The Washington Bee Newspaper, September 28, 1901, Page 1

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[A PAPER FOR THE PEOP" ~ | FIRFSIRr : ir = 3s ae | GRERP ADVERTISING MEDIOW. * Sal - # Sees ae: ; WASHINGTON ric volume: 4 7 ‘ is ~ 1 ; | ence = Tunas 2) 2: the peo | do; they are preity sure to produce |unanimously chosen to preside over| by selling to criminals they are sworn iil a § : S, the first colored | text books in their own line ef work. | the meeting, who after calling the|to arrest immunity from punishment te pease cee es aul por veg aash anon. book is the/| meeting to order, made feeling and/|for violating law,what are they but : 4 < i the rand | school hisiory of ‘The Negro Race in | soul-stirring remarks of the calamity | chists? : i SA of the Republic of Ohio, Judge | America,” by Edward A. Johnson, LL. | that hase epilator adi d ee: : | Williams is also the author of “A His-| D. {Ts OBSERVA NCE BY THE HE. |tory of the Negro Troopsin the War| BREWS OF THIS CITY, befallen the Country.| council of Philadelphia turn over to BOARD OF EDUCATION. Is it ever studied, one wonders, Recorder Cheatham, who was present, | their friends or accomplices in crime Negro ) by white children of North or South? | made indeed, a touching and sympa- fr: i i i - of the Rebellion.” With these works, A book that certainly is studied by /thetic speech, mene to the oa | cee Gen tae sine ac takes eit Pe aeor a nenNg icine perhaps ahead of them in literary| whites in many schoo's is Scarbor-|ceased Executive as a big-hearted | milli ae = ‘From the Virginia Planta- | ough’s*‘First Lessons in Greek,” most | humaaitarian, a Christian atthe high- pov ae -ngjadea connec pt paoal ee Ho the National Capital, by the| of its users, no doubt, being oblivious | est order among men, a sympathizing | ernment? {: Simon Woli Based Upon Recent | /@t¢ Hon. Johp Mercer Langston, the | tothe fact that its scho'arly author,/and true friend, a great States-! Dr. Kent thought the first element | first negro Representative in Con-| Professor of Ancient Languages in the| man and leader of men known to civ-|inthe cure for anarchy wasa keener — from the Old Dominion, after-| Wilberforce University, is a black /ilization. A sentiment of sympathy, | sense of individual duty to one’s fel- ward United States Minister to Haiti, | man. | love and sorrow was felt and express- | lows and a more faithful discharge of and rated by many of his own people| Theological literature, and especial-| ed by every one present the obligations of citizenship. Night Schoos opened and Teachers atioa—Defease of Judaism. Appointed. < ses in connection with ) atonement, which began of the Hebrew Congre- sia street between H and I peo west, last eyening at 6 «, were contiuued today, begin- i The services were in tabbi Stern, and were con- \ according to the ritual. t { the meeting was an ad- a 1 the late President, William McK y, by Mr. Simon Wolf. d, in part: recogni/e the importance of what a as the result of the asass- ae resident McKinley. The »me home to each and ev- s. The nation has been reat lessons to incul- ine of love.” to the death of President said Mr. Lincoln died in of 4,000,000 of slaves. “ep i President who died by the | lived, was The Anglo African Maga sassin's bullet was Gar-| Zine, started in New York in January, soldier, who in the| 1859, There ure now published in the vil life exemplified the best | { American manhood. to President McKinley, ofhis glory, after the | by the New Yerk Historical Society. as the greatest negro author not ex ; Frederick Douglass. Like them Langston was not of! pure African blood, probably few of | the American negro authors, educa cators, and legislators are; nor yes his popular influence atall compa+ able with theirs. No doubt the most effective as well as the earliest book in | this class was Douglass’s “Narratives of My Experience in Slavery,’’ follow ed in 1845 by “‘My Bondage and My Freedom.” No other books of negro authorship in the abolition period are shown here, although several negro | writers were busy then im the period eal press. Here is shown the first is- sue ofthe first paper published in America for negroes, Freedom’s ournal, March 30, 1827, printed in New York by Cornish & Russwurm. This copy is loaned to the Exposition Another ante-bellum print, not long- United States 230 papers, mostly weekly, devotedto the American ne gro, most ef them edited by negroes. ly the literature of