St. Paul Echo
Saturday, July 31, 1926
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
CHARLES SUMNER SMITH, JOURNALIST, DIES
NORFOLK JUDGE REPEATS DECISION DECLARING SEGREGATION INVALID
A CLEAR CASE of love at first sight is the usual reaction of the new reader to The Echo. Do you boost your local paper?
VOL. 1, NO. 39
CHARL
NORFOLK JUDGE RE
DECLARING SE
Court Attitude Will Remove
Teeth From Restriction Ordinance Passed by City.
Second DecisionOfKind
Attempts at Segregation Believed to Be Stopped by Consistency of Court.
(N. A. A. C. P. Press Service)
Declaring the residential segregation ordinance passed recently by the City of Norfolk invalid and without effect, Judge Spindle of the police court on July 15 ruled again against efforts to herd the Negroes of Norfolk in restricted areas.
This decision was rendered in the case of Samuel Costen, a colored man, who recently sought to move his family into a house located at Mapleton and Majestic avenues, a so-called white district. A warrant was issued against Costen on the complaint of white neighbors charging violation of the segregation ordinance.
Former Decision Flouted.
David H. Edwards, attorney and president of the Norfolk Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, appeared for Mr. Costen. Mr. Edwards was assisted by B. J. Barnes.
For the plaintiffs appeared John B. Jenkins and J. Louis Broudy, who contended that the Norfolk law was not affected by the United States Supreme Court decision of 1917 in the Louisville case, as the law under consideration was identical with the one in New Orleans which the Supreme Court of Louisiana has upheld, which case is now pending in the U. S. Supreme Court through the work of the New Orleans branch of the N. A. A. C. P.
Law Called Invalid.
Mr. Edwards made a brilliant argument, contending that the law did not differ in its essentials from the Louisville ordinance; that it did abridge the constitutional rights of citizens; and that the provision which allows the occupancy of a home in a white neighborhood by a colored family on consent of the majority of white residents of that section and vice versa, was an improper exercise. (Continued on page 4.)
(Continued on page 4)
BOOKMAN USES DUMAS FEATURE
June Issue of London Magazine Devotes Cover, Space to Article on Negro Author.
(N. A. A. C. P. Press Service)
The London Bookman for June publishes as the feature article of that issue a study of Alexandre Dumas by Alfred Tresidder Sheppard. Mr. Sheppard in the first paragraph of the three-page article quotes Robert Louis Stevenson, who called the novelist "the ventripotent mulatto, the great eater, worker, earner, waster, the man of much and witty laughter, the man of the great heart. . . ."
Mr. Sheppard then gives a critical estimate of the great Negro writer, closing with an interesting story which reveals one of Dumas's traits. Thus Mr. Sheppard tells it:
"‘Would you rather be called Davy de la Palleterie like your grandfather the Marquais,’ his mother asked him once, ‘or simply Alexandre Dumas like your father? If the first, you could be a page; if the second, no career opens before you.’"
"‘I will be called Alexandre Dumas and nothing else,’ he replied proudly."
And Mr. Sheppard comments, "It is that name, that image, that superscription, which gives its value to the bounty flung so lavishly. We owe the magnificent old prodigal so very much."
Not only does the Bookman publish Alexandre Dumas’ photograph with the article but the same picture appears on the cover.
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The St.Paul Echo
Dancers Plan Annual Exhibit In September
Although its individual age vary from two to 18 years, the Freda C. Jackson class in dancing celebrated its collective first anniversary birthday this month. Born a year ago, the class has had a phenomenal success under the instruction of Mrs. Jackson, one of the talented young matrons of the city, and has had favorable mention in some of the national Negro periodicals.
The second annual dancing exhibition of the class will be given sometime in September. The youngsters are already in earnest rehearsal for the event, the first one of which was termed one of the most brilliant and colorful things of its kind which has ever been given in the city.
The acrobatic classes are guaranteeing a few surprises which will keep the audience wondering. Ballet, tap, character, toe and jazz dancing will also be displayed at the second annual exhibition. The date for the affair will be announced later.
KIP TO APPEAL TWO DECISIONS
Annulment Suit, Allowance of $12,000 Counsel Fees Will Base New Petition.
(Preston News Service)
White Plains, N. Y., July 29.—Not only will Leonard Kip Rhinelander appeal to the Appellate Division from the decision dismissing his complaint in a suit for annulment of marriage, but he will also appeal from allowance of $12,000 additional counsel fees.
Formal notice of both appeals was on file Friday in the office of the county clerk. The two decisions in favor of Alice Jones Rhinelander of New Rochelle were signed two months ago by Supreme Court Justice Joseph Morschauser, although the jury which found that Rhinelander had not been deceived as to his wife's color, reported last December.
Prior to the allowance of $12,000 counsel fees an allowance of $3,000 had been made, which was not opposed by Rhinelander.
Southampton, Eng., July 30. Alice Jones Rhinelander arrived with her mother to visit the latter's relatives in England and although surrounded by newspaper men, she escaped with the mere statement that she didn't care whether Leonard is in Paris.
It is understood that orders were left for a chauffeur to call at the hotel after all London trains had departed, and it was thought Mrs. Rhinelander intended to go to St. Malo, where her mother's family lives.
REMODELS BUILDING
Mr. Robert Minor, well known real estate owner of the city, has remodeled his apartment building at Dale and Rondo Sts. One of the north-facing apartments has been made into a new, modern store front, equipped for immediate occupancy of a first-class barber shop.
Mr. Minor has been active for a number of years in helping to solve the housing conditions and business enterprises of the race. This adds another very good feature to his many accomplishments. It would be well if we could have a few more Bob Minors.
