Washington Bee
Saturday, November 8, 1913
Washington, D.C.
Page text (machine-generated)
VOL. XXXIV; NO. 21
DAVIDSON RESIGNS
Head of the Public Schools Unanimous Choice of the Board of Education—Accepts Call to Pittsburgh, Pa.-His Retirement of the District Public Schools to Be Regretted—His Successor Not Yet Decided Upon.
Pittsburgh, Pa., Nov. 4.—Dr. William Mehard Davidson, Superintendent of Schools of Washington, D. C., was today elected Superintendent of the Public Schools of Pittsburgh for a term of four years, at a salary of $9,000 a year.
Dr. Davidson was chosen unanimously by the Board of Education. He succeeds S. L. Heeter, who came here a few years ago from St. Paul, Minn., and was recently removed on charges of alleged immorality.
Dr. Davidson Accepts Offer
Dr. Davidson Accepts Offer. Dr. Davidson has accepted the offer of the Pittsburgh Board of Education, to become Superintendent there on condition that the Washington Board of Education releases him. If the local board should refuse he will remain in his present position, despite the fact that it will mean a material loss to him.
The acceptance was given late last night, when G. W. Gerwig, secretary of the Pittsburgh Board of Education, called Dr. Davidson by long-distance telephone and informed him of his unanimous election to the office yesterday by the Pittsburgh board.
Mr. Gerwig said that official notice of the election had been mailed. He asked that Dr. Davidson tell him whether he would accept the position. Dr. Davidson accepted.
Board Members Astonished.
Members of the Board of Education, when informed that Dr. Davidson had accepted the offer, were astonished. They said they had thought of no candidate for the position, that they had hoped Dr. Davidson would decide to remain in Washington, and that they were at a loss to say just what they would do. A board meeting may be called for today.
Consideration of Dr. Davidson's request to be released will be the first matter to be taken up. It is regarded as likely that the answer will accord with his wishes. The question of his successor then will be promptly taken up. Among those whose names have been suggested are Assistant Superintendent Ernest L. Thurston, Principals Davis and Wilson, and Carroll G. Pearse, president of the Milwaukee-Normal School.
Uncertain About Successor.
Members of the board, when informed last night of Dr. Davidson's decision, expressed themselves as follows:
Henry P. Blair, President—I have not given the matter of Dr. Davidson's successor one moment's consideration. Until he informs me that he has officially accepted the position I refuse to discuss the matter. We shall secure the best man that we can. E. H. Daniel, Vice President—We have not considered the matter of a successor to Dr. Davidson. We are too stunned at the calamity to realize it fully.
Mrs. Susie Root Rhodes—I don't know what to do. A successor to Dr. Davidson has not been discussed by the board. The subject has been avoided.
Mrs. Edith Kingman Kern—I can say nothing but that I regret Dr. Davidson's leaving us more than I can tell.
Mrs. Caroline Harris—The board has not taken up the matter of a successor to Dr. Davidson.
Suggests Principal Wilson for Place.
Dr. C. W. Childs—I sincerely regret that Dr. Davidson is to leave us. Emory Wilson is a good man, and would make a useful man in any position.
J. B. Larner—I regret that Dr. Davidson is to leave us. Emory Wilson, Dr. Small, and Allan Davis are all good men. They are well trained. I do not believe that we will have to go out of town to find a superintendent.
Dr. C. H. Marshall—I do not believe that we will have to go out of town to secure a successor for Dr. Davidson. Emory Wilson and Dr. Small are both good men. The loss of Dr. Davidson will cripple us for a while, but I believe that matters will work out all right.
Representative Aswell, former Superintendent of Louisiana Public Schools—Dr. Davidson's loss will be felt by the District and by the country at large. His leaving Washington is a reflection on the District of Columbia, Congress, and the country at large. He should have been given a salary so large as to make it worth his while to stay here.
Conrad H. Syme, Corporation Counsel of the District of Columbia—For Dr. Davidson to leave the public schools of Washington will be a calamity. He is one of our foremost educators. That he is worth a larger salary is self-evident. Pittsburgh appreciates this fact.
When the news of Dr. Davidson's prospective appointment was made public for the first time in The Post several days ago Commissioner Siddons wrote the superintendent a let-
ter pleading for him to remain in Washington.
Salary Increase Held Unlikely.
Before last night's announcement, the general, opinion among the members of the Board of Education was that it would be impossible to secure an increase in salary for the superintendent from Congress. The last recommendation made for an increase, in the salary of the position by the board specified that the salary be fixed at $7,500. This was cut to $6,000 by Congress, the figure the superintendent has been receiving. Last year when the board started again to ask for an increase, Dr.Davidson protested against the recommendation and stated that he believed it useless to ask for more money.
Sentiment in Congress to throw the entire burden of the school system on the District is growing rapidly, in the opinion of many of the members of the Board of Education.
"OUT OF ONE BLOOD CREATED ED GOD ALL NATIONS."
"Afro-American Strong in Faith in the Hebrew's God," Said Rev. A. J. Carey in His Speech at the Mass Meeting at Chicago Asking Justice for the Jew.
Rev. A. J. Carey, pastor of the Institutional Church, Chicago, was selected by the committee in charge as the proper man in Chicago to represent the Afro-American people at the mass meeting held Sunday afternoon at Cohen's Grand Opera House to protest against the action of the Russian government in prosecuting one Mendell Beilis, a Jew of Kiev, charged with "ritual murder" Dr Carey's address was received with great applause and at the request of the chairman he went to an overflow meeting at the Garrick Theatre, where he delivered the address a second time, the Jewish audience applauding him to the echo.
Dr. Carey said in part:
It was the Nazarene who declared: "Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free. Nineteen centuries have passed, but the philosophy, the wisdom of this sublime utterance have not been challenged unto this day.
The trouble, then, in Russia, as in America—in fact, in every land where the weak are oppressed by the strong, where the helpless are persecuted by the powerful—is that men "love darkness rather than light" and prefer to grope their ways through the quagmires of ignorance, superstition and sin, wherein are bred the foul diseases of prejudice, race hatred and national crime.
The purpose and end of this meeting as I see it is to awaken the national conscience, yea, the conscience of Christendom to the awfulness and horror of that condition which permits the brutal Russian to conjure up a false and iniquious charge and murder hundreds and thousands of innocent and inoffensive Jews.
I speak as a representative of a race ten millions strong in this country, a race that knows what suffering, persecution and misrepresentation mean. A race, Mr. Chairman, which is fitted by reason of the things we have suffered to sympathize with the Jews of Russia today as no other people in this presence can. And we rejoice that as a natural sequence there will go out from this meeting a mighty influence that will not cease to be felt until all men the world over shall learn the truth declared by Paul upon Mars Hill that, "Out of one blood God created all nations to dwell (together) upon the face of the earth."
The race to which I belong may not be strong in wealth, nor strong in the things the world calls great, but we are strong in our faith in the Hebrew's God, aye in the Hebrew himself. We do not believe that the Hebrew race could produce "Beilis, the ritual murderer," than could the sweet-throated nightingale produce as her offspring the blood-thirsty tiger. The charge is false. The Russian Jew, timorous, fearful and God-loving, is incapable of ritual murder.
This is not a question of the Jew simply, nor of the Czar and the Russian. It is humanity's question. It is Christianity's problem. Will enlightened humanity, will twentieth-century Christianity rise to the dignity of the occasion, meet the demands of the hour and settle once for all the question that neither Russia nor America shall find countenance among Christian people unless full opportunity and a fair chance are accorded to all who swear allegiance to their country's flag?
To this end I pledge the hearty sympathy and co-operation of the 10,000,000 of my people—Christians—people who are living up to the light of Christianity as best they understand it, striving by earnest endeavor to prove themselves in every way worthy of citizenship in this cosmopolitan republic. And I pledge you that our efforts will not end nor will our co-operation with all good men and every good cause cease until the conquering forces of righteousness and truth shall "march forth clear as the sun, fair as the moon, as terrible as an army with banners and there shall be none to hurt or harm in all God's holy mountain."
The following was taken from the Daily Jewish Courier, of Chicago, Monday, October 19, and is a correct translation:
DR. WM. DAVIDSON Resigns from the Superintendency of, the Public Schools. The Man Who Has the Confidence and Respect of the People.
"Then came the Reverend Doctor Carey, the colored pastor of the Institutional Church and social center. He was greatly affected by the stories of Jewish suffering in barbarous Russia, and with tears streaming down his cheeks, he made a masterful address in which he compared his race with the Jewish people and said that the colored people were the only ones present who could really sympathize with the Jews. He said his people were strong in their faith in the Hebrew God and in the Hebrew himself, and he pledged the sympathy and moral support of his race, 10,000,000 strong, in the fight the Jews are making for justice in the land of the Czar."
DREAM OF LOWER PRICES
Fading—Free Meat Fails to Cut the Cost of Living So Far as the Average Consumer Can Notice It.
From New Haven (Conn.) Register.
It is a beautiful dream which many have dreamed this summer, under the soporific influence of Democratic tariff talk. Why, it was the simplest thing on earth. Remove all tariffs from the necessaries of life markets to the products of the world, and the worlds' great supply would rush in in such quantities as to bring prices down to low levels.
So they tried it on meat. That's on the free list now. But before that happened a cargo of Argentine beef had come in. Though it had to pay the tariff, it should sell in our mar-
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[Image of a man seated in an ornate chair, dressed in formal attire with a suit and tie. He is holding a book or document in his left hand.]
DR: S. L. CORROTHERS Will Celebrate the Golden Jubilee of His Church. Will Begin Tomorrow and Continue to December.
kets at least as low as any native beef. It didn't. It was enough higher than the home article to more than make up the difference of the tariff.
That may have served the kind mission, pityearing us for the blow which now comes from no less an authority than the Department of Agriculture, now equipped with the wisdom of democratic statesmanship. The gist of it is that the removal of our tariff can't alter the fact that the rest of the world has use for the rest of the world's beef, and will take it. We shall get no extra supply because we let it in free. Again we face a condition instead of a theory.
This may serve to set even believers in democratic theory to thinking. If this is true of beef, of how many other articles of food supply is it true? If the dream of cheaper foodstuffs is defective in this respect, may it not be in others? Its bright colors begin to fade already.
In many essential schedules, the new tariff is based on the supposition that removal of duty will serve to counterbalance all the forces which increase cost of product. Now, whether this proves untrue because there is no supply available that removal of tariff will induce to come in, or because the duty is a very inconsequential element in the cost, the result is to be that our national revenue will be reduced, without materially lightening the burden of the consumer. Meanwhile, the men who pay the income tax provided to make up for this shrinkage in r
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the whole burden without any compensation at all. And those who don't pay the income tax are likely to "get theirs" through reduction in or loss of wages caused by the depressing effect of the new tariff on certain industries.
MR. AND MRS. NAPIER.
Citizens of Tennessee Honor Them—Big Demonstration to Two Worthy Persons.
(From Nashville Tenn. Union.)
No greater ovation, no bigger demonstration and no more fervent reception has ever been given two citizens of Nashville on their return to their home town than was accorded by some of Nashville's energetic citizens to J. C. Napier, ex-Register of the Treasury, and his wife, Mrs. J. C. Napier, Wednesday morning at 7 o'clock when they returned from Washington to take up their residence in Nashville once more. Headed by Nashville's energetic citizens, the Napier party was met at the Union Station by a special committee and a brass band.
The committee had arranged for automobiles, carriages and private conveyances. Ex-Councilman S. P. Harris, Dr. J. B. Singleton, president of the People's Savings Bank and Trust Company; Dr. C. H. Clark, pastor of the Mt. Olive Baptist Church; Prof. J. D. Crenshaw, editor of the National Baptist Union-Review; R. H. Boyd, president of the One Cent Savings Bank; Mr. C. N. Langston, Dr. J. A. Napier, Mr. Henry A. Boyd, Mr. Lorenzo E. Johnson, Rev. N. H. Pius, D. D., Rev. W. S. Ellington, D. D., Dr. J. T. Phillips, representing the Nashville Boosters' Club; W. H. McGavock, Oscar Sawyer, A. T. Johnson, John Campbell, Walter Clark, Jos. Johnson, J. B. Wilson, O. Jennings, Luke Buntin, Adrain Webb, Wm. McKissack, John Brown, Grant Clark, D. Barry, Louis K. Thomas, L. Landers, J. B. Boyd, P. Petway, G. Davis, H. Floyd, Wm. Franklin, C. Campbell, T. B. Boyd, S. Stratton, J. Boyd, A. Boyd and G. M. West constituted the big citizens' committee. Among the ladies who met Mrs. Napier were Mesdames R. H. Boyd, A. E. Hall, H. A. Boyd, Lorena C. Taylor, M. V. Tittle, Chas. H. Thorn, Joia Uirreña, Misses Eleanor A. Dale, Mary A. Dunson, Sarah Bosworth, Mattie L. Williams, Henrietta Campbell, Georgia Holman, Nellie E. King, Katie Boyd, Leola Bright and Lena T. Jackson.
While Mr. and Mrs. Napier were being escorted from the train to the Union Station platform the National Baptist Brass Band played national airs and as soon as they reached the landing the large crowd gave a new yell composed for the occasion by Miss Nellie E. King, after which began the hand-shaking and congratulations. It was plainly evident that the Negroes of Nashville were in full sympathy and hearty accord with the manly stand taken by the ex-Register of the Treasury when he refused to sign a segregation order that, to his way of thinking, was humiliating to his people. His casting aside of ten thousand dollars (which would have been his salary for the two remaining years of his unexpired term) in their behalf was fully repaid by the great, big demonstration made at so early an hour in the morning.
The honorees and concourse of people, led by the committee, passed through the Union Station and were placed in waiting automobiles and open carriages. A line of march was formed, headed by Captain J. H. Kelly, Jr., in full military uniform, mounted on a gray steed, which led them through the heart of the city. The procession moved east on Broadway to Eighth Avenue North, then north on Eighth Avenue to Church Street, east on Church Street to Fifth Avenue, north on Fifth Avenue to Cedar Street, east on Cedar Street to the public square, across the public square to Locust, west on Locust to Third Avenue, north on Third Avenue to Jefferson Street, west on Jefferson to Twelfth Avenue, south on Twelfth Avenue to the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Langston, where the procession stopped and a short address was made by Rev. R. H. Bloyd in presenting and welcoming Mr. and Mrs. Napier back to Nashville. He declared that no braver act by a truer member and more loyal representative of the race had ever been done for the people who were making good in every walk of life. Mr. and Mrs. Napier responded in chosen language. The band then played and the people dispersed to their respective homes.
Among those who contributed carriages and automobiles were W. H. McGavock & Company. A. N. Johnson Undertaking Establishment, National Baptist Publishing Board, Presston Taylor & Company, Dr. C. H. Clark, Dr. J. B. Singleton, Mr. C. N. Langston, Mr. Lovell Landers, Dr. R. H. Boyd and Mr. Henry A. Boyd. A parade through the business section of Nashville before breakfast created the most profound impression. The streets were thronged with people and the word was soon passed down and went flying in front of the people that Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Napier had returned. It resembled hero and heroine returning triumphantly unto their own and to their home.
Get ready for the Thomas testimonial by the citizens of Washington.
RACE SEGREGATION
RACE SEGREGATION
MOVE TO SEGREGATE RACES
At the Capital—Washington Citizens
Write to Mayor Preston for a Copy
of Local Ordinance.
Baltimore, Md., Oct.-Following
the lead taken by Baltimore certain
residents of the District of Columbia
are preparing to inaugurate a race
segregation movement in the city of
Washington.
Information to this effect is
embodied in two letters received by
Mayor Preston today, in both of
which the writers ask for copies of
the local segregation ordinance.
One of the letters was written by
William Ramsey, a jeweler at 1318 F
Street Northwest, who says:
Will Make Fight Similar to Local One.
"We are impressed in Washington with your efforts to segregate the homes of the white and colored population, and intend to make a fight in the same direction.
"If you will send me a copy of your laws, which I understand were approved by the Supreme Court, you will greatly oblige many a sufferer in the capital city."
E. J. Totten, a real estate dealer, is the writer of the other letter. He likewise asks for a copy of the ordinance passed by the City Council and "sustained by your Supreme Court."
The mistake both of these writers make is in assuming that the Court of Appeals has approved the new segregation law. The new measure, it will be recalled, was drafted in an effort to meet the objections pointed out by the court to the West measure, but, so far, has not been passed upon by any of the courts.
TYLER BANQUETTED.
Negro Business League Entertains the National Organizer.
Indianapolis. Ind.—A fine banquet was pulled, off here last Friday night at the Y. M. C. A., tendered by the colored business men of this city, to Ralph W. Tyler. The local business league, which has been inactive, has been revived and reorganized, and the greatest possible interest is now manifested in league work. The Colored Y. M. C. A. has tendered the use of a room in the handsome Y. M. C. A. building to the league in which to hold monthly meetings without charge. Among the speakers at the banquet, in addition to Mr. Tyler, were George L. Knox, editor of The Freeman; A. C. Manning, editor of The World; Attorneys Lott, Brokenburr and Ransome, Secretary Taylor of the Y. M. C. A., Walter Hodge, Doctors Ward, Armstead and Perkins, and others. The most representative among the colored business men of the city were in attendance at the banquet. During his stay here Mr. Tyler was shown every courtesy by the colored men of the city. It looks now as if Indianapolis will have a strong, active Negro Business League.
Madame Walker, the hair culturist, left last Saturday for New York in her touring car, where she will take passage today for Kingston, Jamaica, expecting to spend the winter in Jamaica, Haiti and Cuba. A fine reception was given by the madame last Saturday afternoon at her beautiful home, to take leave, of her many friends here, prior to sailing. The madame will take her touring car with her to the West Indies.
Rev. Clair, of Washington, D. C., was here last week in attendance on the National Methodist (M. E.) meeting.
Dr. R. E. Jones, editor of the Southwestern Christian Advocate of New Orleans, delivered a masterful address before the Colored Y. M. C. A. last Sunday.
Indianapolis is a great business center for Negro business men and manufacturers.
Afro-American Folk Songs.
Under the auspices, and in the interest of the Washington Conservatory of Music, a society has been formed for the development and perpetuation of Afro-American folk songs.
This society will make its initial appearance in Washington on Friday evening, November 21, at Metropolitan A. M. E. Church with a chorus of twenty-five voices, including the following soloists: Miss C. M. Wallace, Mrs. Lucy Blagburn, Miss Lillian Evans, Miss Mamie Simmons, Messrs. E. R. Amos and Harry Nugent. They will be assisted by two soloists, Miss Abbie Mitchell, of New York, and Mr. William Speights, director of the Voice Department at the Conservatory. Mr. Will Marion Cook, director, and Mr. H. L. Grant, accompanist.
The program will show the progress of the Afro-American singer from the old spirituals of the slave, to the more highly developed works of such colored composers as Coler idge-Taylor, Burleigh, Johnson, White and others, and finally his study and grasp upon the masterpieces of musical literature.
A rare musical treat is offered those who desire to avail themselves of this opportunity to hear these splendidly trained singers.
Tickets may be secured at the Conservatory.
FATAL AMBITION NOBLE AMBITION
Ambition a Prime Necessity to a Successful Life.
Its True Import—Two Notable Examples In the Bible of Right and Wrong Ambitions—A Glorious Life and Prospect Ruined by Wrong Ambitions—In Contrast, Another Glorious Life Enhanced In Eternal Glory by Following Right Ambitions—The Lesson to the Church of Christ—Incidental Lessons to All and to Angels.
PASTOR RUSSELL
Washington, D.C., November 2—
Of Pastor Russell's two
discourses here today
we report the one
on "Ambitions
Noble and Ignoble."
He took for his text Philippians 2:6, 7, but corrected the translation, declaring that he had the support of
scholarship in rendering it thus: "Who, being in the form of God, did not meditate a usurpation to be on an equality with God, but [contrariwise] made Himself of no reputation, and took upon Him the form of a servant." He said:
Whoever has no ambition has not properly begun to live. Ambition implies appreciation of the value of life—a weighing of prospects and possibilities—a decision, and a fixed determination of will. Parents and teachers should aim to lift before the mental vision of the young noble ideals, and to assist them in determining what they would copy and which goal they will bend life's energies to reach. To such parents and teachers many of those successful in life refer in-terms of endearment, declaring how much they owe to the encouragement of ideals and ambitions to which these assisted them.
