The Monitor
Thursday, February 26, 1920
Omaha, Nebraska
Page text (machine-generated)
General Wood Spends Strenuous Sunday
Leading Candidate for Publican Nomination for the Presidency Omaha Visitor for twenty-four Hours—Kept Busy, But Cheerful and Affable—ands Services and Memorial Exercises and Makes Three Ads.
GRANTS MONITOR EDITOR PLEASANT INTERVIEW
Is Gratified to Learn That His Outspoken Stand for Law and Order and His Reputation for a Square Deal for All Citizens Has Made Him the First Choice of the Colored Voters of Nebraska.
$2.00 a Year. 5c a Copy
Genera
Leading Candidate for public Omaha Visitor for Cheerful and Affable—cises and Makes Three Ad
GRANTS MONITOR EDITOR
Is Gratified to Learn That His Order and His Reputation f Has Made Him the First Nebraska.
GENERAL Leonard Wood, whom The Monitor confidently believes will be the next president of the United States, spent a strenuous Sunday in Omaha. Arriving at 9 a.m., accompanied by Mrs. Wood, his son, Lieutenant O. C. Wood; Colonel C. B. Baker of his staff, E. B. Clarke, publicity manager; Andrew Moss, messenger, who, by the way, has been in the war department for fifteen years, and is a cousin of M. F. Singleton of our city; and two stenographers, the party drove immediately to the Fontenelle hotel. General Wood and party attended All Saints' Episcopal church at 11 o'clock, where at the close of the service he delivered a five-minute address stating that in these times it behooves Americans to follow the example of Washington, to be obedient to the laws of the country and to promote by practice and precept wholesome family life.
In the afternoon General Wood delivered a splendid address at Central High school in connection with the pageant and ceremonies of the presentation of certificates from the French government to the nearest of kin to those who had paid the supreme sacrifice overseas. Speaking on this occasion, General Wood reminded those present that:
"It is singularly fitting that Washington's birthday should be the day selected to receive the hands of the French this testimonial," he said, "for she came to our aid during the darkest days of the revolution. Even in her hour of trial she is stretching out her hand to us in gratitude.
"We must not let anything come between us and the allies. Let us remember those many dead—so many that if they were marshalled in columns of squads they would reach from the Atlantic to the Pacific—who have died in the great cause for which we have fought with the allies and let them be a bond between us."
"Some time again," he continued, "it will be necessary for each nation to make the supreme sacrifice and to break peace to fight for the right. We must be prepared. We hate militarism, but we hate almost as much the helplessness that comes of being unprepared."
Must Preserve Spirit.
General Wood closed his speech by saying, "The dead have given the highest testimonial that can be given—their lives. The soldiers we sent typified the principles of Christ in their spirit of self sacrifice. Let us keep alive that spirit." At the close of the exercises at the high school, which preceded by a dinner at the residence of Mr. John W. Towle, president of the Wood league, General Wood attended a reception, which kept him busy until nearly 6:30, and in the evening at 8 he delivered an address on "Character" at the First Presbyterian church.
Crowded with engagements as the day was it was exceedingly gratifying to Rev. John Albert Williams, editor of The Monitor, which was the first weekly to suggest General Wood's name as a candidate for the presidency, to be invited to meet him, and to renew the acquaintance made when the general was here in connection with the September riot. The hour fixed was 6:30. The Monitor editor and Mr. Singleton were on time. We were warmly and cordially received by Colonel Baker, who recalled our meeting in September. He is a splendid type of man, enthusiastic over General Wood's presidential prospects.
General Wood soon arrived and greeted us most heartily. He was pleased to learn that his uncompromising stand for law and order and his reputation for believing in a square deal for all men and had alligned the colored citizenry of this state practically solidly behind him.
Reference was made to his recent speech before the Lincoln Republican League in Chicago, a report of which was published in last week's issue of
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THE MONITOR
The Monitor. He said the reception given him there was most gratifying, and that when he stated what he sincerely believes, that the colored citizens stand for law and order and simply demand protection as American citizens and their constitutional rights, for which he unequivocally stands, the applause was marked and continuous. He was told that the American people want a president who will be the president of all the people, and that because we believe him to be that kind of a man, he could rest content that the colored citizens of this state would vote for him at the April primaries.
In his address at the First Presbyterian church, General Wood said in part:
"America has a great mission in the world, a mission which she is out going to perform unless we keep up an intense spirit of Americanism," said General Wood in an address made last night at the First Presbyterian church.
"When I say intense American spirit, I had better say intense American conscience."
"I hope we shall be able to get rid of the league of nations with the reservations which will thoroughly Americanize it, and which will permit us to call together the people of this country and discuss whether or not we want to go into war. As soon as we have settled this, we will be able to turn our attention to the return of the railroads to where they belong, and to take up and settle the other great problems before us.
Must Watch Immigrants.
"We should keep one door open for the expulsion of the unfit, the reds, the agitators. It is not good to close our doors to the reds and permit other undesirables to enter. We should scrutinize carefully all immigrants, but once within the country it is our duty to educate them, Americanize them, give them something of the American character. We must be a little bit more careful in seeing who comes here and what they get here. The influx of unquestioned immigrants is a very grave question.
"We build character more than anywhere else in the universities and public schools of the country. We are paying altogether too little attention to our teaching force, the greatest character-forming machine in the country. School teachers are receiving $4.50 a day and plumbers $10 a day. We should give this subject immediate, thorough and careful attention, and pay serious attention to our teaching force in order that our children may have the right kind of character.
"One other element in building up national character, national solidarity, is the relations of labor and capital. There must not be the subjugating of any class. Capital must not be permitted to dominate labor nor labor to dominate capital. The human element must enter more into the relations between them.
"All of these things are causing unrest all over the country. We must stand rigidly for the things that Washington and Lincoln stood for. We must keep our feet on the ground, our eyes on God and our ideal high, and stand solidly for law and order. We people of the class here tonight have got to interest ourselves in the problems of the other half of the world."
HAS HYDROPHOBIA; VICTIM
IS SHOT BY POLICEMEN
Montgomery, Ala., Feb. 25.—Jesse Tolliver, a negro, who was bitten two years ago by a pet dog, developed hydrophobia Saturday and was shot and killed by officers who were called to subdue him after he had attacked nurses at a hospital where he was being treated.
CHOSEN AS DELEGATE.
Shreveport, Ala., Feb. 25.—Charles M. Roberson, lawyer of Shreveport, has been chosen uninstructed delegate to the national republican convention to be held in Chicago June 8.
OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FEBRUARY 26, 1920
THE COLOR PROBLEM IN THE UNITED STATES AS SEEN THROUGH THE EYES OF AN OBSERVANT FRENCHMAN
A Thoughtful and Suggestive Article Recently Published in Prominent French Journal Denies Racial Inferiority of Blacks and Expresses Belief That American Good Sense and Loyal Heartedness Will Give Opportunity to Both Races to Live Amicably Together.
THE International interest that is being taken in what is known as "America's Race Problems," in indicated by the number of articles being published in foreign newspapers and magazines. It is always interesting to learn what others are thinking of us. The following article which has been translated from the French especially for The Monitor will invite more than passing attention:
"THE FATE OF THE BLACKS"
(By Monsieur Alfred W. Gaspart in The Freeman.)
Translated from the French Journal "Home for The Monitor by Raymond Jean Knox and Rudolph L. Desdunes.
one should give the word its full psychological value. Livingstone, himself, did he not declare that wherever he saw the Negro in the state of nature, he knew him to be good, candid, easy, generous, enthusiastic and sensible to gratitude?
As to that which regards the intelli-
The American government finds itself face to face with a grave problem. What measures will it take to allay the conflicts which occur daily between the inhabitants of the white race and the black race in the various states? The latest cablegrams inform us that, at Washington, the Negroes, responding to the attacks of armed bands of workingmen of the shops, have ransacked the stores and spread terror throughout the city.
One should not deceive himself as to the fact that the blacks represent considerable strength. By the favor of circumstances, they have grown to be an element of very great importance in the American community. The labor crises of late years have induced the heads of establishments to trust the blacks with occupations which hitherto had been reserved to the whites. After all, of what importance to the corporations is the color of the workman or the laborer if he can do the same work as the white man for the same amount of pay?
Up to the present day, the error has been to consider, in the United States as well as abroad, even in France, that the Negroes are naturally of an inferior race. Each day, however, brings new evidences which tend to demonstrate the opposite of this theory. One must not forget that long before the modern era the black race has given to the world proof of its own greatness among the other races. It would take rank ignorance or innate prejudice on the part of the best portion of the anthropologists to allow proofs so evident to have been ignored.
Let the subject be the powerful states of the Pharoachic age of ancient Egypt or let the subject be the grand black empires of the Soudan, it is an incontestable fact that some Negro civilizations have existed and lately have been buried under the sands of the desert.
I visited some few weeks ago, the Negroes' Art exposition, organized by M. Paul Gulliaume. The most part of the statuettes in clay or in wood, placed in glass cases, presented a remarkable artistic value, evidenced a certain culture and an incontestable degree of civilization and which the major portion of the visitors hardly expected to find among Negroes. The activity and the traditions of which maintained themselves through centuries only to die almost within our days.
Joined to a number of others; it is there a proof of the unity of Negro civilization and the very high level to which it is required to climb. From the artistic viewpoint, as from other angles, it is not rash to compare it with what have been at their cradle, the grand civilizations of antiquity. If the disappearance of the grand Negro societies is undeniable, it is then an acquired fact and not an original condition, a phenomenon historically explicable "and not a fatality due to an essential inferiority of the race."
A lieutenant of the colonial infantry, Monsieur Roeckel, has consigned in a very suggestive book, the fruit of daily observations. It is not a thesis born of preconception, but a connected mass of authenticated facts recorded from time to time from which M. Roeckel was in position to ward off all comments without their picturesque and significant force being attenuated. Lleut. Roeckel at once affirms that, if he is but little "sensitive," according to the physiological sense of the word, the black is very much so, if
one should give the word its full psychological value. Livingstone, himself, did he not declare that wherever he saw the Negro in the state of nature, he knew him to be good, candid, easy, generous, enthusiastic and sensible to gratitude?
As to that which regards the intelligence, M. Roeckel's affirmations are considered almost audacious, so shocking are they to our prejudices; but one will willingly to the conclusion of this impartial observer; "Abstraction made," says he, "of all that affects culture, one may say that the black is, for the needs of his kind of life, as well endowed intellectually as the white, if not better. All the difference existing between the brain of the African and ours is that one is educated and the other is uncultured. Only usage of scientific observation has caused us to lose the sense of natural observation."
In that which concerns me, I have to declare, that, as well in South America as during my journey in Senegal, the black gives proof of a brilliance of mind and of a faculty of reasoning which could be envied by many Europeans. I have had, as foreman of the employee's force in the pressroom of the Tribune in Buenos Ayres, a Negro gifted with a faculty of comprehension and of a fine wit, qualities which made of him a precious collaborator.
To conclude, let us say that the Negro race, considered in the natural state, personifies the youngest branch of the grand family of nations; the qualities of the race predispose it to receive, of the strongest and most advanced races, the direction of which it actually stands in need. Hence, it is those dispositions which the conquering nations are inclined to depreciate and hold in contempt, because they esteem themselves superior to those whose difference in color is not a sign of weakness.
We possess an immense African territory, therefore let us draw from that fact the proper inspiration regarding the notion of the equality of the white and black races and the work of African civilization will be more than a hope.
It is necessary that economic laws which are intended to rule workmanship should be wise and liberal enough to permit the blacks and whites to live in peace by the fruits of their labor.
The Americans, who are people said to have a loyal heart, will obey, we doubt it not, these principles to reestablish order at home.
Their good sense will tell them that the union which has made their strength on the battlefields, must not be destroyed by stupid prejudice.
VATICAN CATEGORICALLY
DENIES PERMISSION TO
DIVORCEES TO REWED
Rome, Feb. 25.—Authorities at the Vatican, after inquiry, state they are unable to find any communications or exchanges have taken place to warrant publication by a journal of Vienna that marriage of divorcees was about to be inaugurated in Austrian Catholic churches, says an announcement authorized by the pope. No such authorization has been given, it is stated, nor is there any trace of suggestions warranting such a statement, which is said to be canonically impossible.
GENERAL WOOD FILES FOR
NOMINATION IN GEORGIA
Columbus, Ga., Feb. 25.—Major General Leonard Wood filed his declaration of candidacy for the republican presidential nomination with the secretary of state here Sunday. He also filed a statement authorizing candidates for delegates to pledge themselves to his support at the republican national convention.
M. H. B.
Santiago de Cuba 10 July 1898.
Reinvented in trio of 13.10.1898.
John J Pershing.
Quantum note 10 U.S. cod.
Sting Sebelow
WONDERFUL ADVENTURES AND
ENVIABLE ARMY RECORD OF
OMAHA COLORED ELE-
VATOR MAN.
"Pershing was a lieutenant tl
and I knew him well," says Serge
Bailey. "Everybody liked him and
certainly was a fine officer."
Deputy Sheriff Bailey Recommended for Medal of Honor Twice.
Up and down in the dark elevator which runs from the court house ground floor to the county jail on the fifth floor rides Isaac Bailey, a colored man apparently of middle age.
His is a quiet life. An elevator operator's life is not filled with much excitement and you think that Isaac never had anything very interesting in his life. Isaac never volunteers to tell about his adventures. He is simply an elevator man and a deputy under Sheriff Mike Clark.
But Isaac—he is better known as Sergeant Bailey—has had excitement a plenty. He was in the United States army for a quarter of a century. During all that time he belonged to the famous Tenth cavalry, which saved Colonel Theodore Roosevelt and the Rough Rivers at the battle of Santiago, Cuba.
Sergeant Bailey has fought Indians, Spaniards and Filipinos.
Arizona Shooting Bee.
During his first enlistment he was stationed in Arizona at Fort Apache. He was dispatched to Holbrook, ninety miles away to relieve another sergeant there in taking care of some Indian property. The cowboys at Holbrook were getting too "skittish" to suit the other sergeant.
