The Negro World
Saturday, November 19, 1921
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
It becomes my pleasure to more to address you. I desire to have a talk with you on the matter of our future. Some of us are very optimistic about the future, we speak of a better time coming, we build hopes in the belief that the Negro will soon get his rights, and that there will be no more prejudice toward him as coming from the other races. Such an optimism is very encouraging, if it comes from the soul and the mind of the man who is working toward the realization of these beautiful ideas.
But how many of us who hope to see the Negro race enjoying their rights, how many of us who believe that a better time is coming, are really working toward this goal? If I judge correctly, I believe only a small number out of the four hundred millions of us are really working toward the dawn of a brighter and better future. The average Negro expects somebody to do something for him. He will make no effort to do for himself, yet he is optimistic over the belief that through the labor, through the initiative of someone else he will come in to a brighter and better future.
NEW YORK, Liberty Hall, Sunday, Nov. 13, 1921—On Armistice Day, November 11, a ringing message in behalf of the 400,000,000 Negroes of the world was sent by telegraph by Hon. Marcos Gaye, Provisional President of Africa, to the Disarmament Conference now convened at Washington at the call of President Harding. In this message a strong plea was made that the conference take into consideration the just claim of the Negro to Africa as his rightful heritage; that the conference act not like the one held at Verailles, but that it realize and appreciate the fact that the Negro is a man, and "that there can be no settlement of world affairs without proper consideration being given to him with respect to his rights."
This message (which appears in another column of this issue) was read tonight, by Mr. Garvey Browning, president of the Negro community, to the Mildred H. and affirmed them to a plea of enthusiasm that was expressive of their complete aporation of it and their deep interest in the possible outcome of the great, Washington conference.
would be difficult to do, be said, for as long as men desire to exploit other opportunities, it will be the dominant motive of their life, and as a society is erected upon that basis, man will need arms and other men will need weapons to meet the requirements of each other. In short, he said the world needs a reapplication of the Golden Rule. The Negro must make himself fit, in
would be difficult to do, he said, for as long as men desire to exploit others competently, 'that will be the dominant force in society is erected upon that basis, man will need arms and other men will need arms to protect themselves against the threat.' He said the world needs a reapplication of the Golden Rule.
The Negro must make himself fit, intellectually and commercially, to play his part in the world, and to meet the force of competition. He must also make others in the race of life, and if he will only mobilize his brain, power, his will power, his moral power, and his financial power and his political power, he can make himself a force. His belief in the power of the Negro, and deed that when the will force of countless millions of black men all over the world has been completely liberated, which was the ambition and aim of the efforts of Martin Gaffey, the Negro to be that is his, and write a new page in the world of civilization.
A short but delightful musical program was颁发了 prize to the speechmaking in which Ilma M. B. M. Hopson, Mink Fink, Karen K. Kearns, Edward Steele took, the Black Star Line Band and the L.A. M. B. A. choir singing
NEGRO HAS NOTHING TO LOSE, WHETHER NATIONS OF WORLD DISARM OR NOT
—JAPAN AND CHINA WILL NOT DISARM UNLESS OTHERS COMPLETELY DISARM
—PREDICTION THAT IN ANOTHER TWENTY YEARS THESE TWO COUNTRIES
WILL GET TOGETHER FOR MUTUAL INTERESTS AND PROTECTION
White Man Has Spoiled Plan of Civilization by Wanton Lynching, Burning, Robbing, Plundering and Murdering of Humanity—Time to Halt
VAST AUDIENCE SWEPT WITH ENTHUSIASM BY IMPASSIONED PHILOSOPHICAL DISCUSSION OF PRESENT WORLD PROBLEMS NOW UNDER CONSIDERATION AT DISARMAMENT CONFERENCE—ADDRESS SHOULD BE READ AND STUDIED BY EVERY THOUGHTFUL MAN AND WOMAN OF RACE—SIR WILLIAM H. FERRIS SAYS WORLD NEEDS REAPPLICATION OF THE GOLDEN RULE
hold in Europe or in America, is but a devise on the part of those who have controlled the world for hundreds of years, and who can continue to rule by deceiving—by side-tracking and by bit-biting those who are now determined to show to the world a new quintilla, a new countenance, and exerted power over the gathers of big nations everywhere—nations that have rulied the world for hundreds of years, is but an attempt to come to a common understanding of the nature of color—"rising tide of color" everywhere; and I feel sure that one of the parties in this rising tide of color, fortunately or unfortunately is now represented by a group of people who devise them as a part of this great "rising tide of color."
Civilization At a Standstill
sensation. Therefore you may as well continue it because if they take it off armament they are going . put it on something else and we will still be without repressure and we will be afraid that the Negro has nothing to lose whether 's the diramis arms or whether it continues armising itself. There is one thin I have to say that if the world is going to disarm, the world is going to disarm and rearm again. I am in deep sympathy with the British, and I am not going to follow. They 're in for a hard time. Balfour cannot go back to England without giving satisfaction to the hungry British masses. Foch cannot go back to France without giving satisfaction to the hungry French masses. Napoleon cannot give satisfaction to Japan without making all the Japanese feel satisfied and sure that he has played the trick at Washington.
Confualon Amona Nationa
Confusion Among Nations
Some where in Scripture it is said that there will be great confusion among the nations. Let me tell you there is great confusion among the nations. These statesmen are worried to death they do not know what to do they do not have the weapons they but they have to disarm, and do you know why? Because they have within their borders too many hungry people and these hungry people are the ones who are afraid to keep three armaments to fight armaments—those weapons of destruction—and have so many hungry people in their midst it spells revolution. If the English leaders do not come with some new program the next month the military will continue to fight armaments. If the French leaders do not come with some new big program to alleviate the suffering of French human, look out for a big social revolution in France and so of all the men and women are murdered; they do not know what tao. I believe even if Dr. Du Bola called a conference how they would jump at it because they believe something came out of it. If they were to hold a conference now these statesmen will be willing to go to find out if they want of the social revolutions that threaten in their respective countries.
If they do not disarm they will have something to face which will redound to them. You will be to your glory and advantage also. So you have nothing to lose whether they disarm now or not. It will redound to your advantage.
Get Organized and Keep Organized
Get organized and keep organized
world over so do you unbused and
keep organized, so that when the
social revolution starts in Europe you
will start to take down the banner of
the war against fascism and march to
march on the battle-plains of Africa.
God Almighty has confounded
them and they do not know what to do.
Do you think Japan is going to scrap
the war against fascism and you
think so. Japan is up to something.
I do not know what it is and my
advice to 460,000,000 Negroes the world
over is so to be with something too. It
is so to be with something too. It
is so to be with something too. It
is so to be with something too. It
Though it is not out in the public print, though it is not announced from the public platform, though it is not sent from the floor of "e" atimental Hall in Washington tonight, and will be tomorrow, and all during the conference, than an audience (Applauses) Every day of the conference, and every floor of Continental Hall will be uttered after a serious consideration of the rising tide of color."
Negroes Masters of the Situation
Men, let me tell you this: Whether they disarm or not, you already are the ones to disarm. It is oblique question of time. If they do not disarm themselves voluntarily, within the next twenty-four months their own people will compel them to disarm. If you keep organized, as the Egyptians are organizing, as the Egyptians are organizing, as the Irish are organizing, I tell you these heretofore oppressed groups will shake the foundations of the world. (Applauses)
The Conference of the Bigger Brotherhood of Humanity
As I said to the people in Philadelphia this afternoon, the present Disarmament Conference should have been the second of two conferences. I am for disarmament. Understand me clearly. I am for disarmament. I am for disarmament. I am for disarmament. The crusaders, the dreadnoughts and the submarines (laughter), because I believe that human beings should not kill each other; human beings should not seek to to the lives of each other. I — or — disarmament. But I say the Disarmament Conference should have been present another conference—the Conference of Humanity (applaus), to which should have been invited all the races, all the creeds, all the religions, all the anti-us of the world. (Applaus.)
White Man Has Spoiled Civilization
The white man, who has been the crown of civilization for the last few hundred years, knows there are times when you give a contractor a plan after the work has been drawn out splendidly by the architect, and he spills the money. Haven't you seen that happen? I have seen good plans and place them into the handiplans and tools, and the contractor went right out and spilled the job. Now, humanity at the starting point, or wherever it started within the last few centuries, handed out · to the white man the plans and execute the plans to out and execute the plans of civilization. Jum Christ himself was the architect. He said: "Do unto others as we would have others do unto you." With that plan the white man went into the world, and for nearly two thousand years he worked with the plan! He has spotted it, some one said. Indeed, he has spotted it.
Now, suppose the architect who drew his plans sees the contractor is spitting his handwork, what would the contractor have, you had better stop you, look here, you had better stop you, but not for it go any further with this job. You had better take my advice, because I find that you cannot go it alone. And there would be some law agreement entered into by which the plans were drawn. I have designed this illustration to bring some to the you: that the white man has had the plan of civilization for the last two thousand years, and he has spotted the construction, and now we are calling it a conference to consult the plan. There is an expation of the plan. Therefore, we are calling it a conference of humanity—all humanity—white, brown, yellow, red, or of whatever other color may be found (laughter), a conference of all and it is for the white man to adhere to the plan. Just as he helps me to architect, he refuses, for some reason, that he has spotted the plan; we cannot afford to allow him to continue appelling the plan for our disadvantage. (Chief of War!)
paying of humanly, to stop his plunder, to stop his murder. (As phrase.) We must bring him to his place. We must want to have to fight him, we do not want to attempt to destroy him. We must want him to meet us around the conference table of the Biggard Brotherhood, that we may advise him. That is all we want. (Laughter.)
Advice to Lloyd George
If Lord George will take the advice or suggestion of an insignificant and humble man like myself if he wants to save himself in Great Britain, it he happens to come over here, and wants to, go back, he will pick his eminent friend, the bigger humanity, and see that it is called, and that at that conference they all come down for equity and for justice, for real human rights; because Africa is going to suggest to them: "you want peace, get out of Africa." You want peace, get out of Africa. Asia Swift suggest to them: "if you want peace, get out of Africa."
What Japan Realizes
Our great statesman, Secretary of State Hughes, suggested to Japan that she scrap so many ships. The Japanese statesmen are having a good time of it in Japan. Do you think that they have to be so aggressive? "No!" The Japanese statesman realize that they have Anatolia interests to protect. I don't know if these other statesmen know it, but they ought to, for they have been playing the game a long time. But you mark my word: Japan and China are going to get together and you believe that (Cries of "Yes") The division between Japan and China today is not a voluntary hate that goes from the Chinese to the Japanese; it is a faint that has been subsided by someone who desires to see a hatred end. For years has been in revolution with itself as a certain class of the Haitians
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Containing articles from leading colored men in all parts of the world. Literary contributions from prominent white statesmen, among them Kings, Presidents, Premieres and Secretaries of State. PRIZES:First Prize $10, Second Prize $8, Third Prize $2.50, Will Be Awarded Respectively for:
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Best essay on the policy of Hon. Marvin Garvey.
Every must be flirted to see someone or form, or learn, to be written or written of.
PICTORIAL SECTION
Photographs of the prettiest in Central America, South America. Submit the photograph of any pretties will be made from the photo mentioned above by a competitor of the prettiest girl from each geo in the Electoral Section of this C made to each girl so selected.
Beney, Poems and Phi "Competition Editor," Nagra Napa, York City, U. S. A., and Later, Than, November 20, 1818. In case of such prizes of equal
Photographs of the prettiest colored girls in the United States, Central America, South America, the West Indies and Africa. Submit the photograph of any pretty colored girl you know. Selections will be made from the photographs submitted from the places mentioned above by a competent committee, and the photograph of the prettiest girl from each geographical section will be published in the Historical Section of this Christmas number, and an award made to each girl so selected.
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would find another class of Haitians. They would get in a president, today, and would kill tomorrow, and the world would not allow them. The people could not govern themselves. What was the cause? The German traders there, and the English traders in Haiti, and the French traders settled in Haiti realized that they could make money from the people they could prevail upon, the Haitians, to have among themselves. They would call certain Haitian Negroes together and say to them: "We will give you so and so many, the thousand to start a revolution and get control of the country, and get control of the people, and so much interest on the money we lend to you for the purpose." These traders of Frycho and English and German nationality did because it was profitable to them to have the money, and their country rent and turn by revolution. But what happened? Haiti found out her mistake. The American Government went down there and brought about an order administration more conflict in Haiti among the Haitians, no more civil wars or revolutions in Haiti.
The Chinese Policized Against the Japanese
In the same way, white capitalists have gone into the hands and have policed the minds of the Chinese against themselves and against the Japanese. They have been subduing certain Chinese to fight among themselves, to take over the Chinese, and to have subdued the Chinese to reject every proposal of Japan, to cause them to believe that the Japanese hate them and want only to take away their lives. The certain propaganda has been at work against them in the East, and they are going to meet propaganda with propaganda.
A few years ago the Chinese people (continued on page 8)
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Redeemed.
Unite the American and West
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HAVE YOU EVER
STOPPED TO THINK
HOW MUCH THE BLACK STAR LINE MEANS TO YOU?
How Many Shares Have You Purchased?
The Shares Are $8 Each. Get You're Now! Right Now!
DO YOU KNOW THAT IT represents your strivings your race's strivings to reach a place in the maritime world that will command respect?
DO YOU KNOW THAT just in that measure you give if your unilateral support and assistance to the glory of the arduous?
DO YOU REALIZE THAT the full measure of support is mirta at your hand? (Get those shares now, brother. Get that now, sister. Get them right now.) Use the coupon.
