Western Outlook (San Francisco and Oakland, Calif.), Vol. 33, No. 36, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 11, 1927 Page: 5 of 8
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The Church and Politics
read medical journals, nor scientific
works bearing upon his profession.
From the Wachington Post He has no clinics in the cities and
Bishop Freeman of Washington towns where he parctices and does
struck a note in his annual conven- not avail himself of such service as
ti >n address that should meet with be might receive at places where
widespread commendation when he public clinics are held."
urced that the church keep out of
politics, adding that it stultifies itself Negro Exposition lor
| A-here it attempts through organized j j- ft
j lobbv to influence legislation. He l\ <311SHS wlty
j ai>o deplored a tendencv to conve. t Kansas Citv, Mo.—According to
! the Christian pulpit into a rostrum the Kansas Citv Record-Searchlight
for discussion of political themes the second Afro-American exposition
"The Episcopal church deals with in the hivtorv of the race will be
principles rather than policies," he held here, July 25th to August 14th
said, *' and men and women will and 100,000 visitors are expected to
ollow better the leadership of a man attend from Missouri, Kansas, Ne-
who refuses to become entangled in braska, Colorado and Iowa. Among
controversies and cortentions that the directors are Dr. R. C. Hayden,
belong to the forum and the halls of J, \j. Scott, P. M. Phillips, W. F.
legislation." Miles, W. N. Mooie, L. S. Gunther
Other religious leaders would do Logan H. Campbell, H. J Hobbs,
well to follow Bishop Freeman's j H. G. Brown, C. C. Cartwright
example in tl i- regard. What is and Theodore 1 homas.
needed from the Christian church is
the daily exposition bv precept a.ndiWidow Asks $100,000 in
txample of the old-fashioned religion
and setting of high moral standards
not only for the young, but for all
people. That is a gigantic task in
itself, enough to occupy all the time
and energy of all the churches.
Benjimin Davis on Negro
Physicians
Fineral Suit
Columbian Press Bureau
Writing on "Our Death Rate" in
the " Atlanta Independent," Editor
B< njamin Davis says:
" The argument is almost corclu-
s ve that the Negro patient dues not
I receive the s ime high-class scientific
treatment mat tne white patient is
| rc< eivi'ig. The average Negro doc-
! toi, when he leaves school, never
pusis. He takes no hospital tram-
i ^ ; he does not .subscribe for or » up the body.
Insisting on a military funeral for
her husband and contending that *he
was denied possession of his bodv
for burial, Mrs. Carrie L. Smvles of
Wood street has brought a suit for
$100,000 against her mother-in-law
Mrs. M. B. Smyles, of Campbell st.
The undertaking firm of Hudson &
Butler and St. Mary's cemeterv are
made co-defe:»dants in the suit. The
widow obtained temporasy restrain-
ing order to prevent burial of her
hu band without her sanction.
Harold J. Smvles was shot by a
Berkeley policeman on May 27. At
tlie time the wife was in Houston,
Tex., and wired the coroner to hold
the bodv until she arrived. She
contends the cemetery officials and
the mother-in-law refused to give
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Wysinger, J. E. & Derrick, J. Lincoln. Western Outlook (San Francisco and Oakland, Calif.), Vol. 33, No. 36, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 11, 1927, newspaper, June 11, 1927; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth596379/m1/5/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .