Washington Bee
Saturday, February 15, 1913
Washington, D.C.
Page text (machine-generated)
IF IT'S NEWS, IT'S IN THE BEE,
FOR THE BEE IS A NEWSPAPER.
THE BEE
WASHINGTON
Washington's Best and Leading Negro Newspaper That's THE BEE
VOL. XXXIII. NO. 36
WASHINGTON. D.C. SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 15, 1913
ASST. ATTORNEY GENERAL W. H. LEWIS
DELIVERS A MASTERLY ADDRESS BEFORE THE MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
HOLDS ALL SPELLBOUND TILL THE LAST DELIVERED SENTENCE INSPIRES A BURST OF APPLAUSE.
Boston, Mass., Feb. 12.—One of the most eloquent addresses ever delivered in the legislative halls of Massachusetts was delivered this afternoon by Hon. Wm. H. Lewis, assistant United States Attorney General. One of the most inspiring sights that ever met the vision of man was the appearance of this wonderful, brainy Negro, whose forebears were slaves, standing in the Massachusetts legislative halls holding solons and others spell-bound with his matchless eloquence. One of the most encouraging signs of the times was the many defense of his people made by this man. And one of the best evidences of the race's progress lay in the fact that Massachusetts, the seat of learning, the birthplace of American liberty, and the rostrum of free speech had invited this man, a Negro, to recall to the people of that state, and the people everywhere, the life, character and deeds of the great emancipator—Abraham Lincoln, Mr. Lewis' address was as follows:
Paine and Gerry, to that great document, but here is Boston, Concord Lexington and Bunker Hill, and thousand memorials of the revolution besides. Great, indeed, was the part that Massachusetts played in achieving independence, greater still was her share in the emancipation of the slave. Lincoln himself said that Boston had done more to bring on the war than any other city; and when emancipation had been achieved he generously credited the result "to the logic and moral power of Garrison and the anti-slavery people."
This day, therefore, belongs to Massachusetts. It is a part of her glorious history. Emancipation was but the triumph of Puritan principle—the right of each individual to eat his bread out of the sweat of his own brow or not at all. The history of the abolition of slavery in America could not be written with Massachusetts left out; the history of Massa chusets herself, since the revolution would be but a dreary, barren wast
Mr. Speaker, Your Excellency the Governor of the Commonwealth, Members of the House of Representatives:
The power of the House to summons forthwith any citizen of the commonwealth has never been resisted; and so by designation of the Honorable Speaker, in accordance with the order of the House, I am here in answer to your summons. You have invited me as a member of the liberated race, to address you upon this Lincoln's birthday in commemoration of the fiftieth anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation. Words would be futile to express my deep appreciation of this high honor, however unworthily bestowed. Twice already have I been before this honorable House. I came first as an humble petitioner seeking redress against discrimination on account of color. You then granted my prayer. Some years later I came as a member of this House, the last representative of my race to sit in this body. You treated me then as a man and an equal. And now the honors of an invited guest I shall cherish as long as memory lasts.
Today is the anniversary of the birth of Abraham Lincoln, the preserver of the Union, the librator of a race. "The mystic chords of memory," stretching from heart to heart of millions of Americans at this hour, "swell the chorus of thanksgiving" to the Aimighty for the life, character and service of the great president. Four brief crucial years he represented the soul of the Union struggling for immortality—for perpetuity; in him was the spirit of liberty struggling for a new birth among the children of men.
"Slavery Must Die."
he said, "that the Union may live." We have a Union today because we have emancipation; we have emancipation because we have a united country. Though nearly fifty years have clapsed since his martyrd death and we see his images everywhere, yet Lincoln is no mere legendary figure of an heroic age done in colors, cast in bronze, or sculptured in marble; he is a living, vital force in American politics and statescraft. The people repeat his wise sayings; politicians invoke his principles; men of many political stripes profess to be following in his footsteps. We of this generation can almost see him in the flesh and blood and hear falling from his lips the sublime words of Gettysburg, the divine music of the second inaugural and the immortal Proclamation of Emancipation. We see this man of mighty thews and sinews, his feet firmly planted in mother earth, his head towering in the heavens. He lived among men, but he walked with God. He was himself intensely human, but his sense of right, of justice, seemed to surpass the wisdom of men. A true child of nature, he beheld the races of men in the raw without the artificial trappings of civilization and the adventitious circumstances of birth or wealth or place; and could see no difference in their natural rights.
said he, "my ancient faith tell me that all men are created equal."
As a man he was brave, yet gentle, strong yet tender and sympathetic, with the intellect of a philosopher, yet witht the heart of a little child. As a statesman he was prudent, wise, sagacious, far-seeing and true. As President he was firm, magnanimous, merciful and just. As a liberator and benefactor of mankind, he has no peer in all human history.
There are only three great charters of freedom among Anglo-Saxon peoples, the Magna Churta, which the barons wrung from King John at Runnymede, the Declaration of Independence, which a few colonials threw at the head of an obstinate king the Emancipation Proclamation which Lincoln cast into the balance for the Union. The Magna Charta gave freedom to the nobility: the Declaration of Independence brought freedom down to the plain people; the Proclamation of Abraham Lincoln set free the under man and proclaimed liberty to the slave and the serf throughout the world.
Paine and Gerry, to that great document, but here is Boston, Concord, Lexington and Bunker Hill, and a thousand memorials of the revolution besides. Great, indeed, was the part that Massachusetts played in achieving independence, greater still was her share in the emancipation of the slave. Lincoln himself said that Boston had done more to bring on the war than any other city; and when emancipation had been achieved he generously credited the result "to the logic and moral power of Garrison and the anti-slavery people." This day, therefore, belongs to Massachusetts. It is a part of her glorious history. Emancipation was but the triumph of Purjitan principle—the right of each individual to eat his bread out of the sweat of his own brow or not at all. The history of the abolition of slavery in America could not be written with Massachusetts left out; the history of Massachusetts herself, since the revolution, would be but a dreary, barren waste without the chapter of her part in the emancipation.
The House does well to pause in its deliberations to commemorate this anniversary. In 1837 your predecessors threw open the old Hall of Representatives to the first meeting of the New England Anti-Slavery Society. A year later the legislature adopted resolutions against the slave trade, for the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia, and the prohibition of slavery in the territories. The fathers early enacted that there should be neither bond slaves nor villeimage amongst us except captives taken in just wars and those condemned judicially to serve. When it was attempted to land the first cargo of slaves upon her soil, the people seized them and sent them back to their own country and cline. In spite of the prayers and resolutions and acts of the early fathers, a form of slavery erased up here, but it was milder than the English villeimage; it resembled apprenticeship except in the duration. The slave had many of the rights of free men; the right to marry and the right to testify in court. Either with the decision of Somerset's case in England or the adoption of the first Constitution of the Commonwealth, during the revolution, that institution passed away forever. The voices of freedom were first raised here. Whittier Lowell and Longfellow sang the songs of emancipation. Garrison, Phillips and Parker were the prophets and disciples of Lincoln. In the darkest days of slavery John Quincy Adams held aloft the torch of liberty and fed its flame with his own intrepid spirit. Summer was the scourge of God, the conscience of the state incarnate.
The people of Massachusetts were not only idealists, dreamers, and molders of public opinion, but when thirty years of agitation had reached its culmination in the Civil War, Massachusetts sent 150,000 of her sons to sustain upon the battlefields of the Republic the ideals which she had advocated in the halls of Congress, in the forum and the market place. The people of Massachusetts, true to their history and tradition, have abolished here, so far as laws can do so, every discrimination between race and color, and every inequality between man and man.
I have recalled these things for no vainligorious purpose. We should remind ourselves constantly that we have a history behind us, that we have a character to sustain. Are we of this generation worthy descendants of tea spillers and abolitionists? Are we living up to the traditions of the Commonwealth, to the principles of the fathers in relation to the treatment of citizens of color? I have observed with aching heart and agonizing spirit during the last twenty years not only the growing coldness and indifference on the part of our people to the fate of the Negro elsewhere; but here in our own city the breaking up of the old ties of friendship that once existed between people of color and all classes of citizens, just after emancipation, the gradual falling away of that sympathy and support upon which we could always confidently rely in every crisis. I have watched the spirit of race prejudice raise its sinister shape in the labor market, in the business house, the real estate exchange, in public places, and even in our schools, colleges and churches.
I say all this with pain and sorrow. I would be the last to "soil my own nest" or to utter one word that would reflect in the slightest degree upon Massachusetts or her people. I love inexpressibly every foot of Massachusetts soil, from the Berkshires to Essex, from the Capes to the islands off our southern coast. I have studied her history; I know her people. And when I have played out the little game with destiny I want to rest upon some Massachusetts hillside. I can never forget the emotions that filled my breast when first I set foot in Boston just a quarter of a century ago, a Negro lad in search of education, freedom, and opportunity. As I walked these sacred streets I lived over the revolution; I saw them peopleled with the mighty men of the past. I hastened to make my obeisance first to the thespass where At-
THE MASTER OF THE MUSIC
HON WM. H LEWIS,
The Assistant Attorney General, Refore the Massachusetts Legislature Feb
ruary 12th Lincoln's Birthday
ker Hill, where Peter Salem stood guard over the fallen Warren. I said to myself, "Here at last no black man need he ashamed of his race; here he has made history." And then to scenes of still another period I turned my gaze, I looked upon the narrow streets where Garrison was mobbed for my sake. I viewed the place where a few brave men gave Shack rach to freedom and to fame. The pictured walls of the old "cradle of liberty" seemed to still echo to the silvery tones of Phillips. The moulded face of Governor Andrew spoke a benediction: "I know not what record, awaits me in that other life, but this I do know: I never despised any man because he was ignorant, because he was poor, or because he was black." I felt that here at last was liberty, and here I would make my home.
You say to me, "Certainly you can find no fault," I gratefully acknowledge the debt which I owe the people of Massachusets, but I cannot forget my brethren here. I cannot forget my children, too, who were born here, and by the blessings of God and your help I will leave to them and their children a freer and better Massachusets even than I have found her.
"Eternal Vigilance Is the Price of Liberty."
I want upon this day to remind Massachusetts of her old ideals of liberty, justice, equality for all beneath her pure white flag. Laws, customs, institutions are nothing unless behind them stands a vital, living, throbbing public sentiment in favor of their enforcement in the spirit as well as in the letter.
Tide of Prejudice
My friends, unless we can stay the rising tide of prejudice; unless we can hark back to our old ideals and old faiths, our very statues and memorials will some day mock us and cry shame upon us
National emancipation was the culmination of a moral revolution, such as the world has never seen. It was not as Garrison intended, a peaceful revolution, the unanimous verdict of an awakened national conscience. Thirty years of fierce agitation and fierce politics made an appeal to arms absolutely certain. A conflict of arms brought on by a conflict of opinion was bound to be followed by a conflict of opinion, whichever side won. So for fifty years since emancipation there has been more or less conflict over the Negro and his place in the Republic. The results of that conflict have in many instances been oppressive and even diarrhoeal to his freedom. Many things incidental to emancipation and vital to complete freedom are unfortunately still in the controversial stages. The right of the Negro to cast a ballot on the same qualifications as his other fellow citizens is not yet conceded everywhere. Public sentiment has not yet caught up with the principles of true democracy. The right of the Negro to free access to all public places and to exact similar treatment therein is not universal in this country. He is segregated by law in some sections; he is segregated by custom in others. He is subjected to many petty annoyances and injustices and oftimes deep humiliation solely on account of his color. The explanation of this reactionary tendency sometimes given is that the Negro is only a generation from slavery. It should not be forgotten that individuals of every other race in history have at some time been held slaves. The bondage of Israel is today only an epic poem. The Greek Slave adorns simply a niche in some
The Anglo-Saxon has not only worn the Roman and Norman collars, but individuals of that race were sold as slaves in the West Indies as late as the Seventeenth Century. White men have enslaved white men, black men have enslaved black men. The place of human slavery in the divine economy I do not understand, nor do I allow it. I am glad that the human race has long since passed that stage in its development. No race has a right to lord it over another or seek to degrade it because of a history of servitude; all have passed through this cruel experience; the history of the black race is a little more recent, that is all. The fact of slavery, therefore, should not impose the slightest limitation upon the liberty of the Negro or restriction upon his rights as a man and citizen.
Question Now Agitating.
Question Now Agitating.
The one great phase of the race question agitating the country today is that of intermarriage and miscegenation. It is a serious question; it is a vital question. No one will deny the right, of any man to protect his family stock, or the right of a group to preserve its racial integrity. The facts show, however, that laws, however stringent, will not accomplish it. I submit for the serious consideration of the American people that the only danger of infusion from the Negro side is simply one thing, and that is summed up in one word, "injustice." Why is it that thousands of colored men and women go over to the other side, "pass" as we say? It is for no other purpose than to escape the social ostracism and civic disabilities of the Negro. Why is it that we see so many pathetic attempts to be white? It is simply to escape injustice. In a country where every opportunity is open to the white, in business, in society, in government, and the door shut against or reluctantly opened to the black, the natural unconscious effort of the black is to get white. Where black is a badge of an inferior cast position in society, the natural effort of the black is to find some method of escape. I do not advocate intermarriage; I do not defend miscegenation. The same thing is true today as it was true in the time of Lincoln. In his debates with Douglas in 1858 he noted.
"that among the free states, those which make the colored man the nearest equal to the white have proportionately the fewest mulattoes, the least amalgamation."
I submit, therefore, that the only sure way to put an end to this tendency or desire, so far as the Negro is concerned, is to accord him all his public and political rights and to treat each individual upon his merits as a man and citizen, according to him such recognition as his talents, his genius, his services to the community, or the state entitles him. Make black, brown, yellow the "open sesame" to the same privileges and the same opportunities as the white, and no one will care to become white. Upon this day, which commemorates the emancipation of the black and the larger freedom of the white race, the redemption of the state and the birth of a new nation, I would bring to you a message not of blackness and despair, but of hope—hope triumphant, hope, that Watts has pictured as blind with one string to her lyre, sees not the star just ahead, but sits supreme at the top of the world.
Emancipation redeemed the precious promises of the Declaration of Independence. It rid the Republic of its one great inconsistency, a government of the people resting upon despotism; it rescued the ship of state from the rocks of slavery and section-
Chamber of Commerce of Rochester, N. Y., Celebrates Lincoln's and Douglass' Birthday.
Rochester, N. Y., Feb. 14.
At the celebration of Lincoln's and Douglass' birthday, February 12, the
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON
Guest of the Chamber of Commerce
at Buffalo, New York.
Chamber of Commerce of the City of Rochester, N. Y., composed of the wealthy manufacturers and business men of that city, had as its guest of honor at luncheon Dr. Booker T. Washington, who delivered an address.
Major Charles R. Douglass of this
MAJOR CHARLES R. DOUGLASS,
Son of the Late Frederick Douglass,
Invited as the Guest of the Chamber of Commerce, Buffalo, New York
city was also invited to be present as a guest of the Chamber of Commerce. The Commemorative Society of Rochester, of which Hon. John W. Thompson is president, gave an elaborate program and banquet the same evening at Convention Hall, at which Dr. Washington was the principal speaker.
THE KINGDOM.
The King Leaves the Queen—The Sergeant-at-Arms Reigns Supreme—The Queen of Song Infatuated With Her Beauty.
There is the Kingdom. The king has left for parts in the West and his queen is under the protection of a sergeant-at-arms. At a recent meeting of the Kingdom it was decided to admit Charlotte Brown. A few chocolate brownies decided to accept the invitation to join while others refused. However, a few chocolate brownies joined last week and one lady who was met in the street flatly refused. The criticism has been so great against this Kingdom until it decided to give it some color. At one of its recent functions three very well known chocolate brownies were present, who held a hurried consultation among themselves and discussed the surroundings. Their conclusions were that they must be in the wrong place. They were the darkest clouds in the house and they said: "Certainly we must be in the wrong place. It was not a hard matter to discern what gave their face color or made them dissimilar to those who recognized the fact that they were in an embarrassed position. These three individuals, who became so embarrassed, belong to the leading families in this city, and it is not their color that gives them recognition in this world, but their intellect. The Kingdom wanted to give a reception on the lily white order and each member was requested to name an intellectual male. At the conclusion of the nominations the ebony was in the majority. The Bee is informed that future social functions will be somewhat colored. The queen of song and the king are brother and sister. The queen has the air of a fashionable blonde. She is pleasant and fascinating, but her lily white organization is a failure. The queen started a similar organization some time ago, but the expose of The Bee caused its disbandment. The recent bill passed by Congress will no doubt have some effect on the Kingdom. The members must prove their identity.
Revival at Galbraith
Galbraith A. M. E. Zion Church. Sixth Street, between L. and M. is now in the midst of a glorious revival. Special services have been going on since watch meeting, and the interest seems to be on the increase night. Sunday morning, February 16, at 11 a. m., Dr. S. S Corrothers, the pastor, will begin a series of sermons, using for his subject Sunday morning "The Most Important Factor in-Race Development" at 8 a. m. "Why Pace
DEVOTED TO GENERAL INTEREST
(By Miss G. B. Mayfield)
Fifty years ago, January 1, 1863, Abraham Lincoln set free nearly four million slaves.
A line painting presented Miss Helen Gould on her recent marriage was the combined gift, of several thousand soldiers. One was a contribution from the Negro soldiers of the Tenth Cavalry.
It is said the color line is being drawn in London, England. American prejudice is fast invading the English capital. The equality treatment of the Negro is presented by the American whites. One well known saloon has no Negro admittance.
Last Sunday President Taft attended the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church and occupied the famous Lincoln pew. Dr. Radliffe preached, his subject being "The Boy Jesus."
Allen von Behren, a prominent manufacturer in Evansville, Ind., shot and killed three Negroes, his excuse being that the Negroes were trying to run the plant.
In Houston, Miss., two Negroes were lynched last Saturday. One was saturated with tar and chained to an iron pump and burned.
North Carolina should be given the blue ribbon. She has not had a lynching for sixty years. The example she has furnished should be followed by her sister states throughout the southland.
It is said the colored people in the east end of Louisville, Ky., are to have a branch library. The library board has appropriated $4,000 for this purpose. The sum of $1,000 is to be raised by the citizens.
The banquet to Bishop Alexander Walters will be a nonparti-affair. It will be one of the most successful events in the history of the colored citizens.
The outlook is that President Tait will pardon Lawrence Norman, Judge Anderson and Mr. Justice Gould, the United States Attorney, have made a favorable recommendation for executive clemency.
The Turks are now slaying Christians, but carried the young girls off.
Albert B. Cassey, a member of the New Jersey bar and one of the most successful lawyers in the State, is being pushed for the office of recorder of deeds. Mr. Cassey is a graduate of Howard University and a young man of ability.
The Illinois legislature on last Wednesday ratified the amendment to the constitution to elect United States Senators by direct vote of the people.
General Jones' marchers left New York Wednesday for Washington. They will have a cool march if the weather continues or a blizzard overtakes them.
Senator Cullom is opposed to invasion of Mexico, while Senator Trillman is very much concerned.
The Standard Oil Company has been ousted by the Missouri Supreme Court.
There seems to be some trouble in the air. There is a great deal of sensational grief going on among the people.
There will be no marriage of Chinese, Japanese and Negroes with white women. Japan will have to be reckoned with.
The country is in an uproar. A good battle between the United States and some other country would make a change in conditions.
Lincoln's birthday was properly observed throughout the country.
Public Meeting
Thursday evening, March 6, 1913, there will be held at Galbraith A. M. E. Zion Church, this city, a conference of men from all the states, at which time it is proposed to consolidate all the Negro political organizations for the protection of the civil and political rights of the race.
Misinformed.
February 11, 1913.
Editor of The Bee.
Referring to the statement in The Ree that I made a mi-statement regarding the position, to which the colored battalion of the District Militia and the Colored High School Cadet have been assigned in recent inaugural parade, I beg to say that my statement was based on what I regarded as correct information. I am glad, however, to know that I was misinformed. Personally, I have viewed only a small part of an inaugural parade since McKinley's, and that one only partially. I had no personal knowledge on the subject and of course no desire to misrepresent. I shall be glad to make correction in my correspondence.
Scotland's "Daft Days"
So bilious were the old ceremonies of welcoming the new year in Scotland that Dec 31 and Jan. 1 won for themselves the designation of "the daft days" Temperance legislation has done much in recent years to moderate and refine the festivities, which still, however, assume extensive and exuberant proportions. Only a few years ago a writer in the London Chronicle in Edinburgh on New Year's eve saw the "Black Maria" perambulating the streets and picking up the hopelessly drunken persons from the pavements and doorsteps for conveyance to the police station.
It was formerly the custom in Ireland and Wales to carry a lantern tastefully decorated with ribbons and containing a wren, round each hamlet and village on New Year's day and make calls on dwellers in cottage and hall. The bearers, swinging the lantern at each door, would favor all whom it might concern with a song and receive a monetary reward.
The Old Time Stagecoach.
In 1762 there were, strange as it seems, only six stagecoaches running in all England, and of course these were the only public vehicles for travelers. Even these were a novelty, and a person named John Crosset thought they were such a dangerous innovation that he wrote a pamphlet against them. "These coachees," he wrote, "make gentlemen come to London upon every small occasion, which otherwise they would not do except upon urgent necessity. Nay, the convenience of the passage makes their wives come often up, who rather than come such long journeys on horseback would stay at home. Then when they come to town they must be in the wade, get fine clothes, go to plays and treats and by these means get such a habit of idleness and love of pleasure that they are uneasy after."
Roast Pig In' Servia.
The favorite dish of the Serylans, says a writer in the Wide World Magazine, consists of a lamb or sucking pig roasted whole over ashes. A pit is first dug and filled with wood-vine branches for choice, as they give the best flavor—and the fire is then allowed to burn for several hours. The carcass is next impaled with a stout stick and slowly turned round and round over the embers. The result, after six hours' turning, is a very luscious meal, for all the gravy is kept in and the meat is unusually tender. No picnic in Servia is considered complete without this delicacy. A story goes that on one of his campaigns Napoleon noticed a group of Servian soldiers cooking meat in this way, whereupon he came up, inquired what they were doing, tasted the meat and was delighted with it.
Races of Mankind.
The races of mankind are five in number—white, yellow, brown, red and black, or the Caucasian, Mongolian, Malayan, Indian and negro. The interrelationships of these different breeds have been the subject of study with the specialists for ages, but the disputes are as numerous as they were when the study began. Whether the various races sprang from some one original race and if so what that original race was, is a question that is still in limbo. Between these five races, as found at present, there are physical, moral and mental differences so marked as to seem to preclude a common origin and yet, unless such origin is assumed, the difficulty of the case is greatly enhanced. Race origins are an ensolved problem.—New York American
Rainbows That Can Change Sex.
Rainbows That Can Change Sex. In many parts of the world it is the general belief that the rainbow has the power to change sex. This queer belief obtains in such widely separated districts as South Africa and Norway and China and Australia. The Zulus have a long folklore story of the young man who was changed into a wrinkled old woman by touching the many hued arch. The Scandinavian peasants have a similar story, and in Greece they say that anybody who runs against the end of the rainbow will have his or her sex instantly changed. In France and India to pass under the rainbow has a similar effect.
Well Trained.
Old Lady (improving the occasion)—Ah, my poor man, you would not be in this position if you had received an early training in some trade or calling. Trump—Don't you tork too sudden about wot you don't know nothin' about, missus. No trainin', indeed! W'y. I was in prison afore I was fourteen.—London Mail.
Made His Hair Come Out
Habitual Customer (to his barber)—Your confounded hair restorer has made my hair come off more than ever! Barber—Ah, you must 'ave put too much on, sir! Made the 'air come right out, 'stead of only 'arfway.—Windsor Magazine.
His Philosophy.
Employer—I see you've collected a lot of small accounts, but you haven't made much headway with the bigger ones. Collector—No, sir; I generally make it a rule to—h'm—follow along the line of least realstance—Chicago Tribune.
There Are Cooks and Cooks
A lady correspondent remarks cynically that many a man who would hesitate to make a wife of his cook is quite ready to make a cook of his wife.—London Standard.
He who would rest must wash Italian Proverb.
A German Fairy Tale.
As the cobbler stepped into his shop his scold of a wife started to lecture him unmercifully for coming in late. "Be quiet. Zenobia," said he affably. "Today I have had a great stroke of nuck. Coming home, I met a fairy who had lost her way. I put her on the right track, and out of gratitude she presented me with this pair of slippers. Whoever puts on the left one becomes invisible. Then if you put on the right one you reappear. You will see that this present is very valuable, because we will be able to make lots of money with it." Zenobia became still and stood overcome with curiosity in front of her husband. "Come," said he; "let us try it once." She slipped on the left slipper and positively in the same instant vanished away.
"It is really true!" said the cobbler, astonished. "She is gone!" Then he took the right slipper, went out of the house and threw it in the deepest well—Fliegende Blatter.
Munich Royalty Is Modest.
As far as meeting royalty is concerned, Munich is a great contrast to Berlin. It is impossible to stay long in the Prussian capital without having one's path stopped or impeded by the passing of some prince of the royal house or, at all events, by the cohorts of police who safeguard them. One may stay for months in Munich without seeing more than a royal carriage driving past almost unnoticed except for the raising of bats. The popularity of the Wittelsbachs is genuine, and every Munlicher takes a lively interest in the ways and doings of the members of the royal house. The tragic history of the Wittelsbachs in recent times is perhaps the reason why the personalities of the present generation seem somewhat effaced. They at all events take care not to stand in the limelight.-Mauchester Guardian.
Champagne From Sponges
"Champagne makers of Rheims buy a lot of our sponges," said a wholesale dealer. "They squeeze champagne out of them. They must squeeze in the year's course a million bottles of champagne out of sponges. Mystified, aren't you? But there is no mystery about the matter. Champagne as it ferments is powerful stuff; it breaks the strongest bottles, and in the past all the champagne that broke its bottles and escaped was lost. Now, though, they pack the champagne bottles in clean sponges, and every day or two they go over the plant, and if any of the bottles have broken they squeeze into casks the wine that the sponges have retalned. This wine, reclarified, refined and bottled again, makes a very good second quality drink."
How a Flea Jumps.
It is said that a flea leaps 200 times its height, and, while it usually does land on its feet, it often falls, especially when it falls on a perfectly smooth surface, where the claws can get only a slight hold. A flea has six legs, whose great length and bulk make them so heavy that they must be a great help in keeping their owner right side up when it makes one of those gigantic jumps, and when it lands upside down or in some other way its ability to kick is so great that not more than one wriggle is needed to set things right. A flea's wings are mere scales and of no use. But, small and worthless as they are, they tell the entomologist something about the proper classification of the insect. To the flea itself they have no value.
Compelling Use of Surnames
Compelling Use of Surnames. Some folk have been compelled by law to change their surnames. In 1603, for instance, the name of MacGregor was proscribed, and those who had previously borne it were compelled to adopt another. In Ireland, also, as far back as 1485, an act was passed ordering the inhabitants of certain districts to "gue appareled like Englishmen, wear their head after the English manner and take English surnames." The act further directed that those concerned should take for their new names "the name of a town, as Sutton, Chester, Cork or a color, as White, Black, Brown," and that they and their wives should use this new surname under pain of forfeiting all their belongings —London Graphite.
"To the Lamppeat."
"To the lamppost" is a mistranslation of "a la lanterne." There was no lamppost. The lamp was hung over the middle of the street in the center of a coral, which passed over pulleys at the sides of the street. The lamp was let down, the person to be hanged was substituted for it and the ends of the cord pulled.—London Notes and Queries.
Poor Colors.
"She's always trying to get things to match her complexion."
"What of it?"
"Haven't you ever noticed her complexion?"—Milwaukee Sentinel.
"Wouldn't it be fine to live in clover?" said the optimist.
"Huh! You'd only get hay fever," said the pessimist. — Cincinnati Enquirer.
Try It
A man never quite realizes how much furniture he owns until he tries to walk rapidly through his rooms in the dark.-Puck.
Describing Her.
Gibbs—Say, old man, that little wife of yours is a picture. Dibbs—Morr she's a picture puzzle.—Boston Transcript.
Arab Hagolina
Alan Ostler in "The Arabs In Tripoli" comments on the amusing haggling scenes in the desert plunder market when loot of war was the merchandise.
"Why do you not sell at a set price to all alike?" he asked a merchant. "But why?" said he. "If I can get but half a grushe the more from one of them than from another, is it not gain?" "But that wastes time, for while you bargain with one you might have sold to three. They say with us, Time is money." "Oh, folly," he retorted scornfully. "Time is God's and given freely to all men, so that all have it alike. But with the flus one has much, another none, and you must take what you can get."
To hangle with any one is a joy to the Arab. But mutual trust he lacks. "I have known two men," says Mr. Ostler, "farm partners, walk eight miles to a market with three scrawny hens to sell. Both must needs go, for neither would trust the other not to cheat him."
The Speed of Animals
According to naturalists, no animal is known to have exceeded the speed attained by the famous race horse Eysonby. Instantaneous photographs show the full length of one complete stride as about twenty-six feet. In the stride of the fastest racers the blind quarters and the limbs are raised considerably higher than the shoulders and from this relatively great height brought downward and forward, widely separated from each other, as a sportsman says, "to avoid striking the fore legs." The hare which is hunted with fast hounds has not in reality the speed of the dog. The dog, on the other hand, does not attain the speed of the horse. The giraffe is said to run at the rate of fifteen meters (yards) per second under the most favorable conditions. The elephant, going at the rate of two yards a second, carries a weight approximating that carried by six horses—Harper's.
---
An Interested Listener
Mark Twain one rainy day found himself in a room in his club which contained only one other occupant The two men drifted into conversation. Mark began a discussion on the merits of "Tess of the d'Urbervilles," and made brilliant deductions as to the character and personality of the writer of "Tess," from what he called the internal evidence of the story His listener at times mildly dissented, but on the whole maintained an attitude of impassivity:
When "Tess" had been labeled only passable, Mark Twain's chance acquaintance excused himself and departed. Calling the attendant Mark Twain he had been conversed.
"That's Mr. Thomas piled the steward imp
Granted that it is that we shall remain our appointed lives that mankind should death. Without that dread the world could hardly remain peopled. The dread of death is to the soul what the law of gravity is to the body. It anchors us to the earth. Without that dread to weigh us down and keep us to the globe half mankind would be driven by curiosity, by the love of change, by the dread of ennui, by what Bacon calls "niceness and satiety," to push open the closed door and see what is beyond. Children and a few very happy and easily pleased people might perhaps say they would not explore farther and that they were perfectly content with things as they are—St. James' Gazette.
To Calculate Longevity
"Bacon took a deep interest in longevity and its earmarks," said a physician, "and Bacon's signs of long life and of short life are as true today as they ever were. You won't live long, Bacon pointed out, if you have soft, fine hair, a fine skin, quick growth, large head, early corpulence, short neck, small-mouth, brittle and separated teeth and fat ears. Your life, barring accidents, will be very lengthy if you have slow growth, coarse hair, a rough skin, deep wrinkles in the forehead, firm flesh, a large mouth, wide nostrils, strong teeth set close together and a hard, gristly ear."
Obligation Both Ways
"Of course you are very proud to have them."
"Yes, and I have no doubt the old masters would have considerable respect for me if they knew what I paid for them."—Washington Star.
A Social Catastrophe
"Was no one injured in the railway collision, count?" "No, but nevertheless it was a most painful situation. First, second, third and fourth class passengers all mingled together Simply unheard of"—Fillegende Blatter.
Not an Expert Opinion
"He has just returned from Mexico. He says a Mexican burro is the most aggravatingly stubborn thing on earth." "He isn't married."-Houston Post.
A Helping Hand.
"Why are you removing all the rocking chalrs?"
"Pa has sworn off on swearing, and we want to do all we can to help him."
—Detroit Free Press.
Boast not thyself of tomorrow, for thou knowest not what a day may bring forth.—Proverbs.
Animal Life.
The May fly's life is complete in four to five hours, during which it is born, matures, loves, fights, mates, propagates and dies. The ordinary tooth lives three to four days, the locust (grasshopper) lives four weeks, dragon fly six to eight weeks, male bees or drones four to five months, snails two to three years, queen bee two to three years, mouse six years, squirrel six years, pigeon ten to twenty years, canary twelve to fifteen years, rabbit ten years, brer fox fourteen years, crawfish twenty years, pig twenty years, lion thirty-five years, toad frog forty years, cat forty years, bear fifty years, raven 100 years, elder duck, 100 years, parrot 100 years, golden eagle 104 years, white headed vulture 118 years, pike 200 years, carp 200 years, elephant 200 years and swan 300 years.
Considering the fact that the average man's age is only about thirty three years, it will be seen that many members of the animal kingdom have a great advantage over the human race in their allotted length of life.
An Insult
Angrily the head of the haberdashery concern stormed into the employment agency and demanded an interview with the manager.
"I understand," he said, "that you have been recommending as AI collectors certain young men whom you represent as having collected money from us. If they can get it from us they can get it from anybody. That's the way you make it appear, consequently your clients land good jobs."
With visions of possible libel suits rising before his guilty conscience, the agent attempted self justification.
"You are considered pretty hard nuts, you know," he said.
"Oh, that's all right," said the man. "It ain't that I'm kicking about, but not one of your men has ever collected a'dollar at our shop, and it don't do any good to lie about it"—New York Times.
It Might Have Been Worse.
Mark Twain during one of his lecture tours was waiting at a station for a delayed train. The lecture committee and several townsmen were with him and talking their best to pass the time away. One man told about a frightfully unhealthy town he had read about, and it was a grewsome tale of dying and burials and that sort. "It might have been worse," Twain followed, in his slow and direct manner. "I lived in that same town for two years, and I never died once—not a single, time." The way he said it seemed to daze the crowd, and not a man said a word in response. "Of course you may think I'm lying," the humorist continued, "and I'm sorry, for I can't get any witnesses to testify that I didn't, because everybody else that lived there is dead."
Dr. Johnson and Tea.
Jonas Hanway was an inveterate foe to tea and wrote a pamphlet in which he ascribed the majority of nervous disorders to tea drinking. He declared that the practice was sapping the vigor of Englishmen and spoiling the beauty of women and expressed horror at the fact that no fewer than six ships were employed in the China tea trade. Dr. Johnson, who reviewed Hanway's diatribe in the Literary Magazine, prefaced his criticism with the frank aweval. "The author is to expect little justice from a hardened and shameless tea drinker, whose kettle has secrecy time to cool, with tea amuses the evening, with tea solaces the midnight and with tea greets the morning," but even he admitted that tea drinking was not good for the working classes, as he thought it an inducement to idleness. —London Chronicle.
More Than Was Asked:
The old tombstone, in the quaint fashion of its kind, implored the passerby to pause and drop a tear, and no sooner had the beautiful girl read the inscription than she began to weep. But her mother reproved her. "Cecilia," she exclaimed, "why can you not have more restraint? You are requested merely to drop a tear, and here you have burst into several!"—Puck.
Patronizing Papa.
Father—Upon my word, you children are getting too dainty for anything, Jam and butter on the same piece of bread, indeed! Why, when I was your age I was glad to get enough dry bread to eat. Bobby—You have a much better time living with us, don't you, father?—National Monthly.
Comforting.
Wife—Why did you tell the Batsons that you married me because I was such a good cook, when you know I can't even boll a potato? Hubby—I had to make some excuse, my dear, and I didn't know what else to say.—London Opinion.
His Advantage
"An aviator, has one big advantage over other men."
"Most of his advantages are over men, but what is this special one?"
"He can want the earth without being called grasping."—Baltimore American.
Economical
Johnny—Mamma, will you wash my face? Mamma—Why, Johnny, can't you do that? Johnny—Yes, but I'll have to wet my hands, and they don't need it.—Lippincott's.
Not Like the National Game. Geraldine—Did you ever play kissing games? Gerald Yes, and I remember them as games that didn't have to be called on account of darkness.—New York Times.
Death Through a Tarantula:
One of the quickest and most complete and justifiable killings that ever I saw came about through a tarantula. It was at a mine camp in the old days, and the camp bully had a tarantula impaled on a stick. A man newly arrived from the east stood gazing, fascinated with horror, at the squirming reptile, working its black fangs in the effort to reach something that it could fasten them into. Suddenly, without warning, the bully thrust the tarantula straight into the tenderfoot's face. His whiskers saved him from the fangs, but he let out a yell as if he had actually been bitten, and jumped back, I fully believe, ten feet. Then as the fellow came poking the tarantula toward him again, the tenderfoot drew his revolver and turned loose on his tormentor. His first shot would have been enough, as it went straight through the fellow's body, but the tenderfoot had his excitement to work off, and he never stopped shooting until his revolver had been emptied and the man with the tarantula was a sieve. "Served him right," was the verdict of the coroner's jury, and the case never went to court for trial.
Why Chinese Shops Are Small
The average Chinese shop of any kind in Tientsin and Peking is a one story building without doors or windows to the street. The entire front is closed by shutters at night. In the day time the shutters are removed. These shops are fourteen to sixteen feet wide on the street, and the room is not deeper than this. Three or four feet back from the front a counter runs, behind which there is shelving. The storerooms are not deeper because of the peculiar arrangement of Chinese houses. The typical Chinese house is only one story in height and is built on all four sides of a square-courtyard. If more room is needed there is a second courtyard in the rear with a communicating door, and so on. The yamens or official residences of the various Chinese officials of Tientsin are all erected in this way—one courtyard after another surrounded by buildings all opening into the court.
Opals and Ill Luck.
Many people regard the opal as an omen of ill luck, and the following will show how this superstition arose. Two or three centuries ago the stone was very popular in Europe, and the jewelers of Italy were especially cunning in its setting. At the height of its popularity came the plague which wrought great havoc in Venice. It was noticed by some observant persons in that city that when a victim was on the point of death his opal, if he wore one, brightened, while after death it became dull. The reason of this was
the heighten
become hot,
brilliant, whi
and damp of t
however dect
brought death
door, and as
the sale of opi
day people be
stone brings il
Scot Free.
The expression "scot free," which is in use every day, harks back to the times of Scottish romance and tragedy so luminously described by Sir Walter Scott in "The Antiquary" and "Rob Roy." In these stirring tales we are told of one form of Scottish trials given certain offenders of justice. He who had broken the law was divested of all of his clothing and placed at a certain distance from archers who had bows and arrows ready, waiting the command, "Fire!" When the command was given the man under indictment would begin running and the archers would commence firing, and if in runnin: this gantlet none of the arrows hit him he was allowed to go scot free.
An Unusual Request.
A large, determined looking woman, undeniably from the country, entered the elevator in a well known New York dry goods establishment. She was carried up and down the elevator several trips, but showed no disposition to get out at any department. Finally the man in charge ventured to address her: "Where do wish to go madam?"
Where do we wish to go?
"Let me out as near Madison Square Garden as ye can," came the unexpected response. -Dellneator.
Not Well Posted.
She—There's always a crowd round the dear old professor. He's such a wonderful conversationist. He—Lor! You really think so? I tried him just now on every possible topic—hounds, bridge, golf, music halls, everything, and he was simply useless.—London Punch.
She Had a Substitute.
Influential Member—I am glad to notice, doctor, that your wife never turns her head to see who comes into church late on Sunday morning. The Rev. Dr. Goodman—No, but she makes me tell her all about them after we go home.—Chicago Tribune.
Conserving Energy.
If one half the world could be prevented from prying into the business of the other half the greatest problem in conservation of energy would be solved—Philadelphia Ledger.
The Brute.
Mother-in-Law-Has the young man who saved my life yesterday called upon you yet? Son-in-Law-Yes, in deed. He has already made his apologe.—Ellegende Blatter.
A gentle hand may lead the elephant with a hair.—Persian.
London's Hot Baked Potatoes.
There are few colder places on a winter's night than the streets of London. Naturally anything warm is welcomed by wayfarers. Roasted chestnuts and hot pies stand high in public favor, but the cry of "Baked potatoes, all hot!" is peculiarly inviting. The simplest form of a potato can—really more like a box than a can—is of plain, unpainted tin, not unlike that used by the street pleman. In the central portion the potatoes are kept hot, while in compartments on each side salt and butter are kept. A large pepper box usually stands on the top of the can. A small valve lets out the steam, and its whistling guides the traveler in search of a hot potato. Street corners, where an omnibus stops or near places of amusement, are favorite spots for the vendors of this delicacy. The season lasts from the latter part of September until about the end of March. It is said that more than 3,000 people gain their livelihood in this way in the streets of London.
Musical Sound and the Ear:
The well trained ear of a musician can distinguish notes differing only one-hundredth part of a tone from one another. Most people cannot perceive a difference of one-tenth of a tone, and a few can scarcely tell one tone from another. The cause of this curious disparity resides in slight differences in the structure of the cochlea, a wonderful piece of apparatus in the innermost part of the ear. It is a little body shaped like a snail shell and believed to be the part of the hearing apparatus which recognizes musical sounds. In its structure it closely resembles the strings of a piano and even has a damper to prevent the mixture of sounds quickly following one another. This little musical apparatus is set going by vibrations received from the middle ear or drum, and in some mysterious manner it sends these on to the brain through the auditory nerve in the form of musical sounds.
The Drummer's Secret.
Here is an old war story. As a regiment of soldiers was on the march to Gettysburg some of the soldiers stepped out of the ranks and confiscated a couple of geese, and one of the drummers unheaded his instrument and put the captured birds in the drum.
Shortly afterward the colonel rode along and, noticing the boy, said sharply:
"Why don't you beat that drum?"