HAVE YOU GIVEN IT? (You may not remember, carefully your own brains and cerebrate whether you would like to see the Real, Hunky and Green donating over the seven—no all this money this blow, proclaiming to WJ World that "Ethiopia has striving for her hand."
The Hon. Marcos Garvey, President General of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, journeyed to Philadelphia on Sunday last and spent two hours with the great unit in that city of the U.N. N. E. A. Mr. Garvey arrived at Philadelphia at 3 p.m. and drove straight to the Olympia Theatre, where a great gathering of U.N. N. E. A. members and friends awaited him. The spaces auditorium was filled to its utmost capacity, and the great leader was accorded a tremendous ovation as he arrived and, after the playing of the Egyptian national anthem by the division band, proceeded to his seat on the platform.
The enthusiasm of the assembly and the verve that characterized the proceedings which followed were worthy of Liberty Hall, of New York. Philadelphia followers of the greatest movement in the history of the Negro let themselves go whenever they are honored with the presence of their chief. The Chicago division, and even New York, must soon look to their laurels.
have gone the limit with themselves, and the masses, because of their bankruptness, must do something. They must either do something on the world will be changed overnight. Of those who lead the disgruntled masses of the powerful races and nations have assembled in Washington to dissee disarmment. Thank God, there is no M.D. to all We have.
The Preliminaries
Selectionists will Divisionis capable band, offerings by the chau and the juvenile orchestra and an address by Master Richard Johnson prefixed the big event. Hon. W. O. Smyer, Commissioner for the State of Pennsylvania, paved the way for the president's address. The Rt. Hon. Marcus Garvey, he said, looking out upon the broad horizon of world events and conditions a number of years ago, saw sound sleep; that they did not understand the psychology of the Angle-Saxons of the human family; that they did not understand their big position in the fabric of national society, and he began then to teach a new philosophy. He began to teach that men that are men must do what men do; that man build governments, slik mines shafts, enter into large enterprises, and not disturb God upon His throne with prayers (Laughter and aplause). So the Garvey movement comes into being to teach black men that the world respects only men; that rights are taken, never given; that men must solve their own problems. It will teach black men to tear the shackles of slavery from their tears and themselves to shine and the stars hide themselves and the world stands still. Garvey philosophy will challenge creation, in necessary, in the high principles of eternal justice for all men. Inowe must put one hand in the eternal hand of God, one hand upon the sword of justice and, our chains forged into cut our way to the sun-lit island.
at the request of Dr. Lionel Francis, president of the Philadelphia Division, Rev. Dr. Graham, who before the arrival of the p alumni had opposed the meeting with an adjacent prayer, then presented the Hon. Marcus Garvey, paying a sterling; tribute to the Universal Negro Improvement Association.
Aid defaecing applause the president then rose to deliver his address. This second demonstration over his address, which was delivered on the Washington conference and held the rapt attention of his hearses for half an hour when he was forced to curtail his address and catch the crowd. He was the good people awaited him at Liberty Hall.
MR. GARVEY'S ADDRESS
Mr. President, members and friends of the Universal Negro Improvement Association—Once more it is my pleasure to find myself before a Philadelphia audience. I have come here on the campus of the University of Chicago to speak to you in the interests of the Universal Negro Improvement association, in the interests of the redemption of Arfion. But before I enter completely upon the theme in my mind I will speak of the words on the international conference for on the limitation of arfionness.
The Washington Conference
The Washington Conference
Negroes are generally interested in
everything they are told about by
other whites. They are interested in
everything as led by other whites
may to us. We pray; if they say
"dance" we dance; if they say to
us "Weep" we weep. But the time
has come for the Negro to formulate
his own opinion. This disarmament
conference means much to the races
that have robbed and exploited the
worker peoples of the world. They
have gone the limit with themselves,
and the masses, because of their bankrupt state, are forcing their leaders to do something. They must either do something on the world will be changed overnight. Ed those who lead the disgruntled masses of the powerful races and nations have assembled in Washington to discipline disarmament. We God, there is no Maro to all. We have no disarming to do. (Laughter) So we are quite safe on that score.
What Is Taking Place?
Now, what is about to take place? The bigger power, the bigger national, the more progressive race, after having insisted themselves as the expense of the weakest man, are about to get together and girm themselves into a team. They are endowing to settle some plan by which they will not continue to rule by brute force by armaments, through which they destroy themselves, by some other method. But whom are they going to rule? They are going to rule by brute force, and when they had armaments, but only under different methods.
The Futility of It
Nay, let us discuss the thing dispassionately. Can the world disarm? (Critics of "No.") The world will never disarm until the spirit of the Man, Jesus Christ, is promulgated throughout the world. (Lord applaudies.) And disarm is not a matter of will, but every respect by mankind everywhere. The world cannot disarm as long as one section of humanity oppresses the other section, because the oppressed section of humanity will always rebel and will use any power at its command for the freeing of itself. We want a conference of the Bigger Brotherhood of humanity, but only if you disarm when you have plundered others, when you have plundered the lands and properties of others, and still hold them? So long as human nature remains as it is, the world cannot disarm. So long as the one man will inflict injustice upon the other, and still hold them, we must practice justice, equity and love and charity, then the entire universe can disarm. (Applause.) I am in-favor of disarmment. I do not want to see any guns and pistols and awards around. I am for such a conference, but I think at this time it is not possible to disarm another conference before this one. (Laughter.)
The conference, where Europe would have met Asia, where Asia, Europe and Africa would be at the table of human justice, and where Europe would say what Asia should do, where Asia and Europe would say to Africa, "Brother, take what is yours." Until they do that, taking about disarmament is only a force.
The Rebellion of George Washington
If you believe you can oppress millions of people for eternity, you make a big mistake (Applause). Not only do you oppress white people, but white, or any other people. You cannot oppress any large number of people for any extended period of time, because it is in human nature to rebel against injustice. It is rebellion against injustice that has made us what we are in this building this evening, American citizens. It was the rebellion of the United States against Washington, that makes us honor and respect the Stars and Stripes at this hour. It will be rebellion in Asia against the overlordship of Europe that will make the Anatolics free. It will be rebellion in Africa against the intrusion of Europe that will make Africans the world over free. (Applause) And it will overthrow the world cannot afford to disarm. And it trust the stetsmen at Washington will consider that it is not only a question of armaments;
it is a question of human liberty. Give
liberty, give freedom to all mankind,
can diamante our cruisers,
our dreadnaughts and our super-
dreadnoughts.
Japan Will Not Dismear Until—
But if they expect Japan is going
to disarm when Europe has its eye
on Asia, they make a big mistake.
Again, they have a second thought com-
munity, not going to disarm
when Asia合共会 disarm not fair for you to expect Japan to disarm except those who have no business in Asia to get out of Asia. What right have you in the other main home? If you get you there, what you get you ought to take. (Laughter). What right have I in my neighbor's house? Absolutely no right. And, therefore, if you get you there, what you get you ought to take. (Laughter). The principle applies everywhere. As in the individual domestic home of the man, so in the country or the race. What right has Europe in Asia? What right, except the right to exchange of commodities, commercial exchange, industrial exchange? No other right have they, no political right, no political right, no politically, no politically, no rights in Europe politically, And, on the same principle, they have no right in Africa. (Applause). Asia has armaments which they fear, and they are asking Asia to disarm, before they go too far in Asia. They do not know how far they can go into Asia; it is a long way to certain places out of Asia, and they have to journey on the journey. So that before much more is done in Asia, they want to know that Japan has disarmed.
The Desplaced Negro
But the poor Negro, in their minds, has nothing to dismantle, therefore they go into Africa without fear, with impunity. But the Negro has his latent brains his latent powers to dismantle, and it is for them to find out what these latent talents are. (Applauses.) When it comes to the conflict of the races, the conflict that is bound to happen, the conflict that is bound to come, so long as human nature remains as it is, in that conflict that is coming they will then know what the Negro has to dismantle. (Applauses.) But until then keep your eyes on what has happened, have something to dismantle after Africa will have won the day; and I believe every Negro in this building has something he will dismantle after the Red, the Black and the Green is planted on the hill-tops of Africa. But you know we are not going to tell them now. The Old Negro used to talk too much. He just told what he does not mean. So you don't know how to sit him up now. But if they believe this race is still a sleeping race, they are making a big mistake. Four hundred million Negroes the world over are getting ready. We do not have any battleships, any cruisers, we do not have any submarines, but what he does is around the world, around the world, around the world. (Loud applauses.) Let them go on. Let them go on brutalizing, let them go on killing Negroes. The reaction may come one of these days. So long as God is God (and He is God) the reaction will conn.
Organization—The Negra Armament
Some of us are cowardly at heart,
we are fearful at heart, because we see
the strong system of organization in
the other people. Ah, my friend, not
everything that glitches is gold. Komei
glitched. The German Empire but seven
years ago had glitched, and the Eagle
walked through the streets, of Potdam
with an air, carriage never
known to man before. Where are they today? They are gone into the civilization of the past. As Carthage, Greece, Rome, France and Germany, have gone from being the most populous of some of the so-called, unconquerable empires of today go to civilization. (Applause.) You don't want cruisers and dreadnoughts and submarines at this present time so much. What you want is the armament of organization. Lot of organizations, not only in Philadelphia, but all over this country; not only all over this country, but over the West Indies, Central and South America, all over Africa, so that when the day of change comes Africa will match down the river, the Black and the Green and marched on to liberty. (Applause.)
The Statesmen's Dilemma
We are not very much concerned about disarmament, only that we form a part of those who pay the taxes to keep up armament. But they have taken Negroes so long without giving them rights that we are seachoned now. Whether they want to stop now or not is immaterial. We have been having representation for over eighty years, so it is whether they stop armaments now or go on. But I may ask to them if they don't stop some other jobs who don't look like we are going to stop them! their own people will stop them. The Englishman, the white Briton'r is not that they don't state that the stateman to tax him year in year out, to ship ships, cruises and dreadnoughts building around the world, whilst there are millions of starving men and children in Great Britain, Frenchmen, hungry Frenchmen and women are not going in all directions to them in year and year out for building new battleships the government cannot pay for the whistle millions of Frenchmen, women and children of Frenchmen, at home, the French common people, will stop them. As of France, as of Italy and other races concerned in this Disarmament Conference; their own people are going to them, they are trying to help the world to be more confident the world. They have confused the world. They have confused the politician of the world and the daily thing they can do to demonstrate to the next people, that they are making some effort to return so normal. But they started out with so much ink and did not get better. And so they cannot die and no dead just the humanity everywhere is oppressed. We want a real reorganization of the world. That is what we want. We want a reorganisation of the world. The world must be thrown into one common place, where everyone can start already, great is what must be done; otherwise there will be more confusion until some more of the empires go down into nothingness.
Wanted: New Diplomacy
I am advising the statement of the world—we are just fifty years out of slavery, and you may ignore me, because I am Nigro—but I may tell you wise statesmen of the world that you had better discard your old-time trickle into my advice and call a conference of world over ask, snort it out fair Call the, white man from Europe, the yellow and brown from Asia, call the black man from Africa and lot, for all together, add let Europe say, "Well Africa, we have robbed you, long ago, because the African is so charitable because he is so human, he will way, "All right, I know you have robbed me, we are quits; we will start afresh. The Anci-
can is long-hearted enough to do that, and he is waiting on them to suggest it. But you know, every man has a limit to his patience. When he is a limit to even God's patience, God Almighty put on with Lafferty thrill. He could not, so any more: then he drew his sword. There is armament in heaven. There is armament among the angels. There is armament in heaven. There is armament in heaven. To know old angels in order. Any one of anything less than. God you have to watch, with armaments, as often, the angels are guarded with air armaments.
The Napro's Dictionary
The *Negoe at the Gate*:
I admira, the white girl, for his strategy.
I admire him for his pluck and caring. I will always cherish the white man, I will never cherish the white man, I will never cherish the white man, because he has been the master genius of civilization. For the last 50 years, when I drew was no one on the scene, he came out and humped, but he did not know that the Negoe was watching him for a number of years so as to know him and understand him and his methods. That is obviously of the Negoe. After the 50 years, he clearly deserved the Negoe's advice. We want to develop this skill; we want to train them; we want to teach them the Island; we want to teach them the they want to Arlington. And the little things these strange man and admired and trained they would be very sensitive. The stranger points at him, he goes up to the strange man and to out what the stranger man said in his possession. And the stranger man shocked the Negoe, but the Negoe said, 'will and out what you have before I reshape you.' Then to reshape the Negoe.
The Negro World does not knowingly accept questionable or fraudulent advertising. Readers of the Negro World are generally requested to invite our attention to any failure on the part of an advertiser to adhere to my representation contained in a Negro World advertisement.
PRESIDEN G. WARREN G. HARDING'S Birmingham address on the two questions has received serious consideration from the press of the country and has been subjected to a keen and critical analysis. There are three reasons: In the first place, it is a serious and sincere grappling with a perplexing problem, a delicate subject, in the second place the utterances of a recently inaugurated President are closely watched as they indicate the ideas and ideals which will shape his policy. In the third place, a President of a great republic spirit psychic waves of influence, which radiate throughout the world just as the sun, that lights up the solar system, sends out waves of light that travel in every direction through the ether of space for millions of miles. When Col. Theodore Roosevelt said, "I will not shut the door of hope in the face of any man because of the fear for the nation among of empathy for the aspiring Merriam. When President Woodrow Wilson questioned the segregation of colored government employees in the national capital he gave an added stimulus to Jim Crowism. So the press of the country does well to analyze President Harding's remarkable address and ask, "What is the significance?"
