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THE BROAD AX, CHICAGO, ILL, SATURDAY, JANUARY 14. 1922.
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In this city since July 15th, 1899,
Withcat -missing one -single 'issue Re
.publkans, Democrats, Catholics, Pro
testants, Single Tazers, Priests, infi
Sfel5l5r"aByont lse can have their say
as lon as their language is proper
and responsibility is fixed.
The BroadjAxis a newspaper whose
platform, is broad enough for auVever
claimingthe editorial 'right to speak
its own. mind.
Local communications twill receive
side?.of.
attention. Wntconly onfbne si
tfceaper, x , :-
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Advertising' rates made ' known on
application.
Address all communication to
1206 "So.- Elizabeth St. Chicago. I1L
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Phone Wentworth 2597
JULIUS F. TAYLOR
Editor and Publisher
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Associate Editor
DR. M. A. MAJORS
4700 South State Street
Phone Drexel 1416
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7
Commodore Ferdinand W. Peck, the First Citizen
of Chicago, Favors the German Monorail System
for Chicago.
(Concluded from page 1.)
are many others here I might men
tion. '
Now, gentlemen, I am not an engi
neer. I am not a mechanic I do not
understand how these cars are going
to get around curves, but they will,
and they will not interfere with the
trollcv lines. They run seventy miles
an hour in Germany. We don't need
that speed here, but we need as much
or more speed as we have on the
elevated or on the surface lines.
There is John F. Foster, who was
formerly city engineer of the city
plan in New York city. Those are
all eminent men of national reputa
tion. Everyone of them will tell you
January 14, 1922.
VoLXXVH
No. 17
Entered as Second-Class Matter. Ane.
19. 1902, at the Post Office at Chicago,
xn. unaer Act ot March 8, 1879.
GLIMPSES AND SIDELIGHTS
OF LIFE
By Dr. M. A.-Majors
A few years ago the Shakespearean
dramas were silenced by rapid
changes of civilization, and a new
' order sprung into being. The dramas
written by the immortal bard of 'Avon
are as well-night immortal, and they
are appreciated and respected by the
,mo'st learned people of all the world
- and perhaps read more extensively
than any other book except the Bible.
Shakespeare sounded with a mental
vision all of the heights and depths
of human nature. In his matchless
intellect he treasured all of the great
courts of royalty, and brought kings
and queens, and great potentates be
fore the common vision of the poor,
by hurling: them before the footlights
with pleas for mercy, or excuse for
acts they Would have populace ap
prove. What was it that almost put the
Shakespearean dramas to almost Her
culean silence?
It may have been the advent of
vaudeville, the supergorgeous bur
lesque, the modern comedy, combined
with the commercial spirit of the lit
erary age that has brought to the sur
face within the last dozen years such
writers as Hal Caine, Winston
Churchill, H. G. Wells, A. Conan
Doyle, George Bernard Shaw, Arthur
Brisbane, and a host of others of
less magnitude. Then the era busi
ness opportunity for riot in a specu
lative period no doubt has sobered
the mind of humanity to a very creat
extent. Of course, we are not to lose
sight of the fact that the new day
takes powerful stress from the old
day. Modern life has become an im
pelling force itself, and people are
drifting away from those older les
sons, learned, when they could learn
tfo others.
Then there is the" integral factor, or
amL Perhaps more impressive the
individual; separate and distinct in all
that pertains to life iself, not exclud
ing its aims, beliefs, principles sus
taining truths founded upon knowl
edge, and proved by a thousand ex
periences; these are the. lulling hyp
notics that have put Win. Henry
Shakespeare dramai to peaceful sleep,
only temporary, yet to peaceful sleep.
Now, what of all of this about
Shakespeare? What is it in your
mind, Mister? You who are so all
fired thoughtful for 'the rest of us?
We are Tery anxious to know what it
is, that is so great a burden on your
literary heart.
If Wm. Henry Shakespeare Is ever
to come back then the Negro tragedian-will
give him the vogue. The
American knows that Shakespeare's
greatest characters were the Negro
vand the Jew. His dramas do not
match well with the American system
of-caste, to flaunt before an audience
Othello in the act of killing a white
woman, after she had proved her love
ior a black man would be very un
popular in this period of the world's
progress. White men do not believe
good white women love colored men.
