GENERAL ITEMS OF INTEREST TO THE RACE,
John C. Dancy, re-appointed Collector
of Port Wilmington, N.C. Salary $3,000.
The appointment of Prof. Richard
T. Greener, of New York, as Consul to Vladivistock.
Hon. H.P. Cheatham, appointed
as Register of Deeds of the District of Columbia.
Salary $4,000.
Hon. George H. White elected to Congress
from the Second Congressional District of North Carolina,
the only colored Representative in that body.
The Cotton Factory at Concord, N.C.,
built and operated by colored people, capitalized
at $50,000, and established a new line of industry
for colored labor, is one of the interesting items
showing the progress of the colored race in America.
B.K. Bruce re-appointed Register
of the Treasury, and on his death Mr. Judson W. Lyons,
of Augusta, Georgia, became his successor, and now
has the honor of making genuine Uncle Sam’s greenback
by affixing thereto his signature. Salary $4,500.
Bishop H.M. Turner visits Africa
and ordains an African Bishop, J.H. Dwane, Vicar
of South Africa, with a conference composed of a membership
of 10,000 persons. This act of the Bishop is criticised
by some of the Bishops and members of the A.M.E.
Church in America on the grounds that Bishop Turner
was acting without authority in making this appointment.
Mr. James Deveaux, Collector of Port,
Brunswick, Ga.; H.A. Rucker, Collector of Internal
Revenue for Georgia, $4,500 (the best office in the
State); Morton, Postmaster at Athens, Ga., $2,400;
Demas, naval officer at New Orleans, $5,000; Lee,
Collector of port at Jacksonville, $4,000 (the best
office in that State); Hill, Register of the Land
Office in Mississippi, $3,000; Leftwich, Register of
the Land Office in Alabama, $3,000; Casline, Receiver
of Public Moneys in Alabama, $2,000; Jackson, Consul
at Calais, $2,500; Van Horn, Consul in the West Indies,
$2,500; Green, Chief Stamp Division, Postoffice Department,
$2,000.
MISS ALBERTA SCOTT AND OTHERS,
Miss Alberta Scott is the first Negro
girl to be graduated from the Harvard annex.
Her classmates and the professors of the institution
have congratulated her in the warmest terms and in
the literary and the language club of Boston her achievement
of the M.A. degree has been spoken of with high praise.
Miss Scott is but the fifth student of the Negro race
to obtain this honor at the colleges for women in
Massachusetts. Two received diplomas from Wellsley,
one from Smith College and one from Vassar. Miss
Scott is 20 years old. She was born in Richmond,
Va., having graduated from the common schools in Boston.
Miss Scott’s teachers spoke so encouragingly
of her work that the girl was determined to have a
college education. She paid particular attention
to the study of language and literature, and she is
now a fluent linguist and a member of the Idier and
German clubs. She has contributed considerably
to college and New England journals.
THE DISCOVERY OF THE GARNES FAMILY.
A picture of which is herein placed,
will do much to confound those bumptious sociologists
who make haste to rush into print with statistics
purporting to show that the Negro Race in America is
“fast dying out.” The aim of this
class of people seems to be to show that the Negro
Race withers under the influence of freedom, which
is by no means true. It is possibly true that
filth and disease does its fatal work in the Negro
Race, the same as in other races among the filthy
and corrupt, but the filthy and corrupt in the Negro
Race, as a class, are growing fewer every year for
which we can thank the philanthropy of the American
people who are doing something to better the condition
of the Negro rather than hurling at him enernating
criticisms and complaints.
“Their home is at Brodie, in
the country, about twenty miles from Henderson, N.C.
The father’s name is Gillis Garnes. He is
about fifty years of age, and the mother says she
is about forty-eight. The oldest child is a daughter,
aged twenty-eight, and the youngest is also a daughter,
three years of age; that you see seated in her mother’s
arms. They are all Baptists and thirteen of the
family are members of the church. I had this
photograph taken at Henderson, on April 8th.
There are seventeen children, all living, of the same
father and mother. A.J. Garnes spends quite
a part of the time in teaching in his native county.