Many Woe-Begone Faces.
character and to give that many billion; or that low and trivial sit. In a crowd less than a hundred faces and their an ideal, an aming it. In other our poor, fallen race lack the very mannspring of life. This lack of proper ambition not only makes life a drudgery instead of a pleasure, but it is a menace to our social fabric. According to the Bible, it is this nine-tenths of the human family, without lawful ambitions, that will be anarchists, striving to pull down the structure of civilization in a kind of blind fury—the awakening of an ambition which, knowing not how to vent itself, will bring trouble upon all.
Worldly Ambitious Profitable.
It is the ambitious tenth of humanity that cause the wheels of progress to turn. Their ambitions are keeping their own minds actively occupied and are giving employment to the remainder of men. The ambitious mechanic hopes to become an inventor and to rise in the social scale. The ambitious clerk strives for success, hoping to become a successful merchant. The successful merchants, princes and captains of industry take pride in building up vast enterprises, in the erection of monumental edifices, in the construction of great bridges, tunnels, etc. Others have ambitions along professional lines. There is a general tendency among the ambitionless to view these successful people harshly, to think of their ambitions as purely selfish, giving no credit to the pleasure of an exercise of ambition which the majority cannot appreciate because they have none themselves.
Centrary Thoughts Should Prevail.
Contrary Thoughts Should Prevail.
Men with ambition leading on to genius should be admired, appreciated; and it should be remembered that they have helped mankind in general to larger conceptions of life and to wider possibilities. I grant, indeed, the necessity for legislation in restraining the rich, and especially trusts and combinations of brain and money which might endanger the liberties and property of the masses. But let us never forget how much we owe to the ambitious men whom we seek to restrain from power to crush those of less ambition and less capacity, who are more or less dependent upon them.
As proving that some of our successful men were moved by ambition rather than love of money, we note the fact that, having accumulated vast fortunes, some are directing their energies in expending the money in the endowment of colleges, the building of libraries, the financing of political and medical investigations for public ween. Whether their judgment and ours agree as respects the wisdom of their benefactions is another matter. They have a right to exercise their own judgments in the use of money which came to them through the exercise of their own brains and ambitions.
We can surely agree that a beautiful library building becomes an incentive for the erection of other beautiful buildings, even though comparatively
few of the public make use of the books therein and prefer the trashy kind. Perhaps some good may also result from the endowment of great colleges, even though they are doing more than anything else to undermine faith in the personal God of the Bible, and thus bistering the great day of anarchy by destroying faith and hope in Messiah's promised Kingdom, which are an offset to the trials and difficulties of the present life.
And if to you or me should come the thought of how much more wisely we could use the money, let us check the thought, remembering that God has not entrusted it to us, and that all our time and thought may be more wisely used in connection with our own stewardship of what talent, influence and money we do possess.
The Lesson of Our Text.
We should remember that our text, and indeed the entire Bible, is addressed to the Church of Christ—to those who have left the world, who have given their all to the Lord, acceptable through Christ, and who are intent upon knowing and doing God's will. The world is left by the Lord to try out its own ambitions, to realize eventually that these result in disappointment. It is when we experience the disappointment of our own plans and ambitions that we are truly prepared to look to the Lord.
In our text the Apostle does not specify Satan in contrast with Jesus; yet we may read between the lines that He had in mind the opposite course pursued by Lucifer, who became Satan, and the Logos, who became Christ. The Scriptural record is that Lucifer was one of the highest and most glorious spirit beings—a cherub. But a sinful ambition took possession of him. Instead of the righteous ambition to serve and honor his Creator, he thought that if he had an empire of his own he could improve upon the Divine order of things. —Isaiah 14: 12-15.
This ambition ultimately led Lucifer to carry out the program in connection with mankind. Thenceforth he was known as Satan, God's Adversary, "the Prince of this world, which now worketh in the hearts of the children of disobedience." According to the Bible, Satan has been permitted to have a certain amount of liberty, to show what the evil course would be and what its evil results. But according to the Bible he is soon to be restrained for a thousand years, while Messiah's Kingdom will break the shackles of sin and death, and give all the fullest opportunity to return to harmony with God and to attain everlasting life. Ultimately, Satan is to be destroyed together with all who have
latter meditated no such usurpation of Divine authority as Lucifer aimed to obtain. On the contrary, He was the very personification of loving obeilence and self-abnegation. Instead of meditating a usurpation to make Himself equal to the Father, He declared. "My Father is greater than F"; "My Father is greater than all"; "I delight to do Thy will, O My God."—John 14:28; 10:29; Psalm 40:8.
As in due time Satan found opportunity for manifesting his ambition, so in due time the Logos found opportunity for manifesting His humility and loving obedience. Man's fall brought the opportunity—the need of a Redeemer. As it was man who was condemned to death, so the redemption of Adam and his race must be accomplished by the death of a man. The death of bulls and goats could be only typical. Neither would an angel be a corresponding price. Hence the Divine proposal to the Logos—that If He would become a man, taking the sinner's nature, but not participating in the sinner's weakness or sin, He might thus be the Redeemer of men and accomplish the Divine will.
Attached to this proposal was the promise that so great a manifestation of love, loyalty and obedience to the Father would receive a great reward—an exultation to the Divine nature, glory, honor and immortality. Thus Jesus declared that for His faithfulness He had been rewarded by His Father with a place in His Throne.—Revelation 3:21.
The Lesson of Humility.
St. Paul was seeking to impress the lesson of humility, as the context shows. Jesus exemplified in His own course of humility the ambition to be and to do just what would be pleasing to the Heavenly Father, not meditating for an instant to grasp Divine glory and honor, and association with the Father in His Throne. He did God's will at the cost of His life—even the death of the cross.
And behold God's wonderful grace! He who sought not to usurp the Throne, but who humbled Himself, has been exalted to the right hand of God! What an exemplification of the teachings of God's Word! Did not God declare, "Pride goeth before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall"? He permitted Satan to be an illustration of just such a result; and this illustration is forceful in its application to all. "God resisteth the proud, but giveth grace to the humble."
The Apostle points out that the Heavenly Father, who so highly rewarded our Savior's loving obedience, has made a similar proposition to those whom He is calling during this Age to become associates with His Son. If we become dead to the world and lay down our lives in obedience to the Father's will, as Jesus did, we shall share His Throne, as He has promised.
tified by faith in our Redeemer's sacrifice, presenting our bodies living sacrifices, and faithfully persevering in the narrow way, we shall "make our calling and election sure."
"Every Knee Shall Bow."
The Apostle (V. 10) declares that our Master's exaltation, as a result of His humility, is so great that all eventually must recognize Him as Lord of all. Unto Him, every knee shall bow of the Heavenly and the earthly families. Already the angels acknowledge Him. As we read, the Father saith, "Let all the angels of God worship [acknowledge] Him." The bowing of earth will come later.
The work of the entire thousand years of Messiah's Reign will be for the uplifting of mankind from sin and death. Whom the Son will make free will be free indeed. But all those made free will know, that their release is due to the great sacrifice which Jesus accomplished in the carrying out of the Divine Plan. And all will know that the Redeemer has been honored of the Father and exalted to the chief place. And those reaching perfection will be glad to bow the knee to Him and to confess Him with their tongues.
The Father Is Excepted.
We are not to gather from these statements that Jesus, in any sense of the word, will take the place, the glory, the honor, of the Father. Jehovah God declares, "I give not My glory to another." (Isaiah 42:8). St. Paul explains that although Jesus will be hailed as Lord of all, nevertheless it is manifest that He is excepted who puts all things thus in subjection to the Son. St. Paul emphasizes this by telling us (1 Corinthians 15:27, 28) that it will be the Father's Power that will bring everything in subjection to the Son; and that when the Son, in carrying out the Father's gracious plans, shall have put all things in obedience to Himself, then shall He deliver up the Kingdom to the Father, that the Father may be all in all.
Truly the Divine Program, as stated in the Bible, is beautiful and wonderful. It illustrates to us elements of the Divine Character that we never could have appreciated except as man's fall into sin and death gave opportunity for the exercise of Divine Wisdom, Justice, Love and Power. Had there been no sin, no death, there would have been no opportunity for God to manifest His Justice in dealing with the sinner, no opportunity to manifest His Love for the world in proviling that they should be rescued from the power of sin and death. Neither would there have been an opportunity for demonstrating Satan's disloyalty and whereunto it would lead. Neither would there have been an opportunity for testing the Only Begotten of the father, and demonstrating the depth of His love and loyalty even unto the death of the cross, unless sin had been ermitted.
Neither would there have been an opportunity for God to show His generosity in dealing with the Logos, in His high exaltation to the Divine nature and glory. There would have been no opportunity to show the length, breadth, height and depth of the Love of God in lifting the Church from the horrible pit and miry clay of sin and death, justifying them freely through the merit of Christ's sacrifice, inviting them to share in His glory, honor and immortality, and finally bringing the Elect to participation in the Divine nature, and in the great work of Messiah.-Rev. 2:10, 26.27.
Room For Boundless Ambition.
Room For Boundless Ambition.
In view of what we have seen of the Divine arrangement there surely is room for the exercise of the most boundless ambition imaginable amongst the blest with the hearing ear and the Gospel Message. It would be a great ambition to strive to become kings or queens of the kingdoms of the world. It would be a great ambition to hope to become judges, senators, or the President of the United States. But such great ambitions would be as nothing when compared with that set before believers of God's Word—the ambition to be received by the great Creator as sons, partakers of the Divine nature (2 Peter 14), heirs of God, and Joint-heirs with Jesus Christ our Lord, to a Heavenly inheritance and Kingdom everlasting.
If any one wants a grand ambition, here is one worth dying for! Indeed, it can be attained only by dying. First must come the death of the will as respects earthly alms, projects, ambitions, etc. Then gradually must come the transformed mind, which rejoices to die daily and to suffer with Christ. If so be that we may be also glorified with him. (Romans 8:17.) This is the ambition necessary to make true, loyal soldiers of the Cross, willing to endure hardness in the Cause of the Captain of their Salvation, and to lay down life in the service of the King of kings.
A Grand Rush For It:
One might suppose that such a Message would find millions anxious and willing to lay hold upon its terms. But no! only a few have faith—and without faith they cannot be pleasing to God. Some have a little faith and render a little obedience, take some steps, refrain from certain sins and seek to walk hand in hand with the Lord—and with mammon. But these make a mistake. There is no promise of joint-heirship with the Savior except by a full cutting loose from the world and by a vital union with God through Christ.
"He that hath an ear to hear, let him hear." He that hath a humble heart of obedience, let him lay hold of the promise and attain the greatest of all ambitions. As for others, let them choose the noblest ambitions of which they are capable, assured that in proportion as they are honest and loyal they shall eventually be blessed under Mestiah's Kingdom.
"It is good not to cat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor to do anything whereby thy brother stumbleth." -Romanus 14:21 -Illegolt.
HIS lesson makes, perhaps, the strongest appeal of anything in the Bible in favor of total abstinence from intoxicating liquors. True, it is addressed only to Christians, as is the entire New Testament. Nevertheless, many can appreciate the argument; and to such it will appeal along the lines of the Golden Rule.
The rule for Christian living, as taught and exemplified by the Master, is far more exacting than the Golden Rule, which is applicable to all men. Christ's followers are, of course, subject to the Golden Rule; but they voluntarily place themselves under a far more stringent rule. Their Covenant with the Lord is that in doing His will—in doing righteousness—they will ever stand ready to sacrifice even life. This is what the Apostle meant when he declared that Christ pleased not Himself, but pleased the Father.
"None of Us Liveth to Himself."
As for the world, they both live and die to themselves. Their own personal
As for the world die to themselves, interests stand first with them. Only to Christ and the Church could these words apply; for none others have entered into such a Covenant of self-renunciation, giving up present interests in exchange for a promise of a spiritual life hereafter. In the resurre
NO
THE
WORLD
LIFE
Giving Up Presents Interests.
These are to live to the Lord—to do His will and not their own, to serve Him and not self, to lay down their lives in fighting against sin. When these die, they die unto the Lord in the sense that every member of the Body of Christ must die to the flesh before the entire Body can be glorified. The Apostle proceeds to show that all judgment is vested in the Redeemer. Each member of the Church must ultimately stand the inspection of the Head of the Church. Loyalty to the Head of the Church will eventually bring membership in the glorious Church beyond the veil.
Let Us. Then, Judges Ourselves.
The Apostle's argument is, that instead of judging fellow-members of the consecrated Body of Christ, we should be full of sympathy for them. We do not know thoroughly their trials and difficulties. Our keen sense of justice should find its principal exercise in self-criticism and in watchfulness not to do anything that would stumble a brother or discourage him or cause him to fall away from the faith.
How many find it easy to excuse self, while they are very critical respecting other's shortcomings! Our Lord warned His people against such an attitude, saying, "With what judgment ye judge, ye shall be judged." If you are hypercritical and wish to measure others up to the full standard of perfection, the Lord will properly measure you by that high standard.
The Lord does not wish His people to think lightly of weaknesses and failures. He is, on the contrary, setting a high standard of love, sympathy and kindness. Love is the principal thing, in God's sight.
"Nothing Unclean of Itself."
While the Jew was forbidden the use of swine, rabbits, oysters, etc., these restrictions were tests of his obedience to God; just as the forbidden fruit was thereafter unclean to Adam and Eve. The Apothese's argument is that to the Jew who died to all hope of attaining eternal life through the Law Covenant and who became united to Christ, the restrictions of the Law Covenant would no longer be blinding. And, of course, to the Gentile, who never was under the Law Covenant, its restrictions would have no application when he accepted Christ. But if any man's reasoning faculties were so twisted that he thought him
thought himself under obligations, he would be responsible according to his judgment. To violate his conscience would mean that he had willingly committed sin; for he would be wrong in doing what he, thought to be wrong, how, ever harmless the matter might be in itself.
tions, he would be responsible according to his judgment. To violate his conscience would mean that he had willingly committed sin; for he would be wrong in doing what he, thought to be wrong, how ever harmless the matter might be in itself.
The brother who is strong mentally, morally and physically, should gladly abstain from whatever would stumble another. Should we not be glad to lay down our lives for the brethren? If so, should we not be ready to abstain from using trifling liberties for our weaker brother's sake, for whom Christ died? This is a strong argument.
Rather preserve others from temptation too strong for them by faithfully abstaining from everything, that might appear evil in others' sight, however right it might be in your own sight, and however correct your own judgment of the Divine Law on the subject.
The advantages connected with membership in God's Kingdom consist rather in righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Spirit enjoyed by probationary members of the Kingdom class.
ARMY SQUIRRELS SAGACIOUS
Training at Springfield, Mass.
Springfield. Mass.-Tom and Jerry,
two squirrels that have made the
United States armory grounds their
abode for three years, are the most
accomplished squirrels in America, accordi-
tong to the soldiers who spend many
hours in training the animals. The
squirrels are present, rain or shine,
when the morning and evening gus
are fired, may be found at the entrance
of the barracks punctually at each
mess and in other ways demonstrate
their acumen.
Jerry's bushy tail is missing as a
result of standing a few feet from the
muzzle of a fieldpiece when the sun
set gun was fired. The rush of air
bowled Jerry over and over, and when
he regained his equilibrium his caudal
appendage was gone. Jerry still att-
tends the eventide ceremony, but takes
a position at a respectful distance and
gives Tom a warning nudge if his mate
is too venturesome.
CHILD ROUTS MOSQUITOES.
Builds Fire Under Horses to Drive
Avoy the Pests.
Sheldon, N. D.-The·three-year-old
son of Martin Thompson observed that
his parents drove away the mosquitoes
by means of a smudge and that the
closer his parents stayed to it the
more effective it proved.
He noticed also that the horses in
the barn were being pestered by the
insects. So he gathered large armfuls
of hay and placed one under each
horse. Then he lighted the hay and
stood back to see the rout of the mos-
quitoes and the horses' look of gratitude.
When the members of the family
arrived the barn was beyond saving and
several of the horses had met death in
the flames. The child escaped injury.
"CRACK SHOT" GLASSES
Men Who Guaranteed to Make Marks-
men With Spectacles Indicted.
men with spectacles included.
St. Louis, Mo. — "Wearing these glasses will enable you to shoot the smallest bird from the tallest tree on a hazy morning."
This statement contained in a circular was one of the causes of a federal indictment against Morris and Harry Goldman, who faced trial.
They sold 200,000 pairs of the glasses a year, it is stated. The spectacles cost them 23 cents aplace.
They guaranteed, the government alleges, that the use of the glasses would make any one a crack shot.
THIEF IS DETECTIVE IN HIS OWN CASE Fogitive Works Hard Trying to Capture Himself.
Oklahoma City, Okla. - Despite a written confession of a $28,000 theft, made with the hope of obtaining immunity, William R. McBrine, formerly warrant clerk under the state auditor, has started a term in the penitentiary. McBrine promised to implicate men "higher up," but in the opinion of the prosecutor he failed to do this and was advised to plead guilty and accept punishment. McBrine for nineteen months traveled through Europe and America working as a detective for Scotland Yard and various detective agencies. His last detective work was in New York city.
Often during his work he came upon pictures of himself and descriptions of the man wanted for a $28,000 theft in Oklahoma, and in each case he went to work earnestly seemingly on the case and made suggestions to his superiors as to the way the fugitive should be captured.
Most of the time McBrine was in communication with his wife in Guthrie, and after returning to New York he received letters from her urging him to surrender to the authorities. Finally he decided to come back to Oklahoma. He telegraphed to the attorney general that he was ready to return, and detectives for the state brought him back.
SAYS MARS SIGNALS US.
Flashes as if From Powerful Lamp Noted by Astronomer. Geneva, Switzerland.—M. Le Coutre, a distinguished astronomer of Geneva, is the latest scientist to arrive at the conclusion that the inhabitants of the planet Mars are signaling to the earth. During observations which lasted seventeen days the astronomer remarked a series of luminous apparitions of a bluish white color like the light of a powerful electric arc lamp. These illuminations, which usually lasted some seconds, were observed on several different nights.
Successful Boy Farmer.
Jollet, Ill.—Werner Krelmer, the nineteen-year-old son of J. F. Krelmer, a farmer of Jackson township. Will county, recently purchased a 100 acre farm for $40,000, all of which he has realized himself from his share of the profits of his father's farm. The lad is a student of scientific agriculture and has taken a long course of home study from the University of Illinois. He has increased the earnings of the farm 40 per cent.
ASKS GERMANY TO HALT NAVAL PLANS
Churchill Proposes Cessation of Building Battleships.
WOULD BELIEVE TAXPAYERS
Suggests That Germany and England Build No Vessels For One Year—Believes That Smaller Nations Would Follow Example of Greater Powers. Situation in Europe Is Now Clearing. London.—Winston Churchill, the first lord of the admiralty, in behalf of the English government has made a specific offer to Germany of a year's "naval holiday," wherein both nations would agree to halt the construction of battleships. Wildspread Interest was aroused by the proposal, and much significance is attached to the offer, which was made while he was discussing the naval expenditures of $375,000,000 a year and warning the nation of the inevitably heavy increase in armaments if the rivalry continued.
The pth of his speech was contained in this paragraph:
"Now, we say in all friendship and sincerity to our great neighbor, Germany: If you will put off beginning to build your two ships for twelve months we will put off in absolute good faith the building of our four ships for exactly the same period."
If Great Britain and Germany took the lead, Mr. Churchill added, there was a good prospect of success in getting other powers to agree to a naval holiday, thus relieving the taxpayers of a burden of millions of dollars.
Mr. Churchill first advocated a naval holiday on March 20 when he was speaking in the house of commons on the naval estimates, but Germany did not accept his offer.
"The proposal I put forward in the name of the British government for a naval holiday is quite simple," he said.
WILLIAM H.
WINSTON CHURCHILL.
"Next year, apart from the Canadian ships or their equivalent and apart from anything that may be required by any development in the Mediterranean, we shall lay down four great ships to Germany's two. Now, we say to Germany, 'If you will put off beginning to build your two ships for twelve months we will put off in absolute good faith the building of our four ships for exactly the same period.'
Mr. Churchill then expressed the opinion that If Great Britain and Germany took the lead all the other great countries would follow suit, and they would all be Just as great and as sound as if they had built the ships at present projected. If Austria and Italy did not build, the obligation, he said, would be removed from France and Great Britain, and the fact that the triple alliance (Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy) was building no ships would make the proposal possible without the slightest danger or risk. The first lord then added: "Isn't it likely that so great and memorable an event would produce an effect on the naval construction of the United States and Japan? Scores of millions would be rescued for the progress of mankind."
Mr. Churchill added: "That is the proposal I make for the year 1914 or, if that year is thought be too near, for 1915."
The first lord warned that apart from such an agreement "the naval expenditure of next year will be substantially greater than that of this year. Whatever may be necessary for the safety of our country and the maintenance of our influence all over the world will have to be done."