"Colonel," said the drummer mysteriously, "I want to speak to you."
The colonel drew still closer, and, bending, down his head, said, "Well, what have you to say?"
The drummer whispered, "Colonel. I've got a couple of geese in here."
The colonel straightened up and gravely said, "Well. If you're sick and can't play, you needn't."
The colonel had roast goose that night.
A Winter on a Mountain Top.
As one climbs up to the mountain top the danger from lightning increases rapidly, and, as a rule, the observatories located on the mountain tops are rather uncomfortable places of residence, as discovered by the scientific gentlemen who have had the experience of a winter on a mountain top. It is evident that ordinary lightning rods are entirely inadequate to carry off the enormous discharges of the mountain thunderstorms. There are several observatories on Mont Blanc, and at one of them, that of Janssen, there have been a number of bombardments, during which the interior of the place was filled with ribbonlike sheets of electricity and balls of fire which moved silently from point to point—Eychange.
Breakfast In Norway.
Home brewed beer has of late years, says Harold Simpson in his "It tambles in Norway," largely displaced spirits as the national drink of the Norwegians. It is so popular that it is used even at breakfast to wash down the stock dish-fried pork smothered in onions. The first sight of a Norwegian breakfast table, adds the author, is apt to astound one. It is covered with small dishes, principally fish-fresh fish, smoked fish, fish in tins, fish in miniature barrels. There are also cold meats and an endless variety of cheeses, of which the Norwegians are very fond.
Tears Not Idle.
"My doctor tells me a good cry is beneficial."
The second woman, opening her purse, displayed a first class return ticket to Europe.
"A good cry gained me this," she said—New York Press.
True Love.
Tom—But perhaps she 'doesn't love you Jack—Oh. yes, she does! Tom—How do you know? Jack—When I told her that I had no money to get married on she offered to borrow some from her father.—Philadelphia Inquirer.
The Departing Son
"Our boy has left us," wept the mother as their only son waved goodby from the car window.
"Yes," said the old man, whom the boy had just touched for a heavy loan, "but he hasn't left us much"—Detroit News.
"I do not think people should get married until they are thoroughly acquainted with each other."
"What would you do—abolish matrimony?'—Judge.
A life in continual need is half death
—German Proverb.
-STEAMER AT SEA
ner Picks Up Crew ‘of Smatter
Vessel, Which Soon Sinks,
RETURNS 10 PHILADELPHIA
[Panic Among Passengers on the
Prince Oskar Was Prevented by the
Officers.
The Hamburg-American line steamer
Prinz Oshar, sailing trom Philadelphia,
steaming at tull speed on the first leg
of her voyage to Hamburg, and the
four-masted schooner City of George-
town, running under full sall in a fresh
northwest zale for Savannar, collided
of Five Fathom Bank lightship, forty
mniles at sea, due east of the Delaware
Capes.
The sailing vessel, after ramming 2
Jagged hole in the steel port plates of
the liner, which nearly sent her to the
bottom, sank. After dealing this
mighty blow, the weakér vessel, whose
bowsprit penetrated two decks and
Jamimed the iner's port anchor ten
feet into lier interior, drifted away and
disappeared in seven minutes’ time.
sinking by the bow. . *
Captain A. C. Slocum and his crev
of seven men were saved after a
thrilling battle for their lives. Half of
them were asleep when the two ships
rammed. Those awakened by the Im.
pact and jostled from their berths in
the forecastle were nearly trapped by
falling masts, splintered spars an¢
falling sails and riggings, which
atrewed the decks.
As the bow dipped into the water
and the ship stood nearly vertically be
-fore plunging to the bottom, the eight
saflors crawivd to the stern and diop
Per overboard into the icy water. A
sailor, wielding a butcher knife, had
severed the lashings of a dory. The
other lifeboats had been smashed.
‘Three cabin and 130 steerage pas
sengers aboard the Prinz Oskar were
panicstrichea. They had been jolte:
from their berths. Upon fleeing to the
upper decks they found the lingr listed
badly to port and in danger of slap
ping water through the hole at tt
prow. The plates had been torn aust
fh a Jagged circle, big enough for, a
team to be driven within. ‘
The fears of the passengers wert
soon abated by Captain von Leuente|-
and his officers. The liner receded
slowly from the sinking schooner an‘
Ufeboats were lowered.
‘The sbip’s searchlights were turned
and revealed the crew of the schoonet
battling for thelr lives. All succeedec
in gaining thedo ry.
Though the dory was finaily thei:
salvation, the sailors were all nearls
drowned. The schooner, upon sinking
caused a churling of the waters. The
suction drew the dory ints its eddlex
and the frail craft was swarled about
The swirling of the water finally ceas
ed and the sailors, half frozen and ex
hgusted. were rescued by the men o!
the Prinz Uskar. The liner came baci
to Philadelphia.
TRUCE ENDS AS
TURKS CONCEDE MORE
Allles Say Four Days’ Grace
Has Begun,
The Balkan allies gave notice t
Turkey of the termination of the ar
mistice, the period of grace ol 10m
days starting at seven o'clock Friday
evening.
The armetice, which has been in
operation since Dec. 3, was signed on
that day by Bulgaria, Servia and Mon
tenegro on the one side and Turkey on
the other. Greece never was 3 party
to the cessation of hostilities, Sie
has continued fighting, both on land
and sea.
The Montenezrins also have come
into conflut-witn the garrison of Siu
tarl on reveral occasions, notwith-
standing the truce. =
In its reply to the jéint note of the
powers the Young Turk government
asserts itselt boldly. Apart from pro
posals to divide Adrianople and a plea
for the retention of the Aegean isl
ands, the new covernment takes ad
vantage of the occasion to press for
rellef from the fetters of tarlf and
“forelgners’ eatra-territorial rights,”
under which the Turks long have
thafed.
Rean tae Metanaee.
Frank M. Ryan, president of the In
ternational tron Workers’ union, serv
ing a sentence on conviction of con
spiracy to transport dynamite In inter
state commer e, was released from the
federal prison at Leavenworth, Kan,.
on a $70,000 bond. Ryan Is the seventh
of thirty-three men to be released on
bond.
1975 FEBRUARY 1913
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WILLARD SAULSBURY,
Democrat Elected U. 8. Senator
From Delaware.
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Photo b) ‘merican Press Association.
Saulsbury Elected Delaware Senator.
Willard Saulsbury, Democratic na-
tional committeeman from Delaware,
was elected to the United States sen-
ate, when ‘the deadlock broke anil he
received a majority of the votes of the
legislators meeting in joint session in
Doter.
The surrender of the anti-Saulsbury
men came on the ntnth ballot. It was
the result of a conference held by Sen
ator Willams and Representative:
Cummins, Houston and Schneider, the
four Democrats who had refused tc
support the caucus nominee.
In this conference all the recalct
trants except Williams ylelded to the
pressure brought to bear by parti
leaders and agreed to vote for Sauls
bury.
The vote was as follows: Willard
Saulsbury, Democrat; 28; Republicans
Senator Harry A. Richardson, 11; Al
fred I. Dupont, 3: former Governor 5
S. Pennewill, 1; Ruby R. Vail, 1, anc
Alexander P. Corbit, 1.
Hughes Chosen Senator tn Jersey.
The two houses of the New Jersey
legislature in Trenton, voting separate
ly, elected former Congressman W:!
Mam Hughes, Democrat, of Paterscn.
United States senator, to sueceed
Frank 0. triggs, Republican, whos:
term expires ‘March 4 next.
Mr. Hughes won the senatorship it
the Democratic primaries last fall and
received the ull Democratic vote {1
each house of the legislature, G3 as
against 17 cast by Republicans for Sn
ator Briges. In the house Mr. Huxlu:
polled 51 votes and Senator Brixgs 5,
in the senate Hughes 13, Briggs 9.
The lezislature in joint session elect
ed E. E.Grdss cup, Democratic stat
chairman, as state treasurer, to sue
ceed Daniel $. Voorhees, Republican
whose term is about to expire.
ii OS Mi the ee
The hous. adopted the joint resolu
tion approving the plans of the fine
arts voinnn=sion for a $2,000,000 ine
morlal to the memory of Abrahani
Lincoln in Washington.
The resoipion had already passed
the senate and now goes to the pres
dent for Ins signature,
The plans of the fine arts commis
sion call tor the erection of a monn
ment in Motomac park, just south o
the White Hause, to be housed by
Greck temple. An appropriation of $2
000,000 already bas been made for its
construction. .
fia Palets Caimaahin Sask!
Miss Martha Bowers, the daughter
of the late Solicitor General Heya
Bowers. while horseback riding 1
Sixteenth street, Washington, ip com
pany with Miss Helen Taft, daughter
of the president, was seriously Injure.i
when her mount was struck by a stree*
car.
Her horse was instantly killed. Mi~+
‘Taft, who escaped injury, aided in car
rying her injured confpanion to a phy
alcian’s office.
One Man Causes Strike,
Close to 1300 men are now idle 2°
the colilery in Williamstown, Pa. ow
ing to the reftisal of one man to jor
the miners’ organization. Thirty-nn
men were reported last week as div
clining to become members. Since th:
time all but one have been enrolled
‘The miners have refused to work un
til the man joins the organization or 1s
dismissed,
~Dies After Taking Poison.
Miss Annie Long, twenty-five year-
old, found unconscious on the door
step of her home, 1335 East Thirteent.
atreett, Wilmington, Del, died In th«
Delaware hospital, having swallower
poison. No cause {s known for her act
Four Surned to’ Death In Hotel Fire.
Three me nand one woman were
barned to death, three men were sct:
ously injured and a dozen others sn!
fered less hurts in a fire which de
stroyed the Iowa hotel, 330-332 Nort’
Clark street, Chicago. :
Ralse For 18,000 Ohlo Ironworkers.
About 18.0") employes in the inde
pendent iron and stee! mills in Youngs
town, ©. were notified of a 10 per
cent increase in wages, which goes in
to effect immediately. -
NEWS NOTES
Mr. Whitefield McKinlay, collegtor
of customs for the Port of Geotge-
town, has renewed his official bond
of $40,000 for the year beginning Feb-
ruaty 1,
The Chandelier Club, headed by the
employees of the White House, gave
a ball’ at Odd Fellows’ Hall Monday
evening, which the ‘oldest inhabitants
destribe as the finest affair of its
kind ever held here: The gowns
worn by thé ladies were, marvels
of the modiste’s, art and the ban-
quet table, in “decorative splendor
and quality of viands, has never heen
surpassed at a local reception. Ma-
jor Arthur Brooks had general charge
of the arrangements and Mr. James
Berman Walker acquitted himsell
gracefully as floor manager. Music
was furnished hy a section of the
United States Marine Band.
i «(Contributed.)
dast Saturday, on motion of Kk. \\.
Thompson, the appointment of Mr.
Fred R. Moore as Minister to Li-
beria was unanimously endorsed and
the President was heartily thanked
for according this honorable, recogni-
tion to a worthy member of the Ne-
gro press. The Senate was urged t»
confirm Mr. Moore's nomination itt
the earliest practicable moment.”
He will never be confirmed —The
Bee
NOTES INDICATING NEGRO
4 PROGRESS 7
As Furnished by the National Negro
Business League.
The Douglass Co-operation Invest-
ment Company is the name of a new
Nesro business firm of Harrisburg.
a.
The Afro-American Investment and
Employment Company of Kansas
City, Mo. will “cut a $900 melon”
among its stockholders February tst.
The Bragg Brothers of Richmond,
Va., who conduct one of the largest
steam laundries in the ty, have be-
gun a real estate business. Their
backing is said to be unlimited.
A Negro Commercial and Industrial
Club is in process of formation in
Nashville, Tenn. The organization is
to work in co-operation with the Ne-
gro Board of Trade, a strong organ-
ization of the same city.
The One Cent Savings Bank oi
Nashville, Tenn, in the recent report
] of the directors; shows a clearance o|
$832,000 for the year of 1912. The in:
crease of clearance in 1912 over 1911
amounted to $45,000.
1 A‘concern to manufacture or other:
wise deal in brick and building sup.
plies has been incorporated at Mound
| Bayou, Miss. Its corporate title is
| the People’s Brick Company. Its cap.
Jital stock is $10,000.
*" The colored business men of Balti,
}more, Md., are to launch what theit
local ‘papers call a “flying squadron,’
| whose mission will be to “spread the
| gospel of -Negro business to every
corner of Baltimore.”
The Windham Brothers Construc
tion Company, of Birmingham, Ala.
is ranked, amang the leading con
Jeractors, builders and movers of th
country. The company employs stead
ily sixty men and docs a busines
ranging from $150,000 to $200,000 :
year.” * .
The colored people in the cast en
of Louisville, Ky. -are to have
branch library. ‘The library board ha
‘| appropriated $4,000 for this purpose
‘|The sum df $1,008 is to be raised by
ifthe citizens. The arrangements art
in the hands of a colored committec
les ——
The Negro Baptists of North. Caro
lina support twenty-cight | secondary
schools of that State. The total nunt
|ber enrolled in these schools is 3,34!
pupils, Last year the State Baptist
contributed $23.20. These school
‘lhave acquired property valued at
_[S123.762 3
The colored people of Naphville
Tenn, are interested in building a Ne
gro civic center. This will be places
in tle northwest section of the city
‘near Fisk University. It is desires
1) that the Y. M. C A., the Carnegie 1.1
brary and other mmportant Negro in
|| stitutions he placed here The propo
i| sition to raise $1oo.e0o for this ha
| been set in motion.
The Alabama Penny Savings Baul
_Jof Birmingham, Ala. celebrated th
fiftieth anniversary of the Negroes
freedom and its own twenty-secon
anniversary by moving into its nev
$50,000 steel constructed building,
six-story structure. The people 4
the city jomed in the celebration by
_| depositing on that day $t3,000; 30
new account were opened.
Twenty Negro farmers around Fait
hope, Ala., have signed up to form co
operative packing association. Th
sJobject is to kill and pack all hog
}}killed in their community. A*mem
| ber of the firm will attend to the sell
Jing and shipping of the packed mea
and the profits will ‘be ‘divided at th
end of the season, The company wi
start with a capital stock of $6,000.
.} A number of educators and clergy
“| men of Louisville. Ky. have begun
.Jmovement to form = a co-operativ
Istock company for the purpose of ¢:
‘| tablishing a bank, ‘They are endeav
'Toring to raisé a capital of $95,00
'1Several Negro leaders in Tennessee
Califarnia, West Virginia are inter
4ested in the movement. This is th
elfirst attempt to establish a Negr
Meese, o.° 8 cetec ttt. andl fe de exnecte:
A summary of the business of the
North Carolina Mutual and Provident
Association, Durham, N. C., for 1912
shows an increase of $70,000 over the
year 1911. The gross eatnings of the
company for the year amount to
$350,000. Ten years ago it amounted
to $3,000. The company has in re-
serve in excess $100,000. This sum
is represented by real estate and state
— MALAY ALMiaparerwero™~-,
Honds ‘and is sufficient to insure the
only counties in the million class,
Several others are far up toward the
mark, but do not quite reach it No-
#roes own the largést amount of land
m the following counties: Bertie, 61,-
44 acres; Halifax, 53.802 acres; War-
Ten, 30.006 acres; Bladen, 48.463;
Wake, 40,096; Columbus, 39,222 acres}
Sampson. 38,267, acres; Pender, 37,
438. acres; No¥thhampton, 36.142
acres: Craven, 36,092 acres, ‘while
there are eight” other counties in
which from 25,000 to 35,000 acres are
owned by Negroes.
HAMPTON -INSTITUTE’S NEW
Y. M. C. A, BUILDING.
diampton, Va., January 10.
The new Hampton Institute Y. M
C.A. building, known as Clarke Hall,
will be dedicated on February 2, 1913,
at the time of the Founder's Day cel-
ebration. The dedication address will
be delivered by Dr. William J.
Schieffelin, of New York City, who
is a trustee of Hampton Institute.
The Y. M. C. A. building, designed
by Ludlow & Peabody, architects,
with ollices in, New York City,. and
built for the most part by Hampton
Institute tradesmen, is a two-story
brick structure seventy feet wide by
forty-five deep, exclusive of two ver-
fandas and a terrace at the rear. -
On the ‘ground floor there are thie
ata flanked by two offices; a large
central hall at the northeast end of
which there is a room for-games, and
at the'southwest end a writing room
containing a large fireplace faced with
pressed brick. .
On the second floor there will be
found several rooms suitable for Bi-
ble study classes and offices and a
good-sized auditorium, This floor
plan is so arranged that the audito-
rium and class rooms can be thrown
open for large gatherings. Theré 1
Faso a gallery around three sides ‘|
the auditorjum, .
The front view of Clarke Hall is
simple, but attractive. The shafts of
the six columns at the loggia entrance
are formed of especially molded brich
with bases and caps of brown stone
The second story contains Frencl
windows with wrought iron balconies
The building is conspicuous for the
free use of the flat or segmental arch
Over the loggia entrance is a_terr:
cotta pancl with the inscription
“Clarke Hall.” The roof of the mir
building is covered with first quality
sea-green slates.
Th interior of the Y. M. C. A
building is finished in chestnut wit!
a wax finish. The — furnishing:
throughout will be simple, but sub
stantial. Clarke Hall will be a socia
‘venter for the boys of Hampton In
stitute. About $33,000 will be spen
jfor the building and equipment, in
chiding furniture, pictures, books an
other necessary articles for a well
organized Y. M. C. A. and studen
recreation center.
The Hampton Institute Y. M. C. A
building has been made possible b:
the gift of $30,000 by Mrs. Charle
S. Clarke, of New York, as a memo
rial to her husband.
Dr, Frissell has said of the Hamp
ton Institute Y. M. C. A. “Of th
500 young men 350 are members 0
the “Yeung Men's Christian Associa
tion. This is a very active organiza
tion; its representatives correspon
with accepted applicants before the
enter the school, meet them at th
boats and trains, care for their com
fort, and give them needed informa
tion”
‘The Misfit Accoutrement,
A recently appointed second Leuten-
ant in the army on tus Hirst public ap-
Pearance ut one ut the president's re-
ceptions bad some ditiiculty with bis
sword und tripped over it several times
while he was 1m jine, sstyy au exchange.
It gat between Ins yexs and dangled
about i a most perplexing way.
“Young wan,” said a inlitary official in
a most kindly manner, “that thing you
are wearlng is 2 sword, uot a hurdle.”
—Denver Republic:cu.
Cautious Judge.
“Judge, ‘why did you adjourn coart
for five minutes just now?"
“I felt Uhut I had to sneeze.”
“Yes?” .
“And I feared if I sneezed on the
bench the, lawyers would make that
tho basis of a demand for a new trial.”
—Loulsville Courier-Journal.
Quite In Harmony.
First Doctor—Had a couple of rather
odd patients this morning. Second
Doctor—Indeed! Who were they?
First Doctor—One of them was 8 bee
keeper with the hives and the other
grass widow with the bay fever.—Bos.
ton Transcript.
The Reculé
“Did the trip of the young heiress to
Europe to secure a title in the matri-
monial market succeed?”
“Yes. though, strange to say, it was
a baron result.”—Baltlmore American.
, Just Shopping.
Tired Clerk (over piled up counter)—
Can I show yon anything else, madam!
Customer—Yes; the nearest way out—
Boston ‘Transcript.
You cannot retrace crooked steps.
‘The path of reform Is straight.
The Bee Would Like to Know
_ Why there are to be so many col-
ored inaugural balls.
How many will attend the recep-
tion of the White House employes
next month,
Why Major Arthur Brooks is so
popular with his friends.
Why Col. Henry Lincoln Johnson
didn’t’ accompany his friend, Ben
Davis, to Cuba.
Tf Col. Johnson will write a few of
his Phillifics of the Atlanta Indepen-
jent.
About what time will Attorney R
R. Horner file his application for the
recordership,
| If Rev. Waldron wouldn't prefer
the Haitian mission.
GEN, SIGKLES
OBTAINS BAIL
The Aged ‘soldier is Under
$3000 Bon,
ARRESTED IN HIS. HOME
General Danlel E. Sickles, ninety-two
years of age, Gettysburg veteran, who
is charged by the state of New York
With a shortage of $23,476, was arrest.
ed at his home in New York by a
sheriff of the county of New York.
General Sickles did not have to go
to jail, because his counsel furnish«d
& bond of $30,000. When the officers
entered the general's home they found
the old warrior sitting In front of a
desk.
Hardly had the formalltles of the
arrest been completed and the sherit{
walked down the steps of the old Fitth
avenue home than there confronted
the old colored servant of the gen-
eral’s the son of the warrior, Stan-
ton, and his mothér. They demandea
an audience. The keeper of the outer
portals disappeared into the gloomy
halls of the big house. Pregently he
“Was back again with the word that the
general would not seo his wife and
son. The two swung upon their heels
and went back to the Hotel Albert.