When he is not teaching he is at home, and every evening
has a school made up of children of the family.
A.J. Garnes is the tall young man in the background
at the right, who is a former student of Shaw University,
as well as one of the sisters represented in the picture.” Prof.
Charles F. Meserve, in the Baptist Home Mission Monthly.
“A COLORED WONDER” ON THE BICYCLE.
New York, August 27. Major
Taylor, the colored cyclist, met and defeated “Jimmy”
Michael, the little Welshman, in a special match race,
best two out of three, one mile pace heats, from a
standing start at Manhattan Beach Cycle track this
afternoon.
Michael won the first heat easily,
as Taylor’s pacing quint broke down in the final
lap, but on the next two heats Michael was so badly
beaten and distanced that he quit each time in the
last lap.
MARVELOUS WORK.
Taylor’s work was wonderful,
both from a racing and time standpoint, and he established
a new world’s record which was absolutely phenomenal,
covering the third heat in 1:41 2-5.
Michael was hissed by the spectators
as he passed the stand, dispirited and dejected by
Taylor’s overwhelming victory.
Immediately after the third heat was
finished, and before the time was announced, William
A. Bradley, who championed the colored boy during
the entire season, issued a challenge to race Taylor
against Michael for $5,000 or $10,000 a side at any
distance up to one hundred miles.
THE COLORED YOUTH LIONIZED.
This declaration was received with
tumultuous shouts by the assemblage, and the colored
victor was lionized when the time was made known.
Edouard Taylore, the French rider,
held the world’s record of 1:45 3-5 for the
distance in a contest paced from a standing start.
THE WORLD’S RECORD LOWERED.
The world’s record against time
from a standing start, made by Platt Betts, of England,
was 1:43 2-5. Michael beat Taylore’s record
by 1 2-5 seconds in the first heat, but Major Taylor
wiped this out and tied Betts’ record against
time in the second heat. As Taylor was on the
outside for nearly two and a half laps, it was easily
seen that he rode more than a mile in the time, and
shrewd judges who watched the race said that he would
surely do better on the third attempt.
PALE AS A CORPSE.
That he fully justified this belief goes without saying.
The Welsh rider was pale as a corpse
when he jumped off his wheel and had no excuse to
make for his defeat. Taylor’s performance
undoubtedly stamps him as the premier ’cycle
sprinter of the world, and, judging from the staying
qualities he exhibited in his six days’ ride
in the Madison Square Garden, the middle distance
championship may be his before the end of the present
season.
A NEGRO MILLIONAIRE FOUND AT LAST.
After a search of many years, at last
a Negro millionaire, yes, a multi-millionaire has
been found. He resides in the city of Guatemala,
and is known as Don Juan Knight. It is said he
is to that country what Huntington and other monied
men are to this country. He was born a slave
in the State of Alabama. He owns gold mines, large
coffee and banana farms, is the second largest dealer
in mahogany in the world, owns a bank and pays his
employees $200,000 a year. His wealth is estimated
at $70,000,000. He was the property of the Uptons,
of Dadeville, Ala. He contributes largely to
educational institutions, has erected hospitals, etc.
He is sought for his advice by the government whenever
a bond issue, etc., is to be made. He lives
in a palace and has hosts of servants to wait on his
family. He married a native and has seven children.
They have all been educated in this country.
Two of his sons are in a military academy in Mississippi
and one of his daughters is an accomplished portrait
painter in Boston. He visited the old plantation
where he was born recently and employed the son of
his former master as foreman of his mines. Finding
that the wife of his former master was sick and without
money, he gave her enough money to live on the balance
of her life. He employs more men than any other
man in Guatemala and is the wealthiest one there. Maxton
Blade.
UNCLE SAM’S MONEY SEALER WHO COULD STEAL MILLIONS IF HE WOULD.
There is only one man in the United
States who could steal $10,000,000 and not have the
theft discovered for six months.
This man has a salary of $1,200 a
year. He is a Negro and his name is John R. Brown.
