wi ete retaatiass, sate | &
=p er ercutura late te ‘be oat Se =
Tg linieate may de ameeered whelly or | te
tly ageinst any property becetane erety |S
eperered? be
TWwe a
PEFL 464 Tiow— Metter ke sow: oe
Ttrachos TT ie me ater oo Seats | Ss
‘ATR OF WEW YORK, .
onal eS eter we oany | SE
ot ie Tene.
werent othe eon” Me et | 3
Bein te Sree orn et
Bi, rir of ee
oF tintl, Tose ie Shenae |
ts tee oe Sle ST |
rat wit coommree te 108 peewee tor | 4, /
eet, as :
eS rete nae tS ne sete Ei | es
Swen. es a
s ‘Beeretery of tata | the
AMENDMENT NUMBER TWO
CoseCetgnr Aseoleriex @F fae Siate amp
‘Aeeimmce "Proresine. ux “Awenpucre “7
Aareue Tes cr bus Contre ten ty a
frente asec? Fore
Rction’ 1 Acwiene TE the feaste evocer,
TMT artiste woof the Comatttetee SS Se
Te imeerting hercln ‘2 ae ac, Me eee
a ak de Sime
a re thse, ,
srevtde“a cenmet ia shee ond ASS Sy
Flaca wht oveiiing tert one ay oad
Te ectuerenee af" say poneeel ection SE
etaidabig bool” od The” ttt te Cathy
iieie rchutace” beoeane thew "tates SSoattned
Ratbiee reste asegte hrgeniate eat
tha" Diatied ticler’ may wate ad Tosern
Feo me RR Ne
Pies Le ehiclledey redpettetly aS
F 2° “neeives "af foo” Seukes “Sealey, That
tad Gocpening tmocdiment, Sor ent a HES
rovie far cigteral at tne geen eegite ht
Ae year facia bund "ast teeta ies
Gohteace with the provisions ste aes
STA7R oF RW YORE,
: ie eden Oe we
‘This bill ake? apes mel icy ot an
iter” there. thtenettg bag peat
ctor teareat eet pone
Dy onier St the .
‘THabpeva oO :
STATR OF EW YoRs, .
arth
Renan, Aprtt 4,°1019.
Tite stn we daly. peoeeds a Babacig a an
ue Soattore iced "eed “tetas aecl
Bie Site Crile gion
By sekec at the anata,
e tata o Witcan
STATK oF New roux, Veit
Oerce ov Tus sachewart ev Brarn, se
x .
move comparvd. the cot om:
current rescieen wit et
Feestetion on Alc in this ofiee, Beredy
iherePrnas tad se het whge eae SMe
aad .
Bein “onder ml Mend ede “oat ot
Uhm) Si oF AMtangs aie arte Magee tte
nay cyte aaa
inliee esr eve thowmmna ates Samael
5 Fiamoga Me woge,
Pr Feasiary ate
Fors rox scnwoanion oe Aston Mette |
“MDatl the “ *pmeodiecnt te article
ten “ef the ‘opetheres, org 8 ee
secon te be eet NS! atin =
Isture tm enact general laws to previce seen,
ter hy “Guin soaent Guallted wouter Ey botethy
soy "Zetetat” shciten’ aha Moreies sarge at
rauaesen air tata. ite See ieee, aad
io bien they soapeciisedt retaat tereganstgt
Tenen
wartavitioy — Matt TS thle la bev mat.
tot tn trac hers 1 tet aia mente eee a
cane tate Sh Mee ESa
erick on Tae Becnerane a
Asaant, Joly J, 1919,
Fete te a oh re
Gro Minka eon tee Seiad ase
te et tr Hinton Terese eet
Cat ithe’ Teliowivg “phopoeed” ‘amenaetalS,
si sin ec atte et sh Sem
othe aise nf sence
icon erie prtene of nt eres
eek” geletay Picts to Seam
arth aay "Gk" Nataai,” alee” Sealed
ince.
vaancie a.
