i i The Monitor l— i A NATIONAL WEEKLY NEWSPAPER DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF COLORED AMERICANS. _ THE REV. JOHN ALBERT WILLIAMS, Editor 12.00 a Year. 5c a Copy OMAHA. NEBRASKA. APRIL 1. 1920 Vol. V. No. 39 (Whole No. 248) Bad Prison Conditions Cause Outbreak Governor Allen of Kansas Refuses Extradition iP - 9 — WILLI AM PICI S PL'S £ ary of the Na tional Associating - the Advance ment of Colorec % ople Delivers Notable Address. ®. •A DISTING I ISHED YALE ALUMNUS GIVES MESSAGE Pleads for Co-operation and Under standing Between Races — Both Groups Must Work Sympathetic ally Together—Neither Can Solve Problem Alone. “jVTEITHKR race can solve America’s ’ great problem alone,” declared William Pickens, assistant field sec retary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, before an audience which taxed the capacity of St. John’s A. M. E. church Monday night. Mr. Pickens spoke under the auspices of the local branch of the association. Mrs. Jessie Hale Moss, presi dent, presided and introduced Elmer Thomas, a Y'aio alumnus who, in turn, introduced his distinguished fellow alumnus William Pickens of whose ca reer, said Mr. Thomas in his splendid personal tribute, "Yale is eminently proud, for none of her distinguished sons has rendered better service to humanity or sustained the scholarly traditions of his alma mater than has Dean Pickens, the story of whose ca reer reads like a romance." Mr. Pickens said in part: “The better class of both races must I deliberately and consciously seek out co-operation and acquaintanceship with each other’s aspirations, needs and worth. Interracial committees should exist wherever there is an ap preciable number of colored people to promote interracial amity. “And any organized effort to affect the race problem must be along "the lines of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People— that is, it must consist of both white and colored men deliberately pursuing this solution. Neither race can settle the matter alone. The white man has already failed in that method; the Negro nets! not try it. “There is no knowledge, superior to that of personal experience in the matter of knowing other people. When the white man of America knows the black man of America even as well as the black people know the white peo ple in this country, there will be much less difference of opinion and danger of trouble between the races.” Speaking of crime reporting in newspapers, the speaker said, “It is absolutely wrong to repeat that a Negro did a crime, for a Negro didn’t do it—a criminal did it, who was incidentally a Negro. If we put the word white before every crime com mitted by a white man it wouldn’t lie long before the word white would be blacker than the word black and if each time a red haired person committed a crime it was announced ‘a red haired bandit,’ it wouldn’t be long before little children would be tunning away from red headed peo ple.” . “We can say what we like about * not being influenced but every single thing we read or hear has some effect upon us ami the association of ideas is one of the strongest influences,” he said. MILITARY MEN HAVE MADE GOOD PRESIDENTS (Special to The Monitor.I Chicago, HI.. April 1. Thirteen oul of twenty-five men who made good presidents of the United States had seen active military service—Wash ington, Jackson, Madison, Monroe, Harrison. Tyler, Pierce, Grant, Gar field, Arthur, Harrison, McKinley and Roosevelt,” said Mrs. Benjamin Arthur Fessenden, chairman of the women’s Wood committee in High ! land Park, ill., recently. DIAMOND MINERS IN SOUTH VFRII'A HOlih FOR 50 CENTS A HAY | ( By Edward AI. Thierry, With Smith sonian-Universal African Expedition.) j Johannesburg—Capital in South Africa either is so lucky in dealing with labor that it doesn't need brains, : or else so brainy it doesn't need luck. With the rest of the world slewing ! in labor t roubles, south Africa has industrial peace. Big industry, of which gold min ing and diamond mining are greatest, J have been practically untouched by I labor unrest What would you do, Mr. Employer, if you had 900 employes and you only had to pay 100 of them an av erage of $7.50 a day and the other S00 only had to'he pa id 50 to 75 cents a day and provided with food and lodging, costing only 12 to 15 cents a day? That's the labor situation in South Africa. Yet capital is gloomy. Most of the agitation now going on comes, not from labor, but from capital. There has been a government in quiry into tile low grade mine labor question. Mine owners, pleading that the cost of gold production in low grade mines yielding a low percentage of gold per ton has gone up so high, are trying to have the color bar lifted. The color bur is a law prohibiting natives as foremen in mines or jobs requiring skill. The white man in the mines owes his position to monopoly. His task is to direct the labor of his gang of natives who are debarred