Soon after Sergeant Bailey arrived there he heard that three of his six men were in Tom Pickett's saloon, where the cowboys were engaged in their favorite pastime of making the troopers dance by shooting near their feet. Sergeant Bailey went into the saloon. Pickett was a "bad man" and had a "private cemetery" where he buried the men killed in his saloon.
"Hre, boys, you mustn't shoot at my men." said Sergeant Bailey as he stepped inside the door.
"Oh, the h— you say!" exclaimed a fellow called Cactus Bill. "Now you dance."
But Sergeant Bailey had drawn his revolver and had Cactus Bill "covered."
"I can't dance," he said, slowly, "but I play pretty good music."
The cowboys knew wheat he meant by the "music," but they were a desperate lot. A general shooting-up was about to start, when, suddenly, across the bar was thrown the barrel of a shotgun. At the other end of it was Pickett himself.
"I'll plug the heart of the first blankety blank that fires at the sergeant," he said. Pickett was an old friend of Seargeant Bailey.
Retired by Pershing.
Sergeant Bailey served a number of consecutive enlistments totaling 25 years and is now retired as regimental quartermaster sergeant.
His discharge, given July 9, 1898, is countersigned by "John J. Pershing, quartermaster, Tenth U. S. Cavalry, Acting Adutant."
Vol. V. No. 34 (Whole No. 243)
Sunday
Cuban 10 July 1898.
p 3. 10th Sunday
J Pershing.
statto 10 u.s. col.
Story Schwarz
"Pershing was a lieutenant then and I knew him well," says Sergeant Bailey. "Everybody liked him and he certainly was a fine officer."
This discharge was given during the Cuban campaign of the Spanish-American war and the sergeant reenlisted the next day.
The discharge paper on which General Pershing's name appears bears also this notation, "Sergeant Bailey showed conspicuous gallantry in assault on Spanish entrenchments at Santiago de Cuba, July 1, 1898."
"That was the time when we saved Colonel Roosevelt and the Rough Riders," says the sergeant, opening the jail door to let out a couple of deputy sheriffs. "We had fought the Spaniards for two hours and driven them out of their entrenchments. Roosevelt and his men came in on the left and the Spaniards opened fire on them. The Tenth cavalry arrived just in time. That was where Hamilton Fish and several others were killed."
Recommended for Medal.
For his actions in this battle Sergeant Bailey was recommended for a medal of honor.
(Continued on Page 8.)
GENERAL WOOD LIKE ROOSEVELT
By Edgar G. Brown.
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Feb. 23.—Ever since General Leonard Wood declared before the Lincoln League assembled in Chicago that he stood for equal rights, equal justice and equal protection to all citizens, in other words, that he stood for the Rooseveltian Square Deal and further stated that America must be made safe for Americans, hundreds have sent their names to be enrolled as charter members of the National Colored People's Wood-for-President Club located in this city. Everyone feels that Leonard Wood will be the next great republican leader because he is a real American like Theodore Roosevelt.
Mr. F. B. Ransom, recently appointed on the Indiana state plateform committee to represent the colored people of this state, leans toward General Wood because he thinks Leonard Wood understands the needs of all the people of the United States and like Theodore Roosevelt will be able to put the country in line for greater progress in the next four years. Some other prominent leaders to take stand for Wood are Perry W. Howard, Jackson, Mississippi, and Major John R. Lynch, ex-auditor of the navy and at present residing in Chicago.
All people wishing to be enrolled as charter members of the National Colored People's Wood-for-President club with headquarters in Indianapolis, Indiana can do so by sending in their name and address at once to this association.
General Wood is the only candidate up to date to publicly state his position in regard to the colored people.
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Events and Persons
Have you joined the N. A. A. C. P. yet? Why not?
The North Side Crochet club was entertained at the home of Mrs. A. S. Flannigan, 2311 North Twenty-eighth street, on Wednesday, February 18.
For special bargains in stocks, bonds and real estate see Fred Williams, Monitor office. Douglas 3224.
The Elite Whist club met Wednesday of last week with Mrs. Augustus Hicks, 2716 Miami street. Mrs. H. W. Black won the prize.
North Side taxi, J. D. Lewis, proprietor. Two limousines with heat. Stand phone, Web. 1490; residence phone, Web. 949.
The N. W. C. A. will hold their regular meeting March 3 All members are urged to be present. Mrs. Mortimer, president.
Everybody is planning for the big occasion, Friday, April 16.
Mrs. Bell Taylor who has been very ill is out again.
10 bars Lenox Soap for 49 cents and black navy beans, 8 cents per pound; for Saturday only, at Finkenstein. Webster 1952.
Mr. C. C. Dudley was called to Dallas, Texas, to the bedside of his brother, who is seriously ill.
Wanted—Boys who are wide-awake and hustling, to sell Monitors. Apply at Monitor office, 304 Crownze block, opposite post office. Entrance 1174 North Sixteenth street.
Mr. C. R. Trimble of the Monarch Cafe has just recovered from a spell of influenza and is feeling fine.
Do you want to learn about the Episcopal church? Then, be sure to attend the vesper services given at St. Philip's church every Sunday afternoon at 5:30 and listen to the series of addresses on "What the Episcopal Church Stands for, Believes and Teaches." Services one hour long. Come out—Adv.
Mrs. N. P. Patton, 1014 South Eleventh street, has recently recovered from a spell of sickness. Also Mrs. Blue of 1522 Y street. Mrs. Patton's niece is confined to her bed with a severe cold at the Paton hotel.
A. P. Scruggs, Lawyer, 220 S. 18th St. D. 7812. Col. 3831—Adv.
Miss May Jackson was hostess on last Wednesday for the Eureka Art class. Ae delightful repast was served. Next meeting will be with Mrs. Burton, March 3, at U, B. F. hall, Twenty-fourth and Charles. All members please be present. Friends invited. Mrs. Lulu Ronutree, president; Mrs. Josephine Walker, secretary.
April 16! April 16! Our day and yours. Watch The Monitor for further notice.
Miss Pearl Alexander, who has been visiting in Denver, Colo., for the past nine months, returned home Monday afternoon.
For big bargains and safe investments see Fred C. Williams, Douglas 3224.
Rev. A. J. Broadnax is able to be out again after being cofined to his home on account of an injury of his foot.
Fashionable dressmaking. Call Mrs, L. Nickerson, 961 North Twenty-eighth avenue. Harney 5991.—4t
The Round Table club held its regular Monday night meeting at the Community Center.
Are you a member of the N. A. A. C. P.? If not, why not?
Mrs. Charles Bird of 2425 Erskine street, reports she is glad to be home again and is rapidly recovering from her operation at Swedish Mission hospital.
E. F. Morearty, Lawyer, 640 Bee Bldg. Douglas 3841 or Harney 2156.
M. N. J. Horton, formerly of Brooklyn, New York, late of Kansas City, Mo., is convalescent in Lord Lister hospital, where he underwent an operation.
Watch us. We are coming April 16.
The Greater Omaha Republican club will hold its first regular meeting March 1 at Community Center.
J. J. Friedman, Lawyer, 650 Omaha National Bank Bldg. Douglas 732 or Harney 3061.—Adv.
Mrs. James Dudley, 2524 North Twenty-fifth street, who has been confined to her bed for the past three weeks from an attack of influenza is improving nicely.
Drs. Singleton & Singleton, dentists 111 South 14th street. Quality and efficiency our motto.
A Literary society was organized February 23 at the Pilgrim Rest Baptist church for the benefit of the church and the young people of the city. Mrs. M. A. Walker, organizer. Send in your subscription for The Monitor, please. It is $2.00 a year. Guaranteed plain sewing. Phone Douglas 9135.—Adv. On Monday evening, 7:30 o'clock, March 1, all officers of the Literary society will be installed by Rev. W. M. Franklin. The public is invited. Buy your groceries and meats at Finkenstein's. We want and appreciate your trade.
The Messrs. William Carter, Jr., Lester Carter, Clyde Belle and Edward Herrington of South Side entertained quite a number of young folks Saturday evening, February 21, at a Leap Year party given at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. William Carter, 2540 Washington street. The evening was spent in music and singing and playing games. An elaborate luncheon was served, covers was laid for forty, after which all departed for home at a late hour. Corn Meal, 5 cents per pound, buttermilk, 15 cents per gallon; eggs, 50 cents per dozen; Saturday, at Finkenstein, 26th and Blondo.
All rights reserved. Keep April 16 open for a date with us.
Rooms for rent. Young lady preferred. Webster 3454.
Toots Botts of Minneapolis, Minn. and Frank Botts of Duluth, Minn., are visiting at the bedside of their brother, William Botts, and their mother, Mrs. Sophia Botts, both of whom are at their home, 2419 Patrick Ave.
Have you investigated the Kaffir Chemical Laboratories yet? Our present place of business is at 922-24 Douglas street, northwest corner of Tenth and Douglas. Drop in and see us.—Adv.
Everett J. Edwards, formerly of 1117 North Eleventh street, call A. P. Scruggs, Lawyer, 220 S. 1th St. Important legal business.—Adv.
Ed F. Morearty, Lawyer, 640 Bee Bldg. Doug. 3841 or Har. 2156.—Adv.
Do you regularly attend church services? If not, why not?
MRS. CORDELLA WINN ENTERTAINED
Mrs. Cordella Winn, National Y. W. C. A. secretarv, who was in the city for a few days last week, was guest of honor at a very delightful dinner party given at South & Thompson's Cafe, Wednesday, February 18, at 6:30 o'clock. Mrs. Rose LaCour and Mrs. Julia Hudlin, hostesses, had as their guests, Mrs. Cordella Winn, Miss Jennie Robinson, who leaves for an extensive trip in New York and other points in the east and South America; Miss Frankie B. Watkins, Miss Lena Paul, Miss Anna Logan, Mrs. Jessie Hale Moss and Miss Madree Penn. Mrs. J. H. Hutton entertained Tuhrsday at luncheon for Mrs. Cordella Winn.
While in the city Mrs. Winn was the guest of Mrs. R. T. Walker, 2423 Maple street.
THE LINCOLN LEAGUE.
The Lincoln League, with its well chosen name, recently in session in Chicago, may become a useful instrument in aiding the colored people in their fight for justice, if it stands firm for the right and is not merely an appendage of the republican party. It should be kept a nonpartisan body and the members should see that it does not degenerate into a jimcrow organization ready to sell out to the highest cash bidder.
Here are three striking examples of the wisdom of nonpartisan action:
The prohibition victory was won by nonpartisan work. The prohibition forces aided the party which was willing to reciprocate.
National woman's suffrage has been practically achieved because the suffragists have kept aloof from partisan politics and voted for the candidates and party which offered the most in the suffrage line.
Labor has been victorious in its battles because it has not attempted to do the un-American thing of organizing a labor party.
Lynching, segregation and the thousand and one obstacles which lie in the path of the colored people may be swept aside, if colored voters will ignore party lines, republican, democratic, socialist, labor or other and vote for the party or candidate which offers the most in justice and rights.—The Appeal (St. Paul, Minn.)
RELATIVE OF OMAHA MAN
WITH WOOD PARTY
Andrew Moss, son of Attorney John W. Moss of Washington, D. C., who has been a messenger in the war department for the past fifteen years, and a special protege of General Baker, is a splendid type of the keen, alert, intelligent young men of the day. He is a member of the Wood party and both officers spoke of him to his cousin, M. F. Singleton, in the most complimentary terms. This was Mr. Moss' first visit to Omaha. His glimpse of our city has given him a desire to return when he can remain longer. Naturally, he is an enthusiastic Wood booster.
ANNUAL QUIET DAY FOR WOMEN.
Next Thursday the Rev. Wilbur Scranton Leete, rector of St. Luke's church, Plattsmouth, will conduct the usual "Quiet Day" for women at the Church of St. Philip the Deacon. The services begin at 9:30 a. m. and close at 3:30 p. m. These services are open to all persons who wish to attend. Two meditations or addresses are given in the morning and one in the afternoon.
THE MONITOR
JOHN BURTON
Edward Killingsworth of the firm of Price & Killingsworth, who has just returned from a thirty days' vacation spent in Chicago, New Orleans and his old home, Paris, Texas. Mr. Killingsworth stopped at other points in Texas, Missouri and Oklahoma. He was accompanied home by his brother, Birney Killingsworth.
We wish to thank our many friends for their kind expressions of sympathy in the loss of our beloved mother, Mrs. Martha Lewis. To those who sent floral offerings we wish to express our deepest gratitude.
MRS. MARY KUYENDALL.
WILLIAM LEWIS.
THOMAS LEWIS.
We wish to thank our dear sisters and brothers, about fourteen in number, representing the mission circle of Zion Baptist church, for their kind expressions of morbid sympathy during the illness of my husband. On Friday morning, February 20, they surprisingly showered upon us many dear little packages filled with high cost of living, which they laid upon our table, God bless that little band of brothers that He sent here to prepare that table before us and fill their hands, and send them back again in due time.
1520 North Twenty-sixth street.
Claude Nethaway, whose second trial for leading a mob which lynched a Negro at the court house is pending, is now defendant in a divorce suit, all over his continual talk about "nigger lovers."
His second wife, who is now seeking divorce, says Nethaway is nutty about the "Negro question" and makes her life miserable. It has been suggested that Mrs. Nethaway is using good judgment. It has also been suggested by a lot of people that Nethaway's first wife would have used good judgment had she taken similar action.
As a general proposition those in touch with all the Nethaway business were never very well satisfied about the manner in which the trial of Mrs. Nethaway's slayer ended. Nethaway himself has lost considerable respect of former friends and his latest escapade tends to enhance that condition.
SPECIAL MEETING OF THEOE
DORE ROOSEVELT
A special meeting of the Theodore Roosevelt Post of the American Legion will be held at Community hall, 2420 Lake street, Friday night, at which time special speakers will discuss and explain allotments, insurance, vocational training, farm land and other subjects in which all soldiers are interested. The plans to be followed to secure the bonus will also be discussed. All service men, whether members of the Legion or not, are requested to be present Amos B. Madison, post commander; Rufus Long, adjutant.
