Second Official Call of National Association of Colored Women To Be Held in Denver, Colo., July 8 to 13, 1918; “On to Denver, the City Beautiful!" at the Gateway of the Rockies. The object of our association is to secure harmony of action and co-oper ation among all women in raising tc the highest plane home, moral and civil life. This object has been con sistently lived up to both by the na tional and by state and local organiza tions during all of our years. The list of honorable, speakers ap pearing on the platform at these con ventions throughout the years includes the names of almost all of our prom inent women along every line. The convention this year will witness th I greatest gathering of Colored women from all sections ever assembled. The period through which we are passing will demand the presence of all of our leaders, even those who in years past were more active than at the present time. Key Word, “Consolidation." Mrs. Blanche Perkins will hold a unique demonstration. Miss Nannie H. Burroughs will give a rousing report on the lynchings and other investiga tions. Other prominent women to be heard include Mrs. John Hope of Georgia, Mrs. Marion Wilkins of South Carolina.Mrs. Bishop Clinton and Mrs. Charlotte Hawkins Brown of North Carolina, Mrs. Mary McLeod Bethunc and Mrs. Emma J. Colzier of Florida Dr. Mary Waring and Mrs. Elizabeth Lindsay Davis of Chicago, Mrs. Lizzie B. Fouse of Kentucky, Mrs. E. D. Lampton Bachus of Mississippi, Mrs. Addie W. Hunton of New York, Kev. Florence Randolph of New Jersey. Mrs. M. E. Goins of Missouri, Mrs. Lelia A. Pendleton of Washington Miss Meta Pelham of Michigan, Miss Mary Jackson of Rhode Island, Mrs. Bertha Turner of California, Mrs. Gertrude Lancaster of Utah, Mrs. Bonnie Bogle of Oregon, Mrs. J. E Mapps of Spokane, Mrs. Mary H. Baker of Wyoming, Mrs. Susan C. Evans of Wisconsin and many others. Our thirty-three affiliated members will be with us and a program is be ing arranged by them for one evening. Be there to see the burning of the Douglass mortgage and to elect the nine women trustees of the Douglass Home. For information concerning program write Mrs. Myrtle F. Cook. 24116 Mont gale avenue, Kansas City, Mo. Musical contest open to any Colored woman. Write Mrs. W. T. B. Wil liams, Hampton Institute, Virginia. Literary contest open to any Color ed woman. Write Miss Anna Jones 2414 Montgale avenue, Kansas City Mo. Woman suffrage, the greatest prob lem before the American Negro to cor rect past wrongs, will come before us. The most prominent woman suffragist in this country is expected to be pres ent and speak for us. Mrs. Dishman, general chairman, it making all arrangements for the greatest convention ever held in our history. Meet credential committee Monday July 8, 11 a. m.; executive board, July 8, 5 p. m.; acquaintance reception wel come, 8 p. m. Mrs. Mary B. Talbert, president; Miss Ida R. Cummings, vice president at-large; Miss Hallie Q. Brown, chair man executive board; Miss Georgia A. Nugent, corresponding secretary; Mrs Ida Joyce Jackson, treasurer; Mrs. W. T. Francis, chairman press committee. Honorary Presidents — Mrs. Mary Church Terrell, Mrs. Lucy Thurman, Mrs. Booker T. Washington, Miss Elizabeth Carter. NEBRASKA FARMERS ORGANIZE WAR COUNCIL First State in Nation Where Farmers Line Up Solid Behind the Government. Following a series of conferences in Omaha the farmers of Nebraska through the heads of their various farm organizations, have inaugurated the Nebraska Farmers’ War Council, the first movement of its kind in the United States to back up the govern ment in the coming third Liberty loan campaign and all other government activities. The organization has the hearty support of the agricultural press. The officers of the council are: Chairman—C. H. Gustafson, presi dent Nebraska Farmers’ Union. Directors—0. G. Smith, president Nebraska Farmers’ Congress; E. K. Danielson, secretary State Board of> Agriculture. Secretary—Frank G. Odell, vice president International Farm Con