New York Age
Saturday, February 3, 1923
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
Charlotte Hawkins Brown Speaks at Oberlin College
Fills Week's Schedule of Appointments in Cleveland's Wealthiest Congregational Churches—Has Achieved Notable Results in North Carolina.
Cleveland, Ohio.—Beginning with a women's meeting at Lakewood Congregational Church at 2 p. m., and a forum meeting and dinner at 6 p. m., at the Euclid Avenue Congregational Church, the Rev. Ferd O. Blanchard, pastor, on Wednesday, January 24. Mrs. Charlotte Hawkins Brown, principal of Palmer Memorial Institute, Sedalia, N. C., filled eight formal speaking engagements up to and including the evening of January 31, telling the people of Cleveland of the splendid work she has down down in North Carolina.
Fire Destroys Dormitory at Laurinburg Institute
Howland Hall, Occupied By Girl Students, Is Burned Down While Students Are at Devotional Services —Girls Lost All Their Personal Belongings.
Birmingham CitizensOppose Segregation in Zoning Law
Bill to Restrict Mercantile Invasion of Residential Districts in Alabama City Contains Objectionable Race Segregation Clause.
FOR QUALITY READ
The New York Age
THE HOME PAPER
Read the Spanish Section
VOLUME 36. No. 20.
Charlotte Hawks
Speaks at Ot
Fills Week's Schedule of Ap
Wealthiest Congregational
Achieved Notable
North C
Cleveland, Ohio.—Beginning w
wood Congregational Church at 2 p
dinner at 6 p. m., at the Euclid A
the Rev. Ferd O. Blanchard, paste
Mrs. Charlotte Hawkins Brown, pr
istitute, Sedalia, N. C., filled eight
up to and including the evening o
of Cleveland of the splendid work
Carolina.
She was given a vigorous and earnest hearing by large audiences at all of the meetings, which included assemblages at some of the wealthiest and largest Congregational and Presbyterian churches in the city, and at Oberlin and Western Reserve Universities. The choice of her engagements was made by Rev. Dr. Blanchard, who gave prominently of his personal efforts to bring together groups which were sympathetic in clined towards Mrs. Elias work.
In addition to the first day's meetings, Mrs. Brown filled the following engagements: January 25, 12 noon, at the College chapel; 26, 8 p. m., Negro Welfare Association (Urban League) annual meeting; 28, 11 a. m., morning worship at Mayflower Congregational Church; 7:30 p. m., evening worship at Archwood Congregational Church; 30, 9/15 a. m., Western Reserve University chapel; 31, 8 p. m., evening services, Woodland Presbyterian Church.
Notable Achievements
One of the youngest of the race women leaders, Mrs. Brown still has given twenty-one years of service, during which she has accomplished some notable things. She is founder and principal of the Palmer Memorial School at Sodalia, N. C., and its growth and development has been steady and upward. One of the most important elements of her work was the building up the first rural Community Center to be undertaken in the South. As an index of the growth of the work she is doing, the proffessional department has opened a position at the Sodalia school. Mrs. Brown was the first Jeanes Fund worker in North Carolina, the standing of Palmer Institute is certified by the fact that the Board of Education训学生 is a model for county training schools. Independently, it should be recorded that La Lostine College and the National Training School have conferred the degree of A. M. on Mrs. Brown in recognition of her educational work. Be on the sound construction character of the work she is doing. Mrs. Brown is more more and more conceived by child women of the country as a legal and outstanding candidate in position of the National Association of Colleged Women's Clubs. Mrs. Brown is president of the North Carolina State Federation and is working with Mrs. T. W. Bickett, widow of the late esteemed Bickett, in the
Fire Destroys Dome at Laurin
Howland Hall, Occupied By O'Down While Students Are Away —Girls Lost All Their Pets
N. C. On Monday night, at 9 o'clock, a dangerous fire broke out in the entire Laurinburg Industrial Institute and in Howland Hall, girls dormi- completely destroyed. Heroic efforts of the local fire depart- times under control and spread of fire. With a driving southward, sparks flamed and for some time great danger that the fire to other buildings, but not wet with a steady stream. The work of property owners in bucket brigade helped situation.
Of the fire is not known, supposed to have caught from its fire. The building was number of its tenants at the time pupils were assembled in
Birmingham Citizen Segregation in
Bill to Restrict Mercantile Districts in Alabama City able Race Segregation
Birmingham, Ala.—Colored citizens of Birmingham are aroused by a feature on a voting bill, introduced before the State legislature, proposed originally to prevent the invasion of residential districts, mercantile establishments, and will mean race segregation, and it has presented a memorial to the commission asking that the objection be eliminated.
A committee of ten leading Negroes in a formal protest which was prepared by City Commission and a conference has been held at the decisive action was taken. The Birmingham News committed to the protest insofar as it limits mercantile development on residential districts, has denied the segregation clause to be made. The News said, editorially:
A similar attempt was made in Birmore. The case went to the
The New York Age The National Negro Weekly NEW YORK, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1923. Best Edited—Best Known
Hawkins Brown
Oberlin College
Appointments in Cleveland's
International Churches—Has
stable Results in
North Carolina.
ing with a women's meeting at Lake-
t 2 p. m., and a forum meeting and
Bid Avenue Congregational Church,
pastor, on Wednesday, January 24.
n, principal of Palmer Memgrial In-
tight formal speaking engagements
of January 31, telling the people
work she has down down in North
establishment of a home for delinquent
colored girls. She is on the women's
committee of the Southern Interracial
Commission, active in Y. W. C. A. work
and a member of the board of the N
ational Urban League. She was one of
the first, if not the very first to suggest
organizing southern colored women into
a Federation.
Protested "Mammy" Memorial
When Congressman Stedman offered his resolution proposing that Congress authorize the erection of a monument to the "Negro Mammu" of slavery days, Mrs. Brown promptly expressed her disapproval of the proposed legislation by sending a telegram of protest to Congressman Stedman, and by wiring Mrs. Luke Johnson of Atlanta, Ga., director of the woman's department, Southern Interracial Committee, asking her influence to have the memorial charged to a Foundation for the Education of the "Beloved Mammu's" Children. In her telegram to Mrs. Johnson, Mrs. Brown declared that Negro women deplore the "mammu" memorial and think of it as a hollow mocker, but that "a foundation helping Negro girls to acquire a knowledge of home economics would speak volumes more than could gray stones, however beautifully carved." The telegram to Congressman Stedman read as follows:
"To Congressman Stedman
Washington. D. C.
"The intelligent Negro women of the South appreciate your motive in advocating some kind of a memorial to the faithful services of Negro women during slavery but deploy the fact that it should take the form of a "mummy monument." The grandchildren of these beloved mammies have been educated largely by Northern philanthropy, their idea of home life, church and school have been developed largely through efforts of consecrated white men and women from the North. If the fine spirited women, Daughters of the Confederacy, are desirous of perpetuating their gratitude, we implore them to make their memorial in the form of a foundation for the education and advancement of the Negro children descendants of those faithful souls they seem anxious to honor." (Signed)
"CHARLOTT: HAWKINS BROWN,
"Principal of Palmer Memorial Institute, Sedalia, N. C.; president of Federation of Colored Women's Clubs; member of executive committee, National Association of Colored Women's Clubs."
Dormitory
Brinburg Institute
By Girl Students, Is Burned
are at Devotional Services
or Personal Belongings.
the chapel for devotional exercises. No one was hurt but the girls lost much of their personal belongings, clothing, etc., which could not be saved.
Laurinburg Normal and Industrial Institute was founded by its present principal Emanuel M McDuffie, in 1904. Howland Hall was built in 1908 and was the second building constructed in what it now a community or school group of buildings used by the school. The last building is a brick structure, but all the older buildings were of wood or frame structure. Principal McDuffie will begin preparations as soon as possible to replace this building with a modern structure. Meanwhile he has made arrangements which will accommodate the pupils of the school and work will continue as heretofore.
The fire loss in this instance was partly covered by insurance.
CitizensOppose in Zoning Law
The Invasion of Residentiality Contains. Objection-legation Clause.
Supreme Court and was held unconstitutional. The same attempt was made in Louisville, and the Kentucky Supreme Court held it unconstitutional. If the attempt is persisted in Alabama, the Alabama Supreme Court will doubtless hold in line with the decisions mentioned, or if it does not, certainly the Supreme Court of the United States will, for the unconstitutionality of such legislation is patent.
Would Work Injustices
"But suppose it were not? Think of the trial of esiis which would come; the injustices worked, the openings given apologists—who, may be at the time? interested in in this move, desiring to run colored citizens out of their homes and acquire them at forced sale, and therefore for
NEW YORK, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1923.
M
Founder and Principal of Palmer Memorial Institute, Sedalia, N. C., Who Protested the "Mammy" Memorial Proposed in a Bill Introduced in Congress by Congressman Stedman.
Founder and Principal of Palmer Memorial Institute, Sedalia, N. C., Who Protested the "Mammy" Memorial Proposed in a Bill Introduced in Congress by Congressman Stedman.
Hospital For Negro Veterans of World War To Be Dedicated
Vice-President Coolidge Will Speak at Exercises on February 12, When Building Erected Near Tuskegee Institute Is Formally Consecrated.
Business League Committee Plans Business Expansion
Spaulding Presents Plan for Corporation for Expansion and Development of Race Business as Suggested By President Moton.
GOLD STAR MEDAL
GIVEN WIRE CHIEF
Four Star Service Emblem Awarded Jos. Brooks by Telephone Co., for 20 Years Service.
Honeoye Falls, N. Y.-Joseph Brooks of Honeoye Falls, has recently received a gold service medal with four stars, one for first ten years service and one for every five years thereafter. This medal was given by the telephone company of which Mr. Brooks is wire chief. He has served faithfully this company for more than twenty successive years.
Wm. Dalton, Friend To Race; Died January 27
William Dalton, aged 71, Deputy Commissioner of Correction, one of the strongest leaders in Tammany Hall, died Saturday, January 27, at his home in the Hotel York, Seventh avenue and 40th street, of pneumonia.
Mr. Dalton was a staunch friend to the Negro and for 17 years had been a subscriber and reader of The New York Age. It was his practice, after reading his copy of the paper, to hand it to some of the bellmen or other colored employees of the Hotel York that they might read it. It was one of his characteristics never to refuse assistance to any worthy member of the race who called on him. He was specially interested in the Bellman's Association, which has its club rooms on West 55th street, and gave personal attention at frequent intervals to activities of that organization.
He was the oldest member of the executive committee of Tammany Hall and was a Sachem of Tammany Columbian Order. In early life Mr. Dalton was a butcher at Eleventh avenue and 41st street, and was the organizer of the Young Dalton's, who became powerful in the 3rd Assembly District. He
Hospital For New of World War
Vice-President Coolidge Wife February 12, When Build kegee Institute Is For
Tuskegee Institute, Ala.—The new government hospital for Negro veterans of the World War, located near the Tuskegee Institute will be dedicated Monday afternoon, February 12. The dedication exercises will be held in the Tuskegee Institute Chapel and Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Edward Clifford will preside.
Among the speakers will be Calvin Coolidge, Vice-President of the United States, William W. Brandon, Governor of Alabama, and Dr. Robert R. Moton, principal of the Tuskegee Institute.
The hospital has been erected at a cost of $2,500,000 and comprises 27 permanent buildings, situated on a
Business League
Plans Busi
Spaulding Presents Plan for
and Development of Race
By President
Tuskegee Institute, Ala.—The committee on Business Promotion of the National Negro Business League, appointed at the annual meetings of the League last August at Norfolk, was asked to devise ways and means to put into definite action the plans for establishing a corporation for the expansion and development of Negro business as proposed by Dr. Robert R. Moton; at the Atlantic City session of the Business League in 1918. The committee met here January 19.
A plan of gigantic proportions was presented by C. C. Spaulding and discussed by those present and at the close
Intelligence Tests Used In P.S. Course Prevent Misfits
Vocational Guidance at P. S. 119 Shows Remarkable Results When All But Nine Girls out of 95 Continue Studies in Day High and Trade Schools.
STATE COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION AND H. T. BURLEIGH AT GRADUATION
Exercises on Friday Morning, January 26, Featured By Exhibits From Industrial Classes—Colored Girl Makes Unusual Academic Record.
Outstanding features of the graduation exercises held at Public School 119. Mrs. Harriet A. Tupper, principal, on Friday. January 26, at 10 a.m., were the parts taken by State Commissioner of Education Frank P. Graves and Harry T. Burleigh, the famous Negro composer and singer. Another interesting fact was the number of races represented in the graduating class, the majority of whom were colored girls. The graduates numbered ninety-five.
had been a member of the State Assembly, Deputy Commissioner of Street Cleaning, Commissioner of Water Supply, Gas and Electricity, Commissioner of Public Works, State Deputy Excise Commissioner, and Deputy Commissioner of Correction. He was Tammany leader of the north end of the Third A D at time of his death. Mr. Dalton was taken ill at his office in the Municipal Building on Monday, January 22. He is survived by a widow, a niece and a nephew.
Intelligence T
P. S. Course P
Vocational Guidance at P.
Results When All But Nin-
Studies in Day High
STATE COMMISSIONER C
AND H. T. BUR
Exercises on Friday Morning
Exhibits From Industrial
Makes Unusual A
Outstanding features of the g
Public School 119. Mrs. Harriet A. T
January 20, at 10 a. m., were the pa-
of Education Frank P. Graves and
Negro composer and singer. Anot-
ber of races represented in the g
whom were colored girls. The g
Dr. Graves, in his address, emphasiz-
ed the value of intelligence tests in
schools to prevent misfits in the world.
He referred to the vocational guidance
work as carried on at P. S. 119 under
Negro Veterans
To Be Dedicated
Will Speak at Exercises on
building Erected Near Tus-
formally Consecrated.
beautiful tract of 464 acres, adjoining
the campus of Tuskegee Institute. It
will provide accommodation for 600
patients, representing a larger bed
capacity than any of the 19 hospitals
being erected by the government with
the exception of the hospitals located
in New York City and Milwaukee,
which he a bed capacity of 612. The
hospital at Tuskegee is a magnificent
institution providing every possible
modern facility for the care and cure
of disabled Negro veterans.
Dr. Moton announced today that a large number of prominent Negro citizens would attend the ceremonies and that the Institute was making preparations for their accommodation.
The Committee
Business Expansion
Corporation for Expansion
Business as Suggested
Event Moton.
of the meeting Mr. Spaulding announced that within the next few weeks a group of men would be asked to assemble to go into a permanent organization.
Those who attended the meeting were C. C. Spaulding, chairman; Dr. R. R. Moton, president of the National Negro Business League; John E. Nail, of the real estate firm, Nail & Parker, of New York City; Warren Logan, treasurer Tuskegee Institute; M. N. Work, statistician, Tuskegee Institute; Melvin J. Chisum, field secretary, National Negro Press Association, and Albon L. Holsey, secretary of the National Negro Business League.
New York Man Is Near-Victim Of Ruthless Florida Lynchers
George Blair, a Pullman Porter, Residing at 132 West 139th Street, New York City, Had Rope Round Neck When Sheff ConvincedMobTheyHadWrongMan
CHANDLER TO CONTEST RESULT
In the special election on Tuesday, January 30, for a congressman from the 19th N. Y. District, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Congressman-elect Samuel Marx, Congressman Walter M. Chandler, Republican, present incumbent, claims election over Sol Bloom, Democrat, by a plurality of 280, in accordance with figures given by the police.
The announced result, however, gives Bloom a plurality of 206 and he is formally announced as the winner. Chandler, through John J. Lyons, former Secretary of State, declares he will not accept the Bloom figures, but will ask for a recount, confident that the final result will show his reelection.
Tests Used In
Prevent Misfits
P. S. 119 Shows Remarkable
Vine Girls out of 95 Continue
High and Trade Schools.
OF EDUCATION
BURLEIGH AT GRADUATION
ing, January 26, Featured By
Trial Classes—Colored Girl
Academic Record.
graduation exercises held at Pub-
Tupper, principal, on Friday. Jan-
parts taken by State Commissioner
and Harry T. Burleigh, the famous
other interesting fact was the num-
graduating class, the majority of
graduates numbered ninety-five.
direction of Mrs. G. E. McDougall, and declared that "as a result of such guidance all but nine of the ninety-five girl graduates are going to continue their studies in the day high and trade schools; the nine who go to work have enrolled in the evening high schools—a truly remarkable record.
"We are getting at the problem earlier now," Dr. Graves explained, "and we are finding out that abilities vary widely and courses must be changed to suit them. We have tended too long to prefer certain studies just because they were older. As a result of this testing and measuring we hope that none of the unhappiness and lamentable results will occur in the future. By deciding to go on to high school you have multiplied your opportunities 250 times."
One of Mr. Burleigh's compositions
(Continued on Boonei Page)
Rev. W. Spencer Carpenter Is Improving in Health
Friends in Brooklyn are in receipt of advices from Buffalo, where the Rev. Dr. W. Spencer Carpenter is now pastoring Bethel A. M. E. Church, that he is greatly improved from an illness that he has suffered during the past three weeks. Dr. Carpenter formerly pastored the Bridge Street A. M. E. Church, Brooklyn.
Lieut. Flipper to Follow
Secretary of Interior Fall
Washington, D. C.-Persistent reports to the effect that Secretary of the Interior Fall would resign on March 4, 1923, has led to speculation as to what would be the action of Lieut. Henry Ossian Flipper, appointed by Secretary Fall as an assistant secretary in the Department of Interior, Incidentally, Lieut. Flipper is the only colored secretary in that department. It reply to a question as to what he would do in case his chief resigns. Lieut. Flipper is reported to have said that as his appointment was not political, but a personal one made by Secretary Fall, it was only natural that its tenure should be coincident with that of the Secretary of the Interior. A Bill to reinstate Lieut. Flipper in the U.S. Army has not been acted upon by U.S. Congress, but the deposed officer hopes that eventually he will be accorded the full measure of justice which he believes he is entitled to.
Held in Waldo, Fla., Jail From 3:30 A.M. to 8 P. M.,—Mob Takes Him and Is About To Throw Rope Over Limb
ANOTHER PORTER HAD ARGUED WITH WHITE WOMAN AND BLAIR WAS SEIZED
Was Enroute to New York and Pullman Conductor Protested Arrest, But Southern White Train Conductor Turned Porter Over to Alleged Officers.
"Mistaken identity" is what it would be called, but George Blair, a Pullman porter, living at 132 West 139th street, New York City, will hardly forget the experience that carried him to within a hairsbreadth of crossing the invisible line between life and death. Blair has only been in the Pullman service about three weeks, and his trips have not been many. Whether he continues in the service or not, it is hardly probable that he will voluntarily go again into the State of Florida, for it was in the "Land of Flowers," residents of which State have recently injected a malodorous scent into the perfume-suggesting name, that Blair had the most terrif-
Best Edited→Best Known
K Man Is N
less Florida
a Pullman Port
139th Street, N
e Round Neck W
edMobTheyHadW
Innocent Man
Train by All
Held in Waldo, Fla.,
to 8 P. M.,—Mob
About To Throw
ANOTHER PORTER HAD
WHITE WOMAN
Was Enroute to New York
tested Arrest, But Sou
ductor Turned Porter
"Mistaken identity" is what
Blair, a Pullman porter, living at
City, will hardly forget the expe
a hairsbreadth of crossing the in
Blair has only been in the P
and his trips have not been man
service or not, it is hardly probable
into the State of Florida, for it w
dents of-which State have recentl
the perfume-suggesting name, th
and nerve-racking experience of
Taken from his car by an armed possession, thrown into jail at Waldo, Fla., from 3:30 in the morning until 8 o'clock at night without food or water, then taken by a mob, blindfolded, beaten, a rope put around his neck, it was only the timely arrival of the marshiff of Alachua county, who informed the mob that Blair was not the man wanted, that saved the colored man's life. Then followed a three-mile walk to the nearest town, where a train was boarded for Jacksonville. Here he obtained temporary relief and succor for the wounds he had received and ill-treatment to which he had been subjected. From Jacksonville, Blair was "deadheaded" up to Richmond, Va., from which city a telegram was sent to the New York Pullman company office for transportation to New York. Blair reached home on Saturday, January 27, worn, torn and shaken, and told a graphic story of his gruesome experience.
Another Porter Was Involved
According to Blair's tale, there is every reason to believe that while his life was saved, some other porter was not so fortunate. It was an incident in which an employee of the Pullman Company assigned to another car was concerned that led to the apprehension of Blair, and he believed that this other man was seized and lynched, news of which evidently reached the sheriff responsible for Blair's last minute release from the mob which held him. Talking to representative of The New York Age, Blair told the following story of the affair, including an account of what he believes to have been the incident leading up to his being eaken from his car and thrown into Jail.
Blair's car, for New York, and another Pullman car, routed to Cincinnati, were on a siding at Plant City, Hillsborough county, Fla., on the night of January 23. A party of white people, two women and a man, came up to Blair's car and made inquiry concerning passage to a certain town in Georgia. The women were accompanying the body of a relative to this Georgia town for burial and the man with them was an undertaker. Blair politely informed them that his car did not pass through the town named, but that the other car, enroute to Cincinnati, would take them there.
Argument with Woman.
Going, to this car, the party of wouldbe the travelers, according to Blair, who escorted them, demanded that they be given each a lower berth. This request the porter declared he was unable to comply with, since the parties had not procured railroad tickets, and there was no way by which he, the porter, could tell as to what reservations had previously been made for his car. The whites were insistent, however, and when Blair left to return to his own car, one of the women was engaged in a wordy argument with the Cincinnati porter.
A short while after he had returned to his car, Blair saw the two white women and white man hurrying away from the Cincinnati car. Within a short period of time, the train for which the Cincinnati car was being held, came in and the Pullman carrying the porter who had had the argument with the white women was taken away on its journey toward the North.
It was fully an hour and a half later, near midnight, when the train for which Blair's car had been waiting, came along, and started him on his trip. Three hours later, when his train had traversed the goodly stretch of Florida and that jay between Plant City in the south and Waldo in the north, a pose of six alleged officers boarded the train at the latter point and demanded of the conductor that the Pullman porter be turned over to them, as he was charged with assaulting two white women at Plant City
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Near-Victim
a Lynchers
arter, Residing at
New York City,
When Shot
WrongMan
In Taken From
Alleged Officers
., Jail From 3:30 A.M.
Job Takes Him and Is
How Rope Over Limb
AD ARGUED WITH
IN AND BLAIR WAS SEIZED
K and Pullman Conductor Pro-
southern White Train Con-
er Over to Alleged Officers.
what it would be called, but George
at 132 West 139th street, New York
experience that carried him to within
invisible line between life and death,
Pullman service about three weeks,
many. Whether he continues in the
table that he will voluntarily go again
was in the "Land of Flowers," resi-
tively injected a malodorous scent into
that Blair had the most terrif-
f of his life.
The colored man protested his incarceration and pointed out that his car had not left Plant City until an hour a half after the alleged occurrence of the fact that he had not been dislabeled before leaving that point in itself indicated his innocence. But his pleas were in vain.
Pullman Conductor Proteste:
And the protests of the Fullman doctor were also in vain. That he demanded in strong terms that the ter be not interfered with, but the board Air Line train conductor, self a southern white man, sided the armed crowd and turned Blair to the alleged officers. The unfortold fellow was taken then to the Waldo an ill-knew, ramshackle, but like a sure, where he was kept all day will no either food or water.
Then, about 8 o'clock that night, the mob got in its work. Breaking into the jail, an easy job, the crowd seized Blair and hustied him out of town for the purpose of stringing him up. As told above, he was beaten, blindfolded, and the rope brought into play for the carrying out of the mob's sinister idea of administering justice. It was the Florida white man's idea of justice, however, as administered by a mob of hundreds to a lone, unarmed, defenseless Negro, thousands of miles away from home and friends.
In some way, the sheriff of Alachua county became aware of Blair's innocence, and the latter believes that information came to the sheriff that the other porter had been apprehended at some point on his route either in Florida or Georgia. However that may be, the sheriff convinced the mob that their victim was not the man they thought he was and so secured his release. It is not chronicle, however, that any of the violators of the law, engaged in the consumption of a criminal act, were apprehended or even threatened with arrest. The Alachua county official evidently thought that he was winning a halo of glory and honor by rescuing the innocent Negro. And his thought is not to be disputed, either, for he might much more easily have let the fellow swing.
Relieved of Watch and Money.
While in the Waldo jail, Blair has been relieved of his watch and all of his money, and when released by the mob he was penniless. The would-be lynchers had taken him three miles out in the country, and this distance he had to make on foot. In part atonement for the indignities and tortures undergone, some member of the mob gave Blair $250 for railroad fare to Jacksonville and an extra 50 cents for something to eat. Grateful that his life had been spared, the porter made his way to the station where really a train was boarded for Jacksonville, thence on back to New York.
Blair vows that even though he stays in the Pullman service all the rest of his life, his southern trips must end at Washington. He came to New York several years ago from Chicago and is unmarried.
Upon reaching New York after his Florida experience, he was examined by the company's physician and a full report of the case has been sent to the Chicago headquarters. He thought that the Pullman Company will endeavor to have action taken against the train conductor, despite no untoward. Blair over to the alleged officers, and Blair has retained an attorney. Blair has been instructed to file against the Seaboard Air Line R.R., on whose time the porter was travelling at the time. Identity of the other porter has not
Identity of the other porter has not been disclosed, as Blair had not met him before and had only a few moments contact with him at Plant Clan.
---
Industrial and Commercial Cooperation Is a Necessity
Glascow, Scotland, Race Men Set Forth Need of Acquiring Independence and Power Along Other Lines Than Religion—Moton Library a Landmark.
(BY LEO W. DANIELS).
Glascow, Scotland.—I am writing as a member of the African Races' Association of Glasgow, Scotland, believing as I do in more educational, industrial and commercial propaganda than in so much of this socialistic and communistic clap-trap talk indulged in by our people in colleague with the offscourings of allon races in European countries who believe more in talk than in productive work multitudes of her own illiterates by using the power of her religious, political, financial and industrial yellow gutter press' which is ready at their command to stigmatize us as immoral rapists and indolent, unworthy fellow creatures. Whereas the fault should be placed in the proper quarter at the door of the investigators by our own Negro newspaper propaganda. If the race went on a political strike for a period of time
What our race needs most in Africa, America and the Colonies are men of integrity to lead them. There is no strong, iron-willed Africans or Afro-Colomals to lead in international, commercial and industrial affairs. These are the principal pursuits that lead to racial independence. We need to stand up like men and work for industrial and commercial equality on universal lines in cooperative spirit like other pioneers of international industries, then the world will have more respect for us all.
Stop your whining and gnawing at the dry bones that your astute, cunning, land, labor, blood, body, art, crafts, science and treasure hunting alien educators have prepared for you to growl at while they snake the substance and wax fat at your expense
I am growing impatient at the lethargy of my people. They cannot see what the races of the world have done, not in talk, but in industrial productions. You may say you never had the chance. I contend that you have, but too glib in the tongue, too short in sight, and too jealous and mistrustful of each other to use the chances you had to advantages like most other races of men. You have not the will to combine religion, education, commerce, finance, and international industries.
Not An Inferior People.
I admit that neither Church nor State helped us along these lines, but you are not going to be kidded forever, are you? Why do not your great educated leaders tell you that you are not an inferior race of people except where you make yourself so by asking equality from a klan of consolidated alien paupers, parasites, bigamists, homicidal, plundering powers of seeds of discord, and moral towards. For proof, read their records, both ancient and modern.
Yes, moral cowards, I repeat, dominating over trembling, quivering, chicken-hearted, chattering, weak-kneed, undivided, self-centered, itchy-handed, glib-tongued, nearsighted. Negro weaklings—called leaders, at that—who are afraid to stand up and give tit for tat to the alien cowards and pack of murderers, lynchers and betrayers of the virtue of our girls and women with impunity, who stigmatize our men as rapists throughout the world, through their united church, political, financial, educational—and social presses in all lands. While our weak-knees—wool-gathered press sings deaf, dumb and blind, afraid to enter the international fray—like men. The supremacy of the alien races? I fail to see it in fifty years of daily observations and investigations and daily contact and dealings. I also fail to see why our leaders of commerce and industries, if we have any anywhere, do not show their existence in the universal industrial world. Where are the landmarks our leaders are setting up for posterity in alien countries? I have prayed for years to see our enterprises appear on the commercial maps of the world.
Stamping Out Our Greatness
You can point out to the inferior alien that he never initiated arts, sciences, trafts or literature, law ceremonies, gallantry, kingdoms or religion; it was all tollem from the creations of black ages of ancient days whose tombs they are trying to rob even at the present time with brazen-faced impunity with a view to stamping out the greatness of our past and converting it to their own selfish use.
Our press and educated leaders are letting them carry on, showing us up as man-casting tribes, staging the "Birth of a Nation," promoting Ku Klux Klanism, promoting Lynch-law legislation, establishing the Invisible Empire, the British Vengeance Leagues, segregation in all parts of Africa, stampeding them rough shod in Haiti, bullying them in Liberia, shipping the products of our lands, labors and industries to all parts of the world in their own ships, while the big baby with the little voice looks wistfully on.
Few, if any, missionaries leave these shores without a counting house, commercial and trades house training. Few, if any, newspapers of the country that have not an apprentice from some parts of the Southern States of America or South Africa. All the black man gets to show is Christ and Him crucified—the alien gets Him commercialized, financialized, industrialized, systematized and itemized, mineralized, oilized, gold, silver and diamondized—I hope you follow.
America and England today are uniting all the cunning forces they have at their command through church, state, politics, education, hooliganism, militaryism, and their united yellow gutter press cooperative system to keep our people terrorized, cowed, and oppressed, separated and unfriendly, that they may rule the world as the "superior" race of men by confiscating our resources of wealth as they have our knowledge, by stealth, with the aid of their German made protestism.
Tryin to Enforce Supremacy.
What has either of these two countries got that they can't lay honest claim to in the way of initial origin in literature, art, science, industry, education, or humanity? But they are trying to enforce their supremacy upon others who are too wilted-like to expose it by deeds of universal cooperation in all parts of the world by letting the world see that you are on the educational, industrial, financial and commercial map of the world.
The hard and convincing truth must be told to these aliens—we must couple our interests in commercial and industrial enterprises of international renown. The alien is dangerous not only on account of his color but because of his crowning hatred of any form of superiority or excellence of our people if made known to the world. Hence, his genius for creating anger, malice, fury and revolutionary madness against us in all parts of the world through the war
PAGE TWO
multitudes of her own illiterates by using the power of her religious, political, financial and industrial yellow gutter press, which is ready at their command to stigmatize us as immoral rapists and indolent, unworthy fellow creatures. Whereas the fault should be placed in the proper quarter at the door of the investigators by our own Negro newspaper propaganda. If the race went on a political strike for a period of time, in the meantime centering energies in commercial and industrial creative enterprises and let every one join the N. A. A. C. P., or similar organizations, the alien factions would know, when you did put your power to one side or the other, that they would be required to act in your interests. And I am certain the race would be no worse off for taking this step.
If I were an American, I would take that course for a few elections at all events. Let all get together and make a drive for commercial and industrial equality. No white man cares anything for a black man, except as to what can be gotten off him, and in England they are pastmasters at it. The alien burden is our ruin. We want a strong-handed, self-willed, determined, contentious, uncompromising, unbiased, well-informed, mercial and industrial leader, capable of looking ahead in the interest of posterity, to lead us. If he wants his laurels piled up at his own feet, he will be or so earthly use to us as a leader.
Moton Library a Landmark.
The African Races' Association, of which R. R. Moton, principal of Tuskegee Institute, is honorary president, is conducted by students of our race attending the Glasgow University, here from all parts of Africa and the Colonies. They all admire and esteem Dr. Moton, who addressed the members while here in Glasgow at the Scottish Missionary Congress. Dr. Moton gained the respect of all who saw and heard him. He is by no means a bigot or swellheaded man of color, ashamed to speak to his people and for them in front of aliens. He won the confidence of students and others from all parts of Africa.
The Moton Educational' and Industrial Library has been established here in honor of that great leader of men and women. The description he gave of the doings of our people in America made our hearts glad. While Dr. Moton made it plain that he was only one of the many representatives of the race, to us he is the only one we have seen face to face. This Moton library is the first landmark our people can boast of in Scotland. The writer has donated more than one hundred books; the ex-Chief Constable of Glasgow gave six pounds (about $0); from Tustakee Institute has come copies of the Year Book for 1921, 1922 and 1923; and several papers have come to hand.
These the students read eagerly and carefully. The object of the library is to encourage the reading of books, papers, histories, magazines, etc., printed by our people, and to learn what is really going on in all parts of the world. To this end, copies of books and newspapers will be gladly accepted. Let us link up with our people all over the world. Why isolate ourselves now after having been forcibly isolated by alien design so long? The library is located at 11 Carmarvon street, Charring Cross, Glasgow, Scotland.
D. A. R. Members Visit Daytona N. & I. Institute
Daytona, Fla.—Teachers, students friends of the Daytona N. & L., Institute had a rare treat on Thursday night, through a visit of inspection made by Daughters of the American Revolution.
The girl's chorus rendered an excellent program of jubilee and patriotic songs in honor of their guests, alter which the principal, Mrs. Mary McLeod Bethune, introduced Mrs. George Maynard Miner, president general of the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution, who was most enthusiastically received by the large audience.
Mrs. Miner congratulated the principal upon the excellent work that she was doing, saying in part, "It is a privilege to me to visit your interesting school and to say from my heart that I have enjoyed this music. The 'Ave Maria' was a prayer from all of our hearts. I congratulate your principal upon the wonderful work that she has done here. To the students I would say that there have never been greater opportunities for service than there are today in this country All life is service. If you live up to the ideals of this school and the example of your splendid principal, you will be well fitted for a life of service."
The principal then introduced the head of the National Association of Colored Women's Clubs, Miss Hallie O. Brown of Wilberforce, O. Miss Brown said that she had been hearing of the school for years but, that on this her first visit she felt, like the Queen of Sheba, that "Not the half had been told." The speaker gave something of th history of the N. A. C. W. C., numbering 100,000 women and of the great work they are doing for Negro uplift, and of their specific work in reclaiming and repairing the home of the late Frederick Douglas at Aancostia, D. C., at a cost of $20,000, preserving it as a Mecca for Negroes. She advised all Negroes to hold fast to the principals of honesty, integrity, cleanliness, industry, intelligence and loyalty as their safeguard in the restless life of today. At the request of the principal, all rose and sang. "The Old Flag Never Touched the Ground."
After the program the visitors were conducted over the grounds by Mrs Bethune and spoke in highest praise of the order, cleanliness, and general excellence of the Institution.
The District of Columbia branch, N. A. A. C. P., has elected the following officers: Archibald H. Grimke, president; Archibald S. Pinkett, secretary; Garnet C. Wilkinson, treasurer. Mjss. E. F. C. Merrite and L. M. Hershaw, re-elected to executive board. Shelby J. Davidson, executive secretary, has been appointed from the national office as regional director, in addition to his regular duties. Reports showed past year to be the branch's most successful.
THE NEW YORK AGE: SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1923.
( Courtesy of New York Globe and Commercial Advertiser )
Upper pictures—Laurette Hasse, thirteen-year-old cousin of Laurette Taylor, in Russian folk dance. Group demonstrating diet teaching. "Applied Design" group front: Seated—Dorles Petrie and Rose Hackmer. Standing—Olga Schnabel, Stephanie St. Vincent, Anna Hackner, Gwendolyn Morris and Dororthy Streat.
Lower pictures—Mary Leibowitz, Anna Newberger, and Bernice Johnson in the radio number. At the right, Grace Barrow, one of 200 girls who take turns cooking for pupils who eat lunch in school cafeteria of P. S. 119, West 133rd street, Manhattan, Mildred Johnson, pupil with lunch, Mrs. Harriet Tupper, principal.
Intelligence Tests Used In P. S. Course Prevent Misfits
"O Little Mother of Mine," was sung by the pupils and the distinguished musician gave an account of its origination. In addition, he was prevailed upon to sing, and he rendered "Go Down, Moses," to the great delight of the pupils and the audience of parents and friends. He was so enthusiastically encorded that he sang another of his songs, an alluring little lullaby.
Part One of the program, under the motto, "Love God with all thy heart, thy neighbor as thyself," was featured by an "Industrial Parade," in which groups of girls appeared carrying exhibits of the work done in the various industrial classes. Preceding the parade, the pupils sang "But the Lord is mindful of His own!" by Mendelssohn, and the Burleigh Number, and gave two dances, "Kaleenka," a Russian folk dance, by pupils of 7-A and a "Majurika Arabeska," by pupils of 8-A. There was also a radio number and quotations from Benjamin Franklin on "Thrift."
The exhibits from the industrial classes as planned by Mrs. Tupper and her teachers, and as carried out by the girls, presented to parents and guests a representation of the wide variety of industrial training offered in the school in sewing, millinery, dressmaking, cooking, and novelty work. A representative from each group explained briefly the aim and nature of the course, explaining, too, that the girls welcomed a longer day, with the added industrial training opportunities. One of the most heartily applauded exhibits was the girl who represented those of her schoolmates who give two hours a week to service in the school cafeteria and the little tot with her filled tray who represented the 200 children served with a mid-day meal there. Many of the children come from homes where both parents are away at work, and their children are well taken care of at school at noon.
The girl who spelled C-O-O-K-I-N-G and who presented the six groups of a balanced and proper diet turned to leave the assembly and spelled H-E-A-L-T-H. Not to be outdone, the millinery group marched in carrying the hats made in class and paused while their leader won a round of applause as she said:
Poets may speak about the art culinary. But what would girls do without millinery?
The state commissioner expressed delight at the exhibition and demonstration that it had been his privilege to witness. It showed the great intelligence and industry with which the girls had applied themselves to their tasks and he sought to impress upon the graduates the great advantages that had been theics, thanks to the way the city and the state and the citizens had given ungrudgibly of their means in order that better citizens might be developed.
With all of this emphasis upon industrial work, academic studies are not
(Continued from: First Page)
Cooking and Health.
Girl Makes Unusual Record.
neglected Rapid progress is encouraged but not stimulated. Following the roll call and presentation of honor students who had made a record of 85 per cent. or over, Mrs. Tupper, the principal, singled out Minnie R. Peterson, a colored girl, who was in the 7-A. grade last June. Since that time, including summer schooling, she had covered 7-B, 8-A and 8-B work, and was graduating with honors. Another pupil had just failed to equal this record, not having completed the 8-B work for graduation.
Another feature of the industrial parade was the group of girls representing the different high schools. Wadleigh announced that twenty-eight graduates were going there to prepare for teaching or nursing. Washington Living was to draw an equal number. Seventeen were attracted by the secretarial courses at Julia Richman, while twelve had elected to go to the Manhattan Trade School for Girls. The rest of the graduates who were going to work had enrolled in the evening high schools.
Dist. Supt. Conroy Commends.
This remarkable record of election to continue schooling was highly commended by District Superintendent John P. Conroy, in a brief talk to the graduates, in the course of which he impressed upon them the importance of sticking at a job until they had completed it. Both Dr. Conroy and Associate Superintendent William J. O'Shea, complimented the girls upon their work and their record, and congratulated the principal and her corps of teachers.
Part Two of the program, under the motto, "Day by day, in every way, grow better and better," the pupils sang "After the rain" by Pinsuti and "Winter" by Massenet, and a "Valse Francaise" and "Polka Galante" were interpreted by pupils of 7-A and 8-B classes, respectively. Following the "Flag Pledge" and singing of the "Star Spangled Banner," diplomas and honors were awarded the graduates. The following girls were awarded graduating diplomas.
Honorable mention—Marion L. Kelly,
Olga M. Schnabel, Cicely O. Burnett,
Mary Brennen, Minnie R. Peterson,
Anna Bougas, Alice L. Bloomer, Mary
Lellowitz, Anna Robertson, Dorothy L.
Hoyt, Ellen A. Butts, Veronica Bullard,
Ethel Graham, Bella Helfkin and Rosalind M. Brown.