Stanton’ said: “The whole affair will
be straightened out very soon. When
the claim of the Bowery bank against
the general's Fifth avenue propertle:
is foreclosed in a week or s0 my
mother need only to bid the amount o!
that claim to become the owner.”
Counsel for General Sickles, Dan P
Hays, telephoned the stierift’s office
that he had procured a bond for his
client's release. Thereupon the sherit
thrust his papers into his pockets and
hastened to the Sickles residence
‘When the sheriff arrived at the house
he walked uup to the veteran and said:
“Iam very glad to see you, gen
eral.”
“and 1," sald the general, cour
teously, “am glad to see you. Did yo:
receive the letter I sent you—the ont
from Mrs. Longstreet?”
The sheriif said that he hadn't re
celved any letters from Mrs. Long
street, and the general thrust forwari
a telegram. It read as follows:
“Gainesville, Ba., Jan. 26.
“My soul is sorrowed by your trou
bles. Am wiring the attorney genera
of New York that I will raise the
money among the ragged, destitute an
maimed veterans who followed Lee te
pay the antount demanded it New Yor!
officials will, allow suffictent time. W
are not writing into’ our history th
story of degenerate descendants of he
role lives. The republic whose battle:
you fought will not permit your degre
dation,
“HELEN D. LONGSTREET.”
The general received the order o
arrest and tossed it on the table with
out looking at It. He told the sherit
that it had cost him $600 to get th
surety bond iequired. The procedur
of arrest and release was short an
pee
Cipriano Castro, former president of
Venezuela, walked the streets of New
York, temporarily a free man, under
a writ of habeas orpus issued by Judie
Holt in the federal court.
A surety company gave $500 bail for
the general. The case was brotight be
fore Judge Holt as the result of tn
refusal of the department of commer: ¢
and labor tu admit Castro to this coun
try.
His lawyers pointed out that Castre
had already been held at Ellis Istan!
for several weeks. “in a manner suth
ciently outrageous to satisfy the vin
dictiveness of any one,” and ashe:
that he he admitted to bail imme
diately.
United States District Attorney Wis:
opposed the application for bail. “I
seems to me,’ sald the court, “tha
his is a case for bail.”
Mr. Wise argued that granting liber
ty to Castro, even temporarily, at this
time would defeat the purpose of the
department of commerce im the step:
it has already taken. The court, how
‘ever, sustained the application and
fixed nett Friday for hearing argn
ments.
| Followed by a curlous crowd, Castrn
went to a hotel. He was all smiles and
‘beaming with happiness as ke Invited
photographers to surround bim as he
posed. Refore the, habeas corpus pro
‘cedings the Venezuelan Issued a state.
‘ment bitterly attacking the authoritres
at Washineton for excluding him.
Jim Thorpe a Professional.
James Thorpe, the Carlisle Indian
school athlete, who distinguished bim-
self at the Olympic games at Stock
holm, Sweden, last summer, has ail
mitted thay he is a professjonal.,
Word was recelved In Philadelpn.a
that thé confession was confalned in a
letter received by the “committee of
the A. A. U, sitting in New York. The
committee «-.usists of James S. Sulit-
van, Bartow Weeks and Gustavus
Kirby. .
‘The letter came froma Glenn Warne-,
coach of 1.* Carlisle foot ball tex ~.
He wrote tuat Thorpe had admitted
playing pre:essional baso ball in the
Eastern Garvlina league.
Tt was stated that the authorities <°
Carlisle knew nothing about Thorpe «
professional career until the Indian
mado a ststement several days azo
‘Warner wrote that the trophies won by
SRE Oe PRE ES Pr
‘Thorpe In the decathlon and pentath-
Jon events at Stockbotm would be
plaved at the disposal of the A. A. U.
Taey will probably be forwarded to
the Olympic committee and they will
then be given to the second man in
each event. Roy Mercer, the 1912 U.
of P, foot ball captain, who was fourth
in the decathlon, will not get thé prize
for third place.
Landslides Menace Panama Canal.
Further movements of the slides in
the banks of the Culebra cut, Panama
canal, was reported to the Isthmian
canal comaussion in Washington.
Material to the amount of 1,160,000
cubic-yards has been or will hy thrown
Into the cut ay a result of this latest
activity of the slides.
Between 300,000 and 400,000 cubic
yards of earth moved into the cut at
Curachaca,” covering five _ railroad
tracks In the cut at that point, leav-
ing only one of the tracks open.
Another slide occurred just south of
Gold Hill, and It is expected that 500,
000 cubic yards of earth and rock will
have been precipitated into the cut be-
fore the slide is completed. The latest
slide at Curachaca has also weakened
the bank at Purple Hill, and it fs ev-
pectad that there will bo further slld-
Ang at that point in the near future.
Crude Oil Quoted at $2.33.
The fourth successive advance in
crude oils was recorded when the
South Penn Oll company announced
{ts prices in Pittsburgh, Pa.
‘As on every day this week the price
was lifted seven cents a barrel, bring-
ing Pennsylvania erude ol to $2.33.
For eighteen months preceding the
Gissolution of the Standard Oil com-
pany of New Jersey, which took place
Dec. 15, 1911, Pennsylvania crude, on
which the price of ail oll Is based by
the purchasing agencies, had beer
quoted at $1.03 a barrel. Eleven days
afterward the price was advanced five
cents, and within a month producers
wero receiving $1.50 a barrel for oil.
Advances conttinued at regular Inter-
vals, and $3 a barrel {s predicted be-
fore the end of the year.
Let Husband Wed Another.
When bis wife became homesick
four years 250, Paul Steinberg, of New
York city, with her consent, married a
younger woman and used the $S0
dowry she brought him to send his
first wife back to Russia.
‘This was the story Steinberg told
when arraizned in court on a bigamy
charge. The plan promised well untit
the first Mrs. Stenberg decided to re-
turn to New York.
Here she had trouble supporting her
five children and sought ald from the
father. Steinberg grew tired of this
and stopped the payments. Then hig
firat wife had him arrested.
‘The court thought Steinberg’s story
so unusual that sentence was post-
poned to permit further investigation,
Senator Tillman Re-Elected.
‘Without a dissenting vote, Benjamin
R. Tillman was elected by the South
Carolina legislature for the fourth con-.
secutive term jn the United States
senate. The opposition talked of as .a
resutl of Tiliman’s recent attack on the
legislature as being controlled by the
rallroads did not develop.
Hammond, Inventor of Typewriter, Dies
James Bartlett Hammond, inven-or
of the typewriter that bears bis name,
and president of the company manu
facturing it, died suddenly at the Hotet
Alcazar in St. Augustine, Fla. He wa~
nearly seventy-five years old and wa»
on a yatching cruise to benefit hic
heAlth. His hody will be taken to.New
York for burial.
Arrested at Close of His Sermon.
Just as Fred W. Randall finished a
sermon on “Salvation” before the Biblo
Students’ association in Albany, N. ¥.,
he was arrested on a charge of desert-
ing bis wife and two children.
Sled Cane Foe Muateia,
Hunters in New York state will he
required to wear a bright red cap
while in pursuit of game if a bill in-
troduced iti the legislature by Axsem-
blyman Doty becomes a law.
$40,800,000 For Waterways. ,
‘The house passed the annual rivers
and harbors appropriation bill, the bix-
gest of the so-called “pork barrel”
measures. It carried appropriations of
$40,800,000.
Nesilise: te Cadesssa 6ittal.
aR pai dha ROP TS, detec pet Ril aR ince
| Harry I.. Bailey, Republican nomince
for congress from the Niath district
of Kentucky at the last election, was
‘shot and killed by Newton Arnold at
Cynthiana, Ky
GENERAL MARKETS
PHILADELPHIA — FLOUR quiet;
winter ‘clect, $4.10G4.30; city mills.
fancy, $5 5.35.
HAE, FLOUR steady; por barrel,
60% 3.73. .
‘i QyHEAT steady; No. 2 red, 31.024
CORN steady: No. 2 yellow; 56057¢.
OATS firm; No. 2 white, 40@49t
lower grades, 38e.. :
POULTRY: Live steady; hens, 15
Give; ollt roosters, 11@12c. Dressed
frm; ‘choice fowls, 7e.5 old roosters
BUTTER firm. fancy creamery, ste.
EGGS. steady: selected, 28 @ 30c.:
nearby. 26c.: western, 26c. :
POPATOES firm; per bush., 2077730.
Live Stock Marketa,
PITTSBUNGH (Union Stock Yards)
CATTLE .eady; choice, $8.25¢8.40;
prime, $7.57" §.10.
SHEEP tower, prime wethers, $2.60
6.75; cults and common, $2.50@3.47:
fits: ssaxse: calves, Slb@IOGe
HOGS active; prime heavies, $7.50‘
7.85; mediuris, $348.05; heavy. Yor -
ers, light Yorkers and’ pigs, $8.70
8.18; roughs, $6.15@7.
THE BEE
Published
at
1109 Eye St. N. W., Washington,
D. C.
W. CALVIN CHASE, EDITOR
Entered at the Post Office at Wash-
ington, D. C., as second-class
mail matter.
ESTABLISHED 1880.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
One copy per year in advance... $2.00
Six months ..... 1.00
Three months ..... .50
Subscription monthly ..... 20
SCARBOROUGH'S DUTY. Prof. Scarborough, president of Wilberforce University, if he is blessed with an ordinary appreciation of consistency, must know that his continuance as president of Wilberforce University is a handicap to that institution, one of the most deserving educational institutions maintained for the race. Negro institutions of learning are largely endowed by philanthropic white friends of the race. President Scarborough has applied to such white friends for support for his school. He must realize that white men who contribute to Negro schools feel that the heads of such schools ought to be men whose advocacy of Negro schools is consistent with their practices. President Scarborough advocates the maintenance of Wilberforce as a separate and distinct school for Negro young men and women in a State whose laws stand for no color line in the school system, and yet one of his acts has been directly the opposite of his teaching. Either he ought to come out boldly and pronounce for equality along every line of action—even to marriages—or he ought to resign and give place to some Negro educator whose life, in every particular, is in accord with his preaching. Wilberforce, founded and maintained for the education of Negroes, deserves and ought to have for president an educator whose practices are in consonant with his preachings, as well as one who is able, wise and strong in executive ability. The interests of the race—of the students at Wilbertforce are paramount to the interests of one man. Wilberforce ought to be maintained for the race, and not for President Scarborough. Will he awake to the fact that he is a retardance rather than an accelerator for Wilberforce? Will he realize that he ought to abdicate? And besides, he is no longer possessed with the vigor of youth to prosecute a great work. His life is mostly in the retrospect. His vigor was never a featured accomplishment even before his years had accumulated. The wave of unjust criticism of the race for which the marriage act of Jack Johnson is responsible ought not to be kept in motion or given impetus by a president of a Negro educational institution. We are firm in our belief that no Negro whose marriage constitutes a contention in favor of intermarriage between the races can consistently, or to the advantage of his school, remain at the head of a distinctively Negro institution of learning.
BEGINNING AT THE TOP.
A few days ago a number of gentlemen met in this city and decided to form a social club, lease or buy a residence, and furnish it and equip it on a sumptuous scale. This club is designed for the amusement and pleasure of its members. It does appear that we, of Washington, will continue to begin working from the top down, instead of from the bottom up. With such a crying need here for organization to promote and finance commercial enterprises it does appear that if men can organize to spend money lavishly for amusement they ought to be able to organize to spend money judiciously to foster business enterprises. With not a single colored grocery store of size and stock deserving the name of a grocery store, in Washington; with all grocery stores of any dimension, located in Negro neighborhoods, controlled and operated by Russian Jews, Greeks, and Italians; with not a single drygoods, hardware, confection or china store or bank in this city
of 127,000 Negroes, it would appear that it would be far better to organize clubs to promote business rather than to furnish amusement. And these are anything but amusement times. This is a serious period in our history. With a House of Representatives passing jim-crow measures, and each day the daily prints carrying cruel, outrageous attacks upon the race by members of Congress; with right after right, and privilege after privilege being swept away; with the door of opportunity being closed more effectually every day, there ought to be something more serious to command our attentions than the providing of a sumptuous club in which to loll our time away with nectard wines and aimless conversation. The sumptuously appointed social club, among the whites, came after the amassing of wealth and business success. Just at this particularly crucial period in our history, which invites serious thought and earnest work, a social club, sumptuously appointed, would be the imitating of Nero—fiddling while Rome burned. Let's begin at the bottom and work up, rather than at the top to work down.
ETHIOPIA AGAIN.
With our political enemies in Congress, with our illy white organizations, and with our opposition to each other, the Negro is in a bad condition. The Democratic Negro declared that there would be no Democratic legislation against his people, but even before the Democratic party comes in control of our government, the Negro is stabbed. To which party, must the Democratic Negro look for his protection?
The Democratic House has declared by almost a unanimous vote that it cannot trust its women with the Negro. The Republican Senate will no doubt repudiate the House bill, if not The Bee is confident that President Taft will not sign it. It is not believed that President-elect Wilson will be controlled by these Southern crackers. It is not believed that the Democratic South will be able to pass legislation that will humiliate the Negro, But, the question is, what excuse can these Democratic Negroes give the people? What explanation will they make to the people for the passing of such legislation? The Bee has great hopes for the future success and prosperity of the Negro. The time will come when the darker races will control the world. The Southern' crackers are used only as an instrument in the hands of God. The salvation of the Negro and his success will soon be at hand. When the Negro realizes that he is against himself, he will throw off the yoke that binds his progress. His lily white proclivities will soon pass into oblivion. He will realize the fact that we are of one flesh and made by the same God. The heathen South and the civilized North should come together as one people. The brain races shall be in control of the world, and the white man who has been such a tyrant, especially the cracker in the South, will be subdued. The Negro will become united
The Negro will become united and "Ethiopia shall stretch forth her hand again unto God."
DEMOCRATIC LEGISLA TION
The Democratic House of Representatives, by an overwhelming majority, passed the Hardwick bill prohibiting intermarriages between the white and black races. We submit this bit of legislation, discriminating and restrictive, to Bishop Walters and his band of faithfuls as an evidence of the unreliability of that party in matters effecting the Negro. We are opposed to intermarriage as a practice—and it has never risen to the dignity of a practice—but we are also opposed to a prohibition being placed upon whom a man or a woman shall select as a life partner. If the Democratic Congress can pass a law restricting the Negro in one thing it can pass laws restricting him in other things, and jim-crow street cars in the District is one of those things we can now, look forward to as a near certainty.
It would be far better for Bishop Walters, and for those other alleged Negro Democrats, and real Negro Democrats, if any, that instead of contesting over a few minor offices—if they are really interested in race advancement, that they exert their influence more on their party to persuade it from passing hateful, hurtful legislation, and less in trying to secure janitors jobs and like positions. If this prohibition of intermarriages is a sample of
the interest the Democratic party proposes to take in the race, then God deliver us from that interest. And where was Bishop Walters, James Ross, Cosey, Woods, et al., when the Democratic House was passing jim-crow legislation? We ask where?
EVERYBODY BUT THE BEE.
(From Indianapolis Freeman.)
"Everybody indorsed Fred Moore, of the New York Age, for the Liberian ministership, except Calvin B. Chase. He seems to have the chronic grouch.
You fools don't know him as well as we do. He will never be confirmed. His nomination is more of a joke than a reality. Minister to Liberia? What would he do with the job if the Senate was fool enough to confirm him? It was never written that Fred Moore would be sent to Liberia by this government. R. W. Thompson, who offered a resolution at the meeting of an alleged press convention, indorsing him, was abused and opposed for president of this so-called press association. Fred Moore has always had a poor opinion of Thompson as Thompson of him. What carried the convention. This barber editor, or rather a more fastidious term, the tonsorial artist, of the Indianapolis Freeman, charges the editor with being afflicted with the "chronic grouch." There is one thing certain. his occupation doesn't call for curing the barber's "itch." See:
WASHINGTON IN THE WEST
The itinerary arranged for Dr. Booker T. Washington through the far West, arranged for his deliverance of addresses before the great white educational institutions of the West, is simply one more evidences of the drawing power of the man, of the estimate the public places upon him as an educator; and of the one grand leader of the race whose works testify to his ability and foreseeing. If you should ask what has Dr. Washington done, it is only necessary to point to Tuskegee. If you should ask what is he doing now, you have only to point to the fact that he is laboring "afield and afar" for his race while his destructors remain far from the scene of battle contenting themselves with firing ineffective abuse. If you should ask who are for him, the masses—the people with no personal grievances and no selfish axes to grind, will answer in concert—"we are for and with him." It is both a compliment to him and to the great developing West that he has been invited to address the people of the States west of the father of waters—the Mississippi.
AWAKE NEGRO !!
A cry from Macedonia calls upon the Negroes to awake. The world is against him, and at every corner there is a fire. Awake. Negro, and defend yourself against the assaults of the enemy. The world is set with dynamite, and at every ball there is a fuse. Time will not permit us to delay. Awake. Negro, and smother the fuse.
RACE DEVELOPMENT
RACE DEVELOPMENT. The most important factor in race development is the subject of Rev: S. L. Corrothers' sermon at Galbraith Church on tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock. This eloquent and logical divine will have a crowded house. No one should fail to hear him as he is one of the most effective speakers in this country. Dr. Corrothers will deal with the Negro in a logical manner.
After the passage of the bill restricting marriages should come a proposal for still another Negro inauguration ball.
They lynched and burned another Negro in Mississippi last week, but it was the cultured, intellectual, superior race in that State that reverted back to savagery.
The National Negro Press Association, whose name includes more words than there are members, met last week. Simply met. The President, the man who sets his sail to catch each passing breeze, and is, all things to all men, presided. Nuff sed.
"Lady of Lyons"
Howard University Dramatic Club present Sir Bulwer Lyton's great five-act comedy drama, "The Lady of Lyons," at Howard Theater Saturday evening, February 22. Popular prices. Admission, 15c, 25c, 35c, 50c. Tickets now on sale. Phone North 1660, Trunk 34. F-18-125.
Public MenAr.d Things
But here I am off - at a tangent again. What I meant to relate to you was this argument in a "strictly" colored barber shop between a high yaller Odd Fellow and a teakwood-complexioned Mason. You know colored Masons are all versed in the antiquity of their order. That's pumped into them from the time they get lasseod with a cable tow to the time they have saved up enough to pay tor traversing the burning sands of the desert. Now, a colored Odd Fellow doesn't know a thing about antiquity in his order. Aked a colored Odd Fellow when his order was founded, and he will give you a St Elizabeth look and mumble something about Peter Ogden that'unintelligible even to himself. But a colored Mason, while he may roast other Masons and reduce his cable tow to about a foot in length, leaves his "square" locked up in the dog house, and destroys his "leech," he can tell you all about the antiquity of his order. Well, these two fraternal gymnasts got into a heated argument. Driven to a corner, the high yaller Odd Fellow, when the teakwood-complexioned Mason said they could go way back to Solomon's time, said "Now, who was Solomon, anyhow?" That was all this discipline of Prof. Wentherles wanted. "Who was Solomon," he repeated, "why Solomon was a thirty-three degree sport. He took all the degrees and invented a few of his own. His statutes were not all hewed of wood and drawers of water like you Hamets, lots of them were highbrows. Solomon not only came into the world with a golden spoon in his mouth, but the spoon had a sunburst diamond handle. While he lived he saw all there was to be seen and done all there was to be done and learned all there was to learn. He not only drank dry the well of knowledge, but he pulled out the pump when he got through. He was the wisest man what ever lived. Why, your Peter Ogden wasn't one-two-three with old Solly. After he filled up with all the wisdom there was hanging around loose, he decided to go out for a little pleasure. And he just cut himself loose. The way he went at it would have made a ba-eah fan at a champion series look like a dummy in front of a Seventh Street second-hand clothing store. Finally his shining charior of gold burst a tire on one of the wheels, and he had to stop." Right here the Peter Ogden follower broke in with "And yes, he got to hit the hooe, too, and signed up seven hundred wives and three hundred concubines. Now, that's the guy you all trace your history back to." The cream-nut-colored Mason got riled at this, and as things began to look like a mix-up was imminent, I remarked to the barber. "I've got to catch a train wish you would spatter that near-water stinking witchhazel on my face and let me out of this chair." Just as I was going out of the door I heard the teakwood colored Mason yell, in a falsetto-voice "We Masons pride ourselves on our antiquity." And the relict of Peter Ogden yelled back "And that's all you have got to hitch your pride to."
\* \*
It strikes me that the average colored barber shop has a service that's bad enough, anyhow, without the colored Masons and colored Odi Fellows meeting there in grand lodge sessions and telling all the secrets of the orders. You can hear any-kind of a discussion in a colored razor parlor from a discussion of the Bible down to an argument on the tariff, about which they know nothing. You can hear all the neighborhood, scandals, learn the latest spread-over-town rumors in school circles, and all the choice knocks that your friends have been handing you. And you can see all the family skeletons taken out of the closets and out for a walk. Some of these days some wide-awake fel-
low will drop into this town, open up a colored barber shop, and put out an electric sign in front reading: "This Is a Barber Shop, and Not a Conversational Parlor," and get all the credit business there is in the town.