gress. Headquarters have been opened in the Federal Reserve bank of Omaha. The presidents of the various affili ated organizations will this week send a letter to their members enclosing a service card for the farmer’s signa ture. Every farmer in the state will be given an opportunity to pledge his support to the government, and a practically 100 per cent response is predicted. The Nebraska Farmers’ War Coun cil has been organized by the farmers themselves and will be controlled en tirely by them. The farmers of each county in the state will co-operate | with the county chairman of the Lib erty loan and other war activity com mittees. There will be a Liberty loan meet ing in every country school house and an active canvass of members of each organization by its own committee. The slogan of the movement is, “Ne braska farmers back thegovemment"' SUBSTITUTES MUST BE SOLD WITH FLOUR AT TIME OF THE PURCHASE Strict enforcement of the pound-for pound substitute rule with sales of wheat flour is ordered by Food Ad ministrator Wattles. If merchants do not have the required amount of sub stitutes, then wheat flour is not to be j sold, only as substitutes can be fur nished. All exceptions permitted have been nullified. Potatoes are no longer a substitute for flour and cannot be sold as such. The substitutes, and NONE OTHER, are: Hominy, com grits, commeal, corn flour, edible cornstarch, barley Dour, rolled oats, oatmeal, rice, rice flour buckwheat Dour, potato flour, sweet potato flour, soya bean Dour and fete rita flours and meals. Consumers are required to purchase | at the time the flour is bought an ) equal amount of any or all of the ■ above products and use them with 1 every pound of wheat flour purchased. j SPECIAL j Table D’Hote Dinner Sunday 50 Cents Regular Dinners 35c Classy Entertainers || If you cannot come, telephone your | orders and we will deliver them. || The Top Notch Cafe 1322 N. 24th Street Phone Webster 2421 Whole wheat or graham flours ma;< be bought with three-fifths as much substitutes. “This ruling will be enforced to the letter,” says Administrator Wattles "and any merchant violating it wjll have his supplies cut off.” NEBRASKANS GETTING LOWEST FOOD PRICES Nebraskans are getting cheapei foods than the average price main taining throughout the United States Figures compiled by Gurdon W. Wat tles, food administrator, show that orl J eleven fundamental foods Nebraska if lower than the United States average. Omaha is also lower, as the following table shows: <2 S' o 3-5 3 z ~ z £ 5 3 n. Z sc B ff - ; S cn ; Wheat flour, 24-lb.$1.59 $1.51 $1.50 Bread, 1 -lb. 1.02 .099 .09 ( Commeal, 1-lb.067 .057 .06 Oatmeal, 1-Ib.087 .086 .06*4 Rice. 1-lb.115 .11 H Potatoea, 1-pk.445 .384 .35 Navy beans, 1-lb.181 .167 .15 Sugar, 1-lb.097 .094 .09 Bacon, 1-lb.492 .472 .47 Butter. 1-lb.556 .523 .50 Oleomargarine. 1-lb... .357 .351 .35 PRAYER OF THE NEGRO SOLDIER > By Roscoe C. Jamison. , In future years, when men shall tell Of valient deeds 'mid stress and fire; How they swept on, when comrades fell, That Freedom’s name might still inspire. When Homeward they shall march again from hard-fought field, and frcm the sea, And Music swells a grander strain— 0, God, grant Thou this boon to nie. That 1 may join in that high speech, Telling the wonders of the fight; How that I too did help to teach That Truth must triumph over Might. On that great day point me a place Among the heroes of the line, That I may bring my waiting race Bright jewels on each brow to shine. Unfettered, and a man at last, Grant me to walk amid the throng, Unburdened by a shame-filled past, To sing the new-writ freedom song. Let those who hear my story told, And see the scars—the dented blade, Know that the hated things of old Will rise no more to make afraid. Let Prejudice and Greed, and all The blight of hope, I’ve known be fore, Be banished with a Despot’s fall— Let Valor find an Open Door. TRrd give me power to do my part, Help me perform the deathless deed, Gird me with strength, set firm my heart