— The Monitor —— A NATIONAL. WEEKLY NEWSPAPER DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF COLORED AMERICANS THE REV. JOHN ALBERT V Ii.LlAMS, Editor $2.00 a Year 5c a Copy OMAHA, NEBRASKA. JULY 7, 1922 VoL VIII—No. 1—Whole Number 365 COLORED YOUTH IS WALKING MOIND THE WORLD HOW SEARE6ATI0H WAS SQUELCHED AT LATE JHMVEUTIOH Colored Delegates Bring Matter to the Attention of Executive Com mittee Which Promptly Dis approves Distasteful Plan. BN0TNENHOO0 IS MAIN NOTE Some Impressions of the Sixteenth International Sunday School Con vention by a New York • Delegate. (Special to The Monitor.) Kansan City, Mo., July 7.—The Six teenth International Sunday School convention was in session here from . Juno 21 to June 27. Prominent Sun day school workers from practically the entire world were present. Ring ing words on the brotherhood of man and living true to Christian ideals were voiced in speeches and resolu tions. The local committee of ar rangements, however, had planned to segregate “the brother in black”, in a manner which jangled harshly out of tune with the dominant note of the | convention. Fortunately, the Execu- j tive committee disapproved of this and | fraternal action accorded with frater- j nal words. Mr. John G. Lee of Rochester, N. Y., gives the following interesting im-1 pressions> of the convention, w'hich in j addition to telling of how segregation was squelched, throws instructive sidelights upon phases of the conven tion which will be pleasing to your readers: “Joining the Timothy Stand By Party at Buffalo on June 21, we were off at midnight for the great con vention which was to unite the Inter national Sunday School association and the Sunday School council of Evangelical denominations, thereby forming the new International Sun day School Council of Religious Edu cation. Eight thousand delegates were anticipated, which anticipation was fulfilled. "We arrived early Wednesday morning in the thriving gateway of the middle west and went at once for | registration. We found that thor ough preparations hail been made for the convention which was held in the spacious and conveniently arranged, City Auditorium, with a seating ca pacity of 10,000. We were then pres- j entcd with a copy of the greatest; educational program ever put on by a Christian body for the development of religious education, consisting of exhibits, lectures, pageants and fine arts, and furnished by the foremost experts. On approacninir uie mam -- with our first Negro acquaintances, we were impressed by the fact that all colored delegates were being di rected by the ushers to a certain sec tion in the balcony marked A. This segregation seemed to us to be en tirely out of place in a great Christian convention of this character and we sought the best means of ascertaining the mind of the convention, and to successfully lodge a protest. Con sequently on the second morning, hav ing our bearings, and being represent ed on the platform "and on the Execu tive committee by James W. Eichel borger of the A. M. E. Zion church, Or. A M. Townsend of the Publish ing Board of Baptist Sunday schools, and Byrd Prillerman, president of the State Institute of Charlestown, W Va., we immediately called a meeting of protest and delegated these men to present our resolution to the Execu tive committee. This was done. The assurance was given us that the Ex cecutive committee knew nothing of this arrangement, did not approve the ushers’ actions, advised us to ignore this request and sit wherever we pleased. This rule maintained to the end. “The Negro delegates, though few in number, there being about 75 regis tered, were from Missouri, Kansas, Texas, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Alaba ma, Ohio, Mississippi, New York, Vir ginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, Illi nois, Arkansas and Iowa, and among them were ministers, educators and doctors. Aside from the busy pro gram we found time for several group meetings and all were loud In their approval of the convention proffram, since it had included so much of direct interest to the Negro in Weas of bet ter training and truer brotherhood. The stereoptican views, "howtog the effects of mob violence and winding up with the thoughtful Negro and showing of outstanding types in ou colleges made a lasting lmpmsslon. The