by law from competing with him, however capable they may be—and sometimes are. While trouble does not appear im minent, South African students of situation declare that the artificial position created by the fact that the color of a man’s skin and not his ef ficiency decides whether ho shall be paid $7.50 a day even as high as $15 a day—or half a dollar a day with meager food and lodging, is a condi | tion that cannot be permanent. Mine operators want to raise the j color bar, but they don't think much 1 of the idea of raising the natives to j l he white wage standard. Capital, in support of the latter contention, points to a report of the economic commission that with pay at only $3.75 a day, 41 out of 52 j gold mines would have to shut down j and the remaining 11 would operate ! at very reduced profits. COCORED OFFICER FOB WOOD, lie Intends to E'ortn Clulis for the General Among People of Iowa. Kansas City, Mo., March 30.— Among tliq -twenty-five Wood follow ers who applied yesterday at head quarters of the Wood-for-President club in the (ilendale building for membership was Captain W. W. Rus sell, a Negro, who was commissioned at the Panama Canal zone in the ad ministration of President Wood. He is a graduate of Columbia uni versity and the Boston Institute of Technology. During the war he was connected with various Negro welfare organizations. Ho is an adfnirer of Roosevelt, and he believes Roosevelt would have indorsed General Wood. He not only intends to vote for the general, but will leave tomorrow for Iowa, where he will devote most of his time to the organization of Wood for-President clubs among the Negro population. Prisoners Mutiny at Treatment of Women Brutal Deputies Beat and Kick Female Prisoners—Precipitates Riot in Parish Jail—Men Refuse to Work—Eighteen-Year-Old Boy Shot Down With Riot Gun by Warden, Who Says He Did Not Know It Was Loaded—Trouble Long Brewing—Cruet Beatings Alleged to Have Caused Revolt GRAND JURY TO INVESTIGATE CHARGES OF DEPLORABLE CONDITIONS (Special to The Monitor) NEW ORLEANS, March 30.—That a new spirit is manifesting itself among the men of this section, even among those who have been unfortunate enough to fall or be placed among tne criminal classes, for it must be borne in mind that in this section that petty theft and mere street brawls in which Negroes are fre quently implicated are magnified into felonies, is shown by a recent jail riot here. Frequent rumors have reached the outside , that Negro prisoners of both sexes are victims of unbelievable brutality at the hands of guards and deputies. Male prisoners have been growing sullen under this treatment. Matters, how ever, reached a climax March 19 when screams of terror and pain coming from the women’s quarters reached the ears of the men., The women, too, goaded to desperation, turned upon the jailers.! Men mutinied and the warden shot an eighteen-year-old boy, Willis, Payne, who is alleged to have been leader. Here is the story asj published by The New Orleans Item: Shoi down in the yard of the par ish prison by Captain Richard Mere dith, warden, Willis Payne, 18, of Clio and Willow streets, a Negro serving time for the theft of a shirt, is close to death in Charity hospital. Payne was shot at 9:20 a. m. His left arm ' is riddled below the elbow with buck shot. from a riot gun, and several of the big plugs pierced his stomach. The scene in the parish prison fol lowing the shooting was a raving, lighting, kicking, scratching, biting chaos as Negro men and women were herded from their open prison yards into their cells by deputies with sticks. A strike by the male Negro prison ers. who riotously refusfsl to take up their morning task of swabbing out the prison started the affray, said Captain Meredith This Friday morn ing's strike had been preceded by hours of frantic riotousness by the Negro prisoners, he said. Conflicting stories are told by the Negroes in the parish prison. Some of the prisoners assert that their strike against cleaning the prison on Friday morning, after a night of screaming and battering at cell doors, was as a protest against deputies heating und maltreating the Negresses in prison. They say that the Negro men in the yard were seeking to es cape when Captain Meredith fired the shot that riddled Payne. Two trusties, Negro prisoners both, deny this. They say that Payne, stick in hand, struck at Captain Meredith, and that the blow by Payne discharged the gun that shot him. They say they “don’t know nothin' 'bout women bein' beat up.” Negress Hurls Shoe at Warden. "The deputies telephoned me at my house early this morning und told me the Negroes had taken charge of the jail," said Captain Meredith. HU right temple was streaming with blood from a cut where a frenzied Negress had hurled her shoe and the heel of it had crash ed against his head. “I came down at once. The Negroes were shouting and yelling in the yard. I took tip a riot gun. On the