[ j THD JMONIXOR I iim. ! *'».« i.—..—» A National Weekly Newspaper Devoted to the Interests of Colored Americans THE REV. JOHN ALBERT WILLIAMS. Editor $2.00 a Year. 5c a Copy OMAHA, NEBRASKA, SEPTEMBER 28. 1918 Vol. IV. ’'•> i3 (Whole No. 169) Methodist Conference • Ends Session Forty-third Annual Session of the Conference Fnds With Enthusiastic Service Sunday Night, When Ap pointments Are Read. PATRIOTISM IS PREVALENT Bishop Parks and Other Speakers , Stress Loyal Support of Government in All War Measures; Oppose I'n demoeratic Discrimination. rpHE Kansas conference has passed I into history and there were many good impressions made by Bishop H. Blanton Parks, D. D., and the minis ters, and much good will result from the meeting. Almost every address and sermon delivered during the ses sion had the ring of patriotism and loyalty, and the conference went on record as giving unqualified support to President Wilson and the army; In his address Bishop Parks urged the people to put their money in Lib -*■ * orty bonds, in war savings stamps, Red Cross and any other place where the government needed it. The con servation of food was urged by him. “Our women must put less money in fine dresses, shoes and the like, and let the government use that money, for it Ls needed in winning the war, and if the government loses, which it is not going to do, there would be but little use for fine clothes. This is not the vhite man’s war, the black man’s war, or any other one man’s war, but it is a war for all America and all Americans are going to unite and win it. That we are go ing to win there is no doubt, but it will require time, money and the effort of us all. Bishop Parks sa:d: “I am proud that 1 am an American and living in the greatest age in the history of the wot Id. Certainly this is a great age. J God ha in store great things for us, ' and we ate now getting to the p*ace where the world will recognize us for who wo are and for what we are. No time in the history of our country were Colored men placed on terms of equal ity in the army before now. We are in every department and have over a thousand commissioned officers and it does not yet appear what it shall be. “President Wilson has spoken out against lynching as no other president j has ever done. He has given to the | nation some thonght. He will ever live j in the hearts of the American people. We are going to follow him.” Friday night was termed education al night for the conference. The an nual educational sermon was preached by the Rev. Dr. H. Milton Mickens of Salina, and following the sermon the people, headed by the ministers, put on the table for education $401.20. The question asked, “Are all the preachers blameless in life and con versation''” brought before the con ference the religious, moral and of i cial character of each minister for scrutiny. All were able to pass with out .a single black mu’k. After a contest between Kansas City, Kan., and Parsons, Kan., Kansas City was selected for the next anrual session. All of Saturday morning was . pent in executive session. It was said that many knotty problems were worked out by the ministers. This was the (dosing business of the session. All committees reported. One of the strongest documents ever presented before the conference was the report of the committee on the state of the country. The ieport was read by Dr. J. R. Ransom, the recog nized leader of the conference and a man of magnetic power. The report made a review of war conditions. It told about the patriotic .sendee en dered by the Negroes in France and commended their efforts. This docu ment was full of information and •showed tnat Dr. Ransom had snent some time in collecting information Words of praise came for President Wiison. Secretaries Baker and Me Adoo. The eonference, while breathing a spirit of the highest patriotism, never theless put itself on record as appos ing iegregation, jim crow cars and other undemocratic practices which •ire inconsistent with America’s ideals. Saturday closed with a lecture by Charles Stewart, A. M., D. D., of Chi cago. Sunday was a busy day and at the close Sunday night Bishop Parks as signed the ministers. The eonference was attended by many of the leading women of Kansas find Nebraska, and at thejr meeting Friday afternoon some able addresses were delivered. Mrs. H. B. Parks spoke on “The Growth of the Home.” She said that one of the greatest uplifts to the human family was the home—tli. j place where hoys and girls were de velop! d into manhood and Womanhood. Mrs. J. C. C. Owens of Kansas City, Kan., who has bejn in the conference for the past twenty ve rs or more, was u great help to the youne women of her race. M rs. Owens has been con nected with the work of uplift for many years. She worked with her hus band in Missouri, Colorado and Kan sas. She knowr in many homes. Dr. Owens is one of the few men who has been able to come back. He went to Quindaro in 1872 and returned in 1!)18. He organized the work in Quindaro and now he comes back and brings from that place the largest re port in its histor>. He brought $115. Bishop Demby Will Be Consecrated Sunday Imnipressive Service Will Be Held in VII Samis' Church Before a Con gregation Numbering 1,000. (Special to The Monitor.) ST. LOUIS, Mo., Sept. 28.