1 t *3 " ,/3 J’l*. J i v f ^'- | - r - f ^ "? ' j v if these men whose ancestor: started in the march of civiliza tion a thousand years befori Jesus Christ died on .Calvary if they needed God in their lives how much more the sons of those who not a century re moved front Servitude? And: noWj;4; you have young friends, the middle of the hiU. Xf> you hope to come forth into th^_ life heroic, the sunrise upon frour crests; if you heroes worthy of may we now sug itials? hope to provi the new gest a few The new Vision ion. ‘being able must have vis been defined as see what the oth er fellow does not see; to see quicker and further than the other fellow.’* All those wjho have wrought well in the wcrf;ld have been men of vision. Eve| from the bloody days of Tours,: when the Frank hammer beat hack the power of Islam; from the long endurance at Waterloo, > to the muddy, hlood-stained benches of Flan ders Field, they have emerged victorious because they were in spired by a . vision, Another ess« ntial la purpose, aim in lifer put on the ocean behold that s&ip,' complete in every sense. T^he best steel has gone into her)s frame; master builders have fnade secure the hundreds of rivets;*the engine is perfect in every line, and yet the ship is being tossed hither and yon before the gale. What is the matter with that noble ship? Why., does she not breast the waves and laugh at the Storm? Why, the /Ship is without a rudder. Even so; whatever your equipment, the man without a purpose, a noble purpose, is like t|at ship with out a rudder, separable, faith and belief; faith in yourself, in your fellowmen, and above all, faith in the God of Armies, the God of Battles. If you do not possess these, you have already lost the fight hero ic. If you are to prove worthy heroes for these new tasks you must believe you can accomplish your part of the long row. ’ Then, too, courage arfd pa tience. Like faith and belief these are tied together. The new hero must be a man cf courage and patience. One of the great things in life is not to become discouraged because of the many reverses, the hard knocks; but to toil on patiently through the long day with seem ingly no appreciation. Courage is superior to brav ery. Bravery runs in either di rection quicker than courage. To play the new heroes for the new tasks will revolve in its final analysis, not on how much you can do, but on how much you can endure.1 Finally, love, good will to all men. These new tasks will not be wrought out without this es sential—love, good will. It is love of our fellowmen of all races and tribes that will ena ble us to leave footprints on the sands of time. Go on to the heights, ye mountain climbers, ye guides, remembering that you can not go alone. Except you carry your brother with you, you will not arrive. SABBATH SCHOOL CONVEN TION. The Western District Sabbath School Convention of Southern . Virginia Presbytery convenes l Wednesday, July 25th, at 9:30 [ o'clock, with the Oak Grove Presbyterian church at Mann . boro, Va. . Rev. D. A. Henry is the pas ! tor of this church. \ We hope sincerely and most . cordially ask that all schools in » the district will be represented. - MRS. SARAH V. THOMPKINS, , * President. BY NEGRO DISFRANCHISE MENT. Los Angeles,— Disfranchise ment of the Negro in Southern States has brought about such iistortion of political power in the United States that a small white oligarchy in the South is the dictator of the nation, de clared Dr. W. E. B. Du Bois, Ed itor of The Crisis Magazine, in the keynote address last night which opened the 19th Annual Conference of the National As sociation for the Advancement rf Colored People. Dr. Du Bois pointed out that the barring of Negro citizens from the polls in Southern cities had transferred political power into the hands of a small group 5f Whites, as many as from 80 to 90 per cent of voters in far Southern States refraining from voting in the election of 1920. Among the States where this ab stention from the use of the bal lot ,was most pronounced J)r. Du BoDs cited the following States and their percentage of non-voters: South Carolina-92 per cent Mississippi —_—91 “ “ Georiga : ~_ 89 “ “ Louisiana i..-86 “ “ rexas_82 “ “ Arkansas —-_79 “ “ Alabama _ 79 - “ “ Florida__ _L_72 “ * The consequence in political distortion, continued Dr. Du Bois, was that whereas it took 35,759 votes to elect a Represen tative in Co in some cases ten times as much political power as citizens in the North, as follows: South: Votes per Repre State sentative South Carolina- 9,449 Mississippi_,- 10,312 Georgia ___— - 12,394 Louisiana _— 15,733 Texas _ 22,973 Virginia - 23,100 Alabama - 24,107 State Indiana New York ~ Kansas 4— New Jersey Illinois North: Votes per Repre sentative _ 97,108 _1_ 67,338 _ 71,278 ..._ 75,333 _...._ 77,425 “The barring of Negroes from the polls in the South,” said Dr. Du Bois, “encourages oligarchy. It enables cliques to nullify, not simply the 14th and 15th Amendments but the 19th, giv ing the right to vote to women. And, finally, it entirely vitiates the normal distribution of voting power throughout the nation. “It accomplishes this not sim ply by disfranchising Negroes. The population in Southern States has doubled and by rea son of woman suffrage the vot ing population ought to have quadrupled; but actually, as a matter of fact, the voting pop ulation Has increased less than 50 per cent showing that not only have two million Negroes been disfranchised but more than two million whites.” Dr. Du Bois quoted from an address of Henry W. Anderson, a white politician of Virginia, who asserted that in Southern States the qualification to vote is so limited that governors anc other State officers are “some times elected by less than ter per cent of the population o1 voting age.” “At the event of a presiden tial election,” continued Dr. Di Bois, singular compilations ari made. The Democrats cai start out assuming the votes o: 11 Southern States with, a present, 124 of the 531 electors votes. They need to figh therefore for only 142 electoral votes to have the majority of the electoral college. On the other hand the Republicans must leave out of account 142 electo ral votes at the start and of the other 407 electoral votes they can aff&d to lose only 141. “As sure as fate some day there is coming in the United States a political controversy with social and economic roots which is going to open suddenly the question as to why the South has three times the polit ical power of the West and why New England, with its disfran chised foreign workers, has more political /voice than the West. The protest is not coming simply from Northerners or ‘friends' of the Negro. It is even coming from the South itself. “There is no more question of parish or section or race. It is a vast and pressing problem of democracy and civilization. We must decide, and decide soon, what .persons, what public opin ion in the United States shall rule. Shall it be the public opinion of a small select group of persons of Nordic descent? Shall it be the public opinion of college graduates? Shall it be the public opinion of all adult Amer icans except Negroes, Asiatics and Latins? Or shall we try to make it the public opinion of all intelligent persons? What ever public opinion rules in the United States, it must rule freely . and clearly without a system of rotten boroughs and without discrimination and cheating. The clearing up and settling pf this great question is the vastest problem that faces America today and we must be gin its solution now/’ In the recent campaign for new Sunday scool scholars in Ca tawba Synod the Cape Fear PresEytery reported 92 addi tions. Calvary and her outposts added 55 of this number. A church vacation Bible school was conducted in Fremont this year for the first time in the history of the church. The attendance was far more than was expected. Interest and en thusiasm ran high. The school was junder the supervision of Miss Theodora Percival. Fremont is in a thriving com munity with a most excellent school system. The people are fairly good livers. The Presby terian church has made itself felt in the community and bids fair to exert a greater influence in the near future. The church there has a boys’ club and a Tux is Girls’ club. The older mem bers of the church are anxious to have this new blood flowing into" the church. The relation ship of the young and old is most cordial. Rev. C. Shirley, our direc tor of Religious Education, was with us the first Sunday in July. His program was as follows: at ten o’clock he visited Sunrise Mission and made a short talk to the school. At 11 o’clock he preached a most excellent ser mon in the Calvary church and assisted in the Communion ser vice. Af 2 o’clock he visited Second Calvary in Nash county, and made a short talk to the school. Second Calvary cele brated Children’s Day on July 1. Rev.' Shirley witnessed a i part of this exercise. The church vacation school in the Calvary church was by far i the most successful of all the ! ones we have had. The enrollment this year was ■ limited. This enabled the stu i dents to have mojte personal su i pervision and the work was t more efficiently done. The fac F ulty consisted of ten members; each one has had special training for the work. b SCRIBE.