Rosa M. Barber, Anna H. Haacker,
Mary A. McNeigan, Remila Ferguson,
Pauline Nigro, Mary Urbisei, Margaret V. White, Joyce Aganft, Hattie F. Keith, Evelyn Harris, Rozalia Crowford, Gertrude Johnson, Stephanie E. St. Vincent, Fula L. Cormish, Edna Tyrill, Vivian M. Ballast, Clementina Liceofish, Carmil Baton, Bernice Johnson, Josephine M. Costa, Miriam Tunclewine, Muriel O. Chandler, Martha B. Greene, Helen A. Brown, Sarah Allen, Garce H. Corprew, Belle Davis, Margaret R. Holland, Letitia F. McDonald, Edith Parmen, Helen E. Grith, Josie Belle Barnes, Marjorie Davies, Myrtila A. Turner,
List of Graduates.
When one thinks of
HAIR and TOILET PREPARATIONS,
one, at the same time, thinks of
'PORO'
The "QUALITY" Preparations
Known throughout the United States and
Foreign countries for the GOOD they do!
—WRITE—
PORU E Poro Corner
ST. LOUIS, MO.
Lola L. Dames, Lillian E. Fleet, Margaret E. McCray, Viola Carey, Helen M. Allen, Evelyn Coleman, Gladys V. Jordan, Hazel M. Fleet, Harel N. Miles, Beatrice G. Massey, Marjorie G. Anderson, Ivy Callender, Gladys L. Gregory, Erma E. Systes, Helen Williams, Willie Bell Jones, Johanna Rhein, Elva A. Mason, Dorothy E. Lockett, Elizabeth F. Conroy, Gladys A. McIntosh, Gladys V. Thorne, Beatrice E. Brown, Charlotte
Tynes, Clara E. Jenkins, Nawal Walters, Mildred Katz, Marjorie A. Lockett, Laura M. Houston, Bernadette Charles, Evelyn C. Streat, Dorothy E. Riley, Helen E. James, Olive R. Stewart, Olive Bell, Beatrice D. Coles, Helen M. Robinson, Lucille Williams, Ruth M. Stokes, Urla W. Power, Florence Dover, Ruth Ward, Ethel A. Bullast, Anna C. Newlertner, Anna C. Hunt and Izaline Walters
35-Foot Site Acquired on First Ave., N. for Inn Catering to Travelers of the Race.
Minneapolis, Minn. — Construction work on a $300,000 hotel catering exclusively to Negro guests will be begun July 1, when present leases on the site at 210 First avenue North will have expired.
E. H. Jennings announced that he has purchased the 35-foot lot, containing a three-story brick and frame apartment building from Mrs. B. B. Smith, paying $35,400 for the property. He has leased the property to a lodging company in Chicago, which will lease the new building and manage the店. The present building will be worked
The location acquired is convenient to the architectural district and the proposed hotel will offer special inroments to colored companies appearing here. An up-to-date dining room will be operated. Contract for construction of a trestory building has been let to the J.A. McDonald Construction Company.
DR. ELIOT'S TRIBUTE TO GEN. ARMSTRONG
Former President Taft a Guest at Founder's Day Celebration—Honor Frissell.
Hampton, Va.-Dr. Samuel A. Eliot of Cambridge, Mass., president of the American Unitarian Association, who delivered the annual founder's day address at Hampton Institute, declared that Hampton Institute, since 1868 has been the creator of opportunity and that its founder, General Samuel Chapman Armstrong, has become known throughout the educational world as the creator of manhood and womanhood.
Dr. Eliot also paid tribute to Dr. Hollis B. Friessell, who was General Armstrong's successor as principal of Hampton, serving from 1893 until his death in 1917.
"Hampton is the extension of personal forces of men and women who could see clearly, think independently, imagine vividly, and will nobly," said Dr. Eliot. "Hampton is the incarnation of the dreams of people who were able to impart themselves and to draw out resisting minds and hearts into equal loyalty and devotion."
The memorial services included the singing of "Lift Thine Eyes" from Mendelssohn's "Elijah" Klinn's "Hall to the Lord's Anointed" and Burleigh's "Deep River" by the Hampton Institute choir of sixty voices, under the direction of R. Nathaniel Dett.
William Howard Taft, chief justice of the United States, president of Hampton's board of trustees, was one of the guests at the founder's day celebration
80-Yr. Old Widow Put
On The Age's Free List
The letter printed below, received
by the editor of The New York Age
from Mrs. Matguerite McKnight, &
years of age, of Hitchcock, Okla., has
resulted in Mrs. McKnight's name being
continued on the subscription list
of this papers as a complimentary
courtesy from the publisher. She will
not again have to pay for reading The
Age, and the publisher and editor hope
it will be a solace and comfort in her
declining years.
Mrs. McKnight wrote as follows:
Hitchcock, Okla., Jan. 23, 1923
"Editor of The New York Age:
"New York City.
"Dear sir: I will acknowledge your letter of January 11, in regard to the yearly subscription to your paper. I am dependent. I like your paper very much. But I am obliged to give up all of my papers on account of my financial depression. My husband is dead. I have been trying to tide over the year which are only too short at best. I am in my 80th year and money scarcity, very scarcity out here. I have tried to raise the money to pay you but am unable to do so. I'll miss a good paper, but pray God help you as well as myself. Yours very truly
(Mrs.) MARGUERITE McKnight"
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[Becher eer eset pe aiey
Pair: lind 247i: A Gainer sere
pH or Mix. Nex Branches oie
ENA Win Retry an’ Daniel: Stowe
{ot Naw Reclistie Tho: evering wa
Peete divine Aes, ‘Sod rete
decane wefe serveds ote we te
OE aad Mts.” Renjomia” Thompsaas
{ate aud Mrs. Dainiel “Lacey=of at:
aise, aed fe: aul MrasGeo, S, Brow
Jot, Wieauraded Sacdelay evening: the
kfi-to-gethees duter'y of the Merry
Motors. Suejat” Club GC New, Vork: git
Vie “Hetet Dum Weat 135th tetecey
Nee Mork Gi, 22) ces henss
fe Stey sd Meu, Radics, Keeler “emers
Listntd ns iuyr fuiois one relathves AL
{eae is sine tai Serdy, 2ftiaence,. Jane
btay TR Age faees Renn. were,
ker Sin | Mee, Olver eitienore. od,
| Steoysanness ticket dtpecis nf New
Visi Gite Riegel Livi amd: Jeecice
EAs ot Muncitimedts Av cabsaalee
[ine was, yen yall prescete scat
Lt MARSARONECK. M.: Yes
fs Baienteccie Me VSubidas micas
Wat es ASE Hog Chureny Bard)
Heer cine Stuintenceel, Se Vy Kew.
DLS O! Agate sewzeled kerwton” at
ehich’ evens hatte sa BLvrsmconede
Sheet fave it a tebregeatative pee!
2 yCisgtions who were present ean
‘Sealise thas ie such Sn ecligtoa,
User Cilipseeeeciaiaed hisneell a
Nye. ceikch fost Tharrday, evenings The:
aig Dacor pane E enteeR se
‘Bax, which yrevel-c# he a gripd-alale.,
Fee oe. one tie dope Warde
STE, sine Superiatee sat Seer
meen cise it te whores the
Ripgeps Set Peccaa at Weeieahester
se CoE nt Zar eae ORI
BAVA: fecciaw rvenchenttuegkeat Oy
ResoMs Boaden of Whate! se
PLUSIIING. N.Y.
Ls. Wotsing, A At Be - Ehenoves
HY Cane” Roath Pines Fereet
Feed ei prc wil hes trade
Sore Eebnuty 3. fre the loys and Bhs
ES tits. cs wide: qeerern eee eees
rar fica Ae Seo
raeat vicifsre of thaazeg, «Dea AVAL
Vickaud east anea Se 3909 Bao
ge MUMPORD, N.Y" 3
Pease! Ny Yew Sanday at
rau scaur éay bur me had st vets ant
piseiasve cesblence Gute. the, Secoud
‘Bers Clgh v0 ie meni series:
‘Ourepaslon: Rew. Worle Parkers neeeek-
fb fpo. Pepvethss 22 ushog<Hfon> hie
Seige a Gord Nowe” —T)Se sermon
sieiipfilsio Us all. =" oicwaesy |
rs phe: Suzy’ Tee’ Chub of ‘whichast!
Scorn iy president, sezved-a-nicempaer
sigan Wal Saistdhy “evcolopeue te}
"prs Wabtia &, Besta Redene
Fates Ne Vy ag the week cand” eit
Ae Nea nig Janta and Lapilly- of Coley
Bua! NUMA alee -Rteanka secashipged
Seah Sitesi" Handise Chane "Sania
2 are Age See
Py sors Watt che: presilent,: Miss Lutz |
By Ae nave va ebseae. Tktenagnaed
treed ns MS CacpU nich ty aba oe
EE cine Ne SE
OC cor ONAN. Noel).
i, Unrate: fy Lore The. snow dit. sp
Seca'tus necble from attehting the,mnee
jag wrtite at the, Carona (Congrepaticna
ECPandh Mews Histon peated 3. doree
Ira ccna gar ehepenianee and Faiths
AE 1 Ove a large notte of the ell
[ree secrtted for Hible study fa the
| Sserka mestiad, The’ ¥, Pe Ge Te So
pene tm SoC ery alee Be
Fiersrerig sdiscessjon inade ey for: the
fag cbeasval fetabtneeee "Reg flint
asia again inne. eueaise “to ah
SEM Goad ue patheeds on
Veh ecneeet by the Aene- Players
baie chance oat Tags, Betday evening. wes
gteers, Vip mam a line ieapeeigon
igor fue Wares agcnae and there 143
alte la themes aaydine.
rie Canc tigining Maset Secslement
Bkery Se onreentng Mrs Weed. a
ertseand wtsshey foam Africa,
Re Pere ke deer
TESS. will hea "Renter Dumpling
Baray ae tha cyurck, Thursday. February
clare a P ;
Niet Settee “at thy 1 ofetoste seed
vise Ti sermon Nill BS to the ealldcen.
Ute end orc James Wise
eciziated shete ite eqghling. anniverts
ase iit Soterday, evening sat" theig
Gog cen “Nomdde -avemec. Av large
Watsectin of tend sscerabled to-okiend
Mat en retatviete fee ee cere ee
“‘ieyivaiion exereieay of Peblie Scioal
9. Elucais, wets “hehe Sentizey 20.
ere nero sep Sled her Sad
fein thy sesdaating lass of efehty,
tie, Be, G4, Bruner
Busherh yume, Corona, gave am lS
Etigas fa os lomse o€ thet sister
Aub Fale: Watler. 0h te eradmaton
rene S. Yi. wMdiee Waller will ate
RAG Manica Trade: Scheet. sd =
“Mian! Mrz. Sacith Teed served "a
otifattionsil amithern supper. te. menry
ierz.camd.grieags: of the Corona. row
ueaive Gh oe wees
he Taipan anil Setticinent Vong
ci ill: mest at te=resiience of Str
Minar, ‘Seuatters,. $9" Filtieta «streets
Meedaycevning, Pebeescy Sq The: Sete
sigware Warhere wis entetlSin. at. thay
summon Old Ladies, Hoste, sometime
mapenenatyers urge iat on
“ties ater Uxdisnneaf Cornna is]
bya. s seraguian andaance in Elrabe
Pe, det, ermaage es
Cit cthe Nes Tick Age: from US
Sinric’- Paige; WL Sorysffth aizeet,
ene eSae sett gt ssibecsing” Ty
tt ROCEESTER Ye sy
Repesen se Yet, Bee A.
SEs eased: inn iene caer
a fe se Howe Cepek
uray ana Ne ie “ee os usa
nestes. Gracin. Corner ‘of-39 Eaves: rveet,
eae ee reek ater Spee
fe Secoeywathecec ai ede
SnaY ety slo anes gern NS, Co
oa ee
fea ea sl aay
SE Cia ete
SS ae
as ees
sieeeeaar beret
AEE reas
Eke-ovay te ltest dnuihieeo( the: late
Rare nee met
ot Sfecntenoed of Oh ey Sasa:
‘The. mather ‘of Harn Hardéniol* Moz
haw street “died on, Rridal \nighi 38°
Gipeiat Ne NEP SEE ne
| New: posses
| New. 1ebsey]
eae Tr
yo Pingealer NN: J — Mrs) Rertlis: Wyle
foe Nort. Pisbafietds: who’, at clled t
er tix Soy | aidiag ray
‘gaue' of ‘the Mineds ol ‘hersanmthers: ha
| Stored ¢o.fer Rowe leaving her mothe
ira eiorera Se of aa Thi
as iTarricsta sSpoit Of Bast: Thik
sitet, “whontay, been iN for -the “pas
Sete, tol iabeore e
‘Me: ind Mey, leks Res Thoiiagy
af Richness poets ss
eetycof- a te pound Balyrdbo:oans
ae Thurtas. IU 5: Moth
ind aby: ire: @oice speedy. th
b iiecahihtes THRE Miacdtics
inantoinn, Vas wcte ihe weekend jet
of: 3854-7 Teahie Hooker Tt Hester
JAtret. Mise = Boohee'sia “Mr, Baylor’
unis, Nica “he aot seen sineesab
Sieh eae tae ‘Tieir, seedling
Sau ieitlicntel ces eit ae ce
ii aie eStart aod cee
ha:isrters very 9% af the bom
Eka, Miss Manta Walker, de
abe imncene. ey Suplehe le
ee av
ster Ind thagge ofcibe forays) of
Pycltie i“ Gipnins ott New Teenie
Ni Ju, whih sepcki topac her tema
Feriers on. Janeaeys22 with Ret, "Reed
of, JU a eet Say
i slliside Coming esti ci a
LU Sree cs
ss ea oats pede: ‘on Thurs
eradenien 25, we alo ie face
ns blown 9c. Hares sStruee
tural’ Werk wherei Re-waa” conployed:
Tie has: heen fr theahormillsetace the
secident ands getty avons well, a
este Geneered valet" the “creunistane
St stan acantby sie aaah
wing. ater Cana on
sees evening, Jareeg” 285 -Ie
Hudaly Clubs forthe benebe of-the Boy
Ronen atfarnus ety & SSCL NO PRS
cat avacecey Stes Molly. Gotstone,
Hee Gi Bowker, Sta. He. CoWormley.
rad Sirs. Dora Seriest. Wout mothers
dcaotve tien credit. for’ thessiccess. nf
he allaity also: Sconsmaster Marry: Fox
sid” hie * assisiant, " Clarence: Steupes:
ise at unset, Jy 3, Bue et
rand ‘under difection, of Jzck Holt. of
Hackensack, Neo onan PS |
Saerel Devor of Mes Sl ret who
ie fren:setouly J s/abe to eave
sis bod Cand sit the House, "0
=Seeed MraAVinm Wis f
oxeraclie: sereaarat
SMa Sea etneed tes ae aa
antily OF WAGE streets oar
fr Willisns Duccon sand Mire: Eliza’
cth Fiee,aitendal the twentjchith wa
i _aneiceeary 2 fla Mt aed Slee
foare.at tacteciomdat tawinides Ja
1 Fridoy evening? Jasuary’ 19... They)
enisiisd over the wtekepde Sse]
wiles Anate” Allele sHigier of: Mrs, W.
ioHlitee of West dnt aiteet has been
te jeofessinpal fare, of De. Fred D.
iti of Pevuiheld seenues of
Gi Cherldice. daughter of Mrz.and }
(Fe “Smith “pf Sie Painted cavers |
Sey he heen’ aiffering.{ront-a.spravaed |
nde is ablevto, be ott again sss |
‘Ose moze the phicky-Atheaans cove |
ed uomalees wl ley on Fda |
secings Jamas ‘saengerburd |
ail whe they defeated the: tise Five |
(hang Bente Nea SPAS Th
sfee was. refereed hy that ‘efficient Vet]
ame wis refercal by that efficient vet:
} se RSA ADLISTED NEARS
| Hrs: Ida“ White-Dunean
2 HAR WORKER: :. ;
79 Prosott Sty: Jersty} CLAN...
Nrige Doatane, Basye: Petpadepta
Tarngtormaticns, ° Combings," made: up
{ora ile. -Sealp-Sontmeat ‘Sham
Heotag,, Hair: renting. Face: Siapsage
Honiciting. -Gulored peopiex combing
bougtite~—Eecroess-teezht-f—baieaweck
Dirlemaa: “lp. we Mg Lh Sees
THE -EAST“INDIA:”
* _.-. HAIR~'GROWER
SRI
Pree af
Eee ss *
Dikigpeee ee:
SU ey
Be AS Rie RRS
Be ee Se st
Bae Nagy ea
Sag): Sage eet
PRRs ao NQF: Mlle nesters
PS a Soe Sine
RR?” -enashe? rieality.-tor the ‘ate,
Be oe yaa Bea
bt eke oe pam
BA. reSson ‘ser pormetea say
Aho Hae Sere ae
oe ere Se
Ses as: acorn gg
sabe meatcsg ta teen
TEE Ip Far" SIRT DIO 3°.
Sic LYONS. Cine: At, 1356" Noes,
Rabe eres Re Ss
&. DS LYONS, Gen: Age
SB Ral Promasiutguan
oy a Rea maha
a Pideetten trea ban?
ane vos arte
far Pestaberes ee errs
BE ere ne eee
sate pec inusastaNioore
ancl byicecorten tala oLX tha. 37) pou
ee SreamssiCees kaart ale
cea tinenr o
Fate Gna Hares ubamiet ase
Se rarer we
en ena fea ee
Sire ieeinen wate hacerest:
Ny Magen Htandalle iste. <for ha
Hiaeeitiadlntrreatioce antstcendy be
es ore a oeae ged
foit ily cequen da picass
aici a Sia
AM Meare Sbiiley of uehnicnd
disee rite ea ys POM omen
sndiAtrs.© Wolieeed (fost er
SoMssEN, Taam os sLaurage ells of
Ins ops tan gala
eAlec shalt Mest AVMs Spans oF
Rrewtsrisiwere ierdiveeke-entaeuest cof
tes ‘Shnuionyliparentng Mandy Nt,
Chistes sSeuulder dat West alkatrect$
je Nee Wi Fase: and Wil
ir rsoft Bb we na? te
(sige SANS NMI and ces EAL!
Jeanie, Brownaiid Mise Stella’ Brown:of
Weit: $ubmstrect Seances greed
SuMrhiand Aree rank: Mavis: of: West
Adv istebet: eutertained | CocRdwatd “Epps
af. lineal ait Loay Sunday anuaryy28, ck
sp Set leeds at Mut Olive Bartle, Church
ong Sunday: <ventay lielided:Seeveral
beaurzltulysekectiéng by 3) cio, (comyche
Groral:-Uniioal bleh: Mra: AAW?
dees Z se president The io awa
cosonoscd sof <Aissesy Marian ‘and: Helen
Carters and"Alrs.7 Grover“ Jobuison ywith
se AWE Sainderst ag ‘accompa
Soran way nreashed by. WhecRer!