2 ncia Mw wOGO,
AMENDMENT NUMBER THREE
Coxcvasastr Musohonon op ome semavs ace
Aretuniy” euroriie. a "aapeesear®, 47
Pectinw Wi ne genera Tana eee Es
Siottisy be RacaTiON Fe aee kale Cony
FNS Waymraee oe saumtane ant Set
Exgietatcen one tee Sraatns ee tee “ht
Lane “
Eectien i. Reatved i" the Benate evarm),
Wea coves ae of arian teen Seem):
Z =
E =
=
C7
Fees
s oa
apersee
ie 4
ee =
wpe Sees
. a Cenneeet
> by 5-7
. (te = ). Test |
ot ae ix wane es i
Ss Se
ar = a
‘e2eee ov aw
e. Sa
‘Tim tt wee parsed, 0 mentors ot ol
ras
ony Sree
Tasboevs C stamy,.
erate or vew rors, ““*-
: eee 4prG 5. 1919.
‘Thies ME .was uly passed, erie. ‘a
etme ees Same Bc?
meee SE eee,
Talat o Witcwn
fran oo nee res
sere Pa eae beeen,
‘1 have compared the’ we of com
ret eS oe OT
tiene ee Sate came ees Sontees |
Ser se Sat faeces Se
Se aioe Sens Stas mt
See tag Tocrary at ono at
the gard Me tae eee Se
Tesipear ee inetd ae Seuss
we ae
el Paawore ws muoo. || |
hem vee omneen o Siaweaest NOwoee
“nat the worewt Tetatment to wettest
cate Eas Cena TEE TS |
tin eRe ‘Seton at WSs, a
a so8 tad Te pate ts Se,
Togs he ost
Foom
Narignstion — astieeS ean noe: met
rie Snes 7 Mean rte me mat
Tate! do Wet Vous,
Orme ae aE OSE orore
Porwumnt te. te ae
Tee opin Bf ET Cachet eat
Toke ate machen tee Seaahed aiet
re OF te Bde Tae estes EE
se Bice aap Saran 5
Phen eee sh are eee aes
ri Sa Pawan
* Sie agin Sete Me Laat
mie Gah SE" Neraater “tartne “ae y
FRANCIA M. AUGO. |
‘Beavetars 4? iiebe
AMENDMENT MUMBER FOUR
Govcsmasxy Reevleriem ef TRB SeWsie an!
‘Aeomatr Peeresioe an Auatomone “7
atticcs ix"ee Tan Oosemreron te” kas
Sen se "Oeatrasecman aa Teeate eet
Gectica T, ‘Meertved (if te Aemrartty
Seems Arata coors
acled corse of dot Barer tbe rene
a Pe emendod te reed ee fetloee’
7. ate coat St eppenie t2'eetinoat 1
ena eeatt Seribe eh ieate Ste cial
iste ‘Soes ia sore? She elt Seid ihr eae
Sethe "atptrence often reteten one
Sed" heir cceeetbre: “et taal sea
ihe alelord gi tae eee” Tee aes re
the chief Jobe and semectate Jnjarn shai te
Feteioen ponre trom wet Mecleane tre ci als
Se eeaatg Beit ating owe aten yt
a I a A
ihe, coeewrrenes of eae seat bees atte
Sse eater Foe ts Pod
tate," wioeeeree aed er erten tes Seahotiee
Ee peaaue of Ther tant of apres eat
tthe pevereer Ct ould ri ia nea?
frase, SF the ecvemetation Gc sSaencan!
