The Monitor
Friday, June 6, 1924
Omaha, Nebraska
Page text (machine-generated)
WILL COOLIDGE ANSWER?
REQUEST OFFICIAL ADVICE TOUCHING ATTITUDE ON KLAN
National Advancement Association
Writes President Formal Letter
Requesting Frank
Answer
IMPORTANT ISSUE INVOLVED
Emphatic Repudiation of Principles For Which Hooded Order Stands Demanded of Republican Party
New York, June 6.—The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, have made public a letter to President Coolidge asking him in behalf of colored voters, and especially in view of the Indiana situation, for a clear and definite statement of the Republican Party's attitude toward the Ku Klux Klan. The letter, which is signed by James Weldon Johnson, Secretary of the Advancement Association, is as follows: "Honorable Calvin Coolidge, President of the United States, Washington, D. C. Dear Mr. President: "Colored voters throughout the United States, but especially in the North, are waiting for an unequivocal statement from you as head of the Republican party on the Ku Klux Klan. Until the present moment it has remained for leaders of the Democratic Party to disavow domination by and affiliation with the Ku Klux Klan and to denounce its principles and procedures.
"The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, with 100,000 members, white and colored, feels it voices not merely the feeling if colored Americans but of Americans of whatever creed or race who believe in the militant tolerance for which America stands in asking the Republican Party through you, its head, to make some definite pronouncement with regard to the Republican Party's attitude toward the Klan.
"The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People is moved to make this request of you especially in view of the situation in Indiana where the Republican Nominee for Governor was given and publicly accepted the endorsement and the votes of the Klan forces and where, furthermore, Senator James Watson from the State, an acknowledged administration leader, not only offered his support to the Klan candidate but did so without by any word or phrase depreciating the nature of that candidate's backing.
"We respectfully submit that the issue transcends a mere few votes in the coming election; although on the basis of the Klan issue, we are informed, colored people, breaking their historical allegiance to the Republican Party, are prepared to vote against Klan candidates by whatever party nominated. It is not, however, from the point of view of vote-getting that a repudiation of the Klan should come from the Republican Party. That repudiation should be made clear and decisive on the basis of the Klan's hypocrisy and the violence, disorder and the race and religious hatred known to be an inevitable product of the organization and activity of that body."
SANCTION MORE FUN
Springfield, Mass., June 6.—(By The Associated Negro Press)—By a five to one vote the conference of the Methodist Episcopal church which just closed here, lifted the ban on dancing and other amusements that has been in effect since the church was founded. Opponents of the move to lift the ban characterized it as a retreat in the fight against the social evils of the day. Those who voted to lift the ban did so in the belief that the church could render greater service in appealing to the conscience of its members than in trying to compel by rules and regulations the membership from indulgence in certain forms of amusement.
NEW BAPTIST CHURCH
ORGANIZED TUES NIGHT
A number of local Baptists held an enthusiastic meeting Tuesday night at Bethel A. M. E. church, the use of which was generously tendered by the Rev. Fred Divers, and organized St. John's Baptist church with a full roster of officers. The Rev. E. H. McDonald, D. D., was unanimously elected pastor. Negotiations are under way for a permanent place of worship.
THE MONITOR
PLAYGROUND SITES ARE
OFFERED 50 CITIES
Marmon Foundation of New York WIN
Donate Fund for Each Up
to $2,900.
New York.—Growing towns, small cities and suburban centers will be given an opportunity to obtain playgrounds free of cost through proposal of the Harmon Foundation of New York to give playgrounds this year to 50 communities of this kind in the United States.
Although the time for filing applications will expire July 1, and a large number of applications have been received from communities throughout the country, Indiana towns have failed to take advantage of the offer, according to officers of the foundation.
Under the terms of the offer, towns, small cities and suburban sections of larger cities with 3,000 or more residents and which show a growth at at least 30 per cent since 1900, are eligible in the final consideration for selection of the 50 sites for playgrounds. Applications will be investigated and the 50 playgrounds given to the same number of applying communities which are found to need them most.
Other conditions are a $2,000 maximum for each playground site, but this amount may be added to by the community if it is desired to purchase a better site than that obtainable for that amount: $1,000 is the maximum price to be paid per acre; an appraisal of the actual value of the land by two disinterested citizens who know land values in the community must accompany each application; assurance that an option on the land proposed for purchase can be obtained for a sufficient period to consummate negotiations must accompany each application; title of property must be examined and legal opinion provided; all applications must be made in writing on regular blanks provided by the division of playgrounds, Harmon foundation, 140 Nassau street, New York, and all playgrounds obtained through the foundation must be known permanently as Harmon field, and all applications must be indorsed by the mayor or president of the board of education. The Harmon foundation was organized last year through the desires of William E. Harmon, head of a real estate company of New York, to provide proper places of play for children because he had lacked these advantages when a child. A number of playgrounds have already been given to small growing towns.
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Builds One-Man Dirigible
an Amateur Can Operate
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UNITED STATES
MARINE CORPS
Matt Corbett has invented a one-man dirigible, which even an amateur can safely operate. The pony balloon will probably be used to fight the terrible "gipsy moth," which has done such great damage throughout the country. The cost of operating the machine is small and the army air service thinks so much of it that it has it fully protected. The inventor predicts that it will be to-the air what the Ford car is to the land—in other words, a great boon.
Less Than 1 Child in 4 Has Perfect Health
Washington—More than 75 percent of American school children have physical defects, Dr. Herman J. Norton, director of health education of the Rochester (N. Y.) schools, told a conference of home economics supervisors at the Interior department.
He quoted a recent survey of the 22,000,000 children and declared 15,000,000 had bad teeth; 2,000,000 to 4,000,000 fallen arches, defective spines or joints; 3,000,000 to 5,000,000 malnutrition; 5,000,000 poor eyesight; 1,000,000 more or less deaf; 1,000,000 had had or did have tuberculosis; 28,000 had heart trouble, and 200,000 were mentally defective.
A STORY OF THE MARTYRS OF 1822
A Story of Ante-Bellum Days, Dealing With Slave Insurrection at Charleston
PROPERTY OWNED BY
GEORGIANS DECREASES
Atlanta, Ga., June 6.—(By The Associated Negro Press)—Property owned by Negroes in Georgia decreased $3,042,141 from 1922 to 1923, according to the annual report of Comptroller General William A. Wright. The total valuation of property returned by Negroes was $48,233,541 last year, compared to $51,275,682 for the preceding year.
Georgia Negroes had almost nine times as much money invested in horses and mules as they did in automobiles, according to the report. They returned horses and mules valued at $4,359,858, and automobiles valued at $585,569.
The tax books showed that Negroes owned land valued at $15,567,057, city and town lots valued at $20,179,465, household and kitchen utensils valued at $4,260,314; and money and solvent debts amounting to $1,028,484.
Migration of Negroes to the North is held to be largely responsible for this decrease, many landholders and property owners selling their holding to whites and taking their money with them, and other Negroes transferring their money to investment centers in the North while remaining here themselves.
GIRL KILLED IN RACE CLASH
Pittsburgh, Pa., June 6.—(By The Associated Negro Press)—Three-year old Ida Kirtsman, was fatally wounded in a clash between Negros and whites in the hill district of this city Monday night. Police quelled the disturbance.
If there were immense difficulties in the way of recruiting, there were even greater ones in the way of supplying the recruits with proper arms, or with any arms at all for that master. But vast as were the difficulties, the leaders fronted them with buoyant and unquailing spirit, and rose, where other men of less faith and courage would have given up in despair, to the level of seeming impossibilities, and to the top of a truly appalling situation. Where were they, indeed, to procure arms? There was a blacksmith among them, who was set to manufacturing pikeheads and bayonets and to turning long knives into daggers and dirks, Arms in the houses of the white folks they designed to borrow after the manner of the Jews from the Egyptians. But for their main supply they counted confidently upon the successful seizure, by means of preconcerted movements, of the principal places of deposit of arms within the limits of the city, of which there were several. The capture of these magazines and storehouses were quite within the range of probability, for every one of them was at the time in a comparatively unprotected state. Two large gun and powder stores, situated about three and a half miles beyond the lines, and containing nearly eight hundred muskets and bayonets, were, by arrangements with Negro employees connected with them, at the mercy of the insurgents whenever they were ready to move upon them. The large building in the city, where was deposited the greatest portion of the arms of the state, was strangely neglected in the same regard. Its main entrance, opening on the street, consisted of ordinary wooden doors, without the interposition between them and the public of even a brick wall.
In the general plan of attack, the capture of this building, which held tactically the key to the defense of Charleston, in the event of a slave uprising, was assigned to Peter Poyas, the ablest of Vesey's lieutenants. Peter, probably disguised by means of false hair and whiskers, was at a given signal at midnight of the appointed day, to move suddenly with his band upon this important post. The difficulty of the undertaking lay in the vigilance of the sentinel doing duty before this building, and its success depended upon Peter's ability to surprise and slay this man before he could sound the alarm. Peter was confident of his ability to kill the sentinel and capture the building, and I think that he had good ground for his confidence. In conversation with an anxious follower, who feared lest the watchfulness of the guard might defeat the attempt, Peter remarked that he "would advance a little distance ahead, and if he could only get a grip at his throat he was a german, for his sword was very sharp; he had sharpened it, and made it so sharp it had cut his finger." And if to cast
OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 1924
AWARDED HIGHEST
BOY SCOUT HONOR
Joseph Dorsey of Troop 23, Dr. Craig Morris Scout Master, Given Badge of First Class Eagle Scout
Joseph Dorsey, senior in Central High School, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Dorsey, 3643 Parker Street, and a member of Troop No. 23, Dr. Craig Morris, scoutmaster, has just been awarded the highest honor attainable by Boy Scouts. At the recent court of honor he was awarded the badge of First Class Eagle scout. He is the first colored scout in Omaha to receive this honor, which is a highly coveted one, and one of the few in the United States. Joseph is to be congratulated upon this honor and it is hoped that others of our local Boy Scouts will strive to merit this coveted distinction.