Can't yon. see, reader, some of the
causes of the suppression of Shakes
peare? Ho writer of any race has
ever undertaken to Jell this truth to
the public before.
MR. JAMES M. DAILEY
Chairman of the Central Committee of the Democratic Party of Cook
Coonty Who May- Become the Standard Bearer of His Party for
Sheriff of This Coonty.
that the monorail is practical
Now, we have to listen to other
people because, as I have said, we
may plunge into unknown dangers
here, and we must be influenced by
the opinions o people who are emi
nent engineers, and whose opinions
are valuable on such a subject Gen
tlemen, it would be criminal if you
did not give the monorail a trial.
Eight months, and a million and a
half dollars, a mere bagatelle when
J is compared to the two hundred
I million dollars required and the time!
be out the labor. The iron will be
just as valuable and good when you
scrap it as it was when you put it in
there.
Now, I am going to say just one
word in a general way. I move a
great, deal among, what you call the ,
more intelligent class of people in
this city of Chicago. I belong to
eicht clubs. I have founded nearly
all of them myself, including the
Union League Club, the Chicago
Club, the Chicago Athletic, the Press
Club and others. Well, I talk with
thinking men in those clubs every
day, men whom we all respect The
concensus of opinion is that we have
today in the city of Chicago a Com
mon Council we ought to be proud
of, and it is the greatest Common
Council we have ever had in my ex
perience. The members are men of
integrity and men of ability, and 1
take off my hat to the Common Coun
cil, as well as I do to the Mayor of
the city of Chicago. Gentlemen, you
ought to be proud to be in that body.
We have to look to you for relief We
have to look to you for realization of
all our desires and needs in this great
city.
Now, I have coined an expression
i . . ... , i
for the subway, and it you can avoia i j tcrm civic Harmony." I never
the construction of the awtul tunnel, h d anvbodv else use it. Civic
EMANCIPATION DAY
AT HAMPTON INSTITUTE
"New Day Is Dawning in Race Rela
tion,' Declares Dr. J. L.
Shepard
NEGROES MAKE PROGRESS
Dr. James E. Gregg Says "Hampton
Belongs to the Colored People"
NEW COUNTY INTEREST
RECORD SET BY CARR
1921 Collections Reach Total
$654,419.90; Commissioners
Land Result
of
Hampton, Va. Two thousand col
ored men, women and children of the
Lower Peninsula of Virginia cele
brated the fifty-ninth anniversary of
Emancipation Day by holding public
exercises in Ogden Hall, Hampton
Institute, under the auspices of the
Congratulations were recently ex
tended to County Treasurer Patrick
J. Carr by members of the Board of
County Commissioners because of the
large amount of interest money
earned on public funds during the
year 1921 as indicated in the report
to the board. All previous records
were shattered. The total interest
received on all funds ending Decem
ber 1, 1921, was $654,419.90. Mr. Carr
Elizabeth CAtv f!nnntv Fmanrinsfinn
Association, of which C H. Hender-1 has hcca Treasurer since April and
son is president
Dr. James E. Gregg; in his address
LEAVES CITY
jRer. J. W. Tutt of Davenport la,
stategrand master of U. B. F. & S.
M. TM left the city during he week
after attending the annual session of
the Mutual Aid Board-whicWconveaei 1
at lie VkcesBes hotel o January 2.
ev. Tutt was raach pleased with the
year's work of the orgaaizatipn.