In this dread hour the call to heed. And if I be not there to tread The Victor’s way with glory drest, Somewhere among the silent dead Where raged the battle, let me rest! WAR IS—OPPORTUNITY War is another name for oppor tunity. These days offer tremendous opportunities to the man furthest down, openings which will last until the war is over. After the war these oportunities offered the laborer will decrease until the condition apporxi mates what it was before the war. More than six houndred of our young men have entered offices in the army paying from $1,800 per year upward. Many times six hundred un skilled laborers are drawing envelopes of $18 per week, while skilled me chanics and workers are paid the fab ulous sums of $5, $6 and $7 per day. In the Departments in Washington women clerks are being put on in groups of ten or more, some of them without examination, and all of them at salaries fur beyond peace salary scales. As clerk, as messenger book keeper, stenographer, janitor, chauf feur, warehouseman, carpenter, tin ner, tailor, hundreds of positions are open under the government at sal aries as high as $1,200 per year. Everybody recognizes that these sal aries can only be paid during the war time, and that the coming of pepce means the cpm ing of lower wages. War is the laborer’s opportunity. Un less he takes advantage of it and gives himself a good start toward econo mic independence, peace will push him back into the same old rut where he was before. Good sense will tell every laborer to get ready for the period of hard times to follow the war. Every man and woman who can find employment during the war should make use of it and this is the most important, not only make money but save money.—The Baltimore Afro American. Smoke John Ruskin 5c Cigar. Big gest and Best.—Adv. MONITOR’S HIGH TONE PLEASES HIM 1917 Eleventh Street, N. W., Washington, D. C., March 16. Rev. John Albert Williams: Dear Sir—Inclosed find check for a year's renewal subscription to The Monitor, the high tone of which I am glad to see you are maintaining. The paper is one of which our peo ple may well be proud. Respectfully, WILLIAM H. HAYNES. COMMENDS EDITORIAL Omaha, Neb., Feb. 23, 1918. Editor The Monitor: Your editorial in this week’s Mon itor capped “American Atrocities,” is timely and to the point. America must awaken to the fact that moral offensives make no im-i pression unless the one making the move acts out the high standard set for others. I Those hothead Southern fanatical j damphool murderous Huns who take j the law into their own hands and in 95 per cent of the cases murder inno cent men and women must be squelched and that at once, or the first thing this country knows it will) have a civil war or revolution on its hands. Men and women of America who love justice must at once get busy and have this damnable hellish prac tice stopped. As a Southern born, I most emphat ically and most vigorously enter my protest against these barbarities and hideous murders and I for one will be only too glad to help organize a vast meeting of protest to President Wil son if it is desirable. My voice, pen and energy is at every Colored brother’s service when he commands. Respectfully, JESSE T. BRILLHART. 1332 South 21st St. “WE DON’T SERVE COLORED TRADE” Manhattan, Kan., Feb. 26. An Open Letter to the Editor of the Manhattan Mercury: This morning, about 2 o’clock, I en tered the restaurant just across from the Manhattan railroad station. I had just returned from Omaha. The man on duty there refused to serve me. “We don’t serve Colcred trade,” he said. “That’s news to me,” I replied. Then I said to him: “You refuse to serve me at your lunch counter be cause I am a Colored man, and I am a soldier of seventeen years’ service for your country and mine. I am one of the protectors of your business. Be sides, I have a legal right to be served here. Conditions are pretty rotten when such a thing as has happened to me is possible.” He answered not a word. Then I walked out into the cool of