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About The advocate. (Portland, Or.) 19??-19?? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1931)
PAGE POUR SATU RDAY, T h r ADVOCATE NOVEM BER >, Ml J I POET ASKS JUSTICE FOR ALABAM A BOYS K EEPIN G W est Indian Racial; ! Purity Advantageous! 1._______ _____ ____ ‘Daughters’ Honor Mammie Type -FIT- A Health Column By DeNorval Unthjnk. M. O. hints BY CARTER O. WOODSON BY W ll I I AM IHCKKNS by Nancy Leo 10 KNOW IF IT IS JUSTICE On a street In New York City not era ble number of us are more Indian lly WILLIAM l’ IOKENS ter A N I* a dog wlth Brown timi Ili» heroes Ion* ago, 1 enjoyed immensely a than African, and a sUU larger uuin The Dnugtitcrs of (ho Coufeileracy Illese "Daughtera" aro h o little uf SUSCEPTIBIL1TY TO DISEASE speech made from a ladder by a her more Caucasian than African. In and other southern »lu to woman havo spirti us lo teli ilio elilldreii of ilio West Indian woman who boasted of some eases, too, we discover amone undoriakon to bulbi a montimeli! to sonili litui Brown hud a "criminal re The matter of racial susceptibil having a black face, full lips, flat us all but perfect types o f Orientáis Wlfe deaerilou seeius to bo a coni 11 N,,gro ■'< llarper'a Ferry. West Va cord”, wlthoul explaliilug limi bis 4lly LANGSTON lll'O IIE S) ity to diseases is an age-old discus nose, and blue gums. She made her resulting from the race admixture men malady lately especially since Thoy bave deelded ulaiu thè seri o f "crim e" was hi» fallare lo obey ilio If the nine Hcuttsboro boys die, the sion. Wherever two races — or more audience appreciate her highly de- undergone by our ancestors and from monumcut whleh soulheruer» always laws of slave lioldcra and hln wllling superimpose their habits and cus the economic depression Is sweeping decide on w lieti tticy wuut to "honor" I le » lo givo evon bis Ufo to thè cause ▼eloped race consciousness and more recent amalgamation over the world like a tidal wave Men Langston Hughes, who wrot® the showed how unfortunate certain It must be difficult, then, to con- toms upon each other, the question feel they cannot support themselves thè Negre: a menu molti to a serrani, ef freedem A "orlino” Itko litui ih no "Negroes" are in having nothing duct a school, to establish a church arises a failhful dlslioner George Washington li.nl a following article. Is America's l»«adltig let alone a family, so they walk out a subordinato, a slave. The American Indian showed which they can admire. Speaking a- or to promote a business with people Ititeresled el iminai record " in ilio eyes of ilio \«*gro novelist and one of America's and shift the burden to some one else human dog Thoy are net He is a member of the bout It to "Broadway" Jones, who handicapped by all these traits and himself to be very susceptible to the As men do the courting and propos In monumenta lo Negro mnnhodd. Ilrlttali, —and tlicy would bave bang best poets diseases that have been brought into was standing by, I had to admit that u mperaments. Persons otteu com- Thoy cali ed litui If |h*y Itati cangili bini. Thoy National Committee for the infensa ing. and shoulder themselves with a eourage ami self-reapect. this country This extreme suscepti of Political PrUomus which is coop- she was right. ' plain that Negroes" do not get a- wife ami family to support and care only show respeel for "black mani hauged ami sltot maity of bis fello» This attitude of this sensible wo- long w ill together. How cau they bility has had much to do with his for. It seems like poor sportmanshlp mio«”. "Unolo Toma", ex-slaves, "good patriota and follo»era Koberl K. Lee • rating with the International laihor gradual destruction. man can be easily explained In the when they have so many differences ttlcgera” . and Iti getterai thè tvpo of couimttted a "crime »lieti he deaeri IW ense In Its fight to save the ttlue While the Negro is susceptible on their part to leave their loved ones Scottsboro hoys from legal lynching West Indies, the "Negroes" have so and divergences of interests- They tu the lurch when the burden becomes Nonni who lina regimi, d (or rnlher od bla collimanti. JoUictl Ihose In re- Together with htm ou tills committee to uiaiiy of the diseases he has been far outnumbered the whites in the are not a race. The only thing they prelemled to roganti “ whlte folks” aa bollion and shot ut thè flag he Itati to heavy. exposed to. he has had a few diseas English - speaking possessions that have in common is suffering from be« n sulutlng all bis Ufo. Jesus of . 1 1 «* Theodore Dreiser. Lincoln Stef superbir beluga race admixture has not developed to oppression, but that has not yet pro- es to hand over in return. Thls sllly sentlniont and cheap In- Nazareth gol a critnluul record“ be fens. Edna St Vincent Millay, Floyd There U an unwritten law (lt.it a Ho has been able, at least, to unti is quito well Doll. John Dos Pasaos ami other of the extent that It has in our own ved to be a force strong enough to •ea captain will go down with his sull lue mulinerà mnke (he soniti ri foro Roman law, America's most prominent literary country. In the iJttin area It has drive them together and hold them hold his owu ship rather than abandon it to the diculous The Daughtera et thè Coti- spokon of in “ thè four goapols“ . The dreaded hookworm disease worked out Just to the contrary, but in line for something constructive. In But thè worst surpt lse of all Is that figures mercy of the sea So wouldn't It lie federaev coiild more aptly dub Gleni the race admixture there has tended the case of the West Indian and the that infests the mountain regions o( a beautiful thing for men to be chival selve« "The United Duughters of thè whlte president of a Negro schonl affecting especially the to break down political and social African of more racial purity there the south, rous. unselfish, and loving enough to Suve Hoblers". lf thoy assunteti tholr sbottiti be so weak in bis destre to South ought lo l o nshatnod of Itsrlf white population, is supposed to barriers. The Latins do not want a is some hope. hold on until they could brest the o righi I t a m i'. llke that, Giett Gioir ideano bis southern friemls and so but th«* lw«*lvt* million N« gn*«s lu A i ontotnptuotiH of thè peoplo he U try- moriva ought to I h » mor® ashain- rce problem, and they get rid of li When you atteud a meeting of so- have been seen for the first time af conomlc storm. With desire, w ill ae "mamniy" antica would be In arder ter the importatiou of the first slav by amalgamation. called Negroes and find it breaking Al llarper'a Ferry they creo! a ing to “ u p liff, us to Join Dieso “ Duu «*«! than th® south Mayb«* II’ h agaliiNt tlon. calmness, bravery, and intelli es from the African shores West Indians of the distinctly At- up in an uproar, as I saw a commit- thè failhful" Negro gltters ' in tltis bistorte stumler ami th«* law to print tho transcripts of gence, one can cope with any situa moiiument lo The Negro population of these rican type, however, are less inclined tee recently do, you come away dis tion. even the ravenous wolf howling slave » h o In bis duntb ignorane" grutuitous iusult hy deliverlng i i ’ wel tríala lu a Slat«* court If not, ovory affected areas show very few of the to undertake the Impossible in try- couraged about "our people", but they opposed John Brown'» offerta to free come uddresa" on thè o c c u h I o H of NVgro pup« r in thin country at (he door ought nonsenso Wu tng io change their features with are not "our people". They are overy- symptoms of the disease. However, thè sluvoH ami who helped bis etisia- thelr monumentai to ImmotiIntoly publlah tho official many of the authorities have sugges halr straightening and bleaching pro- body's people. Their disputes often vera to fight thè nbolttlnnlata In do- would uot usk that he help us to ro rocortla of th«* Scot ta Intro casos mo cesses as do the native Negro vie- result from the fact that some one ted that the Negro may be a carrier lltg thls. illese womeil go otti of thelr soni tlus insali hy attaekiUK thè per that both whitos amt blacks might tima of the slave psychology In the who is more white than black, sees of the disease. wav to ptibllah «lamiera agnina! John petrai leu. The head of no school in si*o at a giam o tn «luit alts uni fan The experiments of two Chicago United States. The black West In- the thing altogether from the Cau- Brown ami thè auper-cotirageotta No- th«* south would hardly dare that But « h an Alabama court «un tloacou«! (Or ¡enlists upon prophylactic vaccine dlan Is not ashamed of his color. He easiaa point of view; another who is greca » h o helped him Thero »aa he could bave digtiifiodly and «piloti) should 1 aay an Atn«*rlc»n court?) Is very much like the African who more Indian than African cannot ap- treatment of scarlet fever, have been Shields Green, a Mark muti freni So. refused. and no uno ueo«l over bave Tho nino boys in Kilby I'rlson aro heralded by the medical world. Scar boasts of being black and comely, precíate the thought of the others; Carolimi, who jolned llrowtt ut ('Mini heard that thè “ Daughten” hud so Am erica ni Twolv«» million NY grimi let fever and its complications is one borsinirg. Pa , just a few daya l't-fore little respeet for bini us to invite htiu black and beautiful. beautifully and still another with a Chinese • black. strain answers the call of the Mood of the worst of the childhood diseas thè fammi« ' rubi" al thè Ferri- Nevi lo • lo such a thing People are roDacloun of huving tho Jury ut Scottsboro. and t».. gov to Brown himself. Green was un With such race consciousness, the and shows himself to the contrary es. ernor of .Alabama, art* Amt*rlcans. Seldom do Negro children have educated West Indian is more of a notwithstanding. The affair ends, doubtedly th<* greatest hero in the dono a greut wrong wheu they koup fighting at Harper s Kerry If the on trylng to Justlfy th« inst ivi s. hy Therefore f r the uk.< »f American dynamic force than the educated Ne- then, in an interracial squabble: such severe attacks of scarlet fever Justice. (If there 1 » any), and for tho gro In the United States; for. as a and '.heir foolhardiness is charged to In the darker skinned Negroes It Is “ Daughters of Slave Holders’* want protending that thoy think they were t to make a lasting tmpr NIon on all right southerners betray th«*lr guilty rule, the educated Negro In our coun- the account of African temperameut. often hard for the physician to deter monument consciences by perpetually yelling there ever W e r e utl)'). let the South try is worse off than the Illiterate Ever since the "N egroes” have mine whether the child has scarlet posterity. let them build " S H A D E S AN D S H A D O W S ' ami gesticulating about “ black mam r!«e up tu tiri «« and pulpit, home and there: Negro who has never attended high- been in the Western World, there- fever or not. In the lighter skinned mies” . “ Duelo litm uses” , “ good Ne school. Senate chamber, and Rotary TO er Institutions merely to learn to de- fore, this so-called race has been re- children the attacks are more severe, Meador Ihibllshiug Company. He-toti • 'luti«, «ad petition (be freedom of groes” and "our darkies” SHIELDS GREEN spise his own and to Imitate others peatedly attacked by other "races yet with none of the complications But if the American Negroes will of the dumb hlnck«, «0 Indiscreet as Reviewed for The Advocate by more thoroughly. Our Illiterate Ne- for doing or for not doing what they that are seen in the whites. Black Fugitive From South ('arolina There is undoubtedly a suscepti go on forgetting or ignoring their own to travel, unwittingly, on the same W HO FREED HIMSELF I1Y groes are more useful than those who themelves have done or have failed CLIFFORD C MITCHELL train with two white prosit heroes, this slaveholding spirit will freight I d N NINO \ w \ Y F Hi >M have been trained to admire the Teu- to do Shortcomings, which are at- bility of the NegTo to Tub« retools. tute» continue to single out and hold up SLAVERY \ND THEN DARED ton and to long for his presence as tributed to "Negroes''. have never However, the educational work done When Randolph Edmonds, of Mor And et the sensible cltlsens of Ala Negro weaklings and traitors Ne T O G I V E IMS LIKE IN the hart pants for the waters of the been discovered among the natives in the last twenty-five years has gan College, prefaced this book ho are any), supply groes know too little about Frederick hatnx tif t h e r e A BRAVE ATTEMPT living stream. of Africa. For example, sexual pro- brought such splendid results that quoted from Addison, as follows schools for the black populace of T O F R E E HIS KELLOW • SLAVES IMtugiuss, have almost forgotten that Yet why should we Mame these miseuity, and concomitant social di there is some questiou as to the u- “ By imagination, a mau in a dun thelr state, and for the half Mark, Such a monument would make his Shields Green ever lived and died, people for this undesirable attitude? eases, which are often charged to mount that is due the enviornment. geon is capable of entertaining him too • the mulatto children of the They are not all Negroes. W e have the account of the American ' Ne- self with scenes and landscapes tory, to which even the grami daugh ami are not teaching their children Southern gentlemen ■ • I reckon no such thing as a Negro race In A- groes" are not found in native Afrl- more beautiful than any that can be ters of the * Daughters” could point anything about either of these men. they're gentlemen), so the Negree» The only houor which I enti recall as merica. What is a Negro? Alabama, ea. These are special contributions found in the whole course of nature.'' with pride, won t h e so dumb i.gatn Frederick Douglass, whom having beeu paid to