In last week's report of the Pollyanna Dancing school recital one number was inadvertently omitted. It was the pretty "Flirtation Dance," given by Ernestine and Constance Singleton and Nathalle Brown, three little girls, who, like all the rest, did themselves and their teacher proud.
SPECIAL LENTEN SERVICES.
The Monitor is requested to call the attention of its readers to special Lenten services which may interest some. Bishop Shayler will deliver a series of addresses to women on "Personal Religion" every Friday morning during Lent at All Saints' church, Twenty-sixth and Dewey avenues at 10:30. The services last just one hour. The usual twenty minutes noonday services will be held at Trinity Cathedral, Eighteenth and Capitol avenue, every week day during Lent from 12:10 to 12:30.
The Ocowasin Group, Camp Fire Girls, met Friday at community room. The evening was spent in singing and sewing on head bands.
CARD OF THANKS.
CARD OF THANKS.
AN OMISSION.
CAMP FIRE.
DOUGLAS DEBATING SOCIETY.
The Douglas Debating Society, composed of young men of high school age, held their first business meeting Saturday, February 7, at the Community Center. This society was organized for the sole purpose of encouraging and promoting young colored men and boys along literary lines and ideas concerning the art of debating.
Great care was taken by the charter members to choose very prominent and efficient men for honorary members. Mr. Moten, the head of the community service of colored people, was elected sponsor, and among the honorary members are Rev. John Albert Williams, Rev. W. C. Williams, Rev. W. F. Botts, Miss M. Penn, Mrs. Moss and Miss Watkins.
Mr. Pinkett was elected critic and at the first meeting gave a most encouraging talk to the members. The Douglas Debating Society is anxious to enroll all boys interested in debating. See James Lewis, 2654 Corby street. Phone Webster 5927.
HENRY SMITH OPENS GARAGE.
Henry Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Smith, who is an expert automobile mechanie, being a graduate of the Federal Automobile of Chicago, where he made a high rank, and also passed with a high grade the government examination for automobile experts has opened a garage and repair shop at 2415 Cuming street. He knows the business from the ground up. He is a fine, dependable young chap, of whom Omaha should be proud. Show him how fully you appreciate young men of his type and character by giving him your patronage. He was in full charge of Courtney's automobile trucks until he decided to go into business for himself.
WILL GIVE PUPILS'
RECITAL—PUBLIC INVITED
Mrs. Florentine F. Pinkston will give her third pupils' demonstration recital at Columbia hall next Saturday afternoon, February 28, from 2 to 5. There is no admission. The public is invited.
Mrs. Pinkston, who is a graduate of the famous New England conservatory, Boston, Mass., where she also taught, is one of the most accomplished musicians and teachers in our city. These annual demonstrations by her pupils are noteworthy musical events.
Rev. M. D. Johnson, Pastor.
Rev. S. Fants, Assistant Pastor.
The usual services were held Sunday morning and were well attended. The service hour is 11 o'clock. Rev. B. Smith of Omaha preached. The Sunday school meets Sunday morning. The B. Y. P. U. meets at 6 p. m.
Rev. S. Fants will conduct service tonight at 7:30.
Mrs. Philip Letcher, who has been qite ill, is steadily improving. The Rev. John Albert Williams went to Plattsmouth Tuesday night, where he preached in St. Luke's church. Ben Slaughter is still confined to his bed in University hospital where he has been a patient for nearly two motnhs. Mrs. Robert Bryant, formerly of Omaha but now a resident of Colorado, Colo., was a week-end visitor en route east last week. She was the guest of Mrs. Dan Desdunes. Mrs. Ed Baum is ill at University hospital. Among other patients there are Edward Covington and Mrs. Owens of Thirty-sixth and Patrick avenue.
Mrs. Sarah Hood of Memphis, Tenn., is visiting her son, James A. Griffin, and family, at 940 North Twenty-fifth street.
Miss Jennie Robinson, 3643 Parker street, left Saturday afternoon for New York City, where she expects to remain for three months.
Kaffir Chemical Laboratories stock, a safe and sound investment. Bought any yet?—Adv.
Mrs. M. J. Roberts, 1549 North Seventeenth street, who has been ill for a moth, is able to be out again.
The postponed meeting of the N. A. A. C. P. will be held at Tabernacle hall, Twenty-fourth and Patrick avenue, Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock. It is hoped that this shall be the permanent home of the N. A. A. C. P. if it be the will of the people. All are welcome.
LOSE YOUR HEADACHE QUICK
USE THE DEPENDABLE
LIQUID REMEDY
(EASY TO TAKE-SPEEDY RELIEF).
CAPUDINE
GOOD FOR GRIPPE AND BACKACHES, TOO
NO DOPE - NO ACETANILIDE.
10$
30$
60$
Bottles
LOCALS.
Colored Commercial Club Bulletin
The executive committee meets regularly every Thursday night at 8:30 o'clock at the Community Center, 2416 Lake street.
Dan Desdunes, chairman of the municipal affairs committee, reports being busy trying to secure much needed paving in districts largely occupied by our people.
The executive committee has recommended consistent and loyal patronage of all business and professional men who are members of the club. The chairman of the publicity committee has been directed to prepare and publish a directory of such members.
Next Thursday night, March 4, a general meeting of all the members
MISS MANICIA GOODCHILD
DIES IN CHICAGO
Remains Brought Here for Burial—Funeral Held From Church of St. Philip the Deacon—Interment in Forest Lawn.
Miss Manicia Goodchild, for many years a resident of Omaha, passed quietly and peacefully away at the family residence, 3640 Prairie avenue, Chicago, early Sunday morning after a protracted illness. Miss Goodchild was born at Cape Giradeau, Mo., but was reared in Grand Island, Neb. She was the eighth child of Thomas and Emily Goodchild. Several years ago, after the death of her father the Goodchild family, consisting of the mother, the Misses Mary, Delcia and Manicia and the youngest brother, Solomon D., removed to Omaha, where Mrs. Goodchild died. The family resided here, where they were most highly respected, for many years. A few years ago they removed to Chicago. Miss Manicia was noted for her warm-heartedness, kindness and general helpfulness.
The body, accompanied by the surviving sisters and brother, was brought to Omaha for burial Wednesday. The funeral was held from the Church of St. Philip the Deacon, where she was confirmed and to which she was devoted, this morning at 10 o'clock, where in addition to the usual burial office a requiem eucharist was offered. The Rev. John Albert Williams officiated. Interment was in the family lot in Forest Lawn cemetery beside the body of her mother.
A MOTHERLY WOMAN
Mrs. Jennie Pearson, aged 84, passed quietly to rest last Thursday night at the home of her grand-granddaughter, Mrs. Josie Henderson Watkins, at Rivertown, Wyo. Mrs. Pearson, who was one of those rare motherly women whom all who know instinctively love had been in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Waters of the Waters-Barnhart Printing company since 1904 until a few months ago when she went to make her home with her granddaughter. Speaking of her, Mrs. Waters said: "God bless her, I cannot begin to tell you how much we loved her. We called her auntie, but she was all that a mother could be to us. You cannot understand how fully she took Ed and me into her warm loving heart. If there ever was a sincere Christian soul it was she. 'She hath done what she could,' fittingly applies to her."
This sincere tribute to Mrs. Jennie Pearson speaks eloquently of her long and useful life.
THE KAFFIR CHEMICAL
LABORATORIES SOON TO MOVE INTO LARGER QUARTERS
The Kaffir Chemical Laboratories, Incorporated, manufacturers of pharmaceuticals, toilet preparations, chemicals and medicines, now located at 922-24 Douglas street, are making preparations to move into larger quarters, where they will have better facilities for pushing the sale of their products. Applications for the purchase of stock in this big enterprise are being steadily received. As the purpose is to distribute the stock widely to dealers in all sections of the country, who in turn become boosters for Kaffir products, the limited number of shares offered to local investors will soon be subscribed.
Miss Victoria Newsm of Kansas City arrived in the city Wednesday to attend the funeral of Miss Manicia Goodchild. While here she was a guest at St. Philip's rectory.
is called to meet at Community Center, Columbia hall, at 8:30. Business of importance. All members urged to attend.
Watch this corner weekly for Commercial Club news.
By the way, Mr. Business Man, have you sent in your application for membership yet?
A handsome club button with monogram CCC will soon adorn the lapels of club members.
SMISOR, Jeweler
24th and Lake Streets
OMAHA
Business Phone Residence Phone
Webster 4620 Webster 4915
AUGUST YOUNG
PLUMBING SERVICE
730 West Broadway
Phone 4623 Council Bluffs, Ia.
MRS. C. M. McFALL
HAIR DRESSER
The Denova System
First class work guaranteed.
Your patronage solicited.
2722 Franklin St. Webster 4555
"Gee whiz, Dad, look at those 'ads.'"
"That's just what they are for, son."
We Sell Kashmir Goods
STARK'S PHARMACY
30th and Pinkney Streets
Phone Webster 4225.
NORTH END COAL & EXPRESS CO.
Hauls Everything.
2010 No. 24th St.
A. C. ALLEN, Prop.
Phone Webster 5036
QUAKOR OIL
Hes for Caraher Gripper, a provocative
Was in great demand for use as a brochure-
tive during the epidemic of Spanish Influenza. Your drugstri or direct
25c. a bottle.
THE QUAKOR OIL CO.,
131 W. 31st St., New York
FRESH EGGS
Quality First Our Motto
---
We are just as particular regarding the quality of foods we buy as we are about the way we serve them. Only the best products on the market are good enough for our patrons. And the most rigid rules of cleanliness are followed in preparing these products for the table.
The Monarch Cafe
CARNER & TRIMBLE, Props.
107 South 14th St.
Phone Tyler 4119
OLD BOOKS
Bought, Sold and Exchanged.
Notions Confectionery Cigars
SHANAHAN
912 North 24th St.
THE MONITOR
A National Weekly Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of Colored Americans.
Published Every Thursday at Omaha, Nebraska, by The Monitor Publishing Company.
Entered as Second-Class Mall Matter July 2, 1915, at the Postoffice at Omaha, Neb., under the Act of March 2, 1879.
THE REV. JOHN ALBERT WILLIAMS, Editor and Publisher.
Lucille Skagge Edwards and Madre Penn, Associate Editors.
Fred C. Williams, Business Manager.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES. $2.00 A YEAR; $1.00 6 MONTHS; $0.63 3 MONTHS
Advertising Rates, 60 cents an inch per issue.
Address, The Monitor, 304 Crouse Block, Omaha, Neb.
Telephone Douglas 3224.
1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
ADMIRERS of General Pershing are enthusiastically advocating his nomination by the republican party for the presidency. But just what claim he has upon the republican party for this high honor The Monitor is at a loss to know. He has been discretely silent as to his party affiliations. His ardent political admirers and sponsors have been equally mute upon this all-important subject. If he be a republican, he has been mighty quiet about it. No one seems to know what his politics are. So far as we have been able to learn he has never publicly declared himself. If he be a republican, and The Monitor is frank to confess that we do not believe he is, it is quite apparent that he is not proud of it, else why his reticence and reluctance to make it known? Our candid opinion is that General Pershing has been and is now a democrat, and that his friends who have been advocating his candidacy at the hands of the republicans have placed him in quite an embarrassing position.
We do not know what General Pershing's politics are, but this we do know: A democratic administration selected him as commander-in-chief of the American Expeditionary Forces in preference to another at least equally experienced and gallant military commander concerning whose republicanism there never wasst the slightest doubt. Knowing the disposition of the present administration to advance wherever and whenever possible men of southern birth and by that fact, naturally and generally affiliated with the democratic party, Pershing's high favor with Woodrow Wilson's administration is not without its sinister significance. When this fact is considered in connection with his persistent sphinx-like silence as to his party affiliation it becomes ominously significant. General Pershing is a native of Missouri, accounted a southern state, and until quite recently confidently depended upon to return a democratic majority. Missouri republicans account their party affiliation such a distinction and an honor that they never hesitate to make that fact known. General Pershing certainly does not belong to that class of Missouri republicans, that is very evident.
What are General Pershing's politics? Who knows? Would it not be well for those who are pushing his candidacy for the republican nomination to enlighten the public on this very important matter?
There is no doubt in the mind of anybody as to General Wood's party affiliations. He is a republican. But how about General Pershing? Is he a democrat, republican, socialist or mugwump? Who knows?
"Speak up, John, 'spress yourself.'"
BE SURE TO REGISTER.
THE Monitor desires to call the attention of our readers to the importance of registering and voting. Many of our people have recently come from sections of the country where they were not permitted to vote. Naturally, they have become indifferent to the privilege of exercising their rights as electors. We want to make it as plain as we know how that in Nebraska every citizen has a right to vote and his vote is counted. But in order to vote citizens must register. There will soon be announced special registration days, when voters may register in their own precintr or voting district; but it is not necessary to wait for these special days. Go to the election commissioner's office in the court house any week-day and register. Everybody who wants to vote must register. Elections this year are tremendously important. Your vote, little as you think about it, may decide who shall be the president for the next four years.
In every public speech General Wood makes it perfectly plain where he stands upon prominent questions before the country today. He makes it perfectly plain that he stands uncompromisingly for law and order and the protection of all classes of citizens under the constitution of the United States. This is what the American people want.
Not only have we General Wood's words for what he believes, but we have his actions. His administration in Cuba and the Philippines and his fair, firm and decisive actions wherever he has been sent to restore and maintain order proclaim the kind of man he is. He is unquestionably the man for president of the United States in this era of reconstruction and international disquietude and unrest.
WHEELER, WAKE UP.
OUR good friend, the Rev. Robert L. Wheeler, veteran pastor of the Wheeler Memorial Presbyterian Church, South Side, in his admirable parish paper, The Presbyterian, under the caption, "A Negro High School," says:
"The citizenship and board of education of our public schools of the city of Omaha owe it to the Negro population to immediately provide High school facilities for our Negro boys and girls. This duty is long past overdue. Beyond the eighth grade, none of the doors of opportunity are open to the Negro students of Omaha. The Negro taxpayer and citizen is entitled to a Negro high school for his children. This 'patient ox' in the shops of human industry should have better recognition by our citizenship. We grow rampant about the 'foreign born' and their children and beat the tom-tom in a rallying cry to succor them. But what about the Negro who is not foreign born? What about our pretty speech inscribed on the great seal of the state of Nebraska of 'Equality Before the Law?' There are 'War Mothers' in the Negro homes whose sons made good on every battlefield since the American revolution. But did you ever see their photos in the society columns? The Negro never led a riot or a strike, destroyed public property, or threw a bomb, or raised the red flag, or kissed the feet of the kaiser. Simple justice declares that the Omaha Negro citizen should have the educational benefits of the high school."
We appreciate the spirit in which Dr. Wheeler writes, but we urge him to wake up and rub his eyes. Negro school children, under the laws of the state of Nebraska are entitled to the same educational advantages and privileges that any others are. Colored children have graduated from the South Side High school. At present there are about sixty colored students in the Central and Commercial high schools. The colored alumni of Central High number nearly seventy. The colored citizens of Nebraska have no complaint to make concerning educational advantages for their children.
BUSINESS VENTURES.
SEVERAL of our progressive citizens are venturing into the business and commercial world. This is as it should be. We wish every one abundant success, and there is no reason why, with diligence, study of one's line and strict application to business our people cannot succeed in the business world. The only way to learn to do things is by doing them. It is up to us to make places for our boys and girls in business establishments and to make our own place in the commercial world. We are at last awakening to a sense of our duty and the recognition of our opportunities in the business world.
THE MONITOR
CONCERNING POLITENESS.
TOO frequent mention cannot be made of the necessity of our people constantly showing by our conduct on street cars and in public places that we are people of good manners and breeding. It does not make the slightest difference whether the other fellow shows politeness and good manners or not, that does not excuse us. Good manners show the gentleman, the want of it the fellow.
THE most valuable asset of our country is our youth, our boys and girls. Every agency that can be used to help, uplift and ennoble them should be given most hearty welcome and support. The home comes first in the rearing and training of youth. But so many homes of the land are irreligious, godless or indifferent that perhaps seventy per cent of American youth do not receive the home training that makes for the development of the highest type of character and the best standard of citizenship. Disobedience to law, which at present is becoming so pronounced in our country, is largely traceable to the fact that so many parents show by their carelessness and indifferent lives such disrespect for religion; for it must not be forgotten that religion is the foundation upon which law and order rest. Therefore that citizen, and especially that parent, who refuses to pay open and consistent respect to religion, is encouraging, although he does not intend to do so, disrespect for law and the orderly process of government and is acting as the worst enemy of the public good. When statistics show that only thirty per cent that is to say only thirty out of every one hundred persons in the United States, profess to be even nominally identified with any religious body whatsoever, it will readily be seen how startling indifference to religion is. When too, it is understood that religion teaches self-control and respect for law and the rights of others, and we perceive the full significance of the indifference to religion which statistics indicate, we can readily account for the serious conditions which confront us today.
Now, if we would save our youth and rear them to law-abiding, high-minded, self-respecting citizenship, there must be greater respect for religion shown by parents and others who are interested in the welfare of the nation. This will help immensely. But in addition to this, since many thousands may not be reached directly in this way every agency that can be employed to reach the youth of our land and inspire them with high ideals of service and usefulness—for service and usefulness are religion in action—must be fostered, encouraged and supported.
Youth saving is the most important work before not only America, but the entire world today. Perhaps the situation is more acute in the United States than elsewhere because of the large liberty of the individual initiative and action permitted. Greater interest in the children is the imperative duty of the hour.
THE CHAMPION BUSINESS By William Pickens, New York City. Now and then we hear that some white champion has announced that he will refuse to give any Negro a chance at the title by refusing to contend with any Negro aspirant. Very often these very white men may have
Ford
THE UNIVERSAL CAR
It's no longer necessary to go into the details describing the practical merits of the Ford car—everybody knows all about "The Universal Car." How it goes and comes day after day and year after year at an operating expense so small that it's wonderful. This advertisement is to urge prospective buyers to place orders without delay. Buy a Ford car when you can get one. We'll take good care of your order—get your Ford to you as soon as possible—and give the best in "after-service" when required.
SAMPLE-HART MOTOR CO.
100% Ford Service
18th and Burt Streets
OMAHA
YOUTH SAVING.
PERISCOPE.
reached their eminence in their line largely through the help of colored men. This was true of James J. Corbett and Jack Dempsey. Corbett first got a real chance to attract attention by boxing friendly rounds with Peter Jackson. And after Corbett become champion by knocking out Sullivan, who, by the way, had been really afraid to box Jackson, then Corbett consistently dodged Jackson—for plain reasons. And it was a colored man who gave Jack Dempsey some of his best training to fight Willard. This Negro, while "showing Dempsey how," almost knocked Dempsey out, so that the latter had to stop training for a week or so.
But what are we going to do about it when white men in any line will not give the Negro a chance at the honors? The colored men should sift out their best contestant and this real champion of the colored world should challenge all comers, including the "white" champion. If this white champion refuses to accept a legitimate challenge, he will no longer be champion of the world, but will merely the "champion of the white race." The man who is willing to meet all comers will be the real champion of the world. Fair-minded foreigners will so regard him, and history will so regard him.
To accomplish this, the colored people must never make the mistake of adopting the white man's error. They must never say that "This is for colored people only." They must keep the door always open to MEN. While developing their champion, they must invite all contestants of any race to take a hand. This will put principle and spirit on the side of the Negro, and will put the Negro on the side of justice and God.
Have you ever thought what a fine chance the American Negro has to be the real democrat and the real man? The Negro can take his stand on principle every time. That is a fine opportunity. I have often thought of the advantages of being a black man in America. If a black man wants to give his seat in a car to any lady, white or black, he can do so without apologies, and without looking around to see who is looking at him. If a colored audience wants to listen to a white man speak, the chairman never has to "explain." If a black man lifts his hat to a white woman, he does not to feel "cheap" and afraid of somebody else. And if a Negro wants to be a champion, he can be a REAL champion, and not have to explain to future generations "that—er—such and such a race was of course not considered," and that he was really the champion of only a certain fraction of the human race.
ON RACIAL SUPERIORITY.
There are 367,710 Negroes accepted for military service in the American military forces under the selective service law. Of the men examined 24.04 per cent of the whites and 34.10 per cent of the colored men were inducted into the army. These figures are taken from the Negri Year Book published by the Tuskegee Institute. Taking into account physical and mental unfitness, claims for exemption and every other basis for service under the draft law, 10.16 per cent more Negroes than whites—in proportion to the number examined—qualified for service. We recommend that these figures be tucked away in a convenient corner of the mind for ready reference when racial consent mounts high or prejudice against the Negro runs strong.
Bulba, Hardy Perennials, Poultry Supplies
Fresh cut flowers always on hand
Stewart's Seed Store
119 N. 16th St. Opp. Post Office
Phone Douglas 977
H. LAZARUS
SHOE REPAIRING
2420½ Cuming Street
Petersen & Michelsen Hardware Co. GOOD HARDWARE
Liberty Drug Co.
EVERYBODY'S DRUG STORE
We Deliver Anywhere.
Webster 386. Omaha, Neb.
Established 1890
C. J. CARLSON
Dealer in
Shoes and Gents' Furnishings
1514 No. 24th St. Omaha, Neb.
MELCHOR -- Druggist
The Old Reliable
Tel. South 807 4826 So. 24th St.
Hill-Williams Drug Co.
PURE DRUGS AND TOILET
ARTICLES
Free Delivery
Tyler 160 2402 Cuming St.
Start Saving Now
One Dollar will open an account in the
Savings Department
of the
United States Nat'l Bank
16th and Fernam Streets
F. WILBERG
BAKERY
Across from Alhambra Theatre
The Best is None Too Good for
Our Customers.
Telephone Webster 673
Watch this space for
Tuchman Bros.
Specials
24th and Lake Sts.
Webster 402
Swandown Prepared Cake
Flour, 32c pkg.
Carnation, Pet and Wilson
Cream, per can, 15c.
Largest Meat Market on
the North Side.
J. A. Edlholm E. W. Sherman
Standard Laundry
24th, Near Lake Street
Phone Webster 130
OMAHA
THE
OFFICE
SUPPLY
HOUSE
PRINTING COMPANY
C. H. MARQUARDT
CASH MARKET
Retail Dealer in Fresh and Salt
Meats, Poultry, Oysters, etc.
2003 Cuming St. Doug. 2834
Home Rendered Lard. We Smoke
and Cure our own Hams and Bacon.
OMAR
WONDER
FLOUR
For Accurate and Dependable
Service See
WILLIAMSON
DRUGS, TOILET ARTICLES,
PRESCRIPTIONS
2306 North 24th St.
Phone Webster 4443 and we will
send it out.
A CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY OF
OMAHA'S COLORED BUSINESS
AND PROFESSIONAL FIRMS
A. F. PEOPLES
PAINTING
PAPERHANGING AND
DECORATING
Estimates Furnished Free.
All Work Guaranteed.
4827 ERSKINE STREET.
PHONE WALNUT 2111.
SILAS JOHNSON
Licensed Embalmer and Funeral Director
2518 Lake Street
The place known for its quality service, and reasonable prices
We spare no pains for our complete chapel service. Open day and night.
For Pierce-Arrow Limoineine
Service, Call
CHAS. BOYD
Webster 208
(After Midnight) Tyler 4119
Service With Class—Car Warm
and Cozy.
Repairing and Storing
Orders Promptly Filled
NORTH SIDE
SECOND-HAND STORE
R. B. RHODES
Dealer in
New and Second-Hand Furniture
and Stoves.
Household Goods Bought and
Sold. Rental and Real Estate.
2522 Lake St. Webster 908
Subscribe for The Monitor
ATTENTION! LISTEN!
MEN OF OMAHA
Are you interested in giving your
wife one day's rest during the
week with no dinner to get and no
worrisome dishes to wash?
If so, take advantage of
SOUTH & THOMPSON'S
delicious 50-cent Sunday dinner.
Regular Weekly Dinner, 35c.
Phone Web. 4566 2418 No. 24th St.
Allen Jones, Res, Phone W. 204
Andrew T. Reed, Res, Phone
Red 5210
JONES & REED
FUNERAL PARLOR
2314 North 24th St. Web. 1100
Lady Attendant
Phone Douglas 6335
Goods Called for and Delivered.
ECONOMY TAILOR CHAS, M. SIMMONS, Prop.
25 Years in Tailoring Business
1313 Dodge St.
Quality Service
DR. P. W. SAWYER
DENTIST
1614½ No. 24th St.
Webster 3694
NORTH END COAL AND
ONE MINUTE EXPRESS
A. F. ALLEN, Manager
Hauling of any kind—
Call Webster 5036
Early morning until late at night.
Open for Business the
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON
HOTEL
Nicely Furnished Steam Heated Rooms, With or Without Board. 623 North 15th St. Omaha, Neb. Phone Tyler 897.
Eureka Furniture Store
Complete Line of New and Second Hand Furniture
PRICES REASONABLE
Call Us When You Have Any Furniture to Sell
1417 N. 24th St. Web. 4206
Today Is Your Opportunity
The Kaffir Chemical Laboratories Is Offering a Limited Amount of Its Preferred Stock To the GENERAL PUBLIC 5,000 Shares for Sale Let Your Money Make You Independent for Life
THE COMPANY THE KAFFIR CHEMICAL LABORATORIES is incorporated under the laws of the State of Nebraska for $500,000—50,000 shares par value $10.00 per share—30,000 shares is 7 per cent preferred which stock is entitled to cumulative preferential dividend and in event of the dissolution or liquidation of the company is given preference over all other stock as to assets and dividends. Preferred stock is voting stock—20,000 shares is common, also voting stock. Both preferred and common stock is non-assessable. The general nature of the business to be transacted by this corporation shall be the manufacturing and dealing in pharmaceuticals, chemicals, drug preparations, medicines and all other things incidental to or connected therewith.
Kaffir Chemical Laboratories
THE MONITOR
8
To the Man of Vision
At this time the Company is offering a limited amount of its preferred stock to careful, shrewd investors at the organization price of $10.00 per share. This is the same price at which the officers and directors are buying their stock. THERE IS NOT ONE DOLLAR OF PROMOTION OR BONUS STOCK IN THIS COMPANY. We intend to scatter our stock over the nation. In order to do this we are not offering it wholesale to the general public. This will be your last opportunity to buy in the open market. 5,000 shares offered for sale. Don't let procrastination lose you a golden opportunity. Fill out one of the coupons below and mail today. 5,000 shares will not last a long time. AND—TOMORROW MAY BE EVERLASTINGLY TOO LATE.
Glance over this table and see what investments in kindred concerns have brought:
Invested Worth today
$500 in Borden's Condensed Milk..... $ 45,000.00
$500 in Postum Cereal..... 50,000.00
$500 in Royal Baking Powder..... 80,000.00
$100 in Air Brake Shares..... 24,000.00
$100 in Bell Telephone (What the wise ones called
the "Fool's Idea")..... 400,000.00
DO IT NOW AND AVOID THE VALLEY OF REGRETS. FILL
OUT A COUPON AND MAIL TODAY. Not less than three shares sold
to any purchaser.
Our Prospects
When you become a stockholder in the KAFFIR CHEMICAL LABORATORIES you become a part of a nation-wide enterprise—a Race Enterprise—that will contribute its share toward justifying the Negro in the business world. BIG BUSINESS IS OURS. OPPORTUNITY IS OURS. LET US GRASP IT AND ENTER INTO THE "GOLDEN GATE" THAT SWINGS WIDE BEFORE US.
The Kaffir Chemical Laboratories is engaged in the manufacture of drugs, medicines, pharmaceuticals, chemicals and toilet articles. During the months of organization and incorporation it quietly lined up its resources, machinery, etc., and enters the market, simultaneously with its stock campaign, in the sale of its products. Already there is manufactured $17,000.00 worth of the following articles:
Kaffir Kream-An ideal skin food.