forceful address by John M. Gan dy, president of the State Normal School, Petersburg, Va-' on ing a Race Through Its Children , brought joy to our hearts and Its ent husiastic reception by the convention, a new ray of hope to us all. We presented him a resolution of appreci ation. “The necessity of efficient teachers, of teacher training of daily Bible and vacation schools, with proper grading was sufficiently emphasized. “When the report of the Commit tee on Resolutions had advanced to section two, on "Law Enforcement'’, we realized that nothing had been said on lynching. Our men were alert and J. W. Eichelberger and John M. Gandy asked that the committee in sert the words ‘We are opposed to all forms of lynching’ to which the con vention agreed. "As we left the convention there was ringing in our ears ‘Listen to the Lambs’ by our own R. Nathaniel Dett, which the large chorus had so beauti fully rendered, and our thoughts and hearts went out to the good citizens of Kansas City for their goor fellow ship and liberal entertainment.” HEW PARTY NAMES RACE PASTOR FOR 0. S. SENATE RACE Lincoln Independents Flag Ku Klux, Lynchings and Republican Party —Adopt Party Platform. PLACE TICKET IN THE FIELD Asbury Park, N. .1. July 7.—Two bundled delegates of the recently or ganized Lincoln Independent Repub lican party convening here unanimous ly nominated Rev. Win. S. Smith, pas tor of the Monumental Baptist church, Jersey City, for United States senator from New Jersey. The convention named a committee to select a can didate for governor. A platform was adopted arraigning Secretary of the Navy Denby for "in sisting upon the Haitian government remaining in hamhi of tshe lawless elements” and condemning the repub lican party for its alleged failure to halt lynching atrocities. "The inves tigation of the Ku Klux Klar,’ says the platform, “ was suddenly sur pressed and the diabolical klan is still permitted to murder anil terrorize men, women and children while the great republican party supinely main tains a passive attitude as to the con duct of these villains.’’ ALL COLORED JURY FOR PATERNITY CASE IN OHIO (Associatde Negro Press.) Hamilton, Ohio, July 7.—What is believed to be the first case in the county, possible the entire country ever tried before a jury composed en- j tirely of colored people, began in j Judge Clarence Murphy’s court last| Friday morning. It was a paternity case brought by Clara Patterson, colored, of Middle town, against Charles Gates,, coloied, also of Middletown. The plaintiff is represented by Attorney John A. Crist of Middletown and P. P. Boli of Ham ilton represents Gates. The situation is regarded unusual in court history. The regular petit jury was needed in a criminal case in Judge Walter Harland’s court and in issuing for a special venire to try this case, orders were given to sum mon colored people. Eighteen were called, six of whom were excused from service. The jury is composed entirely of men. On the jury are Charles Conway, trank Ho gan, Alfred Nixon, Charles Howard, Frank Berry, George Kinley, Sam Lee, Horace Preston, Geyrge Reese Al fred Bates, B. M. Fox, Peff Hodges. All of the jurors are from Hamilton. It is the first time within the mem ory of present court officials that a jury in any case has been composed entirely of colored people. withdraws as a candidate Omaha, July 3rd. The Monitor, Rev. J. A. Williams, Editor. Dear Sir: I have, this day, with drawn as a candidate for the state legislature, in the Ninth legislative district, owing to 111 health. 1 wish to thank my many friends for the Interest they have taken in my candidacy, and wish to assure them, that if my health improvee, I shall he glad to serve them In a political way, sometime In the future. Tours respectfully, A. P. Scruggs. DELIGHTFUL MUSICAL program rendered The Wofan'a Auxiliary of the Chnrch of St. Philip the Deacon closed the most successful year In their history with a delightful “Musical Tea" last Thursday afternoon at. the beautiful home of the vice-president, Mrs. Isaac I Hailey. There was a large attendance and a splendid fusical prograf was l given by the following persons: Elaine Smith, piano solo; Franciso Deal tunes, clarionet solo; Mrs. Beulah Johnson, piano solo; Mrs. Adatns, accompanied by her little daughter, saxophone solo; Mrs. Slna Brown, piano solo; Madame Lena Maya-Curry, vocal solo, pianist, Mrs. C. H. Singleton; Margaret Bell and Carrie Harrison, duet, Inez Bat tles, accompanist; Mrs. Grace Hutten, Spanish songs, accompanied by Miss Lucas, pianist, and Clarence Des Dunes, violinist. LIKENS MME. TALBERT TO MME. GALLI-CURCI New York, July 3.