The monitor. (Omaha, Neb.) 1915-1928, July 09, 1926, Image 1
— The Monitor = NEBRASKA’S WEEKLY NEWSPAPER DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF COLORED AMERICANS ' THE REV. JOHN ALBERT WILLIAMS, Editor. $2,00 a \ | —5 Cents a Copy. OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1926Vol. XII.—No. 2.Whole Number 572 COLOR! | AMERICAN MOST I CIVEN FULL RICH ASCII N <0 _ Colonel Theo Roosevelt Declares That the holding of Such Civil Rights Portends Disaster. NO HALF-AMERICAN STATUS — Country Cannot Endure Unless All American Citizens .Are Accorded Full Rights and Equal Opportunities. Chicago.—Demanding for colored Americans full civic rights and equal opportunities with all other citizens. Colonel Theodore Roosevelt addressed a crowded and enthusiastic mass meeting of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo ple, which closed its 17th annual con ference here. “I believe that the work the N. A. A. C. P. is doing is thoroughly patriotic and constructive,” said Colonel Roose velt. "It is American in the proper sense of the wordd. “The United States is a country wherein all citizens are supposed to have an equal share in the govern ment. We are, according to the prin ciples on which this nation yv»s found eel, equal partners in its governmental affairs. Any man or group of men who attempt to deny full civic rights to any citizen on account of' race, creed or color is committing a thor oughly un-American act, one that is subversive of the ideals of the coun try. “Your organization, as I see it, is striving to obtain full constitutional rights for colored Americans and by opening opportunities to them to help them build themselves into better and finer citizens. All colored Americans must have full governmental rights. There must be no distinctions made by law either covertly or openly against any of our citizens. In certain states by subterfuges as to registra tion or simply by force, colored citi zens are denied the vote. Any stat" which prevents its colored citizens from exercising their privilege of the franchise simply because they are colored, is subverting the constitution of the United States. Every real American should demand that this evil be set right and do his level best j to see that his demands receive proper: attention. “Equally important with govern mental rights are civic opportunities. Colored Americans must be given the opportunity to get the proper edu (Continued on Page Four.) N. A. A. C. I’. ENDS SUCCESSFUL ANNUAL MEET IN CHICAGO Chicago — With the presentation June 29 before a crowded and enthu siastic gathering in Wendell Phillips High school of the Spingarn- medal by Dr. John Haynes Holmes of New York to Dr. Carter G. Woodson of Washington, editor of The Jour nal of Negro History, and author of numerous historical books or. the Ne gro in America, there came to an end the 17th annual conference of the National Association for the Advance ment of Colored People. A profound impression was made on the city of Chicago by the confer ence, among the outstanding features of the week being a luncheon given to the officers and directors of the N. A. A. C. P., by the Woman's Club of Chicago, one of the oldest and most prominent bodies of its kind in the country. At this luncheon the chief speakers included Miss Mary Mc Dowell, commissioner of public wel fare of the City of Chicago, Profes sors Tufts and Farris of the Uni versity of Chifago, Dr. W. E. B. Du Bois, James Weldon Johnson and Mrs. Addie W. Hunton. Another event that attracted much comment was the unannounced visit to one of the business sessions of the conference of Julius Itosenwald, well known for his educational activities in behalf of colored people in the south. Mr. Itosenwald addressed the confer ence briefly, commending its work and aims and stating that his interest in the cause of the Negro proceeded from his interest in the welfare of the entire country; for he felt the coun try could not develop as it ought to if 10 per cent or more of the popu lation were denied opportunity. At the Sunday afternoon mass meet ing of tlie conference in the Audi torium theater, addressed by Clar ence Harrow, Janies Weldon Johnson and Arthur B. Spingarn, a crowd es timated at 2,500 filled the entire au ditorium and numbers of people crowded the street vainly seeking admission. Mr. Harrow commented sarcastical ly on the white man’s feeling of his own superiority. “I never yet knew a white man to object to the presence of a Negro anywhere if that Negro was working for him,” said Mr. Har row. Of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo ple, Mr. Harrow said: “There is no other organization, | secular or religious, or all of them put together, that compares with this Assciation for service to the Negro. Never should the colored people of America let them lack ample funds for their great work. They are the only organized body of men and women having both the intention and the power to