Dentio-A pyrrohea preventive tooth paste.
Sultox—A blood antiseptic that acts as a stomach tonic and destroys the poison induced by auto-intoxication. Rem, an antiphologistic compound for external inflammation and fever. A Hair Tonic, a Dandruff Treatment, a Hand Lotion, an Antiseptic Wash, an Enema, and a treatment for dread pyorrhea, consisting of a liquid, paste, and tablets.
nd, paste, and tablets. In addition to the above named preparations we have other formulae of
(INCORPORATED)
Rfereneces:
United States National Bank, Omaha, Neb.
First National Bank, Omaha, Neb.
Lion Bonding and Security Company, Omaha, Neb.
Officers and Directors
MADREE PENN, President.
G. M. JONES, Vice-President.
E. C. HAYNES, Secretary.
JNO. ALBERT WILLIAMS, Treasurer.
ASA E. FLETCHER, Department of Production.
FRED C. WILLIAMS, Department of Publicity and Sales.
LARRY N. PEOPLES, City Sales Manager.
---
inestimable value, and as soon as we move to our new location we will add more machinery—thus constantly increasing the number of Kaffir Products on the market.
This business of ours is national in scope. We are offering the public what it wants, goods that bear the stamp of experts. A big sale of goods is inevitable. Big sales, bigger profits to the investor.
TODAY STOCK IS WORTH $10.00 PER SHARE. NEXT YEAR IT SHOULD HAVE DOUBLED ITSELF.
Less than ten years ago the man who invested $10.00 in "Denver Mud" sees that share worth $1,800.00. Madame Walker started with $1.25 and an idea of a hair preparation. In twelve years she was a millionaire. Yours is the opportunity of getting in on the ground floor. Don't let it slip!
Our Permit
This company has received from the Bureau of Securities of the state of Nebraska a permit to sell its stock.
"The Kaffir Chemical Laboratories holds permit No. 738 authorizing the sale of $138,000.00 worth of its common stock and $300,000.00 worth of its preferred stock at $10.00 per share."
Your Safeguards
Here is the provision made by the Bureau of Securities relative to the manner in which this company must safeguard funds received from stock sales:
"In no event shall the company expend or in any manner allow or pay in excess of 15 per cent of the actual par value of the stock issued hereunder as payment of commission or marketing expense of said stock, and an additional $2\frac{1}{2}$ per cent for the purpose of paying expense of organization or promotion."
In Escrow
The Kaffir Chemical Laboratories has issued $41,000.00 or 4100 shares common stock for formulae and has placed the same in escrow until such time as the total sum of $41,000.00 has been set aside to surplus from the company's net earnings, and until said Bureau of Securities or its legal successors at law shall have executed and granted a formal order of release.
The Promoters
The Board of Directors is composed of individuals who are well equipped to handle this proposition—Chemical, Publicity and Sales Experts with keen business judgment, who are well known the country over for their integrity and probity and who are on the alert for wide-awake individuals who can be added to the large corps of workers who will form the Kaffir plant.
Laboratories
Present Location, 922-924 Douglas Street. Douglas 7074.
CASH COUPON
Kaffir Chemical Laboratories,
I herewith subscribe for.....Shares of seven per cent preferred capital stock of the Kaffir Chemical Laboratories, Omaha, Neb., at its organization price of $10.00 per share. I understand this stock to be cumulative, non-assessable and voting.
I herewith enclose $.....as payment in full for.....shares.
Name.....
City.....
State.....
Date....
6
MORGENTHAU PLEADS FOR HELPING HAND IN THE NEAR EAST
Former Ambassador to Turkey Says America Should Not Let Armenian Allies Starve.
Former Ambassador to Turkey and Leader in Near East Relief.
If they were good enough to fight and die for us when we needed their help so sorely, they are good enough now to share some meager little crumbs from our plenty when they have nothing, when hundreds of thousands of them are homeless, unclad, foodless and threatened with extermination by their enemies and our own.
Net far from a million Christians have been murdered by their Turkish oppressors. Hungry, terror stricken hundreds of thousands of refugees now look to the United States for succ
Have Trust in America
We cannot refuse. Next to their faith in God is their trust in the disinterested good will and generosity of
O
Copyright by Underwood & Underwood.
HENRY MORGENTHAU.
the American people. They look to us as the human agency to extricate them from the frightful situation in which they have been left as a consequence of the war.
If we should fall to aid them, starvation and the winter's cold would go far to completing the work done by the unspeakable Turk.
I have not seen with my own eyes the misery in which the Armenians now exist. I have been spared that.
But the reports which have been brought in by agents of the Near East Relief and by representatives of the Peace Conference paint a picture of wretchedness inconceivable to those who have not a first hand impression of the savagery of the Mussulman.
Exiled From Homes.
Since the beginning of the war the Turkish Armenians have been largely refugees from their homes. A simple agricultural people, they have been exiles from their farms, deprived of all opportunity to support themselves. Year by year their sufferings have increased. Now, a year after fighting has ceased, they are still living the life of nomads, able to continue to keep alive only by virtue of American philanthropy. These homeless people—"flithy infidels" to the Turk—were good enough to exert their poor might in our behalf while the war was still in the balance. Massacres of a half century had not so broken their spirit that they dared not fight for right and for democracy when justice was the issue. We accepted their aid then. Surely we shall not pass them by without compassion now.
The day has passed when any self respecting man dares permit absorption in his own personal affairs to exclude consideration of his neighbor's well being. No honorable man can knowingly allow his neighbor to hunger or to go unclothed. The Christian peoples of the Near East are our neighbors. The money needed to relieve them can be spared without causing any man, woman or child is the United States to suffer.
Must Not Rest on Past.
In other years of our own free will we sent missionaries to Turkey. Our schools and colleges and hospitals have played a wonderful role in humanizing that dark spot in the world. Our ideas, our educational resources, our material equipment, have been leaved in the Near East. Because we have done well in times past we have this great opportunity for the present. The Armenians have been treated as perhaps no people in history have been treated because they are the spiritual brothers of western races.
Will America help them? There can be but one answer. Their necessity is dire, but our power is great. We are wealthy. We are a member of the family of nations. Our brothers call us. Food, clothes, money, are immediately wanted. If ever unmerited suffering called for succor the plight of the Armenians should be heeded now. A few months more and it may be relief will be too late for those myriads whom only we can save. We shall not fall them.
DADDY'S EVENING
FAIRY TALE
BY MARY GRAHAM
BONNER
© by the AUTHOR.
SALT, PEPPER, SUGAR.
"The Sugar Bowl doesn't appreciate us," said the Salt Cellar.
"Who do you mean when you say 'us'?" asked the Sugar Bowl.
"I mean Pepper Shaker and myself," said the Salt Cellar.
"And why do you not think I appreciate you?" asked the Sugar Bowl.
"I'm sure I don't know why you don't," said the Salt Cellar. "Anything would think you ought to. Anyone, with any sense, appreciates us."
"Of course," said the Sugar Bowl, "I expect you to be a little rude at times. I expect you would be a scrap sharp and all of that. But I do not mind. I am sweet enough to forgive you."
"But you haven't told me whether you appreciate me or not?" said the Salt Cellar, "and I do want to make the Sugar Bowl say that it does appreciate the Salt Cellar and the Pepper Shaker. It would show that the Sugar Bowl had something else besides sweetness."
"What else could I have or would I want to have besides sweetness?" asked the Sugar Bowl. "Isn't it enough that I am always sweet?"
"No," said the Salt Cellar, "it is not. There are lots of sweet creatures who never say anything mean and who never do any harm, but at the same time they don't do anything especially kind and they don't do anything especially helpful.
"They're sweet enough but they haven't much character. Now you will show character if you not only smile sweetly upon me but if you will
"I Will Admit It."
admit that the Salt Cellar and the Pepper Shaker have good work to do in the world."
"Ah, yes," said the Sugar Bowl, "I will admit it, and I think I should appreciate other creatures and things more than I do. I am glad we've had this talk.
"It is true—I have felt that I was so sweet I didn't have to do anything. Just because I never did anything which was sour and mean I thought I was good enough. But I wasn't. I understand that now.
"Creatures and things aren't to be admired who won't take the trouble to go out of their way to do nice things. And as the Sugar Bowl can't go walking around looking for nice things to do at least it can admire the Salt Cellar and the Pepper Shaker for the work they do in seasoning and making things have a good taste."
"Ah, Sugar Bowl," said the Salt Cellar, "I am glad to hear you talk this way. For some time I have been afraid that you didn't have enough character. I was very much afraid that you were becoming too sugary and too weak!
"The Pepper Shaker would tell you too how much he thinks of you but if he comes about too much he is apt to make people sneeze. He doesn't like to do that. He can't help it if too much of him is used, but he hates to be used like that. He likes to add to the taste of things, but not to be made out a cruel creature.
"Yes, he had a terrible blow once. He was treated so badly! It wasn't fair to him at all.
"Some very mean boys and girls thought it would be fun to put sneezing powder in the flowers which they would give to their friends to smell. Then as their friends began to sneeze they would laugh.
"Well, a great deal of my Pepper friend was used then. He made those people sneeze and he didn't want to in the least. Oh, he did feel so badly about it. It wasn't funny he said, it was mean, straight and out mean! The people who sneezed were miserable. Their noses hurt, their throats hurt and they couldn't sleep for several nights.
"One little girl who had sneezed so hard and so much lost her voice for several days for the sneezing powder got down in her throat, and her throat has never been quite so strong since.
"So I think we should all be used in our places and not too much of any of us, for if too much sugar is used things will be sickish and if too much pepper or salt is used the poor pepper and salt creatures are taken a mean advantage of!"
The Greatest Change
"When water becomes ice," asked the teacher, "what is the great change that takes place?" "The greatest change, ma'am," said the little boy, "is the change in price."—Our Dumb Animals.
THE MONITOR
(Copyright, 1920, Western Newpaper Union)
"A wilful, ungrateful girl!" exclaimed Miss Maria Ward, "but I will bend her, even if I break her!"
Thus to an old spinster friend, soulless and crabbed as herself, and the latter voiced entire approval of the system and designs of her double in primness, prejudice, and, as it was now turning out, perfidy.
The subject of discussion was Miss Ward's niece, Drusilla North. Since she was twelve years of age her aunt had been her guardian, in charge of a small estate left by her father. A girl of less gentle mold would long since have resented and abandoned the strict discipline and kill-joy methods of the soured old maid. There was an innate sprightliness and optimism inherent with Drusilla, however, that sustained her mightily.
She submitted to exclusion from the coveted companionship of other young people, she sat patiently in sewing circles, dreary lecture rooms and uncongenial meetings of a club of which Miss Ward was secretary, and which comprised all the long-haired male theorists of the district and most of the female faddists.
Meantime, Drusilla dreamed. She loved poetry, sentiment and all that was true, good and beautiful. She anticipated her twenty-first birthday, when the ban would be lifted and she could enter into real life and joyfulness. Then one day she met Irving Thearle on her way to a town two miles distant, whither she was sent weekly to carry messages and dainties to an incapacitated old lady friend of her aunt.
He came into her life so charmingly, so naturally, that it seemed to Drusilla as if it was all predestined. He was stopping only incidentally at Millville in the property interests of a relative, was young, handsome, chivalrous. The winding country road was lined with flowers, and beyond were bird-hunted stretches of timber and rose-spangled reaches of velvety sward, where they roamed at will, and that one day in the week when they met became a sweetly beautiful idy to both. No word of love was spoken, but its expression came forcibly to both when Miss Ward made the discovery of this stolen companionship and like a destructive hurricane crossed the paradisiacal path of love and beauty.
Meantime Miss Ward had introduced into the household as a tri-weekly visitor a Professor Jeremiah Black, whose cult was antiquity and whose efforts to court Drusilla were persis tent, but repelled. He was a long lank youth, whom, Drusilla discerned, Miss Ward was intent on marrying her to, possibly interested as to Drusilla's little fortune.
There was a picnic one bright July day which all Millville usually attended, and Drusilla consented to accompany her aunt and the professor, because she believed Irving would be tuere, and was prepared to get some word to him. Arrived at the festal scene Miss Ward selected an isolated spot, and, lynx-eyed, kept Drusilla from conversing with any one except herself and the professor. Drusilla, however, was so uncongenial and dull that the latter wandered off by himself in a somewhat disgruntled mood. Her heart was beating high, however, for she had seen Irving arrive in an automobile and later lurking in the woodland near by. Then she caught sight of him gazing directly at her from a near covert.
"I wish you would treat the professor with more attention and respect," spoke her aunt. "When there is dancing I wish you to retain him as your partner."
"I am not prepared to join in the dancing," returned Drusilla with artful mildness, and removing her hat she disclosed several wisps of her hair done up in papers.
"You might try to oblige me for once!" observed Miss Ward tartly, and Drusilla proceeded to remove the curl papers. Her aunt was busy primping, with a hand-glass assisting. Drusilla twisted several tiny wisps of paper free. She turned a quick glance in the direction of her lurking lower. She suspended a larger piece of curl paper, wadded it and flung it into a bush nearby.
Irving saw and understood. When Drusilla and her aunt started for the dancing pavilion he gained the bush, unwisted the discarded curl paper and read: "Meet me at the spring in an hour."
It was that length of time later that Drusilla, breathless and excited, joined him there.
"I just managed to get away from my aunt," she fluttered. "Oh, Irving! they are trying to marry me to that horrid professor and I am going to run away from home."
"Grand!" commented Irving cheerfully. "I'm going to, likewise. Drusilla, dear, let us go together. My auto is handy; I know a convenient clergyman not five miles away. Shall we hurry to him and then begin a joyous, truant honeymoon?"
"Do you care for me so much, then!" faltered Drusilla, and his earnest, loyal gaze gave an assuring reply.
"I trust my future all to you," she murmured, and his strong arm encircled her as they hastened to the waiting automobile that was to them a wertable Cupid's car.