Mr. Churchill thought the fact that the situation in Europe was much clearer now than it had been for some time, the strong evidences of a desire for peace and the greatly improved relations between Great Britain and Germany rendered the moment favorable for the resumption of the consideration of the suggestion of a naval holiday to which friendly reference was made in a speech by the German imperial chancellor."
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WE MORTALS BE
NEGRO DEMOCRATIC
MENAGERIE
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Transformations from $1.50 up.
Pompadours from 25 cents up.
Wigs from $3 up.
Monthly treatments, $3.
Ceruti's Skin Food, $1.50.
Ceruti's African Eureka Cream, for the hair, 50 cents.
When ordering send sample of your own hair.
Describe the article you want.
Officials Have Clew In Chinese Book Just Found.
Washington. On the basis of unofficial reports from Chicago concerning the discovery there of a "Chinese black book" containing a list of agencies for the sale of opium in various cities, marginal notes in Chinese characters and records of Chinese alleged to have been smuggled into the United States, federal officials started on the trail of what they suspect to be an organization of opium sellers, Chinese smugglers and white slavers. Immigration Commissioner Camnetti directed the Chicago immigration officials to get in touch with the Chicago police, who have possession of the Chinese black book, and obtain all the information regarding the case, with a view to ascertaining whether the Chinese exclusion laws have been violated by smuggling orientals "over an underground road" from Canada.
The chief immigration inspector at Chicago is Dr. Percy L. Prentis, who was in New York on detail as a member of the special board investigating food conditions at Ellis island.
The special agents of the customs service will also look into the matter, as they are interested in violations of the opium law, while the immigration authorities are more particularly concerned with the allegations of smuggling of Chinese into the country. Any evidence of violations of the Mann white slave law will be turned over to the department of justice.
MAY CUT LOW LIVING RATE.
Tewanda (Pa.) Girl Will Try to Live
on Less Than 50 Cents Weekly
On Less Than a Century Weekly.
Ithaca, N. Y.-The fifty cents a week rate for food set last spring by Miss Clara Loewus of Towanda, Pa., is in danger. The young woman who made it by living for twenty weeks on $10 is going out to break it this fall, according to word received in the Ithaca Conservatory of Music, in which she is a student.
She has written that she not only will live at the rate she established last spring, but that she will try to cut under it by a few cents. Her experiments in dietetics will be watched by the house economics department in Cornell university.
BECOMES FATHER AT 88.
Mountainer's Son, Sixty-one. Finds a Young Brother When He Calls
Young Brother When He Calls
Spartanburg, S. C.—O. P. Grant, who lives in the mountains north of here, has become a father, at the age of eighty-eight.
When his son, L. M. Grant, sixty-one years old, called at the family home he found his father sitting on the front porch coddling a tiny baby. Aged Mr. Grant proudly introduced the infant as his youngest son.
Must Learn Psalm In Jail
Pueblo, Colo.—Municipal Judge Crossman has issued a number of unusual sentences, but he established a record for odd decisions when he sentenced T. W. Nicholls, a labor agent, to remain in jail until he had committed to memory the Twenty-third Psalm.
MR. HARRY A. WILLIAMS Director of the Vocal Department of the Washington Conservatory of Music the past two seasons, has opened a Studio at 1944 9th Street N. W.
1944 9th Street N. W.
Voice Culture. French and Italian
Terms for lessons on application
ARMADA TO SAIL THROUGH CANAL
All Nations Expected to Join In Celebration.
160 SHIPS MAY BE IN FLEET
First Representatives of Other Governments Will Assemble at Hampton Roads—After President Reviews Vessels They Will Go to San Francisco, Four Days to Go Through Canal.
Washington.—Anchored in Hampton Roads early in 1915 will be the greatest international fleet ever gathered in American waters, assembled in answer to the invitation of the United States government to celebrate the completion of the Panama canal by making a voyage to the Pacific through the new waterway.
The precise number of vessels which will lie in the famous roadstead is not yet known to the officers of the navy department in charge of the arrangements for rendezvous, as so far there have been no formal responses received to the invitations dispatched by the state department to all of the nations of the world.
Some of the nations with great navies may be represented by squadrons of four or more warships, others by only one or two, and some of the countries practically without navies including vessels of the first class will be represented only in the personnel of their legations and commissions to the Panama-Pacific exposition.
The formal invitation of the United States was dispatched to all the diplomatic officers of the United States
```markdown
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© 1913, by American Press Association.
BLOWING UP OF CUCARACHA SLIDE IN
CULEBRA CUT.
abroad by Secretary Bryan. It recited
the fact that in the navy appropriation
act of 1911 the president was authorized
and requested in extending his invitation to foreign nations to participate in the exposition also to invite
"their representatives and their fleets to assemble at Hampton Roads, Virginia, and from thence come to the city of Washington, there to be formally welcomed by the president." The president also is to go to Hampton Roads to review the assembled fleets as they start on their voyage to San Francisco.
It is expected that the American invitation will meet with general acceptance, and the result will be the gathering of a fleet of perhaps seventy-five or a hundred warships of the best type, for the reason that slow and antiquated vessels would be unable to keep pace with the rest of the fleet in the cruise from Hampton Roads to the Golden Gate.
The international fleet will probably be under command of an American vice admiral, in all likelihood Cameron McR. Winslow, for it is expected that congress, which has authorized the assembly, will make provision for this new grade rather than have the American commander outranked by some foreign naval officer.
The ceremonies at Hampton Roads and the time required for a visit to Washington by the foreign visitors will consume about a week or ten days, and then, headed by the American fleet, probably with the super-Dreadnought New York at the right of the column, the great armada will take its way southward for Colon. It is estimated that about four days will be required to pass the fleet through the locks and the canal and about twice that length of time will suffice to replenish the coal bunkers before they resume their cruise.
All Pupils Are Kellys.
Milton, Ore.—The North Fork school, a few miles above Milton, is probably one of the strangest in the country. The school is attended by seven pupils, and they are all the children of one family. Mr. and Mrs. H. Kelly. Miss Helen Narkans has been engaged this year to teach the school.
STUDIES PRISON FROM THE INSIDE
Osborne Serves Self Inflicted Term For Purpose.
TREATED JUST AS A CONVICT
Gets the Same Fare and Dons Regular Prison Clothes-Is Bathed as He Enters and Assigned to Cell-Will Determine Effects of Prison Life on Mind.
Auburn, N. Y.-Emulating the example of Governor Hunt of Arizona, who in March, 1912, had himself locked up with convicts to share their experience of prison life, Thomas Mott Osborne, chairman of the state commission for prison reform, has entered Auburn prison and is serving a self imposed sentence for the purpose of studying the effect of discipline, food, labor and the general prison system on a convict's mind.
Mr. Osborne entered the prison as any new convict would do, went
through the routine, such as being taken for a bath, a session with the prison barber and prison tailor, and went through the same grind as a convicted felon. In reply to a question he said he was ready to "take all his medicine" and would not balk at the dungeon should his conduct at any time justify his incarceration there. The results of the study are to be embodied in a report to be made by the commission that is studying prison reform with a view to legislation next year. Chairman Osborne spoke to the convicts in chapel and said in part:
"As chairman of the commission on prison reform appointed by Governor Sulzer the superintendent of prisons and Warden Rattigan have kindly given me permission to carry out a plan to determine the psychological effect of the prison system on the prisoners. If sympathy and understanding from a vivid personal experience are desirable to studying, say, some foreign country, they are even more necessary in the case of a group of men set apart by society such as this prison community. For in your cases the conditions under which you live are more unnatural and less easy for most persons to grasp than those of a foreign country.
"Moreover, most of the books that have been written about you by so called 'penologists' are written largely from the outside standpoint and with so little intelligent sympathy and vital understanding that few are of real value. They seem to be based on the assumption that the prisoner is not a human being like the rest of us, but is a strange sort of animal called a 'criminal', wholly different in his instincts, feelings and actions from the rest of mankind.
"I want to find out whether our prison system is unintelligent; whether it files in the face of all common sense and human nature, as I think it does; whether, guided by sympathy and experience, we cannot find something far better to take its place, as I believe we can.
"I am coming here to learn what I can at first hand. In the court of conscience I have been found guilty of having lived many years indifferent to and ignorant of what has been going on behind these walls and have been sentenced to a short term at hard labor in Auburn prison. I expect to begin serving my sentence this week and am coming here to live your life, to be housed, clothed, fed, treated in all respects like one of you. I want to see for myself exactly what your life is like—not as viewed from the outside, in, but from the inside out."
No Rent For Thirty Years.
Columbus, Ind.-John Zimmerman, seventy-nine, known popularly as John Cinnamon, is dead here in a home he had occupied for thirty years without paying a cent of rental. Francis T. Crump, a capitalist, owner of the building, recently called on Zimmerman and mentioned the matter of rent, with the result Zimmerman said he had just repaired the roof and would call the rent.bill squared. Crump received the bill.
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DR. DAVIDSON.
_ dt as to be regretted that Dr.
Davidson, the efficient superin-
tendent of the public schdols will
retire by virtue of another ap-
pointment to the public schools
of Pittsburg, Pa. There has never
been a man at the head of the
public schools of this city who
has been esteemed and ‘appre-
ciated as Dr. Davidson has since
he came here. His whole desire
has been to advance the interest
of the schools and protect the
teachers. The teachers’ found in
‘Dr, Davidson a friend, and the
public schools a man of the high-
est ideals. The Bee agrees with
Dr. C. H. Marshall, that it is not
necessary to go outside of the
District of Columbia to select a
successor to Dr. Davidson. Give
some one of the efficient supervis-
ing principals an opportunity and
The Bee is.confident that his new
successor will be able to take up
the management of the schools
where Dr. Davidson left off. Let
the Board of Education consider
the timely suggestion of Dr. Mar:
shall, a member of the Board o!
Education, and select a local man
Dr. Davidson, here is our hand
We regret your leaving us. Yot
"are an honest, noble and a Chris
tian gentleman who is bound te
succeed wherever you go. Yor
have treated the teachers in, out
schools, irrespective of color ot
condition, as American citizens
You have obeyed the letter of the
law, and-when you leave, you
have the confidence, love and re
spect of your fellow citizens.
You have been one man to lis-
ten to and weigh the evidence of
both sides on all questions that
have come before you, and your
decisions have never been appeal-
ed from. .
DR. SHEPARD.
If there ever was an educator
who deserves the support and en-
couragement of the people, it is
Dr. James E. Shepard, of Dur-
ham, N. C..The latest report is
that he is in the West meeting
‘with great succéss. His new doc-
trine of education seems to be
taking hold upon the American
people. Everywhere he goes in
the Wet he is meeting with an
ovation. He has done in three
years what no five or ten men
could do in ten years. He is en-
titled to the support of the people,
not only in his state, but through-
out the country. He has success-
fully overcome the attacks of his
enemies and those who have been
too selfish to help him. His peo-
ple in his state and city and the
officers of his school are loyally
supporting him, and from all in
dications, he will be in the leac
within a very few years, notwith
standing the side stabs that hav:
been given him. a
OUR BUSINESS LEAGUE.
The local branch of the Wash:
ington Business League is mak-
ing a record. Next week, Mr
Daniel Freeman, its president,
will hold a mecting in the Met-
ropolitan Church. ‘This local or-
ganization is making a good rec-
ord, and Mr, Freeman deserves
credit for its success and the peo-
ple, or those in business should
do everything in their power to
make the organization strong and
efficient. The colored business
men and women are getting to:
gether, which they should do, if
they want to succeed. Support
our Business League.
+’ DEMOCRATS WIN.
. The recent election demonstrat
ed the fact that the action of the
administration is endorsed. In
& OSRANGE ME ANS VANE.
The present Administration presents a spectack —.ique, to say
the least, in the political history of this nation. At no time'since
the Declaration of Independence has there been an executive body
or a President who has manifested, apparently, less regard for the
inalienable rights of life, liberty and the pursuits of happigess—
the-denial of which by Great Britain constituted the source of ‘bitter
complaints, persistent opposition, fratricidal war, and which’ re-
sulted in Colonidl independence—than has Waodrow Wilson. This
cannot be gainsaid, if the colored people are:to be reckoned as a part
of'the American body-politic and invested with the Constitutional
tight of citizenship. It need not be said that the colored people do
not enjoy liberty, either personal, civil or political; for that is all
too patent, since liberty presupposes a state of mental tranquility
based upon a sense of perfect security. And how can a sense of
security obtain, when the tide of prejudice and proscription is run-
ning fast and high against us, and the strong arm of the Executive,
though calmly and legally invoked to stay the impending deluge of
injustice and tyranny, refuses to endeavor to quell the storm or to
close the floodgates for our protection? What becomes of the right
of the colored people to the full enjoyment of their property and
of the results of.their own toil, when they are restricted both as to
acquisition and alienation and are compelled to patronize the high-
est market for the poorest returns, to labor at a discount and pur-
thase at a premium, if at all? And what protection is there fo life
itself, when the colored people bear all forms of insult and degrada-
tion and Negro-baiting and, if the spirit of indignation or defense
or retaliation is shown on their part, are hunted like wolves or
treated like dogs? As a matter of fact, under the stress of times
present, there exists such a state of anarchy as respects the rights
of colored citizens, as would shame the most fanatic Jew-baiting
Muscovite or “unspeakable” Turk. And all is due to the do-hothing
policy, or at least the pernicious activity‘of the present Administra-
tion, in so far as some of the most influential executive officers are
concerned. Mr. Wilson’s addresses are laden to the limit with
preachments about morality, morality—ad nauseum. Pray, what
is morality if it be not the practice of simple justice? And what is
justice but the actualization of the doctrine, “Do not to another what
you do,not wish to be done to yourself”? And what does Mr. Wil-
son do when he returns to the White House? Asleep, indifferent, or
at least inactive, while the cardinal Constitusional rights are being
denied the coloréd people, the President adds insult to injury by
denying a right which Congress, by the First Amendment of the
Constitution—which the President has sworn to support and defend
—is prohibited from doing, nantely, the right of petition. Freedom
of speech and of the press, the right of the people peacefully to as-
semble and to petition to the Government for a redress of griev-
ances are among the most sacred and dearly bought bulwarks of a
free and enlightened people. Yet,.when a body, representing the
most respectable, cultured and law-abiding in the land, petition, or
even seck to exercise the right to do so, such body is told that “The
President is devoting his entire time and attention just now to the
legislative program and he is confining his engagements entirely £0
members of Congress, who wish ta discuss official business”! In
-other words, he has no-time to consider petitions for the-redress of
grievances, notwithstanding Congress is prohibited from ignoring”
them, and tlie Executive is sworn to execute laws which may grow
out of them; but evidently deems it a sacred duty “just now” to
confer only with members of Congress who may wish to discuss
official business. The understanding on this point seems to be mel-
lifluously cordial between these co-ordinate branches. But this is
not the only time that the majority in Congress, aided by an execu-
tive, sought to strangle petitions and to hobble the champions of
the petitioners. Nor'do we fail to remember that the said petitions
sought to be ignored were in behalf of the same race which the
| President seems now called upon to ignore. At that time, the feel-
ing was bitter, the contest hot; but the champions of freedom won,
| and the prayers of a suffering race were heard by the God of nations;
'| although rivers of blood and mountains of treasure had to be sacri-
| ficed in order that right and truth and justice might prevail. So
| will it be with this latest manifestion of oppression, this denial of
| the sacred right of petition. The sacrifice of blood and tredsure
'|may not follow—we pray that no such dire calamity may ever again
Jovertake this nation; but if there be any conscience or sense of
shame remaining in the héarts of the American people, the time is
not far distant when the brutal treatment now being shown an in-
| offensive, striving and loyal class of Americans will be looked back
upon as constituting the most disgraceful blot that ever tarnished
| the escutcheon of the nation. The President might possibly find
time enough to suspend the rules of the Yellowstone Reservation to
allow a proscribed pet dog to accompany its mistress through the
park, but “just now” he cannot waste time in receiving a delegation
of the colored race—the educators!
“Massachusetts the legislature
went Republican, and in New
York Tammany was destroyed;
Maryland went Democratic, as
well as Virginia.
There were few gains made by
the Republicans, which, no doubt,
will stimulate their ambition by
next fall.
a eee eee er ea
Had the whité Republicans in
Prince George’s County done their
‘whole duty the entire Republican
ticket would have been elected.
The only colored men, if any at
all to vote the Democratic ticket,
were those who worked upon the
farms of the white Democratic
bosses to whom these poor igno-
rant colored men are indebted
and under financial obligations.
THOMAS TESTIMONIAL.
The people in this city who
have accepted Mr, Thomas’ hos-
pitalities will show their appre-
ciation and the esteem they have
for him and the efforts he is put-
ting forth to give the -people an
up-to-date playhouse. The entire
week from November 29 will be
donated to this testimonial. Ev-
éry citizen, organization and pro-
fession will show their apprecia-
tion.
RACE SEGREGATION...
And now, it is stated that Wm.
Ramsey, a jeweler in this city, has
written to the mayor of Balti-
more, Md., for a copy of the seg-
regation ordinance so that he and
others may make a move in this
city to segregate the colored peo-
ple. In another column of The
Bee will be read with interest an
excerpt from a Baltimore, Md.,
paper. .
BUSINESS MEN.
Special meeting of the*business
men will take place at the Metro-
politan Church Tuesday night,
November 23d . All business men
and women should be present.,
VARDAMAN. * ;
Dr. Geo, H. Richardson’s Mas-
terly Argument. .
The reply of Dr. Geo. H. Rich-
ardson to James K? Vardaman
and others will be ready for cir-
culation next week. “No one
should be without this great de-
fense of the Negro race. The
price will be 15 cents per copy or
seven for one dollar. Don’t delay
in ordering.
The Bee, 1109 Eye Street
Northwest, or Dr. Geo. H. Rich-
ardson, 309 Eleventh Street N. E.,
Washington, D, C.
VIEWS OF THE EDITORS.
=
|Newspaper Owners Who Are in
Close Touch with Farmers and In-
‘| dustrial Workers Tell Tariff Truths.
. (“American Economist.)
Make way for the new tariff. Pret-
ty soon the woods will be full of
Democrats explaining why it failed to
bring the economic millennium many
of them promised—Troy (N. Y.)
Times.
The last Democratic tariff bill was
declared by the then President, a
Democrat, to be an act of perfidy and
dishonor. This one: is worse—Pitts-
burgh Gazette-Times.
With so many goods on the free
list, our Democratic friends cannot
[deny that, so far as this enormous ag-
gregate of American products is con-
cerned, their measure is a free-trade
act, and the country will have am-
ple opportunity before the next elec-
tion to learn whether Republicans or
Democrats have been right on the
question of protection of American
labor and American capital invested
in American industries—Burlington
(Vt.) Free Press.
_ Look here, Mr. Democrat; if more
goods are going to come from abroad.
as a result of the Underwood-Wilson
tariff, don’t that mean that more
American money is going abroad?
And what will bring that good cash
back?—Moravian Falls (N. C.) Yel-
low Jacket. °
The new tariff bill is the slit skirt
for Miss Democracy.—Denver Herald.
Mr. Underwood says the consumer
will.not begin to feel the etfect of low
duties for a month. Will the con-
sumer be the only one to feel the ef-
fect?—Louisiana (Mo.) News.
The protest made by some foreign
nations against the 5 per cent dis-
count on goods brought in American
ships is said to have so impressed the
Democratic administration at Wash-
ington that the repeal of the pro-
vision is favored. > Yet the tariff bill
was passed not only with full under.
standing of the meaning of that sec.
tion, but with the avowed purpose o!
helping American shipping. On what
ground can repeal be urged? The new
law has opened wide the door to for:
eign products. Is it the inténtion tc
inflict further injury to American in-
dustry?—Troy (N. Y.) Times.
Well, the new tariff bill is on the
books. Now let's see what effect it
will have on the high cost of living!
—Memphis (Mo.) Reveille.
Under the new tariff bill the woo!
of the northern sheep raiser has nc
protection. But there is a good stif
duty on the hair of the Angora goa
which his Texas brother produces. I
pays to live down in the South un.
der the present administration. —
Johnstown (P2.) Leader.
THE SIGH.
| By Geneva Laurelus.
T have felt the lash of the whip of the
past,
As it stung with a venom swift;
\nd plied its strokes*o'er my mem-
ory,
And the veil of the past did lift .
Ever and anon it lashed steadily,
To steep in despair was its lot:
But even as my very soul grew sick,
Yet I respaired me not,
-\t the end, ah! weary and forlorn,
T did not sigh.
