p^j The Monitor THE REV. JOHN ALBERT WILLIAMS. Editor -^ . ■■ ■ ■ ■ !■ ■' $L00 a Year. 5c a Copy ^ OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1924 Whole Number 461 VoL IX—No. 45 -- V __gM_ __ " _—- - — Battling Siki Likes Our Country LOYALTY PARADE THRILLING SIGHT SEEN BY CITIZENS 15,000 Boys Representing All Classes and Creeds of Omaha’s Splendid Citizenship in Line of March M MMMLLELEB HUT Thousands of Spectators Inspired By Colorful Picture of City’s Youth in Great Loyalty Day Parade Fifteen thousand boys representing all creeds, colors and nationalities which enter Omaha’s splendid citizen ship, where all enjoy equal protection of the law and the same educational facilities in our excellent schools, marched through the streets of Oma ha last Thursday afternoon in the great Loyalty Day parade which was one of the great features of Boys' week. It was an unparalleled spec tacle in this city, which has been the scene of many remarkable parades, None witnessed it without a genuine thrill of pride in his city. The day was beautiful. Weathet conditions could not have been more favorable. The plans for the parade were carried out without a hitch. Not an accident of any kind marred the day. Starting with commendable promptness at the designated hour the boys moved through the streets bor dered by thousands of cheering spec tators along the fifteen blocks of the appointed route. Omaha's many splendid public, pri vate and parochial schools, each head ed by its drum corps, and carrying flags and various mottoes, marched with a zest and snap and enthusiast which was most inspiring. It was one continuous line of boys emphasiz ing the potentialities of American manhood. There were floats of various kinds and several bands to diversify and enliven the scene. The display of Technical High school with its vari ous trades was a revelation. It was gratifying to notice that in every section of the parade—except one— Ikivs belonging to the Y. M. C. A.—r boys of our own race were in evi dence. In that of the schools, of course, among the Boy Scouts not only in line with their comrades, but on the float; in the Central and Tech high school hands; in Father Flana gan’s Boys Home band, the drum ma jor of which was a small colored boy and in the cadets each in his right ful and accredited place. Waddle’s Boys’ band was among those in line. Boys of all nationalities marched to gether, as they should, an outward and visible sign of that true demo cracy which is America’s ideal, if not her realization. It was a great spec tacle and motive in Americanization which Omaha is effectively putting over. One school banner bo re this significant legend “We have all races and nationalities but are all one Americans.” IIELEWARE REPUBLICAN MTATK CONVENTION Wilmington, Del., May 9.—(By the Associated Negro Press.)—The re publican state convention of Delaware which was held in Dover last Tuesday eventful front the standpoint of the colored voter. For the first time in the history of the state a colored man was sent as an alternate to the national convention which shall meet in Cleveland next June. The person selected was Dr. Samuel G. Elbert, a well known physician of this city. Dr. Elbert was placed In nomination by Mrs. Alice Dunbar Nelson who was the only colored women elected as a delegate to the state convention, she having been elected from the Sixth ward. SEEM AUTO El KMT TIME Wilmington, N. C., May 9.—Ran dolph Seymette, 15, sailor on the West Indian Schooner Rosemary, which ar rived here this week, got his first glimpse of an automobile and a trolly car when he stepped ashore. LIFE CHEAP IN MOBILE Mobile, Ala., May 1.—Bodies of four unidentified men were found In an empty freight car on an L. and N. siding last Sunday. Bullet and knife wounds told the manner of death. K. K. K. WARNED CLERK Port Pierce, Fla., May 9.-—Chester A. Moore, appointed clerk in the post office at Gifford, has been warned by the K. K. K. not to accept the posi tion. SOUTH CAROLINA SENATOR APPREHENSIVE ABOUT LABOR Washington, D. C., May 9.—(Lincoln News Service.)—Senator Furnifold M. Simmons, democrat, of South Carolina, in speaking of the difficulties which the people of his state are facing in their agricultural operations, recently stated, during a debate in the U. S, Senate: “There is another reason why we are confronted with difficulty in our agricultural operations, not only as to cotton but as to the growing of all sorts of crops, and resulting in the wholesale abandonment of farms in the South, and that is the loss of our labor supply. Cotton is cultivated in the South chiefly through Negro labor and Negro tenants. They are the chief reliance. Deprive us of that source of supply in the South and It would be impossible for us to cultivate under the best conditions much more than a third of the acreage that we usually cultivate in cotton.” NIGHTGOWN WHIPPING IS SOUTH’S LATEST Orangeburg, S. C., May 9.