; f """the" MONITOR j A W1BKLT NEWSPAPER DKVOT1D PRIMARILY TO THE INTERESTS . . | ; or COLORED AMERICANS ' rUBLNRBD EVERT FRIDAY AT OMAHA. NEBRASKA. BY THE | ; MONITOR PITOJ8H1NG COMPANY JJ ' ] Enter Ml u Second-Class Mall Matter July 2. 1915. at the Postoffice at <> i , _ Omaha. Nebraska, under the Act of March 3. 1879 X • ' THE RRV. JOHN ALBERT WILLIAMS_Editor «► ; ’ W W MOBCLY. Lincoln. Nob___Assoclsto Editor V ; : LUCINDA W. WILLIAMS_-_B—bless MSWEPT | ! SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Sk.OS A YEAR: *1.25 « MONTHS: 75c 3 MONTHS V ,, Advertising Rstes F trnlshed Upon Application ,, • | Address, The Monitor, Postoffice Box 1204, Omaha, Neb. j> j; Telephone WEbster 4243 j> AN IMPORTANT WORD TO SUBSCRIBERS. £ ;; The postal regulations require that for newspapers to ’£• < ’ be sent through the mails subscriptions must be paid in .j! ! advance. A reasonable time, thirty days, is allowed for x ; | renewals. At the expiration of this period, where sub- £ ;; scriptions are not renewed, the paper must be stopped. £ !! If this is not done, postal privileges are denied the publi- X ;; cation. Those, therefore, who desire to continue receiving ; • ; ; The Monitor must see to it that their subscriptions are • ■ ! ’ paid, as the law requires, in advance. Statements are be ing sent to all those who owe, or our collector will call— ;; ;; and unless your subscription is paid we will be compelled • •1 ■ ’ to cut off your paper which, of course, we do not want ! I !! to do. JM ;; We, as publishers, MUST comply with the law or «> < - pay the penalty. !! <» < > i CALLED HOME Within the past three weeks the earthly careers of several men prominent in Omaha af fairs have ended. Among the most outstanding may be men tioned the genial, big-hearted Edward E. Howell, whom it was always a pleasure to meet. And how beautiful was his home going. Strong in his Christian faith with joy and gladness he went to meet his Maker leaving a message of cheer to his devoted family.. Charles L. Saunders was an other who had knit his soul with hoops of steel to scores and scores of friends. And then the genial, whole-souled Wil liam F. Gurley, eminent law yer of the old school, an orator of international r e p u t a tion whose influence in the com munity was wide. Nor should Robert L. Carter, prominent in business affairs, always pleas ant, always kindly, be forgot ten. These are men whom Omaha will miss and who en riched our civic life. They were all high-class Christian gentlemen, not ashamed to be counted on the side and in the cause of righteousness. Men like these reveal the true grandeur of manhood and re new our faith in human na ture. RHINELANDER AGAIN The important fact about the Rhinelander decision is that it establishes the principle that lawful marriage between a man and woman is to be re garded as a lawful union not to be nullified or denied on some superficial charge. It does not go into the wisdom or expediency of such unions. If, however, inquiry were made as to the racial affinities of many prominent New York families, who are reputed to be of “In dian,” “French,” or “Spanish” blood, there would be startling revelations. Well, what of it? Character and worth are what count after all. EMANCIPATION DAY IS CELEBRATED BY COLORED PEOPLE OF KEOKUK, IA. John Albert William* of Omaha Wa* the Speaker on the Anniversary of the Proclamation of Freedom ■ ■ (By A. W. Draine) The sixty-third anniversady of the Emancipation Proclamation issued by Abraham Lincoln January 1st, 1863, was observed in Bethel A. M. E. church Saturday night by the Keo kuk branch of the National Associa tion for the Advancement of Colored People. F. D. Bland is the president of the local branch, and the principal speaker for the occasion was the Rev. John Albert William of Omaha, Neb. President Bland has been an active worker in the Association during the past year and has to his credit the setting up of a branch in Ft. Madi son with a membership of 50. For the first two or three years this new organization was under the protec torate of the Keokuk branch until a sufficient number of members had been secured to set up an independ ent branch. At the opportune time and with the assistance of his local officers Mr. Bland drove up to Ft. Madison and set the wheels of the new society in motion. Now, Ft. Madison has a live organization that! threatens to outstrip the Keokuk branch in point of membership. There was a larfge and inspring audience present and the speaker was given rapt attention throughout his entire address. The subject of his speech was “The Old Emancipation and the New.” Pay* Tribute Locally In his opening remarks Rev. Wil liams expressed his appreciation in having the pleasure of returning