PENSIONED
Washington, D. C., July 30.—On the United States pension rolls are five mothers of Civil War veterans drawing pensions, and they range in age from 96 to 102 years. One of them is Mrs. Samantha Farrer of Athens, Ga., who does not know how many years over 98 she is.
ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA, SATURDAY, JULY 31, 1926
Dr. Johnson to Assume
Howard Duties Sept. 1
Washington, D. C.—Howard University's new president, the Rt. Rev. Mordecai W. Johnson, Pastor of the First Baptist church at Charleston, W. Va. will officially succeed Dr. J. Stanley Durkee, resigning head in September. This announcement was made following the receipt of a telegram of acceptance from Dr. Johnson, who is making a tour of England and Europe.
Dr. Johnson will return to the United States about the middle of August after visiting London, Berlin and Geneva. He is with a party of Americans interested in the interracial question, which is headed by Sherwood Eddy, International Y. M. C. A. worker.
ORGANIZER GIVES PLANS OF B.S.C.P.
Statistics on Condition of Pullman Porters to Be Presented to Conciliation Board.
Pointing out that the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters had become so strong that the half-veiled opposition of the Pullman company had been withdrawn, A. Phillip Randolph, general organizer of the B. S. C. P. concluded a week's series of meetings at a final mass meeting at the Unitarian church, Minneapolis, last Sunday afternoon.
The immediate program of the organization is the securing of a living wage for porters and maids, Mr. Randolph said.
In outlining the plans and activities of the organization, Mr. Randolph stated that the only opposition which had been met with from the workers themselves came from a group of conservatives who refused to see the value of organization. The figures compiled by statistical experts on the condition of the Pullman porter in regard to hours and wages will be submitted to the United States Conciliation Board very soon, Mr. Randolph said.
Frank Boyd of the St. Paul local outlined the background of the movement. S. A. Stockwell, candidate for the state legislature, gave a short speech; and Paul L. Caldwell, secretary of the local union, acted as master of ceremonies. Two musical numbers concluded the program.
FROGS TO GIVE HARLEM
LITTLE THEATER IN FALL
America's first little community theater owned and managed by Negroes will be opened this fall in the heart of Harlem's large colored population. The building at 46 West 135th street, a stone's throw from Lenox avenue, has been bought by The Frogs, Inc., and will be converted into a 299-seat playhouse, equipped with stage, scenery, dressing rooms and modern lighting effects.
The Frogs were organized some years ago by Negroes prominently identified with the theatrical profession. Among the incorporators were Bert A. Williams, Bob Cole, George W. Walker and James Reese Europe. One of the aims is to encourage dramatic art among Negroes by providing an outlet for plays written by talented members of the race.
The project will be primarily in the interest of dramatic art and not in any sense a commercial venture. The co-operation of the entire community will be sought.
ETHEL WATERS STOPPED
Washington, D. C.—Ethel Waters and her revue were obliged to close at the Howard Theater on Thursday by an action of the American Federation of Musicians at the instance of the local organization, of which Sylvester Thomas is president. The house has been listed with the national organization for some time as "unfair." Miss Waters was denied the right to permit her musicians to work and was informed that her show would be liable to a listing as unfair, if she continued work in the house.
COLORED STAFFS TO HEAD NEGRO SCHOOLS URGED
COLORED STAFFS TO HEAD NEGRO SCHOOLS URGED
Best Results Will Be Secured Through Use of Educated Negro, Penn Says.
White Philanthropy Should Be Supplemented by Negro Support, Contention.
(Preston News Service)
Spirit Lake, Iowa, July 30.—Before the Lake Okiboja Bible Conference, Dr. I. Garland Penn, Cincinnati, Ohio, one of the Secretaries for Negro Schools and Colleges of the Board of Education, Methodist Episcopal church, declared that to secure the best and largest results in the education of the Negro, philanthropy should now work through the educated Negro as Presidents, teachers and workers.
The recent movement at Howard University in electing a Negro to the Presidency is in the right direction.
No Work for Negro.
"We had just as well be truthful about it," said Dr. Penn. It is an economic question. Thousands of Negroes are being educated and are now doing graduate work in the summer schools for their degrees. They have nowhere to work except among their own people."
He said this should not be considered as eliminating white workers from Negro schools but rather a compliment to those God-fearing, self-sacrificing men and women, in that, they have done their work so well in the last fifty years as to have prepared Negro men and women for the task. The time has also come, he said, when Negro leaders and people must give of their means for the education of the race and thus supple (Continued on page 2)
Latest Briefs In Home Fights
A new case where attempts were made to prevent a colored family from occupying its home developed in Jamaica, L. I., during the past week. Mr. and Mrs. N. H. Jefferson purchased a home recently at 110-34 173rd street, Jamaica, L. I., moving into their new residence on June 2. After occupying the home for six weeks they received a letter signed "Ku Klux Klan" ordering them to move.
The case was reported to the N. A. A. C. P. by Mr. Eugene Kinclek Jones of the National Urban League. The Advancement Association immediately took up the matter with Police Commissioner McLaughlin, Mayor Walker, and with the United States postal authorities, inasmuch as the threat against Mr. and Mrs. Jefferson passed through the mails.
Most of Mr. and Mrs. Jefferson's neighbors welcomed them into the neighborhood and are exceedingly friendly. The agitation against them, according to indications, is being stirred up by a retired actress who lives some distance from the Jefferson home. Another factor in the case is believed to be due to the fact that the Jefferson home is the most attractive residence in the neighborhood.