the African Metho- | The Chair appointed the following abundant and characteristic. The thir- | olutions: Hon. H. P. Cheatham, Rev. ty odd volumes here shown in this} W. I. H. Woodward, Mr. W. P. field testify to all grades of enlight-| Young, Mr. Nelson Davis, and Hon. enment among the reverends, from the | Scotland Harris. The Committee sub- Rev. John Jasper, distinguished for | mitted the following which was unan- his demonstration that ‘the sun do | imously adopted: move,’’ up to men of broad culture | WHEREAS, We, the people of the and scholarship like Bishow B. W. Ar- nett, the foremost Afro-American | Warren and Halifax, North Carolina, churchman and a voluminous and able| have justiearned with gre:t sorrow writer. One must note, too, the liter-|and alarm of the untimely demise of ary work of the Rev. J. W. Hood,/ President McKinley, caused by the whose book, The Negro in the Chris. | murderous hand of anarchism, iam Pulpit, (Raleigh, 1884.) is eur Best} ANU WHEREAS, Weare desirous authority‘in this field. of giving expression to the grief and town of Littleton, and the Counties of “When we eome as a people to care cepting Booker T. Washington or| dist Episcopal Church in America, is | gentlemen on the Committee on Kes-| more for justice than self,” he said , in conclusion, ‘‘more fer general com- fort and well-being than for individual enrichment or distinction, the better order will shape itself as naturally as good fruit grows on good trees.” RECORDER CHEA THAN’S INTERVIEW: From the True Retorm, Littleton, N.C. Although our editorial upon this subject was by mistake left out of our last issue, we deem it nene te late to |say that Col. W. A. Pledger, of the ; Atlanta Age, and editor T. Thomas Fortune, lost their ammunitioa and almost their reputation with the peo- le when they fired at the Hon. H. P. heatham because that gentlemen rightly criticisea the speeches de- livered by them tefore The Afro- American Press Association on the 6th ef last month. Mr. Cheatham was not alene in his | cenclusioa that the advice given to the | Negrees of the Sonth by Editors | Pledger and Fortun Ss unwise and inexpedient; being a safe adviser and trué leader, to whom our people are The board of education last Wed nesday night held its first meetin since the reopening of the public schools of the Di-trict. Many matters ef routine were considered, and action was taken in connection with the opening of the night schools. The board also approved an appiicatien presented by students of the manual | training schools, threugh their direet {or, Mr. Chamberlain, for permission te organize two companies of cadets. it was explained that the various ate schoels represented in the High Sehool Cadets’ organizaation were on tke same basis with the manual train ing sehools, the only difference being in the curriculum. The beysef the training schools have been manifesting muck enthusiasim inthe movemeat for the organization of a military ad junct, and are about to elect officers. Bafore preceeding they desireto re ceive the indorsement of the beard of edueation. It was requested that the two new cadetcempanies be placed oa the same footing as the High School Cadets, enjoying the same privileges and acting under ideatical ruless Director Cnamberlain waited at the Franklin Building Wednesday eve. until action en the application of hi, sad he had been acquainted with}One of the race, I Garland Penn, a | pa od Poeciaeae rie toe his | school teacher of Lynchburg, Va., has constantly looking for advice and students had been Kerbside to him, He ws aiways a grand man. Mr.| published a volume, “The Afro-Ameri guidance, he did no more than he was Thursday ee be ig ee he the pleas W ke of the time whem he had/|!can Press and Its Editors.” expected to doin such acrisis, for|ing news tothe Sap and the election auked Mr. McKinley to attend the| Among historical works of sterling which he has the commendation of of efficers will be held. 1 f the corner stone ef the; worth are ‘The Suppression of the every thoughtful Negro in the South. NIGHT SCHOOLS OPEN MONDAY. Va on Temple. The President| African Slave trade to the United If the Negroes are toremain in the} The only other matter of more than sa esponse: ‘My boy, L cannot | States, by W. E. Burghardt DuBois, i | Mr, \Volf said the chair occupied by Mr. tickinley on the memorable oc- A vill forever be held sacred by bers of the Washington He gation. He referred ir rms to Mr. McKinley as a ristian gentleman inits high- a) nse, and quoting his dying said he believed his name go down in history as the great P {lin all the centuries. His.