of welcome, declared that it was ap
propriate to link up the thought of
freedom with the thought of educa
tion. "A school," he said, "is a pe
culiarly appropriate place for the
commemoration of the end of slavery
and the beginning of full legal free
dom intellectual freedom, deliver
ance from the bondage of supersti
tion and ignorance; moral freedom,
delivered from all the habits which
enchain and enslave a man and keep
him from being his best and truest
self." Dr. Gregg added:
"Hampton Institute belongs to the
colored people. It is devoted to serv
ing them and to serving the young
people of the Indian race. AH that
Hampton has is given freely for the
enrichment and the upbuilding of its
young men and women and through
them to the blessing of the races
which they represent
Community Center Will Be Bought
Major Allen Washington, com
mandant of cadets at Hampton In
stitute, in introducing the speaker of
the day, Dr. James E. Shepard, presi
dent of the National Training School
at Durham, N. C, urged the colored
people to purchase and support the
local community center, so that their
boys and girls may have a place for
wholesome recreation. Major Wash
ington impressed upon his hearers
the importance of present action. He
declared that procrastination would
be a great calamity to the community
as it would mean the loss of a com
munity center three times as valuable
as the price which the colored people
are called on to pay.
J. M. Pollard of the National Head
quarters of Community Service, Inc.,
made an appeal to the people to con
tribute to the fund for the purchase
of tthe local Hampton community
house. He referred to the work of
Ohio colored people; in Dayton a
population of 9,600 recently gave 15,
000 for a community center; in Cleve
land, 35,000 gave $40,000, and in Co
lumbus, colored people gave $18,000.
Worth-While Program
The Emancipation Day program in
cluded singing of MAmerica' by the
audience; invocation by Rev. J. T.
Johnson of Hampton; "O Freedom,"
sung by the audience; reading of the
Emancipation Proclamation by Miss
Lucy C Barrow of Phoebus: address.
The Essentials of a Democracy," by
Arthur P. Davis, a Hampton Insti
tute student, emphasizing "respect for
law, education and intelligence, physi
cal and moral courage, deep spiritual
life and high Christian ideals, which
are possessed by Negroes"; "Soldiers
of Freedom Hampton Glee Club;
Negro National Hymn," words by
James Weldon Johnson and music by
Rosamond Johnson, sung by Phoebus
Glee Club, and benediction. Rev. John
H. Gray of Hampton.
the interest is on money collected
since that time.
Lauds Check System
The wisdom of checking on the
Treasurer's records and requiring him
to report all interest earned is shown,
Mr. Carr says, in comparing the rec
ords of past years. In 1905 the total
interest turned over by the County
Treasurer was only $75,138, according
to records in the County Comp
troller's office. The total has" grown
steadily until it has reached the big
figure reported by Mr. Carr.
In 1909 the interest received, ac
cording to the Comptroller's records,
had increased to $117,266.91; in 1914
it amounted to $189,286.12, in 1918 to
$300,533.45, in 1920 to $588,681.17 and
this year to $654,419.30. The best
showing of any month during 1921
was in May, when the interest
amounted to $128,638.44. The poorest
showing was in January, $12,461.12, a
period when practically no tax money
was being received.
Treasurer Can's Letter
In his letter to the County Com
missioners, Treasurer Carr says:
I herewith take pleasure in sub
mitting to you an accounting of all
interest earned on County moneys for
the fiscal year ending November 30,
1921. A resume of all of said interest
shows a total for the year of interest
from all sources on all county moneys
of $654,419.90. This is by far the
largest amount of interest ever re
turned on county moneys.
If your honorable body should de
sire to make an audit of this interest
or appoint a committee for that pur
pose, I will gladly give them every
access to the County Treasurer's rec
ords. The new law, which went into
effect in 1919, covering interest on
county moneys, makes it obligatory
upon the county treasurer, as well as
upon all depositaries of county
moneys, to make verified returns each
month with affidavits attached and
sworn to as to the amount of interest
earned on such moneys, the original
copies of which are in the hands of
the comptroller of Cook County.
These verified returns will show that
the amounted stated ($654,419.90) is
accurate.
NEW -JIM CROW" CAR LAW
FOR NASHVILLE, TENN.
START NEW HOME
VMr. and Mrs. Benjamin Sulinger
have started the erection, of their fu
ture borne in Morgan Park on lots
purchased at 11267 S. May street,
throagh the Bailey Realty Co., 3638
S. State street
On the 3rd of this month a Jim
Crow ordinance was introduced be
fore the city council by Hines. one
of the councilmen, and referred to a
special committee consisting of Hines,
Yarbrough and Willard. This ordi
nance goes further than the already
existing one to provide that a portion
of each car should be set apart for
each race and that strict segregation
be enforced. Large printed and movable-signs
are to be used and the en
trances also are to be separate. It is
1 to take effect thirty days after pass
age.
gentlemen, for God's sake do it
Aid. Geurnsey: Mr. Chairman.
The Chairman: Alderman Guern
sey.
Aid. Guernseyi"May I ask the Com
modore one question?
The Chairman: Just one. Alderman.
Alderman Guernsey: I am wonder
ing whether you have given considera
tion to the necessity of double capac
ity of the north and south side ele
vated roads, or whether you have
given consideration to the necessity
of double the capacity of the north
and south side elevated roads from
Chicago avenue on the north to some
point south of the loop, there being
but one line each way, as you, of
course, recall.
Commodore Peck: Yes.
Aid. Guernsey: And that, making
the neck of the bottle smaller than
the contents north and south, and,
even though you advocate the mono
rail as the best plan, and in your
judgment you have to have a general
scheme, do you not think that there
is a possible necessity of that under
ground tube between, say Chicago
avenue on the north and 22nd street
on the south, to augment the elevated,
and to save the necessity of further
development in the street for these
same cars?
Commodore Peck: 1 will answer
that in two ways. I will admit that
it will probably be necessary to have
a tube or a subway out of the loop
and then go on your monorail track.
I will answer you in another way. In
my judgment, if you adopt the mono
rail, the elevated system of the city
of Chicago will be in the scrap heap.
just like the battleships of the United
States will be.
Aid Guernsey: Ultimately.
Commodore Peck: Yes, sir, as we
may not need them.
Aid. Guernsey: No.
Commodore Peck: If we adopt this
system, that is my opinion of what
will occur.
Aid. Guernsey: But I have in mind
the immediate ten years succeeding
this time, in what is confronting us.
Mr. Chairman, I am not asking him
a second question, I am discussing it
(Laughter.)
The Chairman: Yes, Mr. Peck, we
are much obliged to you.
Commodore Peck: I am not
through.
The Chairman: Go ahead.
Commodore Peck: But I don't want
to take the time of your committee.
The Chairman: Go ahead.
Commodore Peck,: But this sub
ject, gentlemen, is very dear to me,
because I love Chicago. Another
thing, gentlemen, if you spend this
money in making this test line of
six miles, say from Canal street to
the city limits on Madison street, and
right over the street cars, it will cost
you as I told you, a million and a
half dollars, and you will have the
salvage of the iron, if it should be,
unfortunately, disappointing. You
have got that, and you will simply I
harmony means co-operation and har
mony between the three elements, the
people, the press and the Mayor. That
is what "Civic Harmony" means. If
you want the greatest advancement
and prosperity in this great city 61
ours, let these three elements of this
great city pool together and pull to
gether. There is too much lack of
cohesion here in Chicago and too
much unjust criticism thrown at our
Mayor constantly and also at the
council by newspapers and too much
of a lack of harmony between the
council and the Mayor. Gentlemen,
pull together. You have a great
Mayor. You can well afford to take
off your hats to him. He has never
been accused of lack of integrity.
Gentlemen, he sat on that knee of
mine when he was two months old.
and nobody knows him as well as I
do. His wife does not, or anybody
else. I might tell his wife a good
many things about him that she does
not know. (Uproarous laughter.)
Gentlemen of the committee, he is
the most constructive Mayor we have
ever had. There are more tangible
results to show from his administra
tion, his one and one-half administra
tions, than we have had in the ad
ministration of any Mayor we have
ever had, and I have been intimately
acquainted and associated with every
one, from Dr. Boone, our Mayor who
was present when my mother brought
me forth into this world, down to the
present Mayor, and I know whereof
I speak. I am mighty proud of our
Mayor. Now, gentlemen, I am mighty
proud of him, not only because he is
Mayor but because he is worthy of
being Mayor.