the night and looked at the stars of high heaven. Let me repeat it: “Conditions are pretty rotten when such a thing as this is possible.” Why should a man talk democracy and not practice it? Had this man been truly American he could not have refused to serve a Coi oted American in his restaurant. Had he been purely patriotic he would have considered himself and his business honored by serving a soldier, even though that soldier be an American Negro. Legally, as we know, a res taurant is a public and not a private institution. Then it is unlawful when such a place refuses to serves therein any part of the public. The human side of it is that hunger should make the whole world kin. A hungry dog d< selves a bone; a hungry man de serves more. A hungry soldier—what Joes he deserve? He deserves to be made welcome while he eats. The Christian side of it is: I came hungry (requesting bread to sustain the body), but was refused food. I came thirsty (asking for a glass of butter milk), but was given no drink. Liberty, where art thou? (Echo answers, “For the Negro in America I am a lie and the truth is not in me.”) How long will these things be? (Echo asks, "How long?”) LUCIAN B. WATKINS, Sergeant First Class, Medical De partment, U. S. A.; First Ser geant Field Hospital 366, Camp Funston, Kansas. DETROIT OPENS HOSPITAL. Detroit, Mich., March 15.—Under the management of I)r. D. C. Northcross, formerly of Chicago, the Mercy Hos pital and Nurses’ Training School, incorporated, a new hospital for col ored people, fully equipped with wards and private rooms and labora tory with a competent staff of phy sicians and nurses, has been opened here. The race has sorely felt the need of such an institution here, par ticularly since the large influx of our people from the South. The handling of maternity cases will be a specialty in this institution. Remember the little folks and the old folks, and give them plenty of milk. r' " WAR Savings Stamps will not only help win the war but help cultivate thrift and the saving habit. Buy war saving stamps. « Thomas Kilpatrick & Co. L ..............■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■iiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiii Easter! j Make Your Greeting a Personal One. Your Portrait— 5 Nothing Could Be E Better. Make the Appointment Today. Butters’ Studio I Phone Webster 6701 1306 North 24th St. § niiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiimiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiT Warden Hotel On Sixteenth Street at Cuming. STEAM HEATED ROOMS—HOT AND COLD RUNNING WATER—BATHS By Day for One.50c, 75c, $1.00 By Day for Two.$1.00. $1.25. $1.50 By Week .$2.00 to $4.50 BILLIARD PARLOR IN CONNECTION FOR GENTLEMEN WHO CARE EASY WALKING DISTANCE TO HEART OF CITY Douglas 6332. Charles H. Warden, Proprietor. -BUY THRIFT STAMPS I 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4*»4**4* VOTE FOR f. Leonard C. | Johnson! CANDIDATE FOR | City Commissioner f Elect a Business Man to This i Position. % PRIMARIES APRIL 9th, 1918 % • • Our Growing I Popularity Up-to-date methods, courteous atten tion, clean, sanitary surroundings, five barbers who know thtir business. This is what my shop offers you. Omaha’s Most Successful Barber. P. H. JENKINS Omaha's Most Successful Telephone Red 3357 Barber. 1313 Dodge Street Omaha, Neb. Untol Pnminn 1916 cuming street nOlcI UUmmg Comfortable Rooms—Reasonable Rates Douglas 2466 D. G. Russell, Proprietor I Obee-Hunter-Wakefield Funeral Home I (People’s Undertaking Co.) North Side 2101 Cuming St. Phone Douglas 8103 South Side 24th and Q Sts. Nights and Sundays Call South 2014 All other times call Doug las 8103, main office and calls will be answered at once. We belong to most all Fra ternal orders. Can secure county burial for those who have not means for burial. Ring and ring again until you get us, Douglas 8103. I G. W. OBEE, Mgr. J. H. Wakefield, Secy. NAT. HUNTER, Treas. I ■ Embalmer Phone South 2614 Res. Tel. Web. 4740 ■ i FRANK GOLDEN, Auditor. 1