INDIANS REFUSE U. S. MONEY
Washington, D. C., June 6.—(By the Associated Negro Press.)—For the first time in the history of government guardianship over the American red men, a group of Indians of the Colville Indian Reservation in the state of Washington have refused per capita payments due them in the distribution of their tribal funds.
Checks amounting to a total of $1,260 and ranging from $30 to $180 have been returned to the President of the United States with a refusal by the Indians to accept the money. The president later turned the checks over to the Secretary of the Interior who has supervision of the Bureau of Indian affairs.
F THE MART
Days, Dealing With Slave I
By Francis J. Grimke
PART VI
(By The Associated Negro Press)
the last lingering doubt out of his
disciple in regard to his (Peter's)
ability to fix the sentinel, he showed
him the bloody cut on his finger.
Other leaders, at the head of their respective bands, were at the same time, and from six different quarters, to attack the city, surprising and seizing all of its strategic points, and the buildings, where were deposited its arms and ammunition. A body of insurent horsemen was, meanwhile, to keep the streets clear, cutting down without mercy all white persons and suspected blacks, whom they might encounter, in order to prevent the whites from concentrating or spreading the alarm through the doomed town. Such was Denmark's Vesey's masterly and merciless plan of campaign in bare outline for the capture of Charleston, a plan, which, with such a sagacious head as was Vesey, was entirely feasible, and which would have, undoubtedly, succeeded but for the happening of the unexpected at a critical stage of its execution. Against such an occurrence as was this one, no man in Vesey's situation, however supreme might have been his ability as a leader, could have completely provided. The element of treachery could not by any device have been wholly eliminated from his chap-Monitor—Three ter of accidents and chances. To do what he set out to do, with the means at his disposition, Vesey had of necessity to take the tremendous risk of betrayal at the hand of some black traitor. It was, in reality, sad to relate, his greatest risk, and became the one insurmountable barrier in his final success.
Sunday at midnight of July 14, 1822, was fixed upon originally as the time for beginning his attack upon the city. But about the last of May, owing to indications that the plot had been discovered, he shortened the period of its preparation, and appointed instead midnight of Sunday, June 16th, of the same year. His reason for selecting the original date illustrates his careful and astute attention to details in making his plans. He had noted that the white population of Charleston was subject, to a certain extent, to regular tidal movements; that at one season of the year this movement was at high tide, and that at another it was at low tide. It was no great difficulty, under the circumstances, for a man like Denmark Vesey to forecast with reasonable accuracy these recurrent movements, and natural enough that he should have planned his attack with reference to them. And this
ANNIVERSARY OF DEATH OF MADAM C. J. WALKER
Indianapolis, June 6.—The Sunday just past marks the fifth year since the passing of the late Madam C. J. Walker, but Madam Walker is not forgotten. After all, however sad it is to realize that in the natural course of things we all must go, on the other hand it is heartening to know and feel that if we serve well and unselfishly we will not be forgotten. Madam Walker will not only live in the charities that she gave and the good that she did, but will live in the heart of every colored boy and girl and in the grateful consciousness of a struggling race. Madam C. J. Walker stands out as the premier philanthropist of her race, not because she was the first to give largely to the Y. M. C. A., but because her total philanthropic gifts are not even approached by any person of color. It must be remembered that in addition to her many other gifts, the large trust funds created, that she left $66,000.00 in cash bequests to individuals, schools and colleges throughout the country. Yes, Madam C. J. Walker will be remembered, loved and honored on down the ages.
FLORIDA LYNCHERS
MURDER TWO MEN
Fort Myers, Fla., June 6—(By The Associated Negro Press)—“Bubbers” Wilson and Wilton Williams, accused of acting uppish with some white women, were shot to death by a mob here Monday. Wilson was taken from a sheriff, and Williams pulled off a freight train.
was exactly what he did when he appointed July 14th as the original date for beginning the insurrection. At that time, the city was less capable than at an earlier date to cope with a slave uprising, owing to the departure in large numbers from it, for summer resorts, of its wealthier and more martial classes.
Again his selection of the first day of the week in both instances was equally the result of careful calculation on his part, as on that day large bodies of slaves from the adjacent plantations and islands were wont to visit the town without molestation, whereas on no other day could this have been done. Thus, without exciting alarm, did Vesey plan to introduce his Trojan horse or country bands into the city, where they were to be concealed until the hour for beginning the attack.
But the attack, carefully planned as it was, did not take place. For the thing which Peter Poyas feared, and had vainly endeavored to provide against, came to pass. One of those very "waiting men", for whom Peter entertained such deep distrust, and against whom he had raised his voice in sharp warning, betrayed to his master the plot, the secret which had been communicated to him by an overzealous convert, whose discretion was shorter than his tongue. All this happened on the morning of the 10th day of May, and by sunset of that day the secret was in possession of the authorities of the city. Precautionary measures were quickly taken by them to guard against surprise, and to discover the full extent of the intended uprising.
Luckily for the conspirators the information given by the traitor was vague and general. Nor was the city able to elicit from the informant of this man, who had been promptly arrested and subjected to examination, any disclosures of a more specific or satisfactory character. He was, in truth, in possession of but few particulars of the plot, and was therefore unable to give any greater definiteness to the government's stock of knowledge relative to the subject. Suspicion, however, lighted on Peter Poyas and Mingo Harth, the last one of Vesey's minor leaders. They were thereupon apprehended, and their personal effects searched, but nothing was found to inculate either, except an enigmatical letter not understood by the authorities at the time. This circumstance, coupled with the coolness and consummate acting of the pair of suspected leaders, perplexed and deceived the authorities to such a degree that they ordered the discharge of the prisoners. But the fright and anxiety of the city were not so readily got rid of. They held Charleston uneasy and apprehensive of danger, and so kept it suspicious and watchful.
(To be continued next week.)
Whole Number 465
WILL MOBILIZE PEACE STRENGTH
September 12 Fixed as Day for Call to Arms.
BY JAMES P. HORNADAY
Washington.-The plans for an army mobilization on the 12th of next September to demonstrate the peace strength of the country's military establishment are taking form. Secretary of War Weeks has approved the mobilization plan as outlined by the general staff and so it seems certain that the program for this demonstration as originally planned will be carried out.
Orders relating to the details of the preparations for the mobilization will go out shortly to the corps area commanders and these commanders will communicate the details of the plan to regular army units within their jurisdiction and to O. R. C. commanders, to state adjutants general, etc. It is not proposed that the preparations for this demonstration shall place any considerable amount of work on the various units that go to make up the peace strength of the military establishment.
It is explained that all the general staff here has in mind is that every organized body of men or women that would heed an actual call to arms in case of an emergency shall on the morning of September 12 come to attention, just as they would in case there was, actual trouble. Under the revised plan as approved by the secretary of war, hospital units, Red Cross units, boy scouts organizations, as well as all men who have attached themselves to the reserve corps of the army will be expected to report for duty on the morning of September 12.
Summer Maneuvers
The September mobilization is not to take the place of the regular summer maneuvers. In the Fifth corps area the regulars, the O. R. C. and the National Guard will follow this summer practically the same program they followed in the summer practice drills. In some of the corps areas the corps commanders are planning to have the various military units under them practice on mobilization in advance of the September 12 event. This is a matter, it is explained here, that is entirely in the hands of the corps commanders.
General John J. Pershing has entered heartly into the spirit that is behind the September 12 demonstration. It may turn out, however, that this demonstration will not mark his retirement from the army, although he is eligible to retire on that day. Secretary Weeks has notified President Coolidge that he would like to have General Pershing remain at the head of the army a while longer. The general will, however, it is understood, retire as chief of staff on the day he becomes eligible for a place on the retirement list.
Within the next year there will be some sort of a test of the industrial mobilization plan that has been worked out. Here is how the plan would presumably work out should there ever be another call to war:
How It Would Work.
Picture to yourself noon, the first day of open preparations. Telegrams are sent to the 14 district headquarters in the United States where procurement agents are located. From these radiate telegrams to thousands of manufacturing industries who immediately place into operation the conceived plans they had for the production of war material. The bird cage manufacturer turns to the making of fuses. Everything goes on a war basis. Reserve officers previously selected take their posts in the production program fully acquainted with their duties and with what has been planned and done to prepare the way. An automatic inventory of the most needed critical raw materials is immediately commenced. No plant in the country is overloaded beyond its capacity, none of them will find it impossible to obtain raw materials or power to carry on their program and if our plans are laid deeply enough there will be few, if any, industries which will have to lay down their work because their activities are so non-essential that they must be suspended and because they have been neglected in the placing of war orders. Equipped from the available war reserves the first two armies will, under the plan prepared by the general staff, be able to enter the theater of operations; and by the time the third army has been organized and trained, its equipment will be on hand.
Bird's Calls Tell Time
Hartford, Counn.-Scientists who have just returned from an exploration of uninhabited islands off the coast of Chile declared they found a bird whose cry tells the time of day. This creature, the jakar, is like a giant guinea hen. With its mates it screams at 5 p. m., again at midnight, and an hour before wakeup, its distant screams sounding like faint bugle notes.
Miss Hattie Gaston of 2812 Charles street is visiting friends in Chicago.
GROWING
THANK YOU
Vol. IX—No. 49
MARY WIGGINS WINS THE FIRST PRIZE IN POPULAR BABY VOTE
Richard Stanton Wins Second and Charlotte Hicks Third Prize. Contest Nets $200 for Association
COMMITTEE MAKES REPORT
Votes From Other Contestants Which Are To Be Turned in Will Not Change Standing of Winners
Prizes were awarded last Sunday afternoon at the regular monthly meeting of the Omaha Branch held at the North Side "Y" in the Popular Baby Contest which has been conducted by the N. A. A. C. P., under a committee of women, of which Mrs. John Albert Williams was chairman.
