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PROGRAM WOMAN'S BAPTIST MISSIONARY AND EDUCATIONAL CONVENTION OF SOUTH CAROLINA. Twenty-sixth Annual Session to he Held with Friendship Baptist Church, Dr. G. W. Ra i ford. Pastor, Aiken, South Carolina, June 25, 20. 27, 28, 1914. Officers. Mrs. Cora S. Boy kin, President, Camden. Mrs. Maggie M. Gilmore, vice-President, Rock Hill. Mrs. Minnie Sumter Eve, Reeording Secretary, Barnwell. Miss Daisy I). Washington, Corresponding Secretary, Camden. Mrs. A. P. Dunbar. Treasurer. Columbia. FIRST DAV-THURSDAY. Morning. 10:00-Executive Board Meeting. 11:00-Devotional Services: Mrs. Arina Raiford, Aiken; Mrs. Shel donin Milhouse, North. H :30-Introductory Sermon: Rev. D. F. Thompson, B. D., Green wood. 12 :00-Collection, Announcements. Benediction. Afternoon. 3 :30-Song Service. 3:48-Welcome Address on Behalf of Home Mission Society: Mrs Agnes Green, Aiken. 4:00-Address of Welcome on Behalf of the Church: Dr. G. W Raiford, Aiken. 4:15-Address of Welcome on Behalf of Denominations-Mrs. A. B. McGhec, Aiken. 4:30-Address of Welcome on Behalf of the Citizens: Mrs. A. W. L. Jones, Aiken. 4 :4a-Response: Mrs. Bell Gandy, Anderson. 5:00-Enrollment. Reports of Corresponding Secretary. Treas urer. Election of Officers. Installation. Appointment of Commit tees. Ad journment. Evening. 8:00-Devotional Service: Mrs. Othello Simpson. Laurens; Airs. Sarah Clinkscales, Level Land. 5 :30-President's Address. 0:00-Music. 0:15-Reports of District vice-Presidents. Collection. Announce ments. Benediction. SECOND DAY-FRIDAY. Morning. 11:00-Devotional Service: Mrs. Rosa Lorrick, Cayce; Mrs. Emma Rush, Allendale. 11:30-Address, "Womans Service in the Church": Mrs. Mamie Douglass, Newberry. 11:45-Address. "The Woman's Missionary Society in Relation to the Missionary Development of the Church": Mrs. Bessie Pickett, Camden. . 12:00-Address, "The Value of Missionary Literature in the Mis sionary Development of tiie Church": Miss Julia Watson, Columbia. 12:i5-Address, "How Best Interest the Christian World in Mis sions": Mrs. Carrie Gardner, Allendale. 12:30--A Missionary Review: "What Are the Missionary Societies Doing?": Mrs. Roxie Lagroom. Greenwood. 1:00-Miscellaneous Business. Adjournment. Afternoon. 3:30-Devotional Service: Mrs. Carrie Hammond, Aiken; Airs. Minnie Roberts, Sumter. 3:45-Address. "The Development of the Young Women's Auxiliary as a Missionary Force": Miss Mamie L. Torrence, Green ville. 4:00-"The Development of the Sunday School as a Missionary Force" : Miss L. H. McFall, Charleston. 4:15-Discussion, "Our Own Children as Future Actors in the World's Evangelization" (a) The Indifferent Parents; (b) The Lack of Leaders: Mrs. G. A. Murray, Charleston. 5:00-Miscellaneous Business. Adjournment. Evening. 8:00-Song Service by Local Talent. 8:15-Address. "The" Need of Christian Education": Mrs. L. M. Call a ham, Darlington. 8:30-Address, "The Influence of the Christian School in Char acter Building" - Miss Elvetta N. Landy, Leesville. 8:45-Address, "The Home, the Church, the School as the Bulwark of Civilization": Mrs. Jennie Nix Robinson, Barnwell. 0:00-Morris College : Rev. J. J. Starks, Sumter. 0:30-Miscellaneous Business. Adjournment. THIRD DAY-SATURDAY. Morning. 10:00-Devotional Service: Mrs. Rebecca Williams, Allendale; Mrs. Janie Leake, Cross Hill. 10:15-Conference, "How Best to Train the Children to Avoid the Social Evils Which Break Down Health and Character": Led hy Mrs. Tena A. Watson, Ridge Spring. 11:00-Lecture: Dr. C. C. Johnson, Aiken. 11:30-The State B. Y. P. U. and S. S. Convention: Rev. William Howard. Darlington. 12:00-Benedict College: Prof. R. F. Lee, Columbia. 12:15-Address. "The Home Church and Foreign Missions": Mrs L. R. Kinard, Charleston. 12:45-Miscellaneous Business. Adjournment. FOURTH DAY-SUNDAY. Morning. 10:00-Sunday School Concert: Rev. E. R. Roberts, Florence. 11:30-Educational Sermon: Rev. N. C. Nix, Orangeburg. 12:00-Collection. Announcements. Benediction. ' Afternoon. 4:00-Devotional Services: Mrs. Mary Artemus, Monetta; Mrs Julia Hartley, Monetta. 4 :30-Temperance Sermon : Rev. E. R. Roberts, Florence. 