—Mme. Cole-Tal bert, one of the chief artists to record for the Black Swan Records, recently scored such a big hit Itefore a large white audience in Detroit that Rex G. White of he Detroit New* made favorable reference to this wonderful singer in the following fashion: “Florence Cole-Talbert, declared by many to have a voice rivaling Galli Curvi, was the star of the evening. This brilliant singer found difficulty in getting away from her audience although she obliged with four num bers. — — — Her voice is a soprano of great range and sweetness, her vocal flexibility is marked and gives ease and clarity to her utterance. She made a tremendous hit with her audience.” That the music loving public ap preciates high class music as well as “blues" is being evidenced by the big demand made since June for “The Bell Song” and “The Kiss” which numbers Mme. Talbert recorded for the I’ace Phonograph corporation. THE COMIHt HASH VILLE CONFERENCE PROMISES RESULTS Prominent Colored Leaders to Confer On Prohibition and Law Enforcement. ESTABLISHES hTaBQBAITEIS Washington, D. C., July 7—(Special to The Monitor.)—What promises to be one of the try *t important con ferences ever held in America be tween colored leaders of national prominence will soon take place in Nashville, Tenn., under the auspices j of the Board of Temperance, Prohibi tion and Public Morals of the Method ist Episcopal Church, of which Board Bishop Wm. F. McDowell of Wash ington, D. C., is president, and Dr. Clarence True Wilson, D. D., of Wash ington, D. C., is general se> ary. The exact date of this confererj will soon be announced in the press. This conference will be truly rep resentative in Its character; to it will be invited many of the outstanding leaders of both races from widely separated sections of the country, in cluding all of the more prominent church organizations without regal'd to denomination, representatives of the press, educational institutions, busisness and professional men and women, together with representatives of prohibition, social welfare and other reform agencies throughout the country. Rev. Dr. J. N. C. Coggin, secretary of the Department for Colored Work of the board above named, has es tablished national headquarters at 1726 Fifteenth street, N. W., Wash ington, D. C., for the purpose of promoting this movement. CONGRESSMAN JEFFERIS ADDRESSES N. A. A. C. P. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People met at St. John A. M. E. church last Sun day afternoon. The president made an interesting and instructive talk on the work of the local branch. Attorney C. E. Walsh, chairman of the legal redress committee, gave in tersting statistics on the progress made by the Negro for the past fif ty years, using other peoples who have been enslaved for comparison. He stated that out of the colored peo ple alone of Omaha at least 6,000 should be members of the local branch. Congressman Albert W. Jefferis, the honor guest and principal speak er for the afternoon, delivered a scholarly and instructive address. He said among other things: “The self ishness of the white man unrestrained by law is the cause of all the evils in this country. Obedience to law upon the part of all citizens is ab solutely essential to the stability of the nation.” He discussed as the chief factors in development the land upon which and the government under which people live. Contrary to the belief of some of the erstwhile politi cians he failed to mention politics. The Rev. Russell Taylor and sons gave an old time quartett which was well received. The Rev. Mr. Browm (white) offered the invocation. Sev eral prominent citizens were out and ' I Nebraska Civil Rights Bill j Chapter Thirteen of the Revised Statutes of Nebraska, Civil Rights. Enacted in 1893. Sec. 1. Civil rights of persons. All persons within this state shall be entitled to a full and equal enjoyment of the accommodations, advan- | tages, facilities and privileges of inns, restaurants, public conveyances, ;! barber shops, theatres and other