Mrs. Jefferson was for seven years connected with the Y. W. C. A. at Washington, while Mr. Jefferson is employed by the Pullman company.
LaSalle, N. Y.-Within a few hours after Richard Walker, prominent colored business man and his family, took up their residence at 309 Elizabeth street, a white neighborhood, here Saturday a huge cross was burned in their yard. Firemen were called to extinguish the blazing cross. The police conducted an investigation with little results. The burning of the cross was considered the work of Klansmen. The coming of the colored family in the neighborhood had been resented by the whites.
Former Local Student Attends Mayo Clinic, July 23-Aug.7
'My God, No!' Says White Mother To Girl Who Would Marry Negro
A. B. Xuma, B. S. Minnesota, '20; M. B., '25, M. D., '26, Northwestern, to Spend Year of Study in London, Budapest. Dr. A. B. Xuma, native of Cape Colony, Africa, who received his Bachelor of Science degree at the University of Minnesota in 1920, spent two days in St. Paul July 21-22, on his way to Rochester, Minn., where he will do general observation work in the Mayo clinic until August 7.
After finishing from the University of Minnesota, Dr. Xuma spent two years in the medical school at Marquette University, after which he attended the medical school at Northwestern University for two years. He received the degree of Bachelor of Medicine from Northwestern in 1925. On completing his medical course, Dr. Xuma spent one year as interne at the City Hospital No. 2 in St. Louis, Mo., as a result of which work he was granted the degree of Doctor of Medicine from Northwestern. Dr. Xuma received his elementary school training in Cape Colony, South Africa. He came to the United States in the fall of 1914 and attended Tuskegee Institute for two years. In the fall of 1916 he came to St. Paul, where he was active in church and Sunday school work.
On August 7, Dr. Xuma will return to the Twin Cities and will spend three days in the private clinic of Dr. Justus Matthews in Minneapolis. Leaving here he will go back to Chicago, Detroit, New York and Washington. At the end of the summer he plans to leave for Europe; where he will spend a year in advanced study in London, Budapest and Vienna.
PORTO RICAN WORKERS
(President News Service)
San Juan, P. R., July 30—Plans for the emigration of a large number of Porto Rican laborers to Arizona for work in the cotton fields are under discussion between representatives of a cotton growers' association and the local government. Prospects point to an early decision, according to Carlos Chardon, Commissioner of Agriculture and Labor.
Similar projects from several Southern states recently have been considered.
Daughter Held to Be "Mentally Unsound" After Refusing to Reject Cuban Lover in Face of Family Protests.
(By Associated Negro Press)
Samden, N. N. J.-After she had procured a license through a lawyer to marry a colored Cuban, Gladys Jones, a white girl of 21 years, was arrested on complaint of her grandfather and held by Judge Cleary for "examination" to test her mentality. The girl lives with her grandfather at 519 Spruce street.
Frank Michiner, a colored Cuban, is a deep sea diver.
In court Friday, Michiner made a vain effort to obtain the release of Miss Jones. He said he loved her and would marry her at any cost. "Lots of Cubans have white wives and there is nothing unusual in this case," he declared.
Mrs. Jones, the girl's mother, who lives in Woodbury, near here, when told of the action of the daughter, in wanting to marry a Negro, "had a fit."
"The very idea! My girl, a member of the controlling race of this world, wants to mix her blood with that of a Negro. No, my God, No! But when she learned that her daughter had ignored her grandfather, Mrs. Jones stated that Gladys was subject to "spells," while her grandfather declared she had an ungovernable temper and that at times she would threaten to kill all in the family.
Miss Jones insisted that she was of age and could do as she pleased.
"His first wife was the same color as I am," said Miss Jones. "I knew
MINNESOTA HISTORICAL SOCIETY
CHO
NALIST
udent Attends
nic, July 23-Aug. 7
New Fraternal Order Is Incorporated in State
The Patriotic Benevolent Order of Bees is a fraternal organization which has just been incorporated in Minnesota. The organization has its head office in Detroit, Mich. It is organized strictly on the lodge plan, has provisions for loans to its members with sick and death benefits, has a large group in the Southern states, with one of the largest organizations of any lodge in the city of Detroit. The incorporating men are E. O. Pearce of St. Paul, Jorl E. Tarver, Alozono B. Pettiford and Dr. D. E. Northercross of Detroit, Mich. Dr. J. W. Crump has been chosen as a medical examiner in this state. O. J. Smith is the attorney for the organization.
DUBOIS TO WRITE FOR BRITANNICA
Editor of Crisis Sails for Europe; Will Lecture in Germany, Switzerland.
(N. A. A. C. P. Press Service)
Dr. W. E. B. DuBois, Editor of The Crisis and Director of Publications and Research of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, saluted Saturday, July 17, on the S. P. Penland, for Europe. Dr. DuBois is to spend a number of weeks lecturing in Germany and Switzerland, and has received special commission to write a number of articles.
Dr. DuBois, according to the New York World of July 19, has been signally honored in being asked to contribute to the Encyclopedia Britannica a chapter on Negro literature in the United States. Harry Hansen, Literary Editor of the World, in commenting on this new arrangement, points out that hitherto one individual has written on all American literature.