An interesting program consisting of music, the reading of important communications and an excellent address by Mrs. Senora Mae Wilkinson on "The Relation of the N. A. A. C. P. to the Community" preceded the awarding of the prizes. Mrs. Frederick Divers on behalf of the committee announced the result of the contest which was as follows:
Eleven babies had been entered of which seven reported, no reports up to that time having been received from four. This was the result showing the number of votes received and money turned in:
Mary Heedy Wiggins ...1798—$89.90
Richard Stanton ...1557—77.85
Charlotte A. Hicks ...800—40.00
Edwina Divers ...200—10.00
Nonice Williams ...89—4.45
Edna B. Taylor ...40—2.00
Lulu Bullock ...20—1.00
4505 $225.20
A prize of $10 in gold was given Mary Heddy Wiggins; $5 in gold to Charles Richard Stanton and $2.50 to Charlotte Hicks. As the expenses of the contest will be in the vicinity of $30.00, which includes the prizes and printing, and additional returns are expected from some of the four babies from which reports had not been received, the amount netted for the work of the Association will be a little over $200. The committee will submit a supplementary report as soon as additional returns are in.
St. Louis, Mo., June 6.—(By the Associated Negro Press.)—Announcement has been made by H. K. Craft, executive secretary of the Pine street branch of the Young Men's Christian Association here, that Julius Rosenwald, famous Chicago philanthropist and father of the system of Rosenwald schools in the South, has approved a gift of $25,000 toward a second Y. M. C. A. building for St. Louis colored men.
KLAN IN POLITICS EVERYWHERE
Washington, D. C., June 6.—(By the Associated Negro Press.)—"Don't let anyone tell you that it isn't politics. Every man, every cent, every resource it has is swung to politics, not in Texas alone, but everywhere."
Thus ended the testimony of Edward Young Clarke, former imperial wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, and center of numerous flavorable court controversies, before the senate committee which is investigating the election of Earle Mayfield, Texas solon. The charge has been made that the Klan elected Mayfield and that its manner of doing so was illegal.
Clarke claimed that the Ku Klux Klan worked in every manner possible to influence elections in any state where it might have an interest. Money, he claimed, was sent from national headquarters into states where it was desired to put over a program.
WINS PHI BETA KAPPA
Tuskegee Institute, Ala., June 6. (By the Associated Negro Press.) Alphonse Heningburg, honor graduate of Tuskegee Institute, 1920, has been elected to membership in the Phi Beta Kappa scholarship fraternity by the chapter at Grinnel College, Grinnel', Ia. During his brilliant college career at this old and conservative middle western college of America, Mr. Heningburg has held with credit and success the Julius Rosenwald scholarship.
Gordon Fletcher, a medical student of the University of Illinois, is an Omaha visitor this week.
THE M
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER DEVOTED
OF COLOR
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY A
MONITOR PUBLIC
Entered as Second-Class Mail M
Omaha, Nebraska, under the Art of
THE REV. JOHN ALBERT WILLIE
W. W. MOSSLY, Lincoln, Neb.
LUINDSY, W. W. WILLIAMS.
B. S. BUTTON.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES, $2.80 A YEAR,
Advertising Rates Furn.
Address, The Monitor, Poste
Telephone W
ARTICLE XIV, CON
UNITED
THE MONTTOR
THE MONTTOR
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER DEVOTED PRIMARILY TO THE INTERESTS OF COLored AMERICANS
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY AT OMAHA, NEBRASKA, BY THE MONITOR PUBLISHING COMPANY
Address, The Monitor, Postoffice Box 1204, Omaha, Neb.
Telephone WEBster 4243
ARTICLE XIV, CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES
Citizenship Rights Not to Be Abridged
1. All persons born or naturalized in the Unit and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizen United States and of the State wherein they reside shall make or enforce any law which shall allow privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty,erty without due process of law, nor deny to any within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the
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.
THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK
If there be some weaker one,
Give me strength to help him on;
If a blinder soul there be,
Let me guide him nearer Thee.
Make my mortal dreams come true,
With the work I fain would do;
Clothe with life the weak intent,
Let me be the thing I meant;
Let me find in Thy employ
Peace that dearer is than joy;
Out of self to love be led,
And to heaven acclimated,
Until all things sweet and good
Seem my nature's habitude.
SEGREGATION
SEGREGATION means separating, setting aside or apart from others. It is a Latin derivative from SE, aside, and GREX or GREG, flock or herd. Its primary significance therefore is very plain, to set apart or herd together as sheep, oxen or cattle. The prime idea is that of group separation. Such separation is involuntary and is accomplished by external force. For example, a shepherd separates the goats from the sheep, or the sheep from the well or the lean from the fat. We are speaking now of the primary, root idea underlying the word segregation. It is quite necessary that we should understand this for the word as used in our American life in its application to and its effect upon our people it shows a distinct and decided reversal to type. This is explained by the social history of the term. The slave trade of which our race was the victim gave the Negro a status from which in the mind of the white people of this country we have never been emancipated. The slave was not a man, but a mere animal or chattel, the personal property of an owner, which he could set aside or sell or dispose of according to his interest or whim just as he might do with his sheep, oxen, cattle, hogs or any other animal. This idea of the status of the Negro, as an animal, a chattel, has become a fixed one in the mind of the average white American, colors his thought and unconsciously warps his judgment. This is an inheritance and has become a tradition for "this social attitude toward the people of color of these United States, intrenched and forbidden by profit and privilege, persisted with legal sanction and religious justification for approximately half a thousand years."
Will Consider Sale of Monitor
Will consider favorable proposal for purchase of The Monitor as I am seriously considering retiring from newspaper work, important though it is, and devoting my time entirely to my pastoral and parish work.
John Alber
Box 1204,
A PRAYER FOR DELI
PREL
By Morne
(For the Associ
GOD, who hast made
who dost love all whom
because of difference
O GOD, who hast made man in Thine own likeness and who dost love all whom Thou hast made, suffer us not, because of difference in race, color or condition, to separate ourselves from others, and thereby from Thee; but teach as the unity of Thy family and the universality of Thy love. As Thy Son, our Savior, was born of an Hebrew mother and ministered first to His brethren of the House of Israel, but rejoiced in the faith of a Syro-Phoenician woman and of a Roman soldier, and suffered His cross to be carried by a man of Africa, teach us, also, while loving and serving our own, to enter into the communion of the whole human family; and forbid that, from pride of birth and hardness of heart, we should despise any for whom Christ died, or injure any in whom He lives. Amen.
PAGE TWO
naturalized in the United States, on thereof, are citizens of the state wherein they reside. No any law which shall abridge the citizens of the United States; nor person of life, liberty, or prop- law, nor deny to any person final protection of the laws.
The custom of setting the race aside has perpetuated this social attitude, and accounts for the obsession to segregate the colored American and to do everything to continue his status as that of a thing or chattel and not a man. Acceptance of segregation, without protes', is an acknowledgment that we are less than men. And this is the status of the Negro today in the mind of the average American and accounts for all the evils of segregation, which include inferior wages for the same identical work, inferior accommodations in travel where Jim Crow cars are the vogue, and colored passengers are compelled to pay first class fare for third rate service; inferior schools where separate systems obtain; inferior and often unsanitary living conditions in ghettos and districts of many cities.
Opposition to segregation upon the part of the colored American is simply his fight for the status of a man and not that of a mere animal or chattel. It is a just contention for his rights as an American citizen, nothing less than this and nothing more. Unless the constitution of the United States is a damnable lie; the Stars and Stripes the symbol of oppression and injustice segregation of American citizens is absolutely indefensible and unjustifiable.
NOT FUNDAMENTALLY HYPOCRITICAL
WE differ radically from many of our people who contend that white people, as a class, are congenitally, fundamentally and constitutionally unfair, untruthful, dishonest and hypocritical in their attitude toward and their dealings with colored folk. We do not think this is true because we believe in the inherent integrity and moral sense of humanity. We believe that fundamentally and at heart all men desire to be just and fair in their dealings with another. We believe that man's moral nature imposes this desire and duty upon him. We do not believe that white men desire to be unjust towards black or black towards white. That injustice abounds one can deny. That the weaker is the victim of injustice at the hand of the stronger is unquestionably true; but that the dominant group, anywhere—and here it is the white folks—is consciously, wilfully, wantonly, congenitally and constitutionally untruthful, unfair and hypocritical in its dealing with the subordinate group we do not hold to be true. Unfairness there is and much of it, but it is traceable to false
Sale of Monitor
Art Williams
Omaha, Neb.
RIVERANCE FROM RACE
BUDICE
Art Williams
education and faulty thinking. That prejudice, whether racial or religious, which is the parent of injustice, is not congenital or inherent is shown by its absence in the case of little children. They are absolutely void of it. They know nothing of prejudice until taught by their elders. Doesn't this throw a flood of light upon the Divine Master's words, "Except ye be converted and become as little children, ye shall in no case enter into the Kingdom of Heaven?" Because of unfairness upon the part of individuals and manifest hypocrisy, dishonesty, and deceit upon the part of many, let us not lose faith in the inherent goodness and sense of justice of humanity nor become cynical or bitter! "We have more friends than foes among the Anglo-Saxon race."
DEPRAVITY
IT IS almost inconceivable to believe that youths who have been given every educational advantage that wealth can procure could be so depraved and lacking in moral sense as to deliberately murder a fourteen year old boy simply "in the spirit of adventure" and "to have a thrill." These youths, be it noted, belong to "the superior race." How much more horrible this depravity would be considered had these hapless degenerates possessed black skins instead of white.
LINCOLN NEWS AND COMMENT
Mr. Aaron Shackleford graduates from the state university pharmacy course this season. The Kappa Alpha Psi gave a banquet in his honor Monday night.
