Show 0 a I I TJLtNSLOltTtTIIIN OF run > E GPO with rapidly augmenting vehemence vehem-ence tIe race problem is demanding a solution and the more thought is I I bestowed upon Iftlio more fornrfd able dots It appear and the farther away Into Use dim borilOn of the future do all hojied for peaceful solu tioiw recede One claM cfpubliciU insist that the education of the colored race will solvetlm qucsliorr Hut doubters put forth uro invul1 nerable reply Yen dbnot educate la black skin Into a white cue AnoUitr proi iUon la to diffuse the colored race tlioronghly throughout all the State The answer to this is that there would then boa rare pioblcm In all the States Whereas It is I now confined theBouth The migration to Africa of all the negroes in the country at the expense ex-pense of the government is urged by not a few journalists and public sakers who hate put forth utterances utter-ances < Jj > 3n the sulject Senator Morgan of Alabama favors this plea Concerning It the lie w York Jlorald says It occurs to us to point Out to the colored people that Ivliilo the negro in the eye of ha aw ia just as good as the white man ito ISBO bctlcr A proposition that the Federal giVern meet should pay tjo 5fissaK ° lo western west-ern lands of tba whites who live un whclomcio lives In tho overcrowded tenements and factories of our great cities would meet with only deserved ridicule But why should the got ernment do for tbe blacks what It wouTd be absurd to ask for the whites It Is estimated that he sum of 532000000 expended annually for ten years would pay the cost of transporting the entire negro race In America to Africa and that the tax on tobacco alone would 1 1 furnish sufficient revenue for this purpose As an offset to the practicability of raising the money to jay the negroes > to Africa the question ques-tion Is asked Is he willing to go The answer Is Xo America IS his country For generations lie has known no other He isasstrong ly attached to it as are the progeny of the Puritans or descendants of the English settlers of Virginia lie will not leave It voluntarily What then is to be done The answer to this last question is intimated in-timated in the following ominous sentences contained in an editorial which appeared in a late issue of the Birmingham Ala jfycJlcrattL The AgeHerald is not prepared to appear as a champion of the deportation deporta-tion vjheme A more practical plan may be deviled I for the separation ot tho races but wo hai o small ntien < o with the flippant manner In which those smallbore great men and editors of like caliber affect to treat so gnu e a proposition As for the Constitutional barriers in the way of such movement move-ment they may be more or less strong But If the whltopeople of America should come to a unanimous conclusion that the thing should be done it would be Xo parchment regulation made at a time when passion pas-sion and mad fanaticism run riot could tand In the way Desperate cases require re-quire desperate remedies The race problem in America Is a desperate casa X 0 parchment rcguttloncould stand In the way If the whiles should determine to rid the country of the blacks It would be exIle or extermination by a more summary proems No larchment regulation regula-tion in other words 110 law will stand in the way when the crisis comes More than once already I within the borJers of the United I States has the edict exile or pTfir I miuationbecn enforced upon a class of citizens who were as strongly attached at-tached to American soil and in tl tutions as any that lived We refer to the Mormons Parchment regulations such as constitutional guarantees non legal inhibitions were not permitted to stand in the way The general government did i not interfere to lreent tin great > wrong the seeds of which were deep ly and widely sown and have since been assiduously nurtured A crop in proportion Is therefore to bo expected ex-pected |