Now, I hope, gentlemen, you will
take that suggestion I make to heart
and pull with your Mayor, as you can
not get results without harmony, and
we must have it It is unfortunate
we have to move along here and pull
apart from our splendid Mayor. Can
you not pull together? There have
been editorials printed in The Tribune
and in the News and in the Post about
our Mayor that are disgraceful
Now, gentlemen, I wish to express
my appreciation for the time you have
given me, and I do ask you to build
this test line of the monorail, as, when
you do that, you will have solved this
problem, and I ask you to start in at
once, for if you undertakethis dark
and impenetrable subway, we will "fly
to ills we know not of," and we will
impair the financial condition of Chi
cago if you build the subway, but
you will never regret it if you test
the monorail, and you will never cease
to regret it if you build a subway
without such test If you try the
monorail and find it, for some un
known reason, impractical, then you
can build your subway afterwards,
but you will not build it, as the mono
rail will be a triumph.
Gentlemen, I thank you very much.
The Chairman: There being nothing
else before the committee, we will
stand adjourned.
Whereupon the sub-committee ad
journed.
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HON. THOMAS GALLAGHER
Ex-Member of Congress from the Eighth Congressional District of
Illinois Who Is Being Urged by His Legions of Friends to Enter
the Race for One of the Trustees of the Sanitary District of Chicago.
N.
A. A. C. P. MASS MEETING
URGES CONGRESS TO
PASS DYER BILL
JACK RABBIT FEVER
ATTORNEY RICHARD E. WEST
BROOKS RE-ELECTED PRESI
DENT OF THE COOK COUNTY
BAR ASSOCIATION.
Mrs. Lottie Carter, S423 S. Wabash
avenue, will return homer this evening,
afterspending the holiday season in
visiting with relatives and friends in
StT Louis, Mo and Cleveland, O.
The annual election of the Cook
County Bar Association, atwhich of
ficers for the forthcoming year were
elected, was held at the .Appomattox
Club last Saturday evening.
Hon. Richard E. Westbrooks was
re-elected President The office of
president was hotly contested by Hon.
James A. Scott, Assistant State's At
torney and C Francis Strafford. Mr.
Scott withdrew after the first ballot
had been cast Attorney John F.
Wilson nominated Mr. Westbrooks.
Attorney N. S. Taylor nominated Mr.
Scott Attorney A. M. Burroughs
nominated Mr. Strafford.
Other officers elected were First
Vice President. C Francis Strafford;
Second Vice President, Violet N. An
derson, Third Vice President, J. Har
old Mosly; Secretary, William L. Of
ford; Treasurer. Oliver A. Clark.
The Board of Directors is made up
of Colonel Franklin A.' Denison, Wil
lis E. Mollison, Hon. James A. Scott,
H. M. Porter, J. Gray Lucas, A. E.
Patterson and N. S. Taylor.
The speakers were the President,
Attorneys Wilson, Mollisoh and Den
ison. The installation and banquet will
be held February 3d, 1922, at the club
rooms of the association.
The National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People in
its annual mass meeting on the night
of January 7, in New York City,
unanimously and by acclamation
passed the following resolution call
ing upon Congress to pass, the Dyer
Anti-Lynching Bill:
"Since 1889, 3,434 human beings ac
cused of crime have been murdered
by mobs in the United States before
their guilt could be established by
law or their punishment legally in
flicted. "During the World War when the
allied nations were fighting to make
the world safe for democracy, more
than 250 United States citizens were
lynched in America. During the last
year 63 have been lynched, and since
Congress has been debating the Dyer
Bill, mobs in impudent defiance of
the government have murdered 39
victims.
"Some of these lynchings have been
accompanied by the most atrocious
and revolting orgies; in the last three
years 23 have been publicly burned
at the stake amid torture an d physi
cal maiming, and in the presence of
women and children, and in many
cases the burning has been openly
advertised beforehand.
"No particular crime is responsible
for this blood lust. Since 1889, 2,593
persons have been lynched, against
whom no accusation of any crime
against womanhood has been even al
leged, and in this same period 64
women have been lynched.
"In view of a record of lawlessness
which shames this nation in the eyes
of the civilized world, neutralizes her
philanthropy and religion, denies her
civilization and discredit its democrat
ic government everywhere, we, the
National Association for the Advance
ment of Colored People, in mass
meeting' assembled, appeal to the
United States Congress to take dras
tic action in order that lynching may
be stopped absolutely and forever and
by the power of the Federal govern
ment The states will not and can
not act They stand helpless before
the mob and confess openly their
helplessness.