Mrs. Minnie Walker, aged 40 years, wife of R. W. Walker, passed away at the hospital last Friday, after an operation for cancer was performed on her with hopes of saving her life, but it proved fruitless. She leaves as survivors the husband, two small children, one sister of Denver, Colo., several sister-in-laws and brother-in-laws and friends. Mrs Walker had been sick for quite a long time. The funeral was held in Quinn Chapel A. M. E. church Sunday at 3 P. M. Rev. M. C. Knight preached. A large crowd of relatives and friends paid last respects to the deceased. Out-of-town relatives were: Mrs. Eva Kimons, Muskogee, Okla.; Mrs. E. D. Walker, Mrs. Oliver Akers, Horton, Kans., and Mr. A. T. Walker, St. Joseph, Mo. The husband and relatives have our sympathy in their hour of bereavement.
E. J. Griffin has been confined to his home with illness.
Mrs. Rosa Adair and Mr. Wm. Scott are reported ill.
Mr. Chas. Scott was up from Beatrice last week and was raised to a Master Mason's degree in Lebanon Lodge No. 3, A. F. and A. M., last Tuesday night. Grand lecturer, P. A. Booth of Hastings, made his annual visit and gave the craft a most excellent lecture. He also congratulated Lebanon on their fine work as Master Masons of Nebraska and its jurisdiction. A fine luncheon was partker of, and impromptu addresses were listened to from G. M. R. H. Young Grand Lecturer P. A. Booth and others. Master Masons, take notice! Election of officers next Tuesday night.
Services at Mt. Zion Baptist church Sunday were enjoyed in praise and covenant in the forenoon; a fine sermon by the pastor, Rev. H. W. Botts, at night, and sacrament was partaken of by quite a crowd of members. The Sunday school and B. Y. P. U. were fairly attended.
To all Baptist churches and missions of Nebraska: The New Era Baptist' association and its auxiliaries convene in Mt. Zion Baptist church, Lincoln, Nebr., next Monday, June 9-15, at 9 a. m. H. W. Botts, pastor.
The L. L. Kensington Club entertained themselves Thursday with a covered dish luncheon at the home of Mrs. White. The members each brought their favorite dish of food and it proved to be a highly enjoyable meeting. The hostess serving the desert. The new work of bead making was taken up by the club under the supervision of the art instructor, Mrs. C. C. Chrisman. Next meeting with Mrs. Dean, when Mrs. Sara Walker will address the club describing her recent eastern trip.
The vacational school for children will open at Quinn Chapel Monday, June 9, at 9 o'clock in the morning. Every enterprising parent should send their children to this school. A pageant will be presented by the children attending the school at the close on July 26.
The Minnehaha Camp Fire Girls are planning to camp at Crete in their cabin "Uneeda Rest". We are grateful to Lincolnites for making this trip possible.
Miss Dorthy spent the week end in Beatrice attending the graduation of Miss Casmon from the Beatrice high school.
The spring party given by Mr. Harold Jones was a most delightful affair. The music was all to be desired, the beautiful costumes and unusual number of young people made an enjoyable evening.
Misses Frances Hill, Cleopatra Ross, Anita Miller and Helen Nichols are graduating from high school. We congratulate them.
Mr. Thomas Watts was in the city enroute to his home in Fremont from a visit to Fort Scott, Kan.
Eather Day services were observed at Quinn Chapel Sunday night by Order of Eastern Star. Rev. M. C. Knight giving an inspiring address on Ether.
DIPLOMAT FROM EGYPT ADMIRES YANKEE WOMEN
Not Surpassed Anywhere, He Says,
but in His Heart He Is
Lover of Open.
Washington.—A man from the desert has forsaken the great barren spaces for the whirl of Washington social and diplomatic life.
But for A. M. Hassanein Bey, first secretary of the Egyptian legation, the moonlight nights, sandstorms and hardships of the desert are more attractive than the elaborate ballrooms and colorful receptions which are inseparable adjuncts to diplomatic life in America.
Hassanein Bey is one of Egypt's favorite sons. While only in his thirty-fourth year, he has won distinction as a soldier, athlete, adventurer, scholar and horseman. He is a true Egyptian and his love is for the desert and for his people is profound.
If you were to meet Hassainein you would see a young man of medium height, slender and wiry of body. A neat black mustache, a pair of piercing jet eyes and a head of neatly groomed, coal-black hair give his lean, olive-complexioned face the stamp of oriental romance.
His four years at Oxford university are reflected in his speech. His English is as nearly perfect as his native language. He is now writing a book in the English language of his adventures in trekking across more than 5,000 miles of desert waste.
Hassainein is the best swordsman in Egypt. Each day you may find him practicing with his instructor at the Racquet club, preparing himself for competition in the Olympic games.
Aside from this, his skill with his hands, keen sight and speed make him a feared opponent with boxing gloves. He is fond of boxing and played hockey while in England.
He loves horses—but best of all his Baraka, a chestnut horse, which he considers the best in his native land for desert travel.
Most of all he loves adventure. "It's more or less inherent in every one of us."
"I am favorably impressed with America and her people," he said. "I admire American women. They are very energetic and seem much interested in community work. I don't think they are surpassed anywhere."
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Copyright
Underwood &
Underwood
Dr. Walter H. Eddy, who discovered the first vitamine that has ever been crystallized as an individual compound. Asked if this means capsule food, he said, "I hope not, for it will take the joy out of life." Vitamines were never seen, but their absence was known to be the cause of scurvy, berl-beri and many other pernicious diseases.
in a $2.04 Chicken
Gloversville, N. Y.-John Antillo, a local barber, made a profit of $407.96 through the purchase of a chicken for $2.04—and his deal was perfectly legitimate.
He purchased the chicken at a market and, while cleaning the crop, out rolled a diamond estimated to be worth $500.
The "home town" of the chicken is not known, it having arrived alive as part of a shipment from various parts of the state.
RUNNING RACES
Ak-Sar-Ben Field,Omaha
MAY 31 to JUNE 24
RAIN OR SHINE
$80,000 in purses
Nebraska Civil Rights Bill
Chapter Thirteen of the Revised Statutes of Nebraska, Civil Rights—Enacted in 1893:
Sec. 1. CIVIL RIGHTS OF PERSONS. All persons within this state shall be entitled to a full and equal enjoyment of the accommodations, advantages, facilities and privileges of inns, restaurants, public conveyances, barber shops, theatres and other places of amusement; subject only to the conditions and limitations established by law and applicable alike to every person.
Sec. 2. PENALTY FOR VIOLATION OF PRECEDING SECTION. Any person who shall violate the foregoing section by denying to any person, except for reasons of law applicable to all persons, the full enjoyment of any of the accommodations, advantages, facilities, or privileges enumerated in the foregoing section, or by aiding or inciting such denials, shall for each offense be guilty of a misdemeanor, and be fined in any sum not less than twenty-five dollars, nor more than one hundred dollars, and pay the costs of the prosecution.
"The original act was held valid as to citizens; barber shops can not discriminate against persons on account of color. Messenger vs. State, 25 Nebr., Page 677. N. W. 638." "A restaurant keeper who refuses to serve a colored person with refreshments in a certain part of his restaurant, for no other reason than that he is colored, is civilly liable, though he offers to serve him by setting a table in a more private part of the house. Ferguson vs. Gies, 82 Mich. 358; N. W. 718."
ALLEN CHAPEL A. M. E. CHURCH
O. J. Burckhardt, Pastor.
Quarterly meeting will be held Sunday. Presiding Elder Hicks will preach the sacramental sermon at 3 o'clock in the afternoon. Last Sunday night the Rev. Dr. Smoot of Birmingham, Ala., preached an excellent sermon.
EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF ST. PHILIP THE DEACON
Next Sunday being Whit-Sunday or the Feast of Pentecost, a high festival of the Church, there will be appropriate services. Holy communion 7:30 a.m.; sung eucharist with sermon at 11; evensong and sermon at 8 o'clock Church school or Sunday school at 10 a.m.
John Jr. and Harrold Adams, students at the Nebraska State University, are home for the summer vacation.
THE PURPOSE OF THE COLORED
COMMERCIAL CLUF OF OMAHA
The purpose of the Colored Commercial Club is to co-operate in civic and commercial enterprises among the colored people of Omaha; to foster a better relation between the colored and white business houses. The Colored Commercial Club is an organization that undertakes civic and commercial work on a large scale. Despite the fact that the club has been critized very severely and unwarrantedly, it has striven to keep the ideals and principles for which it was organized foremost in mind. It has not allowed the criticisms to discourage but rather to maintain its purpose.
As illustration of practical accomplishments of the Club, it has placed one hundred and eighty colored persons in jobs in the past month, which to every fair minded person speaks for itself. Very often people come to the office with letters and papers from their respective homes indicating they are good citizens and worthy of good jobs. The Club has secured these people desirable homes, good jobs and assisted them in many ways that an individual regardless of his standing could not do. This is emphasized, because of the many activities of the Colored Commercial Club, this is one of the greatest.
It is the duty of the Colored Commercial Club to foster civic spirit as is true of many other clubs and organizations of business and social nature throughout the city. The Club is a meeting place for organizations of social uplift, a place where the colored business men can band together for the good of the race and Omaha at large. The Colored Commercial Club is the logical place to carry on this kind of work.
The officers of the Club are as follows: Nathaniel Hunter, president; R. L. Williams, commissioner; Dan Desdunes, treasurer.
The activities of the Club are carried on by committees consisting of from three to seven members. They are as follows:
Legislation and Municipal Affairs—Rev. John Albert; Williams, chairman.
Publicity and Convention—H. J. Pinkett, chairman.
Charities, Hospital and Public Health—Dr. R. C. Riddle, chairman Boys Work—Chairman to be appointed.
Membership—C. H. Spriggs, chairman.
Entertainment, Music, Good Fellowship—Chairman to be appointed.
Real Estate, Insurance, Housing—Dr. D. W. Gooden, chairman.
Ways and Means—T. P. Mahammitt, chairman.
Retail Trade and New Business—A. F. People, chairman.