Mi'A. Alezander,'and.x-few encauraging’
rétacks \,were’; "made “-by “Counsellor |
“AS, St Macks Churchs the Rey, Father |
Fasiatrics! reetor,<a ; successful, three,
aps Sar Wan held rom MJancdry24 40
FAlday evening,::Jantiary.26. cra: Ji
Rac Careile, vas.chairoaa and: ihe
aie: was pwellspatroniseda se Sng
TAS et HE LCr Tieton pitachedl SO,
lay'eventogs January, 28ats Shilo. Baps|
eek ee
ied “advent? of : Christ." ake
feather .wip very cbads a tvececned. aud:
rice ‘was: pata to, lath “ete id
erring, $8 Me eek ae” ool
sSPRINCETON.N2'T
zs guiceteiny Nv <poerivces were: well
‘iteddeaieatGall: Churches.al this. chy
9 Sunday, January 228s cory th
The: Mount Pisgah Chareh bas stones
Hee oe aac
lected ;by the: Reve Mrassh<). -Dagect
ot Nd iene ce Senet
yA jepcetal anniversary eeraag, to" the
Shinntag ‘Star: Circle-was‘ preached (by
Rev.7AS'S2 George, ‘ont Sunday evening
fright Hope Churelees vy ce
“iObar, Smith -is “inuch ‘improved: from
Itkiess?atv the tomeof iis: pareats” on
Jodkson streetiny see ic:
Mdward, Taylor, is,able to be out after
seyetal ayy Matas 9
“Mec and” Mess Jamies Ashi have ire:
TET oD eae eo aa sae
after’ aperdiag” several: weeks “at Jher
bois: in Virginia and in; Keedbyile
7 Meso DréwntandYdanghter oft Jokn
street,’ were:hasuly:¢alled -away;to! the
bedside 6f:Mrs.:Brown's daughter, Miss
Maty,Brown7"ingNew Haven;< Conn
who :fe:seporied ivery AML 3 et
2M Rice of? Jackson’ stveet ‘is able to,
bcp after caeveral days leas
i/Mrac-Mertha;:HiN of ;Greene: street
is<eut afters her *recene’s illness...) £5.)
sles Cecil Carraway tbo ba beet
onthe sick -lishs6 ongge, much Lis
proved, we are hoping 49) aeeshetZont
wOOR, Ny SES FL Hatin Seto ete
iss; Maggie. gaveéa.dinnerspartyzin
pouae af het cwugine and heir has
pacda” Mr. and: Sbras:Witiam Taylor |
oft! Orange,? No-JucandsMr-vand 7Mrs
acihvie: Johnson of Jersey, City N: Je
sree pata given a the home 4
abd Sis. Joseph Gordan was muel
sed juan gerien var me
Ross Goaway ‘afd Frankia Grepary
are much: improved, :having. had’ weir
Sasils,remioved ar the. Mercer:Hospiyal
Airs," Susin P./Humpbrey, entertained
everal friends to tea oni Sunday January
in shonor of, Mesand? tre Aurtbit
johnson’ of Tertey Gity.she J. sPLey
Morne Tunerat‘ot idehard Taylor: form
fly. of Princeten, , who Sdiedin. New
otk was helds-fromt she owe of hie]
ister, "Mrs. Francisx Smith;:, 132” John
treee,: Tuesdays: Januacy72s, “Revs Dez
Hrown of Newark “ofherated.j: or]
“The: Community." MEG: "A. Diblo|
lasdes care: held from10-a mi ta
ms" epitining !Sunday.sFebrasry 4;
itare< welcome, A.-Ro-Bitnau:?ptesi-|
gh Mdc-tle HH Calnavseenetaryzu 24
rineston i i=—The anal esting |
f: the: Witherspoon -Y-:BURCTA,c wat}
eld. Friday evenings; January" 19, -when-
“weekly: revised: constitixtion was’ sd3pt2
dt" Ate; following” officers {were’ lected 3}
fesseay ame: Haze Bankx<:Thonme |
fcc towards Warrond Fra Vans
ant Rew SAT OES: Derg: “Cha
ailey,"Janies «Redden. “Rev. J. *J2Der |)
ek ASC Anderson, C.F. rane
Gi AE Se Georges 2 Tee metres
“Miss; Christine" Moore recently center: ||
ned . Miss , Vadine’s Freeman ‘of -Pitts-|
drgh.s Passer Ser "SR Rohe
‘Misses SBillie ‘Simmons, \Vadine< Free=|
anivaiid Chiistine? Moore ‘spent’ several |
Sys in New? Yorke City: vititing: friends: |
iAtra,: Frank: Whitting = of 799° Leigh
feet: has.-recoveredvafter vscveral days |
est ae MaRS
TEdwacds Dehaya-is'out of he;houpital
ith Shisarm mach: senproved:'2.6'7"2a5
Sra: Georee Wilson If conkindto her
etm Maeiaiercs chokes
ite! funeral o€ Mire se burees
ag shots from’ Alte Pisgale A S13ES
hare Mondays Jimny) The fe
aged leaves) several: .childeeny:a sbpst |!
: ‘Scents Gnd srelatives: (6 sronrn: their |
ss, ~“Thesnervice was conducted by Rev,
vss Stneess, O(: News Brunswick. *= =
Mis; Celia," Cirway. ‘and’ ‘John "Wils|
oe aes inillyon “the ssicke; Hist.” aN
fh them a speedy! eccoveryé=<4 505
SI Taylor, met Zwith San’: accident
Shiney, Taylor; metwithyian cident
MAKE; YOURSELB3:5:
Ss AMGRE STUER HS
i USE QUINADE "5
UE EE Eps REG ENS ote
pees an Tales hp eta har
BESS pa sgetod ase te pat up
Hg, aniy. aisle sits ylength < will peroaie
aside coeasietr ioe aidne
scalp atid: robs:of ‘the haley’ shereby: ex
eouraging Ng, erowthins Vo ASAT
Soto obtain ‘best. results: from the ‘ase.e?
geiaie Teariae: the: scalp regularly, with
Scehy’s..Guinssoap,: the ideal. champge:
cigs mien eer
niles Ser era Ee, Sel we win
etn Boom 80 Yom ee
ir: Seeby DiugiCompany:..,
so soihra Removedito 22g
/ RAWSON, Staence QuEETS
{Soyer BOULEVARD IAT C722
oe ‘orig Talend Cay NY. 2
“StS Spa ns a ee Rs Be
ENTON | SCHOOL : OF ‘DESIGNING ‘AND: DRESSAAK: 1
RSIS: 62 Oe RPUBRE FSS INOORPORA TED GS SEER ON ATS:
SSE Ey mekteomemr rt aca: WaENron ws. or Ser
[A Nice’ Three: Story: Brick: Building with all kuprevements (or Sesden
po. ck TR Comes eumaptoted Gai Pour Weutes >: Miptemas @iven. (°° NST.
HENCLOSE STAMP.FOR REPLY!- 7)", MBG: ACRES LORE P2250) oh
SNE
1h opr ee cenerit eerrans etien toner esteres wh alah ihe Sowet ors¥ |
| LSS See
| secon ee ee ora eree e ieceree
———
aes NE BS PES eae
Ve TUSKEGEE NORMAL! AND INDUSTRIAL f
=’: Rounded by. BOOKER :TAWASHINGTON.
: Offers Excellent’ Oppertunition’ te: Young Men’ ani
poh si See Se geaie Dicer TOLLS
Ue Gr Biche testes ee ae Se
Se ae tg a a Re ec
my perealy Wetec tira et hs aera
EM andar Sion Br ne cine
Murtied S16) thet pownes fot aaehpbla
[Pas lter Batiagealered x pleasant stay
segue Ker’ 4 My-vamds Mrs
Ar ReoMicaalsbt14 sssene ane
sshteband eins Kates very sprow
aie assaeca ese
eaireeDernte\nonge ed home
ir ening ore gotintNeware
yA lssyArinb Gregory /dled:at thes Prince:
test Hepa lanwary 20:94 Ste, ad been cen
sii hate cya darts dher
mains ‘were ahiphedto: hee farmer, ome
Hin | Dillwyn."< Va. accompanied by “Her
peeoaher: nd his, wild: fromm aluunore
SSGENGLEWOODSN2. 235!
else ides ae
an reabiytetian| Church were cond cted
Suindsy:January? 28, atall asym iby ithe
eaters ReeeiThbitae J De HasGbsS At
ip eswist the cred cee uaaiess
byoiRey Anhrs-L Swit of -Usion
Theological: Seminary: 00's Tha, Child: and
‘thie Chairs isa Siam Fen zn Se
JeiThe} sick; list. of Bethany, Church “in
‘cludes Abram J: Wright:'James:F--For:
lunes: Clyde Fortune," Simeon Saunders,
DSU, Dela aid. Mee, Evalys DJ:
ihe si uia Gighion club
have recovered! from‘an; attack of ‘gripe
afte beget tar two, week
epRev2i and <Mrs-:Nicholas ‘LM, Chis
holm were! conve id> their. homme for
acjweek. with grippe tiie Na Mec Re
* Phes Willing Workers Sock bison
<d a play; on: Friday “night, January 26,
entitled “The Tale’of a Hat,"+with touch
snesets ROARS
ot > SP BNTONEN Docu
| 2Trenton2NSJ—Mrs.{ Paul £° Collis
[eect eee es
oes Spent: the: pat: west
| Shin fabeset narcstevand ‘suser Sarr som
| Mrs.Theeagjand®Mry.: .Hageeean”o!
loMoiemey pbs? Ses
SSMiss -sMamioh-Hay rete, 7 Lite
faders of rss Ex Cases teen
Eee sears are 0s
ve Miss“ Lucy. Mayo; of 4l <West Ead
‘venue: spent.¢Monday; “January .29."in
Philadelphia: with = Miss Charlotte “Ma-
banca = <7 ee
(Ly SRABWAWENST coo0
Gahan g oss Mrs a “Holden
ft asd etret! abode the tweany A
‘Wedding *Aanniversary, fof Mr." tnd “Mré
sees: Uist Seer’ Cy
op Mihara sTastiaty 25 o Sio8
i Freddie. White ‘of 28° Haydock? strece
was’ kniie ed: uneonscious: ‘at Riverside
ppemeawete Jae,
ai seach Sener
sates. Ataryi Risch rot Hapdock steer
coisa on Tourer cater
‘en Aus Rein Dawtsae btinestiaee
‘tens! Mins: i 7 Mil
‘Hoch Mes Stuuatieincy and daseiics
Eligalicth,sand Master! Chasles "Kinch 4
‘+4 Daniel! Edgar; Cre, local @y weight, who
lax doing’ oonalderabie’ scrappioa in an
around) Boston; Maxs.,.js;booleed ‘to, meet
‘Tommy s Kay of! Cambridge’ next! weeks
He i caperds os evtera te this ‘city soon
and this /followers'<in ‘New *Jeracy,< will
seer him injection : soon (sie "<9 dathrs
Kigehm) Harden;-the son'of) Mrs. Richard.
Tommpson sof Maia street ied st the
Scag ued ot Stina Saneere
brought: to 3 Rakway.s{orsburigl. 02 3
Mes. Sylvia: Haris cof Brookiyh CN
Vives eecltee onan he ek:
WASHINGTON, D.C
Sh Buses ee estes
a ‘Bis New out Ags: Brean
To. GAYA RO-Streety No Wes
iy 5p Maite: Jeanette: Carter, “Aang.
“ Wadhiiigton, D.C Joy and app
neha c now; feign: supreme tthe, resi
denicesof Mr: akid: Mis-Suraner- Chishole
908: Weh!Minster street ‘wher’. fre
dstghiewissboca:to:them,, -Mother
thd? dalighier are doing well
“Miss Clotilda ‘A; Barnett had to re-
gain several “days "at “home ‘duc 10.8
Nery aevtte coldest sey
She Youths People's“). Iman slab
af “ahingola’ Temple Congregational
‘Leniple anticipated: jollys-nivelsat
their: barn: frolique Sto" be: held? até the
Linoin Colonade, 1215:U streets Nu Ws
Egiday? *February:92: from :8550 :picims
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SECCIÓN EN ESPAÑOL
FOR Y PARA LA COLONIA HISPANO AMERICANA
QUE RESIDE EN LOS ESTADOS UNIDOS
DE NORTE AMERICA
(Por El Dr. BERNARDO RUIZ SUAREZ).
Por el Profesor Ernesto Andino.
Jente que las nuevas generaciones las aliejas teorias, prácticas, quizas por su miopía, produidas por las comunidades a fortalecer el poder la sensibilidad, creando la sensibilidad, desparar las discordias hermanas universales.
En el entud gallarda que esploró la Latina no tiene que ser para sacar de ideales alli lanzados en cruzados de la Libertad, arcaico y por enriquecible de las nuevas generaciones reivindicaciones, de las cosas, esta la profligio de la luz.
Que lernunciar los nobles por tomar con fe inquebrantas nuestra personalidad histórico y con todo esa juventud gloriosa, cual presiden siempre que cometen de arduo delacion, inmoral de esos proxenetas de inalicables adulterios que pretenden ganar cincuas o asaltando que no creen en las virudes civicas, es de prostitucion.
En estupenda de estudiar esta bora psicologica en un immediato reconocimiento derechos naturales y agonicos a los nuestros LADOS DE LOS OLIGA PROTESIS valientes, de nuestra rara a la llamada a sonar las formenturas de los ambitos del Españas, Francia, Está de nuestra emancipación y se le reconcee su de por entusiasta y patriótica clívico de los pueblos.
En un siglo de regeneración irresistibles, entusiasta y catriotica de nuestro nunca bien la independencia de Boris Magistral. Sigue gigante de la intelectual de la oeos interrumpir se el sabe.
En los irresponsables de la Patria llena de generación decaimiento con la revenida toda del presente nuevas. Hue en amenazan a la amenazar los sucesos puertorriquefios, de la Patria hacia la política internacional de la divina mision en ese pase para nuestro domino nuestra prosperidad, en un constante anhelar de promeuven indefectible juvenud progresista de nuestra patriotas intospechable expresas vidas en las luchas de nuestros luminos, procedentes de nuestra personalidad.
lenie que las nuevas generaciones no pueden encontrar inspiración
las aterias teorias, prácticas y convicciones de los eternos desorientados
quizas por su miopia arímica, de las fuentes naturales de la
vida produidas por las caudalosas corrientes del Cristianismo, las
indidas a fortalecer humano en la fomentación del Bien
sensibilidad, creando de sal suerte un tipo mejor equilibrado y
la assimilación de estas verdades edificantes que tienen virtud
desparar las discordias humana y hermanar las almas en la persecu-
universal.
individuall gallarda que espontaneamente aboga por la Independencia
Patria no tiene que actidir a las fuentes turbidas de nuestra
sus para sacar de sus profundidades los inmensos diamantes
ideales alli lanzados por los insidiosos, irreconciliables delatores
rumados de la Libertad.
lenie es arcaico y por ende, insuciente para orient debidamente la
liberable de las nuevas generaciones hacia los campos augustos de las
reivindicaciones, todo eso que vetusto y carcomido ea el
de las cosas, está llamado a desaparecer como desaparece la
inteligencia de la luz.
nfernunciar los nobles gestos clivicos de nuestra juventud intelectual,
ninar con fe inquebrantable el deseo unánime de nuestro pueblo y
nuestra personalidad con todos sus atributos etnográficos, con
historico y con toda su grandeza espiritual.
esa juventud gloriaosa ante el terrifico tribunal de los pueblos
el cual presiden siempre las conveniencias y los egolosmos estupe-
mos que cometen despojos inauditos en nombre de la ley es,
arde delacion, immoralidad masuseula que pone de manifiesto la
de eso proxenetas de la Tirania destinados a vivir de hipiteras
inalcubicables adulterios y deominables y bochormosas capitulac-
que pretenden panar indulgencia con los amos mediante adul-
cuas o asaltando, cual famélicos felinos, la personalidad de
que no creen en las ambiguedades de la ley ni en el dis-
lus virtudes civicas, esos no pueden ser elementos de liberación,
de prostitucion.
en estupenda de estudiantes, maestros y egregios visionarios que
eosa bora psicología en nuestro predio natal exigiendo con pompa
immediato reconciliendo de nuestra soberania y la pronta restitu-
derechos naturales y políticos anulados por las exigencias de
anagenicos a los nuestros y mutilados por los PRIVILEGIO
LIMADOS DE LOS LÓGICARAS que pretenden el exterminio de
nuestras, de nuestra razza y de nuestro idioma, esa legión estupenda,
la llamada a sonar las formidables trompetas de la libertad, cuyos
los ambitos del universo para cautivar la atención y el
Españas, Francia, Estados Unidos y Spiza en favor de nuestra
de nuestra emancipación. Y si a Puerto Rico no se le respeta
y se le reconoce su derecho a la Independencia, entonces habrá
entusiasta y patriotica juventud puertorriquena propagando los
civico de los pueblos.
un siglo de regeneración y es menester responder noblemente
irresistibles.
entusiasta y catriotica juventud puertorriquena propagando los
de nuestro nunca bien ponderado José de Diego, patriota y paladin
independencia de Borinquen que en mil combates intelectuales
nuestra personalidad en medio de las hechiceras fulguraciones
magistral.
Sigue sin vacilar la senda luminosa trazada
igante de la intelectualidad puertorriquinea que tintas veces hiro
o por interrupir su marcha triunfal por las amplias avenidas
y el sabe.
y grita con todo la potencialidad de tu
reservado de tu conciencia patriotica.
a los liceconciliales y al amparo de la Ley suprema
de la Patria y labora con estoicismo por su pronta
generación decrépita que conservan las supersticiones y
con la reverencia que inspiran las momias seculares
roks ser humano, pero no busques en ellos inspiración
del presente que requieren sangre nueva, nuevos brlos,
nuevas. Huye de ese decadentismo en auge, porque
que amenazan a nuestra vida colectiva.
buirra, los supremos ideales de los genuinos e incon-
puertorriquefos, porque tu canta es la fuerza motriz que
marcar de la Patria hacia puerto seguro a través del oleaje sinuoso
de la política internacional.
divina misión en ese predio florido que al Supremo Artífice le
para nuestro dominio absoluto, para que en el conquistaramos
cosa y nuestra prosperidad, para que vivesemos una vida pacifica y
un constante anhelar de cosas excelas y practicando siempre las
promueven indefectiblemente el progreso moral de la humani-
Luego el juventud progresista de Puerto Rico, el recuerdo sugestivo de
nuestro patrimonio innoceable (Betances, Baldorioti, de Hostos, etc.)
es vidas en las luchas por las libertades patrias y al mágico
en de sus ejitos luminos, proclama la legitimidad de nuestros derechos,
la justicia de nuestra personalidad y la indefectibilidad de la República de
Puerto Rico.
El Partido Unionista de Puerto Rico, Cree Haber Trinfado Contra el Gobernador.
P. R.—A jurgar por las señores Mecifonas, miembros unionista que fue a Washington la remoción del dishe comision ha sentado franco y sin preceer sin embargo circulan el gobierno tiene la aguilre regreso para parlamento y esto hace Washington no se hayan reiteradas protestas de bien informados se asegur de ingresos unionistas estarán de para fines de mes con el tiempo de discidir la y oordar el plan y la política de la
tamia en la fuerza de que
pensamos que la legislatura es para
tamia poderosa y la immensa
tamia los miembros que la com-
pensa en su causa. Por este
tamia que toda conciliación es
tamia pues en todo caso el
tamia Kelly no podrá realizar
tamia ni y constructiva durante
tamia.
En Pro de la Igualda Juridica de la Mujer.
Il tramador Cotillo, presidente de la
civilidad judicial del senado, presenti
le la clamara legislativa del estado
Nova York, una serie de catorce
cuadernos, de aprobarse, daran a las
le la ley los mismos derechos
en los hombres en la actuali-
ción las tienden a eliminar las
que ouesten actualmente en
operaciones no pueden encontrar inspiración
us y conviciones de los eternos desorientados
a anfmica, de las fuentes naturales de
caudalosas corrientes del Cristianismo,
oración humano en la fermentación del Bl
de sal suerte un tipo mejor equilibrado
ses verdades edificantes que tienen virita
humanas y hermanar las almas en la perso
contaneamente aboga por la Independencia
acudir a las fuentes turbidas de nuestra
s profundidades los inmensos diamante
por los insidiosos, irreconciliables delato
ad. de insuficiente para orientar debidamente
operaciones hacia los campos augustos de la
todo eso que vetuoso y carcomido es
lamado a desaparecer como desaparecer
estos clivos de nuestra juventud intelectual
able el deseo uname de nuestro pueblo
con todos sus atributos enográficos, co
su grande espiritual.
ante el terrifico tribunal de los pueblo
crees la conveniencia y los egolosmos estup
esposos inauditos en nombre de la ley e
idad masuscula que pone de manifiesto
de la Tirania destinados a vivir de hiperex
de de abominables y bochornos capitula
indulgencia con los amos mediante adult
cual famélicos felinos, la personalidad de
las ambiguadas de la ley ni en el diosos no pueden ser elementos de liberación
antes, maestros y egregios visionarios que
nuestro predio natal exigiendo con pomp
de nuestra soberania y la pronta restitu
y politicos anulados por las exigencias de
dys mutilados por los PRIVILEGIO
ARCAS que pretenden el exterminio de
de nuestro idioma, esa legión estupend
mirdables trompetas de la libertad, cuyo
universo para cautiver la atención y
eidos Unidos y Suiza en favor de nuestra.