President Harding is not a philosopher, psychologist and sociologist, who is evolving a philosophy of history, but he is a practical minister who is in the heart of the South endeavored to 'deliver an answer which would open to the Negro the door of educational, economic and political opportunity; and at the same time would smooth existing kinds of equality was associated with the Negro. The inexplicable thing about that remarkable address was that it contained passages that pleased the Negro and alarmed the South, and on the other hand contained passages that alarmed the Negro and pleased the South.
The South's Attitude
The lines that impressed us most in that the South was disatisfied with President Harding's speech. It has said all along that it desired to smite the Negro but was irrevocably opposed to social equality, race unalignment and intermarriage. Then President Harding negated social opportunity and political and economic equality, but opposes social equality, race unalignment and intermarriage. One would think that this would please the South. Traditionally it did not.
thought in science, philosophy, literature, art, music and politics, which have a wide circulation. Consequently when they each have an editorial on President Harding's Birmingham speech, and when the Nation follows with a feature editorial on the subject, it indicates the impression made by the speech. As these two journals write in an impartial and dispensative manner, what they say is worthy of serious consideration.
The New Republic said: "The Soufi knows, as President Harding ought to know, that you can't draw a sharp line between politics and social life. The offices of a State are in most parts of America positions of social leadership. With complete political equality the State of Mississippi might easily elect a Negro as Governor. Would such a result be accepted by Mississippians as devoid of social significance? The race problem, unfortunately, is not one that admits of easy general solution."
The Nation on November 16 continued a feature editorial on the theme, "President Harding and Social Equality." The Nation said, "So President Harding ought to have informed us whether he meant by his words on social equality to approve of the Jim Crow car; the denial of all cultural opportunities in the剧院, in concert and lecture halls to colored people, and the unending discrimination against them in restaurants and hotels and in practically every walk of life. He has not even stated that he is opposed to that precious bit of Wilson wrongdoing, the segregation of the Negro in the departments at Washington. Until Mr. Harding does speak on these questions, which mean more to the Negro than anything else, which daily bend his back, scarify his soul and make every educated Negro mother look upon her children and ask whether she can justify to them their being called into existence, he cannot have thought through the problem, nor can he render the full service which we believe he desires to render and which we honor him for seeking to render."
The Answer to the Sphinx's Riddle
From these seven quotations one can see the various interpretations put upon President Harding's memorable speech. It is strange and inexplicable that the Negro and his friends on the one hand and the Southern leaders on the other hand should see both a promise and a menace in President Harding's speech. This is partly due to the fact that President Harding does not exactly define what he means by social equality. He does not state whether he means it in the society sense or the sociological sense, whether he means by social equality the privilege to be admitted to private functions or the right to enjoy public civic privileges. He does not state whether he means by social equality, social hobboobing or equality in social status. The reader may ask what is the difference. Social hobboobing means your associating with those you like or refusing to associate with those you dislike. Equality in social status carries with it the recognition of the full and complete manhood of a man. And inequality in social carries with it the suggestion of personal or racial inferior y.
But here is the rub, the Gordian Knot, the Sphinx Riddle. On the one hand President Harding says the Negro is so different from the Caucasian that he is not fit to associate with him. And on the other hand he says that this being who is not wholly human should receive educational opportunities and political and economic equality. President Harding's premises almost put the Negro in the category of the Missing Link between man and the monkey which Darwin sought for and found not. But in his conclusion he says, in substance: "Let us give this developing ape-man the same educational, political and economic opportunities which we do human beings". There seems to be a contradiction between premise and conclusion. President Harding seems to regard the Negro as a little lower in the scale of creation than the Caucasian and hence is in harmony with the South. Whatever the differs from the South is that he does not desire to keep the inferior being under, but desires to give him a chance to rise educationally, economically and politically and to treat him humanly. Thoughtful Negroes dislike his premises, but like his conclusions. The Southerners like his premises, but dislike his conclusions.
It seems to us that brave, humane, sincere and just as President Harding evidently is, his address, while on the whole designed to arouse the spirit of justice and sympathy towards a struggling race, on the other hand in one respect is fraught with possible danger to the race. It is not what he says, but what might be implied from his speech. It suggests the thought of the inferiority of the Negro.
Take the syllogism which is contained in some text books on logics:
"All men are mortal;
Socrates is a man;
Therefore Socrates is mortal."
In that syllogism it all hinges upon the minor premise as to whether Socrates is a man. If Socrates is a man, what applies to mankind as a whole applies to him. So is it with the Negro; it all depends as to whether he is regarded as a full fledged and full orbed man. If the Negro is a man, what applies to mankind as a whole applies to him.
Establish it again maxim that the Negro is not a man, the same as other men, and it will be comparatively easy to deny him educational, and economic opportunities, civile privileges and comforts in traveling, to disfranchise, Jim-crow him and prevent his holding office, and to justify the New York Tinkers editorial. But once establish the fact that the Negro is a man, their educational, economic and political opportunities and civile privileges will come to him naturally and the New York Tinkers editorial will not be justified.
Why did the British, the French, the Spanish, the Dutch, the Portuguese, and the Americans enslave the African, and why did the Belgians under King Leopold commit such atrocities in the Congo? Simply because they did not regard the Negro as a man, as a human being. Why do the Dutch in South Africa oppress the natives and why do Americans in the Southern States lynch a Negro accused of crime without giving him a chance to establish his innocence in a court? Simply because they do not regard him as a man, as a human being. Why do employers work mill and factory hands as gallery slaves, hiring straw boses to walk around to see that the workmen do not sit down and rest for five or ten minutes when they are fired? Simply because they regard their workmen as socially their inferior. It makes a world of difference. In a man's treatment of you whether he regards your social status, your status in human society as superior to equal to, on inferior to, his. The real reason why the Southman lights against the Negro sitting in Congress, sitting on the judge's bench, holding such responsible position as collector of the customs and collector of internal revenue register of the treasury and recorder of deeds in the District of Columbia is because he regards the Negro's status in American society as inferior to him.
We are not concerned as to whether the sons and daughters of him are entitled to marry the sons and daughters of Japen or be invited to the pink tea affair, drawing room receptions, bridge and what passes and country and golf club of the Caucasian. But we are concerned as to whether the world believes that the Negro was created in the Diving image, though made of the dust of the earth. We are concerned as to whether he be conceived as belonging to the great man with unimaginable fame. We are concerned as to whether he be regarded as a man or an orthodox man; that he be not free from slavery. It is somewhat encouraging though that while President Hering seems just to regard the Negro as
actually a man, he yet regards that as potentially as men, as the stuff out of which manhood is flushed and as capable of improvements.
We can only any here what we said on page 513 of Vol II of *The African Abroad*: "Then reflect also that long after the Phoenicians had invented the alphabet, long after the Ethiopians by the Isle of Morocco had constructed their, wonderful tomb, buildings, and monuments, long after Egypt had erected her pyramids, long after Athens had reached the scene of intellectual development in the age of Pericles and Phidias had planned the Parthenon, long after Rome had built the Coliseum, the ancestors of the proud Anglo-Saxon were roaming as savages in German forests and the ancestors of the gifted Celtic people were offering up human sacrifice on Drindic altars." So who can foretell what the Negro will not do in the future? Just as the Hebrew religion and the Greek Roman and Arabian civilizations lifted Teutonic and Celtic tribes out of barbarism and brutality to their present position of world ascendance, so appropriation and application of the cultural achievements of mankind will likewise develop the Negro into a being who is inspired by the mighty hopes which make us men. -W. H. F.
NEGRO MUSIC
THE New York press spoke favorably of the plantation melodies and jubilee songs which were sung by Negroes at "America's Making" on Negro Night, November 10, at the Seventy-first Regiment Armory, New York. Dvorak, the Bohemian composer, said that the songs of Negro slaves was America's only real contribution to music, and we are proud of that fact.
But we also aspire for greater things. In the early spring of 1916 a colored quartet sang the Negro melodies acceptably in a Congregational church in Illinois. After the affair was over one of the singers overheard the wife of the pastor ask the white clergyman who was in charge of the singers, "Have you any real Negro musicians in Chicago, I mean musicians who count?" Well the Negro is now developing real musicians, musicians who can master melody and harmony as well as rhythm, syncopation and jazz. The Black Star Line Band is now interpreting in an artistic manner the "Overture to William Tell" and Verdi's "Rigoletto." We have already described Miss Helen Hagan's superb recital in Aeolian Hall, New York. We heard the same kind of playing, the same blending of temperament and technique, the same mastery of phrasing and expression when Miss Andrudes Lindsay of the Martin Smith Musical School interpreted the works of Beethoven, Schubert, Schumann, Strauss, De Bussey and Brahms, as well as the works of Coleridge Taylor and Dett.
And on armistice night, in Liberty Hall, New York city, over two thousand persons applauded the singers and the Black Star Line Band until the rafters of the roof echoed back the sound. One of the numbers that made a hit and called for an encore was Verdi's "Il Trovatore," sung by two colored singers in a manner worthy of grand opera stars. All these things indicate that the Negro cannot only master and appreciate his own folk songs, but also the world's masterpieces. And he will undoubtedly accomplish greater things in the future. W. H. F.
THE LITTLE BROWN DIPLOMATS
THERE is some excitement in the councils of the great on account of the disposition on the part of the Japanese delegates to the Disarmament Conference to be a little too fair. This was not expect 1. It was meant from the beginning for the Japanese to be stubborn, uncompromising, adamant. But those who entertained this view seemed to have forgotten the previous reputation of the Japanese for fairness. When she defeated Russia the powers of the world, thinking that this little brown nation might exact too much indemnity from white Russia, met and decided on just what would be a reasonable amount for Japan to demand of Russia to pay. But what must have been the surprise of these Powers when they were told by Japan that she would not make Russia pay a cent, as Russia had suffered too much already. This was a new page written in the history of war settlements, and its author was not the proud Anglo-Saxon, but the little brown heathen of the East.
Again Japan, who bows at the Shrine of Buddha, is about to treat the world to another surprise by being as fair at the Disarmament Conference as any of the so-called Christian nations.
The sincerity of the Japanese regarding their desire to disarm may be questioned, but there is no denying the fact that Japan is playing high diplomacy; and it is having its effect even at the White House at Washington. President Harding has issued a statement that we must not expect too much from this conference. The New York World, in reply to this editorially, said that if the public expects too much from this Disarmament Conference it is because it has been led, to expect large things by expressions coming from the President himself, and the fault rests not so much with the public as with the President who has been preaching disarmament. And to make disarming easy for the United States, Admiral Kato, of the Japanese delegation, is saying that Japan never did want a navy as large as that of Great Britain and America. All of this talk coming from these "little brown heatens" makes somebody think that they will either have to really disarm or quik bluffing. There is a possibility that Japan is doing some bluffing herself, but she is so playing her hand that in event the ends of this conference are not accomplished, she will not stand to blame.
It will be mighty hard for any nation to get the moral sanction of the world in a combine against the Japanese, after-Japan shall have finished the kind of high diplomacy she is engaged in at the Disarmament Conference. There is more than one nation that feels that of the great powers at this conference none shows a greater disposition to disarm—provided disarming can be done honorably—than the Japanese.
But there is the question—under the circumstances can it be done
honorably or will it be done at all?
ROBERT L. POSTON.
stop the plan of Bloedday's book, never mentions that volume one. But the drunk Japen into it, and gets off the following remarkable dictum:
"A small amount of wisdom will enable you to assure herself and to demonstrate to the cross of the world that you into reality with the European powers in Asia or of nursing a la parisian in the United States in the Pacific. Mills the case of Obesity. Fitzpatrick the forster, edition in a summary of the international situation related to the pregnant sentence. Population statistics and race hatred in the international event. Between America and Japan."
The frightening truth is, the same, of the Himalayas, the Amazon, and formerly, too, to Merck's Mills, the white
14-5 Washington directs to the "Evening Post dated November 15" the correspondent of that paper stating that "Official Washington is trying to get a lie on the leading Anatole station whom his attitude to a large extent depends on the success of the world trade General Sir Ian Hamill told the members of the London Press Club that—
"The Japanese know that it battleships should cross the Pacific to be able to navigate back, because of a lack of adequate naval bases. If we had trouble with ships we would be able to take Hong Kong to the Philippines and it would be a long time before they could be ousted. The situation would be realized in connection with he Washington conference, which is something the smoking concert in border warfare
To any one who will think these quotations will definitely indicate both the drift and the intent of the Peace Congress (for that is what it is) now assembled in Washington. The Wilson Peace Congress and its resultant fake news are twice as many soldiers now under arms as there were in 1914, and the burden of taxation presses heavily on the purses of white nations. White millions are out of work and starving shells and bones are being up (and down) in testa. Some of them coat the earth with blood. Some live in a village for a year. Manifestly, something must be done. And those whom Mr. Wells described some years ago as "gawd's sake" have begun to squawk. "For Gawd's sake, lets do something." So the Lords of Misrule have come together to do something." But Banter's friendship entails the maintenance of "white supremacy." And since some of the darker peoples have arms it is obvious that the white powers must first disarm them before they themselves can disarm. Of these darker nations Japan is the most powerful nation in the world, with the European powers in Asia. Therefore their main concern is Japan at the second Peace Congress.
And there is another reason for mistrust. Conceding that no nation warms except in self-defense, its safety must depend upon its military night. Since it cannot know how many nations may attack it at once, how can they one attack another? It must have powers of resilience? The thing is too ridiculous. Therefore, we may expect the usual crookedness and lying, the secret treaties and reservations and all the paraphernalia of "diplomacy" "Civilization" as determined by the white man, see itself on the togban slide, know where it is going, but can know what is happening in Washington is simply one of the last horrible gestures. The only man of them all who seems to know what will be in the press gallery—Herbert George Wille. If one wants to know just how hopeless is the case for white civilization—Yapan or no Japan—let him read Mr. Wille. "Civilization" in which it is politically set forth. And we might regard in chasing that Secretary Grand grand one of that white was only America's first blunt.