Finance—Rev. Russel Taylor.
House Committee—H. W. Williams, chairman.
It will be seen that the purpose and aim of the C. C. C. is to unify racial efforts for advancement and uplift. The Club invites all who believe in such unification and co-operation to membership.
R. L. WILLIAMS, Commissioner.
SIX ROOMS AND DOUBLE
GARAGE
Strictly modern six-room home, all on one floor. Well located, just off busy Twenty-fourth street corner, this property has fine speculative value for business property. Price $4,500, on easy terms. Evenings call TED PITKIN, Harney 7540.
METCALFE CO.
Atlantic 5415 203 South 19th st.
Seeds, Plants and Shrubs
Starting this week we will have a complete line of BLOOMING PLANTS for bedding, boxes and vases, hanging baskets for the dinner to order PRESH STOCK DAILY assures you of getting the best.
We still have a good assortment of HARDY SHRUBS to close out at your own price.
Remember, we carry a full line of GRASS, VEGETABLE and FLOWER SEEDS of the highest quality.
OUR POLICY: "Once a Customer
Always a Customer"
Home Landscape Service
24th and Cuming
Telephone JAckson 5115
I. LEVY
DRUGGIST
DRUGS, DRUG SUNDRIES,
CIGARS, CANDY AND SODA
Let us deliver you a pint of our
Famous Malted Milk in sanitary
Seal-Tite bottle, 20c.
Made Fresh.
Web. 5802 24th and Decatur
FOR SALE
We have several five and six-room houses for sale on small payments. Call
ENTERPRISE REAL ESTATE COMPANY
1423 North 24th Street
TEL. WEBSTER 4650
G RACES
Field, Omaha
How are Your Eyes!
Protect Them Now!
We Examine Your Eyes
Free
Shell or Gold Glasses
Fitted
$5
S. LEWIS
Cor. 24th and Parker Sts.
WE. 2042
HILL-WILLIAMS DRUG COMPANY
FOUNTAIN PENS—STATIONERY
CIGARS and CANDY
Eastman Kodaks and Supplies
2402 Cuming Street
LE BRON @ GRAY
ELECTRICAL WORKS
Expert Electrical Engineers
Motors, Generators, Electric
Elevators Repairs, Armature
Winding, Electric Wiring
PHONE JACKSON 2019
116 South 13th St., Omaha
THE
GAEBEL FLOWER SHOP
Shrubs, Trees and Birds
Designs and Boquets
CUT FLOWERS
2511½ N. 24th St. WE 2057
EUTHOLA
TOILET PREPARATIONS
THAT PLEASE
You can make an independ-
ent living selling them.
AGENTS WANTED
MRS. GRACE WHITE
Web. 5499 Omaha
THOROUGHLY worthy used furniture of every description is offered for sale at very reasonable prices in our warehouse, between the hours of 1 p. m. and 5 p. m. week days. 8th and Capitol Ave.—Orchard & Wilhelm Co.
Why Not Let Us Do Your
SHOE REPAIR WORK
Best material, reasonable prices.
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
BENJAMIN & THOMAS
Phone Web. 5084—1415 No. 24th
EMERSON'S LAUNDRY
The Laundry That Suits All
1301 No. 24th St. Web. 0829
PHONE JACKSON 0864
E. A. NIELSEN
UPHOLSTERING CO.
CABINET SHOP-FURNITURE
REPAIR AND REFINISHING
Box Spring and Mattress Work
1913-15 Cuming St., Omaha, Nebr
H. A. CHILES & CO.
FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND
LICENSED EMBALMERS
Chapel Phone, Web. 7133
Res. Phone, Web. 6349
1839 No. Twenty-fourth St.
Bonds Furnished to Reliable Persons
NOTARY PUBLIC IN OFFICE
PHONES:
Res., Web. 6613; Office, At. 5104
Res. 2863 Binney St.
NOAH W. WARE
ATTORNEY and COUNSELOR
AT LAW
HOURS: 9 A. M. to 12:00 Noon; 1:00
P. M. to 5:30 P. M.
Kaffir B 817 No. 16th St.
Phones: — Office, WE. 3867;
Res., WE. 3888
JOHN ADAMS
Attorney and Counselor-at-Law
Practice in all Courts,
State and Federal
1516 N. 24th St., Dunha, Neb.
Local and Personal Happenings WE PRINT THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS
E. F. Morearty, Lawyer, 700 Peters Trust building, Jackson 3841 or Harney 2156.
Ledrue Galloway, a student in the Iowa State University, Iowa City, returned home Saturday to spend his vacation.
"Dentlo," the tooth paste you ought to use.—Adv.
Mary Ellen, little daughter of Dr. and Mrs. L. E. Britt, who has been ill for some time, is improving.
ELECTRIC REPAIRING, RADIO installing, repairing and making. Cheapest and best workmanship. All work guaranteed. W. M. Holts, 2507 Indiana avenue. WEBster 7062.
Mrs. Kennedy, 2703 North Twenty-
fifth street, who is quite sick at her
home, improves slowly.
Mrs. W. H. Mortimer, 2716 Ohio
street, has been very ill for the past
four weeks at her home and shows
but little improvement.
FOR RENT—Furnished room in a
strictly modern home, 2430 Lake
Street. Web. 1888.
Rev. James Washington of Los Ang-
eles, Cal., en route home from the
General Conference of the A. M. E.
Church at Louisville, Ky., was
the guest, for a few days of Mrs. M. E.
Overall, 2010 Lake street.
The Dames Club met Wednesday afternoon at the residence of Mrs. Alphonso Wilson, 521 North Thirty-third street. Mesdames Wilson, E. M. Williamson and B. Bingham were the hostesses.
WANTED—Competent waitress, with knowledge of bookkeeping. For information, phone Monitor, Webster 4243.
Grand June Ball, Monday evening, June 16, at Dreamland Hall. Adams' Orchestra. Dance until 2 p.m.—Adv.
Rev. W. C. Williams, pastor of St. John's A. M. E. church, left Monday to attend the commencement of Western University at Kansas City, Kansas, of which institution he is a member of the board of trustees.
Michael J. Kelly, grandfather of Mrs. Oliver Willis, 2172 Maple street, who was injured by an automobile last Friday, is improving at his home.
The Misses Gladys E. Brown and Audrey Truehart, students at the State University, Lincoln, returned home Tuesday to spend their vacation with their parents.
Grand June Ball, Monday evening, June 16, at Dreamland Hall. Adams' Orchestra. Dancing until 2. a. m.—Adv.
William Jones of Columbus, Ohio, arrived in the city Monday and is contemplating opening a tailoring business here.
J. H. Broomfield expects to leave early next week for Excelsior Springs, Missouri.
H. L. Anderson, president of the New Era Baptist Sunday School Association, returned Monday from a trip through the state in the interest of the association.
The closing exercises of St. Benedict's parochial school, Twenty-fifth and Grant streets, will be held Sunday night, June 8, at 8 o'clock. The sisters have spent a great deal of time in preparing the program, which will be of a high order. Public invited. Admission 25 cents.
Peter
Bak
24th and Lake Sts.
24th and
June Wed
Petersen's Bakeries
Beautiful as well as delicious
We bake them to order respect. We also prepare SA for all occasions.
If you want a picnic lunch when you arrive at the SHA PACKAGES—PLATES—SP packages.
We bake them to order and they will please in every respect. We also prepare SALADS and COOKED MEATS for all occasions.
If you want a picnic lunch, we put them up ready to eat when you arrive at the SHADY NOOK, also have PICNIC PACKAGES—PLATES—SPOONS—CUPS, separate or in packages.
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24th and Lake Sts.
Grand June Ball, Monday evening,
June 16, at Dreamland Hall. Adams'
Orchestra. Dancing until 2 a. m.
Adv.
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Lane, teachers of
Chillicothe, Mo., are in the city for
the summer and are stopping at the
residence of Mrs. Smith, 2219 Willis
avenue.
Mrs. Walter E. Redman and Miss
Doris Goring of New York City, are
the guests of their sister, Mrs. John
A. Singleton, 2322 North Twenty-eighth street.
Mrs. Edward Burch and Mrs. Russell Bryant of Sioux City, Ia., motored to Omaha to attend the operetta, "A Nautical Knot" at Brandeis theatre last Wednesday night. Mrs. Alexander of Chicago, mother of Mrs. Burch, accompanied them. They were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Smith over the week end returning to their home Monday afternoon.
Miss Ollie Ziegler of Castle, Okla., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Alford, 960 North Twenty-sixth street.
The Pepper Pot Club met Tuesday as the guests of Miss Margaret Bell, 913 North Twenty-third street. An early Sunday morning breakfast in Elmwood park is to be given by the members June 8. The committee of girls plans to serve an appetizing menu.
The Girls' Friendly Society of the Church of St. Philip the Deacon hiked to Elmwood park Decoration Day where they spent a pleasant morning returning home in the early afternoon.
The Altar Guild of the Church of St. Philip the Deacon will give a tea next Wednesday night at the residence of Mrs. Augustus Hicks, 2716 Miami street.
Get your dinner at the North Side "Y" next Thursday. The members of the finance committee will be the hostesses. Mrs. T. P. Mahammitt, chairman.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms in modern home. Web. 3993.—6, 6, 24.
BIG CARNIVAL
P. J. Waddie's Big Band and Carnival will open June 16 on the corner of Twenty-first and Grace streets with all the latest up-to-date attractions. Concert band and orchestra every evening, and all kinds of open air amusements for everybody. Come one—come all. —Adv
CARD OF THANKS
Words cannot express our sincere appreciation for the kindness extended to us by many friends during the illness and death of a loving husband and father and for their beautiful flowers. We thank all. Mrs. Robert Starnes and Family.
REMOVES TO SOUTH SIDE
Attorney N. W. Ware has removed his office from the Kaffir Chemical Laboratories building, Sixteenth and Cuming streets, to 2731 Q street, South Side. His telephone number is MMarket 5354.