Yays White Mother
Would Marry Negro
Only Whisper Needed to Guide Smart Kansas Hens
Oskalaosa, Kan. — You can believe this tale or not—but stranger things have happened. Terry Nichols here has perfected a new breed of fowl which he is pleased to call the "Bumming Cockrel." Mr. Nichols claims, without cracking a smile, that this chicken does not need to be created and hauled, but that when it is taken to the depot and a destination whispered in its ear, it will hop on the rods and stay right there until the town is reached—Yes, sir! And Mr. Nichols relates further, also with straight face, that he has already sent three fryers to his mother, Mrs. Edith Nichols, in Topeka, via the rods. And if you doubt that he is taking himself seriously, read the sign: "Bumming Cockrel Eggs for Sale, $5.00 a Setting."
his wife and since her death we have been friends. I love him and intend to marry him."
The next day Miss Jones was committed to the State Home for Feeble-minded at Vineland by Judge Cleary. The court took this action after Drs. Kain and Conaghy had examined the girl and declared her "unsound mentally." The girl declared she will escape and marry Michiner if it the last thing she does on this earth. Michiner was deeply moved at the action of the court and the girl's mother.
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END COMES ON WEDNESDAY AT VETS HOSPITAL
Late Editor of Minnesota Messenger, Twin City Star; Active Fraternally.
In Letter to Friend Indicates Anticipation of Death; Wife Out of City.
By Mrs. Aimee Hall
Charles Sumner Smith, veteran newspaperman, former editor of the Twin City Star and the Minneapolis Messenger, died Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 p. m. at U. S. Veterans' Hospital No. 65, Dayton and Virginia avenues, St. Paul.
Mr. Smith had been unwell for several months and had been in the hospital since the first of June. The cause of death was a complication of diseases.
Wife Absent.
At the time of his death, Mr. Smith's wife was visiting her mother, who is also ill, in Roxbury, Mass. She is to arrive in Minneapolis this morning in time to complete funeral arrangements.
Mr. Smith had just passed his fifty-second birthday on July 15. Although he was optimistic about his recovery in the presence of all visitors, a letter which Mr. Smith wrote to his former associate, Hamlet B. Rowe, on July 11, would indicate that he anticipated his death.
Well Known Journalist.
In the letter to Mr. Rowe, he said: "I have fought gamely but I will have to submit to the inevitable. I am only immediately concerned with the welfare of my wife and brother Jim."
On coming to Minneapolis more (Continued on page 3)
VICTIMS OF MINE BLAST REMOVED
VICTIMS OF MINE BLAST REMOVED
Six Negroes Among Dead as Result of Gas Explosion in Southern Disaster.
(Preston News Service)
Blockton, Ala., July 30—Bodies of nine victims of a local gas explosion in the Dixie mine of the Moffat Coal Co. Thursday, in the northern part of Bibb County, were removed early Thursday afternoon.
The victims of the blast were: Isaiah Ward, 45, foreman; J. E. Jones, 26, assistant foreman; H. F. Field, 32, all white, and six Negroes, John Smith, Cleve Calhoun, Will Johnson, Will Sanders, James Carter and James Hitt.
Reports reaching here early last Thursday night said the blast was confined to one pocket of the mine and only those men in the immediate vicinity were endangered. The victims were members of an over-time shift. Nearly 350 employees of the mine were ready to enter the pit shortly before the blast occurred. These aided in the work of removing bodies and clearing the debris.
CHILDREN KILL
Darlington, S. C.—When the mother of 18 months' old Nathan Ellison had left home to go to her work, seven children, the oldest being seven and one-half years, were left at home playing. When she returned, not more than an hour later, Nathan was dead, laid out in his best clothes in the parlor of the house, and the children were playing in the yard. The child had been struck in the chest with an axe by a four-year-old girl, and, when dead, the children had affected funeral services over him. No arrests were made by the coroner, none of the children seeming to realize the gravity of their misdeed.
4
"Entered as second class matter Nov. 7, 1925, at the post office at St. Paul, Minn., under the act of March 3, 1879"
THE WAVING OF THE RED FLAG
A local white critic in speaking recently about colored newspapers, stated that they served a function, he supposed, but that they were all too prone to "wave the red flag." He did not see why it was necessary to dwell constantly upon the latest lynching, the most recent bombing of colored homes in white residential districts, and the flaunting of discriminatory measures in states whose composite citizenry was supposed to be protected from embarrassment by Civil Rights acts.
The gentleman must never have examined the organs of other races or groups, or else he was simply talking without thinking if he was serious in saying that the Negro press should abstain from constant reference to the things which most vitally concern the welfare of its readers.
Journalals of the working man devote little if any space to the latest discoveries of some anthropological expedition in the heart of Africa. They talk of things which affect the status of the working man. A Y. M. C. A. organ wastes none of its linotype bill paying for accounts of the periodicity of the business cycle, or the debate between the chemists and the physicists as to what the potential power of the electron is. Rather, such a paper devotes space to matters of religious import, information which its readers are seeking.
Even the large daily papers, by which the critic was judging Negro journals, openly admit that they give the reader what the reader wants to hear. More than catering to their readers, however, they cater to the large business interests, as Upton Sinclair has ably pointed out. In any case, they give what is wanted, and what their reading or advertising public demands.
Colored periodicals have an audience which is reached to a certain extent by any of the journals which supply the reading wants of white people. In addition to those, they have a whole world of interests which the white periodicals never even approach.
To throw completely aside the service of colored papers in presenting to colored readers the intimate facts about the highly colored stories about Negroes which do find their way into white papers, there is yet the whole world of Negro drama, art, sports and social life to be presented—topics which are handled only superficially, and often not at all, by white papers.
"The waving of the red flag" is merely the presentation to Negro readers of facts which vitally concern them as responsible citizens, and as ordinary folks. It is natural that people should be interested in themselves, and in this case, being interested in themselves predicates an interest in every man whose life is taken by a lawless mob, in every home-owner who has his home bombed, and in every city which passes a residential segregation ordinance.