By RALPH HAMILTON
The KITCHEN CABINET
SEASONABLE FOODS.
To each man is given a day, and his work for the day;
And once, and no more, he is given to travel this way.
And woe if he flies from the task, whatever the odds;
For the task is appointed to him on the scroll of the gods.
—Edwin Markham.
For those who enjoy kidneys the following dish will prove worth a trial:
Beefsteak and
Kidney Pie.—For an ordinary pie use one pound of round steak and four or five lamb's kidneys.
Cut the steak in-to pieces an inch
Beetsteak and Kidney Ple.—For an ordinary pie use one pound of round steak and four or five lamb's kidneys. Cut the steak into pieces an inch and a half long and wide. Cut the kidneys through the center. Put the kidneys into cold, slightly salted water and allow this to come slowly to the boiling point. As soon as the boiling point is reached, draw off the water, add cold, salted water and boil again. Then drain, rinse well and add the kidneys to the steak.
In the meantime, roll the pieces of steak in seasoned flour, and brown nicely in a frying pan. Cover with water; add a pinch of marjoram, summer savory, and a few grains of nutmeg. Simmer until the meat is tender. Add any further seasoning needed. Thicken the gravy with flour and butter. Pour the meat into a pie dish with gravy enough to cover and then add the pastry top. Serve either hot or cold.
Pastry for Meat Pies.—Cream together one and one-half tablespoonfuls each of lard and butter. Put this into one cupful of flour which has been mixed with one-half teaspoonful of salt and one teaspoonful of baking powder. Add enough cold milk to make the particles stick together. Roll and cover to the edge of the dish. Leave an opening for the steam to escape. Serve from the dish after baking a golden brown.
Lemon Honey.—Cream one cupful of butter, add one-half cupful of sugar and mix until well blended. Beat in two-thirds of a cupful of honey and heat in a double boiler, beating until well blended. Beat four egg yolks until thick, add the rind of a lemon, turn into the mixture and cook until thick. Add the juice of two lemons and stir until the mixture is like thick cream. This will keep if put into covered jelly glasses. Is very nice for cake or sand-wich filling.
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Williams entertained Mr. and Mrs. Henry Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Robbins and Mr. and Mrs. Grant at a whist party at their beautiful home, 305 West Twenty-fourth street, Thursday night, February 20. Mrs. Robbins and Mr. Nelson won the prize.
Mr. Rasburn Curtis, who has been with the S. S. Kresge Co, for the past eight months, has returned to his old position as head janitor at the C. & N. W. depot. He will take charge March 1.
Mr. Ed Askew, 212 North Sixth street, spent Sunday in St. Paul visiting Mr. Jerry Lee who is very ill with heart trouble
Mr. Walter J. Williams has taken charge of the shoe shining stand and porter work in the new barber shop in the Martin hotel. He is ably assisted by Mr. U. S. Grant.
Mrs. Thomas Sturgess and daughter, Mrs. Roberts, are preparing to move to Cleveland, Ohio.
The little daughter of Mrs. Lillian Hubbard underwean than operation for appendicitis at St. Joseph's hospital last Wednesday.
Mr. Vernon Rountree has sold his interest in the taxicab business to his partner, Mrs. Howard Hill.
Mrs. E. J. Curtis, 510 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Cook street, has fully recovered from her recent severe illness.
Rev. Mr. Street of Topeka, Kas., filled the pulpit at Malone A. M. E. church Sunday morning, February 22. His sermon was very good.
Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Parker of Riverside were the guests of Rev. and Mrs. P. M. Lewis Sunday, February 22.
Mr. Jesse Boyd reports the fact that a niece, a graduate of the Nebraska schools, is now teaching in Wisconsin in a white school district, in which her brother and sister are the only colored pupils. This is her second year, conditions are harmonious and she is giving satisfaction.
All news left at the Poro Parlors receive prompt attention.
Mrs. Susie Perry, formerly of Omaha, Neb., a graduate of Poro college, St. Lewis, Mo., has opened a manicuring and hairdressing parlor at 506 West Seventh street. Mrs. Perry is a lady of high social standing and a member of the Baptist church. The first thing that Mrs. Perry did after locating in the city was to give The Monitor correspondent a subscription for one year. We wish for her success in her business venture and commend her work to all race women of this city.
Diamond Theatre
THURSDAY—
ANITA STEWART in
“A KINGDOM OF DREAMS”
FRIDAY—
JAMES J. CORBETT in
“MIDNIGHT MAN” No. 14
And a Good Short Feature
Program.
SATURDAY—
WINIFRED ALLEN in
“A SUCCESSFUL FAILURE”
RUTH ROLAND in
“THE ADVENTURES OF
RUTH”
SUNDAY—
E. K. LINCOLN in
"DESERT GOLD"
And a Comedy
TAKE
EGYPTIAN REGULATOR TEA
FOR
Consultation and Stomach Disorders
Price 25c., $0.6c. and $1.00.
THB EGYPTIAN DRUG CO.,
129 W. 31st St. New York
(From sample mailed upon request.)
OMAR
WONDER
FLOUR
The Beautiful Col
at Redu
The place for dances, parties
The very best
SODA FOUNTAL
TOBACCO, CIG
Box Office Open Fr
DANCING SCHOOL ET
2420 La
For Information Call W
W. G. MAC
H. DO
FURNITURE AND HARDW
Better Goods for Less M
OPEN
1839-47 N. 24th St. Phones
ALHAMBRA GRO
beautiful Columbia Hall for
at Reduced Rates
for dances, parties, recitals and general
The very best order maintained.
SODA FOUNTAIN IN CONNECTION
TOBACCO, CIGARS AND CANDIES
Box Office Open From 10 A. M. to 8 P. M.
CING SCHOOL EVERY FRIDAY EVER
2420 Lake Street
Information Call Webster 765 or Webster
W. G. MACON, Manager.
H. DOLGOFF
FIRE AND HARDWARE
STOVES, RUGS, LINES
Goods for Less Money. Credit if You
OPEN EVENINGS
24th St. Phones—Webster 1607; Web
MBRA GROCERY & MEAT
The Beautiful Columbia Hall for Rent
The place for dances, parties, recitals and general assemblies The very best order maintained.
SODA FOUNTAIN IN CONNECTION
TOBACCO, CIGARS AND CANDIES
Box Office Open From 10 A.M. to 8 P.M.
DANCING SCHOOL EVERY FRIDAY EVENING
For Information Call Webster 765 or Webster 2442.
W. G. MACON. Manager.
H. DOLGOFF
FURNITURE AND HARDWARE
STOVES, RUGS, LINOLEUM
Better Goods for Less Money. Credit if You Wish.
OPEN EVENINGS
1839-47 N. 24th St. Phones—Webster 1607; Webster 4825
ALHAMBRA GROCERY & MEAT CO.
PRAMER BROS., Mgrs.
One Door South of Alhambra Theater
Everything to Eat
Cleanliness and Courtesy Our Motto
TRY US
Call Webster 5021
Dr. L. E. Brig
Douglas
Ope Drug Co
Dies, Tobacco, Drugs, Rubber Goods and Sundry
PRESCRIPTIONS OUR SPECIALTY.
Burnam Streets.
Omaha
Pope I
Candies, Tobacco, Drugs
PRESCRIPTION
Pope Drug Co.
Candies, Tobacco, Drugs, Rubber Goods and Sundries.
PRESCRIPTIONS OUR SPECIALTY.
13th and Farnam Streets. Omaha, Neb
a marvelous tonic for dogs that are all out of sorts, run down, urinary, with
equal them for distemper and delitating disease. You will notice the differ-
ent, at drags or by **THE DENT MEDICINE CO.** **NEWBURGLE**
a practical treatment on dogs and their training (60 minutes long), applied for
disease.
I Grow Hair by the
MRS. CL.
1424 No. 26th Street
GOOD GROOM
C. P. WESIN
Also Fresh Fru
2006 Cuming St.
I Grow Hair by the LaKeene Process
MRS. CLARA WHITE
1424 No. 26th Street
Strict Attention to Mail Orders.
Agents Wanted. Write at Once.
GOOD GROCERIES ALWAYS
C. P. WESIN GROCERY CO.
Also Fresh Fruits and Vegetables.
2005 Cuming St.
Telephone Douglas 1698
Telephone Douglas 2672
WOLF
The House of Courteay.
24th and Parker Sta.
THURSDAY and FRIDAY—
PEARL WHITE in
"THE BLACK SECRET"
MABEL NORMAND in
"DODGING A MILLION"
Arbuckle Comedy
SATURDAY—
MADELINE TRAVERS in
"WHAT WOULD YOU DO"
Comedy Fox News
SUNDAY—
WM. S. HART in
"WOLVES OF THE RAID"
Fox News Pathe News
Sunshine Comedy
MONDAY and TUESDAY—
TOM MIX in
"THE FUED"
Big Mutt and Jeff Comedy
E. A. NIELSEN
UPHOLSTERING
Cabinet Making, Furniture Repairing, Mattress Renovating
Douglas 864. 1917 Cuming St.
C. S. JOHNSON
18th and Izard Tel. Douglas 1702
ALL KINDS OF COAL and COKE
at POPULAR PRICES.
Best for the Money
MISS BESSIE GILES
Public Stenographer and Notary
Public.
Office Phone Doug. 7812.
220 South 13th St.
Cumbia Hall for Rent
Red Rates
recitals and general assemblies
under maintained.
MIN CONNECTION
ERS AND CANDIES
in 10 A. M. to 8 P. M.
ERY FRIDAY EVENING
ke Street
master 765 or Webster 2442.
N, Manager.
LGOFF
ARE
TOVES, RUGS, LINOLEUM
ey. Credit if You Wish.
OPENINGS
Webster 1607; Webster 4825
ERY & MEAT CO.
Dr. L. E. Britt Upstairs
Douglas 7812
rug Co.
rubber Goods and Sundries.
OUR SPECIALTY.
Condition Pills
What are all out of early from drops, authority, with eyes and high coloured巩膜. There is nothing to detilitating diseases. You will notice the differ
DENT MEDICINE CO., NEWBURGH,
and their training (66 pages fully illustrated), mailed for 18c
The LaKeene Process
RA WHITE
Strict Attention to Mall Orders.
Agents Wanted. Write at Once.
Omaha, Nebraska
Among the Churches
ALLEN CHAPEL A,M.E. CHURCH
5233 South 25th Street
SERVICES
Preaching, 11 a. m.; Sunday school, 1 p. m.;
Allen Endeavor, 7 p. m.; preaching, 8 p, m.
Class meetings Friday nights.
J. A. BROADNAX, P. C.
Phone South 3475. !
POPOL EOE LOLOL IAL ALLAN EL AL LLLP LA NANG
re ere cee eat ee ee ears
Church of St. Philip the Deacon
(EPISCOPAL)
Twenty-first Between Nicholas and Paul Sts,
REY. JOHN ALBERT WILLIAMS, PRIEST
Sunday services, 7:30, 10 and 11 a. m. and 8 p. m.
COME. YOU ARE WELCOME.
% ara THERD’S A MESSAGE
5 ae ae FOR YOU AT
B lad i Bethel Baptist |
Bi ae ee : Church
5 | we © ta 29th and T Sts., South Side
Efe am SERVICES
B lhe f i Sunday school, 9:30 a, m.
B lee a | ] } Song service, 10:45 a. m. §
B ie bid ME | Preaching services, 11 a. 5
s Be Re m.; 8 p. m ;
se | Rev. Thomas A. Taggart,
i — Pastor, é
OL ———E 2120 North 27th St. .
LPO OEDL OPED OODLE DEO PAE DDD Dolor lotriontnie
CHURCH OF DIVINITY
Inter-Denominational People’s Mission
26th and Franklin Streets
Preaching, 11 a. m., 7:80 p. m.; Sunday school, 1:15 p. m.
Prayer and conference meeting every Thuraday 8 p.m.
REV. A. WAGNER, Pastor and G. 0. P. '
LBL PEPOEROO POPE R OHO REDD OME DO DH Hero totntrtetedtniot
CHURCH OF ST. BENEDICT THE MOOR
(Catholic)
MASS—# & m., First Sunday in every month. BENEDICTION—8 p. m.,
urd ‘Sunday in every month Sessions, be Snel tomporarity ip Sacred
ei MEV. FRANCIS CABSILLY: 8d, Paster.
ALLEN CHAPEL, 5233
SOUTH TWENTY-FIFTH STREET
Services were very good Sunday
and the message was delivered by
Rev. Mr. Croucher.
Mr. Rufus Long made a “great hit”
on community service.
The pastor, Rev. J. A. Broadnax,
will fill his pulpit next Sunday.
Allen Chapel members will be at
St. John’s A. M. E. church next Sun-
day at 3 o'clock p. m. at their quar-
terly meeting.
Many are yet on the sick list.
ia seh
2 i eee
1 - , i
bi i
€ |
\. fi. ‘|
| |
Rey. J, A. Broadnax
Reverend J. A. Broadnax, pastor of
Allen Chapel, A. M. E. church and
past G. M. of Oklahoma, and G. M.
of M. W. K. S. G, L. of Kansas and
Nebraska jurisdiction of all legitimate
York Rite Masons, Colored National
(Compact) Prince Hall Origin.
SP. PAUL'S BAPTIST CHURCH,
Rev. Charles Johnson, Pastor.
Sunday services were well attended
and much interest is being manifested
im the work by members of the con-
gregation. The hours of Sunday
services are 11 a. m. and 7 p.m.
PLEASANT GREEN BAPTIST
CHURCH.
Services were good all day Sunday.
The pastor is slightly indisposed.
Rev. Mr, Davis of Mt. Moriah occupied
the pulpit in the morning, and Rev.
Mr. Hail of Zion Baptist church in the
evening.
Mr. Lynch was among the many
visitors and addressed the congrega-
tion at both services on community
service. We endorse the speaker.
Quite a number remain on our sick
Hist.
~~ a 2
A reconstruction of the interior of
the church is being carried on,
/ A message for you next Lord's day.
Don’t fail to heart it.