Teascocete’ apn, ‘the or chant aemgnat
Bieta eae nate Beet
See ees sae
Seema em aageatea Ss"
tee heat aE ag Se
=e Serra
ieee Se eer a ment ass
Sdiaena et Sead eset are renee (oy
Ee ee se ese es
ag poe
ie toe ao]
2P°So cece oe ‘= ee oe
ot fc cone Soot Yoke
ohet) vosstee fey thelr e oe
Taek votes! Y
toes att wt -
r, fe ow , ede fa fhe sate
"netics ty eas cane
eonciate, fkte of the ewert’ of apperis tat
eat a tone mmm So Fe of
nT 4 weird samy evaree), Pt
ne darpeing cmeattat be eesied fa hy
mr, a at tee queers) clertion te
SSE peut setae Trees see sia!
eens te eetertince eHts Toe Trovcieseat ie
evtion law. J
‘erate oF aw ror.
1 usar
aT ae |
ficegsiig semintion wit Gal) foleen
mere eT ae Se Seite cite menine tt
Sr atee
by octet of the. Beasts,
Satara Witnre.
* . eniteas,
wears oF xew york’
Ty vasxsca.”
‘The foregetag resototten was uly yaueed, a
aa fag ay, Fegsrien See ahve, Somard
wr igsopeus et sWicer.
ine
STATA 7 xurw roms,
ves cr Tus anamnant oo bean,
T bave compared the ovr of com
eireat ressittinn swite, Bog ertgheal coscurstat
feat ihe sume ‘a tart teaser
To A a Apso
Cries mp eee apa ieee! ot
St at Aaya arte “day ay
Ce AD Seat ee temeead ales Sioaied
y. ahcageen Downed sie |
iy ee
wan ron: premanen op Anueess Newina
4
; pea arrestee ths? selavice “wf
ae Saari etiaes tncrensing, he. sslacien
STRAIGHTEN YOUR HAIR
Cick-nomeiree rons. But do tt with
(Kink-no-more) the greatest age mtraight
amine: ‘preparation ‘on earia: “Kawi
Fularetanten the "kintcat wind "of bale
Thinde about ita" preparation that ‘all yes
have to do is to apply it ow the bir sad
with » Title combing the hale becomes tewght
not ty stay. for une day or one works ou
fo St “trom tie 46. Sight menthes Water
wit “muvtiny thee will arake it eink: apse
alter A hw men “ateaightened: ‘Kink-nosthore
"a8 siusler workers So marvelously doo ie
faut ‘work that one ean hardly, believe there
AEeae2 ptt atin tematic ad gate
lecaute there ie, mot. apother
fhe sort Nike te." Mer a reweee ot g168
for anv heal of ‘ait that Rlak-wecmere ‘eit
not ‘araighten
Kink-noomore is av bie orn; . It
ws Uetlectly harmiene sad wil Sot hajere, ee
sealp nor hair. Bot K will sop Rh from
falting out; positively removes dandre@l; pro-
motes a luxuriant growth ef Bealthy bak ‘ond
keeps it soft and dlosey.. Remember Kinkos
more is sold under @ gweramtes te do = 3
in claimedd: tor If ot
wvter site Set ot Rh Sate se
regular’ alee’ bos amare,
vtretghien from one to twe hesde of hele.
When ordering, wend = rom te
money order Ur expsaas’ "
inducements offered to: agemt, We
ceyghrgl termes Eacions Taam “oxsay
i Athi, Ties COTTE,
Address Prof. L. F. Shelton, Prospect
Ave, Asbury Park, N. J.
Do vou want work? 34 90, read the
Help Wanted Aéva. en Pages
HELP ‘WANTED ADS.---MALE AND PEMAIE
a Ze fo |
COARSE, BAD HAIR
Made Beautiful, Siiky, Leng Glossy
—— By Using ——
~ INDOL, the Great Hair Grower |
——_—— -
j
FREE SPECIAL OFFER Leam the
Liberal BIG . 9 INDOL
Sampies As an introductory inducement System of
of eur send $1.23— money order or Malr Caltere
HAIR regiftered mail -- and we will by mail.
~— send you the following, prepaid | Woendertal
Receipt anywhere in the United States. | {Moning
of 1 Bex (SOc Size) Nair Grewer @Geod Money
Six Cents 1 Box (38c Size) Glossine by the Use
in 1 Bex (SOc Size) Biceche! ef this
Stemps. Superb Shin Whitener System.
