THE MONITOR ' • A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER DEVOTED PRIMARILY TO THE INTERESTS < > J | OE COLORED AMERICANS | | ‘ ’ PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY AT OMAHA. NEBRASKA, BY THE | | || MONITOR PUBLISHING COMPANY || || Entered u Second-Class Mail Matter, July 2, 1916 at the Postoffice at Omaha, || , ( Nebraska, unchtr the Act of March I, 1879.__ ^ , 4 [ THE REV. JOHN ALBERT WILLIAMS Editor 4 * 44 W. W MOSLEY, Lincoln, Neb. Associate Editor y ] | LUCINDA W. WILLIAMS __ Buainoaa Manager Y 4> SUBSCRIPTION RATES, $2.00 PER YEAR; $1.25 6 MONTHS; 75c 3 MONTHS y Advertising Rates Furnished Upon Application y * \--Y !> Address, The Monitor, Postoffice Box 1204, Omaha, Neb. :: Telephone WEbster 4243 ? < > tm*m««««X”X“XK'<”XX"X-xxx“^X"X"XXX“X»X"XxW’«“:“X"H ;; I; AN IMPORTANT WORD TO SUBSCRIBERS. :: | > x ; | The postal regulations require that for newspapers to A !! be sent through the mails subscriptions must be paid in j| 11 advance. A reasonable time, thirty days, is allowed for ;; |; renewals. At the expiration of this period, where sub- $ <- scriptions are not renewed, the paper must be stopped. j| II If this is not done, postal privileges are denied the publi- || ;; cation. Those, therefore, who desire to continue receiving ? The Monitor must see to it that their subscriptions are 11 II paid, as the law requires, in advance. Statements are be- 11 II ing sent to aU those who owe, or our collector will call— ? and unless your subscription is paid we will be compelled !! to cut off your paper which, of course, we do not want 11 11 to do. || f We. as publishers, MUST comply with the law or ;; f pay the penally. !! THE COMMUNITY CHEST The Community Chest campaign is making most promising headway. In three days more than one-third of the quota set has been subscribed. o%rer $160,000 of the required $435,000. To reach the goal, however, there must be no slackening of effort. If you have not given to the Chest be sure to do so be fore the campaign ends. As a citizen of Omaha it is your job and mine to help fill the Chest. Never mind criticisms—the fellow, as a rule, who criticizes most, is just looking for an ex cuse not to do his part. It’s a big job in which Omaha, like many other cities, is now engaged. The Community Chest has been found to be the best method of doing the organized work of charity and welfare work in the community. Over 300 cities in the United States and Canada have adopted it. It is a good thing. It is a worthy cause. Do your part. We hope that in the home of every one of our people a card stating that wTe have helped the Community Chest will be found. GARY’S FIGHT Here’s wishing success and prophesying success for our people in Gary who are fighting the iniquitous attempt to foist inferior educational opportunities in the schools of that city upon our people who bear their proportion of taxes for the support of the schools. We, as a people, no matter where we may be, are interested in Gary’s school fight. They winning, we win; they losing, we lose also. AVOID MISUNDERSTAND. ING Do you know that most of the trouble in the world comes from misunderstanding? Trou ble, too, mean unhappiness, and so most of unhappiness is the result of misunderstand ings. If we will only have pa tience and forbearance enough with one another to try to un derstand one another a great deal of trouble can be avoided and much unhappiness ban ished. We have great faith in hu manity. We believe that, at heart, most men and women, really want to do the right thing, really want to be just and fair-minded. We all have our peculiarities and there is much of selfishness in all of us, but, nevertheless, under neath all that belies our high er and better nature, there is, we believe, a desire to do right and be fair. If we would only take trou ble to iron out our differences and misunderstandings we will all be happier and better. This applies equally to individuals, communities, races and na tions. The art of living together is one of the fine arts which must be acquired if the human race is to fulfill its destiny. Let’s all try to understand one an other and when some misun derstanding does arise, as arise they will, let us get busy on the job of straightening it out. A GOOD MOVE The merchants in the vicin ity of Twenty-fourth and Cum ing streets have started a good movement. They are seeking to have a better lighted street and the development of the section as a live business sec tion. This does not only ap ply to the immediate vicinity of Twenty-fourth and Cuming, but it should embrace the dis trict extending from Sixteenth and Cuming west to Thirtieth, and north and south on Twen ty-fourth from Cuming. The Monitor has contended that the merchants and business men on North Twenty-fourth street from Cuming to Lake should unite and demand a bet ter lighted street. We are glad to see that those around Twen ty-fourth and Cuming are get ting busy and we hope that the movement will include a wider territory. There should be a branch bank somewhere on Twenty-fourth street, too, near Cuming, or Lake. There is much that can and ought to be done to develop a strong retail section in this portion of our city. WHAT OTHER EDITORS SAY The Chinese and Mississippi The supreme court of the great and inglorious state of Mississippi has ruled that Chinese are not white, and must be denied the equal privilege of educating their children in the white schools of that state. Hence forth they must be sent to colored schools. As stunning as this blow must be to Chinese pride with a historical background overshadowing that of their Caucasian detractors, they should in reality