T have felt the peace of a soul at rest,
Of the future all rosy and bright;
The clouds of mistakes receded,
Not one regret to blight.
No vain wish’ for yesterdays to live
over, =
No worries for tomorrows to be;
Only a heart full of fondest hopes,
Ever in lightest glee.
Yes, at the end as the moments fy,
I do sigh.
AND THOU ART YET UNFOUND
By Genesa Laurelus,
Tho’ day after day and night after
night,
I seek an unknown thou,
Before whose eyes with promise true,
My (or mine?) head in love I'd
* bow;
Yet still I long with longing sore,
The depths of my possible love to
“| sound;
With sighs but half acknowledged,
And thou are yet unfound. *
= i
T long to suffer for thee, tho’ un-
known, «
To blend my soul with thine:
To ‘own thy heart’s love and thine
alone, . ‘
And in return give mite.
To share thy sorrows, give thee my
joys,
Surmounted by love's own mound:
That will stand the storms of always,
And thou art yet unfound,
That when life's sun begun? to fade,
My love would stronger grow:
With the glories past, of the peace to
come,
That our hearts of hearts should
know.
And should I enter the unknown first,
My love I'd leave thy life to sur-
round;
To shield thee from life's tempting
paths, .
And thou are yet unfound,
Miss Moten Commended.
: Denton, Texas, October 31.
Editor The Bee.
A friend gave me a_copy of The
Bee, date October 25. The communi-
cation hy Mr. L. E. Moten to Presi-
dent Wilson was read with pleasure
and enlightment. ‘Continue to remind
the President of his duties toward
our Negro brothers. His motto is
justice, nothing but justice. Can a
man of his noble gifts, a peerless man
wha is no respecter of persons, pre-
varicate?_It seems impossible. Thus
in due time, when the stormy days
about free raw material, free every-
thing, are over, he will direct his
thoughts toward much higher thi gs
—that is, of making free men—and
it is plain that that means the Negro
race, which at present has about or
little to say as in days of slavery.
Keep‘on asking for the loaf—the Fa-
ther will rise and give it.
Yours for the betterment of Negro
brothers.
RAYMOND VERMMONT,
Priest.
WOOD REMOVED.
Tammany Negro Boss Removed—He
Reaped What He Sowed.
New York City, November 3.
Robert Wood, Boss Murphy’s man
Friday and the Negro Tammany bos«
who was the cause of the removal of
Ralph E. Langston, but who was at
last victorious, has been removed.
Wood is the Negro Tammany boss
who dictated all Negro Democratic
appointments in New York among
the Tammany Negro Democrats. He
is the most egotistical individual ‘that
ever came down the pike and the
most arrogant chap that ever led
Tammany Negro Democrats. Nobody
is shedding any tears at the removal
of Wood.
———_—
The free list will be suspended the
entire week of the Thomas testimo-
nial. TTR
ublic Men Aed Things
T got a little question I want to
eropound to Judge Pugh. I am one
fof those “Sundowns.” There are
shree of us what board at a regula-
tion hash house. We want to know
what's the legal penalty, if “any, for
hanging a man what impersonates a
cook, If the fellow what cooks at
our hash house was a real cook we
would know what steps to take to
make his hanging legal and formal.
But the fact that he is not a cook has
added complications ‘what pudzle.
There has been a great deal of specu.
lation among us as to just what this
gook's regular work im life has been.
Some think he is a boilermaker by
trade, one thinks he was a detective,
while another thinks he was a driver
of a garbage wagon. We are willing
to concede that a real cook should be
placed at 2 disadvantage in our hash
house. Naturally when we pay $y per
for board we expect our landlord to
clear $3 per. We expect him to serve
adulterated oleomargine, or “olie” as
we affectionately call it on account
of its Swedish blond comptexion, for
butter, and we expect him to serve
nux vomica for coffee, adulterated
carbolic for tea, and canned milk wa-
tered in the same proportion that
William Jennings -wanted the silver
specie. “Some of the boys think the
other food served is collected from
the city garbage cans. As [ say, we
expect all these things. We kick
about them among ourselves just in
the spirit of all. boarders more te
gratify a penchant for the expression
of ‘satire than to give vent to indig.
nation.
eye
Under these conditions a real cook
would have small opportunity to dis.
play his art. But-this cook of ours
is the limit, and we are addressing
this open communication to Judge
Pugh to find out what is the penalty
for hanging a miscarriaged cook. We
hope the Judge will tell us quickly
for fear the fires of resentment which
are slowly smouldering in our bosom:
will suddenly burn to flame and we
will hang this imposter without re.
gard for the formalities which woul:
make the act. legal. Dancy woul:
never complain. John can go uy
against anything from a possom to a
coon anywhere and any place.
eet
Say, ain't Bill Houston got one
more pair of long legs? I saw him
striding over You Street the other
evening. and each step seemed tc
cover three yards. If Bill had been
split just one-tenth of a inch more,
the thing he wears.for a neck would
serve as something for his trouser
bands to-go around.
T’ve often thought how in the world
is Henry Slaughter ever going to stop
a fellow what's got the legs that Bill
Houston's got. Henry hassa pair of
legs that are just about one inch long
gnough to keep his body from sweep-
ing in the dust as he walks. Speak-
ing about these two fellows, just re-
minds me that about a year ago they
were like Siamese twins, and now
when they meet they, neither one of
them. can remember the words, “good
morning, “or Hello, Old Sport.” Take
it from me, these anthracite fraterni-
ties what's got a lot of brotherly love
signs, grips and pass-words hold more
growtch to the square inch than did
the Harlypot Brothers for the Ignaz
quartette back in the days when old
Pluto used to speel. I wish some one
would stact-a get-together movement
around this berg. Old Captain Divide
has been doing business long cnouch.
Thomas’ Testimonial.
Manager Andrew J. Thomas to Be
Honored by the People for His
Excellent Work the Entire Week
of Thanksgiving—The Most Bril-
liant Affair in the Social Circle of
the City.
Mant Auair in the social Circle of
the City. 7
Mr. Andrew J. Thomas, manacer
of Howard Theater, is to be tendered
a testimonial by the citizens of this
city for his success as manager o!
the Howard Theater and the efforts
he has put forth in giving the people
of this city an up-to-date playhouse.
The entire management of the How-
ard Theater is under the supervision
and control of Mr. Thomas and
there is no doubt that he has done
everything in his power to please the
people. Since the theater has beer
under his entire management and
control Mr. Thomas has made every
¢ffort to please. For this reason the
people, The Bee and the those whose
names appear in a letter, which is
to follow, thought that he shoyld be
given -an expression of their esteem
and approvah The following cor-
respondence will explain itself:
ate
Rosen
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Washington, D. C, Sept. 29.
Mr. Andrew J. Thomas, Howard
Theater, Washington, D. C.
Dear Sir; For a number of years
the colored citizens of this city have
talked about and have endeavored to
erect a first-class theater for their
own amusement, but to some extent
they have failed. It was no fault of
bphapedeee thee eee ee. Many
-Rterprises that have been attempt-
d.have failed, thus losing confidence
1 those who have taken the initia~
ive to consummate such enterprises.
Having watched your efforts, note
vithstanding the many adverse criti-
‘isms, to make the theater, of which
you are the lessee, a success, and hay-
‘ng succeeded thus far in giving the
people of this city a playhouse wor-
thy of the capitol of the nation for
their accommodation and your ef-
forts to please in every Particular,
warrant the undersigned to tender
you a testimonial beginning the week
of the second” anniversary, as sole
lessee of Howard Theater, which you
have so successfully conducted,
This suggestion comes from your
fellow citizens, as an evidence of
their confidence in you and your de-
Serving efforts to make them self.
reliant,
Whatever suggestions you desire to
make tending to make the occasion a
memorable one kindly adyise us if
our tender meets with your approval,
and permit_us to subscribe ourselves
Gratefully yours, *
(Signed) Wm. Calvin Chase, Thos.
L. Jones, Emanuel M. Hewlitt, Ar-
mond W. Scott, W. C. Martin, J. M.,
Rice, Chas. S, Williams, Royal A”
Hughes, James A. Cobb, Augustin
W. Gray, J. Louis Taylor, Benjamin
L. Gaskins, Zeph. P. Moore, J. C Na-
Dier, Harriet Gibbs Marshall, James
F. Armstrong, Fo H. M Murray,
Wellington A. Adams, James F.
Bundy, Joseph H. Stewart, Jabee Lee,
W- D. Johnson, F. W: Cheek, Samuel
M, Pierre, M. D., Chas. L. Barnes.
The following additional names
have been added to the Thomas tes-
{imonial: Dr. A. M. Curtis and wife,
Mr. Daniel Freeman, J. T. C. New.
some, Wm. H. Thomas.
Washington, D. C.. Oct. 28,
W. Calvin ee Editor Washington
Bee; Thoms L. Jones, Mrs. Har-
Het Gibb Marshall, J. A. Cobb, E.
M. Hewlett and others,
Dear Sirs and Madame: Your let-
ter of the zoth inst., in which you and
the citizens * of Washington tender
me a testimonial, received. Words
fail me in expressing my apprecia-
tion of the token of approval of my
effort to cater to the amusement-
loving public of Washington. If at
times I have failed in meeting the
expectations of my patrons, it has
not. I assure you, been through a
Jack of zeal and effort on my part.
This expression of approval is. pratt.
fying beyond expression. Tt will in-
spire me to greater efforts, knowing
full well that my efforts to give clean,
moral and instructive productions
will meet with the approval of the
Public in the future as it has in the
Past. Your request for a week in
which the civic, religious, educational
and fraternal organizations can éx-
Press their approval, will be conve:
nient for me Thanksgiving week.
Trusting this will be Satisfactory to
you and the friends interested in the
affair, and thanking you for your
kind consideration, I am yours truly,
ANDREW J. THOMAS,
Manager Howard Theater.
THOMAS TESTIMONIAL.
Meeting of the Subscribers—Others
Join*to Honor the Manager.
», The people of this city will show
their appreciation of Mr. Thomas for
his efforts to give them an up-to-date
amusement house and his many lib-
eral acts of kindness in giving his the-
ater for kindness. Some of the best
and leading citizens in this city have
joined the mavement first suggested
by The Bee to give Mr. Thomas a
testimonial. The committee is ar-
ranging a complete program, which
will be presented to the patrons in a
few days. -
ALLEN C. E. NOTES.
The Allen CE. Society met.at
Metropolitan A. M. E. Church on last
Sunday, November 2, at 6 p. m., and
held a ‘very enjoyable session. It
was a consecration meeting and each
of the members took part and helped
to make it a glorious service for the
Master. Just before the testimonies
given by the Endeavorers, a very ef-
fective and touching devotional exer-
ise was conducted by the president,
Miss Anna Payne, After which the
topic for the evening was announced
jas follows: “The Ideal Christian, His
Heavenly Helper.” Heb. 13:5-15. As
the names of the various members
were called each one rose and conse-
crated himself or herself anew. Many
of them told how the Heavenly
Helper had aided them in the past,
how He was aiding them at the pres-
ent time and how they expected Him
to aid them in the future. By way
of response, some gave verbal testi-
monies, some a verse from the Holy
Scriptures, and still others a verse
from some favorite song which ex-
pressed their sentiments.
The meeting seemed to be on fire
with the spirit from on high and that
same enthusiasm and earnestness
which has characterized all of the pre-
vious gatherings was evident in a
double portion on last Sunday at the
consecration meeting. Each one de-
clared it to be a splendid, spiritual
success. :
As a part of* the extension work
which is to be conducted this year,
the society appointed three of its
members to go to Bladensburg and
assist the president at that place to
build up the Endeavor Society. Those
assigned to go were Miss Christine
Carter, Mr. S. M. Gilbert. Mr. M. J.
Key. ‘The meeting is to be held at
the ahove named suburb on Sunday,
November 9. :
The subject for next Sunday is
“Christian Home Life” and the exer-
cises' will be conducted by the social
committee. A special. prosram has
been arranged and one and all are
extended a most cordial invitation to
be present and take part in the ser-
vices.
O. W. Wright.
Mr. O. W. Wright. who has a
stand in the O Street Market deals
in all kinds of fresh meats. This is
no doubt one of the best and tn-to-
date meat merchants in the city. Don’t
fail to call and inspect his goods. .
Secure your tickets now for the
Thomas testimonial.
=i
(TRF 5 eee) 7 Si
a gl me Yecle ant
OAR M Bae, cool’
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Mec
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A Sr TIN AA, ;
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ine NG We
teenth Street Northwest, for the best
drugs, remedies, candies and toilet
Srticles at moderate prices, and the
Anest service in Ice Cream ‘Sodas and
delicious drinks the year round: |
Mrs. W. A. Taylor, of Boston,
Mass, has returned home after a
week's visit here and Philadelphia,
Miss Laura Reese is being ‘highly
entertained in Philadelphia by her
cousin, Mrs. Jessie Johnson, of Berks
Street : °
Mr. C. C. Curtis is visiting relatives
and friends in Louisville, Ry.
R, V. Peyton attended the furieral
gf, Res, DOW! Davis, of Richmond,
a.
Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Carter are
visiting relatives in New York.
Mrs. Uenry Baker left the city last
week to join her busband in New
York, who is exhibiting at the expo-
sition.
Mrs, W. A. Hughes spent Saturday
and Sunday in Baltimore, the guest
of her parents.
Miss Anita Jones and Rachel Con-
way, teachers’ from ‘St. Paul, Minn,
are in the city. visiting friends.
‘Mr. W. H. ‘Thompson. inspector of
Richmond Benefit Insurance Com-
pany, is in the city on business.
Mts, Leila Amos Pendleton ap-
peared before “an enthusiastic audi
ence at Nauck, Va, Wednesday even-
ing in selected readings from her re-
cently published hook, “A Narrative
Of the “Negro” Inthe discussion
which followed the reading Mrs. Pen-
Uleton was hailed as the first Negro
woman historian, and. several copies
of the book were subscribed for. Mrs,
Pendleton has accepted ‘invitations to
give readings in southera and western
States during the coming winter. Ol
the meeting Wednesday evening Miss
Ella Boston was chairman, and_the
speaker Was introduced by Mrs. Julia
Collier, “Vocal. selections were ‘ren-
dered by Mr. Chas. Thompson, Mes.
Nelson and Biss Branham.
Charlie West, of 41. Ivy Street
- Southeast, employe of the United
States Senate anf ardent worker of
A. K. Manning Lodge No. 2361, G.
U. 0. of O. Fs has heen confined to
his bed for nearly four weeks, but i
now convalescing and able to be about
his room.
On Friday, October 31, 1013, Miss
Anna, D. Beil ave a Hallowe'en
Birthday party in honor of hec niece
Daisy Celestine Athelda at her resi
dence, 1832 Filth, Street Northwest
‘The guests were Misses R, Gray.
Mann, G. Wells, M.. Thomas, Mf
West, M. Bryant, M._Webh. ‘B
| Blackiston, I. Parker, E. Palmer
8. Skinker, "E. Brooks. A. Tay:
lor, E. Lightfoot, S. Lightfoot. M
Eleazer, FE. Horatd, Bi, Simms, E
Turner, H. Barker, A. West, R Cas
well, R, Howard, F. Green, F. Mid
+ dleton, M. Hayes, E. Thompson. F
Wayman, H. Webb, Messrs. A. Rus
sell, Hi. Marshall, A. Hayes, A. War
ips. R Naylor, W. Hall C Beckley
E. Jones, A. Jones, N. Miller, H
Giark, T. Wood, T. Cupid, C. Lomax
V._Lucas, E. Bailey and Pr Lewis,
Buy drugs and medicines at Board's
912% 14th St. N. We
Mrs. Mattie Orme. of | this city
who is teaching at St. Michaels, Md.
was here Saturday and Sunday.
‘Attorney Jabez Lee. a popular an
successful lawyer of this city, spen
lage Sunday in Charlottesville, Va.
<M. Holmes, of this city, was :
xisitor in Charlottesville, Va a fen
davs last week.
Mrs. Kennerly and her grandson
Eugene, Jr. spent Sunday in Raitt
more with her daughter, Mrs. M. E
Rhodes and family.
Lawyer John A. fluff, of Knoxville
Tenn, is in this city on professions
business
Miss Ethel Mae Swanne, of 143¢
Swann Street Northwest. left. Mon
day for Waco, Texas, where she wil
spend the winter, the guest of Mis
Mamie Vandavelle,
Mr. Charles H. Howe, who has jus
recqvered from a recent. operation
Teft for Salisbury. N.C. Saturday tc
join his wife, accompanied by his yon
inlaw, Mr. Chas. E. Robinson. Sr
Howe’ found Mrs, Howe somewha
improved.
Mr. Chas. E. Robinson has returne
to. Washington.
Mr. John M.D. Wilson, of 9407
Street Northwest, was buried “fron
‘Asbury M. E- Church Monday, ‘No
vember 3.. Mr. Wilson’ was ohe 6
the old residents of Washington, com
ing to the city. during the war T
1873 he established a barber busines
which he conducted until his death
The undertaker, Mr. David Martin, 0
o19 French Street. conducted the’ fi
Reral with great credit to Rimselé.
‘Mrs. Davis, the mother of | Afr
Frank E, Davis and Win. H. Davi
one of the best known women in thi
city and a most lovable mother, wa
buried from her late residence, 200
Eleventh Street Northwest, last Tue:
day. afternoon. Her funeral was a
tended by a large circle of friends.
“High Brown” Face Powder an
a arene Sete ee Eereees ae
‘Masquerade Party.
Friday evening, October 31, was
the oceasion of a most delightful
masquerade party at_ the home of
Mrs. Beatrice Chase Farley, of 1828
K Street Northwest.
The decorations were beautifully
suggestive of the season. In the wide
doors grotesque little jack-o'-lanterns
hung, from the chandeliers black and
yellow crepe paper was festooned.
Banked up about the fireplaces were
bunches of gorgeous autumn leaves,
while roses and chrysanthemums
Were displayed here and there about
the rooms. .
At midnight everyone masked. The
gentlemen selected their partners and
Tepaired to the dining room, where
they were served from vegetable:
which had been cleverly and unique-
ly wrought into recepiacles for de
licious salads, cooling beverages, lus:
cious fruits and delectable ices. Just
before leaving the dining room. the
“Fate™ cake was cut.
Some of those masked ‘were Mis:
Annie Catlett, Indian maid; Mis:
Chase, ““Sunbonnet Sues" Miss
Worthington... Spanish girl; Hattie
Washington, “Jack-o'-Lantern;” Mrs
Farley, A Lady of the Harem;” Miss
Butlers, maid of 1776: Dr.’ Lynn
“Death;” Mr, McKinney, _ street
cleaner; Mr. Freeman, “Merry Jes
ter” Mr. Riles, priest; Mr. Jones
“Sporty Girl.” Misses Wylie, Gra.
ham, Erancena, Miner, Butler, Worm
ley, Spriggs, ands Messrs. Turner
Seymour, King, Burke, Green, Worth
ington and Dabney were also appro
priately masked. ¥
Candy boxes with absurd little jack
o’lanterns on them were the favor:
|for the ladies, and for the men there
were jack-o'-lantern buttonniers.
| WEST WASHINGTON.
EE AE NE a SR SS SES SES A
WEST WASHINGTON.
The annual Old Folks’ Day service
was appropriately observed on Sun-
day at Mt. Zion M.E. Church, Twen-
ty-ninth Street Northwest. More
than thirty of the older members were
brought to the church in carriages
donated by Mr. George Wise and
‘Mr. James, and after the morning
service were given dinner by a com-
mittee of ‘ladies and_ gentlemen,
which, was partaken of with much
pleastire and joy. 7
Woman's Day will be the services
at Mt. Zion, Sunday morning the
twentieth anniversary of the Ladies
‘Aid Society will be celebrated, Pro:
gram, 6 a,_m, Prayer and praise ser-
Vices by Mesdames Eliza North anc
Smith, 11a. m. Sermon by Rev. Mrs,
Nelson, of Baltimore. Md. Solo by
Miss Martha Harris, Mrs. Jennic
Locke, president; Miss Pearl Dixon,
secretary; Rev. W. C. Thompson
‘The Sunday School of the Firs
Baptist Church paid a friendly visi
to Ebenezer A. M. E. School on Sun
day morning and listened to an ad-
dress and special sermon hy Mr. Jos
N. Lawson and N. G. Mitchell, “the
superintendents. respectively.
“The Grand Order of St. Luke So
ciety and subordinate branches of this
jurisdiction will have theif annua
sermon preached to them on Sunday
evening at 7:30 o'clock at Mt. Zion
M. E. Church, Twenty-ninth Street
by Rev. W. C. Thompson.
| Death of Wm. H. T. Spencer.