5:00-Business. Benediction. Evening. 8:00-Memorial Services: Mrs. Emma Walker, Greenville. 8:30-Missionary Sermon: Rev. A. P. Dunbar, Columbia. 0:00-Collection. Resolutions. Benediction. -ocal News Subscribe for The Indicator. . Mrs. Mamie Bratton was very ick Tuesday at her home, . 623 iarion Street. * Mrs. C. W. Goodwin, of 2114 ( jady St., is able to be out after , our weeks of severe illness. . . j Our Job Printing department i s one of the best in the state, i jive us a chance at your printing. Misses Mary Allen and Mala iiser left yesterday for Jackson ville, Florida, to spend a week vith relatives and friends. Mrs, Eliza Starks and grand laughter, Miss Jessie, are in the ?ity spending a week with Mr. D. R. Starks, their son and father, respectively. We are glad to report that Prof. H. J. Wallace who has been seriously ill for the past three weeks, is , now happily on the road to recovery. Mrs. Minnie Miller went to Col umbus, Ga., last Tuesday in com pany with Mrs. Emma Anderson to attend the funeral of her eis ter-in-law, Mrs. Alice Adams. Dr C. M. Young, president of Harbison College, passed through the city Monday enroute to Char lotte, N. C., to attend the com mencement at Biddle University. LOST Wednesday night at Bethel church after the exercise a monogram pennant of Howard. Finder will please return to Miss Alberta C. Altee, 917 Washing ton Street. Read our new advertisements appearing in these columns this week and then go and trade with them and tell the proprietors you read their advertisements in the Southern Indicator. Mrs. Sallie Johnson, of Mil ledgevillp, Ga,, spent several days in t!he city last week visit ing her'mother, Mrs. Lottie C?r ter, and her sisters, Mesdames Annie Fleming and Phyllis Hol man. \ The write-up of the beautiful wedding of Shelton-Owen which took place Wednesday, the clos ing exercises at Howard and a fulller account of the commence ment at Allen, will appear in this paper next week. Mr. John Mitchell editor of the Richmond Planet was a disting uished visitor in Columbia Tues day and Wednesday, He address ed the Alumni Society. During his stay he was royally enter tained at the palatial residence of Dr. and Mrs. Goodwin. Rev. N. F. Hagood, the nev pastor of Sidney Park church, will deliver an address to the mer at the Air Come Theatre Sunda} (to-morrow) afternoon at 4:3( o'olock. The music will be fur nished by the Juvenile Glee Club the Y. M. C. A. Quartet and oth er mu3ical talents. - Editor C. C. Scott of this papei delivered the annual address t< the graduating class of the Hog? Graded School at Newberry Tues day night. He is now, Friday, ii Greenville circulating among th? brethren of the Baptist State Con vention and looking after the in terest of The Southern Indicator President Starks of Morris Col lege, with his wife and two chil dren, Prof. W. D. Prince and Mr R. W. Westberry, passed througl Columbia Monday on their wa: . to Greenville in his automobile They spent Monday night ii Greenwood and reached Green ville Tuesday morning in time t be present at the meeting of tn executive board. Mrs. Julia E. Breeland, thi versatile hair culturist of Or angeburg, spent a couple o days in Columbia this week at . tending the commencement a Allen Univ. During her stay sh' called at The Indicator's office an< we enjoyed a pleasant chat witl her. Mrs. Breeland reports tha Orangeburg is substantially oi the map and that her business i experiencing a continual boom. School Cloting Concert. Ther3 will be given at Jones Chapel A. M. E. Zion church on blossom Street, A School Closing Concert, Monday night June 15th it 8:30 o'clock. The manager is caving no stone unturned to ren-1 1er a high class entertainment] which is bound to delight and in spire all who attend. The music is in charge of Mrs. 