These are the things with which we must live. These are the conditions which are going to make us happy or resentful, satisfied or discontented. These concern living itself. To expect us to forget them in abstract contemplation of the problem of the universe at large is to display a degree of weak-mindedness and to hope for the reversal of human nature.
SCHOLARSHIPS
The University of Minnesota has just announced that beginning with the fall quarter of this year it will award scholarships from a stable fund to deserving entering freshmen. Awards will be made on the basis of scholastic record and of extra-curricular accomplishment in high school.
With this movement of our state university to keep abreast of educational development, and to facilitate the higher education of the youth of the state, there seems every reason to believe that the children of the colored people of Minnesota will benefit equally with the white in the granting of the awards.
This is unfortunately not true and the fault does not lie with the state or with the people who will be selected to administer the scholarships. The blame rests instead flatly upon the colored population, and the weighty end of it is upon that prevalent type of Negro parent which can afford in every way to send its children both through high school and the university, but which will not do so because it lacks mental vision.
One of the things which should redound eternally to the shame of colored Minnesotans is that they have in their front yards, to phrase it figuratively, one of the best public school systems which the country can boast, and that they take the minimum advantage of those facilities which are so readily at hand.
In the South where the schools are bad, where many of the teachers are of a poor grade, and where arbitrary discrimination in state grants to colored and white schools is practiced, colored youngsters scramble and slave and cry for education. In Minnesota where the schools are alike for every one, where the teachers are efficient, and where there is every incentive to carry on in school, colored children "get tired" of school when they are half way through high school, and colored parents lack the foresight to insist that their short-sighted offspring continue their education.
Because of that apathetic attitude the percentage of local colored entrants at the state school each year is disgracefully low, and because of that low percentage, by using the law of averages, it is evident that the chances of colored scholars being awarded scholarships is by that much decreased.
To protest because we are denied civil rights before the law is both right and necessary. That we will never learn to get civil rights, however, before we first learn to seize the valuable and
readily-available fruits of taxation is so obvious as to need no elaboration.
"NO! MY GOD, NO!"
As long as two or more races live side by side, there will be, laws or no laws, social sanction or no social sanction, legally or illicitly, a certain amount of race intermixture. The white South, which is blood guilty in that respect, should long since have learned the lesson as well as has the black South which has had to suffer the consequences of sexual brutality.
Apparently, though, the lesson is being just driven home to one agonized mother whose white daughter insists that willy-nilly she will marry the dark-skinned Cuban of her choice. Daughter insisted and parents cajoled; daughter insisted, and parents entreated; daughter insisted and parents protested; daughter insisted . . . and parents had daughter put in an insane ward!
In spite of all the fuss, daughter still swears that she loves her Cuban deep-sea diver and will marry him if it's the last thing she does. The parents are being crucified on the two horns of a dilemma. If daughter is to be kept from ruining herself and disgraceing her family forever, she must be kept locked up as insane
If she is released, thus wiping the family escutcheon clear of any suggestion of previous tainting by syphilis or worse, she will do herself irreparable injury by marrying a Negro. Mother, at least, seems to have made up her mind about what course to choose, for when asked if daughter might marry she boiled, "No! My God, no!"
the Last Judgment should have been painted, how lacking it was in horses and chariots, in angels blowing their trumpets, how Michael should have been there and Gabriel with his wings stretched toward the East and toward the West, the one colored preacher says: "Mr. Angelo aint never had the tenth part of the necessary inspiration. Without the aid of the speerit he did very well, but when I stood there and contemplated the missing parts of his picture I had to say in my heart: 'Well, here's an amateur.'" And the other preacher explained volcanic eruption to the Negroes of Coosa County with an imagination that a scientist might envy. "In de beginnin' de Lord made de earth round. Now when a thing is roun' it' made to go roun' an roun'. And so de good Lord made two poles on each side uv dis roun'
BOOK REVIEWS
So runs the advertisement, and in sober judgment this is probably the best collection of short stories that America has ever had. And for this good reason that the funny stories about the Negro, which dominate this volume, are fresh, spontaneous and amazingly funny. Mr. Pickens has also some good Jewish and Irish stories, but, at least to his white readers, they will have "an ancient and fish-like smell." But while we will hear Booker Washington's voice as we read some of these colored bits they will smell fresh, salty. They are unmistakably alive.
Especially does the Negro preacher enliven the pages. The illiterate black man who feels a call to preach, and with the Bible as his whole library, shouts the gospel to his flock, will in a generation or two have passed away. From the standpoint of ethics this will be a good thing, but the coming minister who will find much of his gospel in the morning newspaper, will lack in noble imagery. The two longest and most interesting tales that the book contains concern Negro preachers, the one standing in the Sistine chapel in front of Michael Angelo's Last Judgment, the other faced by the catastrophe of the eruption of Mt. Pelee. After telling how
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ST. PAUL ECHO
614 Court Block St. Paul, Minn.
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Page Four
\s pot Light
| ‘By Johnny Walton |
COLORED GOPHERS VS.
ST. PAUL POLICE SUNDAY
The support of all colored baseball
fans of the Twin Cities is asked when
the St, Paul Colored Gophers, a local
ball team, meets the team of the St.
Paul police at Lexington Park, Au-
gust 1.
The Gophers have played eight
games this season, six of which they
‘won, and two of which they tied. The
brand of ball displayed by the col-
ored team has caused a deal of com-
ment all over the Northwest, and the
players are enjoying the reputation
of being one of the best sem!-pro
teams in this part of the country.