—The lat est form of outrage in the South is the nightgown whipping. Mrs. Olive Thompson was taken from her home in her nightgown by unmasked men, carried down the pub lic road for some distance, and beaten with a leather trace until her back was bloody. Seven white men, including George W. Binnecker, member of the house of representatives, were later identi fied by her and arrested. WOOD RESOLUTION PROPOSES NEGRO WAR MEMORIAL Washington, I). C., May 9.—Repre sentative Will Good, republican, of Indiana, has introduced H. R. Resolu tion No.245, in Congress, ‘‘To create a commission to secure plans and de signs for and to erect a monument or memorial building in the city of Wash ington to the memory of the Negro soldiers and sailors who fought in the wars of our country and the late World War.” I FALLS EIGHT STORIES, LIVES Raleigh, N. C., May 9.—Although still unconscious, James Shepard of Henderson, N. C., is still alive after falling eight floors down the elevator shaft of the Odd Fellows’ building un der construction here. No bonps were broken. POPE PIUS KNIGHTS LIBERIAN VICE-PRESIDENT Monrovia, Liberia, May 5.—Before a crowd of Liberian notables, Monsignor Jogee, Perfect Apostolic of the Catho lic Mission, representing His Holiness, Pope Pius XI, conferred on H. Too Wesley, vice-president of the republic, the order of St. Gregory for his ex cellent work of establishing Catholic missionaries in the country. 281 MEMBERS OUSTED Washington, 1). C., May 9.—Over 230 members who voted to oust Rev. W. A. Taylor, pastor of Florida avenue Baptist church, last year, were them selves ousted at an officls' meeting of the board last week. WHITE MAMA WOULD GIVE HER BABE AWAY Raleigh, N. C., May 9.—A white baby accompanied by a note was found on the porch of the house of Mrs. Maggie Arnold, at the corner of Park and Cross streets, Lincoln Park, re cently. The baby appeared to be newly born and unwashed when It was dis covered. The note follows: “This note is left to keep you from humiliating and ac cusing Innocent people of this. It’s no use to look for me because I do not and never have lived in Raleigh, or Wake county, and I am not a Ne gro. I will send you some money every month for two years and I will never trouble you about the baby.” VOTERS EHDORSE DAHLMAN TICKET AT POLLS TIESDAT “The Square Six” and Dan Butler, Who Headed Opposition Slate Are Re Elected by Heavy Vote HENRY W. DUNN DEAN NOYES \joeb:hummell johnhopkins,, A STORY OF THE MARTYRS OF 1822 A Story of Ante-Bellum Days, Dealing With Slave Insurrection at Charleston It is impossible to fix exactly the time when the bold idea of resistance entered through his brains, or to say when he began to plan for its realiza tion, and after that to prepare the blackst for its reception. Before em barking on his perilous enterprise he must have carefully reckoned on time, long and indefinite, as an essential factor in its successful achievement. For, certain it is, he took it, years in fact, made haste slowly and with supreme discretion and self-control. He appeared to have thoroughly ac quainted himself with the immense difficulties which beset an uprising of the blacks. Not once, I think, did he underestimate the strength of Ms By Francis J. Grimke PART III (By Tlie Associated Negro Press) PLOTTING THE REVOLUTION foes. A past grand master in the art of intrigue among a servile popu lation, he was equally adept in know ledge of the weak spots for attack in the defences of the slave system, knew perfectly where the masters could best be taken at a disadvantage. All the facts of his history combine to give him a character for profound act ing. In the underground agitation, which during a period of three or four years, he conducted in, the city of Charleston and over a hundred miles of the adjacent country, he seemed to have been gifted with a sort of Protean ability. His capacity for practicing secrecy and dissimula tion where they were deemed neces sary to his end, must have been prod igious, when it is considered that during the years covered by his un derground agitation, it is not record ed that he made a single false note, or took a single false step to attract attention to himself and movement, or to arouse over all that the terri The Voters of Omaha emphatically endorsed the Dahlman administration at the polls Tuesday by re-electing the former seven commissioners in cluding Dan Butler, who headed an opposition ticket, and fought desper ately for the defeat of his former political partners, who returned the compliment by vigorously striving to relegate him to private life. Three years ago Butler, as in former years, was on the Dahlman slate, which was known as “The Square Seven.” This ticket was elected, Butler being high man. Subsequently there was a dis agreement between Butler and