| 20 characterization here. He is our a he said, remain as an in- » the young of all the Amer | LNESS OF JUDAISM. ast three days, he said, icablegram from the g the Catholic priests against “socialism, idaism.’’ He said g Judaism responsi- me of the last few weeks h. D., professor in Wilberforce Um versity, (Harvard Historical Studies,) | and ‘‘Progress of a Race; or, The Re jmarkable Advancement of the Afro- | | American Negro,” by H. F. Kletzing | and W. H. Crogman, A. M., of Clark | University. For this work, which in- cludes a chapter on the negro in the Spanish-American war, an introducto ry chapter was written by Booker T. | Washington, whose own books need | foremost living negro author. As may be supposed the collection} | is rich in what may be called literary | curios. One of chem, ‘*Behind the} Scenes,”’ by Elizabeth Kecley, ‘‘form erly a slave, but more recently | modiste and friend to Mrs. Abraham | Lincoln,”’ had considerable vogue in its day (1868) because of its singular revelations. Another is ‘‘A Colored |Man’s Reminiscences of President; Madison.’’ The authe-, Paul Jennings, | OSCAR J. RICKETS, Esq., OF ILLINOIS, Private Secretary to Public Prjnter Palmer and the Printers Friend. South, and remain he must, every fair minded man will agree with Mr. Cheatham that we need fewer Win- |chesters, less opposition and more |efforts to cultivate friendly relations | with our white neighbors, fewer fight- | ing Negroes, and more friendly white |neighbors are what we really need |just now. It is not the mark of a | good general to stay 500 miles from jthe field, in a bomb proof position, jand while feeling his own sa ety urge jthe armies forward when he knows | the result would only kea wholesale slaughter. The colored people ef | North Carolina accept and appreciate | Recorder Cheatham’s advice and en- ;dorse his timely criticism of those misguided speeches. They also ap- peciate and endorse the very able and \timely defense of this distinguished | North Carolinian by ‘‘The Bee,” of Washington, D. C., of which W. Cal- vin Chase is editor, he hasever been [as true as steel te the interest of the ordinary importance considered was the night school questien. A com- plete plan was placed before the board and approved. Thenight schools wilt! begin their sessions Monday evening and will be open thereafter through the winter and spring terms every Monday, Wednesday and Friday eve ning, with grades from the first to the eight in each building. There will be three building for white scholars and as many for colored. The buildings have been only tentatively decided upon, probably the Gales, Jefferson and Franklin buildimgs for the white scholars. ‘The board designated the personnel ofthe night schools as fal lows: Director—R. Raymond Riordon. Assistant director—F. J. Cardoza, in charge ofthe colored schools. White schools—Principals, Messrs, Charles Hart Elliott Kramer and Percy Hughes. Teachers—Miss Haz- leton Throckmorton Mr. Harry Dra wa he w = gg at was son ofoneof President Madison’s | Bere State and of that her truest| ger Miss Blanche Pearson Miss Cara irch and the Jewish | slaves, his father being an Englishman. | Those who | EE ORT Ge Baa airy ; | encore. line Robinette Miss Joe Keneally Miss . a : s, seeps ose who who would know the ne| pain feel 2 s ef ~~ - > rh ever taught anarchy. | Pau) became body servaut to Madison, - if \f We su Ren eel ar shee toas/a | Nellie Hayme Miss Kate E. Rawlings :-loving people. They the sanctity ofthe do- serving until the President’s death. In 1865, at the sale of the effects of a| fectations, truest to his native strains, | as well as to the indignation we feel must seek him, in prose, in such ple at the cowardly attack upon him, the gro authorat his best, freest from a the beloved Executive of our Nation, | omer a WISDOM OF CURRENT FICTION. Miss Isa Vanderwerker Miss Margaret O’Brien Miss Bernice Spies Miss Nellie ping cr denominations. The| negio man who had been for years a| and books as The Bri > . i Sar Brandenburg Miss Ida Stutz, Mrs. eake t Hh ae =e | ght Side of Atri} innocent and earthly Saviour of our : g “txt e anvT sh regents oe a messenger of the House of Represen|can Life, by the Hon. William H |Nation. Now, Therefore be it Re-| A woman has need of a sharp Specter ee Laer « ted States. He did not, he spake 1 sia yeere ‘Se autograp | Heard, one time Minister resident and | solved:— E : tongue, since Providence gave her but ele MM. @. Calahan ani Mins Mar va hurch responsible for Ps reaabe le a ee iv z Me eter ae ;}Counsul General to Liberia; Echoes| 1,....Thatin this the Nation’s Dark | ;,aifferent fists—Joscelyn Cheshire. | 20" sae 1 Prete ne, tat he wend aaeede oR ac-simile on the flyeseaf of the) from the Cabin and Elsewhere, by; Hour, and inthe gloom of bitter _be- 0 1d Lit garet ec. duetsial ki 255 S eminiscences reavement which has come to Mrs. As we grow older a € grows more Teachers in industria cooking ilourished mostin tbe re there are the fewest of Jennings. It} reads: | Washington, March 19, 1847. James Edwin Campbell, a simple chronicle reflecting the trne spirit of ante bellum days and full of the phil McKinley, the devoted wife of the President, we extend toher, «nd to and more bitter—and we “more and more able to bear it.—A Woman for schools for white children—Miss Jzeobs and Miss McDaniels. H scale ees ane to. ts I have paid $120 for the freedom of| osepky and humor of his race; Bond| Mr. Abner McKinley, the President’s | Nothing. Teacher of Industrial Weaving—Mr, phere sn cee “pes ee a 4 5 Paul jennings. He agress to work out| and Slave, a tale of slave times by a| brother, other relatives and close| Arguments are like birchings; only Maurice ee ep enstnate OE ax \kak amen pba epay reper the same at $8 a month, to be found | sigye, James H. W. Howard, after] friends our sincere and heartfelt sym-| those know their value who have Colored Schoo en Ce hell ne count ‘Sts can be kept out of| with board, closhes and washing, to) wards one of the leading journalists in | pathy. AD ie hake anwined foc thems kn Fisher G. B. Campbe tecountry, and said that while laws|pegin when we return South. His 2,..-.That we shall ever honor, cher-| (> y : and M. I. Saunders. Teachers—L. B. ssed to stamp out anar- and rchism, he hoped no aws be enacted to keep out the hone rants who come to this with honest purposes. He ed that what was needed in s itry was more religion, and ithatin the future ages re- iberty would be the rally- this country. oe PROGRESS OF NEGRO AUTHORS, { Books by Them on Exhibition Butlalo t.17.—Some 300 books lerican negroes form a gro exhibit at the Pan sition. freedom papers I givehim. They are} recorded in this Distriet. DANIEL WEBSTER. The life ofslavery days has been depicted in many narratives which be tong to the class of fiction founded on fact. Some of these books are a curious combination of feeble inven | tion and of strong pictures drawn trom the writer’s own experiences. There has often been lacking the liter ary discernment which should have led the author to tell what he knew as simply as possible, and not dilute it with trash in a vain effort to achieve a great novel. Two ofthe wortheir works ofthis class ate ‘‘Contending Forces,’’ by Phuline E. Hopkins, and} America, and from Slave Cabin to the Pulpit, the autobiography of the Rev Peter Randolph, (1893.) A book of dis tinction in a different field is Web Down Seuf, by Daniel Webster Davis, a record of tradition and history, in dialect and patois. It may fairly be questioned, however, whether a negro can write negro dialect any better from the fact that he is a negro. White men may be equally familiar with it, aad more skilful in recording it. Whenlit comes to the purely 05 jective study of types, the negro au thor has no advantage over his white brother; when it isa matter of express ing sympathy, insight due to racial qualities the case is different. And this bring us to poetry, the ish, venerate and keep most sacred the memory of this great and good nan, the friend to all the people. 3,----That we acknowledge the loss to the Colored Race in this Country, is wellas tothe Nation in the death of this great friend and Statesman. 