Y si a Puerto Rico no se le respete
erecho a la Independencia, entonces habrá
a juventud puertorriquefa propagando los
cición y es meneiter responder noblemente
a juventud puertorriquefa propagando los
ponderado José de Diego, patriota y paladin
iriquen que en mil combates intellectuales
en medio de las hechiceras fulguraciones
sin vacilar la senda luminosa trazada
alidad puertorriquefa que cintas veces hir
marcha trunfal por las amplias aviendas
y grita con todo la potencialidad de tu
unicionia patritica.
incliables y al amparo de la Ley suprema
aria y labora con estoicismo por su pronta
repita que conservan las supersticiones y
yencia que inspiran las momias seculares
pero no buques en ellos inspiración
que requieren sangre nueva, nuevos brlos,
y que ese dreadentismo en augue, porque
que viva vida colectiva.
permimos ideales de los genuinos e incon-
porque tu canta es la fuerza motriz que
a puertorriquefa traves del oleaje sinuoso
al.
redio florido que al Supremo Artificio le
io absoluto, para que en el conquistaramos
para que vivesemos una vida pacifica y
cosas excelas y practiando siempre la
oblemente el progreso moral de la humani-
se Puerto Rico, el recuerdo suggestivo de
(Betances, Baldoriot, de Hostos, etc.)
as por las libertades patrias y al mágico
lama la legitimidad de nuestros derechos,
y la indefectibilidad de la República de
las leyes del estado entre ambos sexos.
Consecuentemente, caso de que se aprobaran, todos los puestos oficiales podrán ser ocupados por hombres o mujeres y actuar como jurados en todas las regiones de la entidad.
Uno de los proyectos en cuestión proveigualdad de derechos entre el padre y la madre, en las familias, respecto a la custodia, y salarios de los hijos.
El sueldo de una mujer casada que trabajare seria su legitima propiedad.
No se permitiría al exposo que enterperiera su libertad de acción, por lo que respecta la administración de los hogares, los padres y las madres serían iguales.
También estableceriase la igualdad de los hermanos con las hermanas y no habria distinción ninguna de sexos tocantes a heroncias.
Heridos y Muertos en una Penis-
tenciaria de Maryland.
Trece reclusos en la casa corrección de Maryland resultaron muertes y heridos 18 compaheros suyos en una espartosa-refríguea que por espacio de tres horas soquivieron con los guardias de la institución penal.
El consífijo principiado a la hora del desayuno, a causa de que varios de los presos declararon haber encontrado insectos en los alimentos. Disgustados por ello rehusarome a trabajar, y ello hizo que estallara la contienda.
En un principio aplicose a los rebeldes una manguera de alta presion, pero viendo los guardias que lo daban los efectos apreciados tuvieron que armarse com las escopetas y disparar al bulto contra los amotinados.
El gobernador Ritchie, del estado de Maryland, ha ordenado que se eleve una completa investigación de los acontecimientos.
UNA ELOCUENTE CARTA.
Insertar un continuación carta recibida por el señor Bernardo Ruiz Suarez, reclacer de nuestra sección española, del Departamento de Educación de Balon Rouge-Lusiana-referente a su Ubrero "The Color Question in the Two Americas" que se significativa que re-
y quiero tener alas y remontar mi
vuelo.
A un silto donde el hombre te la impida
legar.
Yo quiero que la Muerte con su sorte
de Duelo.
Mis eternales penas—que son todo mi
ajuzar.
Trajerame la calma, la dicha y el
anhelo.
Que a mi vida la faltan por ansias de
volar.
Yo quiero ser un ave tan sólo por
as alas.
No me importa que herido me deplomara
un dia.
Después do haber. gozado de la sabi-
duria.
De tantas coras buenas que nos parecen
malas.
Yo quiero tener alas como un conder
altivo.
Mirar desde la cumbre como el aguila
mira.
Pero no ser un hombre miserable y
cautivo.
Sin más sublime dicha que se insiprada
lira.
Sin más consolación que vivir pensativo
Ocultando entre la risa la sangre de
su ira.
La tierra en que se habita me causa
intenso mal;
Yo quiero de otros mundos guzar sus
impresiones.
Saber que aqui en la Tierra no todo es
infernal.
Que existe un mundo ignoto de bellas
ihusiones.
Yo quiero tener alas para volar por
donde.
No puedan los mortales sus ansias contener;
La tierra es miserable, veneno siempre
esconde.
Y si de vez en cuando nos brinda algun
placer.
No más dura un instante, pues siempre
abominable.
Nos niega el que vivamos la vida una
hora afable.
valta dentro de los actuales problemas
raciales que tanto preocupan al país.
La carta dice así:
DEPARTAMENTO DE EDUCACION
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Enero 23 de 1923.
Dr. Bernardo Ruiz,
The New York Age,
230 West 135th Street,
New York City.
Muy señor min:
Acaho de leer con mucho interés en libro institulado "The Color Question in the Two Americas." Me parece que generamente los argumentos son solidos e舌语icamente, y la redacción por cierto admirable.
Como hombre blanco del Sur, no puede decir que estoy de acuerdo con Vd. en todos sus puntos de vista. Sin embargo eso no me impide apreciar la haría habilidad demostrada en el asunto, y la inguidad con que he traatado.
Anexo encontrará ud. un giro por la suma de $12.3$. Sívise enarle un ejemplar de dicho libro, al superior Juez H. H. White, Alexandria, Luniana.
Atenamente.
(Fdo.) LEO M. FAVROT.
STEAMERS SAILING FOR THE WEST INDIES
Schedule of Sailing, and Ports of Call, for Vessels leaving New York on Friday and and Saturday
Friday. February 2.
9 a. m.—Munamar for Bahamas and City of Nuevitas, Cuba, via Nassau and Neuvitas.
9 a. m. -ss Banan for Jamaica, via
Santiago and Kingston.
1 p. m. -ss Haiti for Haiti, via Cape
Haiti, Port de Paix, Grenadines, Ni
Mare, Port au Prince, Petit Grotte,
Maragoane, Jeremie, Aux Cayes and
Jamel.
Saturday. February 3.
7:30 a. m—ss Fort St. George for Bermuda, Montserrat and Guiana, via Hamilton.
8 a. m—ss Orizaba for Cuba, via Havana.
8 a. m—ss Hasperia for Argentina, Uruguay, and Paraguay, via Montevideo and Buenos Aires.
8 a. m—ss Vestris for Paribados and St. Lucia, via Barbados, Rio Janeiro Montevideo and Buenos Aires.
8:30 a. m—ss Porto Rico (Seaport) for Porto Rico, St. Thomas, St. Cruz, Saba, St. Martins, St. Eustatius, San Pedro de Macoris and San Domingo City, via San Juan.
8:30 a. m—ss Zulla for Caracoa and Venezuela, via Mayaguez, La Guaira, Curacao and Maracao.
9 a. m—ss Pastures for Costa Rica, Jamaica, Canal Zone and Panama, via Havana, Port Antonio, Kingston, Cristobal and Port Lima.
9 a. m—s Araguaya for Bermuda via Hamilton.
10 a. m—s Pan America for South Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay, via Rio Janerio, Santos, Montevideo and Buenos Aires.
12 m—s Bolivar for St. Thomas, St. Croix, Saba, St. Martins, St. Eustatius, St. Kipps, Nevis, Antigua, Montserrat, Guadeloupe, Domina, Martinique, St. Lucia and Barbados, via St. Thomas, St. Croix, St. Kipps, Antigua, Guadeloupe, Dominica, Martinique, St. Lucia and Barbados.
AN OPPORTUNITY
Energetic men and women wanted to distribute Dr. Bernardo Ruiz Suarez's vital study of the race problem, "The Color Question in the Two America's." Exclusive territory. Apply in person or by mail to The New York Age, or Dr. Bernardo Ruiz Suarez, 230 West 15th Street, New York City.
WANT SOLICITOR FOR ADVERTISING Young man or woman to solicit advertisin from Spanish clients for The New York Aga. Should be able to speak and write Spanish.
WITH OUR GIRLS
I have been reading your letter's for some time and find them very interesting. But would like to hear more about you and just what you do. Also would like very much to be 'one of you. Will you write to me, and tell me all about your club? And if I may become one of you girls. You're truly.
Miss MURRIE HAWLEY.
1607 Christian Street,
Philadelphia, Pa.
DEAR GIRLS:
I know that my name is not so
familiar to you all, for I have been
Text of Declarations Adopted By Tuskegee AnnualNegroConference
At the Thirty-Second Session Held at Tuskegee Institute, Ala., on January 17 and 18, 1923, Dr.
Robert R. Moton Presiding.
Ever since the establishment of this conference thirteen years ago, it has urged the people to remain on the soil, to buy homes, to improve their farming, to raise their food and foodstuffs, to improve their churches and work to secure better schools.
When this conference was first established the majority of our farmers were renters living in one-room cabins. Few of the homes had gardens, chickens or milch cows. The chief foods were corn bread and fat bacon. The many reports of progress which have been made in these meetings show that the advice of the conference has been beeded.
There has been great improvement in farming, more machinery is being used; more live stock is being raised; crops are live diversified and more food and foodstuff are being grown. The churches have been improved; better school buildings and longer school terms have been provided; home owning has greatly increased; there are more conveniences in and around the home; and as a result of raising more foodstuffs, poultry and having more milch cows the diet of the farmer is more varied and more wholesome than it was years ago.
Nogre Farmers Slogan fo: 1923.
Farming remains our biggest industry, approximately 50 per cent, of the people of the United States live on farms, and must support themselves and the other 50 per cent of the people who live in towns and cities. As the number of the people who live on the farms grow smaller each year, the job of farming becomes increasingly more and more important. The world's food supply must be produced. The Negro farmer should always constitute a large part of the productive population of the United States. In order to do this, we must become students of the best methods of productive farming. We must not become discouraged by the bell wooled and low prices of farm products which have caused many people to leave the farms.
This promises to be a better year for farmers, but we must fortify ourselves against hard times, by growing more of the things that we need. We must study our markets. We must plant some cotton and let it be a surplus crop. Then grow something to market at all times of the year. The holl weevil can be controlled by intelligently using improved methods for fighting this pest. The Negro must keep his hold on the soil. He can only do this by following the example of those who have made a success in farming. "Better Farming." "Better Business." "Better Living." should be the watchwords of Negro farmers for 1923.
South Offers Greater Opportunities.
The restriction of immigration to America has brought about a situation somewhat similar to that of five years ago. There is an increased demand for labor in Northern centers and another migration from the South is going on. We believe, as was stated when the migration of five years ago began, that now in the immediate future the South will need the presence of the Negro citizens as she has never needed them before. In the South are great and permanent opportunities for the masses of our people. This section is entering upon its greatest era of development and prosperity; here millions of acres of land are yet to be cultivated; cities are to be railways extended and mines worked. Here we have acquired a footing on the soil; here are located more than ninety per cent. of the farms we own.
Negroes love the South. Thousands of our people, however, are leaving because they believe that in the North they will have an opportunity not only to earn more money than they are making here but also that, in spite of difficulties, they will get better treatment, better protection under the law, and will have better school facilities for their children. The chief cause of unrest among our people, we believe, is the lack of adequate protection under the law. The burning of churches and churches and the large number of huddings, which have already been placed this year have tended to increase the unrest.
This conference is pleased to express its appreciation for the outspoken words of white leaders and the fearless editorialists which have appeared in the leading daily papers of Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, Louisiana, Texas, and the other sections of the South, urging the suppressing of lynching and the importance of affording the colored people better protection under the law.
This conference again commends the increasing number of plantation owners who financially, and otherwise are helping to improve the welfare of their tenants. We especially commend their efforts to provide educational facilities for the children of their tenants. We also express our appreciation for the large and increasing number of planters who are rendering more just settlements to their tenants.
The providing of better educational facilities, the furnishing of improved living conditions, and the rendering of just settlements all help to make tenants more contented and more efficient.
Racial Good Will to Uphold South.
This conference wishes to express again its appreciation of the increasing
DEAR GIRLS
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Madam C.J. Walker Mfg. Co.
INDIANA
a little neglectful in writing' to the column. I am very anxious for you all to know what a wonderful treat the Wonder girls had given to them on a recent Saturday. Mrs. Bolden gave all of the girls a ticket to the show down nown at the 61rd Street Music Hall. We saw "Linus". The show was very good, only it was a little cold in the theatre. But when the show started we all got warm, and enjoyed the show very much. We returned home and send thanks to Mrs. Bolden for her kindness to the Girls. From your loving.
"Teddy."
New York City.
growth of the spirit of cooperation between the races and for the growing disposition to meet in conference on better relations between the races. All over the South white and black people are able to meet and talk over in a frank and open manner those difficulties which are the cause of friction between the races. We are deeply gratified to note that women of both races are cooperating in this movement. We especially commend the stand which the white women in their conferences on better relations between the races have taken with reference to lynchings, and their demands that Negroes be given justice in the courts, be protected from mob violence and that lynchings be suppressed.
This conference heartily endorses every effort which is being made to promote good will between the races. Only through the manifestation of good will and the granting of justice, can the two races dwell together in peace and work for the upbuilding of a greater South.
YORK, PA.
York, Pa.—A birthday party was given in the Emergency Girls Home last week by Chas. E. Duffins in celebration of his 28th birthday. Dancing was enjoyed and a delicious luncheon was served. The guests, were, Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Carr, Mr. and Mrs. Freeland, Mr. and Mrs. Earle Hailock, Mr. and Mrs. Chas, Duffins, Mr. and Mrs. Elmere Galloway, Henry Howard, John Palmer, Como Thomas, Leroy Rhoades, Franklin Page, Clarence Duffins, and Miss Florence Clark.
One of the most interesting meetings of the season was held by the Citizen's Club at the Emergency Girls Home, Friday, January 26. The speakers of the evening were Flemming Johnson, W. K. Boulden and Victor Carey, who delivered very excellent addresses Miss Todd, contralto of the Zion church choir, sang Burleigh's "Deep River." Miss Mary Turner and Dorothy Rhodes rendered piano solos. At the Citizen's Club meeting February 9, the Tattler Club will have the program, Messrs. Price, Carey and Armstrong in charge.
Mrs. Amanda Sprowe and Miss Matiella Clark of 337 Oak Lane entertained a brilliant whist party Saturday, January 20. Entertaining by Miss Florence Clark was the feature of the evening. An elaborate buffet luncheon was served to Milton Robinson, John Robinson, Samuel Bolyer, Thos. Stephenson, Roy Rhodes, Harry Wilson, Misses Anna Walden, Lucinda and Mildred Todd, Mattie Clark, Florence Clark, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Sprowse, Mr. and Mrs. R. Clarence Peeler and Mrs. Martha Wilson.
Negro Hospital Co. Formed By Greensboro, N.C., Citizens
Capitalized at $50,000 and Chas. H. Moore Made President
—Mrs. Hunton, Field Agent, Tells of N. A. A. C. P.
—Mrs. Windsor Entertains.
Greensboro, N. C.—The colored citizens of Greensboro, feeling the need of a hospital here to serve members of the race, who may need such medical attention, that January 1, and organized the Greensboro Negro Hospital Association to further such a project.
The officers are Charles. H. Moore, president; Watson Law, vice-president; Gerald S. Johnson, secretary; Dr. G. C. Simpkins, assistant secretary; Wm. Gregory, treasurer
The association is incorporated according to the state laws and is now ready for business. It is the aim of the originators of the enterprise to raise not less than $50,000 to establish the plant, the outlook for which is apparently very hopeful.
from the angle of the association. After her very interesting and informing talk, a few of those who were present, were requested by Dr. Rivera, to express their opinions and judgement concerning the organization. They willigly responded and pledged their support to the cause, for which the N.A.C. stood.
The lovely house of Professor Wm. B. Windsor and wife was the scene of a most delightful social affair. Friday night, January 25, when Mrs. Windslow entertained at an elaborate party in honor of Mrs. Dean, the charming wife of George W. Dean, a prosperous and successful real estate dealer and broker of Germantown. Penn. After dancing and games, delicious refreshments, consisting of punch that
Mrs. Addie W. Hunter, field agent of the N. A. A. C. P., while enroute to Wupaton-Salem from Durham, on January 24, stopped over night here. Dr. A. M. Rivera, the energetic and enthusiastic president of the local branch, owing to the shortness of time in which to call a public mass meeting, requisitioned his telephone, through which he succeeded in gathering at his residence in a few hours about twenty-five representative citizens to meet Mrs. Hunton and hear her speak of her work and explain the outlook
NO "MAMMY" MONUMENT.
Editor of The New York Acz.
In regard to the suggestion of one of our statesmen to erect a monument to the colored mummy of the South I read an article in last Sunday's New York Times, The "Black Mammys Apothecists," by one Maud Nooks Howard of Columbus, Ohio, and I shed many bitter tears, for, my grandma was one of those old colored mammies who died in this city not so many years ago with the stripes of the whip of slavery on her back.
And will all due respect to the gentleman in Washington, I am going to take the liberty in this white man's land to say:
Until the lynchings, burnings at the stake, segregations, disfranchisements, promage and the exhibition of such a picture as the "Birth of a Nation," and all of the other insults, indignities, injustices and outrages hraped upon us and upon our soldiers, has been done away with and until foreigners who set foot on this, our native land, have been taught to regard us (the descendants, of the colored mother, of the South) as 100 per cent. Americans, mostly all law abiding citizens, and while a single one of us has cause to shed tears for these shights, and until every single one of the blasts of these tears on our "Stars and Strips" have faded always in justice to her who was my grandmother, Sarah Frances Stevens, and to the memory of all the mommies of the South—I protest against the erection of any such monument any where in these United States of ours.
MATTIE FAGAN
New York City.
LYNN. MASS
Lynn, Mass.—No small interest is being taken in the Snow Carnival which is to take place February 6, 7 and 8 under the auspices of Bethel A. M. E. Sunday-school, C. B. Games, general superintendent. On the first night, "Mother Goose Jingles" will be presented by the elementary department, Mrs. Beatrice Harris, superintendent and director. Second night, "Snowbird Carnival" and doll dress contest by the junior and intermediate departments, W. D. Taylor, superintendent. Third night, baby carriage parade and baby contest. The prizes for doll dress contest will be awarded on the second night. The prizes for the baby contes on the third
from the angle of the association. After her very interesting and informing talk, a few of those who were present, were requested by Dr. Rivera, to express their opinions and judgement concerning the organization. They willingly responded and pledged their support to the cause, for which the N. A. L. C. P. stood.
The lovely home of Professor Wm. B. Windsor and wife was the scene of a most delightful social affair. Friday night, January 25, when Mrs. Winslow entertained at an elaborate party in honor of Mrs. Dean, the charming wife of George W. Dean, a prosperous and successful real estate dealer and broker of Germantown, Penn. After dancing and games, delicious refreshments, consisting of punch that "cheers but does not incrate," salted nuts, ice cream and assorted cakes were served. The many guests, some of whom were from Winston-Salem, High Point and elsewhere, are much indebted to the gracious hostess, Mrs. Windsor, for an exceedingly enjoyable and delightful evening.
Mrs. Dean is the house guest of Prof. and Mrs. Windsor, while here. From here she will go to Durham, where she intends to spend awhile with Dr. and Mrs. Clyde Donnel, before returning home.
night. The first prize for the baby cone, a baby silver cup, is being exhibited in the window of Dowle & Co. jewelers on Monroe street; the second prize, a kiddie kar, in the window of Otis Chandler, barber, Cestust street.
WAYNE. PA.
WANTED—Every colored family Wayne, to read The New York Age.
Wayne, Pa.—Second Baptist Church services were very well attended Sunday morning. Rev. Masse preached. Communion service was well attended in the afternoon.
Mrs. Eva Holly, who has been on the sick list for several weeks is convalecent.
Mrs. Lillian Royster is on the sick list this week.
Thomas J. Royster is somewhat indisposed.
Hector Mullin is out again after an attack of lagrippae.
Miss Mary Seruggs of 421 Midland avenue is suffering from a very severe cold.
Mrs. Rosa Harris has been elected church clerk for the Second Baptist Church of Wayne.
is a prescription for Colds, Fever and LaGrippe. It's the most speedy remedy we know, preventing Pneumonia. 11-15t
"When You Feel the Need"
Don't do yourself with coffee tea and drugs. When you feel down and out and all your pills is gone, try
Dr. Slegert's Angostura Bitters
Mode since 1886 from the nerve formula. It will ply you together and you get no bad effects.
For Sale by all Drug, Delicatessen and Grocery Stores.