White for Literature, Particulars and Agents’ Terms.
* ENDO LABORATORIES CORPORATION, 2257 7th Ave. H. ¥. City
| Natural Hair Wigs
SWITCHES, TRANSFORMATIONS, CURLS,
CLUSTER PUFFS, HAIR NETS,
STRAIGHTENING COMBS,
AND EVERYTHING IN HAIR GOODS.
WIGS MADE TO YOUR MEASURE
Free Catalog Sent te Out-of-Town Patroms on Request
Alex. Marks.
662—8th Ave. Cor. 42nd St.
Open Daily 9 a. re. to $:30 p. m. (Closed Satuclays)
‘a Vim Goes Over the Top
komo eae Set rine ern a
HER EWE s25c Each
_ “Hair Vim Chemical Co. Inc:
1234 You Street, N.W. Washington, D.C:
4
. anaes “8
rr
5 een
(pag PORTER
| teady e: nt, good 8
Arcrican Book Bindery, "906
West 31st St.
me
TO MAKE (ORALLY
we gaepe e e™
18 RAg? SOF 97.
~~ STABLEMEN on
Tit eu a Gonmisen as bas ae
= YOusieaN
|. Wanted: tm shipping mem to lara s trade.
COLONIAL CHAMDELIER wks,
ee RR Sinn
HELP WANTED—FEMALE
re EE EMALS
| BUTTONHOLE : SEWERS
oa men's cunts wanted
WIT8On & PRICE
376 Allen Beret
You Wat Gor 10 hae tee
DRAPERS—FINISHERS
Seats waht Se at eee
SMITH, 121 West 17th Be.
—.___DRAPERS
ond tutebers on Ree nviies” Bepert-
raced oely meel apply. Apply Midge Drone,
i Bat ap rn BE 3
TOK FACTORY, Wat PAY
IN GITY. Bie TO MELEE
SIVE abo Woun ar itowe
FOR toe Mem HOUR i
Trinacrid Embroidery |
2028 2nd Ave. I
EXAMISTUR wa Urecers, Tl AS Tari ¥ Pat
ania !
EMBROIDERERS !
RXPRUIFNCRD CHOGHET BADER
AN cere bes AS AOE
Ron, Soe Eee ike Bee '
TEXPRITENCED Diapers ce Gress: oT OE;
ctintced end wogly. Omass & Beciamn! Shp
Feat Tat wee '
FINISHERS !
OPERATORS ~
ON arp arniava =
coon Tal, RTEANT WORK
arriy ALL WEES
._G, PEZZELLA, =
322_ EAST 120TH ST.
~. FINISHERS
Sabet vm diewnes,” Blealy wort:
Gainers cit aD wens sy
ADLER & AST, G
5S WEST 32ND ST.
PiMAEGA » anran St
FINISHERS and QPERATORS «=:
COLORED PREVERRED ON KIMONAS | —
HrRAbY VoRTION: Go0D aye |
M._N. ARIDA. He
118 WEST Z2ND ST. ‘
——
BELP WANTED FEMALE
| ;
“aie a
Bie Pag
, ROTH SACKS:
____ 4 WESE 4TH ST.
ee Ee eee xe
experteaced om tellarmade Comm. L 8 L.
Diets ite eee Tae
\ FINISHERS
land. vice meets. om conte ort enttn, MORRIS
tateres ; Test oe ve och
5 we
DAVID CRYSTAL, 11 i 26th St
Finishers on drevecs. J. Isaac-
son, 86 Garrat Place.