protect the Negro’s lib erties am^ rights. They have sense enough to know that the Negro can not become a free man by begging from the whites or by waiting for aid from the clouds. The officers and leaders of the N. A. A. C. 1’. are the peers of any «ien of any color on the face of the earth.” REV. J. S. BLAINE GOES TO GARY, INDIANA Te Rev. J. S. Blaine, who has served the Cleaves Temple Colored M. E. church for the last three years, has lieen assigned to Gary, Ind., and will preach his closing sermon Sunday evening at 8 o’clock. He has added to the Cleaves church more than a hundred members and reduced the church indebtedness in principal and interest $6,060, with church debt paid up to date. The Rev. Mr. Blaine said, ”1 regret very much to leave the many friends I have made during my stay in the city," and I leave with most pleasant memories of these few years 1 have laliored among the people of Omaha, whom I have learned to love. “I have never served a more faith-1 ful and a more loyal group than the people of Cleaves. I was assigned to Cleaves from Topeka to take care of an emergency that arose that necessi tated a change in the pastorate here. I rejoice that the Lord has smiled upon our labors and that we are leav ] ing the church in a splendid way. There are some outstanding debts, to the amount of $200 1 should like to have paid and believe I would have cleared them up if allowed to stay until the conference. But Gary needs ! me most. Gary has a basement paid , out and about $2,000 in cash on the erection of a new auditorium. It has a congregation of !>00 memliers and pays a salary of $2,400 a year. ’ NEGRO TRAINMEN URGED TO UNITE MONSTER CONVENTION TO l!E HELD IN MEMPHIS JULY i* Nashville, Tenn.— (By the A. N. P.I — According to an announcement made to day hy J. H. Eiland, grand president of the Association of Colored Railway 1 rain men, a monster meeting of Negro train men, including hrakemen, porters, and switchmen will he held in Mainphis, Mon day, July 19. This meeting will be a part of the annual convention of the association, and the purpose of it is to effect an organization of all groups of railroad employees under one association. Mrs. James H. Wilson leaves Saturdav night for a three weeks' visit with rela tives in I.awrence, Kansas, and other points in Kansas. NINE LYNCHINGS FIRST SIX MONTHS OF YEAR Tuskegee, Ala.—(By the A. N. P.) — According to the records compiled at Tuskegee Institute in the department of records and research that in the first six months of 1926 there were nine lynchings. This number is the same as the number for the first six months of 1925, it is 4 more than the number 5 for the first six months of 1925. 6 less than the num l<er 15 for the first six months of 1923, 21 less than the number 30 for the first six months of 1922. and 27 less than the number 36 for the first six months of 1921. The races of the persons lynched and the numlier in each race were: Negro 6: white. 2: Indian I. The offenses charged were: murder, 3; rape. 1; attempted rape, 2; making improper proposals to women, I; burglary, 1; wounding officer of the law, 1. The states in which lynchings occurred ami the ndmlier in each state are as follows: Arkansas, 1; Florida. 3; Ken tucky. 1; Mississippi, 2; New Mexico, 1; Texas, 1. EQUAL RIGHTS LEAGUE DELEGATION CALLS ON PRESIDENT COOLIDGE Washington, D. C.—The National Fqual Rights l.egue and the I nited Colored Com mercial Committee hail an audience at the While House, Friday, at which time they presented the race's sesqui-centennial of the Declaration of Independence peti tion, against federal employee segregation, at the middle of American Independence Week. Twenty persons composed the dele gation. The audience was conducted hy Maurice W. Spencer, treasurer of the league, who introduced the delegates, ex plicitly stating their purpoes. After in troductions he presented Wm. Monroe Trotter, of Boston, secretary of the N. F. R. L., who presented the petition to the President. He placed on the table a big pile of petitions with 25,000 signa tures from 40 states specifying one from Maine, and four from California, saying they proved universal geographical oppo sition to federal segregation. He also pre sented one from the “372nd Battalion, 1 Massachusetts National Guards which Mr. Coolidge authorized when governor. Mr. Trotter read the petition and declared seg regation to be inequality of rights and asking for its removal for the race which shed the first blood for independence, lie then asked the President to lead the way in having the United States make the 150th anniversary of American independ ence the beginning of a new American epoch for the abolishment of color caste proscription, segregation and public ostra cism, by himself removing segregation of the colored clerks at Washington. He said this example by the government had given great impetus to every form of seg regation and unless the President would abolish it now disaster will be inevitable. Finally, he urged abolition was a fair return for over 150 years of fighting, dying and sacrificing and in just appre ciation. of a perfect record of loyalty with never a traitor. The President replied to the spokesman in a calm, friendly manner, that some segregation had been removed and he would continue to remove more gradually until it was all removed. SHE WAS COLORED, BUT NOT AN AMERICAN NEGRO, SO SHE GOT A PULLMAN BERTH Kansas City. Mn.