The Negro World
Saturday, October 28, 1922
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
THE
Negro World
WARNING TO NEGROESTOPROVIDE AGAINST RETURN OF HARD TIMES
"THE FOOTBALL CLASSIC OF THE YEAR"—LINCOLN UNIVERSITY VS. HOWARD UNIVERSITY AMERICAN LEAGUE PARKING WASHINGTON, D. C., THANKSGIVING DAY, THURSDAY MORNING, AT 10:30 O'CLOCK, NOVEMBER 20, 1920.
ADMISSION: Box Seats, $2.00 each; Grand Stand, $1.50; General Admission, $1.00. Reservations should be accepted early by Post Office Money Order or Certified Check. Address EMMETT J. SCOTT, Secretary-Treasurer, Howard University.
The Indispensable Weekly
The Voice of the Awakened Negro
VOL. XIII. No. 11
WARNING TO AGAINST LELLOW MEN OF THE NEGRO RACE, Greeting:
It becomes my duty as one of the leaders of the Universal Negro Improvement Association to draw to your attention the conditions that affect us as a people. It is for me to inform you that from my observation it is apparent that we are approaching another crisis in the history of our race.
SAFEGUARD OURSELVES!
The economic world is gradually returning to normal. War abnormalities have all disappeared, or are fast disappearing. The industrial slump that wrecked so many million Negro homes immediately following the cessation of war is also clearing away, and today Negro men who could not find employment up to twelve months ago and were rendered destitute and hungry are now employed in profitable occupations. The major portion of our race has gone back to work. But what is happening? We find that the same recklessness and indifference in preparing for the future as we exhibited in the past are now being followed by the millions of our people who have gone back to work. Apparently we have all forgotten the hard and dreary days of unemployment, the days when we walked from place to place, receiving no encouragement and no help, to fall back upon despondency as our only hope. Some people who were so despondent and broken-hearted are today forgetful of everything but that they are earning enough to indulge in the customary light-hearted sports and spendthrift manner, without taking a thought of the morrow.
INDUSTRIAL MAKESHIFTS
The warning I want to give is that these days of light-heartedness and happiness will again disappear if we make no effort to safeguard ourselves against the threatened future. Our economic prosperity today, limited as it is, is based upon the foundation laid by an alien face that is not disposed to go out of its way to prepare for the economic existence of anyone but itself; therefore, our present prosperity, as far as employment goes, is purely accidental. It is as accidental as it was prior to the war of 1914, when colored men were employed in different occupations, not because they were wanted but because they were filling the places of other men who were not at the very moment available. We are still filling places, and as time goes on and the age grows older our occupations will be gone
"THE FOOTBALL CLASSIC OF THE YEAR WASHINGTON, D. C., THANKS ADMISSION: Box Seats, $2.00 each; Grand Stand by Post Office Money Order
A Newspaper Devoted Solely to the Interests of the Negro Race
NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1922
THE NEGRO STATUS IN THE ECONOMIC REGULATIONS OF THE RACES
MORE SUPPORT FOR NEGRO ENTERPRISES REQUESTED
POOR LEADERSHIP WITHIN THE RACE
from us because those for whom we filled the places will soon appear, and as they do we shall gradually then find our places among the millions of permanent unemployed.
OUR LEADERS
The thing for the Negro to do is to adjust his own economic present as well as future. A race that is solely dependent on another for its economic existence sooner or later is bound to die, and as we have in the past been living upon the mercies shown us by others and by the chances obtainable, and have suffered therefrom, so will we suffer in the future if an effort is not made now to adjust our own affairs.
It is sad to see that we have such limited leadership, which makes it impossible for us to be properly advised and guided in what we should do as a people. We have but very few who are interested in us to the extent of pointing us the way to our political, economic and social salvation. Our leaders are no better than the majority; they are selfish, crafty, narrow-minded and visionless; hence, they render themselves incapable of directing us in the way we ought to go; nevertheless, we shall not by our own neglect allow ourselves to perish, for perish surely we will if we continue in the riotous, thriftless and thoughtless conduct of the present.
To depend upon other races to carve out a future for us is like depending upon a broken stick. Through the great change that has come over humanity and the whole world, every race perforce is looking out for itself. It is purely a question of the survival of the fittest race, and for Negroes to expect other people to be concerned about their future is like expecting the devil to be concerned about the happiness of the good spirits that ought to exist in the realms above.
We will drag along as a part of the economic regulations of today, until, according to the arrangements of those who have created the
AR"—LINCOLN UNIVERSITY VS. HOWARD GIVING DAY, THURSDAY MORNING, AT 10, $1.50; General Admission, $1.00. Reservations should for Certified Check. Address EMMETT J. SCOTT, Secr
Reaching the Mass of Negroes
The Best Advertising Medium
PRICE: FIVE CENTS IN GREATER NEW YORK
SEVEN CENTS ELSEWHERE IN THE U. S. A.
TEN CENTS IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES
O PROVIDE IARD TIMES conditions, they are able to supplant us for those for whom they planned.
THE NEGRO'S DILEMMA
Nobody thinks of the Negro; he is, as I have said, but an accident in the political, social and economic laws of alien creation. We have no fixed place in the economic life of others except that of serfdom and peonage. Rising in spirit as we are, we feel dissatisfied with such conditions. We want greater opportunities. But how can we get them except we create them for ourselves, and these are the times for us to make the effort to so create the things that we want. While we are earning money by our labor in these days of readjustment, why not be thrifty enough to save a part of it for the dark days ahead? Why not be considerate enough to practice the co-operative spirit by which we will help each other to foster those industrial enterprises that would help to make us industrially and economically independent? We find that very little encouragement, if any, is being given to Negro institutions and enterprises that are seeking to hold their own in the competitive field against those of other races who are seeking the support of our race. We still find Negroes giving more patronage and support to the enterprises of other people than they do to their own. This will lead us, if we are not careful, back to the old conditions.
The Universal Negro Improvement Association today offers the opportunity for every Negro to co-operate with his brother to put over the biggest program ever undertaken by the race. We are seeking to unite the four hundred million members of our race the world over for one grand industrial, commercial, social, educational and political improvement and emancipation. If we can get all the members of the race to see the reasonableness of this program, then surely in a short while, even though others plan for our defeat and ruin, we, by our co-operative forces, will be able to lift ourselves to the highest plane of usefulness politically, economically and socially.
"LEST WE FORGET!"
Fellow men, I ask that you forget not the trials and troubles of the past. Buoy yourselves with the spirit of determination to co-operate in this mighty movement of ours and let us so adjust things as to make our race one of the independent racial forces of the day. You can support the program of the Universal Negro Improvement Association morally and financially. Morally, you can inspire others to join the movement; financially, you can send your support, whether it be $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, to the headquarters, Universal Negro Improvement Association, 56 West 135th Street, New York City, N. Y., U.S.A.
Feeling assured of your co-operation, with very best wishes for your success, I have the honor to be Your obedient servant.
MARCUS GAPVEY.
President General
Universal: Negro Improvement Association
New York.
UNIVERSITY, AMERICAN LEAGUE PARTY
D O'CLOCK, NOVEMBER 20, 1863
THE ORGANIZATION OF NEGROES NO LONGER AN IMPOSIBILITY
STIX HALL, New York, Bun-
ans bos on 22, 1922 —Atbough it
te re that the presence at Liberty
Mall @f the stalwart loader of the | ni
versal Negro Dnprovement Assucia,
\on 1p @ source of inspiration to the
large wembership of the New York
‘Local, meverthelons in hie ausence as
was the cuss tosisht. there Is no ov!-
dent lack of entbusiaam, which gives
proof of the fact (hat the followors
of the assuciayion are obscesod nut
eo much with the leadership but with
the principles for wUich the aasocia-
tion atande and that therefore they are
Getermned, deapive what the lender
enip may be, to aupport and carry on
the great work until the gual of Afri-
cap redemption and « free and
‘emancipated race has been achieved.
‘The mesting tonight was gonducied
by the Fourth Aasistant Preaident-
General, Lady Mencietia Vinturr Davie,
who * us ably assisted hy severe: mom
Dere of the Earutive Council who
fouk their usual places un the plas
form After (he uaual opening pre
Lminarics a eplondid mus. al progs am
was rendered by the bund and the
UN FA chur after whin the
epeech maxing followed
‘The nrat apoakor was Hon 4 A
Haynes, why spoke un the eutjert A
Mighty Movement = The Laivernal
Negro Improvement Asagetation. he
aid, way 20 mighty that ft hue caused
the governments of tho /world to halt
and take notice, was feo mighty. #0
big and a0 large that oven those whe
& fow yoars ago louked upon the w-
waniaution of Nogroes into one solid
Dody a4 an unpossibliity were now
compriiod to acknowledge that the
Negro everywhere has come io his
senses und is clamouring for the same
rights und privileges that ate accorded
te other men Ho admoniened hie
hearers to fight on in tho battle for
{rican redemption and Negro emani'
Sarma sk on new rourege and ght
until Magulors of the Red. the Black
andthe Daaayare planed upon th
great continent Wf Africa.
Hon J switt Mpeko briefly on the
abject. “Struggling Deward Our Nu-
{ons Glory His remigke wore very
wmely and were well rageived. Ho
was followed by Hon 1 EL Carter,
Whe spoke on “Tho Three Ca df Late.
These tie said, wero Christ, Character
and Cash, These thro qualitieg the
epeaker said, were oasontial if the BFO- |
mm of the Universal Negro Improve
jont’ Aapociation I» to be put over ‘
rder that life must be expressed in
best form it was necessary that wo
aus In the mad rush of life and find
‘Diirlet of our being, und after hav-
\@ She Christ we will evolve «
haracter that can be trusted and
hen we can mageh forth with cash In
ur pocket and gt our command to do
things worth while in this lite,
jen will trust bs and God will re-
ect us.
‘TUE last speaker was Hon F A.
des Uternational Organiser, who
jelivered a spirited address that
forked thp audience up to a high
NRAESE SMthuslasm Ho declared that |
he two ncu who are attracting the
Attention of the world more than any
ther men today are Lloyd George and
Rierous Garvey The difference, how-
Prer, was that, though Lioyd Geurse
y fall and the British Empire might
jotter, oven though Marcus Garvey
ay be removed the Univoraal Negro
provement Association will atl! go
mM until Africa ie redeemed for the
$09,000,000 Negroes of the world
Following sro the speeches
{ HON. & A. HAYNES BPEAKS
‘The first speaker was Hon. 8. A
Haynes. who took for his subject “A
Mighty Movement.” and said-
As { look on this great cea of faces
My mind goes back to the days of
¢nolent Rome when thousands upon
Chousands of human beings focked ta
fhe amphitheatres to witness the strug-
gle betweon man and benst. But un-
ike the Romans of old wo are gathered
ero thie evening for a greater causo—
@ greater purpose Wo are gathered
Bere thia evening in Liberty Hall, as |
We are sorustamed to slo in order inet
we mhy unce agnin discum: the pro- |
gram for a teve and redeemed Africa.