The funerat of Mr. Wm. Spencer,
a resident of Anacostia, whose sud-
den' death occurred on Thursday, Oc-
tober 18, took place on Sunday after-
noon from the Bethlehem Baptist
Church, Anacostia, and was largely
attended. He was a member of Wan-
dering Pilgrim Lodge, Grand United
Order of Odd Fellows, and a recent
employe of the Bureau of Engraving
and Printing. The services at_the
church were very impressive. Rev.
Jos. Matthews officiated, assisted by
Rev. J. McCauley, of Brentwood,
Md. Nrs, Georgia’ A. Hamilton sang
a solo, “Face to Face.” Resolutions
were read by: Mr. N. Talaferro and
Mr. Jas. L. Turner,“who also “deliv-
ered ‘a poem entitled “The Odd Fel-
Tows' Burial.” Many floral offerings
were presented, including the “Gates
Ajar,” by the associates of, the bu-
ircau, Interment in Payne Cemetery:
} ——
ENON es
{ FAIRMCUNT HEIGHTS. &
EOF ee SE
Mrs. Laura Nichols, “assisted by the
Senior Class of the M. Street
High School, through its representa-
lives, Miss Louise Marshall.and Miss
Emma Payne, gave Miss Lillian
Knight a beautiful surprise party on
Tuesday night, November 4. The ta-
ble was nicely’ decorated to taste. A
well prepared program was rendered
and consisted of solos and songs. Af-
ter the program, ice cream and cake
were served, “After refreshments
jawere served, “Miss Marshall, on the
‘part of the-class of 1914, presented
ee ee ee Re Mee a
fruit; also a bunch of nice flowers,
Mr. R. S. Nichols presented a box of
fine candy and a handsome purse on
the part of friends. Miss Knight re-
ceived the gifts with many thanks.
‘Those present were: Miss L.
Knight, Mrs. A. Nichols, Mrs, Pearl
K. Fouwvilli, Mrs, A, D. Washington,
Mrs. A. J. Ware, Mrs, Boozer, brs.
Briscoe, Mrs. Campbell, Mrs. Tolls,
Mrs, Payne, Mrs. Mary Johnson,
Mrs. Cora ' Snowden, Miss Louise
Marshall, Miss Emma Payne, Miss
Alberta Snowden, Mrs. Laura Nich-
ols, Mrs. Berdette Boozer, Miss Ge-
neva Bryant, Miss Victoria Floyd,
Mrs, Coalman, Mrs. Hart, Miss Inez
Davis, Miss’ Bertie Queen, Mr. James
F. Armstrong and Mr. R. S. Nich-
ols. ‘The officers of the Senior Class
of the M Street High School are:
Mr, Norvell Barnett, president;, Miss
Dorothy Pelham, ‘vice president;
Miss A, Cook, secretary, and Miss
Mary Gibson, ‘treasurer.
[Miss Lillian Knight is a member
of the Senior Class of the M Street
High, School, but on account of seri-
ous illness she was unable to join
her class in September.
Rey, L._E, B, Rosser. the pastor
of Miles C. M. &. Church, Washing-
ton, D. C, is doing excellent work.
He has the great missionary spirit.
Hevis ever ready to assist in Chris-
tian uplift when the opportunity pre-
sents itself.
Mr. Thomas Walker, one of the
leading members of the Washington,
D. C, bar, is doing a successful busi-
ness.’ Being thoroughly upright and
honest to’ all his clients. he enjoys
their full faith and confidence.
“Hon, W. C. Chase, attorney-at-law
and editor of the’Washington Bee. is
a, great benefactor and friend of the
Negro. race. ‘Through his paper,
which is a well and clean edited pub-
lication, he fights and wins many
battles for the race.
Mr. Albert G. Hardaway, of Mont-
gomery, Ala., but now employed in
one of the departments, at Washing
ton, D. C, and Mrs. Naney Harda-
way Sagers, of the sbove named
place and Buffalo, X. Y., visited Mr.
and Mrs, James’ F, Armstrong at
Fairmount Heights Sunday, Novem:
ber 2. They are the brother and sis.
| ter-in-law of the late Charles O. Har.
|ris, who was the most highly hon:
Jored United States Government of-
ficial in the Post Office at Montgom:
éry, Ala,
There was a grand masquerade hop
| given at the Fairmount Heights pub:
lic hall October 31, given by the Gob:
Jlins of the Northeast, County, Citi
zens’ Association. The hall” was
Jcrowded with a happy set, all of
Jwhom enjoyed the time of theis
lives. The officers of the associa
tion are: Dr. W. W. Jones, presi
dent: Homer Mec. vice president: €
JH. Westley, recording secretary: J
|B. Westley, treasurer: C.J, Nixon
sergeant-at-arms; Rey. S, Strother
corresponding secretary; W._ T
}Chapman, chairman Executive Com:
| mittee, F
|| The services at the M. E. Churcl
|| were well attended. At 11a. m, Rev
10. C. Sprague preached a very force
ful se#mon. The choir _sang well, a:
usual, The Sunday School, unde
the management of Messrs.” Jame:
| A. Campbell and Arthur Briscoe, i:
Jholding its own. They are arrang
Jing a campaign for the further de
‘velopment of the school. All indica
{tions show that the work of the M
}E. Church in all its branches is o1
||the upward march.
:] Rev. W. W. McCarty and the Pres
-|byterian Church are doing a grea
Jwork, the influence of which is be
iJing felt all over the community
What is true of this church is als
jJirue of the M. E. and Baptis
:|Churcli’s here. We see the grea
Spirit of Christ in most all the de
-|liberations and gatherings held.
-| At this time the teachers and th
I) public school are progressing, nicel
.|fr is to be regretted. that the teach
‘Jing force.can not be increased at thi
:|time in proportion to the growth o
.|the number of pupils. There wa
-|some talk of increasing the numbe
t{of teachers, but the proposition ha
t{so far failed.
MS
3
FALLS CHURCH NOTES. }
ee ee
The Second Baptist Sunday -School
met in regular session, having an ex-
cellent lesson exposition given by
Bro, Dixon, of Alexandria, Va.
The Young Men's Furnace Club is
in active service with Mr, Robert
Ford as chairman. The tea party on
Wednesday night ‘at the residence of
Bro. Otis was given by said club for
the benefit of the Second Baptist
Church furnace.
Mr. Ed. Neal and wife came home
from Mt. Vernon on Saturday even-
ing, November 1, Bro. Neal holds
his job at Mt. Vernon’ well, Mrs.
Neal expressed herself as highly
pleased with her trip up the river of
the steamer Charles McAlister. Bro.
Neal will spend a week at home.
Bro, Frank Marshall, a trustee of
the Second Baptist Church, and_his
wife, Mrs. Bessie Marshall, one of the
members of the choir-of that church,
are well pleased with The Bee. They
have just’ completed up-to-date im-
provements on their home, a neat and
pleasant place “on the hill.”
Services at the Third Baptist
Church were conducted by the pastor,
Rev. Bowser, during the day. Rev
Bowser is a minister of force and is
making good in his charge here and
elsewhere. :
We are glad to note that Sister Le-
na Dixon is able to attend to her
lafiairs again after a slight indisposi-
tion.
The fair at the Second Baptist
Church closed in a bright’ wave o}
success, and the Mothers’ Progressive
League deserves great credit for it
A brilliant “Old Folks’” concert was
the ending. The presentation to the
two official boards of the church, Sis
ter Lena Dixon says, will be made
Sunday night, November 9. :
. Mrs. Martha I. Talbert, of Wash
ington, D. C., paid her sister, Mrs
Lena Dixon, a flying visit. Friday.
. The Young People's meeting is hav.
ing intefesting sessions every Sun
day evening. Mrs. Fannie Thomas i:
7 . Qo, . © #6
evan af he at ne ee. emee
man of the Program committee,
Mr, Newton Dixon has left Taun-
ton, Mass.,-for Providence, R. 1, and
is very apt to spend the winter there.
He wishes to be remembered to his
many friends.
Mrs, Thomas Miller, who has been
very ill, is now out again,
‘Miss Fannie Simmons spent Satur-
day frening with her parents here.
Mr. Percy Taylor, who has been
with us all the fall,’has returned to
his duties in Washington.
The public schools were closed
here on Friday on account of a meet-
ing of the Fairfax County Teachers?
Association at the school in Vienna,
2.
The hunting season started Satur-
day and quite a few went out for
game. :
Since the fair started.it has been
noted that Miss Edna Ourick is quite
an addition to our musical talent.
Mr. William Odrick, Mr. Charley
Henderson, Mr. Millard Pearson and
family, all of Washington, D. C., were
the guests of Mr. and Mrs, John Rum-
bles Sunday.
Mr. James Payne, of Herndon, Va.
was the guest of Mr. and Mrs, V. S.
Allen Sunday,
Galloway Sunday School was very
well attended Sunday morning and
had as_a very welcome visitor Prof.
O. G. Grandetson, who addressed the
school. :
Sunday afternoon Rev. Dixon, of
Washington, D. C, preached a ser-
mon to the Wood and Coal Club of
Galloway Church. “The church was
well filled. Rev. “Bowser, Rev. Por-
ter and Mrs, MeDower, the mission-
ary evangelist, were also present.
The music was rendered by the Sec-
Jond Baptist choir.
|. The Epworth “League was very
largely attended and beautiful _ad-
dresses were given by Rev. John Bar-
nett and Mjs. Lena Dixon: GA very
Jinteresting Program was -rendered
|The league was visited by Mr. Stew:
Jart. of Washington, D. C.. and two
Jother gentlemen whose names the
|}reporter failed to learn, The league
is indeed growing more and more in:
teresting each Sunday and the presi
‘dent, Mr. J. B. Tinner, is doing all
Jin his power to keep up the interest
|The day closed with .a sermon al
{night by Rev. Porter, of Washington
{who preached to a good sized con:
|ereration. So ended a busy day fo
Galloway. e
| "The wedding of Miss Francis Tin:
ner and Mr. Charlie Coats, whiel
|took place at Galloway Chapel ot
| Thursday night, October 30, was on
of the most beautiful affairs’ ever wit
|nessed, The church was most beau
‘{tifully decorated from entrance tc
altar, even the aisles were: carpetec
| with white, The entire front of the
| church was one mass of flowers, mos
‘|heautifully arranged. The decor
s|Jtions were of potted plants, cu
‘flowers, and evergreens, A larg
‘Jwhite Bell was fastened to the fron
‘Jchande¥er. The ceremony was per
formed \by Rev. J. W. Colbert, as
| sisted by Rev. G. W. Powell, pasto
.Jof the Second Baptist. Church. Th
“bride wore white satin and carrie
s| white roses The veil was beautifull
‘| draped and fastened with lillies of th
s|valley. The bride was attended by
| little MISS Margaret Richards and Su
-Jsan ‘Alexandra acted as Mower girl
-|They carried baskets of white chrys
-Janthemums tied with white ribbor
-|The maid of honor was Miss Emm
i|Tinner, sister of the bride. She wor
blue satin and carried white and pin
-|flowers, The bride was given awa
tlat the altar by her brother. Mr. J. E
-|Tinner. The groom and his atten¢
-Jants ail wore full dress suits. Th
>}wedding march was played by, M
t}/F. J. Newman, The church” wa
t icrowded to overflowing. Many gues!
-|from Washington, Pittsburgh’ an
other places were present, The deco:
{ations of the house were in keepin
.| with those at the church, In spite «
-|the immense crowd at the house, e
s|ery one was well Served with’ ic
f| cream and cake and wine. The pre
s|ents were many and beautiful, amon
r| which was Str.
s| Mr. Lewis Richards, of Pittsfiel
Mass., is the-guest of his father, M
Dan Richards.
&|° Mr. Cregg, of Philadelphia, Pa., w:
|the week-end guest of Mr. and Mr
a|J. B, Tinner. .
€|" Miss Emma Tinner, of Philadelphi
| was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charl
Tinner. She returned to her hon
1 Sunday evening.
-|+ Mrs, Lewis Summerall spent Su
y |day in Washington,
Great care and attivity is bein;
manifested here among the people of
this section at this season of year by
gathering in and storing away their
produce for use during the winter
season, When nature will close in up-
on them'and they can enjoy the fruits
of their labor. The trees and plants
that are heavily clothed with their
beautiful foliage of every hue, is nat-
urally arranged so as to harmonize
without, causing any’ confusion of
color. This gives occasion for nat-
ural lessons in decoration. These
will, however, soon be disrobed and
apparently die, yet only to await the
command of the Master, Who, in-
deed, rules the universe, and at the
appointed time will reappear in the
glorious mantle, each time seeming
more beautiful than before. Hence,
we ask, who can doubt the resurrec-
tion? .
During, the week very little was
done socially, since at present in ru-
ral districts the people are otherwise
engaged.
Rev. C. E. Queene is holding re-
vival services “at Gunnell’s Chapel,
Langley, Va.
“Sunday ‘morning, Sunday School,
ag usual at 10 o'clock, Walter P.
Hysa, superintendent. Rev. J. F.
Williams, local preacher “here,
preached a very carnest sermon; sub-
ject, “The Unchangeableness of
Christ.” At8 o'clock Rev. Grant Con-
tee, of Washington, D. C, preached
a very enthusiastic sermon from Heb.
13:8, “The Oneness of Christ.” Mt
Salvation Baptist Church, Rev. C. H.
Coleman. pastor, was present with his
people and preached at rr o'clock and
at night, and indeed it always seems
to be much to the joy of this pastor
and congr .* we each other
Se Meee Se Te
; (Cut ‘This Ont of Paper.) :
COLORED CITIZENS’ PETITION. :
National Petition Against Jim-Crow and Color Segregation by the Federal
"Government.
Sign Name and Address and Mail to Secretary Anti Segregation Delega-
tion, 1733 Seventh Street Northwest, Washington, D. Ce Not Later Than
Noveniber 3. (Petitions to Be Presented to President Wilson Novem
ber 6) :
To the President of the United States, Hon. Woodrow Wilson, Washingr
ton, D. €. i 2 .
Sit: Ths is to certify that we, the undersigned, are surprised and
alarmed that ander your administration there should be any rules made by
members of your cabinet to segregate employees. of the national govern
ment by race dr color. . Wie protest against this as plainly a public degrada-
tion, and insufferable iny-ry to colored Americans, the establishment of
caste in this fee Republic. "We petition you to reverse, prevent and forbid
an, stich movement by your bureau chiels, in accord with your promise of
fair, friendly, just and Christian treatment of your colored fellow-citizens.
Sieg'on one side only: don't sign for others)
Aiddeeny ssesaveuvosvecees se Sesntsagpaon sere NTransenanneaserennsteenssts
ndaeas sitteegteeseeeeseareeceseeceeceeeessnrsesneeeeseeeteceeceaeee ane
Address donesinse see sauwavegsedusaunsacs nasil coseueacoscnaoneyeessvalt
N. B—By pasting on sheet of paper any number of names can be put 0
to be used in churches, lodges, etc. Panos
The Sunday School seems to be in
prosperous condition under the man-
agement of Mrs. M. Mooney during
the illness ‘of the ‘superintendent,
Deacon Wm. Hungerford, who is
steadily improving, though’ yet_un-
able to walk because of a paralytic
stroke several weeks ago, causing the
loss of speech and the use of one-half
portion of the body. He is still under
treatment of Dr. E, T. Moten. Dr.
Moten has heen engaged in the treat-
iment of serious operations since locat-
ing here. among whom is Mrs. Nan-
nic Gillam, who underwent a serious
illness in ‘the Freedmen’s Hospital.
We are glad to see her home again.
Mz, and Mrs. Jj WW, Bryant made
a flying visit to Philadélphia Sunday
on business and returned Monday
night. -
Several houses are being built in
Hight View Park. :
The. day school enrollment is still
increasing, the number at present be-
ing 136._ Prof. Baltimore is, principal.
‘The Silver Star Club will give a
grand concert here November 20,
which will be the season's opening.
G. W. Ferguson is president, Miss
Annita Hyson secretary, and C. Hy-
son treasurer.
Cottage Park, which ig one of our
most beautiful and attractive places
in connection with Hall’s Hill, has
won the admiration of many passers-
by. jt is owned and. controlled by
our qwn. people. There -are many
modern homes in Gottage Park. Most
of the, property is owned by Mr. Rob-
ert Smith and he is building “many
modern homes, giving opportunity to
persons whor wish fo locate them-
felves there One of these beautiful
homes|has recently been occupied by
Mr. aild Mrs. \. H. Scott.
Mrs., Effie Jones, who has been
spending some time in Philadelphia
has returned and is stopping with he
|sister, Mrs. Elma Dosey, of Cottag
| Park. :
Mr,-and Mrs. Hosea Jackson wen!
to Vienna Sunday and Spent the da}
|with his father, who has been sic
for some time.
| Mrs. Hill, who had been here ver
Ji, returned to her home in Nes
1] York, and recently died.
ATHLETIC SPORT.
Rodyism Passing Away—Newspaver:
> Supporting the Sports.
Each year finds our athletic pro-
gram more varied: and in manage-
ment and conduct ‘approaching the
standard set by ‘the larger organiza
tions of the country. Just now foot-
ball has the center of the stage.
There is a world of difference be-
tween games of nowadays and games
‘of yesterday, among our colored
teams. It is seldom that games are
played, with spectators swarming like
ees about the players and more sel-
dom do we see mob rule on the
gridiron. The players aré coached
fo engage in clean sport, the student
body is trained to orderly procedure
in rooting and cheering, and good
sportsmanship. is the order of the
day. Our colleges have at last_be-
gun to learn to trust in the official
capacity and judgment of members
of the same race of the players in
the games. Rodyism is passing. Our
status will soon demand greater con-
sideration from authorities in this
fine about the country upon the
merits in the: case. Our newspapers
are beginning to feel the need of
game and athletic reports to gain
Circulation among red-blooded men
and boys in the communities. While
not as much proportionate space is
given to athletics as is done by lead-
ing daily press, yet it is encouraging
to find attempts to increase this live
interest everywhere among us.
“Morgan College played Baltimore
High School team a o to o game in
Baltimore Friday in the Monumental
city. M Street High School will play
in Manassas Saturday.. Storer in
Washington on the 13th, Baltimore
High School at a later date, an¢
Armstrong on the 24th. Armstrong
plays Storer on the 7th here in
Washington, Manassas ard Baltimore
at later dates..
Lincoln University. and_ Hampton
engage in their classic at Lincoln or
Saturday the 8th, while Shaw anc
Howard meet here in Washington
On the t4th Hampton and Howarc
fight out their battle on Hampton's
grounds and Howard travels to Rich-
mond the next day. Lincoln and
Howard will again delight the pa-
trons of the sport on Thanksgiving
Day in Washington. 2
‘At each of the three colored higl
schools the students have selectec
officers of the Athletic Associatior
for the year and the Games Commit
tee has been’ chosen. For years ath
letics have been conducted upon
wu inguilicient sum of money,
+ every effort is being made this
ir 30 clear away. back indebtedness
; ‘Linérease the funds in the treas-
fes of the several school organiza-
| ons. For the second year a stu-
‘cnt membership has heen planned
‘and a campaign has been inaug-
| rated to secure a full student mem-
| ership, Each section in the three
thigh schools is endeavoring to raise
jmembership percentage to. 100, per
cent, and-a spirited contest is on be-
tree the sections of the three
schools. Armstrong Manual Train-
ing School anu Commercial High
School began last Thursday, while
M Street began Friday. Already,
under the influence of student man-
agement. students have begun to
join in large numbers. Each week a
standing of all sections will be an-
nounced.
Officers and members of the
Games Committee of the high school
athletic associations dre as follows:
(,jitmstiong | Manual Training
School—President, William Bowie;
vice president; Rena Burrell; secre-
tary, Thomas Johnson; assistant
treasurers, Catherine Short and Mat-
thew Taylor; treasurer, Mr. Hart-
grove; representatives from the vari-
us years, Nathaniel Bacon, Percy
Conrad, Eleanor Newman, Ira Warf;
faculty’ representatives, "Miss Lee,
Miss Campbell, Mrs. "McAdoo,
Messrs. Cowan, Clifford and Hender-
son, -
M Street High School—President,
Thomas Dent; vice president, Ethei
Evans; secretary, | Mary | Gibson;
treasurer, Mr. Joseph, Allen; assist-
ant treasurers, Dorothy, Pelham and
Arthur Payne; representatives. from
the classes, Lena Payre, Gladys Tig-
\nor, Oscar’ Randall, Norvell Barnett;
faculty “representatives, Miss M.