In games played recently, the Go-
phers defeated Warren, Minn., 6-5;
Thief River Falls, 6-1, and Crooks-
ton, 13-2. Colored fans are strongly
requested to be out at the game Sun-
day to witness what is predicted to
be one f the hottest games which
the Lexington grounds will see this
year,
BOY SCOUTS COP HONORS
IN ATHLETICS AT CAMP
At the Boy Scout camp at Square
Lake, Minn., July 5-17, eight colored
boys from local Seout Troop 55
romped off with all available athletic
honors, winning seven first places in
the athletic contests. 128 boys from
the city attended the annual camp.
Troop 55 won first place in the
high jump, the 50-yard dash, the
cross-country race, the potato race,
the pole climb, and the broad jump.
John Kelly, Jr., was high individual
scorer, winning first place in the 50-
yard dash, the pole climb and the
broad jump.
Lonnie Thompson took first in the
high jump’ and Maurice McGavock
‘copped a second in the same event for
funtors. Douglass Green walked
away with first place in the potato
race, J. W. Kelly is scoutmaster for
Troop 55.
First Settlement in
Oregon Was Astoria
‘The fret permanent settlement in
Oregon was founded at Astoria by
‘sgents of the Pacific Fur company,
who arrived at the mouth of the Co-
tumble river 115 years ego. The fur
company was backed by John Jacob
Astor, but the men engaged by him
to invade the northwestern wilderness
were Canadians, « majority being of
Scotch desceat.
‘The party left Montreal in a big
¢ance and made thelr way down the
St. Lawrence, thenes to the Hudson
and New York, from which port they
sailed on the ship Tonquin, which
doubled Cape Horn and proceeded to
Hawall, sailing thence for the Colum:
dia river. Arrived at the mouth of
that mighty stream, they bullt a fort,
ealling it Astoria, which gradually de-
veloped into the town and elty of that
name. :
Tea-Totalers
‘The English poor owe their indi-
gestion to thefr mania for tea drink-
ing. An hour before he gets up ev-
ery Englishman drinks on an empty
stomach a huge cupful of tea as
strong as it can be brewed. This fur-
nishes the foundation for the tea
Jag that he will build up in the course
of the day.
A peasant woman in an English vil-
lage once asked an American visitor
to have « cupful of tea. But the tea
was as black as ink, and the Ameri-
can declined.
“How long beve you bad that tea-
pot simmering on the stove?” she
asked.
“Why, miss, I never take it off,” the
peasant woman replied. “I put in «
fresh pennyworth when it gets weak
and then, when the pot gets full of
Jeaves, I put in my hand and pull out
@ Dandful for my eld man to smoke.”
Water on the surface of a river
travels faster than the water at the
bottom.
Bring Results
Clenitca_Aavertning Rajenr—
Sect a ae
i
Sista Clete hints sown
‘Houses for Rent.
ONE furnished room, all modern, for
rent. Call South 6856.
NICELY furnished front room in
modern home, for man and wife.
Dale 0766.
ROOM for two gentlemen; twin beds.
One block from Dale'or Rondo ear
line. Call Cedar 1879.
FOUR-ROOM, modern fiat, pleasant
and convenient. Call Colfax 2499.
FOR RENT—Modern, 8-room house,
on Iglehart. For information,
Dale 3027.
Residence Phone Eikhurst 1618 . Office Phone Garfield 1500
MCGAVOCK FUNERAL SERVICE
AARON J. McGAVOCK, Sole Proprietor
PERSONAL ATTENTION GIVEN EVERY DETAIL.
Mortuary and Chapel, 550 Rice Street
CALLS ANSWERED ANY TIME, DAY OR NIGHT
jas The Daisy DeLuxe ‘|
2 ao
(SSE. UPPER HAT BOX
any trip—Prices range (row |
$5 to $6.50 |
Special Vacation Values in |
SUIT CASES at $ 5 |
$= -T] |
a |
PS I ag Fatrics “Cin ten |
RD Red tia a o |
( JANRILANNID)
; LUGGAGE SHOP
SIXTH AT CEDAR seem
Pelitice in America
Got Nepoleen's “Goat”
Napoleon hed an unusually deep in
terest in-world politics, extending
‘even to the internal politics of 8 re
mote section of the United States, 1
Was revealed when Ooi. Duncan EK.
MacRae of North Carolina went te
Paris as consul general more than «
oct in one part
o ove ’
country caiemeh. gee: bas. while
thetr neighbors held opposing views
Im some manner be hed learned that
‘Bagecembe county, 1 North Carolina,
‘was Democratic, while Pitt county
embraced the Whig faith. Informed
that Colonel MacRae was from that
tate, be sald to hie courtiers:
“Now, 1 will find out the riddle of
North Carolina politics.” So he gave
Colonel MacRae an extraordinary
welcome and said to him:
“I understand that the same river
flows through the counties of Bdge
combe and Pitt in North Carolina, that
the people of both counties till the sot
and own slaves. I am told that prac
theally all the people in Edgecombe
county belong te the Democratic
party, while most of the people of
Pitt are Whigs. Why ts it?”
Any other person than Colonel Mac
Rae would have been flabbergasted
Femarks the Raleigh News and Ob
server, but not 20 the eloquent colonel
known as North Carolina's first ora
tor. Nobody knows the anewer he
made, but he was quiek to give a ree.
son thet satisfied the monarch.