The Universal Negro Improvement |
|
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Bee : Seen ore NNT E EN AS RS ce os
Association ea miKhty movempat Tt
te & movement (hat ve Milled with pos-
Awiition It ee movement that hae
Arawn together in thes surme ut few
years mare than 6.000400 pene The
Liiversat Negro Iaaruvement Associ
ation 1 & movement 20 mighty that it
has caused the governments of the
world to halt and take notice The
Univeraal Negro Improvement Asso!
ation is 80 mighty 1 so vig ie av
large hat even thuae why a few years
ago leoked upon the organiehtion uf
Negroes Into one solid body as an im:
‘possibility are sompelied to acknowl.
edge that the Negro everywhere has
‘come (o his aenaee and ie clamoring
Hor the name fants anid the game pens
eure that are accorded to other men
The Universi Negro. Improvement
[Association i the Negro « Gibraltar
Snot the ibraitar that greets the
mighty tines we they enter the great
Mediterranean sea but Ja the human
Goteattar knuwn aa the aoul | Whea
the oul ‘casen the human hody the
fe of the individual paneer wit ot |
foxiatence Ag it a with ‘he aul ao it
Jn with the Universal Negro Improve
movement out uf the life of the Negro
today and:we ton finan nut of excstence |
Founded by God
The Universal Negro improvement
Assocation Ia impregnable for it 18
not fouyded ty man hut by God Men
have cianged the aspect of things
material but men will never be able to
halt the Ualversel Negro Improvement
Association, because this struggle to-
warda African redemption la aanctifed |
with the teaaing of Him who died that
otherm may lve
Let mo say to you asl go away from
New York City anrrying vour greetings
to the thousands in the sunny soutn
that if thete was ewer at me in the lite}
ut this movement when. you shoul |
do your hent to bring whet the reall
sation of a great Afrkan Empire that
time is now If there was ever a timo
when you Young men and wemen|
should arixe and huckle on your armor |.
for Afri¢an redemption, that time 1a
now.
Fight On
The Univeral Negro Improvement
Asso: iation in calling upon the Nogroc
of the United States of America, upon
ine Negroen in the West Indies and
Central and South America, calling up- |.
yn the Negroes on the great continent
of Europe and Ania to fight on in the
pattle of African redemption. fight on
in the battle for Negro emancipation
The Univereal Negto Improvement
Association ip calling upon the 400,-
000,000 Negroes of the world to fight
on and not Le weary. take on new |,
courage and fight on until the colors
of the Red, the Black and the Green
are planted upon the great continent |
of Africa. (Applause)
Hon. Mr, Swift Bpeaks
The next speaker was Hon. Mr Swift,
who spoke briefly on the subject of
Btrugsiing Towards Gur National
Glory" He drew a vivid mental plc- |,
(ure of the Nogro in tho curly days of
slavery in the Western Hemisphere
struggling beneath the heels of oppres-
nion of the white race yet belleving in
iho protection of white people and
white govirnment, but. aaid he, since
ihe advent of the Universal Negro Im-
provement Association Negroes every: |.
whore have realized that if they must |
po tree, If thoy must enjoy the fruite |,
of democracy, if they must bask in the |,
sunshine of eternal freedom they must |
uomselves strike the blow and toar
Jown tho bara of slavery, break down |.
he barriers of oppression and walk |,
iumphantly into national glory it
je through the Universal Negro Im- |,
provement Association Inspiring the
Negroes of the world with a new belief |,
and now dealrea that we hope to bring |,
about the solution of our problem The |,
man who desires to be wealthy will],
ucqulre wealth; the man who believes |,
chat he can remove mountains will do|
4, and it is for that reason that the
Univereal Negro Improvement Associa: |,
lon aye to binck men and women |;
scattered over the entire world that ||
ihe time has come when we must be- |;
eve in ourselves and determine that |,
we must once and for all free ourselves |.
(rom the domination of allen races and
wnds, Applause.) i
The Three C's of Life
Hon, G. E. Carter spoke briefly on
“The Three C's of Lite” It te abso-|.
Jutely necessary, he said. in the fur- |)
wherance of Ifo or in th. furtherance |
of @ program of any proportion that |
men and women take cugnizance of |
hrge great C’a. A Iife in order that it |
might be resplendent with glory—that
it might be a success in every sense of |
the word—that it might be a life that!
can be emulated, surely must have in},
it es itp fret great C—Christ. A lite
without Christ does not amount to any-
bing that 1s worth the snap of a finger.
and when I speak of the Christ I am
speaking of that ideal, that one prin- | '
nipla, that one first cause, that one!
moving force that is calculated to make | |
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1922
‘The Universal Negro Improvement Association Has Succeeded in Organizing 5,000,000 |
Nogroes—Is Indispensable to the Life of the Negro—Men Cannot Halt Its Progress—
Is Founded of God and Will Live on Forever
LARGE ATTENDANCE AT LIBERTY HALL IN ABSENCE OF HON. MARCUS GARVEY
—INSPIRING ADDRESSES DELIVERED BY EXECUTIVE OFFICERS—HON. F. A.
TOOTE SAYS LLOYD GEORGE AND MARCUS GARVEY ARE ATTRACTING AT-
TENTION OF THE WORLD—LADY HENRIETTA VINTON DAVIS PRESIDES OVER
MEETING
Lloyd George May Fall and the British Empire Might Totter, but the U. N. I. A. Will
Go on Forever—African Redemption Drawing Near — Membership Admonished
to Stand Fast and Uphold Principles of Association )
ee Ee oes ee ee
What le Character?
The sorand great (which Is novos
mury om ebaraster Chaves ter ae thal
Which Wil leave ite impress upen the
World Reputation In wtat people my
about sou hut character Ie jut whet
yeu are Unless @ man has got some
jharacter ho never will be anything
‘There are some men and women who
oar uo moat enstaie reputation tut
where character in am biaek aw mud.
night’ Character san be relied upon,
chureeter ia that wn apeshe for
man and women in the world an that
the World cn lok at iyem and under
stand and knos. tnetr aria Chara ter
Will stand .he teat of the ages when
thin ald worn alow totter amd when
Unie oid world storll pass away Char.
Deter shail rema:n tor character te of
Goa
Man of Character Needed
Af the Untveranl Negro Improvement
Areociation Into be put over we have
got to have men and women of char-
actez who can be depended upon who
will do the things they know to be
Junt and right
The Last Great “C”
‘Tho last great “C* which I necos-
nary Ig ‘caah ‘A young man who tries
19 make a living cannot get along with-
MOB WHIPS MAYOR
IN NAME OF KLAN
Kansas Executive, Taken
Into Woods and Lashed,
_ Will Sue Town for
$100,000
COFFEYVILLE, Kan, Oct. 16—A
statement was given to the sheriffs
office today by Harold F. McGugin,
attorney for ‘Theodore Schierlman.
mayor of the village of Liberty, near
here, saying that Mayor Schieriman
had been called out of his office late
Saturday night, taken into the coun-
try by fifteen men in three motor cars,
and Inshed with biacksnake whips.
Schieriman has been mayor of Lib-
orty eighteen months and has lived
there forty years. Tho statement said
Mayor Schler.man would sue his town
for $100 000 under the Kansas mob lar
“Tha threa care drove out in the
country about four mites," said tho
statement. “The men tled hia hands to
‘a post, tore his upper clothing off and
lad about thirty stripes on hia bare
back.
‘They told him. ‘We are unknown to
you You have never seen ua Your
neighbors have had us do this to you
You aro ono of those fellowe that have
denounced the Klan“
“After about twenty stripes had
‘been given him, ho said “Mon. if thie
1s 100 per cent American, I dont Itke
it? One of the mon said “You dont.
ehh and they gave kim ten more
atriper, saying. “Maybe you will uke It
better.”
"In the whipping two mon did tt.
one on each side alternating. They
took him back two miles and turned
him out, saying: ‘Now keep your
feoe abut. tf you dor't, we will have
‘this to do again, and the next time wo
‘wil! use tar and feathers.“
Kansas Making Vigorous Inquiry inte
Leehing of Mayor
TOPEKA, Kan., Oct. 16 —Governor
Allen said today of the whipping ot
Mayor Schierlman of Liberty ‘The
responsibility rests on the shoulders of
those who employ the Alsguise and
preach the right of mobs to take the
law Into their own hands.”
State Attorney General Hopkins ts
making « vigorous investigation,
THE WORLD WAR AND CIVIL.
IZATION
‘The recent World War has given «
Rew aspect to civilization. It has cre-
ated—or, rather, encouraged—a press-
ing Gesire for freedom on the part of
‘aubject peoples, It has remade Eu-
rope, giving many races self-deter-
‘mination. The war has made sacrifice
‘no great thing for them. Many of them
died to save their masters and over-
lords and they feel that they can ates
le to save thetr posterity. With that
fact in view they will epare no pains te
grasp freedom. England has given Ire-
land partial freedom with the newly
formed Irish Pree Btate, and Egypt has
become an Independent kingdom, with
Dut few restrictions, Asia and Africa
are propagatiig for their share of
freedom's pie
Out of this spirit of ‘unrest must
surety—res, positively—come a rajuve-
nation of civilisation. It almost de-
stroyed itself in the late war, and no
well-thinking man would belleve that
it can exist in tte present form, with
half the world free and the remainder
eppreseed. _°
apace ye, LERMAN, A. MCR,
PGES TD STAY UP, HARVARD
EXPERTS GAY; PRE-WAR LEVEL
NGF EXPECTED IN DECADE
NOW PLAYING
win LAFAYETTE THEATRE ,i22278827,
“UNDER PERSONAL DIRECTION OF COLEMAN BROS.