—Any kind of colored person in the world ran get better treat ment in American than the American Negro who has died to form, save and perpetuate the ideals of what many call this wondrous democracy. If you haven’t heard of any ease before this. listen to what happened to Senora de Mena, of Nicaragua, who was a visitor in Kansas City last week. Mrs. de Mena, a U. N. I. A. worker, who was the house guest of Mrs. V. J. Williams, 1323 Jackson street, went to the Pullman window at the Union station and received the same answer that many, many darkskinned travelers have received: “W'e have no berths ... if you come hack at six o’clock, perhaps . .” But Mrs. de Mena was not accustomed to surh treatment. “You have not even looked,” she said with an accent, “you look at my face and decide you have none. If you were in my country . . Then she went upstairs to the passenger agent. After he examined her passports and credentials, he, himself went down to the Pullman window and returned with a reservation for her. It does not pay to fight and die for a country, evidently, for even with the fighting and dying, one cannot enter cer tain schools, hold certain jobs, buy cer tain homes or even reserve a berth in a Pullman. It pays to speak broken English and come from another country—a country as small, even, as Nicaragua. NEGROES TAUNT SOUTHERNERS Beverly, N. J.—(By the A. N. P.) — White victims of a Negro mob here com plain that trouble broke when they'got -tired of hearing Negroes refer to them as Georgia “crackers”. The whites, who are said to have been attacked, were imported laborers for a canning factory and most of them came from the south, especially Georgia. Mrs. Rebecca Cuff. 2219 Grace street, has been removed to Paxton Memorial hospital, where her condition has some what improved. JUNES ARE CHOSEN TO DECIDE WINNERS OF HARMON AWARD Outstanding Representatives of Mu sic, Arts, Science and Business Will Select Successful Competitors. RACE IS WELL REPRESENTED Among Judges in Each Field Se lected to Stimulate Creative Ef fort Among Negroes Are Race Members. Washington. — Outstanding musi cians, artists, scientists, educators, religious leaders, university profes sors, economists and business men will serve as judges for the Harmon awards for distinguished achievement by Negroes of American residence. This announcement was made today by the Commission on Race Relations of the Federal Council of Churches, 105 East Twenty-second street, New York, which has been asked to ad minister the awards. These judges will consider nominations and make awards to Negroes of American resi dence who have made creative achievements in the seven major fields of literature, music, fine arts, industry including business, science including invention, education and religion, and also to a candidate, white or Negro, who has made an out standing achievement in race rela tions. The awards are offered by the Har mon Foundation “to give annual rec ognition and stimulus to creative work among Negroes.” The period for making nominations or filing ap plications is open until August 1 this year. Names of successful candidates will be announced about December 1. “I believe that the Hannon Foun dation will afford a rallying point about which ambitious Negro men and women can gather,” said William E. Harmon, president of the Harmon Foundation, in telling of the appoint ment of the judges. “It offers a platform from which their worthwhile accomplishments will receive the de gree of public attention and consid eration to which they are entitled. “No self-respecting Negro desires to secure advantage through special favor without due consideration be ing given to his merit. All he asks is a fair field of opportunity, words of encouragement, a sympathetic un derstanding, and the assurance that his work will be judged on a par with the work of the white race, without either unfair discriminatiin, (Continued on Page Four.) \jC> * V;,.; : . ---—-—.. " — . .. " ~ .... ..Q By Tfc« ▲Mociftted Pm*. SEVENTEENTH ANNUAL SESSION OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF COLORED PEOPLE, CHICAGO, ILL., JUNE 23-20. , , cjoo deleBate9 representing every state in the Union, who gathered in Chicago. Seated in the center art,: James Weldon Johnson, secretary and Mrs. Johnson Others in the front row are Arthur B. Spingarn^donor^ cd*the^Splngarn medal), Mr and Mrs. Walter White; Mary White Ovington, Robert W. Bagnall, Harry E. Davis, and Dr. W. E. B. DuBois, editor of The Crisis.