'Stella McQuar ters, Misses Pearl Archey and Florence Benson. Delicious re-! freshments will be on hand for sale. Admission, adults 10 cents; children under 12 years old cents. Mrs. I. E. Hall, Manager. State Federation of Women's Clubs tc Meet. The State Federation of Wo men's Clubs will meet in annual session at Sumter, June 17th to! 19th. A splendid program of j work and pleasure has been ar ranged, and delegates from al portions of the State will be on hand. The public interest in these meetings is solicited, as it | is hoped that much good will re sult therefrom. The Federation will be entertained by the One More Effort Club, of which Mrs. Anna Andrews is president. Del egates should make an effort to be present at the firs;t meeting, which will be held the afternoon of the 17th. Sunday Services at St. Luke. At St. Luke Episcopal church, 914 Hampton Street, Morning Prayer and Sermon with celebra tion of the Holy Communion, Sunday June 7th, at 11:15 o'clock a. m. The Rev. A. V. C. Cartier, of Phiadelphia, officiciating. Ev ening prayer and sermon at 8 o'clock. ALLEN UNIVERSITY MAY CHANGE SITE School May Be Moved to Lands Recently Acquired No|rth of Columbia. (Written for The State.) The annual commencement of Allen university was concluOtiVl iiihi night with the annual election of the teach ers. The comnv-Micenieiil exercises heve been in progress for si vera 1 days. The graduating exercises of the college were held yesterday in Coppin hall. Great crowds of negroes from different sections of the State at tended. The most prominent speaker at the commencement was John Mitchel, Jr., editor of the Richmond Plannet and president of the Mechanics and Sav ings bank of Riehmond. Mitchel de livered the address lo the alumni as sociation. Ile is a speaker of repu tation and the only negro member of the National Hankers" association. For two years the administration of the college has been In the hands of the Rev. W. W. Beckett, a nativt of Charleston. President Beckett'* administration has boen very fruitful and the general opinion in thi State of the college ia good. Dr Beckett was a candidate for bishoj in the A. M. E. church at the lasl general conference, which met In Kan sas City. He held the office of sec retary o? missions and has traveled extensively throughout the Unite? States in the interest of his people He was unanimously reelected presi dent of the college. The trustee hoare at its first session received from th? reports of thc presiding elders an?: other members of the board $10,300 which was raised In a special sprint rally for the college. Allen university has no endowmenl fund. It has a unique schemt of raising funds to maintain the col lege through the membership of th? A. M. E. church in this State. From the report of the secretary of th? board of trustees ?iver $25,000 wert the annual receipts for the scholastic year. The trustees have purchased HA acres of land near the city for thi establishment of an annex to th? college plant in which many phase.1 of industrial education and agricul ture in Its broadest sense may bi given "the students. lt is rumore? that the boar?! may sell the present property of the college in Wnverlej and move the entire plant of th? school to the new site. Whether this will be finally agreed upon by th? leaders is yet speculative. The degree of doctor of divinity was conferred upon the Rev. G. K Spearman of Camden, N. J., yester day by the faculty and trustees Forty-two students were gradua te? with the JJ. I. degree, one with B. D. and one with A. B. The faculty for the ensuing year h as follows: The Rev. W. W. Beckett D. D., president; C. G. Garrett, vic? president; Praaeiia campbell, proies sor of German, L<atln and Spanish O. A. Combs, professor of Greek Richart} E. Brogdon, professor o mathematics; A. B. Johnson, RI. D. professor of science; O. JJ. Lavallie professor of English; I.,. E. lambert normal teacher; graded school depart ment, A. V. T. McDaniel, Josiphim Simmons, Abbie Johnson. C. E. WU son; domestic art, E. L. Sightler; do mestlc science, E. Purvis. The business of the college ls man aged by the president and the ex ecutlve committee of trustees in thi absence of the regular board. Bishoj W. D. Chappelle is vice president o the executive committee, Green Jack son of Columbia is secretary and thi Rev. D. H. Johnson of Abbeville ii treasurer. Bishop L.. J. Coppin ii