BIG GIRLIE JAZZ REVUE
y
LAFFIN’ THRU
WITH AN ALL STAR CAST OF FUNMAKERS
. BIG VAUDEVILLE FEATURES
Bu AND,
. 20—DARING DAZZLING GIRLS—20
) .. MATINEE CONTINUOUS syM | MIDNIGHT SHOW
ge OILY. gr prow rot | » FRIDAY
mur Chet ard character and ft
han Cte at aig emt fer Ne usualy
Wa tase the cant alinply bes aur
Cheat ie all Aumont aad teat te
HL wnat les hain te get a heme ng
weatth ow 1M weeding We wall te ally
Theretts Othe piogiim at he Cat
cena Neate Linpouveme it Vmao lato
fe to De fmt wee we hase Rot to have
nen ad wanna win have the el ani
Chatter ated go ean Cart tan
Cable he Cited Kater Gosetnit ent
to be revigivaed an a MIEnly peer
Simply bevaua nf the monetary. for es
that wre at woth here Cant 8 a Bound
thing for men and wamen to porns
Ae 1G ie rightly wae and cash muy be
directed into shannels that inay ove
the undving of men and women Put if
(aah ta tightly handled 10 in a poner
In thin world that canut he teft svat
Tete encential In the desolupinent nt
any program ot in tne (rth FaNce Uf
any life
In conetunion the apeaker amid 1
am anxinue that you shoul exprens
fe tn itn emt form and af yu sel
expiias lite in te beat form surely you
munt paune in the mad rush of life and
find the Cheiat of your being, an after
you have found the Christ you stil
tvolve character that cum be (rusted
fand when you can march forth with
eabH tacsakr hochet andieaah. at auc
BOSTON Gt eicnthe Harvard
Committee on Economia Research has
no expectation of © drop in prices to
the pre-war level during the next ten
yeus, Professor Charles J. Bullock
[chairman of the committee, eal in an
| address at the Harvard Club tonisht at
the frst session of a national confer-
cove ‘of eubserivers to the Harvard Ev-
jenomic Service, ‘The committer, he
added, could not accept the conclusion
that prices must return to a pre-war
normal, becauno prices had reverted to
their former lovein after previous pert-
ods of currency Inflation in the early
and middle parte of the nineteenth cen-
tury
“The committee «annot find.” he sald,
“that tho governing conditions exist to-
day which brought about lower price
levels in the past The gold situation
munt first be considered Upen all the
evidence wo have concluded that mon-
etary stocks of gold will continue to
Increase at the rate of approximately
$150 000 900 per annum during the next
eight yearn, and this means a lurece
annual Increment than the world has
ever had, except during the few years
prior to 1918
“Befire the war commodity prices
wero Increasing at a very aubstantial
rate with an annual gold increment of
$232 000.000 and there was @ general
complaint of the increasing cont of Iiv-
Ing. In view of thie fact it would seem
that an annual increment of $180,000 000
should be ample to prevent a decline of
gold prices during the present doc-
eee 4
If the general trend of commodity
prices should decline during the decade,
he anid, the reault would be dus to the
Ananctal policies pursue by the loading
commercial countries and not to a
shortage of gold
“These policies, of course, are wholly
subject to human volition.” Professor
Bullock maid, “although they are not
within the control of any single coun-
try. unless It be one that occupies &
position of commanding influence. Por-
ae this Pf men wit Crumt Ou atl tend
sith deeAU koe
HON F A TOOTE SPEAKS
Hin) \ Torte yaa the taot apeaner
fot sot 1 te decd a pleasure fur
foto ee son ete more In Libs
Mit vid ty towk ante yarn fas ee
heain rg Wath terest) Lam quite eure
Mat AC this tine you well know that
free Cte weed ate facused upon
the br rise Semen Improvement Aas
pre abo ath rut ome Ate Thon even
Caan Gin ye WOE TCS cate: tortaed
‘spetal's upen the great leader uf
Hie nesement
Garvey and Lioyd George
The two men today that are attrart-
ang the attention of the world more
than any other men are Lind George
tit Mateus Garvey Why? Because
tiene (Wo men wtand for a great prin-
Hiple Lloyd Gevrge stands fer the |
Prin ane of the empire of Great Hettain |
te hal her integrity at all conta Liowd
Gertge \tien the sentiment of the |
white man that Africa must be for the
Tints aan, mud thee Rawiand mt
dominate any fleMt that whe feels like
dominating that England must take
nny thing ahe wants and ark nobeds for
what she takee
Marcus Garvey ta preaching another
doctrine -the doctrine of universal
freedom for Negros and tn that unt-
POTSDAM Germany, Oct 14—The
ex-Kaiser haw alrendy begun to beatow
hia wedding favors. One of the mort
overjoyed beneficiaries 18 Sambo. «
Mouth African Negro, who was a favor-
ite uf the emperor in the old days
Hambe was then a bass drummer in
the regimental band of the fumous Lite
Guard Hunnars, the picks of the German
military machine. 11 wae Sambo whe
led the band. the practice being for
the drum to precede the other instru-
ments.
Since the demobiltzation of the army
Sambo has been out of a Job. When
the former emperor heard of it he be-
gan making Inquiries among his friends
In Berlin The result ts that Sambo
will now grace Unter den I.inden In a
baby-blue uniform The Hotel Adion
Berlin's amart hostelry, has engaged
him asa taxi call man Ho will be
parading In front of the hotel, grooting
the arriving Americans and other
guests, He fe a great linguist and
speaks fluent German, even rolling his
Fa In reverherating German fashion —
New York Times.
of Themselves Mean NOTHING—
Crystallized Into Action They Mean EVERYTHING—
BAY Nothing But COME
ro ore
And Our First Educational and Commercial Exposition
=a.
Liberty Hall, 120 West 138th Street, New York, N. Y.
November Ist to the 15th, 1922
Aarts nota, eNeRE Stee oeoinsivo at mont Fi
SEE
a
ae AV-EIPL te o4 (Oia Spinel soci der ;
ean TEE BORE PRAT Uae 8 aera, artes sompletetyfppdaed tam
Irs inresn= SEY-—tontei~aMetna’ wuevieay Posto alae:
sualiAths OF a s1}oe Nenad hy Uttoe Harbeoge Bankes, Kren, and
SABY PARADE Dako Fron (the i Bin |
LOnrEME: ABADE Ivers so Be Ooyres tar erie Golan
Onoceay DePanTMENT Der 2 galiare (ir Were of Orecries for Ie
Dance) > ea em
20;0bm seman “Fatnater vores sew
go cig prviuonn= bers vou gant nee
FO CARRE NERS LA Se Done bors oer eek WME men ma Waa
auaeae
Me Acct taicitmabitAizh JmiAG vechwal ie Wis Sire —
mente, MAREE ACI RENE SRSCUALS: JORRINE Utornctoe the Site Otten
Sots cong oh tare
| 56 West 135th Street, Dept. B NEW YORK CITY
ADMISSION:
beaten That, Aine, are Aag or All Nahe S88) ener Adlon, Fie
‘and Last ‘Nights, 28'Conie, Ail Other Nights, ‘Ten Cents.
Sista bey ctsiges: reso tere Lal a any Siranea eibvall lls ERP
Tare FURTHER ANNOUNCEMENTS IW NEGRO WomLD AND #BONO TIMES
Pysseeas ibs Ube tas ths Lassies ot a paurebeesl ona
EXTRAORDINARY!
The Hon. WM. T. LEWIS, of Boston, Mass.
formerly Assistant Attorney General of the United States, and
other prominent men will speak on the Anti-Lynching Move-
LIBERTY HAI, 120 WEST 138th STREET, N.Y. CITY
on Friday Evening, October 27th-
ADMISSION FREE many noe BAND CONCERT
Seagal froedum program Marcus Gar-
sey haa mapped out a deatiny where
that program must be fought wut and
(hat program will have le be fought out
wh the hattiegrwunde where Lys
Hreorge wants to reign eupteme In ihe
name Way that IC in expected that the
Hie Gab Eempiee wil fait wit the fyb ol
Ling Gestye ne are the eneinien ot
Afe can fred booking for the meme
thing to Magen to the Cmivermal Ne
Are Improvement Amn iution Hut the
fact ie thin That 1 spd George may
he defewted but Linyd George wil not
leave the Britian Empire Garvey wi'l
not he defeated as long as the Hed the
Black and the Green waser in the
Wreeae They muy annautt nim thes
may so whatever they uke but even
though they ele up every brant uf
the Uhiyeenat Negro Improvement Ae
mw ation in the world tthe Cr veraal
Neate Linpresement: Ami ration ast
Sh ge on tapplauaer und it wit go
jn ght Attu a iw redeemed for the
40 900 900 Negiorm of the werkt
The Call to Negroes
Today we ure sailing out for Negroes
wll ver the world (ae battle cry is
Afriey our Motherland one and int
Niaible We shall not stop though *hey
May pernes site UR though they may 9s
hindrances before ve ant 1 appeal th
you to atund ae atrong aa ever in the
futh of One Ged One Aimy One Dew
ny * Men have come and men have
gone but the Cnsernal Negro im-
provement Association 's ati nore
Our Leader Maligned
Today they are saying everything
Imaginuble about our great leader—
rye Rome o wir own Members who @
jew montths ago said they would die for
ihe museinent Let me muy to you that |
whenever you aay one ward againat the
Vniversal Negi Improvement Annu |
‘lation you are saying avinething
\guinst yourecives, you are hurting
nobody but yourselves They epoke
gainst Washington but Wastinaton
ontinued his work They said he was
, traitor to the British government but
Washington never atopped I belteve tt
# Ged who has Implanted tn the hu-
nan heart the spirit of patriotism and
ince that 18 ao, I have implicit confl-
fence that some day through ‘Ms ‘x
trumentality of thie great movement
ve will march on to the promined land
he land promised to us by God when
ie said, ‘Princes shall come out of
Seypt and Ethiopia shall stretch out
jer hands unto God” The time Is not
ar distant Behind every dark cloud
here Ja a silver lining and the darkest
jour of the night Im just before the
lawn We are passing through our
cethwemane and yet it Ie not ag serious
8 eome of us think It Is. Stand firm
and trust in toc aud \sureelves Ke-
memtar that leone Che at out atandurd
beater me 16 nk Mar ue Garyey
leat we dona LAt a our Mopher
Land etal te ed mest
In can he ont ine ak you te trai
Your owe Fn ee tee at ine
movement Home fy ou dy nut even
fell vee cadres suena the movenes
ANT sel au cape tee neat gener stem
Wil come up aid ane your ple e The
Muctrene FEN mma IR ere ete
in UME Minds st tHe yuuAR we tte
pire at though they may note
Premiont of ine United Staten. 6
Ameriva they can he Mresiden of 1h
United Rtates of Africa
Now thar the Present Gener sis
fare Wel come up in a few woeks +
Fem) a thule Vigaruun (han evOr seen
Fe Informa en mtd eying to den rey
Re Macment tat God ettll tems +
featand Fonte tetas Cage may weeny
fee RETR THN The great bead wi
Rautes the deotinies of all mankind w:
Jord ue ets of De nm eMR Inte pet ten
Dent ant ane af these days an von ter
Fant nent we aha l receive the eanmein
brepated Cor us. Applnune )
“Y Sloan's
Rigen (a) SN Rae
eS oe SSR
ee a o
Nene iA
lagging pains cease |
ee Congestion u relieved
Remember: most of the pain
and inflammation of rheumatism
comes from congestion. Start the
Congested blood flowing ree'y
and even chronic, rigging pain
cease. ‘Sloan's docs just ts
it penetrates without rubbing —
straight to the congested spot. It
‘warms up, stimulates the circu
lation It stops pain, bnngsquick,
comforting Teliel. ‘Many uses—
alls one AS¢ bottle,
silatitog manne Relaen tod race
Hiteco inches Baueves ultaces |
peels ;
Sloan's Liniment-hills pain! )
BRITISH GHIEF FORGED OUT BY
LABORITES AND CONSERVATIVES
LONDON rt 19 The last of the
Great yar statesmen went Inte eclipse
today when Mremier Liovd George of
England resigned tngether with the
rest of the Callan Government
Lio)4 George had been in power ox
peare lacking « few weeks He suc-
ceeded Herbert Asquith in December,
1916, when tbe great war was raging
The Premivr presented his own res-
Ignation and that of the other members
of the Cabinet to King George thie
evening
The Crown accepted the resignation
of the entigg Cabinet
A Bonar Law, Union. answered
the call of the King and accepted the
Premiership consenting to form a pew
Cabinet, a:-ording tv announcement
late this oyeuing.