his six colleagues. This resulted in such pol itical estrangement and bitterness that Butler organized an opposition ticket to the “Square Six” which in cluded all the city commissioners ex cept himself. The fight between the two was bitter and made the cam paign quite lively. There were four on; the Butler slate, and four candi dates ran independently. That the voters of Omaha believe that, despite much criticism, the Dahl man administration was a satisfactory one, the returns Tuesday plainly show. The entire “Square Six,” Dahlman, Dunn, Hopkins, Noyes, Hummel and Koutsky, were elected with votes running from approximately 30,000 to 24,000, Hummel, the high man receiv ing 29,956 and Koutsky, the low man of this slate, 23,181. Butler received 20,063 votes thus landing in seventh place. Mayor Dahlman stood fourth with 26,506 votes. Henry Dunn broke all precedents ,as police commissioner, by being re-elected as the head of this “trouble department” has hither to meant political death for the in cumbent. Dunn stood fifth with 23, 316 votes despite a fight against him. Koutsky, against whom also a spe cial fight was aimed landed with 23, 118 votes. Courtney was eighth man with 18, 182 votes. Mayor Dahlman who will continue as chief executive of the city has the unique honor of being chosen to this office for the sixth time, a dis tinction of which he may well be proud and which indicates the place he holds in the esteem of his fellow citizens. Hummel’s vote is a testi monial to his excellent work as park commissioner and that of Hopkins and Noyes for their work in their re spective departments. The vote was as follows: 1. —Hummel .29,956 2. —Hopkins .29,342 3. —Noyes ._ .....28,849 4. —Dahlman .26,506 5. —Dunn .23,613 6. —Koutsky .23,181 7. —Butler . 20,063 8. —Courtney .18,182 9. —McGowan .15,072 10. —Reynolds .14,690 11. —Kiene .14,559 12. —Sutton .-.14,420 13. —Rosenthal ..12,965 14. —Stroud .11,133 The five new charter amendments which will be very beneficial to the city in the important matter of pub lic improvements passed with large majorities. tory included in that agitation and among all those white people involved in its terrific consequences, the slight est suspicion of danger. In his underground agitation, Ve sey, with! an instinct akin to genius, seemed to have excluded from his preliminary action everything like conscious combination or organization among his disciples, and to have con fined himself strictly to the imme diate business in band at that stage of his plot, which was the sowing of seeds of discontent, the fomenting of hatred among the blacks, bond and free alike, toward the whites. And steadily with that patience which Low ell calls the “passion of great hearts," he pushed deeper and deeper into the slave lump the explosive principles of inalienable human rights. He did not flinch from kindling, in the bos oms of the slaves a hostility toward the masters as burning as that which he felt toward them in his own breast. He had, indeed, reached such a pitch of race enmity that, as he was often heard to declare, “he would not like to have a white man in his presence.” And so, devoured by a supreme passion, mastered by a single predo minant idea, Vesey looked for occa sions, and when they were wanting he created them, to preach his new and terrible gospel of liberty and hate. Thus only could he hope to render their condition intolerable to the slaves, the production of which was the indispensable first step in the con summation of his design. Otherwise what possibly of final success could a contented slave population have of fered him? He needed a fulcrum on which to plant his lever. He had no where in such an enterprise to place it, but in the discontent and hatred of the slaves toward their masters. Therefore on the fulcrum of race ha tied he rested his lever of freedom for his people. As the discontented bondsmen heard afresh with Vesey’si ears the hateful clank of their chains, they would, in time, learn to think of Vesey and to turn, perhaps, to him for leadership and deliverance. Brooding over their lot Vesey had revealed it to them, they might move of themselves to im prove or end it altogether, by adopt ing some such bold plan as Vesey's. Meantime he would continue to wait and prepare for that moment, while they would be training in habits of deceit, of deep dissimulation, that for midable weapon of the weak in con flict with the strong, that ars artium of slaves in their attempts to break their chains—a habit of smiling and fawning on unjust and cruel power, while bleeds in secret their fiery wound, rages and plots there also their passionate hate, and glows there too their no less passionate hope for freedom. Everywhere through the dark sub terranean world of the slave, in Charleston and the neighboring coun try, went with his great passion of hate and his great purpose