to Keokuk. He spoke of his services in the church of St. Mary the Virgin during the pastorate of the late Bis hop John C. Sage. He congratulated the citizens of Keokuk for its excel lent band. He said that Abraham Lincoln issued one of the greatest documents in the history of the world. It takes its place with Magna Charta and liberated four millions of human beings who were elevated from the status of chattels to that of manhood. Abraham Lincoln is a name to be revered, a man who en dured all privations and reared in the school of hard knocks, was greatly misunderstood in his own time. He recited the vicissitudes under which he labored in his own cabinet. “We are beginning to realize that the whole world is a brotherhood and when you touch one member you touch all. We do well to meet to gether to commemorate the emanci pation of our people. The American Negro is dressed in the armour of American citizenship, but he is not getting all the rights of an American citizen. All men are entitled to the rights of liberty and the pursuit of happiness." He outlined the work of the Na tional Association for the Advance ment of Colored People and said that this organization stands to make the constitution mean what it says. There is a vital connection between Abraham Lincoln and this Associa tion. He quoted from the platform of the Association in which it advo cates the right to vote, a fair trial, the right to jury service, the destruc tion of lynch law,' equal service on public carriers. He told of a color ed woman being dragged from a Pullmen car in Florida, thrown in jail, and fined $500. The National Association has taken up the case and brought suit for $25,000. Clar ence Darrow and Mr. Hays are the attorneys for the Association. Economic Problem* He spoke of the economic problem and the right of employment. No or ganization has a right to deprive a citizen of an equal chance to earn a livelihood. He dwelt upon residen tial segregation and cited the Sweet case of Detroit and what a tremend ous victory was won for the race. That victory established the right of every man to protect his home. He cited a number of cases in the South in which colored people are lynched on trumped-up charges. Continuing on the subject of se gregation, he said that in some Northern communities there are movements to stir up race hatred, and urged all citizens to keep the public schools free from sectionalism. He urged the people to hold fast to their citizenship. “This land is ours by right of birth and we must not surrender one jot or title of our rights. We must strive and contend for all our rights. We must all labor for the advancement of America, be loyal to each other, magnify the good points and minimize the small points. We must make this nation the land of the free and the home of the brave.” The address was one of the best the Keokuk branch has heard for some time.—The Keokuk Daily Gate City. HILLSIDE ATHLETIC CLUB PROVIDING FOR PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT The Hillside Athletic Club held its weekly meeting Monday evening, Jan uary 10th, at the gymnasium, Thirt ieth and Ohio streets. This club was organized for the purpose of open ing up the avenue of physical devel opment among the boys and girls, men and women of our race. All gymnasiums in Omaha are closed to us, and it is necessary for us to de elop and equip the one in the base ment of the Hillside Presbyterian church at Thirtieth and Ohio streets. There is no place in Omaha for our boys and girls to go for this kind of recreation. I wish we could get the men and women, especially those who have children, to see the advant age of this opportunity of develop ing our boys and girls, and have some place for them to go and play, good wholesome games, under proper su pervision. We are asking that all men inter ested in this move to be present nt the gymnasium on Monday evening. January 17th, at 8:30 p. m., and help us put this over. The price is not to be considered, it is so very small. Come, and bring a man or a boy with you, or both. Come whether you have children or not. We have 35 boys enrolled, and several men. We also have a wo men's division, which will soon be or ganized to play volley ball. We have several basket ball teams, one of which has played several games, which they won. We have had donated to us by Mr. Chas. Pickens: One punching bag, one chest developer, one set of box ing gloves, one basketball. The Y. M. C. A. is going to make us a donation of equipment, and help up all they can. Will you do your part? The following merchants and in dividuals have donated to the club, for which we thank them. H. J. Crawford & Sons, 2012 N. 24th, $2.00; Chas. W. Dickerson, 2814 Ohio, $1.00; Rev. Chas. H. Trusty, 