‘The Missionary society will meet
with Mrs. Mary Lacey, 2513 Caldwell
street, Monday at 2 o'clock.
‘MT. MORIAH BAPTIST CHURCH.
Services were good all day Sunday.
The pastor made an excellent report
on the inter-church movement, which
was held in Lincoln.
Rev. M. H. Wilkinson, pastor, left
Tuesday night for, Kansas City, Mo.,
to attend the board meeting of the
Baptist association,
The Leap Year apron and necktie
social given at Mrs. George Smith's
residence, 2534 Hamilton, Saturday
was a success. A neat sum of $11.25
was turned to the church from the
social.
The funeral of the infant son of
Mr. and Mrs. D. Chambers was held
Monday at 1:30 o'clock at Jones and
Reed chapel. Rev. M. H. Wilkinson
officiated.
‘The sick are improvifg.
Regular services next Lord's day.
‘The pastor's subject, “Mistake.”
Strangers are welcome at all services.
COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA.
Mr. Fred Goodwin of Ogden, Utah,
arrived Monday to be the guest of
Jannette Word Carey.
Rey. Mr. Rhonenee is in Des Moines
attending the Inter-State conference
which convened there February 24
and 25.
Sunday was a great day at Bethel
A.M, E. church. Rev. T. B. Stovall,
the presiding elder, was at his best.
At 3 o'clock p. m. Rey. W. C. Williams
of St. Jhon's A. M. E. church, Omaba,
preached the ‘communion sermon.
‘Text, “And They That Know Thy
Name Will Put Their Trust in ‘Thee.”
Rev. Mr. Williams stirred the audi-
ence as he is known to do.
‘The churches represented were St.
John's, Omaha, by Rev. W. C. Wil-
liams and Tabernacle Baptist by Rev.
J. P. Jackson,
Rev. J. A. Broadnax of Omaha and
Rev, A. C, Terrel, presiding elder of
the Omaha District of the Kansas and
Nebraska Conference, were also visi-
tors.
Rev: 8. C. Crutcher, the world wide
missionary, Rev. Mr. Metcalf and
Rey. W. A. Moore were also with us
An unusually large number ¢om-
‘muned and one united with the
church, Miss Daisy Freeman. The of-
fering for the afternoon was $23. Pre-
siding elder, T. B, Stovall, preached
at night to a large audience. His
‘theme, “The Image of God.” The re-
‘ports read Monday evening at the
rt
second quarterly conference showed
marked progress in every department
of the church. Our church heads the
honor roll. Total offering for Sun-
day, $98.75.
‘The stork visited the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Meekins and left a
bouncing baby boy. Mother and son
are doing nicely.
Mr, and Mrs. Percy R. Starks of
Boone, Ia,, are in the city, the guests
of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. J.
Richardson.
"The slok of the city are all mosh
better at this time,
"The Ladies Mite Missionary society
will meet at the parsonage March 4.
Mrs, Hazel Turner entertained Fri-
day afternoon in honor of Miss Onita
Carr of Moberly, Mo. Covers were
laid for eleven, and four course din-
ner was served, The color scheme
was carried out in pink and white.
A most delightful time was had by
all present.
‘Those present were Mesdames
Watts, Besse, McGregor, Cary Bowens,
Cooper Ferguson and Pearl Bryant of
Omaba and Miss Onita Carr of Mo-
berly, Mo,
LA GRANGE. TEX.
She body of Mrs. Pearl Aycack,
wife of Willie Aycack, of this city,
was shipped here for burial last Tues-
day morning from Hillsboro, where
she died last Sunday. The funeral
was held from the A. M. E. church
of which she was a member. Rev.
R. S. Slaughter officiated.
Mrs. Aldonia McKinney, an old
citizen, died last Tuesday morning
after a long illness. The funeral was
held from the A. M, E. church last
Thursday, Rey. R. 8. Slaughter and
Rev. I. D. Coffee officiating
Last Thursday Revs. 8. A. Tillman,
F. R, Ruffin and R. D. Dodson motored
to Spring Hill Baptist church, near
Oldenburg, Rey. R. 8. Winn, pastor, to
sit in council over some very grave
church matters,
Among the sick are: Mmes. Polly
Smith, Lovie Simpson, Jennie Breed-
ing, Clementine Riley and Mary Hosey.
Mr. and Mrs. Ike McKinney of
Wichita Falls attended the funeral of
Mrs, Aldonia McKinney, mother of Mr.
McKinney, last Thursday.
Mrs, Melissea Johnson ‘Temple and
her son, Ollie Beaumont, are in the
city. Others visiting the city at this
time are: Messrs. Leon Warren of
Huston, Henry (Buck) Johnson and
wife, Augustus Aycock, jr., of Hous-
ton und Mr. Billinger.
Mrs. Leola (Butler) Mitchel, Messrs.
Vernal Prince, Fred Prince are in
Dallas, Tex.
Regular services at St. James’ M. B.
church, Rey. Mason conducting them.
Rey. 8, A, Tillman and R, 8. Slaugh-
ter held regular services at Bagle
Lake and Bethlehem, churches re-
spectively.
Mrs. Carrie Love of Houston was
called home last week on account of
of the sudden death of her husband
Her mother accompanied her,
ATCHISON. KAS
Charles, jr., the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Busy, died this week.
| Mr, Willard Wilson spent Sunday in
St. Joseph visiting his sister.
| Mrs. Rosa Loytin, who operated a
‘neat cafe on lower Commercial street,
was forced to close because of the
building being sold. She has been ap-
pointed agent for the Nile Queen prod-
uets, which are manufactured by a
Negro firm in Chicago,
Mrs. Anna Ingrath of Kansas City,
@ recent bride spent the week with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Ruben
| Caison,
/ Mrs. Eva Donaldson and her mother,
Mrs. Nancy Briely, who died Monday
were buried Saturday from Sawin &
Douglas parlors.
Mrs. Susie Washington's death was
& shock to the community.
Mrs, Pearl Williams stopped over
and visited her sister on her way to
Sioux City, lowa,
Mrs. Lydia and Mr. Clabe Irvin were
united in marriage last Thursday in
St. Joseph. Both are fine young peo-
ple and we offer our congratulations.
Mr. Carl Brown, who has been sut-
fering with a wound on his finger, is
much improved.
Mrs, Lena Richey was given a very
agreeable surprise on her birthday
last week by ber husband and her
sister,
Mr. and Mrs, James Wilson, jr., are
the proud parents of a ten-pound
girl. Her grandmother, Mrs. Jane
Mitchell of Weston is caring for the
the little one.
‘The two small children of Mr. and
Mrs. Willie Smith, who have been
very ill, are much improved.
Mrs. Joe Spotts of Weston was in
Atchison Wednesday having her eyes
treated.
Mr. Robert Greenfield and Miss
Gladys Saylor were married last
Sunday.
Mr. Bert Patrick, traveling sales-
man for the Kashmir Co. of Chicago,
{8 spending three days with Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Stone.
Mr. Lewis Shaw has taken an
apartment at Gray Eagle Inn,
Mr. and Mrs, Jesse Stone have re-
turned from Richmond, Mr, Stone
runs the Annex to the Olympia Cafe
THE MONITOR
nce showed |for his parents.
department |’ Mrs. Mary Hamilton of Weston. an-
h heads the jnounced the engagement of her eld-
ng for Sun-lest daughter, Sarah Ann, to Mr.
Ralph Baylis of Atchison, The wed-
jome of Mr.|ding to take place in the early
; and left # | spring.
ner and son| Mr, Dee Dydell of Weston, also Mrs.
Ed. Reece, spent Sunday in Atchison,
. Starks of |the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Auld Bow-
, the guests |man.
| Mrs. P. J.| Mrs. Mary Cunningham spent last
week in Kansas City, the guest of
re all much |her daughter, Miss Goldie Cunning.
nary society a Otie Ousley of Kansas City
ge March 4./spent three days last week with her
rtained Fri- | father.
‘The weather is beautiful in Pales-
tine.
All the churches are doing good
work and having very large attend-
ances.
‘The following deaths were report-
ed last week: Messrs, Walter Jen-
kens, Tom Christ Richard Richard-
son and Levi Coby, was buried under
the auspices of The Knights and
Daughters of Tabor, of which order he
was a member. Mrs. A. Manda, Mrs.
L. M. Strain and Mr. Alex Box died
last week.
Those who are ill are: Mesdames
Viola Jones, Leona Durham, Mannie
Taylor, Messrs. Augusta Coby, Charley
Coby and Rev. I. W. Waters.
‘The Farmers’ and Citizens’ Saving
bank had their annual stockholders’
meeting here last week, and the town
was filled with stockholders. All re-
ports were satisfactory to all the
stockholders and all who came en-
joyed themselves.
Mrs. Z, V. Alexander of Corsicanna
is the guest of Mrs. N. E. Roberts.
Mrs, Fannie Kemp of Hueston at-
tended the funeral of Levi Coby this
week, :
Mr. Henry Holsom, delegate to the
ministers council which met in this
city last week, was run down by the
Sunshine Special, rendered uncon-
scious and is in the I. and N. G. hos-
pital with three of his ribs broken.
Brother Holans and wife came into
the city from the south this week.
ROOSEVELT 10 MAKE TOUR
IN INTEREST OF GEN, WOOD
Mitchell, S. D., Feb. 25.—Theodore
Roosevelt, jr., together with five other
republicans of national prominence,
will tour South Dakota early in March
in the interests of Leonard Wood's
candidacy for the presidential nomi-
nation.
Ex-Governor Charles Osborn of
Michigan, Senator Beveridge of In-
diana, Governor Henry Allen and ex-
Governor Stubbs of Kansas and ex-
Governor Herbert Hadley of Missouri
will make up the remainder of the
party of speakers.
Have you started that little bank
account yet?
Picea tale
Rou ee
| at LAS:
Neha ho
Hoa aS
& a pel
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aera
ase OE Ay
pyar aelt ha N IY
% WITHOUT
we eh
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foe a
par aedne %, &
SAN we
; For that Neat, Well Dressed
"Appearance, See
4
‘
J. H. HOLMES |
TAILOR
| GENTS SUITS TO ORDER
} Ladies’ and Gent's Suits Remod- |
; sied, Repaired, Cleaned and Pressed
| ALL WORK GUARANTEED
; We Buy/and Sell Second Hand
} clothes. "Work called for and de
; livered.
2022 North 24th Street
Phone Webster 8320
PALESTINE, TEX.
7
“ON TO CALVARY”
Slogan of Pilgrim Rest Baptist Church
in Its Great Financial Drive.
eo eee
oe ERE Ci”
ores is |
ene a
if PCY, . d :
cA ic. [eee
‘The above is a cut of the Calvary Baptist church (white), 25th and Ham-
ilton streets, erected in 1900. This building has been purchased by contract
by the Pilgrim Rest Baptist church (colored) at a cost of $35,000. Fifteen
thousand dollars of the purchase price is to be paid before entering the
building.
Eleven thousand dollars is to be raised by the congregation and friends
by May ist. We are therefore asking every reader of this paper and the pub-
lic at large to give us your moral and financial support in the raising of
this eleven thousand dollars. Below you will find a coupon which you will
please fill in, sign and return with the amount you will give for this pur-
pose.
Please do not lay this aside, but give it your immediate attention. All
contributions will be acknowledged in the columns of this paper. Watch this
fund grow. Address all communications to
REV. W. M. FRANKLIN, Pastor Pilgrim Rest Baptist Church
Residence Address, 1818 North 26th St., Omaha, Neb.
Enclosed please find $cc: & donation on purchase
price of Calvary Baptist Church, Omaha, Neb.
IBD: ONAN eerie oa
SU El est do enna aint ORI tenement ED
Another Exceptional Mattress Sale
Did you purchase a mattress at our last mattress sale? If not,
| ask your friends that did. They will tell you we sold mattresses 50;
per cent below the present mattress prices. 3
We are going to hold another sale— :
; One Day Only, Tomorrow, Feb. 28th :;
; —and will again offer EVERYTHING IN MATTRESSES from {
the best all-layer felts to the plainer cotton top mattresses and at
| the same prices as our last sale. If you are going to need a new
/ mattress later, you cannot afford to miss this sale. ;
Note the extraordinary low prices in our windows. 3
Cash or Terms :
: hields Furniture Co.
olan jelds Furniture 0. ;
| Webster 864 24th and Lake Sts.
non anesanasanencansnasosesanssenesasenanssesnanceses
MAGIC HAIR GROWER
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AND STRAIGHTENING OIL |
at ML cata aman eee
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MME. JOHNSON AND SOUTH ee |
‘The most wonderfulhair preparation on the market. When |i ;
we say Magic wedo not exaggerate, as you can see great re- [hia a
sults in the first few treatments. We guarantee Magic Hair |" p
Growertostopthe hair atoncefromfallingoutand breaking |) —7
off; making harsh, stubborn hair soft and silky. Magic Hair | Samana
Grower grows hair on bald places of the head. Ifyou use |) ajMmMmlies =
these preparations once you will never be without them, |.) ) sare ol
Maricliatr Grower and Straightening Oilare manufactured |p amma
by Meadames South and Johnson. Wealsodo scalp treating. [Ue ac@ly 7
Magic Hair Grower, 0c. Straightening Oil, 35c. Ss
Allorderspromptly filled; send 10c for postage. Money must accompanyallorders,
LL Atents wanted—Write for particulars,
aw BSP) Wecarry everythingin the latest fashion-
% OF )| able hair goods at the lowest prices,
I S| We make switches, puffs, transforma-
} J | toncurls, covonet braids, and combings
am] made to order, matching all shades
| Boe | gesnts. Sa stpies of ae uk
} IF | all orders.
f ©.) | 2416 BlondoSt., Omaha, Neb.
[HEMP Y Naeem iss Telephone Webster 880
Patronize the State Furniture Co. |
; ‘Ith and Dodge Streets
; The Monitor recommends its advertisers. Reliable and accommo
; dating service can be found here.
RATES-2 cents a word for single insertions; 1½ cent a word for two or more insertions. No advertisement taken for cash. Cash should accompany advertisement.
