The Sex Question and Race Segregation
BY ARCHIBALD H. GRIMKÉ, President.
Message of San Domingo to the African Race
BY THEOPHILUS G. STEWARD, U. S. A. (Retired)
Status of the Free Negro Prior to 1860
BY LAFAYETTE M. HERSHAW.
Economic Contribution by the Negro to America
BY ARTHUR A. SCHOMBURG.
The Status of the Free Negro from 1860 to 1870
BY WILLIAM PICKENS.
American Negro Bibliography of the Year
BY JOHN W. CROMWELL.
The above Papers were all read at the Nineteenth Annual Meeting
of the American Negro Academy, held in the Y.M.C.A.
Building, 12th Street Branch, Washington, D.C.
December 28th and 29th, 1915.
PRICE: 25 CTS.
One wrong produces other wrongs as surely and as naturally as the seedof the thorn produces other thorns. Men do not in the moral world gatherfigs from a thorn-bush any more than they do in the vegetable world.What they sow in either world, that they reap. Such is the law. Theearth is bound under all circumstances and conditions of time and placeto reproduce life, action, conduct, character, each after its own kind.Men cannot make what is bad bring forth what is good. Truth does notcome out of error, light out of darkness, love out of hate, justice outof injustice, liberty out of slavery. No, e