Asbestos Long Known
but Little Employed
People of modern time are engaged
im 8 coansless search for ways to im-
prove living conditions, Gaty, com
‘and reduction of expense rank
among the principal things to be con-
sidered. Asbestos, a material known
comparatively abot ‘Une "ago, has
time ago,
done ap much or more toward the
realization of theap three fupdamen-
tala than aay other one thing in its
clase. ‘Traces of its nee have been
found tn sncient China, in Persia, by
the early Greeks and Romans, and
later, in about the afxteenth century,
4m the island of Guam, now a posses:
alon of the United States. The sud-
den emergence of asbestos, from the
long period in which It was almost
entirely the subject of myths and leg-
ends, or treated merely as a costly
curio, into one of the world’s moat im-
portant minerals apd industry's most
important alds, 1s remarkable. Even
Alectricity did not have quite #0 syd-
den a transformation.
British Army Club
The Union Jack club is a national
inatitution of Great Britain where sol-
iers, sailors and alrmen ean go when
on leave or passing through London,
‘© place where they may Gepoalt their
kits and valuables, where they may
obtaln at moderate charges good meals
and comfortable bedrooms to them:
selves and where they find the usual
amenities of @ club, ineluding brary
and writing room, billiard room, baths,
barber sbop and also a club shop tn
which articles of everyday use and
almost everything that service men
Tequire may be purchased. The Union
Jack club was erected by public sub-
seription as a national memorial to
those who had fallen in the South
African war and other campalgns,
and was opened on July 1, 1907, by his
late majesty, King Edward Vil.
eee ae
Phone Dale 8339
| ry the Drug Store First
ELMER MORRIS |
DRUGGIST
Prescriptions |
Rondo and Macknbin
{COMING .
‘ATTRACTIONS
Big Barbecue, Aug. 4, given by the
Royal Circle of Friends, On Rondo;
near Kent St.
se wes
_ Barbecue, Friday, August 6, Grotto
and W. Central, by the Ladies’ Aid
Society of Pilgrim Baptist church.
‘The Union Fraternal Benevolent
Association will have a Box Social
‘Thursday evening, Aug. 5, at Union
Hall. Boxes will contain delicacies
of the season. Single boxes and
boxes for couples. Come out and
have an enjoyable evening with us.
Mrs. Brittania Taylor, chairman of
committee; Mabel T. Brown, secre-
tary.
Trast te Pictares
‘In these Gays of hustle and bustle,
hyperactivity and constant “go,”
there te one thing that every one ean
do to neutraline to seme extent: the
restlessness that has invaded our life.
That one thing is to surround oneself
with beautifel and restful’ pictures.
Pictures take the mind off the wor-
Hleome, petty details that are so ir-
ritating to the nervous system. A
good-natured jolly Cavaiter to look
Gown on us undevstandingly trom the
wall, or a lovely Madoana to fill us
with peace and contentment are like
real companions and friends, and
have an advantage thet even the best
friends do net have; they make ne
demands and expect no favors; they
‘are always: equally dependable and
ever ready to serve. °
Genius and Freedom
Genive con cply breathe freely in on
Atmeapbere of freedom. Parsops of
‘sealus are more individual than other
= lege capable, consequently, of
themselves, without hurtful
compression, into any of the small
number of molds society provides ip
‘order to save its members the trouble
of forming thelr own character. If,
from timidity, they consent to be
foreed Into one of these molds, society
will be little the better for thelr gen-
tus, If they are of strong chargcter
‘and break thelr fetters, they become a
‘mark for the society which has not
succeeded in redueing them to com-
monplace, to be pointed out as erratic,
much as if one should complain of the
Niagara for not flowing smoothly like
‘a Dutch canal—Joho Stuart Mill,
Cold Feet
“Do you suffer from cold feet?” the
doctor asked the young wife.
“Yes,” she replied.
He promised: to send her some med
fetne.
“Oh,” she replied nervously, “they're
—not—not mine.” sg
REE IIE IAEA IO
Apex System
HAIRDRESSING
Call MRS. BERTHA MORGAN,
5. P. M., for Appointment and
2:30 P. M. on Saturdays.
is65 St. Anthony Elk. 5583
Mrs. T. H. LYLES
Oldest Established
Mortician
Office: Cedar 0508
Res: Dale 2947
150 W. Fourth St. St. Paul, Mine.
Le Pe a
ania Whippet
a
<o==—= OVERLAND
a EUROPEAN TYPE CAR
See at ~Y Three New Types
Kramer Diethert Co.
Phone DAle 8016 315 University Avenue
Storage, Repairing and Reconditioned Cars
Do you need
| Letterheads Programs
) Circulars Tickets
| Dodgers Business
| Posters Cards
| or anything in the
PRINTING
| LINE
We will cheerfully furnish estimates
| SERVICE that PLEASES
| The St Paul Echo
z 614 Court Block, St. Paul, Minn.
| Phone Cedar 1879
ST. PAUL EBCHO
CHAIN GANGBOSS
TRIED FOR DEATH
OF FIVE CONVICTS
Howells, Terrell, Alleged to Have
*. Been Beaten to Death by
eens Boss.
Evidence Shows Cruelty
Witness on Leaving Camp “Ad-
vised” te- Say Nothing;
Describes Treatment.
Albemarle, N. C.—Seeking to con-
nect N. Charles-Cranford with the
killing of five colored convicts dur-
ing his 20 years as boss of the Stanly
county conviet-chain gang, state's at-
torneys Saturday produced testimony
to show that torture and cruelty have
been in vogue in North Carolina con-
viet camps for years.
Cranford is on trial for beating tc
death James Howells and James Ter-
rell in 1918,
More Evidence.