DON'T NEGLECT YOUR FEET
Corns Are Not Only Painful but Injurious to Health
LET ME REMOVE THEM
LET ME REMOVE THEM
G. W. Holmes
12 years' experience
2008 N. 23rd St.
rsen's
eries
1806 Farnam St.
Ames Avenue
ding Cakes
and they will please in every
ALADS and COOKED MEATS
h, we put them up ready to eat
DY NOOK, also have PICNIC
OONS—CUPS, separate or in
Phone WE 3387
Phone WE 3387
VS. "AMERICAN WAY"
"The English Way" with the race problem pleases Robert Herrick better than the American way, according to his article in the New York Nation this week. Mr. Herrick is a contributing editor of The Nation and author of various novels, of which the latest, called "Waste", has just appeared.
He found himself not long ago on the British island of Careacou in the Caribbean—an island whose population of about 2,000 consists of colored people and a mere handful of white officials. "I had no preconceived formulas about the race question," he writes, "and so I give what I saw and felt for what it may be worth."
"I had two stock questions that I put to the white officials: 'How many crimes of violence have occurred in your jurisdiction in the last two years?' Sometimes they had to go back four and five years to find a case of first class assault or murder. Compare that with any rural district of a similar density of population, either North or South, in the United States! — — My other question was: 'Can a white woman of the upper class go safely anywhere at any time of day or night in your island unescorted?' The answer to this was a stare of surprise. 'Of course! Why not?"
The English government, according to Mr. Herrick, wants the Negroes who live in places like Careacou, under British rule, to govern themselves loyalty. His account of his visit is sufficient testimony to the success of the plan. He will take up French colonies in an article about the island of Martinique, to appear in The Nation next week.
A CORRECTION
In the report of the operetta, "A Nautical Knot", published in last week's issue, the name of Miss Lucy Mae Allen, who took the character of "Nance" was omitted. The sentence should have read: "Miss Lucy Mae Allen as 'Nance' . . . interpreted her part with feeling and intelligence."
Quaker Maid Married
New York.—A Quaker malden and a Quaker youth gave their marriage vows, one to the other, in the modest Friends' meeting house near Grumery park, in East Twentieth street. It was the same simple ceremony, used entirely without the services of a minister, which William Penn and his faithful followers introduced into America 242 years ago. It remains the simplest and briefest nuptial pledge used in this country today.
Standing face to face in the little, unadorned meeting room, Henry Eckroyd Kirk, Jr., of Egleshames, Pa., and Enid Mary Richardson of Passaic N. J., repeated to each other the 33 words which constitute the marriage vow according to the tenets of the Friends' religion. There was no minister to read the pledges—no minister pronouncement of man and wife. Only the placing of one hand within the other and a pledge spoken in the sight of God and man.
$10 a Ton for Old Warships
London.-Since the armistice, obsolete warships of approximately 2,250,000 tons have been sold. They realize between $20,000,000 and $22,500,000.
Greece Offers to Lend
U. S. Statue of Hermes
Genea.—As a mark of esteem for American democracy, Greece, the youngest republic in the world, has offered to lend the American people one of the most beautiful of statues, bequeathed to her by antiquity—"Hermes Carrying the Infant Dionysus," the masterpiece of Praxiteles, the famous Greek sculptor of the Fifth century.
Can't Lose Pigeons
Kansas City, Kan.—Two pigeons which he had bored for about a year were no longer desired by Frank Peterson, so he motorized them five miles into the country and turned them loose. When Peterson arrived home the pigeons were there clamoring for food.
Find Ailanthus Tree
Makes Splendid Pulp
Madison, Wis.—Officials of the United States forest products laboratory here announce discovery of what is declared to be an excellent and valuable pulp wood from the ailanthus tree, otherwise known as the "tree of heaven." A half-cord of ailanthus wood was sent to the laboratory from the Pennsylvania state department of forestry for experimental purposes. Officials declare it developed into a high-grade of book paper.
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Tapestries Bring High Prices
London.—High prices were paid by French and English collectors for tapestries, when the late duke of Brunswick-Luneburg's collection came up for auction. One English Eighteenth century panel brought $15,000 and three Flemish panels $17,000. The duke's five lots realized $68,000. Five Gobelin tapestries from another collection brought $19,500.
THE MONITOR
TO SEEK DATA IN FAR NORTH
TO SEEK DATA IN FAR NORTH
Captain Bartlett Sails for Arctic on the Bear.
Washington.—Capt. Robert A. Bartlett, famous Arctic explorer and companion of Peary on his successful polar trip, has been commissioned by the National Geographic society to gather data in the Far North in preparation for future arctic explorations of the Arctic regions.
Captain Bartlett is aboard the United States coast guard ship, the Bear, America's most famous "ship of peace," from which he will make his observations during the Bear's annual cruise in Alaskan and Siberian waters.
A romantic feature of the voyage is the fact that the ship which went to rescue Greely, now, in making what may be her last trip, helps pave the way for future air exploration of the Arctic.
Captain Bartlett will study especially the locations available in Alaska for bases of operation for aircraft which would fly a zigzag course over the million square mile area between Point Barrow and the North pole—which area is wholly unexplored. He will report upon harbor facilities for supply ships, possible landing places for various types of craft between Nome and Point Barrow, the terrain across country and along the coast between those points, and upon air and water temperature, wind and sea surface conditions.
The Navy department has extended Captain Bartlett every co-operation in his work, which will be of great value as a basis of explorations such as those proposed when the Shenandah's North pole trip was planned. As the foremost living authority on practical navigation of Arctic waters Captain Bartlett was named a member of the polar expedition board, and during the consideration of the Shenandah's flight he furnished much valuable data. An air exploration of the unknown million square miles between Point Barrow and the pole probably would be made in summer months, a time of year when no explorer ever went there, because the unbroken ice of winter is essential for surface travel. Ice floes and open water are aids to air operations in the North, while the summer months promise comfortable flying temperatures and 24 hours of daylight.
"The lure of a million square miles of unknown area, which may reveal land bodies that will be of use when commercial air routes are established across the pole remains a challenge to America," said Captain Bartlett, before he departed.
"Our flag files at the pole and at Point Barrow—it is up to Americans to find and claim what lies between."
On Golden Anniversary Trip.
The historic vessel, on her golden anniversary trip will sail out of Seattle, going north to Unalaska, the Pribilof islands, to St. Lawrence and St. Michael Islands, to Nome, and thence to ports of call where mission stations and Eskimo schools are visited. She will touch Point Barrow and cruise back to Bering Strait, probably going along the Siberian coast on both sides of the strait.
The Bear was launched 50 years ago this spring from the ways at Grennock, Scotland, and was a Dundee sealer before the United States government bought her. Every year since 1883 she has made the lonesome cruise far beyond the white men's frontiers to administer law among Uncle Sam's Eskimo wards and protect his remote property on seal islands.
While the Bear is in Arctic regions she is judge, jury and clergyman. An incident of a recent voyage was the return of an Eskimo maiden to Nome as a witness against a young Eskimo who, having murdered a fellow Eskimo and a missionary, fared forth to set up "the Empire of the Eskimos." The commander holds court, marries, and conducts funeral services, and the crew aid the schools, attend the sick, and perform numerous errands of mercy.
Hunter Kills Cougar
Portland, Ore.—Edgar E. Watkins, government hunter of Grant county, killed one cougar with an automatic 22-caliber pistol and wounded another.
Watkins was out hunting rabbits to use as coyote trap bait when he came face to face with two cougars. He was about thirty feet from them when they came in sight. Watkins had carried a rifle many a day expecting to meet a cougar. But in the history of the biological survey hunters in Oregon, dating back a decade, none had ever killed a cougar in the eastern part of the state.
So Watkins didn't have his rifle. His automatic pistol was his only weapon. Knowing full well that a 22-caliber bullet is not expected to make a showing against a big cat, and realizing that the animals if wounded might turn on him, Watkins nevertheless opened fire.
Fortunately for him neither attempted to attack him. Instead they tried to flee.
As the smaller one, a yearling, turned, Watkins dropped him. At the older beast, apparently the mother, Watkins sent four shots which, blood stains in the snow told, took effect.
By Mary White Owington
Chairman of the Board of Directors of
the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
"From 'Superman' to Man."
By J. A. Roberts. Published by
The Lenox Publishing Company, 2372
7th Avenue, New York City. Price
$1.50. Postage 10c.
Anyone who wants to be provided with an enormous stock of information confuting the doctrine of white racial superiority should own this book. It depicts a Negro porter of unfailing humor and courtesy debating the race question with a rabid Southern senator. Of course, the author makes the Negro convert his antagonist. Whether he would have done this in real life in very doubtful but he would certainly have silenced him. For the Southerner speaks as most of us would speak on any question that we might chance to debate on a train, from personal observation and from causal reading; whereas, the Negro speaks from a life-long study of his subject. Moreover he has traveled much and can cite instances of customs among people from Missouri to Madagascar. He meets the antagonist fairly and at every point of the bout worsts him. The Southerner goes to be furious, sure that he will never argue with the "Nigger" again, and yet impelled to take up the battle on the morrow. His conversion at the end, his offering the porter a better job, is a bit of unfortunate sentimentalism. It makes the story unreal, whereas it might have ended on a clever note. After the Negro has gotten the better of the senator on every point; on salvery, which he shows was common among white as well as black; on sexual passion, he scores very well there; on intermarriage, his facts regarding intermarriage, he takes the city of Chicago as an example, are illuminating; after his thrusts have again and again struck home, the senator asks: "What would you offer as a solution of the problem?" To which the porter replies, "A sense of humor." "Name something easier," wisely says the white man.
It is this sly sense of humor, which makes the book something more than the platitudinous recital of race equality that is often dished up to us. The porter is poking fun at his antagonist a great deal of the time. He is amused at him. He knows just how to knock the props from under his opponent's arguments and then enjoys with the unmost politeness the Southerner's discomfort. The first night, the senator roars, the second night he fumes, the last night he asks his questions almost with an air of humility.
It would be wonderful if such a debate as this happened in real life. There is no reason that it shouldn't—except for the porter. He is too heroic to be anywhere but in fiction. Such self-control would be worthy of the Spingin Medal. But many might try to approach him. And they could nowhere go for better ammunition with which to do this than to the pages of "From 'Superman' to Man."
A. P. SCRUGGS
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
In the County Court of Douglas County, Nebraska, in the matter of the estate of Emma L. Warwick, Deceased.
All persons interested in said estate are hereby notified that a petition has been field in said Court alleging that said deceased died leaving no last will and praying for administration upon her estate, and that a hearing will be had on said petition before said court on the 14th day of June, 1924, and that if they fail to appear at said Court on the 14th day of June, 1924, at 9 o'clock A. M. to contest said petition, the Court may grant the same and grant administration of said estate to A. P. Scruggs or some other suitable person and proceed to a settlement thereof.
BRYCE CRAWFORD,
3-t-5-23-24
County Judge.
To Elias Hollowell, non-resident defendant:
You are hereby notified that Josie Hollowell, your wife, and the plaintiff herein, filed her petition in the District Court of Douglas County, Nebraska, on the 13th day of February, 1924, to obtain a divorce from you on the grounds of willful desertion for more than than two years last past. You are required to answer said petition on or before the 16th day of June, 1924.
JOSIE HOLLOWELL
4-t-5-16-24
LEGAL NOTICE
ED. F. MOREARTY
Attorney-at-Law
Peters Trust Building
NOTICE OF SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION
To Louis Bonner, non-resident
defendant:
You are hereby notified that Daisey
Bonner, your wife, and the plaintiff
herein, filed her petition in the
District Court of Douglas County, Nebraska, on the 6th day of February, 1924, to obtain a divorce from you on
the grounds of extreme cruelty and
non-support. You are required to
answer said petition on or before the
9th day of June, 1924.
4t-5-9-24 Daisey Bonner.
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Seeds
Bulbs, Hardy Perennials
Poultry Supplies
See Us for Your
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119 No. 16th St.—Opposite
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WATERS
BARNHART
PRINTING CO.
OMAHA
Sam Baby 24th and Parker
MRS. L. ABNER
NOTION STORE
ARTISTIC WORK
Fruit and Ornamental Trees for
spring and fall planting.
1419/2 North 24th Street
O. MADISON
CLEANING AND PRESSING
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Phone Webster 5617 2625 Lake St.
T. H. BRADLEY
MODERN TURKISH BATH
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WE 2770 and 2771
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UPPLY THE DESSERT FOR YOUR SU
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Advertising Talk
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315 South 17th Street Keeline Building
Advertising Talk
A hen is not supposed to have
Much common sense or tact,
Yet every time she lays an egg
She cackles forth the fact.
A rooster hasn't got a lot
Of intellect to show.
But none the less most roosters have
Enough good sense to crow.
The mule, the most despised of beasts,
Has a persistent way
Of letting folks know he's around
By his insistent bray.
The busy little
Bulls bellow
The watch dog
The doves
The peacock sp
Pigs squeak
And even serp
To hiss bef
The busy little bees they buzz,
Bulls bellow and cows moo.
The watch dogs bark, the ganders quac
The doves and pigeons coo.
The peacock spreads his tail and squack
Pigs squeal and robins sing
And even serpents know enough
To hiss before they sting.
The busy little bees they buzz,
Bulls bellow and cows moo,
The watch dogs bark, the ganders quack,
The doves and pigeons coo.
The peacock spreads his tail and squacks,
Pigs squel and robins sing
And even serpents know enough
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But man, the greatest masterpiece
That nature could devise,
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$50.00
With all Concessions
Web. 3217
Enterprise
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CLEANING AND REPAIRING
Work called for and
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Enterprise Tailoring Co.
1423 North 24th Street
Webster 4650
Let Me Photograph
YOU OR YOUR HOME
F. R. PERKINS
WEBSTER 2957
Sam Babior
24th and Parker Streets
Announces the opening of
an up-to-date grocery and
meat market, including a
full line of fresh vegetables.
DELIVERY FREE
Phone WEbster 3121
NOW OPEN
S. COSENTINO
Has opened his Jewelry and Watch
Repair Shop at Knudsen Drug Co.
with his own brand of Sts.
Mr. Cosentino has had 27
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14 years for Watch insector.
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PAN ASSOCIATION
Keeline Building
a they buzz,
cows moo,
k, the ganders quack,
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s his tail and squacks,
i robins sing
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---
PAGE THREE
WEbster 6323
FUSED QUARTZ
AS AID TOHEALTH
LS ——
New York.—The perfected method
‘ef making fused quarts In quantities,
fas announced recently by the General
Electric company, is expected to make
‘man independent of the sun's rays 9
far as his ability to obtain ultra-vio-
let rays are concerned, according t
the opinion of scientists now engaged
fm experimenting with the newly de
‘veloped material.
B. R. Berry, ansistant director of
the Thomson research laboratory of
the General Electric company, an
Rounced that he hud enlisted the serv-
fees of Dr. W. T. Bovie, professor of
biophysics at Harvard medical school,
and Dr. Clarence ©. Little of the Uni-
versity of Maine and their Institutions
to further Important experiments in
the use of fused quartz.
‘The property which makes fused
quartz stand. out above all others is
{ts ability to transmit ultra-violet rays,
the healing chemical rays which, emit-
ted by the sun, cause sunburn, These
rays are excluded by ordinary window
‘ass.
‘Now that Mr. Berry has made it
possible to produce fused quarts in
quantities, efforts are being made to
learn whether {t will be practicable to
‘use the material in the extensive man-
‘facture of electric bulbs.
Independent of the Sun.
“Ut we can provide artificial illumt-
nants that will emit ultra-violet rays
we won't have to depend on the sun,
which ts so uncertain in winter,” sald
Doctor Bovie. “We can get the sun's
effects on cloudy days by using quartz
bulbs or tubes with incandescent
Hight.”
Doctor Bovie is planning to erect
en the grounds of Harvard univer-
sity a greenhouse glassed with quarts
fo which will be determined certain
effects of the rays upon growing plants
with a view to applying any knowl-
edge thus gained to {mproving human
health or preventing human diseases.
Experiments with a simflar object are
to be made in the University of Maine
laboratories, where conditions are con-
sidered especially favorable.
While those who have undertakep
the experiments with quartz desire to
refrain from raising false hopes as to
the possibility of curing or preventing
eertain stubborn diseases, they feel en-
couraged that infant mortality from
rickets, particularly in crowded cities,
may be farther reduced as a result of
the work.
“We all know that exclusion of light
Fesults in the blanching of plants.”
said Doctor Bovie. “They may become
‘more succulent for table purposes, but
their tissues are not stout and well
@eveloped. This is because calcium
‘and phosphorus salts are not deposit-
@d in the absence of the ultra-violet
rays in sunlight.
“Similarly, If bables are submitted
to the same absence of sunlight, or of
ultra-violet rays, their bones do not
‘row, and hence rickets set in. This
is a common disease, how common Is
not generally realized. It is perhapa
Uttle realized, elther, that it 1s prev-
alent among the babies of the well-to-
do who are not allowed to play in the
streets.
“Remember that playing in the sun,
behind window ginss, does not expose
the children to these beneficial rays.
However, quartz windows which do
admit these rays are now entirely
within the bounds of possibility as
@ result of Mr. Berry's work.
The Havoc of Aickete.
“But to get back to rickets. Autop-
sles on babies in Dresden showed that
of those who were born in the fall und
died @ the spring, 96 per cent hud
rickets. Of those who were born in
the spring and died in the fall only
& very small percentage had rickets.
‘The babies born in the spring were
Outdoors in the sunlight during the
summer.”
‘After remarking that the sun's ef-
fects could be obtained on cloudy days
by the use of quartz bulbs, Doctor
Boyle added: “Certain foods act
sympathetically to sunlight. It is not
Mmconceivable that we could light our
restaurants with sources of ultra-vio
Tet light so that while partaking of
foods rich in phosphorus and calclum
‘we could partake of light energy that
would enable us to utilize these salts
fa normal manner.
“There are diseases other than rick-
‘ets which are due to faulty metabol-
fam, the ‘machine gun sneeze’ Is one.
Buch diseases might be alleviated by
feeding calcium lactate and using ul
tra-violet light in connection with It.
“Altogether, the avallability of
quarts suggests very interesting possl-
Pilities, With Doctor Little we are
undertaking the investigation of the
effects of the ultra-violet rays on the
calcium metabolism of milch cows,
The object, of course, is to see if
‘the rays can have any effect on the
milk we feed our babies. It in not im-
probable, Other animals feel the ef-
fect of the lack of these rays. Deep-
‘sea fish do not produce bones, though
Living in water prodigally saturated
‘with calcium salts. Fish of the same
‘fmpecies living in the upper water,
where the sun rays strike through,
ave bones in profusion.
-Ultea-Vielet Rays for Poultry.
“Likewise poultrymen in the North
‘unable to grow chickans for early
f “satisfactorily, ln the dark
CARD OF THANKS
‘We desire to express our sincere
thanks to our many friends for their
kindness to us during the illness and
death of our beloved daughter and sis-
ter, Edith, and for the tender sym-
‘conveyed in the many floral
ens sae
Mr. snd Mrs. John Adams and Famtly.
Advertise in The Monitor:
periment station exposed hens to ul
tra-violet rays ten minutes a day and
doubled thelr egg production. Fur
ther, the weight of the individual egg
was increased 20 per cent.
“I am personally convinced that pin
trees in our forests, deprived of light,
suffer from rickets Just as humans do
We shall hang ultra-violet quart
Ughts about the woods In the course
of our experiments and see what the
result is.”