SARA NG WNC eGR A ESTE Te Aeon Tas AS
Rae PLUG aia catenin ce Ou Eat GURNEE RU eRe ni ae) eeu here are
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i: mA VAT paired es Dope niet NPE a ACN nn Oo I Raat eee a pr
UNIVERSAL: Nae Fad
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Lae q Ro a8 att §
f Benes apie, Se a
pred oe
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bees nee
esceteninrc | 4
GARVEY-SENDS STRUNG?
Parl OA Ser vg pie Mee A Be
ied ac Ge NC
See reriee neat eee
‘wall pf thas athe mas
Sie mentee aston sade
‘ay Wallblamten today. ga: Witte
Tapantea sraptalativea! wld aA
beter ‘probably. thben yb
Saar
ae of the’ Rest lnlveeniton
cf weatarnclvdleaton... ‘Aa. abe:
‘agpaoes pare Glide Sey
raga nes scene te
to une, thelr, highee Snowledce 9€ Dally
Sua eeeairee eae
of Zuropat, Burely not; but tof the
seatration.of Ain, te
Chinese and dapanise-for the Gonfer-
7 ‘ench Goriditibnally
id you read what tat Chinese rep-
seeenative Ell the other day, wht
be wan questioned about the cltoome
of he: inkrvace? “Me as a
oe an ace. in conferene
‘wit dpolde that there shall Be no in-
Ternational faterference: with hina."
Now, that qusaus) "af you will get-out
of China am@ leave Chinn ta the Obte
ese, wo ace for tho eofiference.” And
the Japaneso have enld the ame thing
Wwhatafiocy it mean? Mt meane that 1
te th pole of “asin (rth Auaten”
fand we are sow enunchating the policy
Of "Africa. tor the Afrleana™ (AD-
plause) We ‘ave no battleships te
‘amoantie, slmaply Decatiso we fave
bean too great diplomats to waste ou
tmovey to build battlosbipe and crutsers
fod then destroy them. Now, who bas
Seneo? (Laughter )-A man Who apends
‘early all he haw to balld some toutra-
nent, or oven to build a bouso, and
Then nde out that the howe ia 20
foot and: Gestroys 7. Wao haa. the
froater sonse—ipe tan who builds &
house and deatroye It or the many
had enough senso to kuow that there
trae no uso to balld the hous, Because
bo would have to eatrey It anyhow?
Negre'e Gllence Mistaken for tgnoranc
‘When It comes to diplomacy ther
sccm 10 forget tho Negros higher 10-
{elligonce: they ellove that our being
ulat oveq_ a) theto ‘orld problems
east thit ‘wo. wore ignorant. | We
wwere not ignorant, howover; we wer
Samply playing the fool to become
wisn,” Nom, after they have wasted al
{eso Dillons and Billions of dolare in
farmamanta, they are going to destro
them. We Baven’, wasted one penny
Now, who are tho moro rosoureeful
Bureiy, the Negroes are the more re:
fonrectal; surely the Negroes are th
there intelligent, roore diplomat, be
Cause they avo oot wasted thelr ener
flea or Uelr time Yet all thoy ca
Get out of armaments we know. If {
{ring “a tongerange gun we kno%
og, to re It Yor wo haven't xqent
Ye. (Laughter) Uf it ts tll
Trhat port to put into, wo ea
Fut Into Al port without buying ove
2 compads (Laughter) Nom, who
the foo) after all?
White Mapfo toad6Panip ChaMlented by
‘Mle Oven Face
‘The question ts that thoy have ru
the world wo badly that they ore 1
contusion with Uemesives and amon
Ghemeelves The white man's lender
tthip ta challesged by hia own Tap8 fo
the” simple reason that the Wh
oassee of England, the whito mate
of France, have confidence no longo
in the sober leadership of thetr owt
because their leaden have ted ther
tp to slarvation, to hungor and to eut
fering ‘That fq what White elvilcati
fan done “or tho woya There are 6,
200000 hungry men. women ap bil
dren in England, and to France am
tm diferent parts of the world Tk ln
Dankrupt etvilization, and ft is gp
qo react aghltiat tore who have. bee
fenfatr ad unjust, toammuch 02 th
bankruptoy Mas coho at a tine whe
fil humanity as become tntalilgen
USE SLOAN'S TO
EASE LANIE BACKS
Veeerieos
Retest feat
seeerers
“At alldrugita=S8e, Toe, 9140,
Aaa Alt 4m Dlaaem
Wi tak acadeg. Bo, arp Rema
fee e eee
avs aa reall at
urs. Laughter) ee
Sues tei
vo spavinbry,49/ trons 32
tipo aay aa dees reali
Yat, dnd, ther nip nom_atines haw tb
roimbureathenselven fee
Sra aloet cma :
penmeifi Tk a tf cba
Br pene ned Pompeo
meee cra eben Teague poten
is a to: gohantate Diyos
9 escent ae Ae Baty Aatiy ie net
wolag to 4 ape pant ow det
have complotaly, disarmed. Africa
1p not going. th diearm, either. (Laut
tec). We are'siot trotne to disarm Ga
tit they (hemselven bave cocplately
danse. And vias cr mazes
Brot ur aptnnet a, crantan
That is the armament you wants
Srennised, alan aoldly-orpantsed, Qo
{he world wil be abwcvat en, wen
than they are afraid evsh Of Uielt ow
Sreadnousbie, cruisers an “eu
fisen (Great appauseh
Qste @ Letter from Gir Harry Mi
“sehnston
F got a tertar yetertay from 8
any Johastpn, (wrote bls a coupl
Be wecks ago rd asked Bim (or
Christmas menage for The Near
Goria, ant sent mo one to thee
frorgnt "1 bellove that Negrovo—t
biackp—should have equal rights witt
the whites, But f don’t agree wit
you that there ary 400,000.000 brow
22a black people to the worlds T be
Hove that 200,000,000 ts more correct.
You see, the white man bas a aubtl
way of carrying forward. bls prop
fgende. Ho does not want 700 to kao
Your strength, Ieat if you know whas
ie how strong. you are cumertcall
you wit get to Detter realte tat 70
Thoula be the rulerget tha world. An
Sey tae tre wf by dhe
jway end then in) another, and the
nave now reached the liait, becatn
Ittakes someone more than 8lr Harr
lFonmaten to tool the T. 3 Ea Bu
fehether’ they have computed ou
umerieal etrengt corr@uly oF not,
are satisted, (or anywhere yoo {oF
you ‘esa Stogrons: therefore, thet
suite enough Wherever yoo. ta
fravel or go the world over ob oom
ta contact with Negroes; that ls envi
for me.
Nothing Gan Be Settled WiuRout th
Neare Z
‘But there te this one thjag: othtn
can be exited —and 1 don't know bo
fe statcmnen are golu to do tt 1
[Weabingtoo—oothing can, be settle
now to the world without taking t
Neuro toto consideration, T care
how tong thoy may eit to Weablntot
er wat they say there. . DSTA oF Bo
the Negro ts going to be henrd, 65
[dvumderousty, i the next two yours
feasts and T tell you that until the
fait “Guat. conference of “the> Dtsye
brotheritod there ia going to be gree
onsternatica throughout the worl, be
tature the dariar peoples of the wor!
fre dlegusted and dasatin ted. Thc
fie not ening feng theme
be robbed, to bo expfoted, co be mar
fderod any louger. And t0 70D weal
ineed Nogroos f want to give you'th
fadvico: that If the Negro race (ste,
tlle because of you
[No WeakeKneed Negroes Wanted
‘Wo dons want any Wwoslt-knevd We
rove now:- This ia a time to presi
fo the world all the boldness, all t
nerve power, all the tact that we have
because we are at the turaing polD!
fivilleauce. “We Moe the world, Wer
fore, with & datermination to be to
|tre face the wofla with the Gatermin
tion that there abail be a free and
[independogt Attics. (Applause) W
do not deaire to parigko in the destru
|lton of the world. We do nor desire
partake in any event that will brir
bout tho collapee of civilization,
faro ever willing to help Bumantty,
alge Eee ely ocr ana
‘A Puzzle
‘It terall e pursla,E toll you, It te «
cate eae Sees See
crus upp Tapes, Sate
fai ab wna. tue bas bo
Jong: awakyned. Afriop./ls: dow being
EF Spay aN ARS CARY Patera APC
ON ee NES
OVA NEGR
CG OR aN
ee ic z
Prd AN ee i
ee ae ere are
unt. Liedarepaateata win
rbvevbnya eeat oie oc asta
ca Rees erento
eat Sens nce tea
eve Zeal. face Sele
Abn moe isa tes
Salar ee ered
ton ia Lang, 6;
fate atc St i cat, tm
‘whict. the. ypices~ef the -yast- assem~
awe ren: toon ety 043
dai indceorunte wade tat
to whioh they bad listened, Mr, Garves
eemmed bis adétésoe, and ud:
Tplegram te, Qlsarmament Gonterence
Ma Geaite‘ch read to yon & telegram
Jecst to thy Disarmament Conference
‘on Armistice Day by the Provisional
Pretdust‘of alice, aa foiews?
“tk. \\November.1%, 1971.
presanat Ha avers oF the a
tan dot Mio Shares
Pereadteelens Bulan, Washington
eatin Sean mle
ty elas of Duran efor
WSs GP Risice oa balall cote tour
feb Ss Some oie ta
Freee end Bavertnad) the
Bees, tamoanoed onthe ou mere
aes Grete’ Ge Brecon of ae
ils tages a elite One
stay of Ameren to lscuaa the prob
feats aera he antleeot
WEaSt sa elleve wil corure Ge ars
Fa eu eater het anid Ae th
elected spokesman of the Negro peoples
Sie Te deine tenga
Seth ay aunty. shucatonaly
Bi ad oun, so ello
ei pitt al wand comocracy aod
Et Ser cpendencs alt sar owe
2 Be come staal
Be Boas showb tb four bunared mien
BEES portdasse” a die ‘vereali
Fors" OPUS ane stateana wis
Pinkie ae wane
See peg, lands” Serra tr
dieai on eaeving teed a worid pence
anit ceo Seun eatabllaned rter rach
Scedanen ug lesb a0:
BertaScuts so long aa tha. stone’ of
SEM weet the ‘wea tr
uals, ets ait Koes ere
ARONAD® Goan, “and then tomas
ec Pearce Seat al
Fe
Besse aoa oe ear
SRS gtepiel nstung custo
Trrrettas pate and, qpecerl
barmactiys CE et even
| Seiten ea
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{that fact dtedrsiament ‘woittd: ba very
eee bur the very moines. Pasian,
sna Core win eran air Ge
Core, wi dara tha
world has tar away trom -the
Sersea ed the Monat ena foe.
[GolteeNalomdp unto others aa ou
would chat thay abould 49° anto Jom
the world needa one thing. ta aave'tt
ace aba Wat by anon
1s, & man fs
froor grace er whetiw tases gated
from the aoe, te eesenk Gt exile
sonm 98 weacasty ts atreesne-tnerstens
fi human mara and civilctige 10
procene by wiieh, ean eaboptisai
the puniow and the imps ts the 62
mands of retson and to tho comand
fot conscince; ay@ ft ln because an
bas only partially conquered the brute
fs hitetecanee be bas ooly pertaly
pul the body tater, that we oe @
Trlernsie wore we Beeld i today
‘The Hegre Mit Progrete Like Other
‘haces
‘mae Negro tas complatot brea
te does ot receive thowe ites WD
Belong to him as human belagey bat
De ct progress es other Facto Bave
promreccet: “It te euly by scant
tow oslanoes, macaasicn,payale css
tay and the Dosinecs meiogs whieh
fave come dawn thrcurh the agra tat
the beck man can compet of ital
ectan terma with men ef elber fates
Gen. Hampton, proudly told’ the ats
fdsta of Hampton tnaisae: “Hamp.
fon eivea you enough education t
foupete wiih, any colored. tna, 300
feay neat but tbe. Negro peed
[broader education than that. He needs
fan education ty which he can mate
Sc bratay and is wits with the mea
ot ote re.
Some tagine that the colored maa
napinnate musical end erataten eit
Dat ban bot that toteUectal expect
oy when ho can match Rast (ta
faceally with other enens and Calta
| went so far as to question the Negros
iy fo mene the Ct ree es
the oar hee sore ase
ee ee cieee tach tie area
reek tert books “ft Ean produced a
san Uke Bydea wh sakipred’erre
finerent tanguagen end 1 bay 50
fiuced a man wee wrote a, ook ot
mathematics Go that ql tho alave
oldere eae onfred your ago aboct
‘(ha intallectually, assthotical and mora!