places of amusement; subject only to the conditions and limitations established by law and applicable alike to every person. Sec. 2. Penalty for Violation of Preceding Section. Any person who ;j| shall violate the foregoing section by denying to any person, except for reasons of law applicable to all persons, the full enjoyment of any of the accommodations, advantages, facilities, or privileges enumerated in the foregoing section, or by aiding or inciting such denials, shall for each offense be guilty of a misdemeanor, and be fined in any sum not less than twenty-five dollars, nor more than one hundred dollars, and pay the costs of the prosecution. "The original act was held valid as to citizens; barber shops can not ,t discriminate against persons on account of color. Messenger vs State, 26 Nebr. page 677. N. W. 638." "A restaurant keeper who refuses to serve a colored person with re freshments in a certain part of his restaurant, for no other reason than that he is colored, is civilly liable, though he offers to serve him by setting |j a table in amore private part of the house. Ferguson vs Gies, 82 Mich. 368; N. W. 718." ik—W(W 11 I.* ■ are invited to come out again to also become members. The next meeting will be held at Freestone aptist churdh, 26th street, between Hamilton and Caldwell. At tend hese meetings and bring some one with you. BETHEL BAPTIST CHURCH NEWS Rev. Thomas A. Taggart, Pastor. Excellent service on Sunday. The pastor preached a wonderful sermon in the morning from the theme, “The Wages of Sin”. Had much effect upon the well attended ordinance. In the evening the subject was: “Re pent”. One addition to the church. Had visiting with us Sunday Sister Wilson from Texas. She is here on a indefinite stay visiting her brother, '•jster and Brother A. Welsh. There will be a grand church bazaar beginning Monday and lasting all the week, at Twenty-ninth and U streets. Barbecued meats, fish and lots of good things will be served throut the week. MAN MM ESCAPE! FROM OEORRIA MOB HANGER OR GALLONS “Act of Providence” Plea Fails aa New Scaffold Is Built at Jail— Many Pleas Futile. LIGHTNING STRIKES GIBBET Irwington, Ga., July 7.—Was the blast of lightning which last week destroped the gallows on which James Denson, 18-year old youth, was sen tenced to die, a second “act of Prov dence?” • This is the question being pro pounded throughout the length and breath of the state following his of ficial hanging last Friday morning, ficial hanging on June 16, the date set for the execution. Denson established a precedent in this country, when he escaped from a mob several weeks ago, after he had been taken from the county jail. Fol lowing his sensational escape from the mob, and his re-captirre by the authorities, a movement was started by white and colored citizens to obtain a commutation of his sentence, stat ing that his escape was “an act of Providence.” Gallows Destroyed. Less than a week before the date set for the execution, the gallows on which the youth was to be hanged was entirely destroyed during a fierce thunderstorm. Many people, interested in the case, renewed tlheir pleas that the lad’s sentence be com muted, but to no avail. COLLEGES GAVE DEGREES TO 702 STUDENTS New York City, July 7—Statistics in a current ssue of the Crisis indicate that colored and white colleges throughout the land conferred degrees upon 702 colored men and women this month. White colleges graduated thirteen lawyers, five doctors, three phar macists, four engineers and some seventy-seven bachelors. Colored colleges graduated fifty two physicians, sixty-eight pharmac ists, seventy-two dentists, fifty-six lawyers, twenty-one ministers and over three hundred bachelors. The outstanding feature of the year was the appointment of Julius H. Lewis as an assistant professor of Pathalogy in the University of Chi cago, white. TERRILL CONFIRMED Washington, D. C., July 7—At an executive session the United States Senate confirmed President Harding’s nomination of Judge Robert H. Ter rill to succeed himself as judge of the District of Columbia. Judge Terrill was civil magistrate in Washington from 1902 to 1909. In 1909 he was appointed judge in the Municipal Court by President Roose velt. He was subsequently reappoint ed by Taft and Woodrow Wilson. The Senate confirmed the 1914 appoint ment after more or less sensational struggle. LINCOLN INSTITUTE FAILS TO RECEIVE APPROPRIATION Jefferson City, Mo., July 7—By decision of the Court of Appeals, the State Legislature has no power to ap propriate $500,000 out of the school funds for Lincoln university. Ac cording to the court, the money should have been appropriated from the stat» funds. The decision will halt work on new buildings and affect tfce teachers’ salaries for the next year. ■■ i. i. ■ " 1 - Veto fer WM. E. SIMERAL, for Municipal Judge. Won-political bal lot. Primaries July 18.