After buffeting the grave cr.ses of
the war und the troublesome peace
era whi 1 followed and passing through
the eturms and strife of Ireland the
Ministry surcuinbed ¢ ivaat to ite en:
emies in the Catone or Conservative
party It fil unde tbe blown of the
Toren, eapsorted by labor
Met at Carton Club
Political «vente unoved vert dramatic
rapidity (ode) Phe Cunaersatt¢ Mem
bere of Pe riument aud tovernment
Miniaters under lwadereiip of the ™die
harda met. the Carlton Cub and
bem ver et ING Fe derided on any
immediat arreril clectien to create a
Few Guvereme ar do new House of
Commons
Mite ote, nee oo Ne oten Cham
Berle te TD ge camer t sponsaman
Sane Pom ee DR tour for
tee Beer or nt rn rag Re
Peta at ter ae tate ee heen
EEC pene oe Le OW ete atatem
We pale ue ene ated
Famer ete ab tatty
Atte te Tew se tad eth
fabune et nea N18 Downing,
wre bb tent Walt. dozen un der
Mo ee ae om uty atom
weet Deere ports naneded i
Tar ceric cs come Moeas ident that
the gir tn at Wd begae te pembte
ated san gti ae
The general ce ugnation wae deen
Le oand migred and stertt after 4
teh Tied Georg stared tr held
a baterte inter res win hing George
Promier Buoyant
The Premi:- was in good humor He
alowed ne anatety aver hie polit vat
fit Ho rmild aad waved hin cano
an@boned when rovde ar laimed hun
in be stees VC Buckengham Malace
he greeted tends oo) eetdtul nad
Aiken Many thee before he had vise
ACES pate sear er atta of
SUG and on grent i cernatonal probs
JemaTaat tae gts: tiled him amined
The Cent re he cae Bal han wan big
AM offs halt ca oats be gti sme
Pie hing ae abeeat sin the pos
Lew ee ee tet te etna but
hanteeed Caos te Landon from san
Urnghum: steve te se un a vavatten
Meets 8 reed ie Andee Bonar
Las fener Cocaneetion of the Hx
chequer te Why himmelf in readiness
fo Be wim te the pratace This
indicates: earch ta tie we Lied
Georges tye oe
BrMour Resigns
Tn (he mesetime if was announced
from sem! Te valacures that Kir Rob
Gt Mors Chan eller af the bax hequer
Darl Waltae and Austen Chamber:
late alt Cnomt tn lad eetied trom
their government poste
The conference of Mr T.oyd George
ang hing tenrge Wan brief Mtn omit.
Ing breetl: the Welsh atateaman re.
turned fom Ruckugham Talore to
Downing test where 4 delegation of
miners «surat ge him Me natd
Gentiens Toh ve the privilege to
tell you th Lain ny longer Mremter
GOODVEAR RAINCOAT FREE
feombveor Mfg tu &688-R Goodyear
Ridg Kanroe Ci), Mo is making an
offer ts. acnd a handaome raincoat frec
to one pernon in cach lewullly a fou Whl
show and 1ecommend it to friends, If
Sau Wain ahs. eyite today
Alderman
Harris
of New York
Indorses Dr. Siegerv’s
ANGOSTURA
BITTERS
Read What He Says:
oSaabenecs Aamo, tte te
wiitsmenenbena
1 have resigned to the kg and he
haw accepted
The resignations of the uther min
hera of tho government were accepted
by the hing at the aame tim
There was an atmosphere of gloum
at No 10 Downing atreet, but it had wot
affected the good nature of the Mine
Minister He acemed reheved if any
thing, to know defnitely that the Aight
wus over
Future Questions
Liv) d George told his friends that he
le Ured and wants © rost War has
Deen averted in the Near East and the
Iriah problem 1s out of the way. and
Mr Lioyd George believes that the next
Premier will find it an eaaler Job in
the future than tt has been In the past
‘The biggest problems are taxation
meeting the American debt and Ger-
man Indemnity
EDISON HIMSELF STANDS
Schnectady Electrical Wiz-
ard Produces Artifical
Lightning for His Benefit
and Fhird Inventor Ex-
hibits New Device for
Reproduction of Human
Voice on Film
SCHESTOTADY SY us of
Themas Voor. aween 1
Sten meta met today on Dr Steinmetz
Tabor tery at the point oC the ‘Feral
Testes Company ere
Whie tausing the plant Met dinar
CORN Bed WMA MEO way eMail
Sorkman of! on igs. tee mat
Chistian Mast ant batison forty
PAD OBE Ueseinte we saw aces A
Nhe whet they had sed earcnsives
eee ance
Me Steunmete produss | ertines at
egiining for tis vistors tot ard
then demonstrated by means of the
manufactured thunderbolta thy etNeas>
ofa tghtnang a vester whieh he is de
veloping
Another demonatration which drew
exprensions uf wonder and ndunrution
irom M: Belivon Wa conducted bs
Chara’ \ Hoa ene vf the com
pany x tereach mcientinin Tata wns
& devas for reproducing the t+
of the human yoko on. nm
meuns of vibration of pin points!
ght) The invention wun ow ihe ey
perimental stage te eluimed ty tt
uriginuter tu be a step i wwsing the
problem of the epemking meses an!
We algo tnay be used th tatking me
Chines the record being on a title
fim nstead of or a die eres tints
Tho Coalition Cabinet of Britain
Witt was formed by Lioyd ‘rorge tn
January 1919 and which resigned re
cently, has been churacterized as an
amazing amalgam if all partie. th
atead of being a concrete body of the
name political faith as tho Premier, 1
Was mideugeot men re ected frum al
parties
Not only did it ombrace the two din-
tinct, upponing parties of Liberals
and Consorvatives, it contained alec
all the vartanta of these two bodies
The Coalition Gabinet embraced Stal:
wart Liberols, Stalwart Conservatives
Liberal Untonists, Advanced Libernis
Radicals, Lubur Pacifiete and Labo:
Extremists,
Its only homogeneity wos tn It
pledge. at the timo of Its formats tc
support Lioyd George
Mise Rose Allen of the “LafMa’ Thru
1922," whieh opens an engagement at
the Lafayette Theatre on Monday
afternoon for a week's engagement, !s
a vision of beauty tn her role of the
Mysterious Girl Wherever she has
gone press and public have showered
her with deserved praise Though
scarcely out of her teens, she has «
marvelous polse and carries through
her aiffcult role wintout a blemish. In
no role ever exsayed has she given
more satisfaction than in the present
one. She dances Ike a aprite and war-
bles like a bird.
This attraction was produced by 8.
Manheim ana William Vail, who have
laviahed money gp the production
These producers have gathered a bril-
Nagt group of players to Interpret the
many sparkling situativos of an up-
roariously funny book. The music and
lyrics are equally as good, and both
teave received unatinted praise. Harry
Seymour, the Cebtured player, 9 2
comedian well known here, and has for
able ite George Ehelton, flose
Allen, or Belasco, Al Golden, Coltetts
Batiste and « beauty chorus of atxteen.
The production was etagp! by Willlgy
‘J. Vail Dally matiness will be given.
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1622
i i
ras coupon }|L| (V0) GEORGE FELL BY DELAY, SAY
xD
Five (5) Cents SS
WILL ADMIT BEARER TO THE ‘ ‘
Sir Geo Blames the Whole Cabinet for D
ANNUAL FAIR |e een na
. AND jure in Near East—Opposcs British
First Educational and Com- Noted Economist Arrives to Speak on
merolal Exposition iY Trade and International Debts”
LIBERTY HALL | —_———
120 Wee, sen owe Bir Ueorge Paish, nuted British eco. district of Gluages a |
us Any Exeniug from Nov tdte tom, | [SOME And Anancial advisor to tho| comprises ihe principal
Frossnt this cpupam ch ing door nad par | [TFRRUTY during the war, arrived yea- | “nancial part of the Bec
BET terday on the Cunacder Amustants tug | it 2.2L meme Ama:
SAAS CEORO DIPROVEMENT 1 Southampton and exprossed the opinion | iar agaiist sountrica |
SEATON Be Mee Ne He SF Tl rat ne:vculition’ government: ueaasa plepiorea varvege’ aad
Net Ueed November Ist or the 13th, by Liord Ueorge had deen defeated | fer 8 preterental rate te
through Ite action to (be recent criats in | 08 ae ee ieee
ie dear East tt was not because of | ctienpt at tne protect
the sending of troops and warsbips to| called, in England now
RACE LEADERS SOUND Chanak to defend the Dardanelica| thing that could happen
ainat the ad Turke, 1 wou!