Haserlosity of the Negro has been proves
a tas roses wasn dito
progrens:
‘Tai tar wo hasW maderprogress. a)
todiyiduate, here an@ there, 0a cat
|see ono black min and enojier,binck
[man by bls goalus dod by bie forde ct
personaly. forge. bis way throog
Borracle.” West the Negro besa om
fb the caualiyet organi elort D
a
For Mes! and Women
yous Hens please
Beaten
posers
Peed see
Fane mreeiencurttter|
[eee
Aeneas
OER Ae Ee a
Cope kee ase
SB fren ik Shey Race te a ae cy
Es BOG Lae ae snc Me yp wieticet
Fp Sot rare art sie TE ne ea i
= mapEO emer i orthe Ui) fee
So es
LS amended 4 oe enya ae
ea Seen ia Boe ae
ee ee se soe
Soe cone iden oe
ee som foe
yee es CAVE Be of cna!
sie me
ee Ger
fae Se
tet rae a cent howto
sobre yea
F whats Sat ome me
Eerie ena eet aoe
Bsceden ithe soltiere.
inner aside pet ae a
moire and te Soma andl ta glare: At
Seaton eee
-Rgooes nae tak m ae
Seine ages
ties wm mlltee Costas. tha; tow ateatss
aod Gave: thas, 5“ yew thera, te
need tor ober: pant [n. Laberis
fagpone swe Fenéther si Ike
bse Date (ard eh laverts2
‘the shod tast’ y rafitons of
‘dotlars. to-'the; Laather\ Company, of
Beaten. What do: we.nepSt We, need
an onguntestion by Which:we cout’ get
behing hin, put Bis; trintdtion- onthe
market entvemnntagtere (ices dury
sates 33
anon eens &
[and be is A powertal with bis pent
ad yet the cored: financial force 0
tho Negroes ef the world is probably
oar times as great an that of Hoke
feller’, Just imagine what tt ‘conld
complet ana prodgpe iit were weld
‘ot and manct.
Ydelfovs tn the Nogro‘e. destiny ‘te.
Jeccse J am. not overawed By fhe
| Angio-Baxon's talk of Bia tuperiority,
becduse I remember that two thousand
years ago he -was under ané‘Rome wis
‘on top, and I remember that 8,000 yeas
iSyion aod Eusops were ou 1
eienber tat EhecY and ome:
lord. of creation: snd, thete enmptie
‘went Gown; and’ 1,000 years from tom
SWEATER PREE
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Not shoring, the native eloquence of the Ngorai as we do, the European delegates to the League of Nations assembly, at Genova with more than estimated to hear, what they described one of the best speeches made before, that body, delivered by Ballardine, a black delegate from Haiti. But we know the love of the drama that is in the Nego, his power of imitating the manner and languages of others, and his emotionalism. We have learned not to take all his manifestations too much up, and have learned that the race is produced in so really great man, and in so possible that this man Ballardine may be one of the number. At all events, the address he made before the League assembly was peculiarly retained, and lacked the flowers of speech with which the full-blooded African habitually adorns his public, and even his conversational utterances. His statements were simple, direct and moderate and showed an understanding of the mandate problems not always shown by those of fighters skins.
Found a place in Airbnb, Hurling's edible collection of "Narma Bunk Ginger," Hamilton series—in four parts, published by Schlumberger of New York "Tis Me, O Lord" "Go Down, Moses" "Every Time I Feel the Spirit" "Gital Away," "I Couldn't Knew Nobody Pray" and "Nobody Knows the Troubles I've had."
IF A COMET STRUCK THE EARTH
The question. If we struck a comet, what would happen? was again raised by the approach of Winnocke's comet on its return journey to the Sun. In passing Jupiter it was diverted from its usual path by the mighty attraction of that planet. If we passed through a comet's tail it is questionable whether we should be conscious of the fact and even if its properties were of a poisonous nature, no ill effect would be experienced owing to extrots rare-faction. The earth has passed through many tails in the past, and probably through that of Halley's comet in 1918. A collision with the actual head of a comet would, one would think, prove more serious. It is, however, certain that the head is not solid but may represent a huge conglomeration of small solid meteor bodies, rendered luminous by incessant collisions between them. Probably nothing would happen beyond a meteor shower of exceptional severity. There is no indication to show that the earth in the past has suffered materially through collisions with a large celestial body, although we are correct in assuming that it has more than once during all the ages passed through the head of a comet.
Incidentally, remarks of a collision supposed to have occurred in 5,002 years ago with a comparatively small body are found near Canyon Drable, North Arizona. The site is a huge crater, three quarters of a mile in
TO MEMBERS AND OFFICERS
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
There is absolutely no connection between the Universal Negro Improvement Association and the African Orthodox Catholic Church, and any officer or representative of the Universal Negro Improvement Association who attempts to explain to the contrary is deceiving the membership. Report all such officers and representatives to headquarters.
By Order
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
MARCUS GARVEY, President-General
November 1, 1921
Notice to Divisions and Chapters of
THE UNIVERSAL NEGRO
IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
All secretaries are requested to send in their monthly reports to the office of the Secretary-General in time to make their members financial to date. Members of divisions should see to it that their secretaries make them financial with the parent body every month so as to insure their death grants and other benefits. No death grants will be paid by the parent body except the deceased members of such locals are financial on the books of the parent body.
All members of local divisions should see that dialect officers do not use the meetings of the organization or use the organisation to start their own private enterprises and schemes to the detriment of the movement.
BY ORDER
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
MARCUS CARVEY, President General
NOTICE
To All Officers of Divisions, Branches and Chapters of the Universal Negro Improvement Association
On and after the 31st day of October, 1931, all Divisions, Branches and Chapters of the Universal Negro Improvement Association are financial with the Prayer body, date in the interest of their members, etc. will be published in the latest World.
Dr James E. Green, principal of Hampton Institute, recently paid a warm spirit of honor and affection to the memory of Mrs. Burlin, who was a devoted friend of Hampton, of American Negroes and Indians of Africans and of struggling men and women, regardless of race or creed.
"Natalie Curtis Burlin," said Dr. Gregg in this address to the Hampton staff of workers and students and to many visitors, "was a true artist in literature and in music, and somewhat of a deist as well, discerning inner meanings and hidden spiritual values. Her genius chose folk lore and folk music particularly as its principal field of exploration and exercise, and with respect to the folk tales and folk songs of the American Indian and the Negroes she became one of the first authorities.
Her books are really here. She is more than a compiler, the may truly be a teacher, because the wealth of interpretative content of her individuality is such as to make these books really her own. They are 'Songs of Ancient America,' published in 1895, 'The Indians' Book, 1987, 'Negro Folk Songs,' 1918, and 'Songs and Tales from the Dark Continent,' 1920, recorded from the singing and the sayings of two Hampton students—Kamba Simango and Madikane Celeo.
"Mrs. Burlin had a strong interest in Hampton Institute and much of her study of the plantation songs was done here. We at Hampton mourn her loss and we shall remember her with grateful admiration."
The Hampton Institute chorus of over 800 voices sang the following Negro religious folk songs which have
By Order
November 1, 1921
ICE
UNIVERSAL NEGRO
ASSOCIATION
WHERE
NOTICE
MEMBERS OF UNIVERSAL NEGRO
IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
EVERYWHERE
Demand a Constitution from your Secretary so that you may know what the Organization stands for. See that no one "puts anything over on you."
Every Member Should Have a Constitution
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
MARCUS GARVEY, President General
Executive Secretary for Every Division
of the Universal Negro Improvement
Association All Over the World
MARCUS GARVEY, President General
Executive Secretary for Every Division of the Universal Negro Improvement Association All Over the World
ALL, DIVISIONS of the Universal Negro Improvement Association shall now make arrangements to receive from the Parent Body, an Executive Secretary, who shall be a Civil Servant and banned whose duty it shall be to work as an Executive to the Division, to protect its members from lion or sabbary through inefficiency, disloyalty or dishonesty of any office Officer or Member.
The Parent Body is now taking steps to protect the membership of all Divisions.
All members should see that their Divisions have an Executive Secretary of the Civil Service.
BY ORDER
Universal Negro Improvement Association
MARCUS GARVEY
President-General
Notice to Divisions, Branches and
Chapters of the Universal Negro
Improvement Association
BY ORDER
Universal Negro Improvement Association
MARCUS GARVEY
President-General
Notice to Divisions, Branches and
Chapters of the Universal Negro
Improvement Association
Please entertain no one who claims to be a representative of
the Universal Negro Improvement Association, except the person
can show credentials authorizing him or her to represent the
movement.
All credentials must be signed by the President-General, Marcus Garvey, or, in his absence, the Assistant President-General, Sir William Ferris.
By order
Universal Negro Improvement Assn.
MARCUS GARVEY
President-General
Improvement Assn.
GARVEY
General
CIVIL SERVICE, U. N. I. A.
THE CIVIL SERVICE OF THE UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
is now open for all MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATION of not less than the months' standing in the organization who can pass the Examination in English, Arithmetic, Elocation, Bookkeeping, Penmanship and a general knowledge of the arts and objects of the Universal Negro Improvement Association.
Each successful candidate will have to put in two weeks at the National Headquarters of his or her country to gather routine information preparatory to entering on active service.
All applicants must have the endorsement of their President.
SECRETARY GENERAL
Universal Negro Improvement Association
50 West 135th Street
NEW YORK, N.Y. 10014
have to put in two weeks by the
country to gather routine inform-
ative services.
Movement of their President.
GENERAL
Government Factor.
4th Street
Washington, D.C.
Cinematics, situated for miles around the meteoric iron, 128 to 600 feet deep, the walls rising above the building plains of 150 feet.
But for our atmosphere, which stands as a defense against celestial disturbances such as meteorial matter, life on this globe of ours would be an unpermaid factor.
The damage which would be wrought by the collision of a comet with the earth is as far as we know, averaged, since the small noted meteorite particles are dislipated into vapor before reaching the earth—inchange.
HARLEM SOCIAL NOTES
THE EXCELLENT NOVELS IN THIS
The excellent ladies of Bath-Phillip
Porter Morevan Church, of which the
Royal Bath Church is the most
distant and popular pastor, is the
bless night party in the social room of the
said church on the evening of November
7 in his honor. Among the invited
guests were Dr. Bernhard Rula of Cuba
and his wife, Mr. Cete Waye of South
Africa, a linear descendant of the great
African king of that name, Mr. Light-
bourne of Barbados, and J. E. Bruce,
of the Negro World, and wife. A splendid
musical program was rendered, followed
by a short address by Mr. L. H.
Hunt extolling the great services of
Dr. Martin to the church and his moral
and public worth. (The doctor blushed
The kiddie was one of the most scintillating social events we have attended to a long time. Dr. Mararti is to be congratulated upon having such an impressive Cook. The pasture, upon his church was burned a few Sunday nights and this was the largely to the intelligent and industrious talure of this faithful sampler, who was so genuinely remembered by the ladies club on the occasion above referred to.
THE CLUBMAN'S RECEPTION
The Woman's auxiliary of the Clubman's Domestic Club stage an elaborate concert and carnival for the new Sis Chao on Thursday evening. November 9. The guards were gorgeous.
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO DIVISIONS AND MEMBERS OF UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
All money's of the Organization must be lodged in a responsible Bank in-the name of the Division of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Moneys can only be drawn from the Bank on the approval of the Members, at regular meetings, through standing orders or otherwise. Three signatures must be attached to all checks of withdrawals from the Bank. The signatures shall be those of the President, the Secretary and the Treasurer.
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSN.
M. RCUS GARVEY, President-General
NOTICE! NOTICE!
To Divisions, Branches, Chapters and Members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association
This Association has no connection with any other Organization, Church or Movement, and any one who claims that their particular Organization, Church or Movement is the same Universal Negro Improvement Association, is endeavoring to deceive. There is but one Universal Negro Improvement Association. We are in sympathy, with all Negro Churches, but we have no particular Church to support. Any information to the contrary is deceptive.
Any Officer or Member of a Division, Branch or Chapter, who uses his position to foster the work of other Movements amping the members of the Organization, and who influences the membership to start any private investment or business other than what is authorized by the Parent Body shall be guilty of violating the Constitution and shall be expelled from active membership.
Members should guard against Officers using the Organization for their own business ends to the loss of the Members and the Organization. See that your Officers live up to the Constitution of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Watch out for the person who wants to "put over" his private interests. This Organization is for the good of all and not for the benefit of the "sharper." All members should get a Constitution.
BY ORDER
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION MARCUS GARVEY, President-General
J. D. BROOKS
is no longer connected with the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Any one who knows his whereabouts is asked to communicate with the National Surety Company of New York, and with the Universal Negro Improvement Association immediately. MARCUS GARVEY
MARCUS GARVEY
Applications Wanted Immediately
FOR
Foreign Service in the
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
TWO EDUCATED NEGRO MEN WANTED to represent the NEGRO RACE in Paris and London as HIGH COMMISSIONERS.
Each applicant must be a member of the Universal Negro Improvement Association of at least six months' standing. Must be a graduate of a reputable college or high school. Must speak two languages, French and English. Must be a diplomat. Must furnish references of character, and application must be endorsed by the President of the Local Division to which applicant is attached.
Apply
HIGH COMMISSIONER-GENERAL
Universal Negro Improvement Assn.
60 West 135th Street
NEW YORK, U. S. A.
NOTICE
All moneys intended for the Universal Negro Improvement Association must be sent in the name of the organization and not in the names of individuals.
Calling, calling
Where the falling,
Floating, falling
Moonlight lies
Sobbing, sobbing
Till the throbbing,
Pain-torn voice
In distance disa
Drifting through silver voldness, desc-
lata
"Lost! Lost!" it calls. "Oh, where has
down my mate?"
WHERE ILL LIVE
WHERE ILL LIVE
What gain I by human beings?