Doctor Bovle pointed out that the
‘employment of ultra-violet rays 1s not
new, that they were used by Egyp-
tans, Romans and Greeks, but that
‘thelr chemical nature was not known.
Thelr (dentification and control are of
recent accomplishment, Among oth-
ers, Finsen in Copenhagen succeeded
in curing @ skin form of tuberculosis
and In showing the beneficial effecte
In the treatment of smallpox. =
“In America, however, progress has
deen retarded and some such event
fas the production of this quartz has
been needed to redirect attention to
the subject,” said Dr. Bovle. “Amer-
fean doctors did not understand the
aclentife side of ultra-violet therapy.
Ita use developed into a bad farm of
quackery. Apparatus called ultra-vio
lent lamps which did not emit any
of the rays Finsen relied upon were
used. ‘The result has been that many
reputable physiclans of America have
refused to have anything to do with
1"
Essence of Sunlight the Year Round
‘Those conducting experiments with
fused quartz point out that If the new
quartz merely makes it possible event:
ually for the average home to have
the essence of sunlight, artificial or
natural, the year round, In bad weath-
er and g00d, Its meaning in health to
countless thousands who, “grown un-
der glass” have been deprived of the
Denefictal qualities of sunlight, heat
excepted, Is likely to prove measure
less, It 1s belleved that the action of
the ultra-violet ray 1s sufficiently well
known to make this possibility a pre
@iction and that indoor lving, or res-
{dence in regions overcast for long pe-
rlods, need not be so hazardous In the
future. If the views of some sclen-
tists are to be accepted, Mr. Berry
will be regarded as the man who made
“perpetual sunshine” possible.
“There are now opened possibilities
of studying the effect of ultra-violet
rays on the fundamental instinct of
migration and hibernation and upon
the inherited characters of animals
and plants,” according to President
Little. “It will be possible also to
‘compare the effect of ultra-violet and
X-rays on identical material.
“Also, the fact that strains of mice
at the university's Inboratory have
Tong been used for research with can-
cer lays open a field of prospective
value in the relation between ultra-
violet rays and blology and medicine.”
Cost of World War Is
Fixed at $80,680,000,000
New York.—A book, “The Inter-Ally
Debts,” published by the Bankers
‘Trust company, estimates the total
cost of the World war at $80,680,000,
(000 gold. ‘That sum would reproduce
all the railway mileage of the world,
with more than $20,000,000,000 to spare
for other uses.
During nearly two hundred and
twenty-six years there were eight ma.
Jor wars, each at what was considered
fan enormous cost at the time. ‘The
ware of William IIT cost $150,000,000,
the War of Austrian Succession $200,
000,000, and the Seven Years' war $860,
(000,000. ‘The American war cost $500,
000,000 and the French wars, from
1782 to 1815, about $6,000,000,000
Later, the Orimean war cost $350,000,
000, and finally, the Boer war cost
‘about $1,500,000,000. In spite of all
that, the total cost of government for
Great Britain in that period amounted
to but $58,000,000,000.
‘As for our own government, the total
cost from 1701 until 1914, Including
the costs of the War of 1812, of the
Mexican war, of the Civil war, of the
Indian campaigns and of the Spanish
war, together with pensions, purchase
of Loulsians, Alaska and payment for
the Philippines, as well as the cost of
building the Panama canal, all com-
bined, amounted to $24,500,000,000—
leas than one-third the cost of the
‘World war.
“Wonder Child” Puzzle
to Russian Physicians
Moseow.—Soviet Russia has pfo-
duced a “wonder child,” a boy four
years and ten months old, named Vic-
tor, son of a Vladivostok physician,
who already wears a full beard of
whiskers and is able to throw a full-
grown man in a wrestling match. The
Tearned professor, Leontlef, and Ms
colleague, Doctor Bostk, who exam-
ined Victor, speak about hypertrophical
development, the thyroid, pancreatic
and other glands and a “mysterious
malady” from which the child ts sut-
fering. But Victor continues to grow
Gespite them and their treatment. The
precocious infant, who walks stiffly
and stumblingly, plays like a child and
has a child's mentality, yet he can
choke his small playmates black faced.
He puzzles professors as the great
country where he was born puzzles
Western theorists,
Trees Six Cougars
Montesano, Wash.—For the pelt of
& cougar recently Killed by himself,
Jack Eckstrand of Aberdeen has re-
celved from Auditor W. D. Campbell
« bounty of $20. Hckstrand killed the
cougar near the headwaters of the
Gatsop river. He told Mr. Campbell
that at the time his dogs had treed
stx of the animals, but owing to the
Iateness of the hour the others got
‘away in the growing darkness.
‘The District of Columbia leads in
the number of colored female com-
positors any typesetters. [llinois
Fanks in second place, followed by
Massachusetts, Peonsyivanis and New
\ It would be great if we could win
¢s many prises in science and in
mechanical skill ss we do in oratory.
Our beautiful, modern funeral home provides every convenience and
our experience qualifies us to render the service demanded when loved
ones are called by death.
Jones & Co., Undertakers
24th and Grant Sts, Webster 1100
Their first conversation
betrayed the fact that
she was not fastidious
ALT ausiszance she had appeared
unusually neat, immaculate.
But upon their first face-to-face
meeting he discovered that her teeth
were not clean. And he soon lost
“one look thi
mane et tection Aad aocs
in spite of the fact that in conversa-
tion the teeth are the one most
noticeable thing about you.
Notice today how you, yourself,
watch another person's teeth when
he or she is talking. If the teeth are
not well kept they at once become
a liability.
Lining Toth Canteens tna « mee
Slain terediose tat rally sees ase
Riri camel "5 dint ti
‘You will notice the improvement
even in the first few days. And you
snow it is cleaning safely.
So the makers of Listerine, the
safe antiseptic, have found for you
also the really ‘safe dentifrice.
What are your ceeth saying about
yoiaiays-LaMaear Bia.
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write The Orangeine Chemical Co.,
4-230 W. Huron St, Chicago, ii
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3423 Indiana Ave. Chisugo, Ill. Dept. 2
Selling insurance is a pleasant and
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‘There are 32,445 colored males and
208,903 females under eighteen years
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‘FOR FENT—Neatly furnished front
| Toom. Web. 1780. 2t-5-2-24
[FOR RENT—Modem rooms near car
line. Web. 557. 4t-5-2-24
TWO ROOMS—for light housekeep-
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FOR SALE—We have several 5 and
6 room houses for sale on small
payments. Call Enterprise Real
Estate Co., 1423 No. 24th St. Web.
4650. See
TWO FRONT ROOMS furnished
with kitchenette, modern, reason-
able. Apply after 6p. m. or cis
day 2216 No. 28th Ave.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms. Ail
| modern. WE 3513, 3-28)
FURNISHED ROOM in modem
home one block from car line. 2875|
Wirt St. Web. 4285.
FOR RENT —Neatly furnished room
| for married couple in a private
Sen hays entura as
ster 5372. At-3-21-24
FOR RENT—6 room steam heated
/ apartments, Well arranged. $35.00
For rental call Western Real Es-
tate Co, 414 Karbach Blk., Jack-
son 3607, Eugene Thomas, Mgr.
FOR RENT—3 und 4-room modern
apartments, 1547-1551 North 17th S*.
References required. Cal! at 1549
North 17th St. or phone ATlantie
6863.
FOR RENT—Modern furnished rooms.
Steam heat. Close in. On two car
lines. Mrs, Anna Banks, 924 North
Twentieth street. Jackson 4379
FOR RENT—Room in modern home
to desirable couple. Web. 6031.
5-9-24
FOR RENT—Room. Single lady pre-
ferred. Phone Web. 5355 after 5
p.m. 5-9-24
Help Wanted
| WANTED—Colored men to qnalify
for sleeping car and train porters, Bx-
perience unnecessary, transportation
furnished. Write T. MoCattrey, Supt,
‘St. Loute, Mo.
Wanted—Wide awake boys to sell
The Monitor every Saturday.
iecellon A. E. Smith,
| experienced dressmaker. Work
guaranteed, 2426 Blondo. Web.
5552. 4-4-4
| Madame A. C. Whitley, agent for
jthe Madam South and Johnson hair
|erstem, wishes to announce to her
many friends and patrons that she
|has moved to 2724 Miami street. Tel,
Webster 3067.—Adv.
WILI. CARE FOR CHILDREN during
| day. Webster 5660.
| Use DENTLO for the teeth. Large
tube 26e.—Adv.
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by Mail. ¥ Soap ERE Ps a art
waaiaraes& ey eo
|. West St. Cae | ae
_ Indlanapoli, Ings | LS Se cdiotn ae ioe
THE MONITOR WILL GROW IF
YOU WILL DO YOUR SHARE
GOOD GROCERIES ALWAYS
co P. Wesin Grocery Co. |
Alse Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
2001 CUMING STREET TELEPHONE JACKSON 1008
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DP ASIGLE PINCH CO. NewrorKushe Bef
To Avoid Pyorrhea
Use
PYORRHEA PREVENTIVE TOOTH PASTE
25c--2 oz. Tube
Manufactured by
Kaffir Chemical Laboratories
(A Race Enterprise) h
OMAHA, NEBRASKA -
ASK FOR IT AT DRUG STORES
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE
PATRONIZE THE STATE FURNITURE 60.
Corner 14th and Dodge Streets ‘Tel. JACKSON 1917
j" - BRUNSWICK Srisze
REID-DUFFY PHARMACY
FREE DELIVERY
2th and Lake Streets Phone WE beter 0609
THE GREAT WESTERN }
CLEANING COMPANY |
C.S. Turner, Mgr. |
Suits cleaned and pressed $1.25
Phone Webster 2129 ;
WE CALL AND DELIVER
Phone AT 9631 985 No. 24th St.
CENTRAL MATTRESS COMPANY
| Mattress made to, order. Old met
tresses renovated, Box spring ropalt.
ng our specialty, Give us trial.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
SAIL Work Called for and Delivered