CALL TO ADVANCE|Seerse voinced out tne reporters, buc| tne sresen tne te
Verran Pereree COS SO Oe eeportete. but i the: present: tine: 10: 19:00
Law Enforcement Confer-
ence a Great puccess—
Utmost Harmony Prevails
oo .
NABHVILLE, Teon, Oct 10.—The
National Temperance ané Law En.
turcemont Conference, recently held in
thia Git), was & notaile success. 1
brought cogether one uf the largest and
tort feprenentative groups of Negro
jeaders ever aasembied In America, and
sounded @ clarion ca'l to high charac:
ter and good citizenship that will be
heard throughout the nation
Ne enforcing the many eloquent and
otrring apeeches the eonference
adopted @ number of vigorous pro-
nouncementa on prohibition .aw en
forcement, Juvenie delinquem) edu-
vation vce, erime health and social
moral), and un the relation of the
church, the home and the press to these
Aeveral subjects These reports were
formulated by carefully chosen com
misniona and were referred to a Com:
mittes on Findings to be surrolated
ito @ single statement and given to
the pubs This ntatement will be
mos wiguificant as teoresenting tc
wuted vaiee of ine Negro leaderahtp
of Amora Its puvileation wil be
awaited eagérs +
The conferen:e “us notable not only
for the umber and diatine tien of tte
apeakers but alo for the harmany and
unanim:ty that charwetrited thelr ut-
terancen In the whole prograin there
Was not n discardant note, every apeak-
or pleading eluquently for temperance
law enfurcemen’ high moral character
and good citizenship Among them may
bo mentioned Bishops it HE. Jones, A. J
fares and 1B. Bent Dra, Wo Alex
andi: | Garland Penn JW Waters
WoM Blair, 1 T Moppins, Alfred
Tawlene t. 1 Jordan, Rumsell 4
Brown WV Hughes, 1 11. Jonen
ML. Vaughters 1 8 © Coggin, RG
Morris, N01) Shambourger, tanae
Fisher George 1 Haynes, JC Cald-
well HOF Awe LA Townaiey D
Ht stanton LM Kang. J A AfeSillan
L.A. Fisher JT Philip, 8 A Me-
Dowell and IT Weatherhy, President
funn Hope of Morehouse College, 8. A
owen of Roger Wiliams 10 Bugg
of Livingateno Colege and W J Hate
ft the Tennesseeo Normal James
Weldon Jobnaon J Napler WA
iemungs Drat TOW Tai James I
Kobineon and WL. Vorter, Mrs. Anna
Peun Mee Mergaret Peck Wil, Mea
Ida Welle-Batnett Mise Angela Tur
peau, Mra Cora Jordan White, Mra
Mary Bethune, Miss Mosell Grin, Mra
1. Ad Moorer and Lr Ma‘tle E Cole.
inan
Tho program presented also a num-
ber of distinguished white speakers,
among them being President F A Mc:
Kenzls of Fisk Univermty, Dr WoW
Alexander of the Intes-Raciol Commis-
sion, Dr Clarence True Wilson of the
Mothodint Board of Temperance Ur
Rodney W Roundy, nccrotary Home
Missions Council, Dean Wo 1 Tillett
of Vanderbilt Chivernity, Prof HH.
Leavell of Peabody College. Hon Guy
D. Goff, Anaiatant Attorney Genoral o
the United States. Mrs. Frances Beau.
‘champ of tho WC TU and officials
of the city and Bute.
MUST
MR. AND MRS. LOUIS
FAIR ANNOUNCE ENGAGE-
MENT OF DAUGHTER
Being cordially invited by one of our
eeteemed friends, Miss Edrio Fair, we
attended tho celebration of the annt-
sersary of herbirth on the evening of
October 2at bt her residence, 72471
Moventh avenue, whefe « select party
of young folks enjoyed themsoives
through the hospitality of Mise “Faire
parents. Mr and Mre. Louis Fatr
The dining table was decorated with
many bouquets of beautiful flowers and
was bountifully laden With delicious
old-fashioned home-made cakes and
choice refreshments of all kinds.
During the ovening Mr J outs Fair
Sr. announced the engagemend of hie
daughter, Miss Edrie Fair, to Mr Harry
Owen son of Mr and Mra Robert
Owen of this city Miss Edrto Fair ts
a tesel tn Public School No. 19, Man-
Lane
Mise Fair's guests for the evening
were Miss Isa Gittens, Miss Eugenia
Wilson, Miss & Marie Malloy, Miss
May Doar, Biss Gladys Fair, Mise W.
Jacobs, Mr. and Mra, L. Fair. Jr; Mra
‘Reuter, Misn Gwenda Surphilé, Mr.
‘Robert Owen, Mr. George Case, Mr.
Leon Taylor, Mr Wilfred Speinger,
Mr, Leon Doar, Mr. James Pair, Mr.
‘M. A. Figuetos, Master Melville Fair
Master Erral Gurphiis and Master Ver-
non Surphils.
‘Theaffair was a pleasant curprise to
the many triste and acqwaintances of
‘ths Weis farsily. 9
Ms GEORGE FELL BY DELAY, SAYS PAISH
. Ea
eS i.
eae
»> Le 5
a y ig . iY
. AY. rn
action of the Asmericam faanily ravages ot Caterths e
Coughs, Colds, Neal Cuttcshs Glommach net Teeeet Di edeco
end all croubles of catarthal origin cail for PE-RU-NA,
Rermblicched ip the teacta and homes af the Amaricis people es
a medicine,
“TecieapeaTSRUNA,
oy
rn
rig ray . .
TASLETS : yy aM 7
OR LIQUID ey AY Wei .
Fi} : :
Wc: / , * biti) Fe
somist and fMnancial advisor to tho
Treasury during tho war, arrived yeo-
terday on the Cunarder Aquttania from
Southampton and exprossed the opinion
inatihe-y valition’ governaaent: tended
joy Lioy4 Ueorge nad deen defeated
through Ite action in (ne recent crisis ta
the Near East It was not because of
the sending of troops and warships to
Chanak to defend the Dardanelios
against the advance of the Turke, Bir
George pointed out to the reporters, but
the delay in handling the Near Hast
problem. which had necessitated auch an
action, and the expenditure of a much
money to add to the burdens of the
Britah taxpayer. It was not only Lioyd
George, but every member of the Coall-
Yon cabinet who was to blame in the
matter. The general opinion in Eng-
land was that the critical condition
there anould not have arisen and would
Not have developed if proper diplomatic
measures had been taken earlier to
handle the altuation.
To Speak on International Debts
Bir George bas come hero as the
guret of the American Manutacturere
Assectation to deliver a addross before
that organization neat Wednesday a:
the Waldorf-Astoria on ‘Foreign Trade
and International Debte" Ho wan met
at Quaranune by Btanle, Quinn, repre-
Jsonting Lewis E, Pierson, president uf
the Merchants’ Association
|_ Sir George declined to talk upon the
subject of hia discourse next Wednes-
iday, but had prepared a short state
ment for the repertora whicl expresaci
his \fewa on current topice of the da:
It follows
“The downfall 1.l0)4 George was
experted by many to take place in Ne
| serer a, theecheduled meeting of tir
Congervutives but it way hastened by
[the crinia in the Near Haat Although
Iphare ts na criiigjam of the fact tier
England made a stand at Chadah there
[sar a decided feeling that the nece
jalty of sending troops to Turkey elioutd
Hot Dave arisen,
| “To withdraw would nate meant that
the victorious Turks would have gone
!into Conmtantineple an eaptrolled the
| Dardanctiga whi mus be hept open
| Aagration fd the Balkuns which woul
[have again plunged the world into sar
Such w situation as described should
| not have arincn, It iw believed by: mans
and the cannequenco t# that Lios
Gress resignation camo quickly.
“dow Bonar Law nes taken charge,
ind the Conservatives aro in power,
controlling fully three-fourths of Par-
lament. and what will b. done next no
one knows Certainly there will bo nu
[difference in the relations betnees
IGreat Dritain and the United Btates,
| No matter whether tho Conservatives
Liberata or the Labor Party aro in
‘yoser all wirh to be on the moat friend-
1s terms with you here
| Again, there cay te but ittle
«tango in the Irish situation, for th
majority of the people of England ave
detded that Treland has ween gi et
Mominion rule and must be allowed <
| Uroaper without Interference
| Lloyd Georges downfall hawerer
"has shown that the Coalition has beer
1.4 lamentable failure = Whether the
Conservatives will go before the peopl
for a general olection. as I believe they
| wit, will not be known for e time, Lui
‘1 1 probable that they will, although
‘they have the power to stay in off «
[unt late next year
| “Better that we have an absolute
Conservative or absolute Liboral Gov-
ormment than an attempt at coalttivn
“Phe Coalition movement te but a
‘give and take’ matter at tho bost, and
it can have no determined policy, wave
Jone determined by tho circumstances
, that arise from timo to time
Blames Coalition Cabinet
‘As to the Near East. all the baie
| nhould not fail on Lloyd George, despite
| the fact that ho Is the acknowledgod
head The blame rests on all the mem:
Vers of the Cabinet What Bonar Law
will do nu one knows as yet, but my
position on his well-known policies |
bent expressed by the fact that I am
}ntanding againat him tn tho exchange
istrict of Glasgow 4 usin t suich
comprises the principal Vusiness and
Anancial part of the Scotch city
Ht @ Well Known that the Cunserva
tyes aro pledged tu a 331 3 per cent
turf against countrica whim nave
eploted vurrencs and also iiey are
for a preferential) rate for she demi
lune of the Uriueh Empire tt em)
bellef, especially at this time that ates
attempt at the protective tariff, 80
called, in England now is the worst
thing that could happen for the Brit.
tan Empire It woutd be disaster At
the present time it is carcitio! tu ®@
duce tho barrier againat trade The
British Empire should pursue the pol y
of the ‘upen door’ if it is to live *
When asked to oxpresse an opinion
‘on the recent Fordney Tariff bill in the
United States, Sir George Paish amilod
and shook his head. [am only die-
cueing the affairs of the Britta Em
pire‘ he anid -New York Times
| atest ee
| BRITAIN IN 5 YEARS,
| SAYS WEDGWOOD
ved rene camuuflage and
froma y are ob uf power forever
and ful'-biewd.d reactionaries wll
{ako contiel of the Mrtuh reins of
govcenmen? Vol Jomaa ¢ Wedgwood
Vice president of + Reuah Labor
Party said fast niga’ in an address at
Cooper Unien [ut the change from
hum to conservatiam he mgld, wil
lant only Ave years und then the Brit-
sah Labor Party wil. come into Its uw
This wit be arcomplinhed — the
rruker mid uv, educating the prople
the Labor Marts « tert ‘tual -and
Meactccon of Lend monopetys the bla
fuctor that is keeping seyen miition
Penal workmen ont of emytos ment
todas
Thewe Ne yea # aud © planet Weds
Mood diacunn ng the detease on Bettis
woller wal be bitter yeare for labet
Bat bitter as they are why wl re.