I would soon forget these reptiles
I would reach a place, excluded,
Live among the beasts and fakes
Live among the birds and fakes
Where I see no wicked human,
Have no fights and have no quarrels
Live the life of a happy hermit,
Love the Lord and praise his goodness
For the good 'that he has done me,
What I know no scribes and troubles
Know to stare and look,
Know that all am of God's children,
Forget all, both friends and country,
Love no flag and love no language
In the wilds of Mother Africa
Where the lion makes his tooging,
Where the ostrich builds his nest,
Where the zebra roams with epiphany,
Where the lion lives in the jungle,
Where the eunimids hides her young,
Where the native roams with freedom,
Where the air is filled with fragrance,
Where the Nile o'errows its banks,
Make the soil increase in richness,
Keep the people from starvation,
Find food where there's no rain water,
Make the flamingo flambeo
Foes on the growing lotus,
Where the people find papyrus,
Where houses are sand roots and collings.
Where the air is dry and arid
And the earth is golden bright
Pierce I find the tomb of Pharah
Find the spacious tomb of Zarath
Find ancient arts and mystic wonders
in the land of my ancestors.
2.
Deign, never will I to rest 'mid culture
Where they clip the beard of nature
He mustachios* and whitakers*
Build their own and awkward dwellings.
Call them better works than nature's
I shall amide like nature
In my home, the beautiful.
Where the birds shall sing my praises.
I shall drink of nature's beauty
In the land of golden sunshine.
Where the cold I'll never fear
In the land of my ancestors.
Where no bird doth leave in autumn.
Where I am and do not in winter.
There I'll ask in nature's wonders
In the land of Ethiopia.
Where king Meleskil is sleeping.
Yes, the land of pearls and rubies.
Where emeralds and Jasper flourish.
Where they find most precious dis-
1
Find, the Coriotes and hipphist,
Where the Naro know his country,
Knows his God, does not wish his soul,
Where the people know Rohammed,
Call their God the great, Allah,
Where the Queen of Ethiopia
Waves her sword and waves her scent.
desire.
Loves her natives and her nobles.
Loves the land of her ancestry.
Loves the noble mother, Africa.
8.
Let me go to my own country,
Let me mow it in its dense forests
Here we will write and, sing to nature
Where Lord and God,
Where I will be far from so-called culture.
From the troubles of this country,
Ar away from human beings
Wake me to this land, the beautiful
Hone of Meneliy and Queen Sheba.
Let me rest among the lilies.
Breathe their palmy air of fragrance,
Wake me with spheme,
Lie among the lilies, the sweetest
Basking. In its pleasant sunshine.
Let me lve and let me die.
BIRN MARSHALL
October 19, 1911
Head of the army of Ireland
Midshipman, Hibernians
Whitaker, shorter grass, etc., that grows on the earth
Mahmoud, a sultanate and Trinity town than whose religion other strangers know
INTELLIGENCE
Treat your mind with intelligence and training.
A prudent or unfortunate and training.
Change your wealth by of Learning.
DENTAL SCHOOL & LABORATORY
A dental school and laboratory with more than 200 students
MECHANICAL DENTISTRY
www.dentalschool.com
A. O. BRADSON & CO.
132 West 123rd Street, NEW YORK, NY 10010
TO MISS ETHEL TREW
DUNLAP
Sweet postes daughter of the sitt
bee,
I gree thoe from Cuba's tropic
strand;
Oh thou defender of Ephraim's liberty
Across the sea I stretch brother
hands.
In poetical诗境 I durest not follow
them.
While Elyrian field thou room.
With the muses thou wander happy
and free.
Calling striving Ephraim home.
Encaptured I listen to thy reviving
stra'.
And foilings of pleasure steal me.
Heart strings throb and tremble with
pain.
When thou depict Africa, across the sea.
From the gods thou brought a message
sage shine.
Who touch thy lips with poetic kiss
Sweetly thy voice rang out with a silvery chime.
The slave with courage is inspired
Sweet诗篇, I mourn at the phoenix.
Which sme with moral terror.
When thy bryal notes ascendst on high.
And tales of the peonage's horrow
Ha, when thou singst in that cold,
denied vain.
Condemning the yellow river's crime
Crusted blood to ease the stale
Which disgraced the book of time.
Methinks I saw thee in Tulsa's bloody
hall.
Where my brothers were wanted
alain;
Powerless I listen to thy despairing
call.
For bound by slavery's chain
Strike thy tyro always inspiring alley
divine!
Let their glorious dispersion ring.
Ephraimites shall worship at freedom's
shrine.
And liberty's song sweetly sing.
A black and Aaron have now
formed.
Our Miriam thou shall be.
Ravish us with the music of the sphere
Sweet诗篇 across the sea.
JOSEPH G. THOMPSON
Picota 50, Havana, Cuba.
TO THE SONS AND DAUGHTERS OF THE DARK RACES
Write to me, we sons and daughters
of a race that is oppressed—
Write to me from out of the ocean,
From the east and from the west.
Write me from the emergy scotland,
From the islands of the sea—
Let us sing the happy anthem
of the captive sun set free.
Write from every dime and quartz
Where dark raws will for dawn—
For the light will soon be breaking,
And a race will chirchingle on.
THE NEGRO WORLD
(Arizona)
BY J. H. RALPH CASIMIR
U. N. I. A. Respousa Division No. C1
Dominick, D. W. I.
Tell the Negro the good old story.
"To must that strike the blow if
Nagrore, he up, and dug.
Ethiopia shall stretch forth her hand
God Amakhtiy is our Captain.
Righteous to our cause.
Oh, Amazing awakening.
Wake up, welcoming Negroes,
On to victory!
Hailed their valor, fortress!
Liberty her AGAD and Abyssin-
Down will, impregnate him.
DENTAL SCHOOL
A GRADUATE SCHOOL FOR
MECHANICAL
WEAR FOR
A. O. BERN
Ed. Wash 125th Street, WA
Give kindness!
To the beaten on the highway,
To the convict in his cell,
To the outcast; and afflicted,
To the never seen, and never
Never close our hearts against them.
For perhaps we'll never know
How the little sprites of sunshine,
How today we came to flow,
How our soul - ahtre and
which it touched.
Just kindness
When the friends that we have christened
Turn and seek to do us harm.
Hold them like knightness;
It will wray them like angels.
It will put to flight their sails.
And are they long to stalk.
It will plunk the weeds from their hearts
And take root where they have grown.
And and bloom in beauty,
In elegance and grace.
Till, like a benediction,
It will burst out in 'be face'
This kindness!
AN AUTUMN ODE
O thine man can you tell me why
The autumn makes me end!
Why I an Argan; am deprived.
While you an a grave, an gird!
The autumn grows more tragic like and glaze.
Who leave their withered hope behind
To all across the waves.
The trees grease on their leaves
Like pride cast me away;
The autumn sails of score
Lin Pharissin today.
The autumn winds some story tells—
I cannot understand—
Of tidefly pathes—it may go
Of captive native land.
The autumn cannot my good-bye
As I wend when I laft the shore
And he sighed over my heart.
The trees extend their giant arms
Like dumb but grateful shames;
That tandem chap my like they
Me from hands of white knaves.
And sephra petals cast away.
Like tropho-guns on grunt.
When white hands prince Afro maids
Unholy diabas.
The tresses down between the boughs
And tremble every night;
For well they know their leaves must die.
Like slaves that captures night.
The tresses down to it seems
To tell my spirit's tale
Of love when slave and I chased hands
In fond affection's vale.
The rose leaf trembles as it falls
And brings a thought to me.
The rose leaf heart heart
That sighs beyond the shore.
Some Afro son that he might say
"Last summer's rose is gunt;
But yet the love that sent the leaf
Shall bloom personal on.
Her hopes have perished in a land
Where wild from white raub bloom.
But I will bask her in my heart,
For she loved captives so."
When autumn comes, O think of me
When sunshine falls, I think of you
When sunshine, all the cheer we had
Gave up the ghost and died.
When autumn whends eight, Earl Of
And so in dreams at night-
O captive comes to me as I
O captive comes to me as I
IGNORANCE
Though your mind be disciplined by college routine,
To the merit of a doctor's degree;
Though your wealth, be of Crownes
By house toll;
Emblish you to travel both land
and sea;
If you fail to interpret the soul of
your race,
Its ambitions, possibilities or what be
the case.
To your race you are ignorant.
THE NEGRO'S GEM.
Oh Africa, our Fatherland.
Tiny radiant shores in dreams I see.
The enchanted shores, the happy band
Carries my thoughts to them.
Tiny verdant hills and mountains.
Tiny rivers calm and deep.
Looks like a mystic mountain.
And sweeps happy sleeps.
THE ALUMNI AND OP. MEDICAL
& LABORATORY
MEDICAL SCIENCE
DENTISTRY
0123456789
SON & CO.
NEW YORK CITY
TO MARGARET
PART
There was not a star in the sky.
The chilling wind chilled my ear.
The heavy rain drowned chilled my body.
In the dark night I stumbled there.
There was not a coin in my purse.
And my heart had fell from kings' pain.
There was not a friend to my good night.
Breathtaking I wandered with the rain.
Gregging feeling, tingling sensation.
With a deep, wounded voice I cried.
There were homes, with bright lights burning.
And laughter, but nobody replied.
My heart leapt like the roaring wave.
I stumbled and fell. I rose again.
And walked, till I reached a little bridge.
There I eat mid the midnight rain.
Life to me was like Dante's ball.
As I wished with all my soul to die.
My nerves trembled and my head eached.
I felt like a tomato wandering by.
A lightning flashed, and my camp eyes caught.
A sharp-edged knife at my trembling foot.
"Thank godosomai!" I grenaded, "what blamed him?"
I grenaded the lightning and the falling alert.
I gramped the knife with a shivering hand.
And on rising turned my head toward East!
Sensation bitter stirred my brain.
I howled and screamed like a strangling heart.
Steeped in treeway, I tools the sham blade.
And stripping my black bosom hard.
Pierced it through my heart with Her outrage might.
And mamed!" "God, then does not seem to care!"
Then I told it die in the army.
With maddened eyes rolling about.
Awaiting death. The earth shone like
the thunder, roared, and spotted
semper married out.
Lions hounda crocodiles and tigers.
Wagged for my blood-smeared frang.
I swallowed a blood-tumor. A second
semper married a curmudgeon.
I mamed aloud alone. Home like hunt
bright aloud, sir.
'Friends' heard the groom but no
body came.
I groomed and groomed, my voice sank
With sinking eye I tinkled backward.
I saw something mystical yellow, bea-
tiful.
Like an angel you descended out of the
sky.
You kissed me. Than there was a calm.
The wild beast disappeared and
jumped into the river.
Approaching death retreated his steps.
You spoke and life came back to me.
And the deep wound was healed in an
instrument.
I looked and behold a new world.
Of adventure with love and hope, ne-
twined.
There was the content and harmony.
Nestled on the wings of the silver
night.
We looked together. It was heavenly to
me.
To see you. You hold my hand and
chime me.
To your tatter breath. You blamed me
once and again.
And like that once was bitter sweet
fresh and sweet.
CHARLES II D. ENTER
(To be continued.)
THANKSGIVING HYMN
By M. ELIZABETH. BOWDEN:
Thee, Father, Father, for this day,
And grant to be bidden,
Our hearts are full, we cannot tell
Of half the thin. Then worth well,
We thank our maker, Savior King,
We thank Thee and thy serv. we sing
We thank Thee for the man to be
Alkindred and from counting for
We thank thee, Lord, that we have
bride
In our own text, whatsoever be held,
We thank our maker, Savior King,
We thank Thee for the welcome way,
That we must treat from day to day,
And for the test, it gives true man,
To prove their worth and acumen
We thank our maker, Savior King,
We thank Thee, to that we believe
Our spirit. Here, our heart rejoices
Try gracious Presence with me,
We sturge up and know no fear,
We thank Thee and thy prince son,
We thank Thee for the bonus light,
And for release from this grade spirit,
We thank Thee and thy prince son,
We thank Thee and thy prince son.
CHRISTMAS CALL
Number one call for Christmas celebrations
in the city of New York.
SLAVE, LET ME BE THE JOAN OF ARC
Slave, let me be the Joan of Arc.
He died as well as anyone.
He was a man of virtue, who is dead.
A slave commanded to be.
For I was born where freedom thrills
Bernath Columbia's sky,
And I have heard the voices that
Tcalled Joan to Die.
He stood, as nothing must hide,
Old Glory waves in my!
God is above, and voices sing
Tcalled Joan to realize true.
I came upon someone else,
Bebalde, he said,
Ahmed, are families that saint,
And these 60ths rose to save.
I only hear the battle cry,
My heart leans into fame.
"Lead me on and crush, denim!"
Bright streams the Red, the White, the
Blue
My charms cannot wait—
Never to go, I always with me.
Before it is too late!
O let me be your Joan of Arc.
King Simons's son, brave!
Charge on with me, to victory.
And prove that set me on stairs.
And, when you stand, on native shore,
Meath Red, the Black and Green,
Rammans humble mills, white heart,
Beat warm for Southern Quinn.
Columbus star, and strings shall
shield.
No covard heart in me—
So let me be thy Joan, or And,
Set the black man free.
SHAD DINNE, leap fryn the stair and stripes
I waved my curtis of gold,
Dedeked my trown and virgin breast.
Bent warm beneath in mild?
Ahl names, shall serve you away.
The vision that I pave
A Joan of Adele stage and stripes
That rose lost hearts should haint.
Sink Shad DINNE, because be my alma,
To lend it is reed to victory.
That mind is treasured but
ETERNAL TREW DUNLAND
115 Ender St. Dalville, ID.
LIBERTY HALL'S LATEST LIVING
BY A. MARSSON
The glorious hale of the morm.
And birth and flowers all womely born,
In chanting praises, the reply
The prowling heart, the driest fears
For darkness alds it's plain!
So are the morning's and appreh
Family—the time's beautiful sister.
Truth's fustuous beams adorn;
And mankind walks with tears strained
ease.
The breathing of the tree.
The beast of greed and selfishness.
At war with whom's plan?
Mother.
The approaching son of Man.
Arlas, O Ethiopian daughter, rise
From thine Ancient sleep.
And to the beast a lift thine eyes.
The trust with Allah's help.
Not dead, but plaining angels said.
These hands stretched forth head of
Arlas.
His children shall be born.
O morulous day of peace on earth,
And good will man to man.
Soul must we herald in thy birth.
Decided since then began.
On God for war and strife must cease.
O Alm, that all be free.
On Godship, that all will be saved.
Be born naturally.
ELEGY, WRITTEN IN A
STRANGE LAND
I know not the day when my time will
come.
To have living climes for my own dead
home.
To have my own home for my own
dream.
To take my own earth in the land of my
own life.
I know not the thoughts that they have
for me—
One of them own that they have did
From the time Marina Garvey was twenty, he held an enthusiastic vision of great accomplishment for himself and his race. He believed in himself and his race.
Mr. Negra man or woman, do you believe in yourself and your race?
You need enthusiasm, vision, imagination. You need all these things in order to visualize the possibilities of yourself and your race and just in that proportion you have enthusiasm, vision and imagination you will contribute to the great accomplishment of your race.
CHARGES NEGRO
WITH NOT KNOW-
ING OWN HISTORY
Flames Educational System
(Bespoke to the Negro World)
Washington, D. C. Nov. 7—Do the one of the national composition of *B. hernandez schlumberger* and students of Negro history, which convenes at Brennish, Va., next week in the strife annual conference of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, Dr. Carter G. Woodson, the director, is a statement journal from this city today, accented the Negro's deploration of their own history. "We are the Negro," he says, "the street with the lack of historicalism of its own racial history, but the several exposures this importance among the more intelligent and esteemed members of the back.
13. Patrick, baptized before the world, was a model of holiness, was in Martes. These "sacrifices" I challenge the world to spurn to the country. The Madrid had, upon the advent of Rome with their blood four hundred years before St. Patrick was born, and the Christian Church was then well established. I advocate Church separation just as white and common people do, and pray for the priests and mins. Then we would not have to sit in the white Catholic Church and its tradition as I have been copies of times. I will suffer no nuisances to be offered to the black race, because the world owes them too much.
We are proud of our black skins and spoyly hair because we are made in the image and Thinness of God. There is not a page in history, ancient or modern, that would cause the black man to hunch, except the years he bent under the roles of slavery in America and in the West Indies under England. For my people I dare to be a Dale; for my people I dare to die.
45 Newark Ave. Jersey City.
HIS EXCELLENCY J.
W. H. EASON, THE
AMERICAN LEADER,
SWEEPS THE WEST
His Expedition I. W. H. Bacon, the American leader, who is touring the West, addressed a large and enthusiastic gathering in Waterloo, Iowa, the second week in November. The Evening Counties and Reporter, of that place gave him large headlines. The skating rink in the Forum was crowded to the very edge while he spoke on "A Worldwide Movement" for the Unification of Negro Interests. "The African Movement" "The Aspirations of the New Negro" and "The New Negro in Business."
The Dr. Kerns only invites the U. K. B. as a world-wide movement for the quification, organization and benchmarking of the colored race in all lands, and to the same extent to defend the same relation to the Negro population, the organization stands to the Jews and the Irish Freedom Society in the Irish.
He presented the many affixed phases of the movement, fraternal spiritual communion, financial, commercial' and political. He was accompanied by Mr. W. de Freeman.
MR. CHARLES' WORK IN CUBA COMMENDED
Mr. W. de Charles.
P.O. Box 101.
Dallas, Texas, No. 10.
Respected life is with a heart filled with respect for the enmune the opportunity to communicate you to the New World and to the World. International Association and its Progress in the city of Gatamanta.
With others would become aware and follow your old example, for we were more from rural boroughs than in every district, branch and chapter to learn the best of native triumphs until we shall have found ourselves among the people enjoying the coolness of a free and restored Africa.
EDUARDO V. MORALES
Chambalectores to Chile.
Buenos Orientes, República de Chile.
ENTHUSIA
INDIFFERENCE new
INDIFFERENCE new
name and private use.
ENTHUSIA is the
name of the class.
New York, Nov. 18. Under the protecting fields of the American flag, Communists, Socialists, members of the Workers' League and various other radicals gathered in the New Star Casino in East 107th street yesterday afternoon and cheered predictions of the coming of the "workers' revolution" and deposited the Conference for the Limitation of Armaments at Washington as "one great, grand, glorious fake."
The meeting called by the newly organized American Labor Alliance, which aims to establish a workers' society republic in the United States, was attended by nearly 500 men and women, many of the women wearing red hats, skirts and necklaces. Young men and girls sold radical literature in the alista. American flags were draped from the balconies and over the speakers' stand, and the stage was bordered with great strips of red, white and blue hunting.
While the meeting was primarily called to discuss the Washington conference, the speakers took the opportunity to advocate the "workers' revolution" and rule of the proletariat, declaring that only communism could
$750.00
If I Fail to Grow Hair!
World's Wonder Hair
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For dressed, fashioned hair and skincare,
the supply trainers will show a Grower's
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Girl's Hair-Wool which puts the Wearer's
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grown hair, wired to last the Jewel's Wonder
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Washington Warehouse, N.Y., Ct.
Stampe & B. R. Bay, New York City
In Writing Plate Notation This Paper.
WASH IS ONE OF THE
ear translated steam into the dri-
er changed pig, from into steel a
bring 'real world peace.' The conference at Washington assists being frequently referred to as 'a sake,' was delivered to be a meeting of imperialistic powers to divide up the spoils of the war.
"We must impress upon the working class the struggle that lies before them," said Edward Lindgren, secretary of the Worker League, in declaring for the need of a revolution. Many thousands of lives may have to be sacrificed. We must fight for our powers as they did in Russia. ———
Mr. Lindgren then declared for the "dismantment of the capitalist class" but warned the workers that they must not disarm, but must prepare to arm and show that "we are not afraid to use them in the internet of our class."
"Dismantment as discussed at Washington," he added, "means nothing to the working class. The working class cannot be pacifists as long as the struggle between capitalists and the working class continues. The fight will
Repetition by S
A REAL B
A
LIBERTY
120 to 148 W
THANKSGIVEN
THURSDAY, NO
At 8.15
MUSICAL
AB
MIDNIGHT
by the Musical
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMP
Musical Program from 8.30
Every Member and Association S
Full Force of Black
Get Your Tickets at the O
or at Liberty H
AQMISSION
given them declared for the
out of the capitalist class"
the workers that they might
but must prepare to arm
that we are not afraid to
the interest of our class"
as discussed at Wash-
added, "means nothing to
class. The working class
specialists as long as the
twelve capitalists and the
continuum. The fight will
peace, as this could one
about representatives
ing class. He said it
must also be representative.
He said the Limitations
Conference was
glorious fake," and that
the country had brou-
n in an effort to get the c
to spend less money for
order that they may be
their $20,000,000,000 debt
Repetition by Special Request
REAL BIG NIGHT
AT
LIBERTY HALL
120 to 148 West 139th Street
THANKSGIVING NIGHT
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24TH
At 8.15 o'Clock
MUSICAL REVUE
AND
MIDNIGHT CARNIVAL
by the Musical Talent of the
MUSICAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCI-
ial Program from 8.30 to 11—Ball from 11
Member and Friend of This
Association Should Attend
Full Force of Black Star Line Bar
our Tickets at the Office, 59 West 135th
or at Liberty Hall Any Night
MISSION , - - - 50
Every Member and Friend of This Great Association Should Attend
Get Your Tickets at the Office, 58 West 135th Street or at Liberty Hall Any Night
Don't Miss This Great Treat!
Be Early to Get Scab
THE BIG KEYS TO SUCCESS
living force for transportation
and steel into engines nor perfected radio-activity for
G KEYS TO SUCCESS
e for transportation.
auto enginea nor perfoced radio-activity f
A copy of the records for all Divisions, Branches, Chapters and members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association has been stolen from the Secretary-General office by some one who was employed by the organization, either as an officer, an employee or an agent. This record, as stolen, may be used by the person or persons concerned, to write to the members and officers of the divisions of the organization for their own administer or other purposes.
Divisional officers and members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association receiving letters from organizations or other movements or individuals asking them to transfer their allegiance from the U. N. L. A. to thain, or asking any obligation, will ignore such appeals, and will realize immediately that such communication had its origin in the degree of the organization, movement or individual to undermine the solidarity of the Universal Negro Improvement Association.
You have joined the Universal Negro Improvement Association for the realization of an object. You should support it for that object and not allow others who may be more self-sacrifice to contuse you by distributing your measure finance in supporting everything, and weakening all when you could have supported one good thing and make it succeed.
Look out for new communications. Send them to our office.
By order.
After undergoing strenuous repaira has been reopened. We are now in a much better position to serve you. Therefore we call upon our former customers and wall-wishers to leave orders to call for your wet wash or finished Laundry at 63 West 142d Street or at the Boot in Liberty Hall, and we will assure you
So do not forget to let us do your washing because all our work is done by experienced hands
Therefore it can only remain open through your Individual support. Thanking for your past patronage and hoping you will continue to do your bit towards the
UNIVERSAL STEAM LAUNDRY
OUR MOTTO—"EFFICIENCY AND SERVICE"
UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRY.
JOHN HABLER, 1837
BLACK STAR LINE PASSENGERS AND FREIGHT
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: statemnen and legislators,
however, come forward. They also
Seaver save
saris that world peace can,
mi the nations enty as it has
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are, pesce-loving and law,ehiding. Fer
‘woeld peare cations siust eetablah t3-
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~ Awakenes Negro in Eetabii
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‘that of the groups {ust mentioned?
Sa tee te oa
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fooe te (cllenghle sights that ue
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tween peoplea and races Arw tescap
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Grtatned of lod: ¢hat their viotailo
te to and brings terrible dlsaster and,
if pervieted In, Bal artructioa.
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can wo expect any ewoepiog reduction
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—
NUESTRA EDICION ESPECIAL
NAVIDADES" DEL NEGRO WORLD
Este período publicitario um número especial de Navidad el 15 de Dicembre proximo. Centenário artesial, porprominentes miembros de muestra raza de todas partes del mundo. Publicaciones literarias por estadistas, entre los cuales figuran Reyes, Presidenta, Ministro y Secretarios de Estado.
Las mejores compuestos remilidas serán premidad, mediante la
sanción de un jurado elegido para el efecto, basadas en las siguientes
materias:
Poema, da Navidad.
El Problema de la Raza Negra.
Los Proyectos y Proposiciones de U. N. L. A.
Historia de Nilo.
Afris Redimida.
Medida de Unión entre Americas y Antillenas do Raza.
Media de Unión entre Negros de Occidente y de Africa.
Relacción con las demás Razas.
SECCIÓN DE FOTOGRABADOS
Fotografías de muestras bellezas femininas en los Estados Unidos, América Central, America del Sur, las Antillas y Africa. Enviamos la fotografía de algn joven que Ud. conduce de muestras raza. Se ha仁n selecciona, se fotografía enlaja desde las altas ariña indicadas, por un cuenta competent; y la fotografía de cada una de estas secciones seleccionada, se publicará en la sección de fotografías de este número授领a de Navidades, y se hará un premio a cada bellaza así seleccionada.
comunado.
Dado el caso de empate en el computo, un premiro do igual valor se dara a las contendientes que obtengan igual número de votos en el computo.
LA EDICIÓN DE NAVIDADES
La edición de Navidades salora el 15 de diciembre, 1921. Todas las ordenes para este número deben ser enviadas a la officiala del Negro World, de modo que llegum en 6 antes del 30 de noviembre, 1921. Esta edición será limitada, y las ordenes serán registradas en medida que sean recibida durante el periodo antes indicado. Envié en orden antes de que se ague la edición.
Este número especial no será entrado a muestras númericas, a mena que sea ordenado. Effectivo debe acompanar a otras ordenes.
Este número especial costará 15 centavos en los Estados Unidos,
y veinte centavos en el extranjero. Gíries Postales u otras ordenes de pago deben acompañar los pedidos, de otro modo no se prestara atención p.e.
Los agentes del Negro World en los Estados Unidos podrán obtener cita a razón de 10 centavos por copia, en cantidad de veinte y cinco más, pago por adelantado; y los agentes en el 'extraangero a 15 centavos por copia, inyugando gastos de zellos, por veinte y cinco m más copias; pago por adelantado.
Politica del Dr. W. E. B. Du Dola
Politica del Hen. Monres Trotter
Politica del Dr. Robert R. Moton
Politica del Hen. Marcus Garvey
Fotografías de mestras belleras feces
America Central, America del Sur, las.
fotografía de alguna joven que Ud. com-
seleciones de las fotografía envasadas
por un committee competent; y la fotografía
seleccionada, se publicará en la sección
especial de Navidades, y se hará un
picionada.
Dado el caso de empate en el címo
se dara a las contendientes que obtengo
computa.
La edición de Navidades saldrá el 10 ordenes para este número deber ser World, todo que lleguen en, 6 o 10 Esta edición será limida, y las ordenes se recibirán, durante el periodo antes de que se agote la edición. Este número especial no será menos que sea ordenado. Efectivo debe Este número especial costará 15 y veinte centavos en el extrangrado. Gí pago deben acompañar los pedidos, de o a ellas. Los agentes del Negro World en los estás a razón de 10 centavos por copia, mía, pago por adelantado; y los agentes por copia, inculpando gastos de dellos, pago por adelantado.
ULTIMA ALOCUCION
DEL PRESIDENTE
DE GUATEMALA
Concidadapana: En estos momentos histórico tengo el honor de hablar por ultima vez can president de la república y por la primera como jefe del Estado de Guatemala, que en unión de El Salvador y Honduras tan constituido la República de Centro América. Cuando tomé posición del alto puesto con que me hignaría mis conciidadanas, prometí -trabajar con todo empeño y perseverancia en pro del ideal nacionalista y esta pro la he cumplido; y hoy tengo laatisfaction de venir a anunchar a los guatemaltecos que la Unión de Centro América se ha consumado legalmente con la constitución federal, que ha hecho respacer elorsoamente la patria de 1821.
Supo el pueblo de Guatemala en heroica resolución, reinforzar en su suelo los principios de libertar y de democracia el al amparo del orden y de la justicia los brazos fraternalmente a sus hermana para realizar la constante aspiration del patriotismo y principir su seguimiento siglo de existencia ta la egica de la pas formado la inicladalidad que en mala hora rompiera la inexperiencia, una que las pasiones de los centroamericanos. Adi el que los pobres han sido los inicladadores de la reconstitución nacional, v el gobierno de Guatemala ha debido ser fiel inteprtepte del almappa y, secundaria en sus ideales como lo impone el deber y lo señala el patriotismo.
El pacote de anilom
El Grun' Congreso de las munci-
palidades de Centro Antártica re-
sumido en la Antártica Guatemala en
noviembre de 1920, en Benjamín, la-
bore preparó el adventimiento del
pacto de la unión sustituido en del
pacto de San José de Costa Rica,
dia 19 de enero del mismo, y con su
sección de es traido, se imbibió
en la ciudad de Tegucigalpa, y se
20 de julio de este año, la Antártica
federal constituyente que decidir
la consiliación centramente
tangamos col汗ante una gota de tangro africano en muestra venna. Las cortes, las jueces y los abogados blancos lo testifican en todas partes; y ahora vamos a unirnos basados en esto principal. Los Negros no han dicho esto; los blancos lo dojeron, y no vamos a permitirles el que cambien en politica en este particular, para un propia conveniencia. Ellos tahen que esta política no puede racicarse en el Sur de Africa; quizas en America, donde los blancos estan en mayor número que los negros, y en otras partes del globo, donde las condiciones sean las mismas; pero cuando se trate de Africa, ya es algo distinto; pues los negros estan en mayor número que los blancos, y en todas las edades la ley de la moyoria predomina. Por consigulente, tratan de cambiar esa política en el Sur de Africa; pero gracias a Dios, la voza se ha escarpecido por el universo entero, y los Negros en todas partes realizamos que SOMOS TODOS UNO, siempre que por nuestras vena circula una onza de sangre africana.
La Baza Blanca En El Sur De Africa Quilaro Igualdad Social Con La Baza Negra—La asociación Universial Para El Alejandro De La Baza Negra Objina a La Baza Blanca En Afrika A Utiliza De Sn Orgullo Social—Nuestra Baza Dela Mentencio Udida Y Equuar Condescençao Harta Que Haya Un Afrika Llibre Y Redimida
Conciidadencia de la raza, Salud:
Reproduciendo hoy a continuación datos publicados en la "Noticiana de la Tardis" de Londres, con fecha de 15 de Octubre de 1921, acerca de Blomfontein, Sur de Africa. Las narratos revelan la confeción siniestra del General Hargom director del partido Nacionalista en el Sur de Afrika.
Apelo, puea, a los mixtos y negros del mundo para que no permitan a otras razas el degrado por beneficio propio. Si éramos negros en 1913, somos negros aún en 1921. Si en 1913, antea de la guerra europea, no éramos competentes para asocianos con los blancos en el Sur, Oeste, Norte y Este de Afrique, en los Estados Unidos y en todas partes, siendo aún negros, no debleramos ser considerados competentes para asocianos con ellas. No permitimos bajo ninguna circunstancia, el que ninguna raza nos use para su conveniencia. El japonés es siempre japonés; el anglo-sajon es siempre anglo-sajon; y el Negro acrd siempre Negro, aunque no asiente a la conveniencia, del General Hertzton y a sus asesuces.
El General Hertzog es un hombre blanco dirigendo un gran número de blancos en el Sur de Africa, con la infinidad política de una república Sir Africana independiente. El partido Nacionalista del Sur de Africa ha extendido por varia años y ha ganado terreno en el campo político de aquel país. Hada dos años la Acoelacón Universal Para el Adelante de la Raza Negra y los pueblos Negroes del mundo, emprenderon una campaña de propuesta por una Nacional Africana Independiente para los Negraes del mundo, preando por consigulente, consternación y enlocha entre los enigradados que habían el contente de Afrikan. El General Hertzog, como el resto de los demos enigradados en Afrika, han visto muy perturbados por el tema antiformal de "Africa para los Afrikanos." Ellos por fuerza han tenido que cambiar su converación y su política.
Estos planes han sido ejecutados en contra de nuestra raza en diferentes partes dal mundo. Han sido ejecutados en las Antillas por cierre de ochenta años, y han causado casi la destrucción de la gran ambición del Negro antillano hacia su libertad política, industrial y social. Ha sido solamente la aventura de la Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra, la que ha traido un cambio de condiciones en los asuntos de las Antillas.
"Divide y venceras" ha sido la política de unas razas en contra de las otras; y aún actualmente vemos a la raza blanca alentando a los Negros mixtos, para que se rebelen en contra de los Negros de pura raza, y así dividílen, les sirra más fácil dominar a todos. Esto se ha venido ejecutando por más de quintientos años, porque como raza, ignorábamos sus tácticas; pero los mixtos y Negros del presente, hoy estudiantes de altas escuelas, colegios y universidades, van a emplear su talento en contra de la táctics de los blancos, y demostrar al Sur de Africa que tal división entre los pueblos negros no puede il debe existir.
e Porqué dividimos cuando se acerca la victoria?
Un blanco, el General Hertzog, hablendose compentrado de la imposibilidad de una superlorda blanca en el Sur de Afres alisata y aconseja "con cantos de gorriones" a una parte de nuestra raza, para que se rebelo en contra de la puerta, de modo que se beneficie la raza opuesta. e Qué elemento do nuestra raza está dispuesto a aportar tal arbitrariedad?
Estoy convencido de que los directores blancos en este país y en todas partes, creen que las dos razas tienen destinos sociales separados y distintos; por estd razón, dife; dejad que la gran raza blanca se desarrollo en al mismo socialmente; dejad que la gran raza negra ejecute su desarrollo social; y aconsejaria a los pueblos negros del Sur de Afres el no prestar ni un atomo del derecho de raza al General Hertzog y a sus asesucases, porque al ellos hace cuatro años eran escrupulosos para admitir sangre negra en la sociedad blanca, nosotros estamos hoy muy orgullosos con la nuestra, hemos de hacer ver al universo en general, que es UN HONOR pertenecer a la raza africana; que es UN HONOR el ser Negro.
En cuanto podamos unir en un solo cuerpo a los cuatro citas, millones de Negros del mundo, y entremos en nuestro desarrollo en general, podemos demandar un cambio de política, no solamente del Général Hertzog, sino del mundo entero.
En todas las escenas de híterra humana, siempre ha adelantado un papele fronto un humbre de nuestra rasa, para probar que tenemos derecho ha en reconocidos entre las tal llamadas razas favortas de la humanidad. Si recurrimos a los anales de la híterra antigua, hallamos que entre los grandes oradores, grandes cerebros y grandes educacionistas, una esplendida avalancha de elementos de la rasa han illuminado las puertas de dicha híterra con el fulgor de una gruda, en teosofia, atrae, mulesa, clenias, intrupriacions, invención, No. se ha requisito para casar en una humbre de sauge africana no haya contribuido de mundanidad a mar. MARCUS GARVKY en el prechaño, como se dirige en John Hancock de alpinismo en una fulgara Declaracion de Independencia, exhibido en su humbre en donde la fulgara es encargará de sentirse varado girar y limpiar. J.E.B.
a femmina, en los Estatos Unifeng,
las Anillas y Africa. Enviando la
encuesta de nuestra raza. Sa haría
as desde los litos arriba indicados,
rafa de cada um de deis secciones
don de fotograbados de deste número
m premio a cada bella enal selec-
cumputo, um premio de igual valor
engan igual número de votos en el
6 el 15 de diciembre, 1921. Todas
enviadas a la oficina del Negro
antes del 30 de Noviembre, 1921.
senas en registraras a medida que
antes indicado. Envié en orden antes
enviado a nuestros cuerteiros,
de debe acompañar a estas ordenes.
15 centavos en los Estados Unidos,
Gipos Postales o otras ordenes de
de otro modo no se prestará atención
in los Estados Unidos podrán obtener
apia, en cantidad de veinte y cinco
centavos en el 'extragrando' a 15 centavos,
os, girante y cinco o más copias).
En el trascendental y serio paso
que Ganestela da jal, ni el mierto
ni la responsabilidad son mitos
Atento a la voluntad de la ancioca,
he escuchado aus anhelos y en
carriandos por la sensa del derecho,
liega a este inmortal día en que
aurge—nombre ni patriotismo de los
hombres de buena voluntad—la Rep-
publica Federal de Centramentera.
Legitima aegraclon
Tenemos que felicitamos al ver que la suprema apinación de los gran patríos, de los cannatates luchadora de la gran causa' nacmal, llega a su realización sin huchas fratriadas que enangrienten el suelo de la patria, porque dehesmo reconocer que a pesar de las pasiones politica y de las rivalidades, se han impuesto la senater y el partifolio persigulando el bien comuna para la realización felix de nuestros destinos futuros.
Los Estados de Guatemala, El Salvador y Honduras integran por ahora la Neocalidad Centrionalrica y esperan que se ven bien por los Estados hemírios de Nicaragua y Costa Rica, porque eso puglios un deben permear separadamente los estos llamados y los llamaremos stempre-hacía el hogar comin, con noble y caritas: fratriadido.
Debemes complacernos· hondamente de que Quentoftamferia se reconstiuye y renace bajo el amparo de la justicia y de la libertad y debe peinsanne con sergiidad y patriotismo, que sólo se necesita de cordura, pa y de trajato para para la patria grande canine libre, majestuos y repeateda incla su prosperidad, y su grandeza.
Los guebios son los llamados a mantener con le' y con firmea la grande obra realizada y de prestigial y g. emencer a la patria con todas sus energias y con todas sus virtudes.
La bandera di Centro Antorfo
ein penario ni merecnilo, dehk
renocer, en el altra empire torna el
hidlogehil schirlo inscindamos
para rendirlo cono bumenjo ante
los allares de Cenotamérica que se
quiblum abestenthida los egres-
damos lama. Dlosa, Ullon, Libertad,
Vuixro campanaria y ampon...
C. Hexaura
Gran Cooperación Por
Parta Del Elemento Dá
Nuestra Raza De Habla
Española
Entra las varias sollicitudes y sus
escripciones a nuestra Asociación y
periodico de la misma, como con-
secuencia de la publicación de nuestra
planta en español, a continuación
insertamos, una comunicación de
de una muestra nuevos suscritores.
Negro World.
66 West 135th Street New York, NY
Muy Selena miros
A contenido de una entrevista
quite sobre el Sensor A-H. Quiño
sobre la Organización. Ilustra
"Asociación Universal para el Afon-
loño de la Raza Negra." me ha
interesado tanto al significado,
que siento el desgo de ear informado
dialectamente acerca de sus thues
y propósitos.
Va quito que periódico se escribe
en "Cantáblica", que es de mucho
gusto tajerilbínea como lejos de
dicho diario, para luego liñearse
como miembro de la Asociación,
y envilar la contribución correspondiente
para esa obra que tan justamente
lo merce. Por lo tanto
incluso sivahe halar un giro postal
por valor de $3.00 (tres pesos) para
pago de mi usurpación por un uño.
Krogandale envie los numeros enmanalmente al recibo de esta, a mi dirección, quedo de Ud.
Frate alimenté.
(Firmado) M. VELASCO.
Jalme 8, Cam quey, Cuba.
U. N. L. A. REPOSITORY
Discos para fonografos
Cumpre los discos pamforgos de la U. N. I. A. por artistas de la raza, a precios reducidos. Enviamos ordenes a todas partes mediante pago por adelantado.
Lista de precios
Agentes en los Estados Unidos.
$9.00 por docena, mas gastos de fiesta.
Agentes en el extranjero. $10.00 por docena, mas gastos de sellos.
Disco por correr, $1.00 cada unid mas gastos de sellos.
Precio en nuestra oficina, $0.90 cada uno.
U. N. I. A. REPOSITORY
U. 50 Oeste, Calle 135
Cuidado de Nueva York
SE SOLICITAN ANUNCIOS EN ESPAÑOL PARA ESTA ELANA.
JUST OUT
MARCUS CARVEY CIGARS
AGENTS
ORDER YOUR HOLIDAY HURRY
NOW
This is a solicitation of our special
Wholesale prices.
CORDARA
HANDCUTTING
150 per bar
100 per librum
PRINTING
150 per bar
100 per librum
FURNISHING
150 per bar
100 per librum
also the best on the market today,
very personally also, almost always
sale.
LNO CIRO, MER
B0: West, 135th Street
NEW YORK CITY
MEN
WEEKLY FINE
Make
Your Resume
or
Surprise
Bake
For Cash
or
Salary
FREE ON DAYS. Marcus Garvey will write
a letter to you on Saturday or Sunday.