"We assert that an enormity so
cruel and frightful calls upon this gov
ernment to hesitate at no technicali
ties and legal hair-splitting, but to go
to the limit of its authority in main
taining law and orders in re-establishing
republican government according
to constitutional guarantees, and in
giving its own citizens at least as
much protection as international law
compels it to give to foreitmers.
"In the name of God and humanity,
Congressmen of the United States,
pass the Dyer Ann-Lynching Bill!
Rabbits, lice and a species of horse
fly (crysops discalis), says the I S
Public Health Service, are all respon
sible for the transmission of an in
fectious disease of rodents, recently
christened tularaemia. Investigation!
and experiments made in Utah in the
summer of 1920 demonstrate that the
disease originates among jack rab
bits, to which it seems very fatal, and
is transmitted to man, and other rab
bits, by a blood-sucking horsefly,
which obtains it by biting the rabbit
and passes it on by biting the man
or another rabbit Further investiga
tions disclose that the wild rabbits
are infested with lice and that these
lice also spread the disease among
them. Experimental transmission by
means of these lice explains how "
infection is kept alive from year
year.
Tularaemia is seldom fatal to m
only one death due toit'bcmg-kno
It is, however, a disabling septic fe r
which lasts from three to six wer
and from which convalescence is sh
Its economic consequences to the v
tims, however, are serious because it
attacks farmers and field workers in
the busy midsummer and harvest sea
sons, when the ny earner is most
prevalent, and lays them up for two
or three months.
This is the season of closed win
dows and overheated, badly ventilated
living and working conditions. And
these conditions are directly responsi
ble for what we call the seasonal in
crease in cases of pneumonia, bron
chitis, catarrh and common colds.
Pneumonia cases and deaths increase
in Chicago each year from October to
May. With the advent of the outdoor
season they rapidly decline until cold
weather comes again. Watch your
air supply.
To think is to suggest Thinking
health tends to suggest health. Some
people are prone to worry about dis
ease and fancy they have the symp
toms of this, that or the other ail
ment. The trouble is they think along
the lines which suggest disease or
sickness instead of the subjects which
would suggest health and vigor.
In doing things that are worth
while, co-operation counts for much.
In fact it is almost everything. One
person alone cannot transform a dirty
and unkempt neighborhood into a
clean and tidy one. But when the
neighbors alNpitch in and help, the
job is easy and soon completed.
INVITED TO VIRGINIA
Miss Betty Ray. St Louis, Mo.,'
spent the holiday season in this city
as the guest of her sister Mrs. Carrie
Warner, 3822 Calumet avenue.
M. T. Bailey, 3638 S. State street,
president of the Alumni Association
of the V. N. & 1. 1, at Petersburg. Va.,
has just been invited to attend a big
mass meeting on January 15 at Rich
mond, Va., by the citizens of Rich
mond and surrounding towns at which
time the president of the. Institute,
Prof. John M. Gandy, will make pub
lic the appointment of Mrs. Ora
Brown Stokes as non-resident lecturer
and a member of the faculty. If for
any, reasons, Mr. Bailey cannot he
present,;he will be represented either
by Hon. J. C. Robertson of Richmond
or Hon.J. Thomas Newsome of New
port News, Va.
The decayed and aching tooth is
too often beyond the skill of the dent
ist to repair. The wise thing to do
is to have the teeth examined before
it is too late to save them.
Smallpox, a most loathsome dis
ease, is no respector of persons. The
only one who is protected against it
is the individual who has been suc
cessfully vaccinated.
-
There is plenty of good, fresh air in
God's big outdoors. Then why ex
clude it from the places where we live
and work.
Smallpox has not terrors for the
person who is protected against it
by being vaccinated. How about yoo.
A live or wide awake newspaper
man or solicitor can earn some easy
money by calling on or addressing
the undersigned.
Julius F. Taylor, 6206 S. Elizabeth
street Phone Wentworth 2597.
09