level, I didn’t know it was loaded. I simply took It to bluff them hack into their cells. "When T got out in the yard the Negroes wore all bunched up and raving. Right of them started to ward me, this Willis Payne boy in the lead. They had sticks in their hands. I raised the gun and they still came on. And the gun went off. I didn't know it was loaded.” As Payne, riddled with buckshot, fell to the ground of the yard, depu ties horded the Negro men up into their cells. Payne was picked up and taken to the Charity hospital. He has little chance to survive, say the doctors there. Madness Reigns ill •Tail. The parish prison “wireless” sped the news to the yard where the Negro women prisoners were grouped. Like a flash the enclosure became a rav ing pandemonium. Captain Mere dith and eight, deputies went, into the yard, sticks In hand, to herd the Negresses Into their cells. They were greeted by a volley of horrible curses, while the maddened Negress es hurled cans, pails, sticks and even tore a big iron manhole-cover loose in an effort to make a missle of it. Here it was that Captain Meredith received the cut. on his right temple from a hurled shoe. Another shoe heel hit Deputy Dan Donnelly on the head. 'They treat us like dogs! They beat us like dogs!" screamed the maddened Negresses. Up the stairs they were herded by pushing depu ties. One mulatto girl tore down her blouse. Across her left shoulder was a long cut "book what they do to us!” she cried. “That, deputy, . ‘>n Demmings, did that to me last i night!" Incoherent screams of rage arose from the raving huddle of forty Negresses. brand Jury to Probe. His wound given first aid dressing. Captain Meredith rushed to the office of District Attorney Chandler Luzen berg. There he told the story. Mr. Luzenberg said that he would lay the whole afafirs before the Orleans par ish grand jury, in session today. Captain Meredith, deputies and the prisoners themselves will be brought before the grand jury as witnesses. “We’ve been having hell with them for days," said Captain Mere dith. "They seem to have gone crazy, especially the Negroes. Last night Deputy John Demmings was attacked when he went into the Negro womens quarters, and was beaten tip before he could get out. The white prisoners, too, have been surly, though they haven’t gone to the length that the Negroes have." Rebellion Rite Several Days. Tlie parish prison has undeniably been the scene of riotous rebellion during the past few days and nights, according to the tale told by police reporters and deputies. Shouts and screams have echoed from the walls. Prisoners have grasped the liars of their cell doors and clashed them for hours, while shrieks swept through the corridors. The whole prison was in such a state of hysterical frenzy on Friday morning that no coherent word could be obtained from the prisoners to iell the reason for the outbreak. Tales of Cause Conflict. A swift tour of the parish prison by an Item reporter brought from the Negroes themselves widely di vergent. statements. Some of the Negroes assert the strike was as a protest to the beating and maltreat ment of Negro women prisoners by deputies. Others say they know of no such beatings. Two trustees say that Willis Payne, striking at Cap tain Meredith with a stick, hit the gun Meredith carried and caused its discharge. This story other Negroes, claiming to be eye-witnesses, deny. They say Payne was turning to run without, striking a blow, when Mere dith shot him. Alex Johnson, Negro, of 819 St. Philip street, in prison on a charge of carrying concealed weapons, says that at 9 p. m, Thursday he heard “thly and reports will be made any brewing disturbances of an; nature. The influence of the league w'ill be used to stop trouble in its inception. OHIO PUBLICATIONS LINE Cl’ FOR LEONARD WOOD Women Clocking lo the General’s Standard “Country Needs Another Abraham Lincoln" Says Prominent Worker. (Special to The Monitor) < Columbus, Ohio, March 31.—Resent ing the treatment accorded the col ored voters of the state by the Hard ing management, two other publica tions in the interest of the colored race have fallen in line for General Wood for president. They are the Cleveland Advocate and the Ohio State Monitor, Colum bus, both of wihch praise the fitness of Wood and condemn the Harding ltaiigherty method of hand-picking delegates, ignoring the rights of 150, 000 colored voters in Ohio. Tile treatment of F. 0. Patterson, Greenfield, colored candidate for dele gate-at-large, by the Harding mana gers, first refusing him consent to run and then in forcing him off the ballot, is strongly denounced. In most Ohio cities the colored vot ers are voluntarily organizing their own forces in behalf of Wood, it is said at state headquarters. Mrs. John H. Arnold, wife of the former lieutenant governor, has ac ce pted the state chairmanship of the Ohio woman's Leonard Wood com mittee and will have headquarters at the Neil