—Prepara tions have been completed for the impressive consecration service by which the Venerable Edward Thomas Demby will he made a bishop in that long line of prelates of the Anglican communion which reaches hack to the t'me of the establishment of the church in Britain. The service will be held in All Saints’ church, this city, Sunday morning, September 20, the Festival of St. Michael and All Angels, I Peculiar interest attaches to this serv- j ice, because it will be the first time that the Episcopal church will have consecrated a Colored man as bishop for work in the United States. Dr. Demby will be consecrated bishop suf fragan of Arkansas. The congregation of All Saints’ church have planned to accommodate at least 1,000 people. A monster mis sionary mars meeting is to be held in the afternoon at 5 o’clock, at which B’shop Demby and others will sneak and an offering taken for missionary work in Arkansas. The consecration service was first appointed for August 24, but it was deemed advisable to postpone it until this later date. In its entire history the Episcopal church has had only two Negro bish ps—one was consecrated in 1885 for Liberia, and the other in 1874 for Haiti. Both are now dead and Bishop Demby will be the first of a line of American Negro nishops in charge of work among American Negroes. A full report of the consecration service, with illustrations, will be pub lished in next week’s Monitor. . TYPES OF RESIDENCES OWNED UY Ol'R OMAHA CITIZENS The Residence of Dr. A. G. Edwards, 2111 Erskine St. THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA STANDS FOR TRUE DEMOCRACY. WHAT KIND OF DEMOCRACY DO THEY STAND FOR WHO COMPEL THIS INSTITU TION TO VIOLATE TIGS PRINCIPLE? The Students’ Army Training Corps, generally abbrevi ated “S. A. T. C.,” is a military unit of the national army composed of university students from the ages of 18 to 21, who registered September 12. The government pays all the student’s expenses and provides him with a salary of $30 a month. At the end of three months the students are assign ed for such other work or training as their efficiency war rants. Joseph B. LaCour and Sandford Fallings, university students, enrolled. They were denied admission to the S. A. T. C. The following letter from the Acting Chancellor will be read with interest: Thp University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Chancellor’s Office, Sept. 25, 1918. Mr. Joseph LaCour, Lincoln, Neb.: Dear Sir—Replying to your application for admission to . the S. A. T. C. and your inquiry as to the reasons why it has been denied, I wish to say that it is done under instructions received bv telegram from Captain Zillman, inspector of this district, sent to me from Minneapolis, Minn. Captain Zill man’s telegram was in response to an inquiry addressed to him by Commandant Mclvor of our S. A. T. C. unit, as to the admission of Colored applicants. The telegram is in these words, “Not in a white unit.” There is, of course, no distinc tively Colored unit possible in this institution. Mv informa tion is that there are seven Colored applicants. I do not myself personally know of so many. The policy of this institution has always been to regard its privileges as public and designed for all citizens of whatever color or ancestry. So far as I know, there has been no diffi culty in the application of such a rule, and the Colored stu dents have been uniformly a credit to the institution in their characters, bearing and progress. The only authority, how ever, which the university has in this matter is that which is derived from the War Department at Washington. Its direct representative in this district is Captain Zillman, and so far as we are concerned his decision in the matter is final. I know of no reason for anticipating any more trouble with Colored members in conjunction with their white fellows in our S. A. T. C. unit than we have had in the past in our uni versity classes, but I can easily understand that there are localities where such association would be impossible, and apparently the War Department has adopted a uniform rule. Regretting that 1 can give no more satisfactory reason than the above for what you deem an injustice, I remain very truly yours, W. G. HASTINGS, * Acting Chancellor. I ■ ^ THE ZION ATHLETIC TRACK TEAM, WHICH WON FIRST PRIZE AT AUDITORIUM. MARCH 31, 1916. The Interest Attaching to This I’icure is the Fact Thai These Boys Have Recently Been Called Into Service, Leroy Kelly Leaving Wednesday. Campaign Against Venereal Diseases Prominent Physicians and Surgeons Appointed by War Department in Educational Campaign to Safeguard Health of Soldiers. — Washington, I). C., Sept. 25.—An nouncement is made that a group of prominent Colored physicians and sur geons have been appointed by the wa> department to carry on a vigorous campaign of education, with a view of combatting the spread of venereal dis eases in the camps and cantonments of the country, whe'P Colored solrdcrs are stationed in appreciable numbers. The physicians thus far selected for this vitally important work include: Dr. C. V. Homan of Nashville. Tenn., formerly editor of the Journal of the National Medical association and au thor of rumcrous literary and medical productions; Dr. Algernon li. Jackson, surgeon-in-chief of Mercy hospital, j Philadelphia; Dr. Roscoe Brown of Richmond, Va., and Dr. Ralph A.1 Stewart of Washington, D. C. According to the plans adopted it is confidently expected that every Color ed soldier in the army will be reached by this educational work. The work of these^ physicians is to be supple mented by literature which has been prepared to meet the special needs of Colored troops. This is now in press, and a pamphlet covering these sub jects simply but thoroughly wi'i be put into the hands of every Colored oldier in the army who is able to read. It is hoped to reach those who (annot read by specially prepared pic torial placards and -dor''onticon slides. The last mentioned work will be large ly in the hands of a group of Colored sergeants' who are peculiarly adapted by education and training for this work. TWO MORE SOLDIERS GIVEN WAR CROSS Washington, D. C., Sept. 27.—Ser geant Robert Terry, of the First Sepa rate Company of Baltimore, and Ser geant Charles Hughes, of the First Separate Batalion, of Washington, D. • C., have been presented the Croix de Guerre for bravery, according to word received from France. These compan ies, now the 372d regiment, are brig aded with the French and are consid ered to be among the very best trained regiments in France. War Correspondent For France Two Notable Additions to the Big Achievements to Credit of Recent Conference of Colored Editors at Washington. NEWS FROM THE BATTLE FRONT Ralph W. Tyler Named to Report Military Happenings on Western Front in France—United States Agrees to Loan $5,000,000 to Aid Republic of Liberia. ASHINGTON, D. C.