president of the board and also pre siding bishop of North and Soutl , Carolina. edi! Departme 225 Men To Vote on the subject of Wor For the next ten days our customers the foll Made-to-measure Su: $45.00, and Trousei 15 per centdis< We are also selling Trade Boc By purchasing them from ui your favorite a good chance t< N. H. S? |^125 Washington St. BENEDICT LABORATORIES. The chemical laboratory has 96 individual lockers. Each stu dent has his key and is held re sponsible for the contents of the ocker. There is good space for four persons, and plans made for ten. Eighteen persons work in the laboratory at one time, each having his own Bunsen burner on his desk and the water with in his reach just over the lead trough that carries the waste liquids. All dilute and common liquid are on the individual shelf, while those of a more important nature are upon a common shelf in an alphabetical order thus saving the student much time in performing his experiments. When he strikes an experiment that calls for apparatus not in his locker, he fills out a borrowed list and gets the same from the instructor for the said experi ment, returning it in good condi tion when through with it. So, the plan is for the student to do experiments that are given and the material is always on hand if it can be had. The biological laboratory is in good working condition and work is now going on in it. There are ten compound micro scopes and six dissecting micro scopes for the use of the college student. There are slides pro vided for the students when fresh material cannot be had. Regular laboratory tables are now being placed, and plans made for charts and maps for al] classes in botany and zoology. The Physical laboratory is nearing completion. Already the gas burners for individual work have been placed and the tables are being constructed. The laboratory is equipped with apparatus to perform any of the experiments called for by the text. The students have done great work in this department this year, especially with thc pulleys heat, light, electricity. Phone 1488 Ferguson Oldest and Undertakers & L in the city, All kinds of to select from. Good Ser\ OPEN AL in's nt Store Wanted all important nan Suffrage. we are offering to owing inducements : its from $13.50 to s from $5 to $12.00 :ounton them )ks on the DeLuxe Grafonola. Il 3, or contestants, will give II 3 win. II 5LLINSV J sound, and water. Greater things are planned for next year. One trouble is to hold the stu dent down until he is in line for the laboratory work, so anxious is he for the course. If the de partments are supplemented each year as they have been for the past three years, Benedict will soon have what she says she wants, that, that will fit the boy or girl with just the kind of sci ence he wants and needs and will feel proud that she can in troduce the several students to nature as she without such equip ment would be unable to do so. Announcement of Marriage. Miss Lottie T. Sightler an nounces the marriag? of her sis ter, Laura Belle, to- Mr. Wilbert Lancing, at Springfield, Massa-. chusetts, May 18th, ultimo. Mr. and Mrs. Lansing are now at ?home with his parents, Dover, New Jersey. Schedule. SEABOARD AIR MNE. Schedules effective April 27. 191?. Arrive. Depart. 12:15a m North and East 6:00am 12:05pm North ami East 6:35pm 11:50am Hamlet Local 7:45am 8:10pm Hamlet Ix>eal 4:00pm 5:46am Savannah and Florida 12:20am f,:30pm Savannah and Florida 12:10pm 11:60am Savannah Local 7:00am 10:00pm Savannah Local 5:00pm TICKET OFFICE 1225 MAIN ST. Phone 574. C. E. Boisseau, City Ticket Agent, Columbia, S. C., J. S. Etchberger, Traveling Passenger Agent, Columbia, S. C.. O. W. Small, Division Passenger Agent. OFEICE 2129 Gervais St. Office Phone 2412 OFFICE HOURS: 9-10 a. m. 12-1 p -n. 3-4 p. m. DR.".. A. EVER-IT PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Diseases of Women and Children a Specialty. All Calls Promptly Answered. R ?aid enc?: 2228 Washington St., COLUMBIA, S.C 1015 1-2 Lady St. & Morris Most Reliable icensed Enbalmers Robes, Caskets, and Coffins dee to be had on all occasions. _L NIGHT