‘| Perry, Miss T. Lee, Miss M. Kirk-
‘|Iand, "Messrs. Morton, Douglass and
| Henderson. Zs
|| Commercial High School—Presi-
{dent, John Tatum; vice president,
'|Virginia Robinson; secretary, Wal-
|ter Searcy; treasurer, Mr.’ D. B.
'|Thompson; assistant “treasurers,
'|Edith Basey. AValter Jackson; class
representatives, Pauline Minor. Vic-
tor Thompson, Clarence Fletcher,
Cecil Butler: faculty representatives,
,| Dr. H. L. Bailey, S. E. Compton, E.
B. Henderson, Misses JE. Brooks
and M. O. EH. Williamson.
DR. S. L. CORROTHERS
Golden Jubilee to Begin Sunday—
Meeting With Great Success—Pop-
ular With the People. :
Rev. Sylvester L. Corrothers, pas-
tor of Galbraith A. M. E.’ Zion
Church, will begin next Sunday with
his golden jubilee. It will be one of
the greatest events in the history of
this ancient structure. Dr. Corroth-
ers is the first and only minister in
the history of that church,-who has
ever been a success. Galbraith Church
is known far and wide. Its popularity
has been due to the untiring efforts
of Dr. Corrothers. ;
During the services of the golden
jubilee some of the best known and
most able divines in this country will
take Sark.
.Galgraith A. M. E. Zion Church,
Sixth Street between L and M Streets
Northwest, is now celebrating its
twelfth anniversary under the pasto-
rate of Sylvester L. Corrothers, This
is the first time in a hundred years
that so long a pastorate has ‘been
served in any one of the chief, pulpits
of the Zion connection, and in view
of past tappenings the entire church
is praying that it may be a prophetic
and prosperous year.
‘The membership and friends of the
city are asked to contribute to the
fund being raised to meet the obliga
tions against the church. The. anni
versary will close on the evening of
December 3d, at which time the offi-
cers of the church will tender the
pastor a reception, the occasion being
his. goth birthday.
‘Sunday morning, November oth, the
subject of the sermon will be “The,
Propaganda in Zion.”
| THE TESTIMONIAL
‘The Greatest in the History of All
} ‘Washington.
| The Thomas testimonial, which
was mentioned in "The Bee last week,
will no doubt be the greatest in the
history of all Washington. Some of
the,best local stores in this city have
voldnteered their services for the
week of Thanksgiving. Mr. Thomas
will be convinced what all-Washinig-
ton thinks of him.
Galbraith Church.
TAKING CARE OF THOMAS EDISON
His Thoughtful Wife Equal to This Big Task.
HE WILL OBEY NO ONE ELSE
Frequently He Works For Twenty Hours Without Ceasing, and Then He Sleeps as Long—Takes Little Exercise and Does Not Eat His Meals Regularly—Enjoys Automobile Rides.
West Orange, N. J.—Thomas A. Edison is sixty-six. If he were to die now it would be difficult to estimate the loss to humanly. He has given it the lightning's flash for its tool. He has taken the very soul of harmony and imprisoned it for its toy.
Every day, every night, he works in his laboratory out in those quiet, enclosing hills, literally the wizard of the new world. Loss of time or strength to him is loss to civilization. Disturb him, worry him, divert his mind and you may scatter a swarm of thoughts
THE FATHER
1913, by American Press Association.
MR. AND MRS. THOMAS A. EDISON,
that are forming into one big idea, one great working principle that will make life safer and happier for children.
And that is what the round of life means to Mrs. Thomas A. Edison. She is the one "boss" that the wizard obeys. They call her "the missus" down at the big graystone works in West Orange. Every man in the place knows she is the only person he ever minds. And they know, too, that if his life is prolonged and preserved for the good of the world it is because there stands beside him this quiet, handsome, steady nerved woman with the little smile uncurrying her lips.
Mrs. Edison is of medium height and rather plump. Her hair is brown and waves back from her face girlishly.
"How do we take care of Mr. Edison?" she answered. "Well, first of all, he needs quiet. We all guard him against any noise or confusion or interruptions. When he is home here he needs perfect rest. Sometimes he stays down at the laboratory "for twenty hours at a stretch and longer without sleep, but when he does come home he will lie down and fall asleep as easily as a child and perhaps sleep straight through for twenty hours without waking. So the house must always be quiet for him.
"No, he has no regular habits." She answered this with a little smile and shook her head. "No regular habits at all—no regular time for rising, no regular diet, nothing like that. He has been called a vegetarian, but he eats wild game and beef and lamb—only they must be well cooked.
"Exercise? Not what other people call exercise. You see, he is on his feet down at the works all day. That is enough exercise, he thinks, so he does hardly any walking outdoors, but he loves his garden, and motoring is his favorite recreation. We have our ride together in my car every day. I am just going down for him now. We ride for two hours before dinner, and he looks forward to it, for I never let him forget that he must be ready when I come for him."
Mrs. Edison is the woman at the switch that regulates the current of his life.
Sacramento, Cal.-Fifty-two of eighty-five convict applicants at Folsom prison have been granted paroles by the state board of prison directors. A new policy of awarding paroles was decided on. Hereafter a careful study of character, temperament and the conduct of each applicant will be made and awards made upon the basis of general average.
WEDDING BIDS OF NO USE
Girl Refuses to Mail Them—Why! Married In June.
West Orange, N. J.-When Mr. and Mrs Silas A Mills received from the engravers a box of invitations to be sent out for the marriage of their daughter, Miss Helen Mills, to William Forsyth of Orange, the daughter began to blush. When her mother told her to address the envelopes the daughter blushed some more and said:
"I don't think we will mail the invitations, mother."
"I hope you don't think we will deliver them personally," retorted the mother.
"But there is no use in fooling the folks," the young woman said. "We can save the money for the stamps, be cause Bill and I were married on June 18."
The mother bore up bravely under the shock, but more than 200 friends and relatives will have to forego the pleasure of seeing Helen Mills and "Billy" Forsyth married on Thanksgiving eve.
DENIES SNOBBERY IN NAVY.
Officer Who Rose From Ranks Praises His Treatment.
Washington.—Lieutenant D. Lyons of the navy, who reached his present commissioned grade from the ranks, has written a letter to the secretary of the navy denying charges which have been made of snobbery in the navy and that graduates of the Naval academy were disposed to look down on nongraduates and discriminate against them.
Lieutenant Lyons has had twenty-seven years' experience as an enlisted man, warrant and commissioned officer, and he says that such charges are unjust and untrue. He declares that other men who have come from the ranks, with whom he has discussed the subject, feel the same way.
MUSIC HALTS MARRIAGE
Bridgroom Overcome on Hearing "Marching Through Georgia."
Kalamazoo, Mich.-During the marriage ceremony which united John Dean, seventy years old and a veteran of the civil war, and Mrs. Nancy E. Marks, a native of Alabama, a band passed by the courthouse, where the ceremony was being performed, playing "Marching Through Georgia."
As soon as the old man recognized the air a thousand memories seemingly flashed through his memory, and he was so overcome with emotion that it was necessary to stop the ceremony.
After the band had passed beyond hearing the reading of the marriage vows was concluded by Judge Falling.
Kingston, Mo.—After twenty years of goosep, theorizing and discussion regarding the disappearance of the family of James McMillan, one time probate judge of Caldwell county, the officials of the county are to take steps to trace their present whereabouts in the hope of disposing of farm and town property owned by them and upon which taxes have been left unpaid since they disappeared. The property is now deserted and has been long regarded as haunted.
The dropping out of sight of Judge McMillan and the subsequent disappearance of his family at various times provides a mystery that has never been solved. Having the county courthouse one ev' big, the judge, at that time serving his third term in the probate court and reputed one of the wealthiest men in the county, stopped to talk with his most intimate friend, Thomas Laldaw.
"I think that I will go back to Scotland some day, Tom," he said: "I am fifty-five years old and have been away a long-time, but I have honestly grown homeclck." He and Laldlaw parted a few moments later, and Judge McMillan was never seen again by his family or any one in the county. He did not leave by the nearest railroad spur, it was found, nor had he hired any vehicle to take him from Kingston. For a time Mrs. McMillan lived quietly. She received no word from her husband, and inquiries in Scotland proved that he had not been seen there and that no word from him had ever been received by his relatives there.
About three years after Judge McMillan's disappearance James and George, his two sons, spent a day about their usual haunts and at night disappeared. They had no baggage of any kind and were dressed in their working clothes. No word has ever been received from them since. Two years passed after the boys had disappeared when handbills were circulated stating that Mrs. McMillan would sell all of her belongings for cash. The sales were held at the different homes owned by her, and then she and her three daughters disappeared as had the father and sons. The real estate belonging to the family had not been disposed of, and no provision was ever made for its sale.
Crepe on Girl's Door
Garfield, N. J.-Jlited, a man here nailed crape on the girl's front door and was arrested.
National Religious Training Schoo
THE NATIONAL RELIGIOUS TRAINING CORPORATION
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.
2. Department of Theology.
3. Commercial Department.
4. Literary Department.
5. Department of Music.
Test Eyes of Beggar Who "Rubbered"
When Witness of Stuart Reed
When Wearer of Gown Passed.
Lima, O.-Scientific inquiry into the normal condition of the eyes of Thomas Kern, a begging "blind" man, has been ordered by Mayor Shook, following the alleged development in municipal court that Kern found little optical impediment in discerning the form of a woman in a diaphanous gown at an interurban depot.
With a "Please Help the Blind" sign pinned across the front of his coat, darkened glasses over his eyes and a tin cup resting in his hands, Kern sat at the depot, an object of pity until, as the woman passed, he dropped his cup, snatched away his glasses, took a long "rubber" and then started to resume his pose, when a policeman arrested him.
HAVEN FOR TRAMPS HAS FED 300,000 MEN "Turn No Hungry Man Away," Said Dying Millionaire.
San Francisco, Cal.—"Turn no hungry man away from the Parrott home."
On his deathbed John Parrott, a multimillionaire clubman of Hillsborough, solemnly laid the injunction on his wife that all who should come hungry to the house in the stately and ornate park which is one of the beauty spots of Hillsborough should receive food and shelter.
That was in 1884, and since that time more than 300,000 tramps and wanders and adventurers have received succor from Mrs. Parrott, who has held her husband's dying wish as a sacred trust.
At one time twenty-five tramps were fed at the Parrott home. There is a porch at the back of the huge kitchen attached to the mansion which is used as the hoboes' dining room. There they may have hot meals in abundant quantity and of the best quality.
For years Mrs. Parrott employed a special chef to cook for her wayfaring guests. She puts aside a large monthly allowance in her budget of household expenses to provide for them. They also are permitted to camp on the grounds, and sometimes fifty to a hundred men are gathered there.
78 GIRLS PROPOSE TO HIM.
Heir to $25,000 a Year, New a Cobhair: Dafnacha Cicha. However,
Brunswick, Ga.-Attracted by the story of Van Allan, a newspaper man who, after spending his first-yearly allowance of $25,000, is now living the humble life of a cobbler, by which means he hopes to save enough money to get to Birmingham, where he will receive another allowance of $25,000 in February, seventy-eight girls have written letters to Allan proposing marriage.
Allan came to Brunswick on his "uppers." He had been previously living a life of ease. He received a bequest of $25,000 a year for the remainder of his life, but his remittance falls due in February. He has not yet chosen his life partner.
120 YEARS TOO OLD TO WED.
Register of Deeds In North Carolina
Refuses Man Seventh License.
Raleigh, N. C.—Declaring his age of 120 years too great for marriage, the register of deeds of Bladen county declined to give Joseph McIntyre his seventh marriage license. Mr. McIntyre has buried six wives, all of whom lived with him until death. The register declined to issue a license on the ground that the applicant was too old to take care of his prospective bride, who gave her age as eighty. She has been married four times. The couple walked two miles to the town to ask for a license.
House & Herrmann 7th and Eye Sts., N. W
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.
BAN TEMPERANCE BOYS.
Abstainers Expelled From an Old University In Germany. Greifswald, Germany.—The expulsion of some students from Greifswald university because of their total abstinence principles has caused a sensation here. The university is one of the oldest in Germany, having been founded in 1456.
The students, numbering about 1,000, were called together in June to attend a typical "beer evening" in celebration of the emperor's jubilee. Several abstainers protested and were reprimanded by the officials, who said the protest was an "incitement to action against academic customs." One of the abstainers criticised the reprimand and was sentenced to three days' confinement in the university dungeon. Further protests led to even more drastic steps, and two of the students were expelled.
RECALLS MOLLY PITCHER.
Mrs. Samuel Sipe, 101 Years Old, Was
Friend of Menmouth Hereina.
Carlisle, Pa.—Mrs. Samuel Sipe, who was a child friend of Molly Pitcher and a resident of Carlisle for ninety-four years, celebrated her one hundred and first birthday here.
Mrs. Sipe vividly recalls history spanning a century and is in possession of all her faculties. She recalls Molly Pitcher, the heroine of Monmouth, and refutes the assertion that she is buried in any other place than Carlisle, where memorials have been placed over the woman's grave.
Mrs. Sipe was born in Switzerland in 1812 and came to Carlisle when she was eight years old, when this place was but the hunting ground for settlers in the Cumberland valley.
$10,000 FOR KISSES.
Young Ladies Sell Them to Furnish a Hospital. Salem, O.-Twenty thousand masculine lips pressed those of six fair members of prominent families in a scheme whereby $20,000 was raised toward a fund to endow Salem hospital through the dispensing of women's kisses at $1 each. Men, young and old, stood in line to enjoy the osculatory performance. All the women were single. One married woman, seeking to do her part, compromised by shaking hands at 25 cents a shake. One of the victims, her husband, she charged $2 for the privilege publicly of closing his fingers over hers.
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
Durham, N. C. Herrma Sts., N. W
Beautiful Lounges
Morris Chairs Writing Desks
Music Boxes Beds
Fine Bedsteads and Mattresses
If you want a first-class Bed-room suite, call after you have been elsewhere
FREEMAN'S NEW MODERN
14th Street, N. W., Washington, I.
PHOTOGRAPHS, CRAYONS AND
Any Size and All Kinds.
Verses and Copying Interior and Ex-
t-LASS AND GUARANTEED.
ALL WORK REDUCED.
In Retouching and General Photog
Handsome LARGE PHOTO FREE
Cards.
d floor; 25 feet operating room;
RAIN OR SHINE. YOU ARE IN
Phone North 724-Y.
PETER GROGAN & SONS CO.
NEW MODERN STUDIO
7, Washington, D. C.
RAYONS AND PASTELS
All Kinds.
Interior and Exterior Views.
GUARANTEED NOT TO FADE.
REDUCED.
General Photography. Pictures and
THE PHOTO FREE with each Order
operating room; two dressing rooms
E. YOU ARE INVITED TO CALL
724-Y.
DANIEL FREEMAN'S NEW MODERN STUDIO 1833 14th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. FINE PHOTOGRAPHS, CRAYONS AND PASTELS Any Size and All Kinds. Groups, Flowers and Copying Interior and Exterior Views. ALL WORK FIRST-CLASS AND GUARANTEED NOT TO FADE ALL WORK REDUCED.
Lessons Given in Retouching and General Photography. Pictures and Picture Framing. A Handsome LARGE PHOTO FREE with each Order of Photos and Post Cards. Studio on ground floor; 25 feet operating room; two dressing rooms with steam heat. SITTINGS MADE RAIN OR SHINE. YOU ARE INVITED TO CALL Phone North 724-Y.
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 greeter—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.
N & SONS CO.
North St. N. W.
Lowest Prices Best Work
TRIANGLE PRINTING CO.
BOOK AND JOB PRINTING
Electric Power Presses Linotype Composition
Specialty made of Constitutions and Pamphlets
BUSINESS OFFICE and PLANT, 1109 EYE STREET. N. W.
PHONE MAIN 4078
Uptown Office
Phone: North 2842-y
TALKING APES ARE DEAD.
Knew Their Alphabet—Were Valued at $50,000.
Philadelphia—Bettina and Borneo, the orang outangs which had been educated by Dr. William Henry Furness of Wallingford so that they would pronounce simple words, are dead.
By constant teaching Dr. Furness had hoped to demonstrate through education that the orang outangs really were the "missing link," capable of sustaining thought and doing almost everything of which a human being is capable. Borneo was eight years old, and Bettina was four, and both were as highly educated as children of the same age.
Each knew the alphabet perfectly and could pick it out on lettered blocks. Borneo also could pronounce such words as "cup" and "papa," and Dr. Furness declares that his orang outangs were proving gradually that they were capable of human reasoning. He valued the orang outangs at $50,000.
THREE CAWS FOR JIMCROWI
He's Not So Black as Painted, Agriculture Experts Find.
That the crow is not as black as he is painted is the conclusion reached by experts of the department of agriculture who have examined several thousand craws of the desplied bird. An error was made ten years ago, the investigators declare, in spreading broadcast a warning against "old jimcrow." A report announces that the crow does more good than harm; he eats more peats than crops. His one besetting sin is 'devouring the eggs and young of other birds, but the contents of his craw prove that about nineteenth of his food consists of insects and other crop destroying creatures. "Don't be too hard on the crow that squawks about your farm," is the advice given by the department of agriculture to the farmer.
TO EUROPE WITHOUT A CENT.
Harvard Man Sails to Make a Living
There on Ten Dollar Wager.
Cambridge, Mass.—Charles E. Morris of Brooklyn, a Harvard junior, is bound to Europe with an empty pocketbook on a wager of $10, according to college friends, who say that he sailed on the steamer Laconla and expects to stay several months abroad, depending on his own efforts for a livelihood.
"For 2 cents I'd work my way across to Europe," Morris is said to have told classmates a few days ago. One of them offered to bet $10 that Morris would not go, and the wager was accepted.
Washington. The continuation of the policy adopted by the present government in the Phillippe Islands of building extensive public improvements throughout the islands, schoolhouses, roads, bridges, municipal markets, water systems, ferries and lighting plants. is one of the problems which the advocates of immediate independence are finding difficulty in solving.
The present government, through the bureau of public works, has established public improvements throughout the islands contributing to a marked extent to the prosperity which they now enjoy. These vary in cost from $250 to $250,000, and 80 per cent of them are constructed by the administration itself, private contractors refusing to submit bids on the hazardous undertakings.
"The smallest number of active projects in any one of the regularly organized provinces inhabited by the Christianized Fillipinos on April 1, 1913," says a statement of the bureau of insular affairs of the war department, "was three and the largest thirty-two.
"Nearly one-half the total number was connected with road and bridge improvements. The list included ninety-six new schoolhouses and thirty-four municipal markets, public buildings, water systems, parks, ferries, an electric light plant and two telephone systems.
It has been said that, although current expenses have been cut to provide money for public works, it will take twenty-five years at the present rate to bring about the highway improvements needed today. These roads, the best of them being fully equal to any park roads in the United States, have been one of the great factors in the very marked increase of prosperity during the last few years. Hundreds of communities are in urgent need of schoolhouses, for which no funds are available, and it will necessarily be several years at the present rate of construction before the schools are at all generally housed in permanent buildings.
Locomotive an Assault Weapon.
Chicago. William Newell, an engineer, was arrested charged with assaulting Cornellus Reagan, fourteen, with a switch engine. The boy was struck by the pilot and seriously hurt It is the first charge of the kind ever entered in Chicago police records. The locomotive is termed a "deadly weapon."
STORIES OF GOLD FROM ALASKA
Women Brave Hardships of the Frozen Desert—Motto, "We Should Worry," Expected That Fully Three Hundred of the Three Thousand New Settlers Will Spend Winter In Klondike.
Seattle.—Word came out of Alaska on July 19 last that a new and startlingly rich gold strike had been made on the extreme upper reaches of the Tänana, a strike which might rival the Klondike in importance. The new region was referred to as the Shushanna, though the geographies call the river Chisana, pronouncing the "ch" soft.
The Seattle newspapers and the news gathering agencies adopted the word Shushanna, however, and by that name the region is now known. This new camp lies northwest of the famous Bonanza copper mine at Kennecott, the terminus of the Copper river and Northwestern railroad, and is reached by a very difficult, hazardous and trying trail over Scolai pass, 125 miles from the rail line.
It can be reached by way of Dawson and by way of White Horse and White river, as well as via Cordova and the Copper river railroad. The three routes offer little choice in the matter of freedom from hardship.