house. ‘.General Wood stands for the thing 1 believe in. That's a woman’s rea son. He stands for the best things for the people. This is a crucial pe riod in our national life. We need another Abraham Lincoln. WOOD’S VICTORY IN MINNESOTA PRIMARY .Minnesota The victory of General Wood hy the republican presidential primary in Minnesota assuring him a big majority of the twenty-four delegates from that state to the coli seum convention in June was the signal for jubilant expressions at the Wrood head quarters in the Congress hotel. At the Bowden headquarters the Minnesota jolt brought dismay. Because the state was the place of Lowden’s birth, the governor made a "native son" campaign here. His supporters had been led to believe that he was strong enough to en danger General Wood's commanding place as the leader. YOUTH NAMED FOR W EST POINT. Chicago, 111.. March 30.—Congress man Dyer has recommended Richard Jackson, a graduate of Summer High school for West Point military school. Jackson is only 19 years of age and has made a very creditable record at Summer High and friends have used every influence possible to get the recommendation. People will recall that it was Congressman Dyer who introduced a bill that would make lynching a federal offense. SAYS FRANCE ABANDONS RUHR OCCUPATION PLAN Berlin, March 30.—France has abandoned her demand to occupy the neutral zone and has consented to grant Germany from two to three weeks to employ a strong force in the disturbed Ruhr area, according to an announcement made to the national assembly today by Chancellor Muel ler. KANSAS GOVERNOR DENIES REQUISITION Refuses Arkansas Governor's Request for Return of Robert Hill, Who Was Charged With Forming Organiza tion to Massacre White People of Elaine and Phillips County. FARMERS’ ORGANIZED AGAINST EXPLOITATION Employed Counsel to Secure Legal Redress Against Wholesale Robbery Under Crop System—Hill Active in Trying to Obtain Justice From Predatory Planters. TOPEKA, Kans., April 1.—Gov ernor Henry J. Allen announced Tuesday that he would deny the requi sition of Governor Brough of Ar kansq^ to return Robert Hill, wanted by the state of Arkansas on a charge of having incited the race riots that occurred there last September. Im mediately upon the announcement, Colonel R. Neill Rahn, deputy United States marshal, took Hill into custody on a federal warrant charging him with impersonating a government of- * ficer. Attorney General Arbuckle of Little Rock introduced evidence to show that the Negroes in the riot district ac cused Hill of starting the trouble and of urging them to arm themselves for trouble. Army officers had testified Negroes told them Hill had caused them to join the Progressive Farm ers’ and Householders’ union, and had urged them to arm for trouble. The attorneys for the defense contended that the Negroes were forced to give false testimony by being placed in electric chairs, lashed and otheiwi.se tortured. Hill said he was aiding a Little Rock lawyer to get Negro clients, who were dissatisfied with the settlements given them by the planters, when white men came up and took charge of the Little Rock lawyer. He testified that he escaped and, when told of the riots at Hoopsur, he decided at once to come to Kansas because he believed Kansas would furnish him the best refuge. Evidence was introduced by Ar buckle to show that Hill had station ery and a badge indicating him to be a United States detective. Immediately upon being taken into custody by federal officers, Hill was taken before United States Commis sioner White here, where an applica tion was made to Judge Pollock to have him removed to Little Rock and placed under the jurisdiction of the Arkansas division of the United States district court. ASSEMBLYMAN WOULD PROTECT INSTALMENT PLAN PURCHASERS One of the Colored Members of Em pile State Legislature Introduces Important Bill. Albany, N. Y., April 1. — As semblyman J. S. Hawkins of Har lem has offered in the assembly an amendment to the personal prop erty law in relation to the conditional sale and retaking of household fur niture, which is of particular interest to housewives who purchase furniture on the instalment plan. The new section reads in part as folows: Whenever household furniture shall be sold on the instalment plan, the vendor shall deliver to the vendee at the time of making such agreement true copies of all contracts, notes or other written evidence of such agree ment. No vendor shall retake by replevin or otherwise any furniture after the vendee has paid a sum equal to 60 per cent of the purchase price. MAJOR LYNCH TOURS SOUTH. Chicago, 111., April 1.—Ex-Con gressman John R. Lynch, who is now a resident of this city, attended the state republican convention in Jack ! son, Miss., on April 1 In the interest of the candidacy of General Wood. He will extend his trip to other sec tions in Ihe south. 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