Send for free sample
J. W. WUPPERMANN
12 East 46th St., New York City
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THE STAGE AND ATHLETI
Small Crowd Sees St. C.5 Dethrone Alpha in Hard Game
It. Was Alpha's First Defeat, One of the Season's Surprises, and a Most Exciting Conetest—Kane Was Individual Star.
ORGANIZED FEB. 27 1884 CELEBRATED FEB 27, 1923.
HAMILTON LODGE
No. 710 Grand United Order of Odd Fellows
Will Hold Their Original Celebrated Old Fashioned
MASQUERADE and CIVIC BALL
At New Star Casino
115 EAST 107th STREET, NEAR LEXINGTON AVENUE.
TUESDAY NIGHT, FEBRUARY 27, 1923
MUSIC WILL BE FURNISHED BY
COMMONWEALTH JAZZ ORCHESTRA, Inc.
While this is the 55th Masquerade given by Hamilton
Lodge, No. 710, it will be the Biggest and Best of all
TICKETS and BOXES ON SALE BY OSCAR BREWSTER, ODD FELLOWS OFFICE, 244 WEST 1351h STREET; THE W. DAVID BROWN ESTABLISHMENT, 2315 SEVENTH AVENUE.
GENERAL ADMISSION $1.00 BOXES - Scating 8 Persons - $5.00
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
JAMES P. ADAIR, Chairman JAMES E. LINDSAY, Vice-chairman
DANIEL A. SHIELDS, Secretary, 361 West 126th street.
HENRY POOL, Treasurer
ADOLPH P. HARDING, Chairman Floor Committee
WARNER RANDOLPH WILSON WADLINGTON
GEORGE R. LOCKHART
PAGE SIX
Small Crowd Se
Dethrone Alph
It. Was Alpha's First De
Surprises, and a Most
Was Indiv
The Alpha Big Five no longer holds the amateur basketball championship of the East, as they were dethroned by the St. Christopher Red and Black Machine at Star Casino on Friday night, January 26. The game was one of the most exciting of the season, and is one of its big surprises. Alpha started the game, supremely confident of victory, and their confidence was borne out during the first half, as the score stood 20-12 in their favor at the end of this period. During this half, Kee, the big St. Christopher center, ran over everyone and proved a liability to his team. He was taken out at the end of the half, Kane shifted to center, and Garcia into forward.
After a lecture by Coach Bradford, the St. Christopher team came back for the second half with a strong determination to win. Although the Alpha team was rough in the first half, they became tougher as the game proceeded. The shifting of Kane to center by the St. Christopher coach proved a fortunate change, as he was easily the superior of Vanderveer. He shot five field goals in the second half, and soon had the crowd wildly excited as he, with his field goals, and Garcia, shooting souls, closed the gap between the score of the two teams.
Ten minutes before the game ended, Alpha had to take Carroll out because of personal fouls. Esquirre replaced him, but was soon replaced by Wilson. Despite these changes the Red and Black Machine continued to score. In desperation, the Alpha coach rushed in Randall, the veteran guard. Randall immediately got loose and scored a field goal, which again gave his team a lead. Although there were three minutes to play, Alpha attempted to hold her lead by preventing her opponents from getting possession of the ball. She soon found she could not do this and about a minute and a half before the time was up. Kane scored another field goal, which, with a foul, gave his team a lead of one point. Another field goal was scored by the winning team, but it was not allowed count, as some one moved the goal out of position just before it was shot. The game ended with the score stand-ing 35-32 in St. Christopher's favor.
Kane and Austin were the stars for
St. Christopher, while Waddell did the
pst work for his team, shooting nine
out of sixteen fouls and several field
goals.
These two teams will stage a return
game at Manhattan Casino on Lincoln's birthday, and if St. Christopher can repeat her victory, it will appear that Coach Bradford has again built up a winning team.
The game was poorly attended, largely because St. Christopher did not see the necessity of advertising. The summary was as follows:
St. Christopher (33) Alpha (52)
Kane R. F. Waddell
Napoleon L. F. Carroll
Kee C. Vanderveer
Massey R. G. Lewis
Austin L. G. Nanton
Substitutes—St. Christopher: Garcia,
Mattil. ws and Day. Alpha: Esquerrie,
Wilson and Randall.
Field Goals-St. Christopher: Kane
6. Austin 3. Napoleon 2. Alpha: Vanderwee
3. Waddell 2. Lewis 2. Cartell
2. Nanton 1 and Randall 1.
Foul Goals-St. Christopher: Garcia
8 out of 14 trials and Napoleon 3
out of 12 trials. Alpha: Waddell 9
out of 10.
Bordentown. Wins
Bordentown, N. J.-The Bordentown Industrial School won second place in the prep school relay at the Community Meet in the Armory at Trenton, Saturday night. January 27. The Bordentown Industrial boys also won second place in the sixty yard interscholastic Watson was the Bordentown Industrial School entrant. These meets are held once a month in the armory and some of the best prep schools in this section of New Jersey compete for the honors in the different field events.
Neptunes Defeat
The Columbia Cubs
The Neptune A.C. defeated the Col-
umbia Cubs Monday, January 22, on
their court by a 27-20 score. This
made the fifth consecutive victory
for the Neptunes.
ORGANIZED FEB. 27 1884
HAMILTON
No. 710 Grand United C
Will Hold Their Original C
MASQUERADE an
At New Sta
115 EAST 107th STREET, NEA
TUESDAY NIGHT.
THEATRICAL JOTTINGS
Thompson and Covan are at B. F. Keith's Hamilton Theatre, New York City.
Moss and Frye are at the Opera House, Bayonne and Proctor's, Elizabeth, N. J.
Jones and Jones are at the Maryland Theatre, Baltimore, Md.
Howard and Brown are at Fox's Crotona Theatre, New York City.
Glenn and Jenkins are at the Orpheum Theatre, Omaha, Neb.
Creole Cocktail is at Loew's Warwick Theatre, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Dixie Four is at the Colonial Theatre, Erie, Pa.
Joe Bright and Co. are at the Lafayette Theatre, New York City.
Byron Bros. Saxo Band is at Pantages Theatre, Long Beach, Cal.
Wilson and Giles are at the Halsey Theatre, Brooklyn, N. Y.
J. Rosamond Johnson and Co., are at the Colonial Theatre, Utica and Olympia, Watertown, N. Y.
Harrington and Green are at the Capitol Theatre, Ansonia, Conn.
Peat and Stevens are at the Astoria Theatre, Astoria, L. J.
Chapell and Stinnette are at the Shubert Theatre, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Austin and Delancy are at Henderson's Theatre, Coney Island, N. Y.
Williams and Taylor are at Keith's Theatre, Lowell, Mass.
Allen and tSokes are at the Lincoln Theatre, New York City.
Foxworth and Francis are at Pantaegs Theatre, St. Paul, Minn.
Morton and Brown are at Loos's Warwick Theatre, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Seymour and Jeantette are at the Regent Theatre, Muskegon, Mich.
Sandifer and Venerable are at the Palace Theatre, Red Bank, N. J.
Chadwick and Taylor are at the Kedzie Theatre, Chicago, Ill.
Eddee and Graze are at the Lim. in Theatre, New York City.
Moore and Mendel are at the Orchard Theatre, Porta and John, III.
W Bates and Tear Sisters are at the Hippodrome, Youngstown, Ohio.
The McCarvets are playing in and around New York City.
Justa and Marshall are at the Capitol Theatre, Hartford, and Palage, New Haven, Conn.
Carter and Cornish are at the Rialto, Amsterdam, N. Y.
Malinda and Dade are at Gordon's, Olympia Theatre, Boston, Mass.
Sonny Thompson and Co. are at Polly's Theatre, Meridan, Coun.
The Musical Magpie are at the Princess Theatre, Youngstown, Coun.
Donny and Freeman called Saturday, January 27, for Christiana, Norway, to open February 10, at the Modern Tivoli, for a two month's engagement. They will also play six months in Scandinavia. Regards to all friends in and out of the professon. Mad will reach them at Christiana, Norway, until April 10.
CELEBRATED FEB 27, 1923.
LODGE
Order of Odd Fellows
Celebrated Old Fashioned
and CIVIC BALL
ar Casino
THE NEW YORK AGE; SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1923.
Jack McVey, Welterweight, Is New National Guard Champ
Surprised Fight Fans at 369th Armory By Handing Out a Defeat to Sandy Taylor—Little Jack Johnson of 369th Outfights Marco of 102nd.
Danny Edwards Loses Bout Crowd Thought He Had Won
Sol Butler Indefinitely Suspended For No Running
The YALE & HARVARD of BASKETBALI.
Monday, February 12,1923
AT MANHATTAN CASINO 155th Street & 8th Ave. New York City
St. Christopher Red and Black Machine Alpha Big Five
Music by GUS CREAGH'S ORCHESTRA
Boxes on Sale at Alpha Club House 126 W.131st Street, Phone Morningside 1859
THE PRE-LENTEN RECITAL AND DANCE
New Star-Casino, 107th St., & Lexington Av. FRIDAY EVE., FEB. 9th, 1923 at 8:30 P. M. WALTER M. HUNTER. PRESENTS
Dancing Follows Music under Bernard Parker of Liza Orchestra
ADMISSION (Including war tax) $1.00
BOXES - Seating 8 $5.00 LÖGES Seating 8 $4.00
Reserved Beats (Including war tax) $1.28
Tickets can be had from Odessa Millinery Shop, 2221-7th Ave., Phene Morningside 0536
SINGERS and PLAYERS for ORCHESTRA and ENTERTAINMENT IN AND AROUND New York City
Jack McVey, 146 pounds, became the new welterweight champion of the National Guard by defeating Sandy Taylor, 142 3.4 pounds, in the star 12-round bout at the 39th Armory on Tuesday night, January 30. McVey, who is said to be only eighteen, has had one of the most rapid rises of any local pugilist. A year ago he was almost unknown around the armories, and until a few months ago he was fighting only in the preliminaries. Although he has been getting better and better with each fight, few of the fans expected him to defeat Taylor, who is one of the fastest and cleverest boxers in the city.
McVey started the fight as the aggressor at such a rapid pace that everybody, including Taylor, expected him to weaken in a few rounds. As the fighting continued, it became apparent that McVey was not going to weaken, despite the fact that Taylor was fighting him back and doing his best to knock him out. The sympathies of the fans, which were with the champion at first, changed and many began to sell for McVey to knock Taylor out. The boxers were evenly matched, and although McVey outpoint-
Danny Edwards
Crowd Thoug
Danny Edwards, colored bantam-weight champion of the world, lost a close decision to Danny Lee after twelve hard rounds of fighting at Pioneer Sporting Club on Friday night. January 20. The judges' award was granted with mingled cheers and jeers, as it was the opinion of many present that Edwards was the winner on points. The bout was sensational in spots.
Sol Butler Index Suspended
Sol Butler, joint holder of the world's record for many yards, and former broad jump champion, was indefinitely suspended by the Amateur Athletic Union on Thursday, January 25, for failure to attend a meeting of the registration committee of that organization Butler and Jackson Scholz were non-
The YALE & HARVA
Monday, Febr
ed his opponent in most of the rounds, both were in good condition at the end. The boat was one of the fastest that has been staged at this amusement and attracted a crowd which packed the place. The decision of the judges in awarding the victory to McVoy met with the general approval of the fans. In the semifinal bout of six rounds, Little Jack John, on June 1995 and Steve Marco of the 102nd Resident fought a fast draw. Marco was the better boxer, but the colored fighter gave him little time to box, but fought him all of the way. Although he had been out of the ring for several months, Johnson sloved him off from a defeat by his aggressiveness. He wrestled 127 12 12 pounds and Marco wrestled 128.
Tommy Lack on all but Lane-gad out Kill Lane in one of the four round preliminaries Jackson outpointed his opponent all of the way, and knocked him down three times in one round. Lane was game and narrow to last the fight out. In the other preliminary, Kill McKenzie and Frank Holson fought a draw.
Barney Williams was the referee of all the bouts.
Loses Bout
ight He Had Won
partially in the fifth round, when Edwards had Lee down for the count and seemingly in a bad way, only to have things reverse before the round ended. Neither fighter backed up an inch and it was a case of backs and crosses. In the last few rounds, Edward's showed up much better than his opponent and I was clearly the stronger of the two. The bout was proceeded by a crowd that jolted the crowd to its corner.
efinitely
For No Running
fool to appear and confirm why they did not complete in more than which they were entered. Enter was ordered in the Municipal games, he was in the West playing basketball with the Chicago D friend. New York team. He will be permitted to take part in any of the indoor sports until he suspends it latter.
ARD of BASKETBALL
February12,1923
AT THE LAFAYETTE THEATRE
Joe Bright and Company bred a good vanguard bill at this location this week. Bright has a rather lengthy time with Rose Brown. O. M. Stewart and Mitchell, Dink Stewart, and others well known artists and singers. Other artists include Pete L. Gins, doing as many with which we are big. Rose and Firework. Art, Meyer and Nelson and the Flower LeParks an excellent show in a well known city.
The management of the business in
birmingham 11th Street is Mills on the
a final management in the business in
London where it is being developed. We
will open on April 1st the business
will begin at the Lafayette on the business
12 and will probably be open two weeks
AT THE LINCOLN THEATRE
At the Lincoln Theatre this week was presented by the late Mr. Metro-SL play play "Olympus Mann Sawyer" a satirical version of the twentieth novel of the same name, established the name of the author, Charles Fellin Bodman. In this play some of the plays were written and acted in, and others well played. In the play one of the plays which is unimagined and not played play. It was a play in which the hero bara La Mart, lost Clemens, John Vidyge, Eliza Lomax, John Deworth, Louise Lomax, Zacharia Pike, Mann, Victor J. Howard, Curtis and others. "Olympus Mann Sawyer" was led by Curtis to the theatre, where the match and was played. Sawyer and Fellin Bodman only displayed.
Orientals vs: Whirlwinds.
Commonwealth 5 Defeats St. Michael Five
ASKETBAL
At Commonwealth Casino N.Y.
Sunday Night, FEB. 4
COMMONWEALTH DIC 5
ITALIAN CATHOLIC CLUB
of Interborough Lease
Preliminary Game at 10
Dancing Before and After
the Game
ADMISSION
EDWIN COSTEN
TEACHING ST
HARMONY, C. UMMA, L. LINCOLN
GARTEN
130 W. 100TH ST. AUGUST 1913
HARRY
HARRY
LAURA
Prampin
School of Music
131 West 136th St. N. Y. C.
TELEPHONE AUGUST 1927
WILSON LAMB
VOCAL STUDIO
105 W. 100th St. New York City
FIRST EMANUEL CHURCH
Saturday, June 21, 1944
Home Studio; Metropolitan Building
Orange, N. J.
Philadelphia, 710-755-7004
GRAN
ON
Thursday
and the other two are unrelated.
Daly's 60rd St.
Wickford Street
60
Dock by Inn
Dia Lynn
LAFAYE
THE LOUNGE
Sims, Premier Jockey in 1900, Plans Another Bid for Fortune
Said To Be Working Out Heres at New Orleans' Fair Grounds, Hoping To Regain the Physical Form Which Brought Him Fame and Wealth.
THE PHILIP A. PAYTON JR. COMPANY
announces to those who have left their appli-
ation at the office, that
MR. E. C. BROWN
has purchased seven houses on the St. Nicholas Avenue
block front between 140th and 141st Streets. These
houses have one apartment on each floor,
steam heat and hot water. Apart-
ments consist of 6, 7, 8 and
9 rooms. A number
of vacancies
are an immediate prospect.
Deposit will now be accepted
PHILIP A. PAYTON JR. COMPANY
137 West 141st Street
Telephone-Anderson 0845
(From New York Evening World).
A few days ago word came to New York from New Orleans that Willie Sims was galloping horses at the Fair Grounds track with an eye toward making another bid for fortune in the sadis.
It is a long way back, more than 20 years, to the days of Ben Brush's Suburban, to the days when the "all white" of Mike Dewyer and the "Yale blue" of Richard Crooker were as prominent on the turf as the "white, green color and color" of the Rancocas stable. Is today; to the days when Sims and Tod Sloan were on top of the list.
It has been done before. It may be done again. John Osborne, a famous old-time jockey who died recently at the age of 88, followed his calling for 44 years. He accepted his first mount at the age of 15 in 1848 and his last when he was 59 years old, and in the last race finished second.
Willie Sims has turned the half century mark. Back in the late 90s when the names of Fred Taral, now trainer for the Rivière stable; Sloan Snapper Garrison, Doggett, Griffin, Skeets Martin, Reiff and Marty Bergen were household words among racegoers, he ranked with the best. Sims was born in Augusta, Ga., an drifted to New York city when he was about 15 and began picking up mounts at Clifton in 1887 and 1888.
Beats Snapper Garyben
Con Leighton, who was then training for W. L. Scott, happened to be at the winter track one day and saw Sims ride. He was so taken with what he called the boy's thorough sense that he engaged him. This gave Sims his first opportunity to show his real talent, and in 1889 he became a full-fledged Jackie. His first important victory came in the Expedition stakes at Gravesend in 1899, when he rode Banquet and beat Garrison on Bellarius, the favorites. The stable Jackie had backed with Chaoos and He had backed him heavily, for an entry was not coupled in the betting in those days. However, he put a modest taxes on Banquet at 20 to 1. Chaos finished in the ruck.
Even after that Sims did not get the feet mounts in the stable. At the Monmouth park meeting the same year, Mr. Scott again started Banquet and Chaos. This time the stable pinned its faith to Banquet, which was ridden by Hamilton, while Chaos, on which Sims had up the leg, went begging in the ring as if to one. Banquet was unplaced, whereas Chaos won from Padisha, ridden by Garrison, and Liovnia with Berries on.
This following year Sims had such success at Saratoga Springs that Phil Deyer engaged him. He did well not to the stable, scoring his most notable victories in Lamplighter. Later he rode for Mike Deyer, Pierre Airtier, Raneyas, stable and Richard Sticker. He ran Tammany chiefly with Debbie in the Fulfillment in the drilling race won by Domino, with Tatal up and again in the even more spectacular match in which Domino and Joshua ran a dead heat.
Ben Bruah's Surburban.
In 1977 Sims reached the peak of his
pride. Perhaps his greatest triumph
was winning the Burburian
Laws on Ben Brush. In this race
Sims was Martin rode Belmar and Tod
Sims was the Winner for Pittsburgh
Sims was named finishing second,
and Seagann's Havoc third.
The maximum Sims had gone to
Sims to ride for Richard Crocker
The Dwayer and had met with not-
being at the time Tod
Sims to rival. The British had
sims to Telfy's seat and style, which,
he was, has revolutionized jockey
he has marveled still more at
and what they called his ugly and
stole. They did not see how
sims riding with short stirrups, sitting
him erect from the hips, but hump-
ing at the shoulders and with a
could get much out of his
Sam also rode in France with a full
protection of success. On his return to
France, he was prominent for a
number of voyages, but gradually accept-
ed less and fewer mounts and finally
riding altogether.
For many years he has been a daily
journey to New York tracks during
the winter. He has attracted hardly
any interest with the younger set of
mounts, though a quiet little man is
increased out in the paddocks
Hardy Heads.
Champion of Other Years.
Whether Will will come or off, if Will will try to is problematical. The riding is not a vocation in which compasses with age. However there are probable exceptions on the English where they seem to be able to ride faster than they do here. At the beginning of the last century there was
The New York Age PRINTING OFFICE
one James Robinson, who rode about as many Derby winners as Steven Donoghue, who has headed the winning list on the flat for the last nine years.
Robinson won his first Derby on Asor in 1817 and seven years later rode Cedric to victory and the same season won the blue ribbon with Lord Jersey's Middleton and two years later had the leg up on Mameluke and in 1828 rode Cadland to victory after a dead heat with The Colonel. Eight years later he came back and scored his sixth triumph on Lord Jersey's Middleton, a son of the colt which he rode 11 years before.
HAMPTON ANNOUNCES ATHLETIC SCHEDULE Championship Track and Field Meet Will Be Held at Armstrong Field, May 19.
Hampton, Va.—The Hampton Institute championship track and field meet will be held on May 19 at Armstrong Field. The 220-yard straightaway, the quarter-mile track are being held in good condition. More space is being prepared for, the field events. There were about 150 contestants in the first annual meet. This year a larger number is expected.
Feature events for 1923 will be one mile relays for colleges and high schools. Leading athletes of the country will be present.