of free dom, this untiring breeder of sedition. (And where he moved beneath the thin crust of that upper world of the master-race there broke in his wake whirling and shooting currents of new and wild sensations in the abysses of that underworld of the slave-race. Down deep below the ken of the mas ters, was toiling this volcanic man, forming the lava-floods, the flaming furies, and the awful horrors of a slave uprising.) Nowhere idle was that underground plotter against the whites. Even on the street where he happened to meet two or three blacks, he would bring the conversation to his one consum ing subject, and preach to them his one unending sermon of freedom and hate. (It was then as if his stem voice, with its deep organ chords of passion, was saying to those men: “Forget not, oh! my brothers, your misery! Remember how ye are wronged everyday and hour, ye and your mothers and sisters, your wives and children. Remember the genera tions gone weeping and clanking heavy chains from the cradle to the grave. Remember the oppression of the living, who with heart-break and ' _ BATTLING SIKI, THE SEHEHALESE BOXER HERE FOR A FIGHT Enlisted at Outbreak of World War and Served Five Years, Winning Two Medals for Bravery LIKES AMERICA ARB FRAICE Expects to Have Match With McTigue in New York Before Returning to France to Visit His Family “Battling Siki"' who is here to meet a local boxer, at the Auditorium on Wednesday night for the Spanish War Veteran’s Fund, had just finished his breakfast in the De Luxe Cafe of which Jim Bell is proprietor at 24th and Burdette streets this morning, when the Monitor man entered. “You are Battling Siki” said the Monitor representative. “Yes,” said the Senegalese, as he courteously rose to his feet and cordi ally greeted us. “I have come to interview you and find out something about you for a newspaper.” “Be seated, monsieur.” “Do you speak English ” “Only a leetle and zat imperfectly,” was his reply in broken English. As he speaks “broken English” and we “broken F'rench” we managed to get along quite nicely. Siki told us he was bom in Ban Luis, Senegal, September 16th, 1901, and is therefore not quite 23 years old. This in response to our question as to his age and birthplace. He looks like a good many Negro boys whom you meet in Omaha. He is black with his hair growing rather low on his forehead and impresses one as a great big overgrown South ern country boy. “Were you, in the army?” was one of our questions. “Yes, I enlisted and served five years. I was sergeant and received two medals.” These we learned were given for acts of bravery. “How do you like America?" “I like America well; would like her better if I could speak the language. America good for business—I like France better. My family is there, and I have nine lions, my pets.” “When do you expect to return to France?” “After I meet McTigue in New York sometime this year, then I go back.” “Do you expect to whip him?” “Yes. In two rounds. He is Irish man and we fought in Dublin last st. Patrick’s Day. I had no show, but I can whip him. As we arose to go, he wanted us to have a cup of coffee. We thank ed him but) declined as we hadl just breakfasted too. As he said “au re voir” he warmly grasped our hand and said “I hope to see you again.” “Au revoir, Monsieur,” was our parting word. death-wounds, are treading their mournful way in bitter anguish and despair across burning desert-sands, with parched souls and shrivelled minds, with piteous thirsts, and ter rible tortures of body and spirit. Weep for them, weep for yourselves too, if ye will, but learn to hate, ay, to hate with such hatred as blazes within me, the wicked slave-system and the wickeder white men who op press and wrong us thus.”) Ever on the alert was he for a text or a pretext to advance his under ground movement. Did he and fellow blacks for example, encounter a white person on the street, and did Vesey’s companions make the customary bow which blacks were wont to make to the whites, a form of salutation bom of generations of slave-blood, meanly humble and cringingly self-effacing, rebuking such an exhibition of sheer and shameless servility and lack of proper self-respect, he would there upon declare to them the self-evident truth that all men were bom free and equal, that the master, with his white skin, was in the sight of God no whit better than his black slaves, and that for himself he would not cringe like that to any man. Should the sorry wretches, bewil dered by Vesey’s boldness and dazed by his terrifying doctrines, reply de fensively “we are slaves,” the harsh retort, “you deserve to remain so,” was, without doubt, intended to sting if possible, their abject natures into sensibility on the subject of their wrongs, to galvanize their rotting souls back to manhood, and to make their base and sieve-llke minds cap* (Continued on Page 2)