I dropped in at the Howard last week and saw Black Pattie's troupe. I've been arraigning myself ever since on a charge of accessory to prolongation of a has been. The first time I heard Black Pattie was a number of years ago, some time after the dove returned to Noah's ark. Her troupe at that time was moderately indifferent, and she wasn't up to the show bills, according to my tastes. But now Black Pattie has reached the age of retirement, and if she would announce, at the close of this season, that she will retire permanently from the stage she would be doing the proper thing. I see Sam Lucas has retired, and while Sam is up in the seventies I don't think the prima donna is very far behind him. If Black Pattie is going to give us return engagements for an indefinite number of years to come, she at least ought to surround herself with a troupe that will enable us to forget her. But really, as I view it, the dark-brown prima donna has seen her best days, and she had some twenty years ago. It's a funny thing about a colored singer. If she ever was touted as a singer with a fair voice she thinks her voice every year finds one of those elyxer springs of American Vespa was hunting for when he sailed for America a few hundred years ago. Old Liberty Bell at Philadelphia has got a crac, and some of these dark-brown warbblers who have arrived at an uncertain age have also got a crack in their voices about as wide and long as the one in the Liberty Bell. Some one ought to insert this advertisement in the newspapers. "Lost, a once fair voice. Finder will be liberally rewarded by returning to Black Pattie any time before the arrival of the millennium." Now, I use to know a little about music, and in my halcyon days use to sing a pretty fair tenner for a Baptist choir. Proof Layton, who is authority on dark voices, will tell you, if you get him off in a corner, that the nut-brown prima donna's voice has missed connection with the present through express. To me, Black Pattie's voice is about as pleasant as the piano playing we have been getting at Hiawatha for the past few weeks, and comes pretty close to being a violation of the nuisance order.
WILLIAM H. LEWIS
Delivers a Masterly Address Before the Massachusetts General Assembly.
Holds All Spellbound Till the Last Delivered Sentence Inspires a Burst of Applause.
alism, and set her with sails full and chart and compass true once more upon the b lead the w human bro countered times; the have run hj encies of tl the heaven and depair faith, beca course, and has ever be freedom to the slave we insured freedom to the free." In a country where all men were free none could be slaves. Emancipation raised labor to its true dignity and gave a new impetus to industry, commerce and civilization. Under free labor men of many climes have come here to help develop the natural resources of the country, and the nation has entered upon a period of progress such as the world has never before witnessed in any time or place.
Emancipation Justified.
What of the Negro him-self? Has he justified emancipation? The statistics of his physical, intellectual and material progress are known to all. He has increased his numbers nearly threefold. The Negro population is today nearly three times that of the whole country at the time of the adoption of the Constitution. It is nearly three times that of New England in 1860. He has reduced his illiteracy to 30 per cent. He owns nearly $700,000,000 worth of property including nearly one million homes. He has shown that his "tutelage in American civilization has not been in vain; that he could live under the most trying and oppressive conditions.
Three milestones in his progress have been reached and passed: First—The North and South agree that the abolition of slavery was right and just
Second—The people of the North and South agree that every industrial opportunity shall be given to the Negro.
Third—The right of the Negro to be educated and the duty of the state to see to it that he has every opportunity for education are established. Public opinion has settled forever the right of the Negro to be free to labor and to educate.
These three things constitute no slight advance; they are the fundamental rights of civilization.
The prophecy of Lincoln has been fulfilled, that emancipation would be "An act which the world will forever applaud and God must forever bless." Moreover, it should not be forgotten, as Banoroff, the historian, has said, that "it is in part to the aid of the Negro in freedom, in its movement of regeneration—that the world of mankind owes the continuance of the United States as an example of a Republic." The American Negro, in freedom, has brought new prestige and glory to his country in many ways. Tanner, a Georgia boy, is no longer a Negro artist, but an American artist whose works adorn the galleries of the world. Paul Lawrence Dunbar, an American poet, who singing songs of his race, voicing its sorrows and griefs with unrivalled lyric sweetness and purity, has caught the ear of the world. The matchless story of Booker Washington, the American educator, is told in many
conquests and in many lands.
The history of the world has no such chapter as the Negro's fifty years of freedom. THE DUTY OF THE HOUR IS TO UNSHACKLE HIM AND MAKE HIM HOLLY FREE. When the Negro is free from the vexatious annoyances of color and has only the same problems of life as any other men, his contribution to the general welfare of his country will be greater than ever before.
Whatever be his present disadvantages and inequalities, one thing is absolutely certain, that nowhere else in the world does so large a number of people of African descent enjoy so many rights and privileges as here in America. God has not placed these 10,000,000 here upon the American Continent in the American Republic for naught. There must be some work for them to do. He has given to each race some particular part to play in our great national drama. I predict that within the next fifty years all these discriminations, disfranchements, and segregation will pass away. Antipathy to color is not natural, and the fear of ten by eighty million or people is only a spook of politics, a ghost summoned to the banquet to frighten the timid and foolish
I care nothing for the past. I look beyond the present: I see a great country with her territories stretching from the rising to the setting sun, with a climate as varied as a tropical day and an Arctic night, with a soil blessed by the fruits of the earth and nourished by the waters under it. I see a great country tenanted by un told millions of happy, healthy human beings, men of every race that Goil has made out of one blood to inherit the earth, a great human family, governed by righteousness and justice, not by greed and fear—in which peace and happiness—shall reign supreme.
Men more and more are beginning to realize that the common origin and destiny of the human race give to each species the right to occupy the earth in peace, prosperity, and plenty, and that, the duty of each race is to promote the happiness of all. The movements for social and industrial justice and the right of the people to rule are world-wide.
The American people are fast loosing their provincial character. They are today a great world power with interests and possessions upon every part of the globe. Their horizon is the world; they are thinking in terms of the universe, and speaking in the tongues of all men. With the widening of men's vision they must realize that the basis of true democracy and human brotherhood is the common origin and destiny of the human race; that we are all born alike, live alike, and die alike that the laws of man's existence makes abolutely no distinction
All Equal in Death.
I wandered recently into Westminster Abbey. I behold all around me the images and effigies of the illustrious and the great kings, rulers, statesmen, poets, patriots, explorers and scientists. I trumped upon the graves of some; I stood before the tombs of kings, some dead twelve centuries, there the wisest and merriest of monarchs and the most pious and dissolute of kings slept side by side. As illustrating the vanity of triumph of personal glory, on one side of the Chapel of Henry VII rests Mary, Queen of Scots, and almost directly opposite, all that remains of Elizabeth, her executioner. I stood before the tomb of the great Napoleon: I wandered through his palaces at Versailles and Fontainebleau with all of their magnificence and splendor and I recalled the period of his power and glory among men, and yet he, too, died. Then I passed a potter's field, and I looked upon the graves of the unknown, graves of the pauper, and the pleb, and I realized that they were at last equal, those who slept in Valhalla and those who slept in the common burying ground, and that they would each and all hear the first on the second trump of the resurrection "according to the deeds done in the body and the flesh, according to whether they were good or evil" In the democracy of death all are equal. Then, men, my brothers, our duty is to make life in human society the same great democracy of equality or rights, of privileges, or opportunity for all the children of men. There is nothing else worth while.
God grant to the American people this larger view of humanity, this greater conception of human duty. In a movement for democracy, for social and industrial justice, for the complete emancipation of the Negro from the disabilities of color, Massachusetts must now, as in the past, point the way. If we fail here with tradition and history such as are ours behind us, we can we succeed elsewhere. The Great Emancipator speaks to us at this hour and furnishes the solution for all our race problems "Let us discard all this quibbling about thiman and the other man, this race and the other race, and the other race being inferior and therefore must be placed in an inferior position. Let us discard all these things and unite as one people throughout this land, until we shall once more stand up declaring that "all men are created equal" God grant that the American people, year by year, may grow more like Lincoln in charity, justice, and righteousness to the end that "the government of the people, for the people, by the people shall not perish from the earth."
Col. Simmons Visits Tuskegee.
Tuskegee Institute, Ala., Feb. 9- For several weeks Tuskegee has had as a visitor Roscoe, Conkling Simmons, the journalist and orator, and "boy of the campus." Col. Simmons has received a hearty reception on every hand. Before a great audience in the Institute Chapel Col. Simmons delivered a moving address during Conference week. The student body gave him an ovation. Taking a lively interest in all departments of the work' of the Institute, Col. Simmons has spoken before the several literary societies and lectured to the Senior Class. For the New York Sun, the Evening Post and the Chicago Inter Ocean he has written notable stories of the Conference.
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Northwest.
Miss Lois A. Hall, of Pittsburgh,
Pa, is_the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Chas. E. Hall, 617 You Street North-
west.
Mr. Sam Taylor, of Leesburg, *Va.,
has been visiting friends in this city.
Mr, Charles H. Ashe, of Leesburg,
Va., was in the city last week on busi-
ness,
Miss Lydia E. Ashburn, a graduate
of Howard University, has passed the
medical board of Virginia and will
practice medicine there.
Mr._and Mrs. William L. Bell, of]
151 Druid Hill Avenue, Baltimore,
Nd, gave a whist party last Saturday
evening in honor of Miss Grace Wa-
ters of this city and Miss Gertrude
' Henry, of Wilmington, Del.
Mrs. Ella Madison, who has been
visiting in this city, has returned to
her home in South Twentieth Street,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Miss Mary Parker of this city is the
guest of Mrs. A. G. McKensie, of 1737
Christian Street. Philadelphia. Pa.
Miss Pearl Sputlock, of Pittsburgh.
Pa. has come to this city to take up
nurse .training in Freedmen’s Hos-
Spital,
Mr. Artins Bonner, who resigned
his. position in the Navy Department.
* died recently at his home in New Or-
leans, La.
+ Prof. Louis Greyory, of this city.
will deliver an address at a piano
recital in Chieage, I. next Sunday.
Miss Edith Meriwether, of this city.
rendered a vocal sola entitled “My
Dear™ at the annual reception of the
Schubert Shakespearean Club of Dur-
ham, N.C. The club held its recep-
tion in the beautiful home of Dr.
Shephard. Miss Sadie Sumner, of
this city, was presem und is a mem-
“ber of the club. .
‘Mr. Jay Cox. of this city, who has
heen a student in Columbus. Obio,
has discontinued his studies at the
- university on account of a_nervous
breakdown. :
Mr. Churchill, of 1423 S_ Street
Northwest. whe has been sick for
more than six weeks, is now cunva-
Tescent. ils friends wish his speedy
recovery s
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Wormley had
to give np ther cozy tittle Haran}
Steeet on account_of the health of
Raby Elizabeth.” They are now liv
ing with. the gaperienced mother ot
Mrs. Wormley.
The friends of Miss Phoebe For-
rest are +Sorry to note the contmue#
illness of her aunt. |
February 27, 1913, at 8 p.m. al
Florida Avenue Baptist Church, Mrs
Maggie L. Walker, RW. G. secre
tary-treasurer, will speak to all Coun
cils of Sti Luke's and_conduct 4 grea
union: obligation. Every St. Luk
bring one new member.
Dr. J. W. Morse, having com
menced his season with a new line o
goods, he will be pleased to greet al
of his old and any new patrons tha
may come. 1904 L Street Northwest
Dr. Sarah Brown and Miss Mam:
Williamson, teachers of this city. 1
company with with Dr. Brown o
Pittsburgh, Pa., have gone on a lon;
visit to Porto Rico.
Miss’ Hart of this city was amon
the guests present at a surprise part
un for Mr. J. H. Dade, of Coron:
Miss Beatrice Patten, one of th
public school teachers, was recent!
married to Mr. Jessic Mitchell of thi
city,
Mrs. Wingfield, the wife of M:
Walter Wingfield, after a long illnes
died at the home of her daughter 1
Tea Street Northwest and was burie
* from Vermont \venne — Baptis
Church. :
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gorgas an
the Misses Alice and Henrietta Set
of Philadelphia, Pa. were in the cit
last Sunday.
Mrs. Ella Johnson, of 1613 Sout
Vancroft Street. Philadelphia, Pa.. |
in the city for several weeks.
Mrs. Sara Johnson has returned t
her home in Philadelphia after spen
ing several days here visiting frienc
and relatives.
Miss Bessic K. Mayse of this cit
was quietly married to. Mr. David V
Jones, of Philadelphia. The bride r
ceived useful presents.
Rev. Alexander Williamson, after
ten days’ visit in this city, has r
turned to his home in Chester, Pa.
_ Mrs. Frances White and Mrs, Ma
tie Smith, have returned to their hor
after visiting Mrs.. Joseph Mannin
a2 E Street Southwest
7 Miss Nora Randall, of | Sily
Springs Orange, N. J., was in the ci
during the illness of Mrs. Mannin
Her friends are glad to note
change in her health,
lee Cream Sodas and Sundaes a
* always pure and delicious at Buard
the drug store on Fourtcenth Stre
1912 3-2, where everybody — mei
everybody else. 4
Sunday to join his family, and v
make this his future home.
‘Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Gargas,
Philadelphia. Pa.. spent last Sund
SRR, Sen Ser eee See
~Mr_ Edgar Thomas, of 65 N Street
Northwest, entertained a few of his
friends last Saturday night. Among
those present were Messrs. Raymond
Thomas, Percy D. Williams, Leland
Ward, James I, Minor, Perry Ed-
wards and Philip Barnes. 7
The “soloists” at the Metropolitan
A. M. E. Church Christian Endeayor
on last Sunday were Miss Ruth Smith
who rendered “Hope and‘ Charity;”
Miss Berry, who | rendered “By the
Water of Babylon,” and Mr. Williams
who rendered “Teach Me to Pray.’
These young singers have exceeding
ly fine Voices and we wish them great
success.
Register J C Napier returned tc
the city from Tennessee last Friday
where he has been on business.
Fourteenth Street was never
more popular thoroughfare than it i
today, and Board’s Drug Store a
1912 1-2 is its most popular center.
‘
© ALEXANDRIA NEWS. 1
x +
RR MH HH MIM HRM OHM HR HM RR HM
The iuneral of Mrs. Cornelia Shel-
ton Scott, who was killed in a trolley
accident in Yonkers, N.Y. took place
tram Roberts’ Chapel, M. E. Church,
Sunday at 2 p.m, The deceased was
related to Miss Alice Dogans, Leon-
ard Dogans and several other Alexati-
drians. Rev. S. H. Brown, D. D.. of-
ficnated. “Interment was’ made in
Hethel Cemetery. :
Mr. Garnet Cl Wilkerson, of the
Armstrong Manual Training School,
addressed the Epworth League Sun-
day at 4 p.m. Special music was ren-
dered by the League choir.
1 Miss (rene Randolph was operated
on at Freedmen’s Hospital Tuesday
morning. Dr. J. Milton Hopkins, her
physicim, reports her case as being
very fav will remain at
that inst two weeks, or
possibly
The Tt «lapter of Rob.
certs’ Chi * urch, will hold
their ree” service tomor-
row afte +. February 16),
at 4:30, 1. AL Bennett,
trectpr ¢ scopal Church,
+ willl add ng. Music will
fre furni ale choir inde
the direcuen oi ate. + Richard TE
Rraoks
Mrs. Lizzie Johitson is spending: 3
few weeks in Philadelphid with rela:
tives.
Douglas R, Carter and Whittield 1
Brooks opened their Friday nigh
dancing class at Whiting’s Mall las
Fevening ‘There was a kirge and jolly
crowd present The dass will contin
J during the season Se as ces
| The concert at the ‘Third’ Baptiy
| Clinch on Wednesday evening: was ;
{phenomenal success Miss Chapmat
deserves much credit for the way sh
managed the affair, “The program in
: eluded numbers hy Mr. P21 Lump
|| kins. Mme = Gertrude Hapkins, Ma
dame Margara Brown and other abl
talent
‘| For an up-to-date drug store. D:
i J. W. Mors¢, at 1905 L Street North
tl ects is the one;
= s
= FAIRMOUNT HEIGHTS. :
We OS YE MA A Se a a SE EE
Sunday, February 9. 1913. was red
letter day at the Fairmount Heights
M. E. Chureh-here Rey. Dr. MW.
Clair, Ph.D., pastor of Asbury M. E.
Chureh, Washington, D. C,, who has
encouraged this work ever since its
organization and who has contributed
greatly to its spiritual and financial
success, was out at 3 o'clock, preached
a glorious sermon, and brought or
raised the sum of twenty dollars and
left_ with the trustees to pay on the
obligations of the church. Rey. Clair
‘encouraged an after collection at one
‘af his weekly: meetings for the bene-
fit of the work here and seven dollars
and fifty cents was raised. He al-
ways exemplifies the spirit of the
great Nazarene—helping wheréver he
can,
Mr, James A. Campbell_was also
elected’ a trustee of the Fairmount
Heights. M, E. Church, His name
Was erroneously omitted from the list
published in the last issue of The Bee.
| Mirs. ‘Tabb sang in the Af. E. Churel
choir last Sunday. She is an accom
plished lady and a valuable accession.
It is the hope of the church that it
will be convenient for her to become
& permanent meinber of said choir.
Rev. Dr. Ernest S.Williams, D. D.
held the Fourth Quarterly Conferencé
of the charge at Mt. Airy, Montgom:
ery County, Maryland, Saturday, Feb
ruary & "The reports showed grea
improvements over .previdas years
| Rev. Bradly Johnson, the good pas
Jtor, and his people have made grea
|| progress this year under the superin
tendency of Dr. Williams. He_ heli
jthe | greatest conference at Sand;
Springs February 13. He has con
| sented to aid the Fairmount Height
"| M. E. Church in revival services be
| ginning Sunday night, February 1
-| 1913.
i] Mr. Charles E. Payne, -one of ot
good citizens, worshiped at the M. E
ae
|Church Sunday night. He addressed
the meeting and aided in raising the
collection. .
‘The Deanwood Catholic Church was
at the public-hall February 3, the old
Folks’ Concert under the leadership of
Mrs. H. B. Cardézo, Wednesday
night, February 5, and the Miller
Musical Family Friday night, Febru-
ary 7, 1913. Each of the above en-
gagements were highly patronized and
enjoyed, ¢
The Christian workers here formed
an interdenominational Sunday School
Union a few days ago. This union
will be composed of representatives
from the Sunday, Schools of Fair-
mount Heights and vicinity. The
first public meeting was held Sunday
evening, February 9, at the Presbyte:
rian Church. They rendered a beau-
tliul program of songs, prayers aud
addresses. The welcome address was
delivered by Mr. Robert_5. Nichol».
the superintendent of the Presbyterian
Church Sunday School. The response
was made by Rev. C. H. Strother, the
superintendent .of the First Baptist
Church Sunday School. The tempo-
rary officers are: C. H. Strother,
chairman, and C. A. Thompson, sec-
retary. Permanent organization will
be formed soon.
Rey. Bradley Johnson, pastor of
Mt. Airy charge, Rev. Benjamin
Gross, pastor of Laytonville charge.
and Mr. Gross, his bréther, were
in the city of Washington on Fehru-
ary 10, 1913. Théy report great suc-
cess in their fjelds of labor.
Miss Justine Wilkes, the principal of
the Fairmount Heights School. fa-
vored her class, which is now studying
United States. money. with a trip
through the United States ‘Treasury
Department and made some practic:
able and instruetive observations.
They were guided and shawn through
by our_good old friend, Mr. A. E:. De-
gan. Tis courtesy to the principa
and pupils shall never be forgotten.
‘There was a successful meeting hel:
at the Union Mission M. E Church
of which Rev. Robert A. Hart is pas:
tor. The district superintendent an¢
many visiting ministers were presen!
| Monday night and helped in the re
| vival services, Many souls were mid
Jto now the Lord. Rey. Hart is doin;
a great work for Christ ahd the churel
and has a bright ftiré.
Rev. John Mansky and his peopl
conducted the mecting Tuesday night
|iwlich was a great success.
|. The revival at \sbury M. E, Churet
| Washington, D. C.. is reported to by
| the most successful in ten years, Mer
{than two hundred persons found pea:
‘lto their souls and added to the chureh
Dr. W. L. Smith, Fourth and Elm
Streets Northwest. is prepared to fill
any kind of prescription It is the
only drug store in the park.
Deéanewood, D. C.
Rev. E. Thos Broadus, pastor uf the
Zion Baptist Church, ‘is visiting Bal-
timore and Philadelphia for a week or
ten days. and will return to Wilming-
ton, Del., fora short stay. During his
one year's pastorate of this elitreh it
is said that there has been done more
actual work in bringing forward. the
work of this church, both financially
and spiritually, than can be said of
any church in this city proportionate-
ly to the few-he had to help him. He
isa stirring, energetic gospel preacher.
forceful and logical” m pressing the
truth,
Engagement Announced.