Immediately following the news of the strike a stampede for the new diggings began. Most of those who went were seasoned prospectors and veterans of the north country. The number might aggregate 3,000. The number who actually reached the camp cannot have exceeded 2,000. Only 300 will winter there. Pay has been found on Bonanza, Little El Dorado, Gold Run and Snow Gulch. These streams are all tributaries of Wilson and Johnson creeks, two of the main sources of the Shushanna or Chisana river. The Chisana and Nabesna are the sources of the Tanana.
The James claims yielded about 400 ounces of gold up to August last and the Whitham claims about 100 ounces. The total for the district for the season is probably in excess of $50,000, a small yield, yet most promising when it is considered that no one had more than a length or two of sluice boxes and but little water.
The gravel is shallow up around the discovery claims and the gold coarse. Down the creeks the gravel deposits are deeper, and only the surface is thawed. There is but little wood near the scene of the discoveries, and, as steam plants will not be available until transportation is extended to the region, no frozen ground can even be prospected this winter.
Discovery was made in June last by W. E.' James, who had spent fifteen years on the headwaters of White, Shushanna and Nabesna rivers prospecting for quartz. Wonderful deposits of copper exist on all these streams, and both the Copper river and White Pass railroads have made extensive reconnol-sances and surveys in this region. Henry Bratnoher and his agents have been active there also. It was copper and not the possibility of gold placers which attracted prospectors to the Shushanna region.
Another man hunting the red metal was Carl Whitham. He was the second locater on the new placer field. He did not get started quite so early as James and did not make so good a showing, the James ground yielding about $20,000 this season, while Whitham took out only $10,000. Other producing claims were worked by Fletcher Hamshaw and Joe McLennon. It was an Indian who told James that gold existed on the Shushanna creeks, high up above timber line. James verified the report, and he and his partner were soon taking out the yellow metal. It was not an uncommon day's work with three men and two lengths of sluice box to wash up $1,000. A piece of ground two feet deep, eighty feet long and sixteen feet wide yielded 35S ounces of eighteen dollar gold, or more than $6,000.
It was this phenomenal richness which started stampeders from all parts of Alaska to the scene, making one of the most interesting rushes of recent years. The trail requires ten days for experienced mushers to negotiate from the end of the railroad to the scene of the strike.
Mrs. Grace Bostwick, who, with her daughter, was the first woman over the trail, writes of life in the new camp. She says:
"One lives close to nature, for that is certainly all one has to live close to. Nerves are unknown, and livers are not objects of suspicion. Health stops at every campfire to call out greetings. The worries of outside life slip away. Bit by bit, very naturally, one drops into the Slwash way of existence—a warm bed (of hemlock boughs on the ground), three good meals a day, plenty of wood for the campfire. Men are unshaved; every one is dirty. Skins are blackened by the sun and by the smoke of the fire. Sleeping close to the fire, many of the men's garments are half burned away. 'We should worry,' they say, and that is camp philosophy."
A. DOUBLE LEGACY.
One-Bequest a Lost Treasure of Gold and of Pearls.
Boston-A search for treasure in southern waters will shortly be undertaken by Roland P. Kelley, a Harvard junior, in compliance with the terms of the will of his grandfather, T. L. Kelley.
The will provided that young Kelley should have the savings of his grandfather's fifty years of trading as a ship master in the far east on condition that before his twenty-first birthday he should attempt to locate pearl fisheries in an estuary of the Amazon river and two uncharted islands in the Pacific. These islands, according to the will, were found by the old mariner to contain a large amount of gold and were discovered when he was in search of fresh water on one of his voyages. The pearls were seen on another voyage. The elder Kelley made several attempts to organize expeditions to unknown islands, but was unsuccessful.
$1,500,000 FOR PEACHES.
Ozark Crop of 2,000 Cars Brings Good Prices.
Springfield, Mo.—Carload shipments of Elbera peaches from the Ozark region, practically have closed. A few scattering cars will be moved, but the bulk of the tremendous crop has been harvested. Fully 90 per cent of the shipments found a market at points east of the Mississippi river.
One railroad has handled over 1,300 cars of peaches, and the consignments over other roads in the peach belt bring the total output to more than 2,000 cars. It is estimated that the fruit brought $1,500,000 to the growers.
TO EUROPE ON STRETCHER.
Polish Boy, With Broken Back, to Return to the Fatherland.
St. Paul.—That he may see his mother and home in the fatherland once more Mike Wasuck, a nineteen-year-old Polish boy, suffering from a broken back and limbs, left for Warsaw. The lad will make the long trip on a stretcher, accompanied by Miss Lydia Keller, superintendent of a hospital where he has been for the last thirteen months.
The boy was injured on Aug. 14, 1912, in a railway yard when a pile of lumber toppled upon him. In a suit for damages he received $13,000.
TO LEARN SECRETS OF MYSTERY ISLE German Explorer Plans to Fly Over New Guinea.
TO LEARN SECRETS OF MYSTERY ISLE German Explorer Plans to Fly Over New Guinea.
Berlin.-Lieutenant Paul Graetz of the German army plans to explore the island of New Guinea by means of an airship. The cost of equipping his expedition is estimated at $750,000, and capitalists in Germany, Holland and England are being asked to interest themselves in the project. A semirigid balloon of the Parseval type is to be used, and it will be constructed at Malu, on the coast of New Guinea. From that place, as a gas and supply station, flights will be made over the island, and it will be mapped, and its opportunities for commercial exploitation will be studied from points of vantage in midair.
The Island of New Guinea, which lies north of Australia and is separated therefrom by the strait of Torres, contains one of the few large unexplored areas on the globe. Great Britain claims one portion of the island, and Holland claims the other portion, but neither nation has done more than settle and develop the rich plains near the coasts.
In the interior are wild tribes of savage head hunting Papuans, who have the reputation of eating one another and devouring every white man they can capture. In the interior are mountains, some of which rise 10,000 feet and are snow capped. The climate on the New Guinea plains is tropical. Kangaroos abound, but there are few wild beasts.
A British and Dutch expedition attempted to explore the interior of New Guinea last year. They lost one of their number to the cannibals, and another of the party was killed by polsoned arrows. They scaled one lofty mountain.
TRACE SHIP LOST IN 1788.
Wreck of French Exploration Vessel Found in Pacific. Paris.—Some wreckage found burled with sand on the island of Vanikoro, in the Pacific, is supposed to be the remains of the Boussole, the vessel of the French explorer Laperouse, which趴led on a voyage of discovery in the Pacific in 1788 and never returned. An expedition which was sent out under Admiral d'Entrecasteaux to search for Laperouse found no trace of the vessel, but the admiral always believed she was lost among the Santa Cruse group of islands. Vanikoro is one of these islands.
Scalded to Death In His Bath.
Cleveland, O.-Henry W. Judd, a wealthy retired business man and director in several local corporations, was called to death in his bathtub. His body was found by his wife on her return from church.
All Who Get $3,000 or Over a Year Taxable.
WILL PUNISH ALL DODGERS.
Government Requires That All of the Returns Be Made Under Oath—Extent of the Law Is Broad—All Who Are Liable and Fail to Make Payment Will Be Fined.
Washington.—It now behooves all those with an income of more than $3,000 a year to lay a hand upon a furrowed brow and try to find out how they are going to pay the income tax to government and what will happen to them if they do not.
Representative Cordell Hull of Tennessee, who framed the income tax bill, issued a statement intended to help the taxable persons, and the internal revenue bureau of the treasury department is already at work on a set of instructions which will be issued later.
In the first place, the law about to go into effect includes within its scope all citizens of the United States residing at home or abroad, all persons living in the United States though not citizens thereof and all net incomes from property and business owned or carried on in the United States by aliens. In every case a deduction of $3,000 is allowed-for living expenses. In the case of a husband who is living with his wife or a wife who is living with her husband an additional $1,000 exemption is allowed, so that all told a married person is entitled to an exemption of $4,000. Only one $4,000 deduction, however, is to be allowed from the aggregate income of both husband and wife.
Till the Smoke Rose.
In the third century there was an emperor of Japan who, mounting to the summit of a hill during a period of hard times and poor crops, observed that no smoke was rising from the clusted cottages in the valleys below him. The villagers could not afford fire; besides, most of them had no food to cook. He surveyed the scene thoughtfully and, descending, gave orders to remit all taxes for a period of three years. Before the time was over his palace fell into decay and parts of it into ruin; the rain came through the roof, and more than once he was drenched as he slept. But he made no complaint. At the end of three years he climbed the hill once more. Everywhere, from more numerous cottages, blue spirals drifted upward to the sky. He smiled as he descended, and the taxes were restored. But it was not with tax money that the palace was repaired, since the grateful people raised the needed sum as a thank offer—Youth's Companion.
The Supercritic
Provost Hawkins of Oriel college, Oxford, declares the Right Hon. W. G. E. Russell in "Edward King, Sixteenth Bishop of Lincoln," was never happy unless he could find some fault to criticise in the undergraduates who came before him. Among other things, the record of chapel attendance was always on his table and referred to for praise or blame. One day when King, who was an Oriel man and who seemed to have been a happy combination of George Herbert and Saint Francis de Sales, was before him the provost consulted the record.
"I observe, Mr. King," said he, "that you have never missed a single chapel, morning or evening, during the whole term."
He paused, but instead of a word of praise, which might reasonably have been expected, he continued severely: "I must warn you, Mr. King, that even too regular attendance at chapel may degenerate into formalism."
SUCCESSFUL MEN.
Invitation to Colored Business Men to Speak at Tuskegee.
Tuskegee, Ala., Oct. 23.—The Executive Council of the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute has decided to invite a representative group of successful colored business men throughout the country to visit Tuskegee Institute during the school year 1913-14 for the purpose of speaking to the student body.
In each case the persons invited are asked to speak upon the particular line of business activity in which they are engaged, the purpose being to give the students direct contact with Negro men and women who have succeeded in various business directions.
Among those already invited are the following:
Banking—Mr. J. C. Napier, Nashville, Tenn.; Mr. Charles Banks, Mound Bayou, Miss.; Mrs. Maggie L. Walker, Richmond, Va.; Dr. U. G. Mason, Birmingham, Ala.
Country Stores—Mr. C. W. Gilliam, Okolona, Miss.; Mr. Jonas W. Thomas, Bennettsville, S. C.; Mr. Deal Jackson, Albany, Ga.
Gardening—Mr. P. D. Blackwell, Summerfield, Fla.; Mr. John Brown, Montgomery, Ala.; Mr. J. D. McDuffy, Ocala, Fla.
General Merchandising—Mr. C. H. James, Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. A. J. Willborn, Tuskegee, Ala.; Mr. V. H. Tulane, Montgomery, Ala.; Mr. William V. Chambliss, Tuskegee, Ala.
Farming and Merchandising—Mr. J. G. Groves, Edwardsville, Kan.; Mr. Scott Bond, Madison, Ark.
Insurance—Mr. G. F. Johnson, Mobile, Ala.; Mr. A. F. Herndon, Atlanta, Ga.; Mr. John Merrick, Durham, N. C.
Undertaking Enterprises—Mr. G. G. W. Franklin, Chattanooga, Tenn.:
N05 N05
L. C. SMITH & Typewriter
C. SMITH & BROS.
Typewriter
BEARING LONG WEAR
Appointment of the L. C. Smith permits the carriage on the last printing point so instantaneously the operation is too rapid.
Trigger touch of the ball bearing type bars, never shifted for capitals, a capital shift key rite-third ordinary pressure, a combined one-mm and line space, which spaces one, two or the same sweep, and the lightest possible carriage an ease of operation that makes all day easier to operator.
Always rigid carriage, stationary printing point, engagement of ribbon shift and back space keys, and that no necessary operation takes the hands from position, combines speed with accuracy in the machine.
Mail a postal for literature today.
SMITH & BROS. TYPEWRITER
for Domestic and Foreign Business: SYRACUSE,
Branches in all Principal Cities
BINGTON BRANCH, 1325 G. St. N. W., Washi
BALL BEARING
The escapement of the L. C. Smith permits the carriage to get away from the last printing point so instantaneously that no speed of operation is too rapid.
The escapement of the L. C. Smith per get away from the last printing point so ina speed of operation is too rapid.
The hair trigger touch of the ball bear riage that is never shifted for capitals, a cap ing only one-third ordinary pressure, a ce carriage return and line space, which space lines with the same sweep, and the light tension—give an ease of operation that re easy for the operator.
The always rigid carriage, stationary pr the arrangement of ribbon shift and back spa the fact that no necessary operation takes the the writing position, combines speed with acc L. C. Smith.
Mail a postal for literature
L. C. SMITH & BROS. TYR Head Office for Domestic and Foreign Business
Branches in all Principal O WASHINGTON BRANCH, 1323 G. ST
James H W
The hair trigger touch of the ball bearing type bars, a carriage that is never shifted for capitals, a capital shift key requiring only one-third ordinary pressure, a combined one-motion carriage return and line space, which spaces one, two or three lines with the same sweep, and the lightest possible carriage tension—give an ease of operation that makes all day speed easy for the operator.
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.
Mail a postal for literature today.
L. C. SMITH & BROS. TYPEWRITER CO.
Head Office for Domestic and Foreign Business: SYRACUSE, N.Y., U. S. A.
Branches in all Principal Cities
WASHINGTON BRANCH, 1325 G. St. N. W., Washington, D. C
James H Winslow
UNDERTAKER AND EMBLAMER ALL WORK FIRST CLASS. TERMS MOST REASONABLE TWELFTH AND R STREETS. N. W
Heating Bars TR MAGIC IS 19 IN LONG
THE MAGIC
AND HAIR ST
SHAMPOO DRIER MEDICO
MAILED
SEND MONEY BY
Address all letters
Minneapolis
A BEAUTIFUL HEAD OF HAIR IS A LADY'S CROWN
have it if she will use the Magic. The Magic will dry the hair
straighten the earliest head of hair. It will also stimulate its
not injure the hair, because it is never heated direct, but takes
is heated on our Alcohol Heater, or any other heater. We ad
Best on the market. Price per box, 50c. Alcohol Heater, price
Write for literature today.
MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER COMPANY, MIL
THE MAGIC IS 19 IN LONG
THE MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER AND HAIR STRAIGHTENER
MAILED ANY WHERE IN U.S.
POSTAGE PAID
SEND MONEY BY POST OFFICE NO.
Address all letters to Magic Stamp.
Minneapolis, Minn. not to
ALL HEAD OF HAIR IS A LADY'S CROWNING GLORY. And only use the Magic. The Magic will dry the hair after a shampoo drier, because it is never heated direct, but takes its heat from the heat Alcohol Heater, or any other heater. We advise the use of water. Price per box, $50. Alcohol Heater, price $50. Liberal terms. Write for literature today.
SHAMPOO DRIER COMPANY. MINNEAPOLIS. M
HEATING BAR UP MAGIC IS 9 IN LONG
THE MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER AND HAIR STRAIGHTENER
MAILED ANYWHERE IN U.S.$100 POSTAGE BASED SEND MONEY BY POST OFFICE MONEY ORDER
Address all letters to Magic Shampoo Drier Co., Minneapolis, Minn. not to individuals.
A BEAUTIFUL HEAD OF HAIR IS A LADY'S CROWNING GLORY. And every lady can have it if she will use the Magic. The Magic will dry the hair after a shampoo or bath, and straighten the earliest head of hair. It will also stimulate its growth. The Aluminium Comb cannot injure the hair, because it is never heated direct, but takes its heat from the heating bar which is heated on our Alcohol Heater, or any other heater. We advise the use of Hays' Elf Pomade Best on the market. Price per box, $5c. Alcohol Heater, price $5c. Liberal terms to agents.
Write for literature today.
MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER COMPANY, MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA
Mme. L. C. Parrish
HAIR CULTURING, MANICURING
AND SCALP TREATMENT
THE WORLD'S FIRST WOMEN'S HOLIDAY
Largest Manufacturer of Hair Preparations in Boston. Largest Importer of Pure Human Hair.
We manufacture all other kinds of Tole. Articles—Hand Made, Natural Looking Wigs, Switches, Braids, Puffs, etc. Free Catalogue. Perrish's Never Fall Hair Food is absolutely one of the best hair preparations on the market. It stops the hair from Splitting at the ends and falling out. It will make your Hair Grow. It is praised by people in all sections of the country.
Send 10 cents for a sample jar. Agents wanted. Write for terms.
Mme. L. C. PARRISH,
95 Camden St., Boston, Mass.
Phone 888 R Tremont.
Mention this paper when writing.
95 Camden St., Boston, Mass.
Phone 888 R Tremont.
Mention this paper when writing.
Mr. A. N. Johnson, Nashville, Tenn.
Contractors—Mr. J. H. Blodgett,
Jacksonville, Fla.; Mr. B. L. Windham,
Birmingham, Ala.; Mr. R. E.
Pharrow, Atlanta, Ga.; Mr. H. W.
Strickland, Birmingham, Ala.
cago, Ill.
Real Estate—Mr.
Brockton, Mass.; Mr.
New York City.
Harnessmaking—Mr.
Montgomery, Ala.
Later it is proposed
successful colored men
Grocers--Mr. James S. Hardwick, Springfield, Mo.
Bakers-Mr. W. A. Wallace, Chi-
The Typewriter without a Speed Limit
& BROS.
writer
LONG WEARING
with permits the carriage te
it so instantaneously that no
all bearing type bars, a car-
rals, a capital shift key requir-
re, a combined one-motion
with spaces one, two or three
the lightest possible carriage
that makes all day speed
inary printing point,
back space keys, and
takes the hands from
with accuracy in the
literature today.
S. TYPEWRITER CO.
Business: SYRACUSE, N.Y., U. S. A.
Principal Cities
G. St. N. W., Washington, D. C.
Winslow
MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER
HAIR STRAIGHTENER
LED ANY WHERE IN U.S.$100
POSTAGE PAID
MONEY BY POST OFFICE MONEY ORDER
all letters to Magic Shampoo Drier Co.
eapolis, Minn. not to individuals.
B CROWNING GLORY.—And every lady can
dry the hair after a shampoo or bath, and
amulate its growth. The Aluminium Comb en-
but takes its heat from the heating bar which
er. We advise the use of Hyles Lint Pomade
caterer, price $60. Liberal terms to agents.
future today.
Y. MINNEAPOLIS. MINNESOTA
NOT SOLD UNDER ANY OTHER NAME. HOME WARRANTED FOR ALL TIME. If you purchase the NEW HOME you will have a life asset at the price you pay, and will not have a endless chain of repairs.
Quality Considered
it is the Cheapest
in the end
to buy.
If you want a sewing machine, write for
our latest catalogue before you purchase.
The New Home Sewing Machine Co. Orange, Mass.
For sale by Gustave Oppen-
heimer, Cor. E and 8th Sts. N. W.
McCall's Magazine and McCall Patterns
For Women
Have More Friends than any other magazine or patterns. McCall's is the reliable Fashion Guide monthly in one million one hundred thousand homes. Besides showing all the latest designs of McCall Patterns, each issue is brimful of sparkling short stories and helpful information for women.
Save Money and Keep in Style by subscribing for McCall's Magazine at once. Costs only so cents a year, including any one of the celebrated McCall Patterns free.
McCall Patterns Lead all others in style, fit, simplicity, comfort and style, and do the best for all McCall Patterns than any other two makes combined. None higher than 15 cents. Buy from your dealer, or by mail from
McCALL'S MAGAZINE
236-246 W. 37th St., New York City
Norm-Sample Copy, Franklin College and Pallium College Inst.,
on request.
cago, Ill.
Real Estate—Mr. Watt Terry,
Brockton, Mass.; Mr. P. A. Payton,
New York City.
Harnessmaking—Mr. J. H. Façain,
Montgomery, Ala.
Later it is proposed to invite other
successful colored men and women;
but for the present year the above list
represents those who have been
invited to speak to the student body.
THE BEWING MACHINE OF QUALITY.
cago. Ill.
AREPLY TO THe MULATTO
y.
Prof. H. Jordan, of the University
of Virginia, James K. Varda-
man, et al., Published in The
Popular Science Monthly for
June, 1913—Published Under
the Auspices of he Washington
Bee, by Dr. Geo. H. Richard-
son, M.D., L.L. D.
This great pamphlet will be
ready for circulation next week.
15 cents per copy, 7 copies for
one dollar. 7
Address Dr. Geo, H. Richard
son, 309 Eleventh St. N. E., or
The Washington Bee, 1109 Ey:
Street Northwest, Washington
D.C, 7
Write for one at once,
é St. Lukes, ss
St. Luke’s, at Mt. Zion M. E.
Church, Twenty-ninth and O Streets,
West Washington, Sunday night,
November 9, at 8 o'clock. Rev. W. C
Thompson, pastor, will preach the
sermon, Fine music. All St. Lukes
urged to be present.