—Adv. WORLD PEDESTRIAN REACHES OMAHA ON WESTWARD JDHRHET Douglas Lee of Baltimore, Twenty Tears Old, Given Three Tears and n Half to Walk Around the World STOPS OVER HIOHT IH IMARA Passage Engaged from Man Francisco to China, But Must Walk on Board Mhlp With the Marne Average as on Land That the spirit of adventure anim ates our youth as it does that of other races is borne out by the fact that last Thursday night about seven o'clock, a slender youth, weighing 122 pounds, dressed in khaki, and carrying a pack weighing forty-two pounds, presented himself at the Grant Street branch of the Y. W. C. A. and intro duced himself to Miss Frankie B. Wat kins, the secretary, as Douglas Lee, member of Baltimore Y. M. C. A., en route by foot around the world on a $5,000 wager. Mr. Lee was in quest of the colored Y. M. C. A. but not finding that he sought information at the sister organization. Miss Watkins immediately got In touch with Messrs T. P. Mahamnnitt and W. G. Haynes of the executive committee of the embryonic branch of the Y. W. C. A., and these gentlemen couiteouBly took Mr. Lee in charge and made arrangements for lodging that night at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Hicks. Mr. Lee, who is the son of a prom inent Baltimore lawyer, is keenly alert and intelligent and tells an in teresting story of his travels. He Is modest and unassuming, and seems to have the grit to make him stick to his big Job. Two boys left Baltimore to gether, but Lee’s companion threw up the sponge in Ohio. The young pedestrians left Balti more, April 18th. They were given only! $5.00, the conditions being that they must earn their living on the way. l,ee, because he is the only one who has continued the trip, has had no difficulty in doing thie so far. He starts as a rule on his journey early every morning, and walks until late at night, taking such intermissions through the day as may be necessary. He aims to average not less than thir ty miles a day. Passage has been arranged for him from San Francisco to China, but he muBt walk on the boat every day ana cover the same number of miles that he would were he on land. On reach ing China his itinerary will be ar ranged by a Baltimorean who is a United States official there. He has been given three years and live months to complete the journey and If he ful fills the conditions of the wager he will be given $5,000. Stopping here over Thursday night he hit the road early Friday forning on his westward journey. McKAY, POET, RESIGNS New York, July 7—Claude McKay, made famous by his i-ecent volume “Harlem Shadow's”, and hailed as the foremost colored poet living, sent in his resignation recently as an execu tive editor of the Liberator, a white radical socialist magazine. The Liber ator, it was said, was becoming “Ne groized”. Recently a dance of the Liberator friends and well wishers was raided by police and stopped because the poet was discovered dancing with Crystal Eastman, a highly educated white woman. 26 EX-SERVICE MEN IN H. U. LAW CLASS Washington, D. C., July 7—The 1922 class of the Howard University Law School was the largest ever graduated from the school, reports James E. Waters. Of the fifty-six members of the class, twenty-six were war veteran*. Two members of the class were ad mitted to the bar before graduation. They were John L. Smith of Indiana and John L. Jordan of Indiana. Avery Wood passed the Connecti cut bar and eight member* took th# recent District of Columbia “exams'*. Tote ter WH. K, MXBRAL, far Maateipal Judge. >oa-political bal lot. Primaries July W.—Adv. "Vote far Baase Once” —Adv. CIRCULATION MANAGER Mr. C. C. McDonald who has wsttesd successfully aa the Omaha Bn la ante Circulation Manager mt Dm Maaltor. Be ready to give year sabaMgHin when hs calls. -> •