ADAMS HAIGHT DRUG CO.,
24th and Lake; 24th and Fort,
Omaha, Neh.
Furnished rooms for rent in private family. Call Webster 3200.
Strictly modern room for rent. Young lady preferred. Webster 3454.
FOR RENT—Comfortable, nicely furnished rooms. Call Webster 1256.
Rooms for rent in home, all modern except heat. Call Harney 6829.
Modern furnished rooms for gentlemen. 2013 Grace street. Webster 4983.
FOR SALE—20-room flat on paved street and car line. $500 cash. Robbins. Douglas 2842.
Furnished room for rent, modern. Gentleman only. Call at 2640 Caldwell. Webster 6303.
For Sale—My equity in a desirable five-room modern home.—A. P. Simmons. Douglas 8682.
FOR SALE—Six rooms, modern, 2506 Maple St. Price $4,250. Cash $500. Robbins. Douglas 2841.
Two large rooms furnished, each strictly modern. Twenty-fourth street car line. Phone Webster 4012. 4t
Wanted—Colored woman as housekeeper with knowledge of poultry raising. Phone L. Knox, Calhoun.
Furnished room with twin beds, suitable for two gentlemen; one block from carline; rates reasonable. Call Webster 1888.
First-class modern furnished room. Mrs. L. M. Bentley Webster, 170x North Twenty-sixth street. Phone Webster 4769.
One furnished upstairs front room, suitable for two gentlemen. Two blocks from the car line. Rates reasonable. Call Web. 3792. 4t
First class rooming house, steam heat, bath, electric lights on Dodge and 24th street car line. Mrs. Anna Banks, 924 North 20th. Douglas 4379. Agents Wanted—Men and women to solicit and collect for the Nebraska State Health & Accident Insurance Co., Northwest Corner 14th and Douglas St. Phone Douglas 5575.
Real Estate North.
I have a number of bargains in homes, 5, 6 and 7 rooms, well located Am able to sell at $250 and up cash Balance monthly payments.—E, M. Davis. Webster 2420.
G. U. O. of O. F., South Omaha Lodge
No. 9374. Meetings first and third Fri-
day, South Omaha Second and fourth
Fridays, 29th and N Sts. South Side.
Past Grand Masters Council (No. 442,
first and third Tuesdays, 24th and Charles
Streets.
WM. R. SHAFROTH, N. G.
E. E. BRYANT, G. M. and P. S.
To Martha J. Kennedy, non-resident defendant:
You are hereby notified that on the 15th day of October, 1919, Moses Albert Kennedy filed a petition in the district court of Douglas county, Nebraska, the object and prayer you have on the grounds that you have wilfully absented yourself for more than two years last past.
You are required to answer said petition on or before March 22, 1920. You are further notified that this notice is made by order of Hon. Willis G. Sears, judge of the District Court of Douglas County, Nebraska.
MOSES ALBERT KENNEDY.
2112-19-26-3-4
PROF. KERLIN WRITES
New York, N. Y., Feb. 25.—Voice of the Negro." by Prof. Robert T. Kerlin, professor of English in the Virginia Military Institute, Lexington, Va., is the name of a new book in the hands of the publishers. It will come from the press in a short time and will be unique in contents. The book is designed particularly to be circulated among the white people of the United States and is made up completely from newspaper stories, special newspaper contributions, editorials and cartoons from seventy or more race newspapers and magazines throughout the country. The selection covers the period beginning with the Washington riot, up to the close of the year 1919, and is complete in every detail. It is calculated to have a tremendous effect in creating a better understanding of the Negro's problem of adjustment.
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FIRST POPULATION ANNOUNCEMENTS FOR 1920 ARE ISSUED
Washington, Feb. 25.—The first population announcements for the 1920 census were issued Saturday night by the census bureau and were as follows: Cincinnati, 401,158; an increase of 37,567 or 10.3 per cent.
Washington, 437,414; an increase of 103,345 or 32.1 per cent over 1910. Cincinnati ranked as thirteenth city of the country in 1910, with a population of 363,591. Washington ranked sixteenth with a population of 331,069. Census bureau estimates of Cincinnati's population July 1, 1917, were 414,248 and Washington's on that date 369,282. From now on, as soon as the statistics gathered by the enumerators and special agents are assembled and certified, the date will be made public, the population of the larger cities of the country being given out first. Then will follow the population of the various counties, which number more than 2,900, together with the divisions of townships, precincts and towns, with the population of each incorporated city.
NEGROES ORGANIZE
Dispatches carry the news that the Negroes of Chicago are on the point of forming co-operative societies for buying and selling.
This is good news. They will find, as white men have found, that there is no progress without organization.
Negro labor union men are reported as backing the movement, which is also good news.
Workers everywhere will find their liberty and security only in organization, and collective bargaining. We will go further and say that the workers will find their effective unity only when they recognize that their economic interests are one. Men will not come into their own until they accept industrial democracy.—W. Va. Federationist.
WOOD WONT WITHDRAW
IN STATE FOR PERSHING
Lincoln, Neb., Feb. 25.—Major General Wood, with Mrs. Wood and members of his staff, arrived in Lincoln Monday for an all-day stay. During the day General Wood met members of the Wood-for-President club and delivered an address breathing vital Americanism. According to Frank P. Corrick, state manager of the Wood campaign, the name of the general will not be withdrawn from the Nebraska primary in deference to General Pershing.
Laredo, Tex., Feb. 25.—Jack Johnson, former heavyweight pugilistic champion, will leave Mexico City for the United States Thursday, going directly to Chicago, where he will surrender himself to federal authorities for execution of sentence for conviction of violation of the Mann law, according to an interview in Thursday's issue of the Heraldo De Mexico of Mexico City.
PHILIPPINE REPUBLICANS
INDORSE GENERAL WOOD
Manilla, P. I., Feb. 25.—Major General Leonard Wood was indorsed as the republican candidate for president and a platform urging postponement of withdrawal of American sovereignty over the Philippines until the masses of Filipinos are capable of safely exercising the franchise, was adopted at the republican insular convention here last Sunday.
ITS SHAMEFUL RECORD.
The United States continues its shameful record of lynchings, burnings at the stake, breaking into prisons to seize those awaiting trial, that they may be murdered in cold blood. Nearly all these unhappy victims are Negroes, but American citizens as truly as truly as the proudest United States senator whose peace of mind only an occasional murder in Mexico can disturb.—Our Dumb Animals.
GO INTO REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE BUSINESS
Dan DesDunes and James A. Clarke, whose advertisement appears elsewhere in this issue, have gone into the real estate and insurance business. They have taken up a new line and with the energy and ability which they ahe always shown in anything they undertake there is no reason why they should not succeed. The Monitor has nothing but the sincerest wishes for success for them and all others who enter any legitimate line of business. Both gentlemen stand high and are well known in the city.
THE MONITOR is $2 a year, payable in ADVANCE. Several subscriptions are now due. Please drop into the office and pay, send the amount by check or post office order or phone Douglas 3224 and our collector will call.
THE MONITOR
JACK JOHNSON'S PETITION.
Jack Johnson, the Negro pugilist, who has been for some time a refugee in Mexico, seems to have the notion of the bad boy who thinks that if he runs away and returns after a while saying he's sorry, the heart of his corrector will be softened a bit.
The district attorney at Chicago is however, showing no disposition to compromise or negotiate with the fugitive from federal justice, and gives his the word "unconditionally" in response to certain terms desired by Jack for his return. The pugilist asks for immunity from arrest for thirty-six hours after stepping on United States soil to arrange for bail so that he will not need to go to jail while another attempt is made to secure his discharge in the courts. Jack is desperately anxious to get back to the United States. He needs the country in his business. He wants more fights, big money-making fights, and he found France, and has later found Mexico, hard to exploit in the fight line. He is ambitious to get clear back into the limelight of the arena by fightign Dempsey.
Jack Johnson is ignorant and conceived enough to believe that he should be shown some favors on surrendering to federal authority, but the moment he is within federal jurisdiction he should be arrested, as any other man under conviction and a ball-jumper would be, and thrown into jail, his case being taken up right from the point where it was interrupted by his flight.—World-Herald.
NEGRO GOVERNMENT IN U. S. A.
The Negro controls the south. The south controls the democratic party. The democratic nation still controls the nation. The nation is conducted with regard to the limitations of the Negro in the south. Prohibition was adopted by the southern states because it is dangerous for the Negro to drink. If he drinks he becomes savage or may become savage. The south defended itself against the liquor traffic not because the southern adult did not want to drink, but because he could not allow the Negroes to drink.
Woman suffrage probably will be adopted, but it had to win against the south. The south is opposed to extension of suffrage because that involves the Negro vote, which is not cast, but which must always be suppressed. Extensions of suffrage are [inimical] to sections which must maintain restrictions of suffrage.
We probably will not get universal military training because the south is afraid to train and arm Negroes. Congressmen from the south say they will not put arms in the hands of blacks. If that is their reason for opposing universal training we have a whole system of national defense dependent upon the limitations of black people submerged below the citizenship line.
We are not blaming the south. It is of no use to blame the south and it is probably unjust. The north, given the southern problems, might behave in the same fashion. But we are being ruled by Negroes to a very considerable extent and in very important matters.
The southern Negro governs by the limitations of his citizenship. His incapacity is an applied test of American legislation. If proposed legislation does not fit him it is opposed.
One nonvoting southern Negro has more influence upon the course of the United States in many essential particulars than ten voting northern citizens.
He is powerful in his powerlessness,—Chicago Tribune.
WONDERFUL ADVENTURES AND
ENVIABLE ARMY RECORD OF
OMAHA COLORED ELE-
VATOR MAN.
(Continued From Page One.)
Once, in Arizona, Sergeant Bailey, with a detachment of soldiers, in command of Lt. J. B. McDonald, was in the mountains, when a shot came from behind a rock and wounded one of the men. Then came a voice in the Apache tongue: "I am Gar! Let any man come and take me who dares!" Lietuenent McDonald called for volunteers and Sergeant Bailey and Corporal Richard Miller stepped forward. The lieutenant ordered them up the hill. Gar's first bullet grazed the left side of Bailey's head, and his right arm was sticking from the edge of his rock for another shot, Bailey, an expert shot himself, fired and broke the outlaw's arm. Gar fled, and, in the dense underbrush and rocks, made good his escape.
"He was killed a few months later," said the sergeant-elevator operator. "He had sent word to an Apache girl to meet him at a certain water hole on a certain night. The girl feared for her life and betrayed him. Sixty men ambushed themselves at the hole. In the moonlight he made an easy shot. Many bullets pierced his body and that was the end of Gar."
Read Record to Regiment.
On the occasion of Sergeant Bailey's final discharge, the colonel read
to the whole assembled regiment the record of his services. Every one of his discharges bore the legent, "Character, excellent."
Among other things, the colonel stated that Sergeant Bailey was recommended for the certificate of merit by Lt. C. P. Johnson for his services in the campaign against Kid, a White Mountain Apache Indian in June, 1887. In 1888 he was with General Corbin, settling the Moqui Indian troubles at Keene's canyon, Arizona, and was on the expedition against the Ute Indians in Montana in 1908.
When the Apaches went on a rampage in Arizona he carried dispatches from Fort Thomas to Fort Apache, a distance of 130 miles, in 17 hours.
He qualified as an expert marksman for six years, expert rifleman three years and sharpshooter for five years.
He was a corporal, sergeant and first sergeant from November 1, 1887, to April 15, 1903, when he was appointed drum major. In 1908 he was appointed regimental sergeant quartermaster under which rank he was retired in 1909.
Sergeant Bailey was born in Parker county, Texas, September 9, 1860. When he retired from the army he selected Omaha as his home.
"I had visited Omaha at the time of the Trans-Mississippi exposition and other times and thought it was the best place I knew to live," he says.
He is married and lives at 2816 Pratt street, where he owns his home. He is prominent in the affairs of colored people. He is president of the Greater Omaha Republican club and the Round Table club.-Omaha Bee.
BIG DEMAND FOR DRUMMERS
Why not learn to drum under Holland's quick method of instruction? For terms see Holland Harrold, 2420 Patrick avenue. Webster 1528. See me also for drums and traps and repairs.—Adv. Feb.
MONITOR Office, Douglas 3224. Here
they are:
One 4-room house; lot 22 by 132;
$1300.
One 5-room house; modern except
heat; lot 33 by 132; $1750.
One 9-room house; two story; lot
40 by 80; $1850.
THE MONITOR'S PRESS DAY.
THE Monitor goes to press Wednesday of each week at 2 o'clock in the afternoon. To insure publication in the current week's issue news items and articles must reach our office by Tuesday night. One form, that is to say, one chase, the iron frame in which one page of the type is "locked up" to go on the press is held open for emergency advertisements, the copy for which cannot be obtained before Wednesday morning, until noon Wednesday. Now and then we can get late news on that page, but ordinarily not. Copy, therefore, that reaches our office Wednesday later than 10 o'clock in the morning stands a slim chance of getting in that week's issue. Frequently copy reaches us Wednesday afternoon or Thursday and some irate individual calls up to know "Why isn't my item in this week's issue?" Too late, dear friends, that's all. Get your news in on time.
That corn and bodily ease are incompatible is the most trite of tru-
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no proving. Therefore, eliminate the
corn. That you can do it by using
CORNEASE FOR FOOT LACE
Cures Corns
needs only a single trial to demon-
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Try it and you will be convinced, be-
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Don't think that because various
"Corn Cores" have not succeeded,
CORNEASE will fail you also. If
it does you get your money back.
At druggists' or by mail, 25 cents.
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Subscribe for The Monitor.
Star Grocery Company
2702 Lake Street
NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS
Under Colored Management
We solicit the trade of every one in our community.
GROCERIES DELIVERED TWICE A DAY
Phone Webster 1917
Charlie Andrews & Arlander Brown, Proprietors
1509 CAPITOL AVENUE
Phone Douglas 2972 and Wagon Will Call.
J. G. LOHLEIN.
NILE QUEEN
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