sult in gow for th teactfn cries will
eu Unet one throats and the worker
Wel amsuine control of ins political
Hae atinies
| Covunel Wedgsvod who ies member
of the Britta wiotu acy but a Fabian
In Iie nupper. of the masses, recently
Jarrived vn tre country to amaiet in the
mombershly drive of the Americar
iapor Part), whlch sabes to relocate
trade ubloniam to the back and bring
[orem ‘@ national labor union. Ho tt
now a lnbor member in Parilament
and won distinction In the World Wai
uF Fianders and it Gail.polt
* The rule of the Connersauiven in dF
Fund it win ve ard for rebur biter
indeed" he nad vu there 1s som
congolat‘on in the Tae cule of 1
action whieh « it follow under Bonas
Law wit try to get blood out of a
stone to sollect German reparations
for instan «© 1'y such methods he and
hg Cabui. wii dig their graves, be
cauae they wall cute Engtind by the
[power nf the aword *
Other speakers ut the rally wer
seat Jaco Panken, Abraham Let
kowi'z of ghe teacher's union and Ms"
| Marte MeLona:a Bocialiat candidat
for the Amsemuly in a Bronx distri
Sa 'tred de Muat chairman of thi
‘Labor Party, prentued
ANEWWAY @
TO GET YOUR CLOTHES |49
ABSOTBTELY FREE
Sopa ary S
ce eee
ieee
See
WITH BROWN SKIN !
GIVE YOUR CHILD ONE OF THESE - ;
EASIEST WAY TO TEACH RACE PRIDE
Negro “Children Should Play With
‘ Negro Dolls
SEND YOUR ORDERS NOW FOR CHRISTMAS
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION'S
DOLL FACTORY
Office—86 West 138th Street, New York City
Factory—38-38 West: 135th Street, New York City !
NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS
.
And Divisions of the Universal Negro
Improvement Association and the —
Negro Peoples of the World a
Is no longer connected with, the: Uni
versal Negro Improvement: Associations:
° "SET augiaea ety
- page
a a MEY ER
- Hereby Warried. Not: tie'Recetyi ae
- “2 ES i pe
ORDER. on
AORN os 5 lea
9 6 ns god sis digi ta a ea eas
LS SASSOON i
oT sates tas cet SS Ap Seo ae eae
FF aot Fide ty nee Foe auapbias er
See Saas eee
CAREER OF LLOYD ee
THE LAST OF WAR'S “BIG
FOUR” TO SUCCUMB
Survived Fall of Clemen-
ceau, Wilson and Or-
lando — Turned British
Plants Into Munition
Factories and Raised
Army of 5,500,000
Lio) J Geovge outlasted all the states
imen who guided the great nation
‘Lrough the World War In the tur.
mw.) ofseadjustment that foitowed he
nent hie eear at the ateering whee
When air around him were losing
tetra -
The three men with whom be sa!
at Paris ue the “Big Four” of the peact
conference long ago were toppled over
Promter Orlando of Maly was the first
to Go Mia cabinet resigned in June.
1919 The following January Ctemen-
seau the French “Tiger,” was cast
agide Two months later the Senate of
Une United States refused for a second
{Ime to ratify the peace treaty Wood-
row Wilson had brought from Vereellles
‘and not long afterwards his party was
beaten at the polls.
trish Parteye
After all of the other three bad been
but aside. Tloyd George became prob-
ably the most outstanding figure in
public affairs His position was
alrehgthened. no for aa history te con-
cerned after all the other war states-
men had gone. because it was he who
usted an Great Britains epokeaman in
tho parievs last winter with the rebel-
Nous Irteh Icaders parieys which ted
tw the création of the Free Btate.
Lieyd George was born In Man-
suester England January 17, 1863
Ils father, @ Unitarian echoo! master.
died when David was on infant, and
[ihe child was adopted by an uncle
Richard Lloyd, a Welsh shoemaker and
tas Preacher With only a limited edu-
sation David went Into a Inw office
|Then he married and soon dived inte
polities
| Entered Cabinet
For eighteon ycars ho was a Liberal
member of Parlinment 11 ascent to a
place among the mighty began in 1906
when Asquith became Prime Minister
The ttim Welshman entered the eab-
'uinet aa@Chancclior of the Exchequer.
ES
Luc
STRIKE)
not be duplicated
In 1916, when England was threat-
ened with strikes, at a time when Ger
many wds scoring heavy successes 0”
the Western front, Lioyd George loft
the Chancellorahip of the Exchequec
to become Minister of Munitions. Whee
“Kitchoner of Kbartgum™ was lost ot
sea the Welshman took his place a»
Secretary of State for War. Then. on
December @, 1916, he was called to thu
‘Premiership. -
Increased Ghtpping .
| During the war be turned the indus-
‘tries of Great Britain into vast munis
‘Moons factories, raised an army of
5.00.00 men, and organized 6,000,000
“war workers.” He provided for cone
struction of 4.000.000 tons of shipping:
‘He helped make tt posaiblo for the
‘United States to transport 2,000,000
soldiers to tho Western front.
) Other remarkablo achievenfenta at
hia regime included the enfranchises
‘ment of women, the minimum wage
for farmers, and successful prosecujica
ba the Palestine expedition.
‘On Bupreme Council :
When the Pesce Conference aay
sembldd nt Paris ho went there as head
of the British delegation and with
President Wilson, Orlando and pepe
‘Chinda of Japan constituted tho Busy
preme Council. *
It wan frequently sail of Lloyd
George that no atatesman ever changed
his mind on important questions ef
many times, Personally, he was alwage
popular, and not even the Prince af:
Wales was photographed more often
than tho little Welshman who bos
the Utlo of Prime Minister, .
RAC ot Beeb Nir PE DA Anca AE SG eR KAU DL 8 “Fr os f Be
ey RS oo eRe Mt. ake Silat att Tl - Me ~~ A ’ . ee
ae A PEO ey aD eT RR KS Te UN ad x "Baden ces te MMB a terns vale ’ . ne ere oe
4
TO BES orld
: ALD
A eI PO ee Y
ET et a HP
OO West (55th Gtreet. New York
Teteppon Hariean S371
4, pape pupuunea, every Gavurday ve he voteret of she Negru rare and
ne Univer Negro improvement Association by the African Communities
League
Makcue oan Tauiwin Wabedine Gals
BIR WILLIAM H FERRIB M AK CON on... eeeeeee Literary Kaito
BHIC LD WALROND . . ete tee e eee oe Ammen tate Katiter
U_ & POSTON ” Ansuciau b tier
AULSON OC PHICE ste ees ceegeccececs © Hurinene Mansvees
SIR JOUNN © BRUCE KC ON oo . .. Contributing E litor
ELE SOM NE BIC EE CEN se batriallina Boe
81 nF IPTION RATES THE NEORO WORLD
Domestic Foreign
One Toar eee nee 00 One Year * 8 eens 8200
Biz Months . wee secvee, 1D Siz Menthe weer wesc coves 800.
‘Three Montha............. 0... 8 Three Menthe * os 15
Bion Aare aoe on W_, Theee Miia sa
Ebtured en ercgus cam cmatiesaprih/V6: ID19. At:tne! eortemce: et Hew
Yoru. N Y_ undez he Act ot March 2 1679
PRICES: Vive cents tn Greater New York seven cents eleowhere in the
U & A. ten cents tp Foreign Countries
paversiaang. Hates: at coe
VOL. xii. NEW YORK, OCTOBER 2, 1922 No. 11
The Negro World does not knowingly accept questionable
or fraudulent advertising Readers of the Negro World are
earnestly requested to invite our attention to any failure on the
part of an advertiser to adhere to any representation contained
in a Negro World advertisement. .
THE FALL OF DAVID LLOYD GEORGE
HE news of the resignation of David Lloyd George, Premie:
T of England, fell like a bolt from the blue upon a startle:
world on October 1" of last week Coming five days aite
his speech at a luncheon oi the Manchester Reform Club, when hi
successfully answered his enemies and ably defended his Turkis!
policy, as Mr. Arthur Brisbane intimates, to say that it was .
surprise would be putting it mildly. It was more like a shock
The headlines in the daily press leave nu doubt as to the 1m
mediate cause of his fall “British Chief Forced Out by Laburites
and Conservatives,” “Near East Policy Broke Premer,” “Lloyd
George Fell by Delay, Says Paish," “Sir George Blames the Whole
Cabinet for Diplomatic Failure in Near East,” “Resignagion o
Lloyd George Brings a Finish to Zig-caggig Course Purstied fi
jour Years.” These headlines themselves tell the story
David Lloyd George was the last of the “Big Four” whe mud:
led up things around the peace table at Versailles, France, i
“January, 1919, to go. Premier Orlando of Italy dropped the reins
f power in June, 1919. Clemenceau, the “Tiger” of France, was
rleft Bigh and dry in January, 1920. The United States Senate in
March, 1920, refused for the second time to ratify the peace treaty
&hat Woodrow Wilson imported from Versailles, and m the fol-
lowing fall his party was driven from the polls. So {ar two years
zand a half David Lloyd George has remained the world’s one out-
6tanding statesman, the most powerful political figure of the twon-
tieth century.
The Career of David Lioyd George
It is rare for a man who sprang from the common penple to
rise to the top in England, and David Lloyd George's career reads
“more like the story of an American statesman. He was born in
Manchester, England, January 17, 1863. His uncle, Richard Lloyd,
“& Welsh shoemaker and lay preacher, adopted him when an infant
after the death of his father, a Unitarian schoolmaster. With only
a limited education, he entered a law office, married and plunged
mto politics. He soon became a Liberal member of Parhament
and remained 80 for 18 years. In 1906. when David Lloyd George
was 43 years old, Asquith became Prime Minister and placed him
in his Cabinet as Chancellor of the Exchequer.
Ten years later, in 1916, Lloyd George's big uppurtumty came,
when in the midst of the World War he became Minister of Mum-
tions and in December of that year Secretary of State fur War.