The Hampton Institute basketball schedule is as follows: February 9, Roanoke All-City Five, at Roanoke, Va.; 10, Bluefield Colored Institute, at Bluefield, W. Va.; 17, Morehouse College, at Hampton; 22, Lincoln University, at Hampton.
The baseball schedule: April 13, Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute, at Petersburg; 14, Virginia Union University, at Richmond; 21, Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute, at Hartington; 28, Virginia Union University at Hampton.
The preliminary football schedule
October 20, St. Paul Normal and Industrial
School, at Hampton; 27, Virginia
Normal and Industrial Institute, at
Hampton; November University, at
Lincoln; 10, Shaw University, at
Ralcigh; 17, Howard University, at
Hampton; 29, Virginia Union University
at Richmond.
Geo. W. Carver to, Speak
At Voorhees Conference
Denmark, S. C. —On Wednesday, February 14, the thirteenth annual farmers' conference of the Voorhees Normal and Industrial School will be held on the campus of the institution. These annual conferences have proven helpful to the farmers, workers and business men of this section. Principal J. E. Blanton, Treasurer Martin A. Menafea and County Farm Demonstrator E. D. Jenkins, with other Voorhees workers, are perfect arrangements for the conference.
Dr. George W. Carver, director of the Department of Research and Experiment Station at Tuskegee Institute, one of the great scientists of the age, will be the speaker of the day. His subject will be "How to keep an at Home, or How to Stop the Exodus." The session will begin at 10:30 a.m. An exhibit of the fine products grown or produced by farmers and their wives and others will be on display. Representatives from Clemson College and other institutions will be present. A free Barbecue will be served to all after the session.
BALEIGH N C
"Raleigh N. N. C.—"Suffle Along." the colored show which appeared there Tuesday matinee, and night, was quite a success. The white papers stated it was the best that had ever shown here. The colored bank here is progressing.
THE NEW YORK AGE: SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1923.
By JAMES H. MOGANA.
At the annual election of the Pullman Porters Athletic & Social Club held on January 17, the following officers were elected for the ensuing year: J. F Cooper, president; R. S. Delaney, first vice president; O. Ford, second vice-president; J. W. Gilbert, third vice-president; J. H. Batic, treasurer; J. H. Hogans, financial secretary; L. H. Kidd, corresponding secretary.
This Association which is composed of Pullman porters and other railroad employees stands pre-eminently among colored railroad men as to what can be done if they will only stick together. Organized in 1913 by a mere handful of young progressive porters running in and out of New York City, their papers of incorporation which were granted in 1914, states that the particular objects of the corporation were forming of an Association to promote the spirit of friendship and brotherhood among Pullman porters; also, to establish a home and club room for such men where they could meet, between trips and where their wives and relatives may meet and congregate for the purpose of furnishing entertainment to one another and for the general purpose of morally and socially elevating such members.
How near they have reached their objective can be best judged by mentioning that they have acquired the property and building in which they first met; they have also remodelled, renovated and furnished it throughout and equipped club houses for railroad men in the country; in fact it has been appraised by some as being the most up-to-date club in its appointments in the United States for men of color. Now, if an organization whose membership has never exceeded two hundred can make a total expenditure of $300 outside of sick disbursements and death donations, and can accumulate property and assets that are worth $40,000 in the years of its existence, what might be the possibility of the thousand porters running in and out of New York if they were behind some financial proposition?
We have just been informed by the newspapers that the Engineers Brotherhood has purchased a substantial interest has purchased a substantial interest of course we do not make the money of an engineer, but from personal observation the average engineer is no higher mentally or morally than the average Pullman porter, consequently we should be able to as they have done, only on a small scale. But, here is the "rub"; we have no Warren S. Stone's; no Garrettson's; no Lee's; and we do not think you could find any among our race if the earth were searched. The officials of the Empire Trust Company said the financial officers of these men thought right, talked right, acted right—there is the secret.
We heard a responsibleporter say; thouderday he never knew a body of men among our race yet to furnish capitol and guidance to one of our own, that if they were mentally inferior and did not know the "ins" and "outs" of the proposition, but what he would not eventually scalp them. These are broad assertion, but we challenge a refutation with facts to back it up. We will digress to say this; no matter what our race leaders, teachers and what-not offer as a panacea for the race's problem; nothing will benefit us until we learn the advantage of financial solidity and the handling of the other fellow's money honestly. However, back to the subject of this article; in electing Mr. Cooper as president, the members of this Pullman Athletic and Social Club are determined to keep progressing.
Dr. Carroll Talks
To Negro Farmers
St. George, S. C.-The Rev. Richard Carroll of Columbia, S. C. was the principal speaker at a fArmers' Community Conference which began here on Sunday afternoon, January 28
The meetings were largely attended, and were under the direction of Rev. J. M. Marshall and a group of local ministers and prominent citizens.
Rev. L. M. Keit, who spoke Sunday, Monday and Tuesday night of the conference, and by Dr. W. J. Bryan of Waynesboro, Ga.
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STAUNCE AND UNCOMPROMISING
Editor of The New York Age:
Please find herewith my renewal for
1923. I have been a constant reader
of The New York Age for more than
twenty years. I have no hesitency in
saying that it one of the staunchest,
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have, fearlessly handling all matters of
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Your painstaking editorials on all specific
points of interest to the race are worthy of commendation beyond all expression.
W. T. GREENWOOD.
Baltimore, Md.
NEWS OF THE CHURCHES
Mother Zion Church. Despite the inclementy of the weather, the morning service at Mother Zion was attended by a large congregation. The usual preliminary devotional services weer of a very interesting nature and conducted with inspiration.
The sermon was preached by the pastor, Dr. Brown. His subject was "Death in the Fot." In his discourse he emphasized the importance of a greater degree of sincerity in the work of assisting in the saving of men and women. He, admonished the discarding of all bulbs, and sacked that the requirements as laid down by our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, he complied with in the lives of those professing to be his followers. He emphasized the doctrine of the church in believing and teaching that Christ is the Son of God and that His incarnation was the fulfillment of the mission of the redemption of mankind. Throughout the service the spiritual interest was high and all present manifested hearty approval. At the conclusion of the sermon thirty-four persons were received into the church, including a number of recently converts from the revival being conducted at the Commonwealth Casino.
The Sunday-school convened at 2 o'clock sharp. There was a large attendance. To our teaching force have been added Archie Watkins and our organist, Miss Williams. Under the direction of Miss Williams and Rev. Hendricks, a very creditable Sunday-school choir has been organized and is doing excellently. Our boys of the basketball contingent, under the direction and supervision of Gordon Dickerson, are doing fine. The game that they were to have played at the Y. M. C. A. on last Saturday evening, was forfeited to them because the Y. M. C. A. a team did not appear. Under the auspices of the Sunday-school, there will be a motion picture entertainment in the lecture room of the church on Monday evening, February 5.
At 8 p.m. Dr. Brown preached an annual session to the Knights of Toussaint.
Thursday night there will be a meeting of the Brotherhood. All members are requested to be present.
The sick: Lillian Arrington, 236 West
134th street; Louise Stewart, 236 West
134th street; Georgianna Codes, 19 West
122nd street; John Talley, 63 West
143rd street; Apt. 15; Anna Holloway,
2228 7th avenue; Depulla Scott, 255
West 136th street; Mrs Jackson, 135
West 132d street; Rosa Hint, 414 West
52nd street; Anna Hundley, 244 West
64th street; George Dillard, 261 West
136th street; Emma Stricklen, 50 West
140th street; Minnie Leffwit, 102
West 142nd street; Apt. 10; Estelle
Bradford, 1 W 131st street; at Woman's
Hospital; Archer Branch, 317
West 139th street.
Abyssinian Baptist Church.
The church held its first service up-town-Sunday. Dr. Powell preached about 1,000 people in Palace Casino Sunday morning on "The New Birth" and Rey. J. Ardour Payne spoke to a large audience in the vestry of the Metropolitan Baptist Church in the evening. Superintendent Taylor held a largely attended session of the Sunday-school in the same church at 1:30. The Abyssinian spirit of loyalty was manifested at all the services. Two other persons were added to the member hip roll and an offering of $6,5728 was lifted. Miss Gertrude Dodd, one of our white friends, sent a check for $100. The pastor will preach rest Sunday morning in Palace Casino, and the assistant in the vestry of the Metropolitan Church in the evening.
St. Mark's M. E. Church.
On Sunday, January 28, the morning and evening services at St Mark's M. E. Church were attended by good sized congregations; notwithstanding the very inclination weather. The pastor, Dr. W. H. Brooks, who has been ill for the past five weeks is still confined to his bed but is improving rapidly. Authentic information from the sick room is very encouraging and inspires the servant hopes of the members and friends of the church that he will soon be able to occupy his pulpit.
Bey, Holmes, secretary of the Lincoln Settlement House, was the speaker at the morning service and delivered a very powerful sermon.
In the evening, Rev. Richard A. McCarthy was the occupant of the pulpit and preached a very able sermon.
The Sunday-school was well attended and the collection good.
The musical and literary exercises of the Epworth League were largely attended and a very enjoyable program rendered.
There was a good attendance at the
meeting of the Foreign Missionary Society and able remarks were made as great work being done by the society in the right of Christianity in foreign lands.
Dinner was served in the Church House by the Ladies Aid. At the morning and evening services the choir under direction of Prof. E. A. Jackson rendered excellent selections.
Union Baptist Church.
Clouded skies and falling snow again graced our Lord's Day this week. In spite of this our service during the day were well attended and fruitful. We missed the face of our pastor who left the city last Wednesday to carry on a revival service in Sixth Mt. Zion Church of Richmond, Va. At 11 a.m., following the song service, in which both choir and congregation participated, Rev. John Joseph broke the Bread of Life to us. His subject was "The Decided Stand Eq. Jesus" his ex-king had just taken up in 1666. The Sunday school convened at 2 p.m. and all were soon engaged in diligently studying the lesson, which was afterwards carefully catechised by John Dachal.
At 4 p. m., the Missionary Circle held their praise service, as is the custom on the fourth Sunday of each month. At this service the different auxiliaries do their part in contributing toward the salary of Emma Butler, our member in Africa, who we are supporting. Their meetings are always fereently spiritual. The B. Y. P. U., with Julia Harrison, 1st vice president in charge of the opening exercises, held a very interesting meeting at 5:30. Miss Coine琳迪erson had charge of the program which was timely and well rendered; the evening Rev Joseph again spoke of the teaching for the missionaries in the afternoon, from the subject: "Laborers for the Master." His subject for the evening was "God's Judgement for Sin." His remarks were both interesting and helpful. During the day nine happily united with the church. The collection for the day amounted to $430.43.
The First Emmanuel Church.
On Sunday, Pastor Bolden, preached two interesting sermons. In the morning his text was St. John 12 2-3: "Thou hast given Him power over all hast given Him. And this is eternal life, to many that they might know as thou hast given Him. And this is eternal life, flesh that He should give eternal life, that they might know the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom At 2 o'clock Miss Maggie Johnson opened the Sunday school. The lesson study was very interesting. One little girl joined the Sunday school.
At 7:30 p.m., Miss Mamie Anderson had charge of the prayer and praise service. Many were at this devotional service.
At 8 o'clock Pastor Bolden again preached to those assembled. His talk was on "Divine Mysteries." This topic Pastor Bolden is going to use on Sundays, until Easter.
The dinner way served during the day by the Flower Circle. Many are coming on services, and would love those many guests. The real thing we are aiming at is to let the people all over the world know that God is literally with us, and that we can, if we will be saints. On February 14, the C. T. M. Circle will give a valentine party.
Salem M. E. Church and Lyceum
Last Sunday morning Dr. A. A. Crosbie preached a most excellent sermon from St. John 17:21, taking as his theme "Eternal Life". Rev. F. A. Cullen the pastor, preached a soul stirring sermon. In spite of the storiness day, a large audience was present. Five persons joined the church.
The lycum had a time program at 4 o'clock.
Friday night, February 2, a reception will be given at the members meeting. All members are requested to be present.
At 4 o'clock next Sunday the lycum will hold its annual Candlelight service all the friends are asked to be present, and especially the societies of other churches. Geo. W. Allen will be in charge.
St. Paul Baptist Church
He spite of the falling snowflakes, we had a nice crowd for such a day. At 11 a.m. m., the past, Rev. Arthur Booker, preached. Right after that service was a meeting of the officers and teachers of the Sunday-school upstairs. At 1:30 p.m. m., Sunday-school, under direction of Miss Belia, was opened. At 4 p.m. there was preaching by Rev. D. Dr. Perry for the Men's Usher's Club, which was for the benefit of the spring rally. At 8 p.m. the pastor again preached. We had a large attendance all day.
St. James Presbyterian Church.
Notwithstanding the inclement weather last Sunday, the services were largely attended all day. Dr. Hyder preached from the subject "Faith, intellect and feeling in the act of regeneration." A large number of visitors from suburban towns was present. The pastor com-
J.
ducted the funeral services of Mrs. Eliza Roberts from the church at two o'clock.
At the night service Dr. Hyder delivered the annual sermon to the Christian Endeavor, Department. The Christian Endeavor orchestra of eight pieces furnished the music. The pastor of St. James preached last Friday at Mother, Zion Methodist Church, where the noon day meetings of the union revival are being held.
The subject next Sunday morning will be: "Religion and Science." Theme, "When these fail to harmonize which one is to be followed." At the evening service the sermon will deal with the subject: "New wine in old bottles."
Rendall Memorial Presbyterian Church
At 3 p. m., the publicity committee under the direction of J. C. Denham presented an excellent literary program to a very appreciative audience. Mr Denham presided. T. H. Alston acted as secretary and Mrs. Marion Ferrer was pianist. Short thoughtful addresses were made by Geo S. Johnson, president United States of Georgia, J. D. Phillips, W. N. Huggins, J. O. Wright, and Dr. W. R. Lawton. Among those who rendered numbers were Mrs. Maggie Carter, Geo Ledbetter, Mrs. Ferrer and 4 Mrs. Hassell. Mrs. Josephine Johnson Terrell gave several interesting readings of her own productions. Geo B. Hawkins presented a poem entitled "The Two Glasses." At conclusion of the program, a temporary organization was formed.
Sunday, February 4, at 11 a. m., Dr. Lawton will preach on "The Call of Sacrifice." At 3 p. m., there will be a meeting of the Forum for permanent organization. At 8 p. m., the subject will be "Two is greater than twice one."
BIRMINGHAM. CITIZENS OPPOSE SECREGATION IN ZONING LAW
(Continued from First Page)
less than the value of the property? Who is there that for a moment will contend that if the Negroes are herded into one ward or section, that they will be given any sort of consideration in the way of paying, lights, sanitation, policing? By having a Negro settlement, here and there in the city, no harm is done; these citizens get the benefit of protection and convenience, and it is a guarantee of orderly conduct, of the very nature of the institutions that harmlessly, and cumulative in great degree toward better citizenship on the part of the majority of these coloured people.
"There is another feature: white neighborhoods change. People seek other surroundings; there is a vogue for a certain neighborhood, and the older positions of towns and cities are sometimes deserted for newer and more modern ones. Very often Negroes fall heir to these neighborhoods, and are glad to get them; there are better houses than the average of Negro rental property, paving, sewerage, lights, and so on. To adopt a race segregation zoning ordinance would cut both ways—the owners of this unfashionable property would be cut off from a market, of perhaps the only rental class available, and the Negroes would find an inexorable law against their better class moving into better surroundings. It would be to cut off a possible salvage value of such property.
Create Unrest and Disquiet
"Another bad feature is the unrest and disquiet produced among the colored people. Things are going very well indeed; there is growing a mutual confidence between the races, and mutual coogd feeling. This sort of agitation has a disquieting effect, and is bad in any and all of its aspects.
"The Nets respectfully submits to the Legislature and those proponents of this zoning law here in Birmingham, that the race segregation section of the act should be dropped. There is no complaint of the status quo and no occasion for stirring up unnecessary trouble, and disturbing the colored people, to say nothing of the very uncertain effect such a law would have upon real estate values."
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PAGE SEVEN
A MESSAGE
To New Converts and New Members
BY
Dr. R. C. RANSOM,
Editor A. M. E. Review
AT
MOTHER A. M. E ZION CHURCH
151-3 West 136th Street
Rvr. J. W. Brown, D. D., Pastor
FRIDAY EVENING, FEB. 2, 1823
AT 8 P. M.
Soloist Large Chorus Choir
A Rousing Meeting
Gospel Singing
Reserved Seats for New Members.
Local Preachers and Class Leaders
EVERYBODY INVITED
mission the committee of colored citizens called attention to the migration of Negroes from the South and pointed out that whatever will allay unrest among the race will be constructive, but that the segregation clause will cause more unrest. It was also declared that the element migrating, or planning to migrate, was not composed of the riffraff, thriftless or ignorant, but the industrious and intelligent from city and country, the type that make good citizens. Continuing, the memorial said: "The purpose to enact a segregation law affecting property rights has already produced increased disturbance among Negro people of this district.
"This restive state of mind among Negroes is increased by whatever tends to promote race friction or to give color or to a belief already in the mind of the Negro that it is the purpose of his white neighbor to shove him asided to legislate upon him conditions that make living environs inconvenient and undesirable.
Directed at Negro
"It is fixed in the Negro's mind that although such clause or section may leave the word Negro out, it is definitely directed at the Negro. He is thus singled out in a way that would indicate to be true what is far from being true, that the Negro seeks to live among white people. "The natural drift of the Negro group is toward group communities. This natural drift has created white communities and Negro communities, alternating in the cities after a manner that has not left the Negro sections wholly without protection, the tendency being wherever there are large areas occupied by Negroes, to supply less police protection, poorer civic improvement and worse sanitary accommodations, to say, nothing of being exposed to the mob and the fire fiend. Thus, any movement seeking to do this by legislation tends to fix upon the Negro by actual legislation, inferior living conditions, which spells race degradation.
Race Relations Cordial
"Relations between the white and Negro peoples of our commonwealth are reasonably cordial and peaceful. Why not permit them to remain so? Whether such section as a segregation cause passes or does not pass, its preservation and discussion will have a bad technological effect upon race relation. The Negro leaders who seek to protect and maintain racial good will seriously handicapped when they concrete acts on the part of the white neighbors that carry the significant race degradation. Moreover, wherever such legislation has been cusseted and even effected, the first effect has been race animosity, the second result has been that they have been judged by the supreme as being unconstitutional—as cases of Baltimore, Md., and Kentucky.
"We pray that such legislation as a race segregation clause in the zoning bill be not sought. We appeal on behalf of the Negroes of the City of Greater Birmingham and of the State of Alabama. We appeal in the interest of settled economic conditions for our race, in the interest of peace and prosperity for all, and in the interest of interracial goodwill, which spells internal happiness and contentment.
"We love Birmingham. We love Alabama. The Negro wants to stay here if given a reasonable assurance of the protection of life and property.
"After carefully reading and pondering the Zoning Act, we feel content with its general purpose, our exceptions rest on the clause that provides for segregation, hich cause we pray you, for the above reasons, to have eliminated from the bill."
The letter was signed by Oscar W. Adams, chairman; J. A. Bray, secretary; F. G. Ragland, C. L. Fisher, H. N. Newsome, W. T. Woods, U. G. Mason, B. F. Mallard, R. N. Hall, T. W. Coffee.
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News of Great
Manhattan and the Bronx
News of Greater New York
Mrs. A. C. Garner continues to improve.
Archedeacon Russell of Lawrenceville, Va. will be in the city during this month.
The New York Chapter of Howard University Alumni will be represented in the special meeting in Washington on February 5.
Mrs. James H. Hogans is in Chicago, visiting her sister, Mrs. Margaree L. Weaver, one of the popular members of the "Shuffle Along" company.
Dr. James H. N. Waring, principal of the Downingtown, Pa., Industrial School, spent a few days in the city last week in interest of the school.
Miss Cora F. Wood daughter of Rev. Scott Wood, is among the graduates of the Schenley High School, Pittsburgh, Pa., this year. The editor of The Age received an invitation to attend the exercises.