Ae ie a? Om
FINISHERS
se mm ns is
KAMERICH GARMENT ©
29 West 35th &t.
FINISHERS
On Dresses
00D PAY: RABY WORK
James & Diament
55 East 8th St.
$e
a HI eetnes, Gnd pay
ay
GELBERG & SCHENK |
106 Sth ates en ‘bib 2c ily oe
Finishers & Cleaners |.
nnted: oa, Hilk etdererar. Costeery alae tube
ee Sasug LO Meree: etree ater men
a
Randolph Sik Underwear = |
31 West 2ist St.
FINISHERS
aoe
BRAMBIR & LESSER
138 Wert_ftat Breet 7
irls to trim ladies’ neckwear;
‘steady work. Barnett, 126
h Ave. « . , =
LEE ret ary eer ee
GIRLS
OwiGiNAL EhewROIDERY® .
HIGINAL EMBROIDER
ARENA AUTO SCHOOL, 151 Weat Stth Street, N. Y. City
tre s—Remenber that the AREMA AUTO SCHOOL Is 20 jonger at
Wert tad Sts briget OUR MEW BEACE TS Wore tCH OSE, lt to Jong thet the
Wat is over and opportecity is offered to you by the ARENA AULO SCHOOR tne
Benegal to any other school in New York Clty. in-Becauac it iy sachet or Hone
Became our school 1 Superior to ovhers In smeteactions Sse Medias 4 "engel of Homey,
Beat Equipped school of itt kind in this country. ¢—Becamse this ie thy ‘Ont Sebi te
Atverice” wang, up codate 1919 automobiles for’ driving ieenone, auth ty SRAM DCR
pReminn Suite” abecaue we uaatce our Gdenm co get ther Lleeane,
ase our prices are compare a oem (can that other schools
charge, F—Hecema we futnioh poutlons through tr Cha wii ay on cute schools
see sai terres, IT zor aaah MW, gagy ig! chance yon ill eve foie
Eire. Caioday for’ mere information af the ARENA AUTO. SCHOO mei wey
Sain Scene Nem York, Chor. Rclore spending "your monty in other wchosts ice for yew
Item edition catalog, which will be talked to 50 free et Case” Te toa
EEA nom Hee of charge, tees 4
AGENTS MAKING. FROM $10 to $20 DAILY selling .
“SCOTT'S OFFICIAL HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN NEGRO
7 IN THE WORLD WAR”
300,000 COLORED HEROES
Their daring dade and dheilling experiences
. Told tn ‘a great historical wsiene
That wil be bought and
Read by the cstored people ef the world.
Tota ts the gent ood Say Baeorieel ete ee taty
red and published rirtetiy ta ereat
NEGRO—tee the NROROvaad by GI NEGROES
wore a Ter od ele today! SOPH Pato amd postage for gents outbs to Lee
SYSTEM SERVICE AGENCY, Y
71 West 09th St., New York City. 7
Colored Soldiers in France
imagtoes pe bela tow cota ae ae ny ota
es ‘ e ry
The Only Publication of Its Kind
We have taken over the entire collection (over 500 picture of colored
coldiens) brought from Francs by Edward L. Snyder, who traveled on al!
trewta with the 92ad Divisien.
The Pictures Include Actual Scenes
At the Front im Real Trenches. Going Over the Top Under Fire
Crawting Through No Man’s Land. The Pamens Road to Metz.
‘Tremsbes in the Argonne Forrest aad St. Mibie! Bester. Troopers
. im the Voges Mountains.
. Photo of the late Lieutenant James (“Jim”). Earcpe and his Band, fro:
the French Govermment Pistares of the 360th infantry Vid 1th). 807th
(Old 8th), 871st from South et one See Me Maes. Ubio and
Vena. ‘The tomons African herees of the First Batic of the. Marne.
The. Beck, with a ler- “legravere for framing, seat upen receipt of
Dme Del an. scmy- Coats. P.O. Money Order. Without the Rote
crevare, One Deller. Ten conte for pustage. . a8
ARGONNE FOREST WAR PICTURE CO.
C). Phliatitighia, Pemaptrenie,
HELP WANTED—JEMALE
{ee
ont ene ry ‘eutpeors. Grom
light werk, geod pay, vieaty
= = 5 aa
Ladies Silk Underwear -
+ Also Hematitchers
iy
/. sHUTRO, ‘
218 i a on
te. om tobe smrtiond dartnem ets ond
rer
ee
~ GIRLS 7
fee tinge! Nee ot tever’ wor.