: A.C. GARNER,
x Deputy.
JULIA H, HAYES,
. . Associate Deputy.
Bethel Literary and Historical
Association.
Rev. Dr. T. J. Moppins, who is re-
garded as ore of the ablest ministers
in the Zion connection will discuss
“The Sociological Outlook,” Tuesday
evening, November 11, at Metropoli-
tan A, M. E, Church,
Music will be rendered bv the choir
of Union Wesley Church.
A. D. POWELL
. Dealer in
| Coal, Wood and Ice. |
Having purchased the business of
Mr. James Winslow, I am now pre-
pared to supply, his former patrons
and the public in general with best
grades of Coal and Wood, and at
moderate prices. Prompt and relia-
Dle* service can always be assured,
and a trial order is invited. Phone
North 413. .
Fresh Fish and Oysters,
Adjoining the Coal Office has also
been opened a stand where the pub-
lic can secure fresh fish and oysters.
Our oysters are shucked daily on the
premises and can be obtained by the
pint, quart or gallon.
Special attention given to supply-
‘ing oysters for church festivals, ban-
quets, etc. Family trade a specialty.
Remember the Location,
1200 R Street N. W. Phone, N. 413.
Mr. Taylor’ in the West.
Ex-Auditor Ralph W. Tyler, nation-
al organizer of the National Negro
Business League, addressed the local
Negro Business League in St. Louis,
Mo., last Monday evening. This is
one of the largest Negro Business
Leagues in the United States. .
Miss Nannie H. Burroughs, presi-
dent of the National Training School
for Women and Girls, is compelled to
rent additional quarters for her girls.
The school is overcrowded.
Many distinguished persons will
participate in the Thomas testimo-
nial. .
Richard's reply to, Vardaman is al-
most ready to come from the press.
FOR RENT _
THOMAS WALKER.
3108 Sherman Ave. N. Wa 9
rooms, all improvements.$25.00
1005 Maryland Ave. S. W.,. 10 :
rooms, all improvements. 25.00
+ 41 Patterson St. N. E, 6
rooms. all improvements. 18.50
1045 47th St. Deanwood, D.C.,
+ 3 rooms and porch...... 7-00
105 Benning Road, D. C, 6
rooms, large yard....... 8.40
Sheriff Road, Deanwood,
D. C., 4 rooms and 5 acres
of ground ..e..reeeeees+ 8.00
Stanton Road, Anacostia,
D.C, 8 rooms....--.+.+- 12.00
zoo, Nichols Ave., Anacostia,
D. C., 7 rooms.........+- 16.50
2047 gth St. N. W., 5 rooms.. 17.50
THOMAS WALKER
560 Fifth Street Northwest.
Amos Takes Charge of Choral
The South Washington Choral So-
ciety was organized at the Colored
Social Settlement Sunday, November
zd. Rev. VanLoo, vicar of St. Mo-
nica’s Church, is president of the as-
sociation. Mr. Wm. L. Washington,
head worker at the Social Settlement,
is secretary.
The Choral Society will meet_week-
ly at the Settlement every Sunday
afternoon at 4 o'clock. Competent
musicians will teach and conduct the
singing. South Washington has 2
great deal of talent along musica
lines and here is an opportunity. tc
cultivate it. Let us all Iearn to sins
and sing right.
Mri Ernest R. Amos has been se
lected as the director. Mr. Amos i
regarded by musical critics as a mu
sician of rare talent.
‘ The Democratic administration, |
having been convinced that a Demo-
cratic Senate will not confirm a Ne-
gro Democrat, has decided to allow
Col. Henry Lincoln Johnson to re-
‘main. Negro Democrats claim that
they will be satisfied if Col. Johnson
is retained.
The Washington Orchestra, forty
musicians, Mr. H. A. Williams, direc-
tor, has decided on December 28 as
the date for their first concert at the
Howard Theatre.
The sale of patrons’ tickets will be-
gin about December 1.
The colored vote wgs solid for Mr
Carmody. Only a few colored trai-
tors. } Uc
be dd = ey >
Supreme Ca: o . .
lumbia, Holding P> - :
Estate of Jane Lowry, >
No. 9403, Administration Docket
Application having been made here-
in for probate of the last will and
testament of said deceased, and for
letters of administration sum testa-
mento annexo on. said estate, by
Thomas A, Cox, it is ordered this
3ist day of October, A. D. 1913, that
James Cox, Nancy Brown, alias Nan-
cy Bailey, William Cox, Rebecca
Harden, Lizzie Cargile, Atma Wil-
liams, ‘alias Eleanor Williams, Jose-,
phize Johnson, —— Robertson, —
‘obertson, —— Robertson and Jo-
seph Wickliffe, and all others con-
cerned, appear in said Court on Mon-
day, the 29th day of December, A. D
1913, at to o'clock a. m., to show
cause why such application should not
be granted. Let notice hereof be
peblished in the “Washington Law
eporter” and The Washington Bee
once in cach of three successive
weeks before the return day herein
mentioned, the first publication to be
not less than thirty days before said
return day.
WENDELL P. STAFFORD,
Justice.
Attest:
JAMES TANNER,
Register of Wills for the District
of Columbia, Clerk of the Pro-
bate Court.
L. MELENDEZ KING and
WM. I. LEE,
. Attorneys.
Death of Mrs. Brooks.
Mrs. Laura Broome Brooks, wife
of Rev. J. Henry Brooks and a high-
ly respected, deeply loved resident of
this city, died Sunday, November 2,
at her, residence, 509 Florida Avenue
Northwest.
The funeral was held Wednesday,
November 5, at her residence.
Her husband and three children,
Dr. Phil Brown, Mable E. and Mrs.
Bertie Brooks-Lewis, survive her.
The family and relatives have the
sympathy of their hosts of friends.
Tuskegee Institute.
Tuskegee Institute, Alabama, Oct.
30.—Tuskegee Institute, in the first
contest of the year, October 18, regis-
tered thirty-eight points against Clark
University of Atlanta, and on the fol-
lowing Saturday, October 25. over-
whelmed the football squad from
Morris Brown University with a 45
to o score. Not once has Tuskegee
been scored against.
Tuskegee has not in recent years
started her gridiron adventures under
happier auspices, and from every an-
gle there are indications of a remark-
ably successful season.
The first real test of the team,
however, will be on Wednesday, No-
vember §, when the team will meet!
the Talladega College eleven in Birm-
ingham. On November 15, on the
Tuskegee Institute field, will be
played the most hard-fought contes
seen in recent years when the dough
ty Tuskegee squad tackles the Atlan
ta Baptist (Morehouse) College, o
Atlanta, Ga. This game ‘will withou
a doubt be a large factor in decidin;
who shall claim the Southern cham
pionship. On Thanksgiving Day th
team, under the direction of Coac!
Gordon R. Thomas, will go to Nash
ville to meet. the Fisk Universit:
team for the final game of the season
Guest of the Training School.
The District Union, composed o!
the white church of this city, was the
guest of the National Training Schoo!
for Women and _ Girls at Lincolr
Heights Wednesday, November 5
from 2 to 5 o'clock p. m.
BUSINESS MEN’S NIGHT.
Bethel Literary and Historical Asso-
ciation Tuesday Evening, November
* 25, 1913. «
,. You are requested to attend a meet.
ing of the Commercial and Profes.
‘sional business men and women Tues:
day evening, November 25, at §&
o'clock, Metropolitan A. M. E.
Church, M Street, between Fifteenth
and Sixteenth Streets Northwest. The
purpose of this meeting is aimed tc
‘cement the active power of the com.
mercial and professional and public
in raising a higher standard and bet
ter understanding among the colorec
People of the District. There will be
several prominent speakers of the
practical type, along with the fine mu:
sical program. Don't fail to com«
out'and help us.
Wait.
a ie
Wait, there is time to answer
blackguards,
Wait, and see what fools some peo-
ple made themselves. ven oa.
jait and see the animal kill “him-
self.
Wait. and don’t be worried at jabs;
they are harmless to what The Bec
has in its possession.
Wait. and sce “those who laugh
last. It is not the first shot that in:
jures you, >
Wait, and don't doubt The Bee’:
ability to satisfy the monkey mind
Tt Is Amusing
To see a monkey climb a tree.
To sce Jackson turn a somersaul:
To see bogus newspaper corre
spondents play fool.
The. Bee Would Like to Know
What_ is the National Busine:
Men's Press Association doing.
| .If a real National Press Associ:
-|tion is not in order.
-| If John Mitchell, Jr., is not amon
|the great editors in the South.
-|_ What got it into the head of Ti
{| Fortune that he could lecture.
1} Tf The Age will join a real pre:
association.
r| If Trotter isn’t got them all |
.| guessing.
The Colored Inventor.
This is the caption of a twelve-page
pamphlet by Mr. Henry E. Baker, As-
‘sistant Examiner in the United States
Pension Office, This. twelve-page
pamphlet gives in detail 4 large num-
ber of inventions of the colored
© WO
GROWS HAIR
i Pe rae DANDRUFF
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inne F< wl
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PE Mea Pas ai)
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Nobranchatores’ -
THE SL,
KIDNEY, BLAUDER, LIVER
1 BOWEL KEMEDY. |
By its direct action on the Kid- |
neys and Bladder, relieves thuee
important parte of the human
system of Diseases of the Uri-
nary Organs, such as Inflamma-
tion of the Kidneys, Fain in
Back, Cystitis, Catarrh of the
Bladder, and by its mild laxa-
tive properties acting on the
Liver and Stomach, our remedy
is especially helpful in relieving
Billiousness, Constipation and
kindred troubles.
It is pleasant, patable, and
can be given to children.
Price, soc, *
TYREE & CO,
sth and H Sts, N. EL
Open All Night.
Where you change the cars for
Chesapeake Junction and
Kenilworth,
American. Mr, Baker has also in
preparation a book which will con-
tain every known invention of colored
people. The present pamphlet is very
useful and should be read by every
one. *
THE NATION'S WARD.
(Advocate, Wilmington, N, C.)
At the triennial general convention
of the Protestant Episcopal Church a
mass meeting was held on the night
of October oth in the Cathedral of
St. John the Divine, under the auspi-
ces of the American Church Institute
for Negroes.
Bishop Nelson of Atlanta made “a
plea for the Nation’s Ward" in. the
following:
“An immeasurable wrong was
done,” said Bishop Nelson, “when
the ballot was given to the people
untrained for citizenship. He needs a
vitalizing religion. He needs educa-
tion but not so much of the sort
which we have beenstrying to give
him—the arts and sciences, the clas-
sics and romances, languages and
music and theology. He. needs in-
struction in honor, righteousness
thrift, truth and purity more than he
needs the ballot.”
In addition to the above, Bishor
Gailor, of Tennessec laments thusly:
“But ‘there is another side to the
picture. The moral progress of the
Negro has not at all been propor.
tionate ‘to his progress in book carn
ing and ability to acquire property
More than any thing else in the worlc
the Negro needs religion.”
. From Bishop Nelson’s caption yot
would be led to expect an addres:
upon some phase of the American In
dian. He is the only ‘Ward of the
Nation we know anything about. Th
Nation schools him, clothes him anc
gives him lartd and tries in every wa}
to instil into his unwilling mind the
elements of American civilization
But what has the Nation given th
Negro? What, in return for his un
requited toil of centuries? He is th
veritable fulfillment of .the scriptura
prophecy “from him that hath not.’
The good Bishop would train the Ne
gro for citizenship which is daily de
nied him, The gift of ballot whict
“he seemeth to have" is deeply de
| plored as an awful crime. Dear Bish
op, dry those tears, he hasn’t got it—
because his grandfather didn’t hav
it, that’s the only reason, And do no
lament so grievously over the science:
Jand languages and arts and classic
and music and theology you hav:
Jgiven him. You have never give
him much of this sort of education
‘}you are giving him less now.
'| , He does need “instruction in honot
{righteousness, thrift. truth and_nuri
'|ty,” perhaps, more than he needs th
ballot—but the Anglo-Saxon who bar
ters his honor in Wall Street and i
,|gigantic trusts and monopolies, wh
forfeits his righteousness by wicke
‘land unjust laws, who thrives upan th
thrift of the unfortunate, who rept
"|diates the great truth of the Brother
hood of man, and who stains the pt
“|rity of the Nation by his Whit
Slave trade and his “black slave” it
+|dulgences—he is hardly the instructe
elto when the Negro would paturall
turn in his extremity. The Negro t!
h} Ward of the Nation?—Rather, tu
| Nation’s outcast—Prof. W. B. Cri
_|tenden.
FOR RENT.
HIGH CLASS APARTMENTS
.
The Minerva
; 1838 Fourth Street Northwest.
Ideal Location
| First-class resideritial sections
ona pleasant street close to three
car lines. ‘
Attractive Building
Up-to-date in every respect, jani-
tor service, heat, hot water in
abundance.
PERFECT CONDITION.
Being thoroughly renovated; quick
tenant can select decorations,
Reasonable Rents
Five and six rooms, $29 and $30.
Agents
SHANNON & LUCHS
Renting Service
733 Fourteenth St, N. W.
M. 2345 M. 2345
Consumption Can Be
Cured
WE HAVE THE REMEDY
Dr. Brown's New Consumptior
Remedy cures Coughs, Colds.
| Hoarseness, La
. . Grippe, Pleuras;
Pneumonia. Con-
- sumption and all
: Diseases [of the
} tespiratory or-
gans .
| Drug trade sup-
plied by Groover-
| Stewart Drug Co
° Jacksonville Fla.
For sale by retail .at all the leading
drug stores, or write *
Magnolia Remedy Co., St. Augustine,
la, U.S. A. Box 734
ee ms
: * For Rent.
For sent—By Thomas Walker, a
splendid house, 9 rooms and bath and
hall. All modern conveniences, in-
cluding staticnary wash tubs; all
clean and in gocd repair for $23 per
month. Thomas Walker, 506 Fifth
Street Northwest. O-25-3t
For Sale. ‘
For Sale—Three lots, 25x120 feet
each, corner Fifty-third and Dayton
Streets Northeast, two blocks west
of National Training School, $600.
Address “N,”*Bee office. .
_ - OEE
Mrs. M, Harvey — Clinkscales,
teacher of the pianoforte. Terms rea-
sonable. For further | information
call or write, 1232 Linden Street
Northeast. S-27-4t
Open from 6:30 a. m. to 8 p.m.
Open Sundays 7 a..m. to 6:15 p.m.
. LEE’S LUNCH ROOM
-Geo, H. Lee, Prop.
1231 E Street N. W.
Meals 15¢ and 25¢.
Washington, D. C.
1
Phone Col. 185
Edward L. Scott, LL.B.
Public Auditor and Accountant
Auditing accounts of individuals, so-
cieties and cerporationsa specially
728 Girard Street, N. W.
Se gaol aaa
| Wordy.
Messenger Wordy Thompson- says
the people in.this city are more in
need of a decent weekly than a daily.
The Bee will look after its defamers
in a few days. Dont’- worry, Wordy
,will be pressing bricks for Walker
en
Cleaning, Altering, Dyeing, Re-
Pairing.
JOHN F. HARKUM CO.,
TAILORS,
2012 Tenth Street N. W.
| Ladies’ Skirts made to ordet
from $2.00 up. Coat Suits, $10.00
_ Fit or no pay. _
‘| HAIR @'
IY GAL
A Delightfully Perfumed Hair Pomade
PREPARED ESPECIALLY FOR COLORED PEOPLE
HIS old, reliable preparation has been in constant use for years,
Tena is considered a necessary toilet article in thousands of homes.
It is guaranteed free from all injurious drugs or chemicals.
JOHNSTON’S HAIR DRESSING makes harsh, stubborn, kinky
curly hair soft, pliant and glossy, enables you to comb with ease
and to do it up in.any style consistent with its length.
It is perfectly Safe and Harmless. *
By supplying the needed oils directly to the roots of the hair,
JOHNSTON’S HAIR DRESSING tones up, invigorates and nour-
ishes the scalp, stops the hair from falling out, increases its growth
and prevents the hair from splitting and breaking off at the ends’
and gives the hair new life and vigor. :
JOHNSTON’S HAIR DRESSING removes Dandruff, cures
Tetter, Itching and Sealing of the Scalp, etc.
. There is nothing experimental about JounsTon’s Hair DRESSING
ithas been thoroughly tested and endorsed by thousands of satis-
fied users. Try a box and be convinced that it does all and more
than what we claim for it. )
JOHNSTON'S HAIR DRESSING is put Up ia fesnce square
FOR’SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES IN WASHINGTON.
VALUABLE COUPON IN EVERY PACKACE.
————— el
9 :
Real Colored People’s Hair
we SES: “ -
Uwe. = Weare the largest Imjorter and
ae Manufacturer in this line. Plaits,
we RE my Wigs, Pomps, Puffs, Braids and
Sma Transformations in stock or to
=~] Sf order. All our goods guaranteed
ra) Fy a to stand combing and washing and
F to hold the color and crimp. All
a > shades matched, none too difficult.
q Mixed gray our specialty. ’
Send 2c for catalogue. Straight-
ening combs and toilet articles our
specialty. The Only and Old Re-
a liable.
Mme. BAUM’S HAIR
EMPORIUM ee
7 486 8th Avc. New York City
Mail Orders Promptly Attend-ed to. Py ‘
SS eee
THE MODERN PRESSING CLUB CO. ~ .
1905 Seventh Street Northwest (Near Tea.)
- Phone North 5548. .
PRESSING, DYEING, CLEANING, ALTERING, REPAIRING
Men’s List. a = Ladies’ List.
Suits Sponged & Pressed... .25 Suits Sponged & Pressed... .5o
“Dry Cleaned ........ 50 “ Cleaned & Pressed... .75 up
“ Steam Cleaned ....... .75 Skirts Cleaned ......... Soup
. All oo Called for and Delivered.
One Coat and Two Pairs of Pants Sponged and Pressed, (called for
and delivered) each week, for $1.00 per month.
3 O. K. WILLIAMS, Mgr.
LOU COSTLEY’S
ORIENTAL RESTAURANT
Is nos open for Ladies and Gentlemen, with all the nicest Chinese Dishes,
prepared by an expert Chinese Chef. You cam be served with
Chop Suey and Yokomen and all the other Chinese Delicacies.
Yokomen . . cencecccccccccccccsccccccccccscccsscssccscs ofO
Gal Soo Min ..cccscsccsccsccccccesccccevecececsccsssvecs 28
7 Gai Yong On cccscccsssccscccscevesecseesedsscecsvevsees: 950 4
Chop Sucy .......--ceeeeereessreccceeecccecsccceewsssees 25
Chicken Chop Suey ...ccccccccccccccssecccnccctscesecess ofS
Pepper’ Steak . crccorssecsesesesiavesecscevcssveccssvveoae: 25 .
Mr, “Bud” Minor will entertain with Music. ,
ror. ay .
3312 Pennsylvania Avenue - - - - - + = + Northwesr
W'The Aoricultural and Mechanical Colltce
" The Agricultural and Mechanical Collece
'_ Established and Maintained by the governments of North
Carolina, and of the United States.
Open all the year round. For males only. Board, Lodging and
Tuition, $7.00 per month. Strong Faculty. Excellent equipment.
Successful graduates. Fall term begins September 1, 1913
| Write today for accommodations or for catalog.
JAS. B. DUDLEY, President,
< A. & M. College, Greensboro, N. C.
aw =m om a. Ff 7 + 3
Land for Sale.
Buy land now at very low rates.
Glenarden Heights offers all one could
wish in rich, level land, pure water
and convenience to cars. Only 3c
minutes ride from Washington.
Twelve lots for sale 50x130 feet at
$115 each. Clear deed.
Don’t hesitate. For further partic-
ulars to see Miss Elizabeth Shaw,
1613 Thirteenth Street Northwest.
Madame E. L. Bruce
1228 Vou Street Northwest
Open for engagements for singing
in churches, concerts and private
or public concerts. Her selections
are high-class. Address 1228 You
Street Northwest.
| JUSTH’S OLD STAND.
There are prizes to be had and
the wise man of limited means
looks for them. Here, we buy
so as to give value. If it’s a fine
slightly used overcoat, $3 to $10
or a pair of new pants, $2 to $3, or
a new pair of shoes, suit case, hat,
etc, there’s a cash saving. One
price. JUSTH’S OLD STAND,
619 D St. © z
> Madam Walker.
The Madam C. J. Walker pre-
parations on sale at 1337 Wallach
Place Northwest, between’ Thir-
teenth and Fourteenth, T and U.