His acts in these positions of turning the industrial plants of Great
Britain into munition factories, of raising an army of 5,500,000 men,
‘of organizing 5,000,000 ‘war workers,” of providing for construc-
ion of 4,000,000 tons of shipping and of helping the Umted States to
stransport 2,000,000 soldiers to France were largely responsi for
fe winning of the World War.
f His Fall
3, It seems incongruous that after such a brillant war iecord
i nd after adjusting the Irish question and the Indian trouble that
David Lloyd George should be forced out of office. It is un-
ifoubtedly true that the immediate cause of the downfall of Lloyd
i eorge was the Unionist or Tory or Conservative party of Eng-
ifand under Sir George Younger withdrawing their support from
jEloyd George and pledging it to the radical Labor party” It va
ifrye that Younger was nettled because Lloyd George previously
Bemanded that he be custed as hend of the Unionist machine and
faw his opportunity when the Turkish crisis presented itself. But
Phe cause.of the fall of Lloyd George is deeper and resides in the
Btaracter of the man.
Hy’ the very thing that made Lioyd George great during the war
pial. Him incapable of hardling the post-war problems. Lloyd
Meciwe wag a pronourced British imperialist. And just as Bis-
Bia W’s-sole ambition was to make Germany powerful and mighty,
o-Ldoyd Gearge’s sole ambition wwas to make England powerful and
Bitghity.,, Hence Be ‘was able to fire Great Britain with his own
pestle @s the Earl of Chatham fired her in the days when
WRagtadcruahell the French in Canada.
Bs Aad es hen Lloyd George sat around the peace table at Vert
sat iss bed d.sot sit as a humanitarian, anxious’ to mete out justice \
peuay 8 Saver people and the darker races of the world, but he
we pea tinced Brith fepperialist devoted to maintaining the
tenth i anu of Britain. His French and Italian
PRT PER, ioe: likewise Sntegested in. pushing the claims of thei
emer Ane President Woodrow Wilson:was-honeyed,
ee mo ecqulescing..And. that is why the dogs of |
Feaere cee eres, raeeh alte itt, gentlemen ce
amr Nags Ne oy tas arate ML t th ii, Co8 Lie
TE ETE UE SBOE ha SSE UAE
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1922
paired to their respecuve homes. And of course Lloyd George's failure
to resolve the Easterg question would naturally react upon his popu-
larity and prestige at home
Then he stood pre-emimently as the master opportumst of mud-
erm times He ian with the hare and held with the hounds, he
rude two horses and straddled the fence better than any states-
man of modern times His craftiness and clevernes- matched the
craitiness and cleverness ot Richelieu and Mazarin He seemed to
he gifted with some clairy syant sense by which he knew when to
Hack sails eid which way te tack and when te steer straight again
[Pat he ended as all oppertimiets end, by pleasing belly anybody
tle pleased neither the Labor party, ner the Ende pou lent Liberals,
nor the Conservative Dories
| Explanation of David Lloyd George
| Pas tar easier te cntee a man im puble hte than te ride
the sterm when the hele placchin one sands Vie nan navors,
Hoevernors and presidents hive gone ite power with rebar wdeas
| \nd they have teund the pelteal machines and tmancal barvas
powers to be reckoned with
We must remember that Llavd George bad to be something
of an opportunist, wath a Cabinet which was ao nglomeration
Gfdiverse elements Phe Ce vhitien Cabinet of Het, which was
furmed by Lloyd George an January, TUF) was amu maxed Gabe
inet and composed of stalwart Liberals stalwart) Conservatives,
Liberal Unionists, advanced Liberals, Radicals, Laber pacifists and
Labor extremists, embracing every political party in L ngland
Then, again. the situation facing “The Big Four” at Versailles
was something new and unusual Woodrow Wilson's talk about
Pmaking the world safe fur democracy had excited high hopes and
expectations among the oppressed peoples, nations and. social and
racial groups Plas, blended with the rival ambitious of the vse
tonows nations and the Claime ofa vanqinshed but powerful nation
offered a situation which hal ne parallel and no. precedent an
human history Jt was but notural that the “Big: Pour” should
lexperiient and make mistikes
But, making all of these allowances, the fact remains that hu-
prran problems can never be settled untl settled right, that peace
perfect peace, will not come ta the world until justice 1s meted out
to the weak as well as te the pos erful, that the datker races and nations |
must be recognized as having: Liudable aspirations for treedein and
liberty which cannog be crushed. but must be reckoned with, and
that a poles of oppertnnism which ignores eternal aud ummutable
principles of justice and ryghteonsness wall run ate course like an
intermittent tever
Stil Lloyd George's resignation duce net mean his Waterloo,
but merely his temporary eclipse \ndiew Bonar Law, the new
Premier, 1s a Canadian whe has been a remarkably <uccesstul busi
ness man But he will have ls hands tull with the foreign: prob-
lems bequeathed te him by \squith, Darl Gres and Liwsd George |
Rriteshamperalem wa never in such a tekiteh psitien
HENRY FORD AND THE NEGRO
K VOTE week the Dearbers Pedependent: Mr Henry herd
Writes a pe et cpmiten an Vien publi “west In
the current sue ot Het very splendid perwalieal ié-tackles
the Negro probiem as we know atin mera Mr Ford rs some:
thing of a thinker, it net a radheal, and his savings are sincere,
forceful and dispassionate One as not always an agreement: wath
what he says. as. der iustance, when he writes Ehough it appears
that the mstitution of slavery was the device by which this swarm:
ing of the colored race began te the lands of the white people,
and though measured by the ~tandards of today chattel slavery has
nothing to recommend at) still tas a fact which the \nglo-Saxon-
Celue peoples have te thar credit, that the cmancipation of the
Negro from slavery all ever the work wis the act of the white
man, at great costot blood and treasure" Undisputably true, but
the question anees. as thers virtue in mybting an sdimitted wrong?
On that pomt woomust disagree wath Mr Derd ‘The white man
enatae the Negro, and admitted at te be a wreng — \bolitronists
of the caliber of Wendell Mhithps, Willan fievd Garrison, Henry
| Ware Beecher, Harnett Beeches Stowe, (haries Sumner, in’ \imer-
fea, and Clarkson and Bishop Wilbertorce, in Pngland, came te the
front and denounced slavery. \nd even though there were sume
cconome and political considerations thrown in, the Negro vas net
sreed from bondage because of the philanth repre spunk of the white
man Certainly at this lute date the white man cannot justly pat
himself on the back for his “altruistic” spirit in freeing the Negro
But on the whole Mr Lord's message ts fringht with unprest-
diced thought He says “Itone were ached ahat tu sav to the
Negro on this matter, ene would advise the Negro to beware of
those why pretend to be hie trends fer the sake of arousing his
ire against others “There is an influence a Versa which has
tusidiously worked with the Negi ta str him agamse the majority
im America, Indeed, Unis bas been done by a minonty which
ranks in numbers below the Negro population ot the Uoaited States
Let the man of color distrust these false trends who mingle with
him to get his money, why seck aa alliance with him on the
alieged common ground ot ‘op; tession' and whe eapese their
whole hand when they urge hin to that Kind ot bolshevien found
only in Moscow and on the Fast Side ot New York * |
This is the sanest Int ct advice that has come to the Negro
in a decade Moreover, it 1s sincere anil tspical of the independent
spint of Henry Ford tn the tace of seamtes sade opposition he
jana series uf ants Pos ish antigtes a fis maga. me that created an
international sensation Vad hers et a see adal momen ater ame |
tonety seeker [his pomt is cones fot tes yond: tthe the New Verk!
World One can safely comet! then thar t Vi Pond save!
he says sincerely and without wai pari oN te grind |
Negroes ought to ponder scat ee cr thay dat af adv ce
There 1s too much ognorant ssoalein gang the rounds among
us these days to altogether gnere it |
THE CRISIS ON DR. BUNDY AND THE U.N.I. A.
i HE much. advertised November resi ot the Crisis was called
T to our altention as we were gomp to press Tt contains an
elaborate five-page atucle by Dr WE B Du Bois on Dr
Leroy Bundy, and in the Looking G'ass two pages are devoted to a
circular which was thrown around the streets, entitled, “See What
Garvey Has Done *
Unfortunately, we will be forced to postpone a detailed analysis of
these documents until next week, as the galleys are beng broken up into
pages as we are penning these lines. Bit we will say one or two words.
Dr. Du Bois states in his introduction that he 1s now led to speak
plainly, because Dr. Bundy accuses his organization of theft in the
columns of the Negro Wor'd immediately after he was elected “First
\ssistant President General of the U. N. I. A." And Dr. Du Bois con-
tudes his article by saying:
“Since Dr Bundy nov {cels <afe und 1s gratuitously attacking us, we
‘blish the facts"
Such, indeed, is not the case’ Tt is not customary for editors to re-
veal the identity of those who L..ing them the facts or data upon which
cditorinls are based. We will, however, say this: At no time did Dr.
Biridy: ever enter the editorial office of th Negro World, or send any
secretary or friend of hus to the office with a verbal or written criticism
of the Crisis or the N A A C P
‘As to whether he lad any personal conversations with any of the
officials of the U N. I A or any members of the editorial staff of the
Negro World regarding his treatment at the hands of the N A A.C P.
we do not know As to whether he indirectly inspired the editorial and
the question which Dr Du Bers construed asa gratuitous attack, we do
not know But we do know that he did not directly inspire the editurial
and the question which aroused the ire of Dr Du Bois
Perhaps sume present ur former member of the N A A C P may
have mvesugated the matter and made the mquiry Perhaps some mem-
ber of the UN 1. A may be or might have been a member of the
NoVA © PB Perhaps he anght have been a donator or contributor
of the Dr Bundy defense funds, which in some churches in St. Lours.
Mu, ad in uther towns and cites was raised specinealls for the put puse
of defending Dr Bundy And perhaps he may have wondered why,
after deaating and congributing to the NVA CP appeals for lega!
defense ut Dr Bandy, he discovered that Dr Bundy sull needed funds
for legal defense Perhaps he may have ashed “Where did the money
we" We da not know Such things are possible in this world of
wonders
We will consider in detall next week how far Dr Du Bots’ deductiuns
are deductions fron: real or from unagined facts and data If he (Dr
Du Bois) was mistaken about De Bundy “gratuitously attacking” the
NA AC P and anspiring a direct attack upon the association that
he (Dr. Du Burs) represents, perhaps he was also mistaken in some of
his other facts. It is human to err And it 1s said that Homer even
sometimes nodded
THE U.N.I1.A.