—Two no table additions have been made within the past few days to the list of big achievements that may he just ly credited to the influence of the re cent conference of Colored editors and leaders in Washington. One of the direct requests of the editor's conference in .Tune was that a reliable Colored news writer be sent to France to report the doings of the Colored troops on the western front in France, for the information of the anxious millions of Colored Americans in this country and to the end that the correct story of the valor and patriot ic devotion of their brethren might be told fully and in a sympathetic vein by one of their own blood and kindred. In compliance with this request, the committee on public information has designated Ralph W. Tyler of Colum bus, O., .former auditor for the navy department at Washington, as a reg ularly commissioned war correspond ent, to make daily reports of the ac tivities and engagements in which the Colored soldiers are prominent. He will be on the stalff of General Persh ing, commander-in-chief of the Ameri can Expeditionary Forces overseas. Every facility has been provided by Mr. George Creel, director of the com mittee on public information, for the prompt and accurate gathering of all facts that may be of interest to the Colored people. First Negro to Be Named as a War Correspondent Mr. Tyler is the first Colored man to be named as a regular war corre spondent by any government in the world. He is a native of Ohio. For seventeen years he served in various departments on the Columbus Evening Dispatch and the Ohio State Journal, which gave him experience in the technique of the newspaper craft and afforded him opportunity for asso ciation with many influential news paper men. This intimate contact with such forces will be invaluable to him in his labors as a war corre spondent. The fact that he has a wide acquaintance with correspondents now at the front., will make it pos sible for him to gets news concerning Colored troops which, perhaps, no oth er Colored correspondent could secure. The claims of a number of men w*ere fully considered in connection • with this important assignment, but Mr. Tyler was finally selected as the most efficient of those available. Imme- J diately after wav was declared by the; United States rn Germany, Mr. Tyler wrote the president tendering h’s serv ices in any capacity. He has three sons, all of whom are at the front in France. $5,000,000 Loan to Liberian Kcpubli The second of this series of editor ial conference achievements is the au thorization by the government cf a loan of $5,000,000 to the Republic of Libeira, in line with the request of the conference. This fund is allotted to aid in the rehabiliation of that coun try’s public finances, which have been reduced to a dangerously low ebb by the cessation of trade, and to develop production of rice and other foodstuffs for the allies, as well as to place on the market many of the greatly need ed products with which the little over seas republic abounds. Much of Lib eria’s commerce was with Germany, and this has been totally cut off since the former’s declaration of war against the Teutons. The granting of this $5,000,000 cred it through the United States treasury had its inception several months ago when Dr. Ernest Lyon, the Liberian consul general, made application on behalf of his government for same, and was helped forward quite per ceptibly by a meeting at the White House later, when a committee laid before the president the peculiar needs of Liberia and made plain the faith fulness of her people to the cause of the allies, emphasiing the fact that Liberia is the natural ward of this powerful government and that its wel fare must be safeguarded by America in her hour of peril. The members of the committee, who joined in the appeal to the president were Dr. Robert R. Moton, principal of the famous Tuskegee institute; Em mett J. Scott, secretary of Tuskegee institute, now' serving as special as sistant to the secretary of war; Dr. Ernest Lyon, former United States minister to Liberia and now' Liberian consul general in this country; Dr. James H. Dillard, of the Slater and Jeanes fund boards; Dr. Thomas Jesse Jones, of the United States bureau of education; and Hon. William H. Lewis, former assistant attorney gen eral of the United States. German Defeat Due to Colored Troops Amsterdam, Sept. 25.—General von Risberg addressed the main commit tee of the reichstag on behalf of the minister of war. He explained, ac coridng to a telegram from Berlin, that the failure of the German offen sive on the western front was due to the failure of the German army to surprise the entente allies and the necessity of assuming the defensive on the arrival of the English home army in the theater of war; to the employ ment of Colored troops and to the in tervention of American divisions. Referring to the entente allies’ at tack on the Marne salient. General von Risbe’.g said the withdrawal of the German troops was necessary “for strategical reasons and was complete ly successful.” “Thvs the first offensive of the enemy," he added, “brought him a tac tical success, but considered in the 1'ght of his great strategical aims it can be regarded as not having suc ceeded.” Grneral von Risberg described the British victory between the Ancre and the Avre rivers as a “great success due to the massed employment of tanks and surprise under the protec tion of their fire.” The withdrawal to the Hindenburg line, the general said, was due to a “lack of well consolidated positions.” The Rev. S. M. Skelton, of Nashville, Term., who will begin a ser ies of r evival ser vices at Grove Methodist church, Twenty second and Seward streets, Sunday, September 29.