Set: tend pas at SE
“CHARLES RIEGEL MAN
1333 BROADWAY.
—GIRE—RELYABLE
* te do general housework; good home
qed every considerstion giv.
MR. KASS, 1464 Carrol St, Bhy.
HAND SEWERS. experiecced 0c One wales,
ay Me & Es
a ae
SFRATORG we Riper Geaines alos ai
Ce a ae
OPERATORS
Suet RTO, eae
MITCHELL .
na area
oiners and hemmers on muslin night | f
owns by picce or week good pay.
L. Radinsky & Co.
515 BROADWAY
nee TOR
ciaiettnene Oo ase sas
tin cee ais Be
stat IE eT og
‘QUAMER SPECIALTY’ CO.
Aen STRCIAT LY.
SS is \
fomdy RE TN, |
JAMPOLSKY BROS.
$62 Park Ave, Bhlyn, M. Y.
oy tales! weekieat ‘end aig amirruese,, |
ae 2 3
Gelberg & Schenk |,
100 Sth AVENUE
TIMATORN enperich ad oi Ureaate aie er
CNEL ree oe
Rena 2 heiarhaas GN eae,
experienced on silk dresses .
Steady work, good pay. a
Apply all week
ENAISSANCE DRESS CO.,
22 Wert iit Bt, 10th Pleot—— |
care tant Coctene, OS, St Erne |e
char See we
$$
. PPE OL ALP, PPAR
MEL? WANTED—PEMALE
i TORS 2a gt ee Sud girls,
, Unies iy J acting. Oar
Sms Comemay, BS Waves aa
| “OPERATORS —
inde Sh es et
aaah rte al ey
4th floor, 31 East 32-0. St.
OPERATORS 2ND TRIk: URS
i
“Medes Serw's'to"*
rate mo
OPERATORS Bis, FSCS
Experisares ce sili and siepe Qrem sicaty
Tort ore bay, novia nll" Coan’
Roger & Bireabaum, 10. W. 18th
OPERATORS AND PR. SERS”
wNri0000 Ades; Sah UNDER WAR
CRYSTAL, 113 University Pi
OPERATORS
se ant wee sere hate
a ie ay @h Floor.
OPERATORS ~~
Paxve CNDESOARMENT iar,
PRPERIRNOED ON OUILDRSN'S Deora;
STEADY WORK AND GOOD Pay.
Marvin & Abramson
__716 EAST 215 8T., N. Y.
OPERATORS & FINISHERS
ON CHIL MuES's Coup: GOOD Par.
TURK & GAPIN
64 RAST 11TH ST,
00 - —PRESSERS “- 500
ON SHIRTS
ALSO BAND STARCHERS
monger ‘waors
att YRAI STEADY Wonk,
334 Sth Ave., Room 202. x
PRESSERS
winted on abire, Learoere also taken,
“tonay werk, Piece or eek eolt
VHITE SWAM LAUNDRY yit_nuee 1
PRESSERS
RXPEMIENCAD MiOU Geans_DRSScR;
2 DAY WHERE coubep ae!
MACK KANNER & MILIUS
19, Bast_3tst St, cor. Madison Ave. _
iBieivin im ealitrers tthe aes BO
page diane heen on wee
TSSTIS ST TTS
dreea mecay Ga, cea Ge eae
Mae a Gee eee
PRESSERS—LEARNERS
on house dresses. Steady work
I. Ginsburg, 102 Madison Ave.
lagiea night gowraey gel poy! stealy wot
ONYX,
192 PRINCE BT. _ =
PRESSER
Vxperienred om chilaret's dreson
TMenay cork” gee pee!
HAMMEL-BERNSTEIN CO.
2 wet ae be .
in
DEAE Saree om otek Gad TR