Mr. Brown’s interesting duty
is to be the packer of currency under James F. Meline,
the Assistant Treasurer of the United States, who,
says that his is a place where automatic safeguards
and checks fail, and where the government must trust
to the honesty of the official.
All the currency printed at the Bureau
of Engraving and Printing is completed in the Treasury
Building by having the red seal printed on it there.
It comes to the Treasury Building in sheets of four
notes each, and when the seal has been imprinted on
the notes they are cut apart and put into packages
to dry. John Brown’s duty is to put up the
packages of notes and seal them.
Brown does his work in a cage at the
end of the room in which the completion of the notes
is accomplished the room of the Division
of Issues.
The notes are arranged in packages
of one hundred before they are brought into the cage.
Each package has its paper strap, on which the number
and denomination is given in printed characters.
Forty are put together in two piles of twenty each
and placed an a power press. This press is worked
by a lever, something like an old-style cotton press.
There are openings above and below through which strings
can be slipped after Brown has pulled the lever and
compressed the package.
These strings hold the package together
while stout manila paper is drawn around it.
This paper is folded as though about a pound of tea
and sealed with wax. Then a label is pasted on
it, showing in plain characters what is within.
The packages are of uniform size and
any variation from the standard would be noticed.
But a dishonest man in Brown’s position could
slip a wad of prepared paper into one of the packages
and put the notes into his pocket.
If he did this the crime might not
be known for six months or a year, or even longer.
Some day there would come from the Treasurer a requisition
for a package of notes of a certain denomination.
The doctored package would be opened and the shortage
would be found. However, the Government has never
had to meet this situation.
There have been only two men engaged
in packing and sealing currency since the Treasury
Department was organized.
John T. Barnes began the work.
He was a delegate to the Chicago Convention which
nominated Lincoln and he received his appointment
on the recommendation of Montgomery Blair in 1861.
In 1862 he was assigned to making up the currency
packages and fulfilled that duty until his death,
in 1894. No mistake was ever discovered in his
work, though he handled every cent of currency issued
by the government for thirty-two years so
many millions of dollars that it would take a week
to figure them up.
Mr. Barnes’ duties were filled
temporarily until November 1, when John R. Brown was
appointed to the place.
Barnes at the time of his death was
receiving only $1,400 a year and Brown draws only
$1,200.
Ordinarily the Bureau of Engraving
and Printing delivers to the Issue Division about
fifty-six packages of paper money of 1,000 sheets each,
four notes on a sheet, making, when separated, 224,000
notes. These notes range in value from $1 to
$20, and their aggregate is usually about $1,000,000.
The government, however, issues currency in denominations
of $50, $100, $500, $1,000. The largest are not
printed often, because the amount issued is small.
If it could happen that 224,000 notes
of $1,000 each were received from the bureau in one
day, the aggregate of value in the fifty-six packages
would be $224,000,000. As it is, a little more
than 10 per cent, of this sum represents the largest
amount handled in one day.
That is, the packer has handled $25,000,000
in a single day, and not one dollar has gone astray.
John R. Brown is a hereditary office-holder.
His father was a trusted employee of the Treasurer’s
office for ten year prior to his death, in 1874.
The son was appointed assistant messenger in 1872.
He became a clerk through competitive examination
and was gradually promoted.
The man who has the largest interest
in John Brown’s integrity and care probably
does not know Brown’s name. Yet, if a thousand
dollars was missing from one of the packages in the
storage vault, Ellis H. Roberts, Treasurer of the
United States, would have to make it good. Mr.
Roberts has given a bond to the government in the sum
of $500,000. Twenty years hence the sureties
on that bond could be held for a shortage in the Treasurer’s
office, if it could be traced back to Mr. Roberts’
term.
Not one of the employees under Mr.
Roberts gives a bond, though they handle millions
every day. But the Treasurer’s office is
one which every responsible employee has been weighed
carefully. Its clerks have been in service many
years and have proved worthy of confidence.
HOWELLS DISCOVERS A NEGRO POET.
Mr. Paul Lawrence Dunbar has been
until recently an elevator-boy in Dayton, Ohio.