Cincinnati, Ohio Feb 9, Vat.
\At aeard party at which there were
fiity invited guests “aut the residence
ot Mrs, Daisy S Merchant, 1014 John
Street, the night of January 3t, the en-
gagement of Mr Chas 1) Moore.
Greensboro, N.C. “and Mrs.” Daisy
Simms-Merehitt was publicly an-
nounecd. Mrs Merchant is the dangh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Washington
Simms. Mr. Simms for twenty sears
was one ot the first colored teachers
here on College Hill The last fifteey
years he has been known as one ot
the leading caterers ot this city Mr=
Davy Simms-Merchant happily ew
joys the sincere friendship of a host
of admirers, fot only in the “Queer
City.” but | throughout the centra
states wherever she is known. She
is evsily the most prominent, succes»
ful husiness woman in the city—tha
of Caterers.
Mr. Moore, as i¢ well known to the
business and professional men of th
country, has heen for the past. si3
years the National organizer of tlh
National Negro Business League
Previous to his entering the Leagu
work, he had been counceted with th
State Agricultural and Mechanica
College for the colored race, Greens
boro, X. C, for fifteen years as vic
president and director of the .\ca
demic Department of the school. ,
BASKET BALL.
Hiawatha Will Win the Champion:
ship.
The Cardinal-Hiawatha basket ball
team won its first inter-city game at
home on Saturday night’ when it
trimmed the Dunbar quint from the
Monumental city by the sedre of 25
to 16. The Dunbar boys arrived in
Washington fresh from a victory over
the strong intercollegiate team of
Philadelphia in Baltimore of Friday
night, and fully expected to duplicate
their winning here in Washington.
The first half ended in favor of the
visitors by a‘score of 8 to 7, but in
the second half of the game the home
boys let loose and threw nine baskets
‘to two field goals and four fouls by
their opponents, |The Dunbar players
|were much heavier than‘the boys on
the Hiawatha quint, but this was not
enough to. offset the speed of the
lighter players. Henderson and Hol-
land shot fewer goals, but the passing
and speed of these two meant much
to the winners, Mabry and Mille:
were in form, but as the game pro-
gressed grew weak in spots. Lewis
did not play up to his usual standard
but was in the game at all times anc
scored more goals than did any othe
in the game. The Webb brothers wer«
the best for the visiting aggregation
jin field play, while Jones’ six out o
nine chances from the foul line. Only
four field goals were thrown by: th
Visitors, yet considering the strang'
court, they did well.
It was proven last night that th
ilewatiay team is the fastest light-
weight quint that has ever existed in
Washington, and that this team will
likely win the amateur city club title
when it plays the Y. M. C, A. heavy-
weight team at the meet in Conven-
tion Hall on February 28,
M Street High School five defeated
the Keystone Athletic Club of this
city in ‘the preliminary by the score
of 27 to 11 Neither team did_any-
thing remarable, and the M_ Street
boys were way off form, with little or
no passing or guarding of the tyne of
which they are capable The Key-
| stones for a frst-vear team are doing
well, and if the organization lives
Should be a strong contender on the
(court next year.
The games of last night and the
work of the officials cannot be too
highly complimented,
Summary.
Following is the line-up of the Hia-
watha team and the Dunbar A. A.
Henderson... R. FL ......W Webb
Mabry... 1 LB. Webb
K, Miller. Jr. G80 0000 Jones.
Lewis... ROG. 0222. Wilson
Holland. ...3.. 1. G......M. Dorsey’
Referee—Mr. W. If. J. Beckett. Y.
MC. AL»
Umpire—Mr. 8. Washington, A. M.
TS.
/__Scorer:—Miss Lily Skinker. ediptain
YW. CoA. girls,
Timer-+Mr_Herriot.
Score--IT-C A.C. 253. AL AL 16.
| Following is the line-up af the M,
[Street High School and the Key-
sutnes: a
| Slade-Toomer . Re B. ...... <1, Brice
Brown-Reetor.. 1 0. 2... Williams
Scott-Green. C22. 2 Estes
Tyler-Reetor ROG vee... Green
Brown-Tyler.. 1, G. Lists... Bryce
Referee—Mr “Holland, HC APC.
Umpire Mr 1G. Douglas. M
Street HLS. 3
Scorer—Miss Skinker.
*Pimes—Mr. Herriot
Score—M Street. 27: Keystones. 11
Don't miss the Park Drng Store.
Fourth and Elm Street Northwest
Dr We Le Smith,
“The Choral Concert *
The Choral concert presented at
Howard Theater February 2 hy the
Washington® Conservatory ef Music"
was like all of their epneerts, a de-
lightful success in quality. length and
andienee
Tt is the hape of ity patrons and
many of the leading mitisters that the
Sunday concert of uplifting classies
will be a helpful contribution to the
general culture of our young people.
“The large aulience was a compli-
ment to the work of this our first and
only mission school of music, candutet-
ed by Negroes in *\merica.
‘The Choral ‘Society. only recently
organised, reflected gréat credit upon
the training af its eapable director.
Mr. Harry \. Williams
The program was as fnllows:
Kermesse Scene--"Faust".. Gounod
Rarcarolle-—"The Tales of Hoff-
MAN. evseseeeeeteee Offenbach
Washington Conservatory. Chorus,
Waltz Song—"The Firefly”... .Frimt
Miss Jenne Kelly,
“Young Lovel’s Bride”..../ daesche
Misces Enola. McDaniel and Jeanne
Kelly with Chorus of Ladies!
5 Voices.
Niriean Melodies... . Coleridge-Taylos
Hl Mr. Felix Weir,
Inflamatus—"Stahat Mater”... Rossin
Mise Alta B. Scott and Chorus.
Dae "Night Hymn at Sea”. oo...
Sete arene» Gortng-Thonta
Miss Jeanne Kelly and Mr. \dolph
_ Hodge.
“Good Night, Good Night, Beloved.”
and “Now the Concert Ts Over”.
leniaininenceisineneceientiensmesinemees ENEUS
Charas
+The student soloists, now under th
shilliul direction ni Mr. Uarry A
FAVilliams, presented to the andienes
excellent. voices and mest promisin;
talent, They were Misses Enola Me
Daniel, Lillian and Alta Scott and Mr
\dolph Hodge, all who did most ered
itable work. ‘The rendition of th
“Firefly” by Frimi hy Miss Jeann
Kelly. the well known dramatic con
tralto, broughy persistent encore
The concert as a whole was « mo-
enjoyable one and all_are looking for
ward with great interest to. the. "Mi
tkado” to-be presented by the Chora
| Society March tst at 8 p mat How
Least Theater
Dr. McGuire's Gratitude,
Dr. Robert T.. MeGuire. successor
tu Board & McGuire. Pharmacy, at
Ninth and You Streets Northwest, ex-
tends most grateful thanks to the pro-
fession. patrons and the public in gen-
‘eral for their generous patronage dur-
jing the past two years «
Pure drugs, choice toilet acce~so~
ries, selvet candies, ice cream of all
popular flavors, delicious hot and cold
sodas, ete. are among the attractions
that have made the Ninth and You
Street store the reliable, busy corner
pharmacy. :
Assuring prompt attention, courte-
ous service. accuracy, and personal
supervision, your-continued patronage
and that of your friends is éordially
solicited
PARENTS’ MEETING
And Musicale, by-Normal No. 2—Con-
fidence and Gratitude Expressed—
‘Tribute to Principal and to High
Character of Students—“Credit Sys-
tem” of Marking Explained—Neces-
sity of Good Companions, Etc.
After a musicale by the students of
Normal No, 2, directed by Miss Lola
Johnson of the faculty, last Friday
afternoon, a parents’ mecting was held
with students and faculty all present.
The -principal, Dr. Lucy E. Moten.
stated in characteristic fashion that
the best of character was none too
good to be placed in charge of chil-
dren in the classroom, and that to the
extent of the power of the adminis-
tration of the normal school, charac-
ter was demanded and developed. She
admonished the parents as to the ne-
jcessity for carelully supervising the
conversation, companions, dress‘and
diversions of their sons ad daughters,
and urged them to co-operate in de-
manding character in those in high
places in public life.
In several addresses by the parent:
Secure Your Seats for the wy =
MAMMOTH INDOOR ATHLETIC MEET AT CONVENTION ‘HALL
% THE EVENING OF FEBRUARY 28
The Beginning of the Festival Season ty
Under the Auspices of Interscholastic Athletic Association, Public Schools
Athletic League, and The Teachers’ Benefit and Annuity Association,
-Colleges, Schools, and Clubs as follows will be represented:’ |
Howard University, .
Hampton Institute,
Alpha Physical Culture of New York, .
Lincotn University, 3
Smart Set of New York,
Salem and Crescent of New York, . 2
Public Schools Athletic League of Washington, D. C.
Other teams from New York, Philadelphia, Jersey City, Newark,
and Baltimore. =“
Events begin at 8 and are over at rr o'clock.
Hoffman's Orchestra until 2 a. m.
Reserved Seat Tickets $1.25, $1.00, 75¢ and soc. On sale at ¥. M.C. A
Office, 1816 Twelfth Street Northwest. .
General admission, soc. 7
J. MORIA SAUNDERS,
Chairman Committee on Advertising.
E. B. HENDERSON, .
General Manager
high tribute was paid to the work of
thé school as displayed in the dével-
opnient of the young people while un-
der its jntluence.
‘Much satisfaction was expressed
with the eredit system of marking for
work done in terms of the vali of the
subject taught in the whole course of
two years, which was inaugurated by
Assistant Superintendent Brice upan
assuming charge of the public sehools.
una effectivelysapplied by the priner-
pal.
Dr. J. H. Waring and Rev. Dr. Jer-
nagin Were especially forceful in ure:
ing the necessity for co-operation be
tween parents and children on on
hand and the school gn the other it
producing that fitness for the hit
calling of the teacher. Critical self
examination was urged upon thos
who essayed to teach, and an hones
judgment’ as to the results
~ C. M. Thomas of the faculty viger
ously defended the stulent body “HL
‘urged that foll credit he given then
ior the character shown in making th
dificult adjustments between the hu
man nature and the high ideals set he
iore them in preparation for the teach
ing. profession.
- “Niter hearing themselves diseusse
pro and can, the students were dis
"missed and the parents’ met the indi
“vidual teachers in their claxsrooms t
| confer respecting the special strength
_ and weaknesses of individual member
of the school.
. The following courses are in oper
tion in the Normal Scheol this yea
. The regular course for clementar
| schools. ¢
| ‘The Kindergarten course.
Domestic Science course.
. Domestic Arts course.
, Woodwork or Manual Arts cours
. There is no Drawing or Colles
Section course this year, Miss Fla
rict Perry was graduated February
+ sisnn:.
Mr. "Roland Hayes in Recital at How-
ard University.
On February 14. at 8 p.m. the
School ai Music at Howard Univer:
sity will present Mr. Rowland. W.
Hayes. the phenomenal tenur soloist
of Hoston, Mase. Those they heard
the rendition of Handel's “Messiah”
by the choral suciety of the univer:
sity. will remember the splendid work
OP Mr.‘Mayes. whe thrilled the entire
audience with the beauty of his voice
This young artist the possessur oi
a righ Iyrie tenor vice whieh, is, ion.
derfal in its range and the depth of
its expression,
Meu Mayes ‘began his eareee with
the Fiske Jubilee Quartet. with which
organvation be save the most breil
fant. periurmiances Elis work at-
tracted the attention ai the. intluen:
Hal wealthy people ot the south, some
Gi hom are meey hacking hin tinan-
rally in ins efforts te complete hs
musical education m Baston,
| Recently. m consumetion with Mr,
RW. Tibbs, instructor im the School
of Music of Howard University. Mr
|
|
ia
rd
aS
we
Ned og S|
Hayes appeared in recital before an
audience composed. of the students
and faculty of the New England Con-
servatory of Music and the most ex-
clusive Boston society His perform-
ance astounded his auditors and the,
press of New England way unanimots
Jn placing him im the foremost rank!
ef \merican artists
Mise Clarice Jones, the well known
pianist who recently. graduated from
the Conservatory of Music of Cornell
University, will assist at the piano.
Mr ROW Tibbs will accompany Mr.
Hayes
The demand for seats for this re-
cital fs greater than that of any other
previous event of this kind in Howard
University. and a large and brilliant
audience will grect the soloist.
EC TERRY.
TUSKEGEE HOSPITAL.
The John A. Andrew Memorial Hos-
pital to Be Dedicated.
Tuskegee Institute, Ga., Feb. 11—A
$50,000 hospital. to be Known as the
$B A. Andrew Memorial Hospital
fiven by the granddaughter of the
ge Governor of Massachusetts, will
he dedicated at Tuskegee Institute
| Briday, February 21, at 4 p.m. The
The Berean Baptist Church Bazaar.
‘The Berean Baptist Church bazaar
will begin Monday, February 17
There will be several special attrac-
tions Wednesday evening, the 19th
The spelling bec under the direction
of Prot, Grant Lucas, Chas. S. Syphax.
“Aliss Nettie Murray and others. The
public should not fail to attend every
evening, because everything will be
interesting.
Admission, 10 cents.
program contemplates ~ addresses by
Hon. Seth Low, chairman of the Tu--
kegee Institute board of trustees; Prin-
cipal Booker T. Washington; Dr. John
A. Kenney, medical director of the
Tuskegee Institute Hospital: Dr. Geo.
C, Hall. of Chicage. Hh. De CG
Mason. of Tarmingham, Maz Ur W.
A. Wartieli, surzeonan-chiei Freed
men’s Hespital. Washington, 2,
and ie pest xtatlnate tnrse as well ts 6
student nerse The dedication sill
take place m the presence ot a mest
distinguished audience.
Two special trams are commg—one
from New York under the direction &
Mr. Low and other New York trus-
tee~ amd anuther irom Chicago with
friends as guests of Mr Julius Roser.
wall, the Chicage philanthropist and
trustee of Tuskegee bustitute.
During the meeting of the Nagional
Metical” \ssociation last) \tqeust 324
patients were treated and seme twe-
ty-hve eperations were periormed in
the sniall hospital of the Institute. It
is now planned to have another such
clinic in conneetion with the dediva-
tion ef thy Juhu Vo Andrew Mospital
which ts. bt many respects, one of the
best-itted hospitals in all the Seutti
The clinics are to be held under the
directions of De, John A Kenney, tite
Institute medical director, and opera-
tions will he performed, remedies pre-
scribe, ett. by the physicians above
named and by Dr CV. Reman, on
Nashville, Teno. specialise in the
treatment of the eye. ear. nose ani
I throat.
Joseph Manning. ,
\ strong supporter of The Bee ane
all colired enterprises He ose
therengh race man and ane in whorn
the people have contulence. and res
spect tar bis honesty and integrity
Mr Joseph Manning. a well known
carpenter and builder of this city, ex-
presses himeeli as bem grateful for
his association with the old boys
his Jong acquaintance. Mr. Manning
is one of the founders of Odd Fet-
lows? Hall \Ssocfation and has beet
one of the directors for more thar
twenty-two years. He was for more
than eleven’ years the treasurer, a3-
suming the responsibility of more
than $0,000. Four years ago he gave
a check for $9,500, which cancelled
the pending debt on the Hall. In the
ae
a
- a
a oe peo bu
last four years, at the rate of 5 per
cent. more than $10,000 have been
paul to the stockholders
‘Mr. Manning, who is a member of
all the branches of Odd Fellows, is
also one of the founders of Crispus
Attucks Relief Association and now
its president. In this organization
more than $2,500 per year is expend-
ed for sick arid death benefits.
Mr. Manning, aside from being as-
sociated with these noted organiza-
tions. is one of the deacons of the
Zion Baptist Church. If at any time
you should need a builder, call on this
deserving man, who is not a stranger
to his profession.
The best in drugs, medicines and
toilet articles can be had at the right
prices at Board’s, 1912 1-2 Fourteenth
| Street Northwest. -
‘Lost His Hat.
| The gentlemen who through a mis-
take took a black hdt with initials W.
H. D. D. from the Metropolitan A. M.
E. Church, Seventeenth and M Streets.
February It. can find his hat at 420
@ Street Northwest, or Telephorie
1 North 5194.
SIX-YEAR TERM WINS IN SENATE
NOW GOES TO THE HOUSE
Measure If Passed and Approved by States Would Bar Wilson, Taft and Roosevelt From Re-Election.
To the surprise of many of its own members and of outsiders generally, the senate gave just one vote more than the necessary two-thirds in favor of the Works-constitutional amendment limiting the tenure of office of president to one term of six years.
This action of the senate assures that if three-fourths of the states ratify the proposed change within the next four years the presidential term of Woodrow Wilson will be automatically extended two years, and he will be ineligible for re-election, as will Colonel Theodore Roosevelt and William H. Taft.
The final vote by which the unamended Works resolution was adopted proved exciting in the extreme, as it was very close throughout and again and again it looked as if the resolution was defeated. Senator Henry A. Dupont, of Delaware, by his belated vote in the affirmative at last saved the day for the proposed constitutional change, the result being 47 ayes and 23 noes.
In addition to the surprise caused by the success of the resolution, due to the apparent drift of senatorial sentiment during the three days' debate on the proposition, the way in which several senators voted was surprising and almost inexplicable.
Senator LaFollette, for instance, turned up in opposition to the resolution, although its passage would be a long step in the direction of preventing Colonel Roosevelt from ever again being president of the United States. On the other hand, Senator Cummins was recorded in the affirmative, while the only Democratic senator in opposition was Snively, of Indiana. Senators Dixon, of Montana, and Polindexter, of Washington, both ardent supporters of Roosevelt, of course cast their votes in the negative. Senator Oliver went the same way, while Penrose was recorded in the affirmative. In all seventeen regular Republicans supported the proposition.
Senator Dupont had been paired with Senator Culberson, of Texas, and so announced when he voted, but said that he felt free to have himself recorded in the affirmative, because he understood that if the Texas senator were present he would vote the same way.
There seems to be no doubt that the house of representatives will adopt the Works resolution or one practically identical with it. It is also expected that three-fourths of the state legislatures will be found to be in favor of the constitutional change when it is submitted to them for ratification.
The language which it is proposed to insert in the constitution in place of the first paragraph of article 2 is as follows.
"The executive power shall be vested in a president of the United States of America The terms of the office of President shall be six years; and no person who has held the office by election, or discharged its powers or duties, or acted as president under the constitution and laws made in pursuance thereof, shall be eligible to hold again the office by election."
7300 MINERS ON STRIKE
Quit Work Because Engineers Refuse to Join Union. Refusing to work alongside of engineers who have refused to join the union, 7390 miners at the Lackawanna collieries in Scranton, Pa., and Tavon and 'at the Delaware & Hudson colliery in Archbald are, out of work. This was part of a general strike that had been planned for between Nanticoke and Forest City to compul engineers to become allied with the miners' organization. At the collieries not affected by the walkout the engineers have joined the union.
The walking out of the 7300 men tied up operations completely at the nine-collieres. Every Lackawanna colliery in Scranton is affected, but the workers at its other twenty-four collieries remained at work.
FIRE SWEPS WATER FRONT
Blaze at Savannah, Ga., Does $1,500,000. Damage.
Destruction by fire of the wharves of the Merchants' and Miners' Transportation company and the Planters' Rice mill on the water front of Savannah Ga., entailed a loss estimated at $500,000.
The fire raged for four hours before it finally was brought under control. No lives were lost.
The wharves destroyed are owned by the Central of Georgia railway, but are used by the Merchants' and Miners' company. The burned area is a quarter of a mile long and two blocks wide.
West Virginia Acts on Election. The lower house of the West Virginia legislature adopted a resolution ratifying the amendment to the constitution of the United States providing for the direct election of senators The senate has not yet taken action.
Former Philadelphia Official Convicted of Conspiracy.
[Name]
GUILTY OF CONSPIRACY
Ex-City Official of Philadelphia and True Contractors Convicted
Two Contractors Convicted.
Henry Clay, former director of public safety; John R. Wiggins and Willard H. Wallis, contractors, of Philadelphia, were found guilty of conspiracy to defraud the city in the erection of a fire house during the administration of Mayor Reyburn. Carl B. Zilenziger, tried on the same charge, was acquitted. A motion was made for a new trial.
It was shown at the trial that Philadelphia paid $35,000 for a building that could be erected at a profit for $18,000, and that two sets of plans and specifications were used in awarding the contract. The favored contractors bid on the cheaper plans and others on those calling for high-priced material.
Should the verdict be sustained the three men will be lable to a maximum penalty of two years' imprisonment and $500 fine. Pending disposition of the motion for a new trial the convicted men were released on $5000 bail March 1 was set for hearing argument on the motion.
FIRE CHIEF'S MOTHER AND SISTER BURN
Leading his company in response to an alarm, Fire Chief Patrick Curran found the blaze was in his own home on West Maiden street, Washington. Pa. Grabbing a chemical extinguisher, he rushed through the smoke filled doorway and, running through the hall, enered the room of his aged mother, Mrs. Bridget Curran, eighty-four years old, where the flames were burning fiercely. The fire chief stumbled over something on the floor and, reaching down, picked up the terribly burned body of his mother. He carried the woman into a neighboring house, where she died soon afterward.
The aged woman's daughter, Miss Mary Curran, who attempted to save her mother, sustained fatal burns while a son, Michael, was terribly injured by the flames.
The fire had its origin in an open coal grate. It is supposed that Miss Curran rose in the night and approached the mantel, her nightrobe become ignited at the grate. Her screams brought her daughter from the second floor, and in the flight with the flame Miss Curran was burned over the greater part of her body.
TWO KILLED IN PANIC
Cry of Fire Stampedes Audience In Moving Picture Show.
Two women were killed and more than a score of men, women and children were badly hurt in a panic at the Houston Street Hippodrome, a moving picture center at 143 East Houston street, New York.
A blind, unreasoning panic at the shout of "The!" swept an East Side audience of 800 into the entrance way to the snow house, where they clutched and tore and trampled upon each other.
The fire itself, the quick flash of a moving picture film, was out in three minutes. The operator himself had smothered the blaze that was the cause of the death of two before the firemen could fight their way through the terorized crowd to his assistance
Killed by Train; Friend Fatally Hurt. While on their way to Pittsburgh to look for work, Richard Lowe, of Mac tawan, N. J., and A. J. Kennedy, of Haddonfield, N. J., were run down by a freight train on the Pennsylvania railroad near Horse Shoe Curve, above Altoona, Pa., the former was killed and the latter probably fatally injured. Kennedy's scalp was almost torn from his head.
Mule's Kick Fatal to Farmer. Isanc Troop, a tarmer, of Denver Pa., died as the result of a kick on the head by a mule.
National Religious Training Schoo
THE NATIONAL RELIGIOUS TRAINING SCHOOL
Offers superior advantages for the training of young men and women in many departments of work.
The following Departments are in successful operation.
1. Department of Religious Training. This department is intended especially for the training of Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. Secretaries. Settlement workers, Deaconesses, and for Home and Foreign Missionaries.
House & Herrmann 7th and Eye Sts., N. W
James Ottoway | Holmes, Proprietor
| Washington, D. C.
home Muia 2315
of all kinds and description, House and Herrmann is the place to visit. There is no other house of its kind in the city where the people can be satisfied. This is house that will satisfy you.
Knights Of Mary
A National Negro Secret Society Chartered Under the
By Congress and Approved by the President of the
It proposes to uplift the race along moral, s
lines, to be the largest association of its kind in the
lish subordinate lodges in every village, hamlet and
holding a convention in Washington, D. C., during the
Inauguration.
It pays sick benefits ranging from $2.50 to $6.00
$100 to $1,000 at death. Joining fee from $2.50 to $5.
Good organizers wanted everywhere, and are at
$100 per month salary.
For further information, address Supreme Lodge
F St., N. W., Washington, D. C. L. Melendez King
Bruce Evans, G. S. L. G., Miss Henrietta Vinton Da
Entered Under the Laws as Enacted President of the United States.
strong moral, social and industrial arts kind in the world, and to estab- hamlet and town, however small, C., during the coming Presidential
$2.50 to $6.00 per week, and from $2.50 to $5.25.
ere, and are assured from $50 to
Supreme Lodge of Malachites, 609 Melendez King, G. S. G., Dr. W.utta Vinton Davis, G. L.
A National Negro Secret Society Chartered Under the Laws as Enacted By Congress and Approved by the President of the United States.
It proposes to uplift the race along moral, social and industrial lines, to be the largest association of its kind in the world, and to establish subordinate lodges in every village, hamlet and town, however small, holding a convention in Washington, D. C., during the coming Presidential Inauguration.
It pays sick benefits ranging from $2.50 to $6.00 per week, and from $100 to $1,000 at death. Joining fee from $2.50 to $5.25.
Good organizers wanted everywhere, and are assured from $50 to $100 per month salary.
For further information, address Supreme Lodge of Malachites, 609 F St., N. W., Washington, D. C. L Melendez King; G. S. G., Dr. W. Bruce Evans, G. S. L. G., Miss Henrietta Vinton Davis, G. L.
FORD'S
HAIR POMADE
MAKES HARSM, KUNKY OR CURLY HAIR
GLOSSY, SOFTER AND MORE PLIABLE,
EASY TO COMB AND PUT UP IN ART STYLE
THE LENGTH WILL PERMIT, UNEXCEILLED
FOR PREVENTING HAIR FROM FALLING OUT, GANDRUFF AND ITching
OF SCALE BEWARE OF IMITATIONS, GET THE GEMINI, PUT UP IN
25* AND 50* BOTTLES WITH CHARLES FORD'S NAME ON
EVERY PACKAGE
BURNSTINE LOAN OFFICE
GOLD AND SILVER WATCHES, DIAMONDS, JEWELRY, GUNS, MECHANICAL TOOLS LADIES' AND GENTS' WEARING APPARKL.
OLD GOLD AND SILVER BOUGHT.
UNREDEEMED PLEDGES FOR SALE.
361 Pennsylvania Avenue, N. W.
imports ever recorded. It looks somewhat like "free competition," does it not? When prosperous Americans can spend more than $25,000,000 a year on foreign merchandise the equivalent of which could for the most part have been produced in our own country, and when to the extent of close upon a billion dollars foreigners are allowed to compete in the American market, what becomes of the Free-Trade contention that lower tariff duties are needed? How much more than the competing privilege of $25,000,000 a year are the foreigners entitled to? As the case now stands they displace about $1,200,000,000 of American labor and production. Isn't that enough?
Reference—E. B. Henderson.
Umpire—B: Washington.
Timer—R. Vaughn.
Scorer—J. F. N. Wilkinson.
Would Have the Field All to Itself.
With free raw sugar the Sugar Trust can close down practically every beet sugar plant in the country and put the 25,000 farmers who are raising sugar beets out of business. Then it will have the field entirely to itself once more and can combine with other importers as it did in the past, and make prices to suit itself. If sugar were made free the price would drop for a while, but
2. Department of Theology.
3. Commercial Department.
4. Literary Department.
5. Department of Music.
GO
HOLMES,' HOTEL
33 Virginia Ave., S. V
est Afro-American Acc
the District
Good Rooms and Lodging 50c, 75c
and $1.00. Comfortably Heated
by Steam. Give us a call.
Assistant Attorney General Wm. H. Lewis, in company with ex-Minister John Durham, of Philadelphia, are receiving a royal reception by the crown heads of Europe.
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS
In Athletics—Great Meet at Conven- tion Hall.
In the series for the championship of the elementary schools of the P. S. A. L. Slater School annexed another victory on Friday afternoon, which assures this team of a place as a contending team at the Athletic Carnival to be held on February 28 at Convention Hall. The other team is to be decided in the game this week between Banneker School team and Stevens School heavyweight team. The intent of the series just held was according to the plans of the City Games Committee to decide the two best teams in each weight class to compete for the championship in a deciding game at the big meet. In the lightweight class, by the series just finished, Birney School has been the only team eliminated. Stevens, Garrison and Jones Schools each have a chance to be one of the two teams to play for the lightweight city championship that night.
The game between Slater and Lincoln was an uninteresting game due to the one-sided feature of the contest. Slater won by the score of 18 to 5, and did not put up much effort to score.
The Stevens School lightweight team appeared all in and did not show the form of other occasions, while Jones played better than it has before. The score was 11 to 0 in favor of Jones. Captain Hart and Lewis were the stars of the game.
Following is the line-up of the teams:
Stevens School.
Slater..... Pos..... Lincoln
Graves..... R. F..... Toyer
Gilmore..... L. F..... Piper
Bacon..... C..... Barnes
Meredith..... R. G..... Meredith
Bryant..... Bryant
Betters..... L. G..... Smith
Jones School.
Jones..... Pos..... Stevens
Hart..... R. F..... S. Parker
Baltimore..... L. F..... C. Parker
Jackson..... C..... Reynolds
Dyer..... R. G..... Brown
Lewis..... L. G..... Coleman
"Free Competition" $825,443,010.
(From the American Economist.) In the year just closed the people of the United States, in spite of a "prohibitive" Tariff, purchased from other countries articles entering into competition with domestic labor and industry of the invoice value—foreign value—of $25,443,010. This is an increase of nearly $100,000,000 over the year 1911, and is the largest amount of durable
Malachites
FORD'S
HAIR POMADE
MAKES MARSH, KIRKY OR GIRLY HAIR
GLOSSY, SOFTER AND MORE PLIABLE,
EASY TO COMB AND PUT UP IN ANY STYLE
THE LENGTH WILL PERMIT UNEXCEELED
6. Department of Literary Training
7. Department of Industries.
8. Extension Home Classes.
There are special scholarships for deserving young men and women, in the Departments of Theology and Religious Training.
The next Summer School and Chautauqua will open July 3. 1917
For further information and catalogue, address
PRESIDENT JAMES E. SHEPARD.
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ANNOUNCEMENT
The Sherman Directory Company Directory and Ready Reference of a trict of Columbia.
This publication has been compiled the general public a concise Directorying the names, addresses and occupa sixteen years of age, male and female schools, colleges, homes, orphan asy institutions.
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catalogue or other information, write to
The Sherman Directory Company announces their publication of a Directory and Ready Reference of the colored population in the District of Columbia.
This publication has been compiled with the idea of presenting to the general public a concise Directory of the colored population, showing the names, addresses and occupations, that is to say, of those over sixteen years of age, male and female, together with a list of churches schools, colleges, homes, orphan asylums, hospitals, and other colore institutions.
The book is bound with blue cloth, front cover printed in silver and has no advertisement on either the front or back cover. The printing throughout is neat and on the best quality of paper, thus affording it a place in the finest home or office library.
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President. - - - - Greensboro, N. (
HOWARD
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Located in the Capital of the Campus of over twenty acres. Equipment. New Carnegie Library Faculty of one hundred. 1,409 stu. States and eight other countries. support.
THE COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENTIFIC AND ENTHE TEACHERS COLLEGE.
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as soon as the beet sugar producers were put out of business it would be run up to any point the trust pleased.
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The Democrats are short-sighted in a good many things, but in hardly anything else are they going it so blindly or displaying so much ignorance as in their cries for "free sugar in order to down the Sugar -Trust."—Johnstown Leader.
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Opposition to the reduction of the sugar tariff by Louisiana Democrats, who depend upon beet sugar for their livelihood, is the first monkey-wrench that has been chucked into the theoretically well-oiled, smooth-running machine especially designed to produce tariff reform all along the line.—Philadelphia Inquirer.
Read The Bee if you want a live paper.
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UNDERTAKER AND EMBLAMER ALL WORK FIRST CLASS. TERMS MOST REASONABLE TWELFTH AND R STREETS, N. W. James H.Dabney
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Minneapolis. Minnesota.
Hopelessly Tangled:
Professor Thinkitout was about to be married and had just received an invitation to his own wedding, which he had absentmindedly mailed to himself.
"Well, well," he mused, "what does this mean? My fiancee's name on a wedding invitation! The faithless hussy! And great Logarithms! There's my name on it too. Either she's untrue or I'm about to be a bigamist."—Exchange.
Testing His Love.
"Has he ever tried to tell how much he loves you?"
"Frequently, but I am going to get you inside information this afternoon."
yet reached a verdict, your honor. I missed my pocketbook in the night, and I would respectfully ask that each juror be searched
"The prima donna we heard yesterday has a voice of velvet."
"Of course That's where she gets her pile."-Baltimore American.
Mabel—George thinks I am so easy to please. Gladys—He must think so after all the rest of us had turned him down.—Baltimore American.
He who laughs last is an Englishman.—Princeton Tiger.
The gold plate on which the invitation to the late President Wm. McKinley was engraved was found in a New York pawn shop, where it was sold by the niece of the late President.
Judge Pugh has given authority to the Commission to impose a fine for the violation of the building regulations.
There will be three colored inaugural balls March 3, with no President to inaugurate.
Bishop Alexander Walters will reside in the District of Columbia where he will make his home.
J. N. Carpenter, of Natchez, Miss., a white philanthropist, has given $80,000 for the white public schools and $5,000 for a Negro school.
When President Taft becomes the Kent professor of law at Yale University, his salary will be $5,000 which is the maximum paid to full-grade professors there. Of this sum $305 comes from the Kent endowment and the remainder is given by the college.
By the will of Miss Helen M. Griggs, of Boston, Mass., $3,000 was left to the Arkansas Baptist College, of Little Rock, Ark.
The mayor of San Antonio, Texas, through the influence of the women's clubs, lately announced his intention to appoint four women on the city police force.
Chief of Police in Los Angeles, Cal., has promoted a colored officer to the rank of detective at a salary of $125 per month.
Mr. Julius Rosenwald, of Chicago, who has given so magnificently to the Colored Young Men's Christian Association, gave $2,500 recently to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
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Fresh Drugs.
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Drugs and Preparations always fresh. phone Main 3252.
ROBERT ALLEN
Buffet, and Family Liquor Store
Phone North 2340
Washington, D. C.
1917 4th Street, N. W.
H. K. FULTON'S LOAN OFFICE
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my engagement
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-We have not
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Cruel Hint
Horse Sense.
When a collar hurts, the average horse winces upon being asked to throw his weight into the collar. Later he becomes what we foolishly call balky perhaps, and finally he fights like an army mule when some one tries to put a collar on him. That's knowing something!
I am personally acquainted with a horse which simply hates a certain blacksmith who once upon a time nailed a bad fitting pair of shoes to his feet and inflicted sore feet upon this horse for all time to come.
There are men in this world of ours cruel enough to fasten a horse with a heavy rope in a stall and then beat the horse with a chain. But such men have "bad luck," for forever afterward if the horse which has received this sort of discipline hears a chain rattle he will bolt in terror, whether hitched to a mowing machine, a carriage with children in it or a heavy wagon loaded with produce. This is either horse sense or horse revenge.—Farm and Fireside.
Place Names In Russia.
The Russian has not applied his names without reason. In 1838, when he founded the capital of the Amoor province, he named it Blagoveschensk. This means "good news"—to all save the proofreaders in the newspaper offices. Three years later he founded the capital of Primorskaya and gave it a name that plainly showed what it was intended to be—Vladivostok, "ruler of the east." Near the end of his great transcontinental railway he made a brand new city and called it Dalny, "farthest," a very appropriate name for a place 5,800 miles from the starting point of the road. A petty clan of the Suchan family, springing from the narrow, beautiful, but savage glens southwest of Changbalahan, founded the Manchu dynasty, which for more than 200 years ruled China. They took the dynastic name of Manju, or Manchu, in their own language meaning "clear." To this the Europeans have added a termination, and we have Manchuria, the "country of the Manchus."—London Answers.
His Shaky Memory.
The lawyers got a tartar when, in a recent trial in a southern city, they summoned to the stand an aged darky who had been an eyewitness of a fight that had occurred between a number of persons.
"Tell us what you know about this fight," said counsel when old Mose had been placed upon the stand.
"Flight?" asked Mose, apparently greatly surprised. "What fight?" "You know very well what fight is meant," said counsel. "Tell us about it."
"I don't know nothin' about no fight," insisted the witness. "When was it?" "See here, Moses," exclaimed the lawyer; "no trifling—the fight day, before yesterday. You know all about it. Tell us"— "Oh, de fight day befo' ylsterday," said Mose. "Well, sub. you see, I'm slept since de day befo' ylsterday, and I never kil rickollect anything after I'm been asleep."
And that was all they could get from him.-Green Bag.
Blind Dogs and Bats
Canines born blind or Towsers that become blind by accident are able to smell and paw their way into the most inaccessible and out of the way places. It is practically impossible to starve them, lose them or trap them. Furthermore, blind dogs learn stunts just as quickly as those that see. Loss of sight in no way interferes with their ability to learn tricks, acquire habits or find their bed.
Rats, as a matter of fact, if they use their eyes at all—a doubtful matter—can see little or nothing of the world. The retina of these creatures has no point of perfect vision such as is found in the higher animals and man; hence their noses, muscles, touch and hearing give them information about the world they live in—New York Press.
Gave Himself Away.
A little girl was weeping bitterly in the street, and a benevolent old gentleman, putting her on the shoulder, inquired, what was the matter. "I've lost a penny, sir." the child sobbed. The old gentleman promptly handed her a penny. She looked at him askance for a few seconds and then said in a tone more of sorrow than of anger: "Oh, you wicked old man! So 'ou had it all the time'—London Tatter.
His Opinion of War
"War," replied the old fellow, "is a bad investment.
"The poor man goes out to fight and then, if he doesn't get killed, he has to come home and help pay the debts."
—Detroit Free Press.
Mighty Texas.
Texas is so big that if it swung around in a circle over the United States it would touch the great lakes to the northward, to the east would reach the Atlantic, westward the Pacific and southward the Caribbean sea. -Cassier's Magazine.
A Popular Recreation.
"Where are you going. Sandy?" said one Scotchman to another. "Doon to the club." said Sandy. "And who'foor?" "Just to contradect a wee bit."
Executive Ability.
Little James—Father, what is executive ability? His father—The faculty of earning your bread by the sweat of other people's brows, my son.
Philosophy is a good horse in the stable, but an arrant jade on a journey.—Goldsmith.
In former times the punishment of the bagno (bath), one of the most cleverly cruel inflictions ever devised, was administered in Venice, where the water of the lagoons played so prominent a part in its penal system. The punishment was as follows: The prisoner was placed in a vat the sides of which were slightly in excess of the average height of a man. In order to hold in check the rising tide of a supply of water which ran into the vat in a constant stream the criminal was furnished with a scoop with which to bale out the water as fast as it came in. The respite from death by immersion thus obtained was more or less prolonged, according to the powers of endurance possessed by the victim. But imagine the mortal torture, the exhausting and even hideously grotesque efforts, the incessant and pitiless toll by night and day, to stave off the dread moment fast approaching when, overcome by sleep and fatigue, he was unable to struggle any longer against his fate.
Compliments.
Said a certain eminent actor, who at the age of fifty-nine looks no more than thirty-five:
"I try to keep my hair on and my stomach off—that is the true secret of perennial youth."
Then he told one of his famous stories illustrative of the horrors of corpulence.
"A fat man," he said, "could not help laughing one day at the ludicrous appearance of a very bow legged chap, one of those arch looking chaps, you know.
"Though a total stranger to him, the fat man slapped the bow legged chap on the back and said:
"By flugo, brother, you look as if you'd been riding a barrel."
"The bow legged man smiled and poked his forefinger deep into the fat man's soft, loose stomach.
"And you look as if you'd been awal lowing one," he said."—Washington Star.
A Town You Should Reach.
A Town You Should Reach.
The pleasant town of Get There lies far up a rocky, hill, across the sands of Courage and above the swamp of Will. The path that leads to Get There leaves the pleasant thoroughfare and wanders off 'mild rocks that grind and briar vines that tear. And thousands pass along the road that leads to Nowhereville and grumble at the few who climb to Get There on the hill, and others start the thorny path and seek the town to gain, but falter at the swamp of Will and turn them back in pain. Oh, happy town of Get There, shining in the morning sun, you only show the toller how yet higher peaks are won! The truest recompense you give for self denying years is but the promise old, yet new, that conquers doubts and fears. For no one lives at Get There, but with heart and purpose set on better things, from peak to peak they climb up higher yet. — Rural New Yorker.
He Favored Brevity.
A bishop once rose to address the house of lords and began by saying he intended to divide his speech into twelve heads. Lord Durham thereupon got up and begged leave to interpose for a few minutes to tell the house an anecdote.
He was returning home, he said, a few nights before and passed St. Paul's cathedral just before midnight. As he did so there was a drunken man trying to see the time. Just then the clock began to strike the hour and slowly toled out 12. The drunken man listened, looked hard at the clock and said:
"Hang you, why couldn't you have said all that at once!"
After this narration the bishop condensed his remarks—London Globe.
Walrus and Bullets
The most vulnerable spot in which to hit a walrus is the back part of the skull. The forehead, being several inches thick in bone, almost invariably turns bullets even if solid ones are used in a big rifle, as should always be done. Besides the head, with the exception of the heart, there is hardly a vital spot in these huge brutes' bodies, and bullets may be fired ad libitum into these masses of flesh and blubber without seeming to have much effect.
Domestic Tragedy.
"This morning our furnace was found choked."
"Whom do you suspect?"
"Well, uncle was the sworn enemy of that furnace, and father is known to have made threats." — Louisville Courler-Journal.
A Fatal Error.
Borrows—Nellie, hand me my umbrella, will you? It has commenced to rain. Mrs. B.—I lent your umbrella to Mr. Sweetfern last night. Borrowes—What in thunder did you do that for? Didn't you know it was·his?—Spare Moments.