3007 Ohio, $1.00; North Side Loans, 1906 N. 24th, 25c; Liberty Drug Co., 1904 N. 24th, $1.00; Frampton-Mason, 1818 N. 24th, $2.00; Sol Lewis, 1812 N. 24th, $1.00; Ralph Underwood, 1606 N. 24th, 25c; Clarence C. Green, 923 S. 13th, 50c; Dr. Wesley Jones, 1518 N. 24th, $1.00; Dr. Herbert Wiggins, 1518 N. 24th, $1.00; Ike Levy, 1802 N. 24th, $1.00; North Side Bazaar, 2114 N. 24th, 50c; Isaac Bailey, 2816 Pratt, 25c; Dr. G. B. Lenox, 1602 N. 24th, $1.00; Dr. J. J. Jones, 1602 N. 24th, $1.00; Pierre Barquett, 2519 N. 28th Ave., 50c; Ross Drug Co., 2306 N. 24t.h, $2.50; Jones Under taking Co., 2216 N. 24th, $1.00. Total, $18.75. Officers: CHAS. W. DICKERSON, President. DILLARD CRAWFORD, Vice President. RBT. BURNS ALLEN, Secretary. REV. CHAS. H. TRUSTY, Treasurer. MIGRATION OF NEGRO A RELIEF TO RACE PROBLEM Shifting of 2,000,000 Negroes in Last Decade Beneficial to Entire Nation. San Francisco, Jan. 6—“The shift ing of almost 2,000,000 of the Ne gro population from the tenant farms in the South to the northern industrial centers in the last ten years has been a great relief to the race problem” said Will Winton Al exander of Atlanta, Ga., winner of the Harmon award, who was a re cent visitor at the Hotel St. Fran cis. Negroes Are Making Good "The Negroes are making good in industry, and the shift caused by the shutting out of foreign labor, has not brought a race problem to the north, because the Negroes do not present a problem until they ex ceed 30 per cent of the total popula tion. “While industrial leaders have ex pressed approval of the Negro labor they have trouble in getting the men to work on time and in keeping them from taking holidays without notice. This is explained by the fact that on plantations the Negroes worked by the sun, and do not yet understand the use of clocks. Causing Diversification “This migration movement is breaking up the southern planta tions into smaller units and is caus sescika -j AoLi ing a diversification of industries there, bringing about more dairying and farming in that part of the country.” Wins Harmon Award Alexander is a southerner who re cently received the award of the Harmon Foundation of New York of $600 and a gold medal as the per son adjudged to have made the most notable contribution to the improve-( ment of race relations in America during the past year. The award was based on Mr. Alexander’s ser vice as director of the Commission j on Inter-racial Co-operation, a south ern organization with headquarters in Atlanta, Ga. Solution of Race Problem When asked what he considered a solution of the race problem, Mr. Alexander expressed the opinion that the Negro will have to be given a sane legal status before the race problem can be solved. You ought to subscribe for your local race newspaper. The Moni tor is the only race newspaper pub lished in Nebraska. $2.00 a year in advance. Send in your subscrip tion. Mr. Dudley Maxey passed away at his home, 1211 North 21st street, Wednesday, January 12. SECOND GENERATION OF COLLEGE BRED NEGROES By Kelly Miller (Continued from Page One) us then for convenience divide and deal with them severally and separately. Let us then look upon the estate in its religious, economic, political, social and cultural aspects. Impotence With Mum In the first place the educated Negro has not yet been able to arouse the enthuisiasm of the mass es. The tasks which he easays does not in general appeal to the rank and file. Herein lies his greatest imbecility. For his function will re main unfulfilled until he projects his influence even unto the uttermost and nethermost. The Catholic heir archy reaches and stimulates the humblest Catholic in Christendom. The Jewish elite reaches and inspires eery member within the household of Jewry. But the Negro elite stands separated from the mass life of his group by a gulf across which his influence scarcely leaps. The churches and denomination over which the educated clergy preside, such as the Presbyterians, Episcopa lians, Congregationalists, and the rest do not quicken the spiritual pas sion of the race. The more popu lous and enthusiastic denominations, such as the Methodist and the Bap tist, are manned and managed by a much less well educated and cul tured clergy. The Y. M. C. A., which is under well educated and trained auspices utterly fails to quicken the moral sense of the masses of the young manhood of the race or to arouse general moral enthusiasm. The N. A. A. C. P. and the Equal Rights league are officered by the best college equipment within the group. It is devoted to the task which most easily elicits enthusiastic response of the multitude, and yet they arouse and sustain no wide pop ular emotion. Violent denunciation of wrong with holding