While engaged in the ups and downs of life in that
capacity he has cultivated his poetical talents so
successfully that his verse has found frequent admission
into leading magazines. At last a little collection
of these verses reached William Dean Howells, and
Mr. Dunbar’s star at once became ascendant.
He is said to be a full-blooded Negro, the son of
slave-parents, and his best work is in the dialect
of his race. A volume of his poems is soon to
be published by Dodd, Mead & Co. and in an introduction
to it Mr. Howells writes as follows:
“What struck me in reading Mr.
Dunbar’s poetry was what had already struck
his friends in Ohio and Indiana, in Kentucky and Illinois.
They had felt as I felt, that however gifted his race
had proven itself in music, in oratory, in several
other arts, here was the first instance of an American
Negro who had evinced innate literature. In my
criticism of his book I had alleged Dumas in France,
and had forgotten to allege the far greater Pushkin
in Russia; but these were both mulattoes who might
have been supposed to derive their qualities from
white blood vastly more artistic than ours, and who
were the creatures of an environment more favorable
to their literary development. So far as I could
remember, Paul Dunbar was the only man of pure African
blood and American civilization to feel the Negro life
esthetically and express it lyrically. It seemed
to me that this had come to its most modern consciousness
in him, and that his brilliant and unique achievement
was to have studied the American Negro objectively,
and to have represented him as he found him to be,
with humor, with sympathy, and yet with what the reader
must instinctively feel to be entire truthfulness.
I said that a race which had come to this effect in
any member of it had attained civilization in him,
and I permitted myself the imaginative prophecy that
the hostilities and the prejudices which had so long
constrained his race were destined to vanish in the
arts; that these were to be the final proof that God
had made of one blood all nations of men. I thought
his merits positive and not comparative; and I held
that if his black poems had been written by a white
man I should not have found them less admirable.
I accepted them as an evidence of the essential unity
of the human race, which does not think or feel black
in one and white in another, but humanly in all.”
The Bookman says of Mr. Dunbar:
“It is safe to assert that accepted
as an Anglo-Saxon poet, he would have received little
or no consideration in a hurried weighing of the mass
of contemporary verse.”
“But Mr. Dunbar, as his pleasing,
manly, and not unrefined face shows, is a poet of
the African race; and this novel and suggestive fact
at once placed his work upon a peculiar footing of
interest, of study, and of appreciative welcome.
So regarded, it is a most remarkable and hopeful production.”
We reproduce here one of Dunbar’s dialect poems
entitled
WHEN DE CO’N PONE’S HOT.
Dey is times in life when Nature
Seems to slip a cog an’
go
Jes’ a-rattlin’ down creation,
Lak an ocean’s overflow;
When de worl’ jes’ stahts
a-spinnin’
Lak a picaninny’s top,
An’ you’ cup o’ joy
is brimmin’
’Twel it seems about
to slop.
An’ you feel jes’ lak a racah
Dat is trainin’ fu’
to trot
When you’ mammy ses de
blessin’
An’ de co’n pone’s
hot.
When you set down at de table,
Kin’ o’ weary
lak an’ sad,
‘An’ you’se jest a little
tiahed,
An’ purhaps a little
mad
How you’ gloom tu’ns into
gladness,
How you’ joy drives
out de doubt
When de oven do’ is opened
An’ de smell comes po’in’
out;
Why, de ‘lectric light o’
Heaven
Seems to settle on de spot,
When yo’ mammy ses
de blessin’
An’ de co’n pone’s
hot.
When de cabbage pot is steamin’
An’ de bacon good an’
fat,
When de chittlin’s is a-sputter’n’
So’s to show yo’
whah dey’s at;
Take away you sody biscuit,
Take away yo’ cake
an’ pie.
Fu’ de glory time is comin’,
An’ it’s proachin’
very nigh,
An’ you’ want to jump an’
hollah,
Do you know you’d bettah
not,
When you mammy ses de blessin’
An’ de co’n pone’s
hot?