4,-...That a copy of these Resolu- tions be sent to Mrs. McKinley, and Mr. Abner McKinley, and Senator Hanna, their close friend. “What makes you both so glum?” “Why, I've sworn off from smoking, and My wife from chewing gum.” —Chicago Tribune. “A Charleston Love Story,” by T. G. Stewart. im These are both comparitively recent | publications and illustrates two things: The collection | First, that books of negro authorship est work of the race in| are sometimes put on the market with- », and is unique. | out that fact being indicated, which | f these book furnisk 3| suggests the querry: W ould a book ery great. There has h mulatto. sell better or worse if the “general books printed by negroes since 1590 er, Shakespeare, | bear the imprint of well-known pub- rican counterpart | lishers; whereas in earlier years their But a/| books for the most part were wretched- s work has better|ly printed by ill-equipped printers in the world has reason to| towns not knowa as publishing cen- t remembers the condi- tres. Books taken at random from field of American letters, in which the negro has made his most distinct ivemark. There were negro poets be fore Paul Laurence Dunbar, though there is none who can rank with him, even as there has been no eatlier sto ry teller whose gifts rival those of Charles W. Chestnutt. There is how Circumstances Alter Cases, Freddie—Say, dad, would you call it a sensational story if the hero killed 20 men? Cobwigger—That depends, my boy, on whether it is a historical romance $$$ ee , e, 1895.) written some of them in the] noor hour in the swamps of Mississ / ippi, have not only a high lyric quality, | but present a true poetic interpreta | tion of nature and of life. oS ore : The range of negro authorship is | “Anarchy—Its Cause and Cure, vast: from The Black Codes of Georg | was the theme of the sermon preach- Rev. Dr. Kent Regards Corrupt ¢ S$ as the Worst. Royal Exchange. The history of many a woman's -tragedy could be summed up by the man’s cry of weakness. “I need you. Stand by me!” — Another Woman's Territory. Poetry—and most of all amateur poetry—stands for pain. Every line of it spells woe. Either the writer, or those living with the writer, could tell a tale.—Robert Orange. It is sometimes instructive to look back and see how Destiny gave us a “Why so depressed?” the caller asued.| kick here, and Fate a shove there, that sent us in the right direction at the proper time.—The Crisis. Men who like field sports are, as a rule, earnest, healthy, vivacious fel- lows, fond of good cheer, with a de- | cided leaning towards making the best of everything.—At Love’s Extremes. All this outward show of holiness failed to convince. It was like the smell of musk, which hints of less de- | I suppose it is the erowning futility | of sentimentalism to try to remem- | ber all the sunrises and sunsets of one’s heydays. It only adds to one’s late pathos in life to open his old al- bum and smile wearily at the souvenirs that have grown meaningless. — A Syphax G. F. Smith E, L. Kumer M, J. Brown L. R. Smith H. S Holmes K. R. Parker J. S. Ball H. E. Hamer L. B: Brown H. E. Anderson L. E. Scott L. E. Hewlett M. A. Stewart A. E. Hewlett O. V.Contee J. T. Fox L. Page D.B. Thompson and G. C. Pol lard. Teachers of colored cooking schools; Miss Alice C. Pinyou Miss Julia Shaw Miss Laura Parker and Miss Lena W. Johnson. PROMOTION OF TEACHERS. The board made the following pro motions: Fourth division—Miss Sarah Mouzon third grade teacher, to be fourth grade teacher; Mrs. E.J. Maloney, second grade teacher, to be a third grade teacher. Buy! . Eight division—Miss =mma L. Wil liams, second grade teacher at the Cranch School, to be a second and third gradeteacher at the Benning School; Miss E. C. Espey, first grade teacher, to bea third grade teacl +r; N h to rate the civili- ever, at least one o.her negro poet] or a dime novel.—Town Topics. 6 z lui i. V. Bolter, first grade teacher, : | public”? knew it was by a negro? Sec-| whose work should be known to stud oe sirable Aug at + es urernower’ Bee: Ms and third grade teach eentirely frank ic | ond, negro authorship has greatly in-|ents on the subject George Marion THE SCHOOLS OF ANARCHISTS. eather: Shan cleaned star: leas er; Miss A. E. Douglass, second grade h of itis rubbish.|creased in the last decade; many) McClellan, whose Poems, (Nashville pher. teacher, to be a second and third grade teacher; Miss M. K. Espey, fourth grade teacher, to be a fifth grade teacher. : Miss Nena Reed was appointed a teacher an< assigned to the eight division. ‘ Miss Georgie Anderson Baldwin was | | Its chief value, the | theseshelves were published at Xenia, | ja (Du Bois) aud learned treatises on ed des Se ple = Serpe in Typo- | Lu appointed assistant rincipal. ‘b makes it worthy of at-| Ohio; Dayton, Ohio, Nashville, Tenn, | theology, to Diseases of the Feet, T he; graphica emple S unday morning by | Journey to Nature. Misses Bessie E. Miller, Lottie B. e is no concern with the| San Francisco, Louisville, Cleveland,| Waiter’s