The Mystery of Man
Man is greater than a world-than systems of worlds. There is more mystery in the union of soul with body than in the creation of a universe. Henry Gilles.
The Inexitable
There is no good in arguing with the inevitable. The only argument available with an east wind is to put on your overcoat.
Making It Right
First lawyer—Don't you think we are giving our client unnecessary trouble! Second lawyer—Yes, but we can charge him for it!
L. C. SMITH & BROS.
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The always rigid carriage, stationary printing point, the arrangement of ribbon shift and back space keys, and the fact that no necessary operation takes the hands from the writing position, combines speed with accuracy in the L. C. Smith.
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In Morris, Minn., December 21, Olaf Christopherson, aged 17, confessed to the killing of his pastor, Rev. John Cling. He charged the boy with not earning his board.
The Yaquis Indians wiped out a whole town in Mexico and captured and carried off a lot of girls.
Mr. Wm. Jennings Bryan denies that he has selected,a place in President-elect Wilson's cabinet.
Attorney Louis Gregory is in a fair way to solve the race problem. His new religion is making inroads in the most select circles.
There are 20,000 cases of hookworm among the school children in Breathat County, Ky. Every pupil has it.
A Harvard College thief has robbed the students of $10,000 in money, books, etc. One of President Taft's sons was a victim.
Lulu Davis Maschino, formerly of Texas, was arrested for slandering her husband, a member of the Italian House of Deputies, was released from jail, divorced from husband and given $50,000 alimony. She has returned to Texas.
Dr. Williston, accompanied by his friend, Mr. John T. Howe, was going in the direction of Harmony last sun day afternoon.
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Read The Bee if you want a live
LEGAL NOTICE
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, Holding Probate Court. No. 19451, Administration. This is to give notice: That the subscriber, of the District of Columbia, has obtained from the Probate Court of the District of Columbia, letters of administration on the estate of Robert Ward, late of the District of Columbia, deceased. All persons having claims against the deceased are hereby warned to exhibit the same, with the vouchers thereof, legally authenticated, to the subscriber, on or before the 13th day of January, A. D. 1914; otherwise they may by law be excluded from all benefit of said estate.
Given under my hand this 13th day of January, 1913.
Register of Wills for the District of Columbia, Clerk of the Probate Court.
GEORGE F. COLLIINS,
Attorney.
AUGUSTUS W.GRAY, ATTORNEY
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, Holding Probate Court. No. 19599, Administration.
This is to give notice that the subscriber, of the District of Columbia, has obtained from the Probate Court of the District of Columbia, letters of administration on the estate of Georgiana Clay, late of the District of Columbia, deceased. All persons having claims against the deceased are hereby warned to exhibit the same, with the vouchers thereof, legally authenticated, to the subscriber, on or before the 16th day of January, A. D. 1914 otherwise they may by law be excluded from all benefit of said estate.
Given under my hand this 16th day of January, 1913.
Register of Wills for the District of Columbia, Clerk of the Probate Court.
Court.
'AUGUSTUS W. GRAY,
Attorney.
ATTORNEYS SMITH AND WARRICK
Supreme*Court of the District of Columbia, Holding Probate Court. No. 19590. Administration Docket.
Estate of David G. Cleveland, deceased. Application having been made for probate of the last will and testament of said deceased, and for letters testamentary on said estate, by Samuel W. Watson, it is ordered this 31st day of January, A.D. 1913, that Nelson Cleveland, John Cleveland, Milton Cleveland, Maggie Cleveland, Glenn and Caroline Pickens, and all others concerned, appear in said Court on Monday, the 17th day of March, A.D. 1913, at 10 o'clock A.M., to show cause, if any they have, why such application should not be granted. Let notice hereof be published in the "Washington Law Reporter" and "The Washington Bee," once in each of three successive weeks before the return day herein mentioned, the first publication to be not less than thirty days before said return day.
THOS. H. ANDERSON,
Justice.
Attest:
WM. C. TAYLOR,
Deputy Register of Wills for the District of Columbia, Clerk of the Probate Court.
LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY
Celebration—Senator Bradley of Kentucky Speaks—"Big Day at the National Training School."
On last Sunday afternoon the beautiful chapel of the National Training School for Women and Girls, Miss Nannie H Burroughs, president, Lincoln Heights, Washington, D. C., was packed to overflowing with a most representative audience to listen to the Lincoln Day address delivered by the Hon. W. O. Bradley of Kentucky.
The meeting was one of the best of its kind that has ever been held in the city, and the address of the distinguished Senator from Kentucky was a masterpiece. The Senator's great admiration for the emancipator was expressed in the most tender and beautiful eloquence. With the vision of a true statesman he told with the greatest sense of appreciation the value to a nation in general and to a race in particular of the greatest man that has ever lived since the days of Jesus Christ. Coming from the state that gave to us the immortal Lincoln, the speaker was nearer to his subject, and could paint the life from the log cabin to a place at the head of a list of the world's greatest martyrs, from the inspiration he received by frequent visits to the National Mecca in Hardin County.
The lessons drawn were so beautiful and practical that every one went away feeling that to make their lives of the greatest service to humanity they must be willing to be used by God, and to stand squarely for the right, in a great crisis. The distinguished state-man made it quite plain that while the Negro must be helped, he must learn, and the sooner the better, that his advancement depends upon his own efforts; that Abraham Lincoln, by his Emancipation Act, made a race possibility, but that the Negro himself must make that possibility real.
The special music for the Lincoln Day celebration was splendid. It consisted of national and folk songs. The audience was particularly pleased with the rendition of "The Prophecy," the words of which were written by Miss Nannie H. Burroughs and sung to the tune of "Swane River." Miss Frankie Turner was the soloist, and Misses Rudolph, Wright, Versa and Austin were the other members of the quintette who rendered so effectively the beautiful song.
The chapel was tastefully decorated with national colors. In the audience were white men and women, who are becoming interested in the work of the National Training School.
50c quart25c full Pint Only at 909 7th St. Nobranch stores
Senator Bradley expressed himself as greatly pleased with the wonderful work that has been done on Lincoln Heights by Negro women, for Negro women.
The great throng inspected the five beautiful buildings, and then turned their footsteps homeward, feeling a new inspiration, a wider vision, a deeper sympathy, a greater faith and deeper consciousness of the part they must take in solving the great problems of a great race.
NINETEENTH ST, BAPTIST
Church—Will the Members Sell
Same?—Talk of a Sale—Opposition
to the Scheme.
There has been a report in circulation for some time to the effect that there is a movement on foot by two or three leading officials to accept an offer of one hundred thousand dollars for that old and historic corner where the First Baptist Church was erected and where the Nineteenth Street Baptist Church is now. It is not believed that the members of this church will accept any price for this corner, which they worked so hard to relieve from debt. There is not a cent owed on this church and the members are composed of the leading and most influential in this city.
The First Baptist Church was erected in 1803 on this corner and the first pastor was Rev. Obidiah Brower, a clerk in the patent office at that time. This church then moved to Tenth Street, where the old Ford Theater was—the place in which President Lincoln was assassinated. Then it moved to Thirteenth Street, between G and II Street-Northwest; thence to Sixteenth and O Streets N. W. Seventy-five years or more later this ground was sold to the colored Baptists of the District of Columbia, which was organized and set apart as the First Colored Baptist Church. The ground where the Nineteenth Street Baptist Church is now situated is one of the most valuable spots in this city. It is in close proximity to the White House, the monument grounds, the war, navy and state department of justice. It commands a view of every important building in this city and today this property is worth every bit of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars.
What reason would the members of the Nineteenth Street Baptist Church have to sell this old historic spot? This church is a monument left to this generation by its anteestors. Certainly the members can't better their condition. The church is out of debt What more? The spirits of Wm Syphax, Henry Jarvis, John Lewis, Corbin A. Stewart and hundreds of other Christian patriots would rise before Rev. Brooks on some beautiful Sunday morning while he was in one of his cloquent flights and figures of speech. The charm of Rev Walker would lose its sweetness and echoes of those moving spiritual sermons of Pastor Brooks would pass forever into eternity. The Bee is confident that the members of Nineteenth Street Baptist Church have too much sense to sell their landmark.
DEATH OF W. T. SMITH.
A Well Known Funeral Director Is Dead.
William P Smith, a life-long resident of this city and a well known funeral director, died Wednesday evening at 6 o'clock at 2235 Cleveland Avenue Northwest and was buried Thursday, February 8, from Walker Memorial Church, Rev. A. B. Gordon, pastor. Elsworth T. Chisholm, the well known funeral director of this city, officiated. Mr. Chisholm of 643 Rhode Island Avenue, assisted by Wilmer D. Kennedy, gave excellent service.
Mr Smith was for a number of years connected with the firm of James H Winslow. It was with Mr. Winlow that he learned the business. The funeral was largely attended by his friends.
Gray & Gray's Health Hints—No. 1.
Take no chances with your health. Care and skill characterizes every prescription compounded at Gray's
THE S-L.
KIDNEY, BLADDER, LIVER AND BOWEL REMEDY.
By its direct action on the Kidneys and Bladder, relieves those important parts of the human system of Diseases of the Urinary Organs, such as Inflammation of the Kidneys. Pain in Back, Cystitis, Catarrh of the Bladder, and by its mild laxative properties acting on the Liver and Stomach, our remedy is especially helpful in relieving Billiousness, Constipation and kindred troubles.
It is pleasant, palatable, and can be given to children.
Price, 50c.
TYREE & CO.
15th and H Sts. N. E.
Open All Night.
Where you change the cars for Chesapeake Junction and Kenilworth.
Oysters and Clams. Wholesale and Retail. Meals at all Hours. ROBT. T. MURRAY,
Horner's Dairy
600 T. St. N. W., cor. Florida Ave. Horner's
Perfect Pasteurized Milk and
Cream. Raw milk if desired, Our
Specialty.
Fine grades of Creamery Butter,
Fresh laid eggs. Eight wagons give
you prompt, reliable and efficient service.
Corner Eighth and M, Northwest.
Phone, North 1872.
C. B. HORNER
DANIEL FREEMAN'S N.
1833 14th Street, N. W.
FINE PHOTOGRAPHS, C.
Any Size and
Groups, Flowers and Copying
ALL WORK FIRST-CLASS AND
ALL WORK
Lessons Given in Retouching and
Picture Framing. A Handsome LARGE
of Photos and Post Cards.
Studio on ground floor; 25 feet o
with steam heat.
SITTINGS MADE RAIN OR SHIN.
Phone No.
Go To
HOLMES' HOTEL
333 Virginia Aye, S. W.
Finest Afro-American Accommodations in the District.
European and American Plan.
Good Rooms and Lodging. 50c,
75c and $1.00. Comfortably
Heated by Steam. Give
Us a Call.
James Ottoway Holmes, Prop.,
Washington, D. C.
Phone, Main 2315.
BURNSTINE LOAN OFFICE.
Gold and Silver Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry, Guns, Mechanical Tools, Ladies' and Gents' Wearing Apparel.
OLD GOLD AND SILVER BOUGHT.
Unredeemed Pledges for Sale.
361 Pennsylvania Ave. N. W.
HAY'S HAIR
Pomfret
Does All and More it Promises to Do
HAY'S HAIR POMADE straightens coarse, kinky hair and makes it glossy and luxuriant.
You can dress your hair in any position and keep it so, if you USE HAY'S HAIR POMADE REGULARLY.
Any one with kinky, coarse hair that is stubborn, will always get satisfactory results from HAY'S HAIR POMADE even if all others have failed.
— Highly Perfumed —
Present this adr. with 25 cents,
and get a large jar; and free sample
of HARFINA SOAP, at
O'DONNELL'S PHAR:
WASHINGTON, D. C.
004 E ST. N W
Happy Birthday
Happy Birthday
Happy Birthday
Philo Hay Spec. Co.
Sole Manufacturers
Newark, N. J., U. S. A.
Telephore North 595
LEWIS J. COHEN
Wholesale Wines and Liquors,
Fancy Groceries.
410 O Street Northwest
Washington, D. C.
Phone, Main 4856.
OPEN ALL DAY
J. J. RONAYNE
Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars
436 L St. N. W.
JUSTH'S OLD STAND.
It's about this time of the year that your money is supposed to go farthest, gets so far away you never see it again. Many a man wishes he had called here first, as we have the stock, and, if you want a tailor-made suit or a slightly used overcoat, low as $3, here's headquarters. One price. Justth's Old Stand. 619 D.
Washington, D. C.
s Dairy
Coupon
Present this coupon to driver or
office and a 5 per cent discount
on your milk if at retail prices
HORNER'S DAIRY
8th and M.St. N. W.
PRIETORS - C.F. HEIM
NEW MODERN STUDIO
W., Washington, D.C.
CRAYONS AND PASTELS
and All Kinds.
Interior and Exterior Views.
GUARANTEED NOT TO FADE.
K REDUCED.
and General Photography. Pictures and
ARGE PHOTO FREE with each Order
operating room; two dressing rooms
NE. YOU ARE INVITED TO CALL
north 724-Y.
BRODT'S HATS.
The greatest hat st es in the city. Only places where the up-to-date hats are made fresh from the block. Give your friend a Brodt hat for Christmas. Brodt's stores, 419 Eleventh Street Northwest, and 503 Ninth Street Northwest.
GEORGE W. MURRAY
DRUGGIST.
The Most Reliable Druggist in the Southwest.
For Holiday Toilets Murray's is the place to go.
201 D Street S. W.
Mention The Bee.
ESMERALDO
Phone N. 406.
Don't forget to go to the Esmeraldo, on the boulevard. Phone for a box of oysters before you leave the theater. Phone N. 406.
Call or phone to the Triangle Printing Co., for-estimates. It is one of the most up-to-date printing offices in the city. W. Calvin Chase, Jr., is manager. Two new presses will be installed beginning the New Year.
FOR RENT
Four (4) nice rooms, and bath, heat furnished; Dresden Apartments, 4th and Florida Ave. N. W.; $20.00.
Notice to Patrons
For the benefit of those who continue to send advertising matter for publication and want it inserted as news matter will kindly remember: That news matter differs from advertising matter. Notices of public meetings, church meetings, sermons, Christian Endeavor meetings or all notices of meetings to be held, entertainments, for rent, for sale, for hire, must be paid for.
Wonderful Results on Short Notice. I have used your Pomade. It's the best thing I ever used for making curly hair hair smooth. I have not finished my first bottle, but can see wonderful results, writes Mrs. Louise E. Hayes, of Pineville, S. C. Try Ford's Hair Pomade for harsh, stubborn and unruly hair and Ford's Royal White Skin Lotion for the complexion. Ask your druggist for them. Be sure and get the genuine (Ford's), manufactured by the Ozonized Ox Marrow Company, Chicago, Ill.
For 'sale by Nichols' Pharmacy, Corner 19th Street and Penn, Ave.; S. A. Richardson & Co., 7th and Q Sts., N. W.; Morse's Pharmacy, 19th and L Sts., N. W.; W. S. Richardson, 316 Four-and-a-Half St. S. W.; Daniel H. mith, 28th and Dumbarton Ave., N. W.; F. Simpson, corner 7th St. Rhode Island Ave., and R St., N. W. Singleton's Pharmacy, 20th and E Sts. N. W.; Market Pharmacy, corner 20th and K Sts. N. W.; John R. Major, 716 7th St. N. W.; Ideal Pharmacy, 11th St. and N. Y. Ave., N. W.; R A Veitch, corner 20th and M Sts., N. W.; E. Cissell, 10th St. and N. Y: Ave., W. P. Herbst, Penn. Ave. and 25th St. N. W.; Hutton & Hilton, 22d and L Sts., N. W.; R. W. Duffey, Penn. Ave. and 22d St. N. W.; Whiteside Pharmacy, 192r Pa. Ave.; Board & McGuire, corner 9th and U Sts.; F. M. Criswell, 1901 7th St. N. W.; Quigley's Pharmacy, corner 21st and G Sts. N. W.; Daw's Drug Store, corner 23d and H Sts. N. W.; Howard Pharmacy, 10th and R Sts. N. W.; People's Pharmacy, 7th and Mass.
JAMES F. OYSTER
Telephone Main 4820-4821.
BUTTER, CHEESE AND EGGS.
900-902 Penna. Avenue.
Center Market, 5th and K St.
Washington
PETER GROGAN & SONS CO.
Square Stands: Center Market, 5th and K St. Market. Riggs Market. Washington, D. C.
It's time to be thinking about new Furniture and Carpets. Look through your home and see what will be needed—then come to US.
Here is a store where you will realize that a feeling of good will pervades every business transaction. We take more than a mere buying and selling interest in our customers. We're interested in their homes and in their desire to make them comfortable and attractive. Our experience and advice is valuable to them, both in this direction and in the matter of economy.
Our interest takes the helpful form of making it possible for them to have the things they want, the qualities that will show the most value, and to have them when they want them.
We tell you not to hesitate in saying that you wish your purchases charged. We're not going to bind you with notes of any description nor charge any interest. Here it is simply an open book account, such as you carry with your grocer—except that we do not ask you to pay in a lump sum at the end of the month, but divide the account into such amounts as will suit you.
We make these arrangements with you; we make them according to your statements and wishes; and we do not go outside our store for information regarding your private affairs.
PETER GROGAN & SONS CO.
817-823 Seventh St. N. W.
IE GROVES MINING AND M
THE MOLLIE GROVES MINING AND MILLING COMPANY begs to announce to the public that they are closing out the last block of stock in their copper mines located in Grand County, Colorado, not far from Denver, in the vicinity of the famous Cripple Creek Mines, the Happy Dream Mines, and the Leadville Mines, each of which has long since enriched the country with its mineral resources. The Mollie Groves Mines embraces 114 acres of pure mineral and contain gold, silver, copper, iron, aluminum and other products of wonderful resources. The Mine was incorporated March 4th, 1909, under the laws of the State of Colorado, and a record of the corporation, as well as the deed transferring the property to said corporation known as the Mollie Groves Mining and Milling Co., can be found with the Recorder of Deeds, whose office is Sulphur Springs, Grand County, Colorado.
Mr. O. M. Groves, the former owner and present manager, and Mr. T. W. Lott, General Agt., are in the city for the purpose of selling the last block of stock, consisting of 8,000 shares at $1.00 per share. The Mine is being operated already. There is $4,000,000 worth of ore on the dump waiting to be smelted and sent to the market. With the sale of the 8,000 shares of stock, a smelter that is already built and contracted for, will be placed in position by March 1st, at which time the sale of stock will end, and those already holding stock will receive a liberal dividend in addition to the increase in their shares of stock from $1.00 per share to $5.00 per share.
A local Mollie Groves Mining and Milling League has been organized with the following well known persons as officers (each one being a large stockholder himself in the Co.); W. Bishop Johnson, Pres.; W. H. Jernagin, Vice Pres.; Alfred W. Adams, Secy; Spencer Adams, Treas.; with offices at 818 3d St. N. W., Washington, D. C., where any additional information may be given. It is the desire of the League to put before the public at least 100 agents with a liberal commission. We will be glad to have anybody act as agent, giving their whole or spare time, to call at the office and make arrangements. The following prominent persons throughout the country are among the stockholders:
J. G. Groves, the "Potato King of the world." Edwardsville, Kansas; Prof. E. A. Meyzeek, Principal of the Normal School, Louisville, Ky.; R. O. Johnson, a leading merchant, Louisville, Ky.; Dr. L. G. Jordan, Secy of Baptist Foreign Mission Board, Philadelphia, Pa.; R. M. Brewer, Indianapolis, Ind.; R. H. Boyd, M. D., Nashville, Tenn.; Prof. W. J. Harvey, mail clerk, Memphis, Tenn.; W. J. Amigar, D. D., Pres. State University, Louisville, Ky.; John Bond, undertaker, Brownsville, Tenn.; S. W. Bacote, D. D., statistician for National Baptist Convention, Kansas City, Mo.; W. T. Taylor, druggist, Cairo, Ill.; Judge T. A. Head, Cairo, Ill., Prof. J. W. Holmes, merchant and mechanic, Du Quoin, Ill.; Rev. J. F. Thomas, Pastor Ebenezer Baptist Church, Chicago, Ill.; Rev. Dr. Anderson, Pastor Quinn Chapel, Louisville, Ky.; Rev. L. H. Brown, Presiding Elder, C. M. E. Church, Louisville, Ky.; J. E. Johnson, Citizens' Bank and Trust Co., Muskogee, Okla.; P. B. Austin, merchant, Muskogee, Okla.; R. Emmett Stewart, lawyer, Muskogee, Okla.; J. H. Escoe, Cashier Citizens' Bank and Trust Co., Muskogee, Okla.; Rev. Hardin Smith, leading Divine of West Tenn., Brownsville, Tenn.
Lowest Prices Best Work
TRIANGLE PRINTING CO.
BOOK AND JOB PRINTING