Green was given it Kentucky. Maryland, Mississippi, of the whites to ■ Negroes." Polvga- Using this philosophy he has writ Hut hack to the dark millions • . the white race called The him by Jesse Max Barber, founder of a pi North Carolina. Tennessee, and Tex- my is practiced in Africa in certain ten six short stories, in drama form, Slave That Ever God Set John Brown M«-inurlul Association, of Mark and half black, brown and yel- as once designated a person of color places, but is not general, for only that not only Indicates a liberal use Noblest l,,w. with a gang of white fore par* ho brought Shields Green Philadelphia, who bus named on® of as one who Is descended from a Ne- the rich and well-to-do can indulge of his imagination but will also take Freo”, ents like me la-t Ih f„■ (w .lve mil lined him to Brown a few the branches of his association “ Tin* atul luir gro to the third generation inclusive. In It. and wherever it is practiced some imaginative powers to thorough lion Negro Anicrh-nna raise sueh a ore the raid. For this ser Shields Green Chapter'' Most other weeks b though one ancestor In each genera- the wires are decidedly loyal to the ly appreciate his volume howl that Go- d oot• : Kilby |*rlson tlon may have been white. Later Al- husband. In only two of Iris stories. Hewers vice t his own race Douglas had to Negroes will hear th»* name Shields shaki' until the nine youngsters come abania changed ' fifth" for "third” These so-called American Negroes of Wood and Everyman's latntl” Is run iiw ay to England to avoid being Green for the first time in this little ont (and I don t mean a pt i.i,* knwl. The folowing bullentin is released the race problem, even remotely, in- nrr I eral officer» and turtv editorial slap which we are haudlng genc?\ a. According to the laws of are also censured by the others as cither! And let the mlllowners of Florida. Georgia. Indiana, Missouri, being too emotionally religious, but b y t h e National Urban League troduced. The characters in “ The j tH* ver to Virginia to b hanged Ilk«* the Daughters". Huntsville stop paying w><men work through its Department of Industrial and South Carolina, a person of col- the Negroes’ religion and their me- Phantom Treasure” ur« Negro» - but — er« too little for them to afford the or v i one with one-eighth Negro thod of giving expresión to their e- Relations: no problem is presented other than price of a train ticket to t'h att an oo- H O L D UP N I G H T W O R K E R The old adage that Is an illwind that a plot based upon the Negroes’ tradi blood. In Nebraska. Oregon. Virgin- motions were taken over from these gn Dear Lord. I never knew until la. and Michigan, one must have one- other “ races” with which they have blows nobody good is illustrated by- tional superstition. now that white ladl.-s (the color of fourth Negro blood to be thus class- come in contact. On account of ad- several innovations that have brought Although “ Shades and Shadows” is j Southern »••ntl.nt.n) travelled In Philadelphia. Pa. .Nov (ANTi ified. These laws by amendment and vancement in education most of the Jobs to Negroes as result of the busi strictly imaginative it contains, thru- Charles W High, night worker in a freight trainai • Did you. world* • • • Interpretation, however, have come others have edeveloped out of such ness depression. The necessity of out, an excellent moral lesson ami no I laundry at Mcrvliie and Oxford Sis. And who e\, r heard of raping a to mean that a man becomes a mem- religious practices in which the "Ne- keeping plants running is of greater one can read the t>ook without paus- I jjorted to th«* police that ho was ; r dilute* ber of the so-called Negro race as groes” in their unenlightened condi- moment than race prejudice and so ing to deliberate upon the uujuatr*** : held up Friday night, and robbed soon as it is known that he has a tion still find enjoyment, but they Negroes have been employed by tele of tyrannical rule, class or racial while working In the basement of the visible trace of African blood. By are merely doing what they were phone companies in Richmond and hatred, unmerited superiority, etc., plant. race admixture, then, one may go in- taught to do by those whom they Los Angeles and In New York chain that Edmonds so delicately, but con store coroporations have employed vincingly. portrays in his writing to the "Negro Race,” but by t h e have imitated in America, same process he goes out of the This situation, then, presents a their first Negro workers. In Mil "roprietors Written and described in dramatic | “ white race.” serious problem. Neither the whites waukee two public schiils have gone form adds a touch of realism that * A Sim« It Dejournette Some one. then. In answering this nor the so-called Negroes ever think to work and two eligible polk—men brings many a thrill and excitiug question as to w hat is a Negro, said about it. They boast of know ing very ! Await assigment moment to the reader of Edmond's , impatiently that a Negro is any one much about this "race” , but the fact | But these innovaiious for the white first book, “ Shades and Shadows". who hs to ride in a Jim Crow car in is that they have not even begun to collar worker, while comforting, are Georgia. Another probably gave a study It; and, therefore, so far as few compared with the large number better definition when he said that a this question is concerned, they have | of jobs lost by the laboring group not In St Louis. Buffalo, and Wilmington. I h»* 11 « » in d* o f Southern L o o k i n g Negro Is anything which the white gone along in all but perfect ignor- ¡ because operations w ere curtailed or Del.-in normal times outstanding pla ¡'reparo! I \pei tally for Thtl man does not care to take along with anee of a problem which must be working force cut. but to make room ces of • mployment for Negro work* r - Horn® Mai!»* Mexican Chili him. for that is just about the de- scientifically studied before the up- for workers of another race In liar- are employing considerably fewer H«*m«‘ Made Fork Sausage \t'u i paper scriptiou of what we call a ■ Negro" lift of these people becomes possl- risburgh one of the largest hotels numbers of workers. Bul N SIXTH Near (ilutan »St. now uses white waitresses instead of in the United States. ble. When management changed in an Not long ago when called on as Some of us would do well to read Negro waiters, some of whom had gi automobile agency in Seattle three l'uri land :: ()r<‘gon the last speaker at an interracial E. A. Hooton's new book. “ Up from ven as much as fifteen years’ service. Negroes were released, one of whom Department stores in Columbus. ha»l seen five and one half years’ ser meeting where members of all so-call- the Ape", In which he treats the Ne ed races Bpoke. I told them that they gro along with others as a product Ohio are reported to have replaced vice with the company. The new did not need this number of persons of race admixture. In his chapter on colored porters with white, and rail manager brought in his crew of work to represent these element«, for I “ Who's Who of the Races” , he says road in the North West have taken ers. among whom were no Negroes. have In my veins the blood of practi- that when races come into contact off dining and Pullman cars, thus the cally all of them, and in the case of with one another they may some- throwing Idle emyloyees on C. R H o »( i Willi.<?.' about a third or fourth of th" "Ne- times fight, but they always inter- streets in Minneauolis and St. Paul. left Tuesday night for Kansas City. In Fort Wayne, foremen inform Ne* groes” there Is less African blood breed. This Is the -way we have got Mo. to pass ten days with his mother gor applicants they “ cannot hire col who resides in that city. Mr. Howe than that of other "races". A consid- where we are today. ored m»*n just now. Pullman shope la popular in railroad circles. m s m , y j w, HOOK R E V IEW Z K mssn IfciJk Urban League Reports Lad or U p -to th c M inute mi; i:i;o\mn <:\i i; Modes Lovfe Comes fc/'k C harming Garvey to Geneva Mart Garvey, coloriai West Indian leadei who was deported to Jamaica by U- nited States immigration authorities some time ago. appeared bffore th» League of Nations officials here last week to prt darker races throughout the world. Garvey stylc-d himself "Commissioner to Eu- rope re resenting the Dla< k People» of the World” w hen he appeared here, He called on Sir Eric Orummond. the League's Secretary General, and conferred with officials of the man- date section coneornlng the petition of the Universal Negro Improvement t i i j j | Association and th" African Comma- (ties of the Longue for action onbo>|| half of "the struggling and oppress- ed black people” , which he submitted to the League in 192S. Assured that the League had the petition under consideration and that it would come under the agenda next year. Garvey left for London, from where he will rail early in November for Jamaica, w here he has resided since his expulsion from the United States. He stated that a convention of Negroes would be called in Jamai- ca early next year to name a deb-ga- tlon to represent them at the League. 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