I have heerd o’ lots o’ sermons,
An’ I’ve heerd
o’ lots o’ prayers;
An’ I’ve listened to some
singin’
Dat has tuck me up de stairs
Of de Glory Lan’ an’ set me
Jes’ below de Mahster’s
th’one,
An’ have lef my haht a singin’
In a happy aftah-tone.
But dem wu’s so sweetly murmured
Seem to tech de softes’
spot,
When my mammy ses de blessin’.
An de co’n pone’s
hot.
Taken from the Literary Digest.
DISFRANCHISEMENT OF COLORED VOTERS.
While the Northern and Western portions
of the United States were paying tributes to the valor
of the Negro soldiers who fought for the flag in Cuba,
the most intense feeling ever witnessed, was brewing
in some sections of the South-notably in the North
Carolina Legislature against the rights and privileges
of Negro citizenship, which culminated in the passage
of a “Jim Crow” car law, and an act to
amend the Constitution so as to disfranchise the colored
voters. It was noticeable, however, that although
the “Jim Crow Car” law got through that
body in triumph, yet the “Jim Crow Bed”
law, which made it a felony for whites and colored
to cohabit together DID NOT PASS.
The Washington Post, which cannot
be rated as generally partial to the colored citizens
of the Union, and which is especially vicious in its
attacks on the colored soldiers, has the following
to say as to the proposed North Carolina amendment,
which is so well said that we insert the same in full
as an indication to our people that justice is not
yet dead though seemingly tardy:
SUFFRAGE IN NORTH CAROLINA.
(Washington Post, Feb 20, 1899.)
The amendment to the Constitution
of North Carolina, which has for its object the limitation
of the suffrage in the State, appears to have been
modeled on the new Louisiana laws and operate a gross
oppression and injustice. It is easy to see that
the amendment is not intended to disfranchise the
ignorant, but to stop short with the Negro; to deny
to the illiterate black man the right of access to
the ballot box and yet to leave the way wide open
to the equally illiterate whites. In our opinion
the policy thus indicated is both dangerous and unjust.
We expressed the same opinion in connection with the
Louisiana laws, and we see no reason to amend our
views in the case of North Carolina. The proposed
arrangement is wicked. It will not bear the test
of intelligent and impartial examination. We
believe in this case, as in that of Louisiana, that
the Federal Constitution has been violated, and we
hope that the people of North Carolina will repudiate
the blunder at the polls.
We realize with sorrow and apprehension
that there are elements at the South enlisted in the
work of disfranchising the Negro for purposes of mere
party profit. It has been so in Louisiana, where
laws were enacted under which penniless and illiterate
Negroes cannot vote, while the ignorant and vicious
classes of whites are enabled to retain and exercise
the franchise. So far as we are concerned and
we believe that the best element of the South in every
State will sustain our proposition-we hold that, as
between the ignorant of the two races, the Negroes
are preferable. They are conservative; they are
good citizens; they take no stock in social schisms
and vagaries; they do not consort with anarchists;
they cannot be made the tools and agents of incendiaries;
they constitute the solid, worthy, estimable yeomanry
of the South. Their influence in government would
be infinitely more wholesome than the influence of
the white sansculotte, the riff-raff, the idlers,
the rowdies, and the outlaws. As between the Negro,
no matter how illiterate he may be, and the “poor
white,” the property-holders of the South prefer
the former. Excepting a few impudent, half-educated,
and pestiferous pretenders, the Negro masses of the
South are honest, well-meaning, industrious, and safe
citizens. They are in sympathy with the superior
race; they find protection and encouragement with
the old slave-holding class; if left alone, they would
furnish the bone and sinew of a secure and progressive
civilization. To disfranchise this class and leave
the degraded whites in possession of the ballot would,
as we see the matter, be a blunder, if not a crime.
The question has yet to be submitted
to a popular vote. We hope it will be decided
in the negative. Both the Louisiana Senators are
on record as proclaiming the unconstitutionality of
the law. Both are eminent lawyers, and both devoted
absolutely to the welfare of the South. We can
only hope, for the sake of a people whom we admire
and love, that this iniquitous legislation may be
overruled in North Carolina as in Louisiana.