Manuel, and Why a Negro | Rev. Alexander Kent. He described | Ray, Evelyn E. Knight, Mrs. F. F. arace rary form, but lies in the | Buffalo, York, Pa.; Wheeling, and Should be a Democrat! It is stated | the various schools of avowed anar- | ae eae 5 a Fitzgerald, Clarence is and Wal- . re is the world’s best rec-| Harrisburg. Theseimprints transiat- | that there are about 2,000 works Ly chists, all of which aimed at the over: | eos nae esos: ree lien fiurt were. appointed substitute evolution of the negro re-|ed mean that the authors were too| American negroes. The present col| throw of state and government, the | ey pec | reachers. ¢ the negro himself. | poor to gei their work into the hands | jection far from complete, belongs to | communistic employing both argu- | sree does not always make the mare wnt ems and letters of Phillis|ef the leading publishers, too un) the library of Congress. ment and qe To meet it, both | go.—Puck. = —— e y many years first in the| known to tempt the ‘‘sure thing’’ pub} mespons should pe nsed: he Secere, } : : ase] ee “ i ; erent ae ause men w unsel v in-| DP Agha aneM 2 s an authorship in America, | lishers to assume any risk with their) HONORING OUR LATE PRESIDE? ee Liste pba sibs Pebeeacereaalaparl PAE EAE EI 008 ee | bathe = : ‘gto this particular cate- | dubious wares. : =: al rovernment cannot be left in freedom Ted—Was the game close? { In Chisa. s 2 einian and * iAtricea Ministers” a fan Coctioatien of oe Ais | He favored a combination of the gov- | Ned—Close? I should say so, The| In China liquids are sold by weight — pa v the Rev. Daniel Croker, | race in the civil war. What has been| A Mass Meeting of panic and grief ernments of the world in providing | crowd was just pouncing on the um | and grain by measure. John buye . ed in Baltimore in 1810, be-| until within a few years the best re/ stricken Colored Citizens of Littleton, ; some isiand where such people would | pire when the police reserves are| soup by the pound and cloth by the 3 is ¢ the first phamplet written | cord of the work of the underground | and the adjoining Counties of Warren | be at ede sok out their own | gived.—Judge. ae _ | foot. A Chinaman never puts hia a shed by a negro in thiscoun-| railroad was Still's well knows Vol | and Halifax was held at the residence | ideas of gocia sgt iy Ee name outside of his shop, but painta f 4 se are sporadic instances.|ume, the author himself a maees | of oes - P. or cree as ae Oe geen e es bases gst Di | SDUCED RATES TOFREDERICE instead a motto, or a list of his goods, t was not » se Rat ls i son| N.C. to-dey to adopt suitable reso s g EDU Ps 7 . ” t until after the civil, war, |slave. Another negro, john Tatct#te ‘ th was that which sets fundamental prin-| = on his vertical sign board. Some re- z a Sess Spt ofessional edu | President William McKinley. Rev nledged to protect the common inter-| leave Frederick at 5:00p. m. Rate for tomer to take his own measure ere is “y HoH Tag ei | Pi diet a acquit them | Virgil N. Bond, of the Episcopal | -sts, and make the members of that’ the day only, on these trains, includ- pe scales with him—Albsny Argus. Race in America,” 1619-1880, in two selves much as their white brethren’ Church and Schoo! at this place was “force plunder and rob the whole city,’ ing admission $1.65. Sf apse scr imams i negro was free and had Old a pen, that his liter- put began to have a concrete the student of American his- are w field some of these books | as Green, who describes himself as ‘‘a| lutions concerning the great loss to carpetbagger. who was oorn and our people, and the Country in the lived there,” is the historian of “The| sadand untimely death of the Chris- Inhabitants, Localities, Superstitions, tian gentleman, the devoted and ten- and Ku Klux Outrages of the Carolin der-hearted husband, ani the greatest a earthly leader known among men, ciples of government at defiance and | AND RETURN. uses its machinery for personal ad-| Account Agricultural Fair, Oct. 8 to vantage. When leading officials of|11, special train from Washington at New York city deliberately corrupt 8:00 a.m. gthand roth. Stopping at he whole police ‘orce, which is|interimediate stations. Returning assuring remark is frequently added, such as “One word hall,” “A chud two feet high would not be cheated.” Every single article has to be bar- gained for, and it is usual for the i

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