BLEEKS
Dressmaking School
Designing, Dressmaking, Patternmaking, Draping, Grading and Millinery Individual Instruction in Every Department. Oversee for Business and Home Use. 11th West 20th St. Merringside 7220 Jan. 15, 1979 Mrs. M. M. C. Lawton, president of the Empire State Federation of Colored Women's Clubs, is visiting in Scheenc-tady, Albany, and Kingston, Poughkeepsie and Hilburn, and other cities of the state in the interest of that organization. Bishop M. W. Clair, one of the first two Negro ministers elevated to the bishopric of the M. E. Church, sailed from New York on the ss. Hesseltin of the Bull lines for Monrovia, Liberia, West Coast of Africa, where he is in charge of the missionary and educational work
Gilbert Zackery of Denver, Col., has come to New York to join his wife, Mrs. Jessie Andrews Zackery, the corollta soprano who is singing at the Plantation Revue, Broadway and 50th street. Mrs. Zackery has for a number of years occupied a responsible position with the Denver Athletic Club, but the musical success attained by Mrs. Zackery in the East has induced him to come to New York to live.
Shirt, Levi's, Wife, Dead
Chief Lee's Wife Deak
Mrs. Anna Lee, wife of Chief Edward E. Lee, one of the oldest colored citizens of New York, died at her home on Saturday, January 27, and was buried from the undertaking parlor of the J. C. Thomas Understaking establishment, 89 West 134th street, on Tuesday afternoon, January 30, with the Rev. Frank Hyder officiating, assisted by the Rev. F. R. Cullen. Interment was made at Mt. Hope cemetery.
Stenographera Orgonize
The Harlem (Stenographers) Association, composed of stenographers and artists, is located in the assembly room of the New York Academy of Business.
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447 Lenox avenue, Thursday evening, January 25, at eight oclock and formed a permanent organization electing officers. The next meeting of the Association will be Thursday Evening, February 8.
Dedication of St. David's P. E. Church in The Bronx
It will be a red letter day for the Rev. Dr. E. G. Clifton, rector, and his faithful members of St. David's P. E. Church, up in the Bronx on Sunday (Sexigesma) February 4, when their new edifice in East 160th street will be dedicated. The day will mark the culmination of years of effort on part of Dr. Clifton and his people and they are rejoicing greatly over the fruition of their hopes.
Rt. Rev. Herbert Shipman, suffrang bishop, will preside and preach at 11 o'clock in the morning, and at the evening service at 8 o'clock, the preacher will be the Rev. Scott Wood of St. Luke's Mission.
Dr. Clifton, the rector, extends a cordia limitation to the public to be present on this interesting occasion.
Hamptonians in New York
Observe Founders' Day
Founder's Day, in honor of General Samuel C. Armstrong, the founder of Hampton Institute, was observed by Hampton graduates, and exudent; in this city on Sunday afternoon at the Mother A. M. E. Zion Church. A fitting program under the auspices of the J. C. Price Lyceum was presented with Robert W. Willis, president of the Lyceum, presiding. The program included: a piano selection, Miss Beatrice Johnson of the Martin-Smith School; remarks, J. E. Williams, president of the Hampton Club; selection, Northern Brothers' quartet; harpite solo, William Hiam with Walter Bakey, accompanist reading from the letters of General Armstrong, Miss Bertha Sawyer; address, Robert S. Abbott, editor of the Chicago "Defender"; bass solo, Mr. Keyser; cornet solo, John H. Watkins; address, William Pickens.
The meeting was largely attended and the program one of the best that has been presented by the Hampton The local office is the John F. Williams office, Paul D. Saintec secretary; Mrs. J. R. Ceaar, treasurer; and Mrs. Elizabeth Michael, chaplain.
Manhattan Y. W. C. A
The Inter-Club Membership Rally is on! It began last Friday night with a lively meeting and reception. The September Clug took the banger for bringing, in the largest number of new members on that night and now every club is on tip-toes to wrest it away from September at the next report night, Wednesday, February 7. The Girl Reserves, were present at the meeting and allowed new members to step in with their yellows and togs. Miss Alma Marshall, president of the October Club, brought some lovely flowers. After the meeting refreshments were served and the new members were introduced around.
The January membership social was a gala event. Through the efforts of Mrs. Minerva Harris of the January Club the Commonwealth Orchestra furnished six pieces of music and girls and grown-ups joined in dances and games. Mrs. Harris, Mrs. Ella Sessomy and Mrs. Sarah Graves were hostesses and furnished refreshments. The next social will be a Valentine Party on February 14. The charge for the February Club. There are eight plus one for this social also. On January 21, we had a splendid soccer service. Harry Pace gave an interesting address. Carroll Clarke and William Veasey were the solosists for the afternoon and the audience insisted upon hearing them both sing twice. There was a good audience. Dr. W. H. Moses will speak on Sunday, February 4. Dr. Moses, who came to this city from Philadelphia last year, is known as a good speaker. The gymnasium classes of the physical department held a demonstration of their work on Friday, January 26. The "Y" basketball team will play against the Deers on February 3;
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Brooklyn, February 10; Deers again March 3; and at a date to be announced later, the Oriental Girls.
The physicl department is offering to its members and to the young business women free recreation twice weekly. Every Monday evening from nine to ten there will be carefully supervised recreation in the form of exercises, games and dancing. On Thursday evenings at 7:30 free instructions will be given swimming. New classes are now being formed for reducing. All women over 150 pounds should register at once.
Meetings for next week are: March Club, Tuesday, February 6; July Club and Beux-Arts, Thursday February 8; and April Club, Friday, February 9.
135th Street Library
The North Harlem Community Forum at its meeting on Thursday, February 1, celebrated the birthday of Lewis Carroll, author of "Alice in Wonderland." The forum has secured for this occasion Dr. Hubert Harrison. The library has an exhibit of pictures and books about Lewis Carroll and "Alice in Wonderland" in the children's room. Parents are invited to visit it.
New books received include "Rough-Hewn" by Dorothy Canfield; "The world in falseface" by George G. Nathan "Valliant Dust" by Katherine Fullerton Gerould; "A Pushchair at the Curl" by John Dos Passos; "Men, Women and Beasts," stories of Africa, by H. Dere Vere Stapoole; "Ditte: Towards the Stars" final volume of the "Ditte Trilogy" by Anderson Nexo.
Urban League Annual Meeting
The eleventh annual meeting of the National Urban League will be held at the Russell Sage Foundation Building, 22nd street and Lexington avenue, on Wednesday afternoon, February 7, at 3 o'clock. At 8 o'clock p. m., an open meeting will be held.
Officers of the League are Holkingsworth Wood, chairman; Robert R Moton, John T. Fmlen, Kelly Miller, and George C. Hall, vice-chairman; William H. Baldwin, secretary; A. S. Frissell, treasurer; Eugene Kinkle Jones, executive secretary.
Dog Show in Harlem
On February 26 and 27, at the Commonwealth Sporting Club, 18 East 135th street S. T. Saxon is staging a dog show under the auspices of the Commonwealth Kennel Club. In the same colored person has undertaken such an educational venture. Entries will open on February 1 and close at noon, February 24.
Rush Memorial Church.
On last Sunday morning, Dr. Oliver was at his best. He took as his text Se. Matthew, 22:42, subject "Interrogations." This sermon was edifying and comforting and one felt the immediate presence of the Holy Spirit. The Sunday-school, which is rapidly growing larger, met from 1 to 2 o'clock. At 6:30, The Christian Endeavor met. There was a lively discussion of the topic which was enjoyed by all. In the evening, Rev. A. E. Piggott filled the pulpit, preaching an inspiring sermon from St. Luke 10; part of 20th verse, subject "Man on the wrong Road."
St. Luke's Episcopal Mission.
Notwithstanding the heavy snow storm of last Sunday, St Luke's Mission was filled to overflow at the 11 o'clock service. The vicar, Rev. Scott Wood, preached from the next: Ezekiel 2,4. "This Sathth the Lord God." He showed clearly that in these perilous days God's appointed messengers must preach the unadulterated word of God, without fear of favor, sustained at all times by the promise that "Lo I am with you even unto the end."
The Sunday-school was well attended. Confirmation class met for instruction at 4 p.m.
At 8 o'clock evening prayer was said and Vicar Wood spoke on the subject of Missions, showing that Jesus Christ
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NEW YORK CITY.
WILLIAM H. WORTHAM, President
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Established 1900 by Philip A. Payton, Jr.
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"THE COLOR QUESTION
IN THE TWO AMERICAS"
(By Dr. Bernardo Ruiz Suárez)
This is the latest contribution to the study of problems affecting our race. A comparison is made of the conditions in which the colored race jives in Central and South America on the one hand and in the United States on the other hand.
The price of this book is $19 but we are making a special price to new subscriptions of The New York Age, giving the book and one year's subscription to The New York Age for $2.30, within the United States, and $3.43, foreign countries. All orders must be addressed to The New York Age, 230 West 15th street, New York City.
DR. JAMES A. BANKS
Formally as 813 West 197th Street,
Borgeson District,
New at
222 West 188th Street
Ten Years With Dr. D. C. White
New York
Telephone 6030 Addison
June-30
THE NEW YORK AGE: SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1923.
These lots originally sold at $150 to $300 each—Only subscribers to THE NEW YORK ACE can obtain these building lots at this special price.
WESTWOOD TERRAZON is located in the Borough of Westwood, Bergen County, N. J., 14 miles from the heart of Manhattan, overseeing the Palladium.
A thriving, prosperous community of race people, former tenant developers of new York and Brooklyn today occupy their own homes at WESTWOOD TERRAZON. The community owns and enjoys freedom and independence. There are few amenities established at Westwood Terrace and other social and fraternal organizations.
WHERE TO GO TO CHURCH
was the great missionary and the church the oldest missionary society. He also exfoliated how missions are made practical today in the operation of the social service commission and other mameleesMosesP. Service hir hirdred organizations doing concrete community work in the extension of The Kingdom of God. The discourse was both practical and idiosyncratic. The services for Sunday February 4, will be as usual; morning prayer, 11 a.m. at which time the vicar will preach, and celebrate the holy communion; the Sunday-school will meet at 3 p. m., and at the evening service at 8 p. m., Rev. A. P. Nelson, curate of St. Luke's Church, will preach. The public is cordially invited to be present at all the services.
On last Wednesday night Rev. Scott Wood addressed the Ladies Evening Study Class of St. Luke's Church, His spoke on "The Missionary Work in the South among the Colored People" The keynote for lent was struck on last Sunday (Sephaegsima), nine weeks before Easter.
BROOKLYN
Mrs. Annie Cowan of Jersey City, is indoressed at 208 Clifton place, where she is visiting
Mrs. Willa Berry, proffreader on the Negro Daily Times, is sick at her home, 208 Clifton place.
THE ABYSSINIAN BAPTIST CHURCH, until
BELLEM BETTMONT PRINCIPAL UNIVERSITY 1695 West 133rd St. The Rev. Frederick Aubury Cullen Pastor, Presbyterian Church, 1695 West 133rd St. Sunday School, 1695 West 133rd St. W. Aile Superintendent, Monts Bible Class, 1695 West 133rd St. 4 p. M., Rev. J. B. Coleman, Instructor, D. P. Pinnock, 1695 West 133rd St. Thursday, George W. Allen, President, Equestrian League, 6 p. M., Sunday, J. J. Jameson, Presbyterian Church, Sunday night and 4 p. M., Sunday, Praise meeting, Friday night, Presbyterian every Tuesday night, W. B. Harcourt Presbyterian Church, Sunday in early morals. All are welcome.
Bobbie A. B. McCormick, B. B. W. Thorpe, B. B. W. Buster, 1695 West 133rd St. Church services, Spring August 6 a. M., Praise meeting, 1695 West 133rd St. Presbyterian Church, Sunday in early morals. Thursday, George W. Allen, Presbyterian Church, Sunday in early morals. Lord Pence is welcome.
The choir of Newman Memorial M. E. Church, Herkimer street and Russell place, Rev. T. W. Cooper, pastor, will sing A. R. Gaul's sacred cantata, "Ruth," on Friday evening, February 9, at the church, Lusen H. White is directing the rendition.
Mrs. Missouri A. Moore, of Brooklyn and New York has returned after an absence of four weeks, during which period she was at the bedside of her sister, Miss Cleopatra Andrews, at Williamston, N. C., who had undergone an operation at the hospitair at Rocky Mount, N. C., on December 27.
Colored and white citizens of Brooklyn attended a meeting at Jefferson Hall on Friday evening, January 26, at which time Counselor Summer H. Lark was celebrated upon his recent appointment as Deputy Assistant District Attorney of Kings County. Mr. Lark presided over introduced District Attorney Doole, Counsel Kelly, congressman-elect Coller, the Rear Commissioner, Shippen Sark and H. H. Procter, Mr. Jacoby, and a number of other citizens, who spoke. Mrs. Eilee Stannard Smith sang, with Lucien H. White at the piano, and an orchestra played.
Nazarene Church, Brooklyn
On Sunday, January 21, at Waterbury County, Dr. Proctor spoke in behalf of the proposed community center in that city for colored people. Miss Jessie Williams graduated last week from the Maxwell Training School for Teachers. Ladies of the church are preparing
MEMORIAL A. M. B. R. ZION GRUON 2:4
New Main A. M. Yoolers, New H. S. Odena.
A. M. Yoolers, stationage 2:23 New Main
A. M. Yoolers, stationage 10:45 Sunday School; 2 p. m., preschool;
7 p. m., C. B. U., Tuesday evening, class;
C. B. U., preschool, meeting;
Communion, first Sunday service;
Officine, Brotherhood, 1st and 2nd Sundays at a clock p. m. Pause's passage 6479-W.
Dec. 18-26-19.
GRACE ODOROGATIONAL GRUON Y.
A. M. Yoolers, pastor, services; Sunday School and Preaching at 11 a.m.; Church School at 1 p. m.; P. S. P. C. B. Forum and tocheries club meetings at 7:46 p. m.
nnesday, Woman's Aid at x3 West 19th street at a p. m. Thursday, Drama club meetings at 7:46 p. m. Saturday, choir rehearsal at X. W. G. A. at 7:00 p. m.
BALANKER CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
(institutional), Harlem Street and
Town Avenue, Harlem, NYCORTH,
pastor, Sunday services; preachers,
a. Biblio School 9:48 a.m. Young
men, Sunday 7:48 p.m. Young men,
mooring Sunday 7:48 p.m. Boys
sunday evening and early, Friday
afternoon, Open church; Pastor's office
p.m.; Telephone Decatur 1982. To reach
church from Manhattan take Busway to
street, Brooklyn, or carriage to
Fulton, within one block of church.
ST. JAMES PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
18:51 West 1871th St, New York City,
Rev. Frank M. Hlynder, D. D., Pastor,
services on Sunday during 18:52 w-
ellows, follows 18:52 w., Sunday
School; 4 p. in Brooklyn, 7 p. in
Christian Encourage 8 p. in, mer-
ger, Player service, 4 p. in, Junior
Encourage Friday; 8:30 p. in, Boys' Athlete
day of each month, Visitors and Strangers
are urged to attend all of their services
day of Lord's Supper at 8 p. in,
phone, auditions 1856., Church Yale
leader 1861.
BENNALL MEMORIAL - PRESBYTERIAN
HOSPITAL—129 West 190th street, Bristol, W.
R. Lawson, Minneapolis, Sunday service 11
m. B. Berkshire, p. B. B. Sunday-school,
11 m. B. Berkshire, p. B. Sunday-school,
11 m. B. Berkshire, Every Wednesday p. B. B.
Sunday service, All 426 community Fridays.
FURNISHED ROOMS
FURNISHED ROOM--And kitchen to let,
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PROST PALLOY--To rent. 2076 Madison
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FURNISHED ROOMS--To let from $5.00 up
824 West 123rd street, L. H. Ittman,
Telephone 0181 Morningside. Feb-31
201 W. 191st St.-One nice small front
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UNFURNISHED APARTMENT
TWO UNFURNISHED front rooms, only
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FURNISHED ROOMS--BROOKLYN
TO LET--Parter floor and basement, six
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Phone Decatur 0280 party M.
FURNISHED APARTMENT--BROOKLYN
FOR SALE--Purchased apartment of 6
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Mr. Riley wishes private table boarders
Very reasonable, 100, West 141st street
apartment 57, phone Aulibon 9110.
Jan 20-4t
(for their annual fair, March 5, to 9. with Mrs. H. H. Proctor as chairman. The next installment on the Building Fund will be received February 11.
Fleet Street Church: Brooklyn
"Zaccheaus, the publican, vs. The minute man," was the theme from which Dr. Brown deduced his warton Sunday morning, preaching to a large and appreciative audience. The sermon was one of those often heard in story form, but in this none of the spiritual struggles usually portrayed were seen in the conversation between Zaccheaus. To understand the significance of the collecting of tales or to be known as the leading citizen in Jericho, One was able to observe closely, study in detail and interpret, and to become more intimately acquainted with the great plan of salvation.
The Rev. W. N. Holt of Lexington, Va., sang two selections at the close of the sermon. Bishop W. L. Lee offered prayer and eleven persons united with the church. At 3 p.m., Dr. Brown was the speaker at Newman Memorial Church, Herkimer street and Russell place. At 7:45 The Rev. A. A. Crooke was the speaker, theme, "Eternal Life" Dr. Crooke is among the able ministers of the church and for three years pastored this church, terminating his pastoral service at the Rush Memorial Church, Manhattan, three years ago, when he was elected to go to Bridge as Zion's representative in that field as superintendent of the work. Tuesday evening, the class of instruction will have their final meeting and on Sunday all recent members will be received in full connection.
Beginning February 5, through the 9th, the anniversary celebration of the church will be in progress. The auxiliaries and prominent ministers and laymen of Brooklyn and Manhattan will have a large part in the making of the program. Souvenir booklets are in readiness with the various official groups of the church board that will serve in years to come as a memorial to the steady advancement of this particular church body. At times in her history it has appeared that the church stood still, her progress was so slow. She has steadily gained ground, however, and today, under the
Beginning Sunday, November 12, home cooked dinner served daily from 8 to 8:30, 65 cts. Sunday dinner, 1 to 8:30—chicken dinner, 75 cts. (11-13-3m
Harlem 7483
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ANNOUNCEMENT
Mr. and Mrs. J. Clark with Alastair
George, with to announce the
riage of their daughter, Minnie Clark.
Mr. Harry Clark towers on舞台.
Mr. Clark to high room, at the
dance of Rev. and Mrs. J. P. W. W.
Montclair, N. J.
WANTED. More reliable, industrial and women to represent the Gift Association of New Jersey. Send information and everywhere in the regional commissions paid. Good interest for advancement. See Globe for paper. Write or call today at 843-546 Broad Street, New York, 843-546 Broad Street, New York, Mitchell 1161.
able pastate of Rev. Brown stands among the leading Zion, and a bulwark for public community. To see the extension recently opened to the public please preciate it.
Bridge Street Church, Brooklyn
On Monday evening, January 22, election for the annual fair named follows; Mrs. Bessie Robinson, student; Mrs. Martha Mitchell, student; Mrs. Minnie W. Walker, Robinson, secretaries; Henry Washing, treasurer; and Mrs. M. M. M. weather, chairman of the election committee. The fair will take place on January 22, Washington's Birthday.
On Sunday, although the snow was falling fast, it did not prevent a faction of audience at the morning service. The pulpit was filled by the pastor Tyler, and he preached from the room found in the second epistle of Peter 6, 7, 8. The subject was "Christ and to faith." He said, "Add the add virtue, and moral courage to the true, then knowledge, and to applaud the whole thing is to know what God is. To knowledge and perseverance. This does not mean cants, but means control of the Then add patience; we must God and if we do not believe true to His promise then we take our cause out of His hand. That is why we have reverential fear. Then brotherlessness; we cannot love God who have not seen and hate our impressive helpful and hopeful
At the evening service Rev. Wm. N. Holt of Lexington, Va., preached his text was selected from St. Luke, Col. "For the Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost." The sermon was enthusiastic and filled with thoughtful points. Beside him, the doctor, Dr. Holt is also an author. At 2 p.m. Sunday school children the school was well attended and the collection good. Rev. N. Holt was a visitor and spoke word of encouragement. He admonished children to get God in their hearts while young, for he is a light in nature and hope in despair. At 4 p.m. the pastor, congregants and choir attended the service at St. Alma Presbyterian Church, Starks, pastor, Rev. E. E. Toller was the speaker and his choir rendered a cellent music.
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