out hope of arouse the slave to insurrection and deliverance might be supposed to the suppressed to rebellion. And yet so feeble is the response to the appeal of the N. A. A. C. P. and the Equal Rights league, that their an nual collections amount to scarcely a half-cent apiece from the constitu ency to whose welfare these reform moements are devoted: On the other hand, the Elks, the Pythians, the Odd Fellows and others whose leadership grows out of the masses, corral their members by the hun dreds of thousands and collect mil lions of dollars. In politics and in dustry we find the same lack of re lationship. It will not do for the college man to stand off in his im potent aloofness and condemn the masses for failure to appreciate their exalted proffer of service. The masses have no faults, merely mis fortunes. The educated man and woman must devise some means and methods of reaching them, just as they are, without one plea. Other wise the higher education of the race will be pronounced a failure. Pres* Powerful Perhaps the greatest exception to i the general rule above set forth is to be seen in the Negro press. At one time college bred Negroes spurn ed even to write for the colored publications, on the ground that they fall so far short of literary form and mechanical perfection that it would belittle their name to appear on their pages. But now the Negro press is coming more and more un der the editorship and ownership of college men. Our three most wide ly spread journals, the Chicago De fender, the Baltimore Afro-Ameri can and the Pittsburgh Courier are owned and edited by degreed men. influencing, masses of the race as Negro journals are reaching and no other agency is now effecting. The appeal which they often make seems offensive to the type of taste which the editors cultivated in the good old college days. But the mass es must be reached and stimulated even at some sacrifice of the stiff orthodox academies standard. When I read the Negro press and look over the pages devoted to crime, scandal and dubious forms of amuse ment, my moral nature is disposed to revolt. But I am steadied by the thought that the appeal must be made to the masses in such terms as the masses can and will respond to. This is precisely the lesson that the talented tenth must learn. On the whole the Negro press is the great est voice for righteousness now cry ing in the wilderness to the American conscience. It is the voice of the masses of the people. As illustration of my meaning, I bad on article in “The Education Review" for De cember, on “The Higher Education of the Negro at the Cross Roads.” I very seriously doubt whether five hundred Negroes in the United States saw or heard of this contribution. On the other hand I broadcasted a New Year release in the Negro press, and judge that it reached the eye of three million readers. Appeal of the Elite The elite is now making appeal in artistic form under the guise of the New Negro. This movement should be watched with great interest and not without some apprehension. The chief burden of concern is to reach the white public, rather than the Negro reader. Appeal is too often made to the coarser and cruder side of life merely to amuse the white race, as the clown used to do for the court. There is a certain neur otic strain that may forebode the race little premanent good. Negro authors are writing for white read ers. We feel prouder to get an ar ticle in the white magazine than -in the Messenger, the Crisis or Oppor tunity. It is true that the educated Negro must serve as a middle man between the races. It is he who must make the appeal to pharoah, but he must remember that pharoah gives heed to Moses only in so far as he is convinced that he speaks with the voice of the people whom he pur* ports to represent. The educated Negro must first make influence and understanding with his own race before he can hope to make much impression on the white mind. My space is too limited for tull treatment. I promise an early re | lease upon the failure of the college bred Negro to assume his rightful place in commanding the pulpits in the great denominations, and thus ef ficiently administering the great re ligious estate which our more illiter ate fathers bequeathed to us. I WANTED | ONE MILLION MEN AND WOMEN | TO JOIN THE HAMITIC LEAGUE OF THE WORLD f It costs nothing. Enclose stamp for application blank. J If you wish, you may also enclose one dime (coin) for a copy of our new magazine, THE HA MITE, which begins publication in January. It will awaken you as you have never been awakened before. * THE HAMATIC LEAGUE I Suite H, 4707 Calumet Avenue I CHICAGO £ || Subscribe for || 1 THE MONITOR 1 B: Omaha's Reliable 9 B Race Weekly 9 I $2.00 a Year i