congratulate them tact and education of the brand to be had in Mississippi schools, domi nated by the whites. For the descendants of old China and disciples of Confucius, one of the greatest of world teachers, have much at stake, considering the awak selves that *hey have escaped con ening of New China and its great fu ture destiny to contaminate the pure ] minds of their young by sending them to schools controlled by lynch 1 ers, murderers, Klansmen and the i bigots of professed Christian leader , ship, both clerical and lay. Negroes have already been exclud ed from the white schools of Mis | sissippi. Yet white Nothern Christian philanthropists have built and main ; tained schools and colleges there in most instances superior to the state schools for Negroes. These schools have prepared their ' pupils to become good citizens with a fine spirit of tolerance without I their minds being poisoned with the i prejudices of their oppressors, or their hands being stained with blood of the innocents. The Chinese should congratulate themselves that they have escaped such contacts. It remains to be seen as yet wheth er the colored brother will welcome the Chinese' into his schools or not. For of late years it must be remem bered that the Afro-American is de veloping some airs of his own, the least of which is the tendency to I ward exclusiveness socially as well as educationally. It is to be hoped, however, that the bars will be let down against these yellow people who find .themselves in the dilemna in Mississippi to which we have toe long been accustomed, but to the overturning of which by our own in itiative, lies our salvation. We con gratulate the Chinese of Mississippi as well as sympathize with them.— The Chicago Bee. DID YOU KNOW WE OWNED SO MANY BANKS? There are 80 banks in this country owned and operated by Negroes and have upwards of twenty-two million dollars in deposits. There are at present two banks operated by Ne groes, chartered as national banks, according to Major Wright, president of the Citizens and Southern Bank and Trust Company. One of them is the Douglas National Bank of Chi cago. and the other is the Boley Na tional Bank of Boley, Okla. DR. MOTON’S DAUGHTER STUDENT AT OBERLIN Tuskegee Institute.—Miss Cather ine R. Moton, daughter of Principal and Mrs. Moton of Tuskegee Insti tute, has matriculated at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, Oberlin, O. She will major in piano, with harp as her minor. OMEGA PSI PHI TO GIVE CASH PRIZES FOR WORK Washington, D. C.—Cash prizes are to be offered by the Omega Psi Phi fraternity during the organiza tion’s observance of Negro Achieve ment week from November 14 to 20, inclusive, according to Attorney W. H. Mazyck of the fraternity’s admin istrative offices. The awards will be made to the members of the Race who are adjudged to have performed the most noteworthy achievement during the year. WINS WANNAMAKER PRIZE Los Angeles, Cal.—News has been received by Miss Ethyle Gray that her brother, Mr. John A. Gray, now studying in France, is the winner of the second prize given by Rodman Wannan.aker through the Curtis Og den Association of Philadelphia for musical composition. Te was award ed second in the Class of “Melodies and Synchronous Effects” at the Convention of National Association of Negro Musicians, held in St. Louis August 25. Good Heart Can Rout Hawks of Adversity What an unimportant trifle may often change the course of a man’s life! Once I was going thoughtfully along the highway. My soul was weighted down by heavy forebodings. I was overcome with despondency. I raised my head . . . straight before me run the road between two stiff rows of poplars. And across the road, about ten puces In front of me, were hopping In single file a family of sparrows, full of life, merriment and courage. One, In particular, distinguished him self by his bold, sideways hoppings; he stuck out his little breast, and twittered as bravely ns If he did not fear the devil himself. A true con queror ! Meanwhile a hawk circled overhead, whose destiny It was, perhaps, to de vour this very hero, I looked, was forced to lough, and regained my self-possession. My gloomy thoughts had vanished; I felt again courage, etc gy and Iifev A hawk may be circling over me; hut the devil take:—let's keep a good heart!—From Turgener’s Poems In Prose.” Natives Confirmed in Their Belief in Ju-Ju There Is a Utile final touch to a story In the British Medical Journal which should give supporters to the "thirteen superstition” and similar de lusions something to think about. It occurs at the end of an account, by a medical officer In West Africa, of how thirteen native women were all struck and killed by lightning while cowering under the same galvanized Iron sheltu. All the natives, in cluding tlie driver of the motor lorry which hud been sent to remove the bodies to a mortuary, firmly refused to enter the shelter, as there was a prevalent' belief that anyone remov ing the bodies before the “Ju-Ju” bail been appeased by a ceremony of purl ticatlon by the "thunder women” would die within h week. However, the Knropean manager of the local transport company took the j bodies to the mortuary In spite of the j warnings he also received. Three j days later he was admitted to the Hu- | ropeun hospital at Accra and died of | yellow fever after three days' Illness. Thirteen at Table The origin of the superstition about the unluckiness of the thirteenth |»-r son at a table Is so old as to be tin known. Thirteen, from earliest times, has been a number with mystic asso ciations—like three and seven. Rev. B. 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