New charges were that Henry
Wooten, another Negro, had died
shortly after the chain boss beat him,
and that a fourth, Arthur Butler, dis-
appeared mysteriously after Cranford
had ordered other prisoners to leave
the camp and “piek blackberries.”
‘The state added to the strong evi-
dence it praduced Tuesday that Cran-
ford had beaten John Quincy Leake
to death 16 or 17 years ago. Teeth,
hair and decomposed shoes, dug from
a shallow grave, were presented tc
explain the disappearance of Leake.
Witness Testifies.
8. P, Thompson, @ witness, a for-
mer convict, said when he left the
chain gang Cranford “advised” him
to tell nothing, He said the two race
men, Terry and Howell, claimed they
were sick and were given medicine
and foreed to go into the hot sun to
work, They sald they wanted to stay
in the shade, whereupon Cranford
rushed toward them screaming that
he would give them shade.
‘Then, the witness said, Cranford
beat them until they were uncon-
scious. “They never talked again,”
Thompson declared. Solicitor Don
Phillips announced that he would not
seek the death penalty, but instead
2 Pr hg as
White Front Store
(CASH and CARRY Prices With
PREG OELIVaRY
Quality Meats and Groceries
Fresh Dressed Poultry st All
‘Times
Elk 1388 559 St, Anthony Av.
"LONG? FELEOW Brean
ee a SN
eee AF / i
lea lO an |
| : ois oN y € tie |
[test er — {Y
pee see eee oe ie
SEGREGATION INVALID,
SAYS NORFOLK JUDGE
(Continued from page 1)
ing of legislative authority.
Following the submission of briefs
by attorneys on both sides, Judge
Spindle rendered his decision, declar-
ing the law invalid, unconstitutional
and without effect.
Judge Spindle’s previous decision
was rendered when Mr. Edwards
prosecuted a white merchant who
moved-into a Negro neighborhood.
‘The case was dismissed on the ground
‘We wish to express our sincere
thanks to our friends and neighbors
for kindness and sympathy shown us
during the illness and death of our
beloved one. (Brother)
‘We also wish to thank Rev. Stovall
and Rev. Parsons for their kind
words of comfort and the Zion Choir
for their service rendered and for the
‘many beautiful floral offerings, a
silent reminder of love and esteem.
MRS. LAURA LEWIS,
MR. AND MRS. 8. TEAL,
REV. AND MRS. BURTON,
MISS HAZEL-CLARK,
MR. OTIS OLIVER.
—
‘The United States produced $49,-
000,000 worth of gold lace last year,
which is less than half the production
of 1915, the record year.
would ask conviction either on a
‘charge of manslaughter or second-
degree murder.
Hellie’s Cash Grocery
& MEAT MARKET
893 No. Dale St.
Free Delivery
‘We Carry a Full Line of
Groceries 1
Fresh Dressed Pobitry at All Times |
‘See our line of fresh green vegetables |
SoS ene
Whippet
OVERLAND
EUROPEAN TYPE CAR
pees REDUCED TO S125 20009
Now on sale by the :
St. Paul Echo
Z
FLIGHT
:
es
by WALTER WHITE ~
$4.25 |
With each a
Six Months Subscription S
for the St.Paul Echo 3
$1.25
CEdar 1879 ;
614 Court Block St. Paul, ai
SS TTD
REDUCED TO $1.25
that the law was invalid. It is be-
eved the two adverse decisions will
end attempts at segregation in Nor-
folk by this means.
PASS EXAMINATION
‘Titeteen Sikene Stele).
Raleigh, N. C., July 30.—Out of a
class of 93 applicants to practice
medicine in North Carolina, $3 suc-
cessfully passed the examination and
among them were three race men, ac-
cording to an announcement by Dr.
K. P. B. Bonner, Secretary of the
BOTs ee rae
PEC) Wy BREA
R=
“a ~
“P “
ey y
wee
See Fe
eee
DROWNED
Homestead, Pa., July 30.—William
Compann, aged 25 years, of Gold
Way, employed as a laborer by Me-
Crady Brothers, contractors of Me-
Clure Street, Homestead, was
drowned in the Monongahela river at
the foot of McClure street at 11
o'clock Friday morning. The man
was working on a barge when he fell
into the river. His body was recov-
ered Saturday afternoon.
After the theater try our delicious
Chicken Sandwiches
Picnic Box Lunches
TOASTED SANDWICHES
ALEXANDERS SWEET SHOPPE
Dele ond Ronde Streets Phone Dele 7175
Become a Lawyer
Study at home in spare
time. Course endorsed
by Chief Justice W. H.
Taft, Degree (LL. B.)
conferred.
Educational Guidance Bureau
414 Metropolitan Bank Bldg.
SSS:
Now ons
St. Pat
tate Board of Medical Examiners.
‘The race men passing the examina-
tion are: Dr. Wiley Claude Crump
of Lilesburg; ‘Dr. Lonnie Anson Cur-
ry, Clinton, and Anthony Lepold Jor-
dan of Gastonia.
Beautiful indeed is the optimism
of the man with the one-tube radio
set who, having heard a squeal which
he thinks was London, asserts that
it will not be long now before we
shall listen to programs broadcast
from Mars,—Chicago News.
The St. Paul Echo maintains «
branch office at The Economy Mar-
ket, 902 6th Ave, No., Minneapolis.
For the convenience of readers living
on the North Side, any business for
the Echo can be transacted with Mrs.
Cabbell at the Economy Market, By-
land 9746,
ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
—It Pays!
The Echo is read
by more than 7000
readers,
Phone
St. Paul Cedar 1879
Minneapolis Hyland 0436