' And now for the much-discussed (NT A. which has afforded the
“upportunity fer several gentlemen of ¢ ‘Jor ts get in the limelight and get
audiences eithet as boosters or knockers ot the movement As we satd
Inefore at 1s.a human and not a divine msttution Its leader 1s a mortal
Jman, subject to the hmitations of a human being, and not an omniscient,
omnipresent and omnipotent God [le cannot immediately know the
ultmate motives and purposes ef all of those who enroll under the
‘banners of this organization and champion its cause He cannot im-
Jmechately know what his agents and representatives, one, two, three and
}four thousand mules away, ire doing He cannot always have a thing
done because he wills a thing ta be done Part of the criticism of Marcus
[Garvey would be in good taste and order, 1f he were a God.
What ic it that the Crisis under “See What Garvey Has Done” desires
to prove? Does it desire to prove that he, with limited capital at his
disposal, did not have smooth sailing m waters that the U.S. Shipping
Board and other rich shipbuilding concerns found rather boisterous ?
Does it desire to prove that he uid not escape the pitfalls that the New
York New Haven & Hartford railroad (ell in when it paid $20,000,000
ior a Connecticut trolley line, reputed to be worth only $8,000,000, and
when it paid $35,000,000 for the Boston & Westchester railroad, reputed
to he worth only $10,000,000? Does it desire to prove that Marcus
Gatvex attempted things that transcended Ins immediate financial re-
sources as George Westinghouse, the famous founder of the Westing-
house Rlewtrie Campane, twice did and (wice tound himself hoisting the
signals 1 distress?
| Dues the Crists desire its readers to beheve that Negro business con-
cers can escape the experiences sometimes sunny and sometimes cloudy,
that most white business concerns experience * 3
For oursilves, we beheve that the great mass of the members of the
UN 1 \ have kept the tauth because they realized that the UN 1A
and its albed industrial urganizanions must Laboriously chmb the rugged
and stony heights of achievement, instead of bemg sereneh carne! there
eon Vlaudein's magic carpet.
MISLEADING PROPAGANDA
i cee ee ee ee eee
| I Tribune © ptains a cartoon which has the characteristics of
“onsteading propagand+
The cartoon ts headhned “The Rising lide of Color" First comes a
j Picture of a French bugler calling the native \tricans to arms, Then
itollows the picture of Sik knocking out Carpentier Then follows the
jiicture of Shih mzed am the French cabarets, with men and women
running ater him, cruing out “{ want to get his autograph!” Then
follows the preture of an \frican with his Lurkish fez on, haranguing
his tellows, while two European officials nearby are saying, “We'll have
trouble une of these days”
Under the inseriptions are the following phrases, which, put together,
makc a complete sentence " After recrmting nearly 850,000 colored war-
rors and workers to Europe in the Great War—und teaching them how
to use firearms and knock out the white champion of Eutrope—and mak-
ing a black Senegalese the idol of the Paris tharets—will it be any
wonder it Africa seethes with dreams ot equahty and military aspira-
The Chicags I nmbune 1s very far afield in its generalizations, Durng
the past thirty seure, Peter Jackson and Sam Langford knocked out the
beet Caucasian nghters of England, Austraha and America George
Dixon, Joe Gans, Joe Wolcott and Jack Juhnson won the featherweight.
hghtweaght, welterweight and heavyweight championships of the world
respectively , and Harry Walls has been in the championship class for
the last three ur four vears And vet these fistic victories did not cause
\frica tu seethe with dreams of equality and military aspirations \Why,
then, sh ald the victory of Suki, the battling Senegalese, cver Carpentier,
the athlenc idol ot France, have such magic etfect ¢
It would have been better rf the cartoomst for the Chicago Tribune,
who 1s more smart than wise, had unfolded the logical impheations of
the rst cartoon In that cartoon the French bugler calls out, “Lo
arms! Help crush nulitarsm'!! Defend ewilzation!'"" And the \fri-
can soldiers, with fezes on heads and rifles on shoulders, are exultingly
leaping from \irica ty Curope 850,000 strong They fought, bled and
died as hers es in France, Flanders and Mesupotania, They helped to:
hurl back the Germans at Paris and Verdun Many were decorated for
bravery and gallantry Is it any wonder that they should desire some|
of the blessings of that civilization that they gave all they had and poured
out therr life blood to save? Is the cartoomst for the Chicago | ribune
su dil st gy mentally dense that he does not see this?
| RACE CO-OPERATION
{ "IL editorial comment on “Race Co-operation,” an article
i by George Madden Martin, a Southern woman, which ap-
peared in McClure’s Magazine for October, and which we
promised for this week's issue of The Negro World, will appear in
next week's issue Lack of space prevents its appearance this
week
HON. W. H. LEWIS
MONG the.distinguished speakers to appear in Liberty Hall,
A New York, on Friday evening, October 27, to speak on the
anti-lynching movement, is Hon. W. H. Lewis of Boston.
He was class orator at Amherst College, center on the Hasvard
football team, Harvard football coach, District Attorney in Boston
and Assistant Attorney-General under President Wm. Howard Taft
agd gave a goud account of himself in all five positions
HON. JOHN W. FOWLER RE-
TURNS 10 CALIFORNIA;
ELEVATED 10 POSITION
OF MINISTER OF LABOR
AND INDUSTRIES; WILL
MAKE NEW YORK HIS
HOME
Soave! to The Negro World by the
Bun Frantieco October 16—John W
jtywier wed known Oshland real entate
broker whe left the Bay cites tate in
July of thie sear ag the representative
of (he Oakinad svinton of the Ualver
nal Negro Improvem: nt Ansoctation. to
the convention of the Negro peoples of
the world held in New York lat Au-
ust hae returned to California for «
brief stoy He has been elevated to
the position of Mituste: of Labor and
Industry anit will direct the affairs of
that office from genera! headquarters
Fowler han always been an ardent
advocate of the Universal Negro Im-
Provement Association, and since his
visit to the convention be hen increased
hie activities in that direction, Con-
trary to the expe:tation of many,
Fowler is upsetting the dope by an-
awering all questions put to bim rela-
uve to the work of the association in
a frank and above board manner. ma‘n-
taining that (he association has noth-
ing to hide and that it Is his business
to Kio all interested such information
aa they may desire, He told fully ané
frankly of the hope of the association
in the matter of the Black Star Line,
Tho African Redemption Work. the
various enterprises now being carcied
on by the association and the wo.k of
the delegation revently sent to the
meeting of the Laague of Nations. and
he fupther predicts « great future cor
the association throughout the world.
Tho Universal Negro Improvement
Association Js fortunate in securing tho
services of Mr Fowler, as he ts a man
of considerable vision and will add «
great deal to the work of the isscc:a-
ton by reason of his vast business ex-
perience. The only thing necessary for
the furtherance of the cause of thy as-
sociation te for them to adopt tne
policy of sending men on the roid like
Fowler who will and can newer
frankly and fully all questions relu iy
to the work of the association, I «Ir
made n trip south to Los Angeles and
Man igo, where he reported *y te
local d.t.sione there the work of the
convention Ie was ten bred a bat
Quet Urtuber 17 by the vakiund dv.
sion, and left for New York the nas
day. ary .ng the best weebew of a heat
Of Locnds and admirers who Aiea tim
Ue Lest of tuck In tis new peaite =
CHAMPION OF FIVE-CENT
Z
GATE’S OFFICE
@:tent memters of Mayor H; lar £
fear'ess champion of the peuple r
Porat‘on Counsel at a salary of 83.500
Known as Major Hylans “Lega!
Bull Dog.” Sir O'Brien won his great-
emt vitory for the people when, as
representative of the Mayor, he waged
@ vigorous and successful fight to keep
elevated raiiwayn, Although arrayed
againat him in this gigantic legal con
On a
a =|...
Freee hae ae
os aa
eA.
SRURORCnE” .«). Aad
Boney anes
bras ee Se are
pid penne ae
Parra eee
Ronee ren oe)
PIP ier ee ey ole A
See Re rbd"
John P O'Brien
teat were ad the weaita ard influers
Of the traction trumt reeking an ¥-con!
fire Me waved 863 000 400 to the peo
pie ef the city by blocking the tra.
Non trurt plot to union broken down
” alway and e's ated ronda on
the city.
Aas poration Counsel Me O'fr en
hua baitied If the interest uf the peo.
ple for lower maa electe:e light ant
telephone rates and has played a
Prominent part in bringing about tene-
ment house reforms.
John P OUr.en was born In Wor-
ceater, Masa. Twenty-five years ago
he came to New York to seek his for-
tune. Throughout hie career he hae
had two paramount objects in mind—-
to better himself and to do something
for the bettarment of humanity, In
both he has largely succeeded.
A voto for John T O Brien for Bur-
rogate vill mean the election to oMea
of n true and tried friend sf jhe peo.
ple, whose record has stam ‘Bim as
# fearless oMotal who can be depended
upon 10 rofeguard the righte and
privileges of all—Advertisement. _
WORLD'S TEN GREATEST NOVELS—WHY RENE MARAN'S 'BATOUALA' WON GON- COURT PRIZE?—NOVELS FOR PROPAGANDA
The Negro World says: "It is throbbing with life and color and feeling. It is a literary masterpiece. It is the work of a woman who looks at things calmly, unemotionally.
"It is a book that colored people especially must read. It is the first noted work that has appeared anywhere on the noble life and character of that distinguished Negro poet and novelist, Alexander Pushkin."
A Negro of the French Colony tells a strange story of African life and culture of the French Government. "There is sound historical reason to believe that the most significant piece of fiction before the world today is Rene Maran's "Batonala."—Allan Wilson Porterfield (The Bookman).
This offer, made especially for the convenience of Negro World readers, is made in conjunction with Young's Book Exchange, 135 W. 135th St., New York City
BATOUALA WORLD, 56 West 135th Street, New York City.
BATOUALA: Business please send $1.49 for which please send me [BATOUALA] or [BATOUALA] and send your subscription to the NEGRO WORLD.
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By WILLIAM H. FERRIS
Author of "The African Abroad."
In the editorial on "Pushkin and Duman" Mr Eric Walrond, one of the members of the editorial staff of The Negro World, wrote "At a time when so much is being said about Negro fiction it is well to note that fiction—that is, good fiction—must steer clear of propaganda. In his preface to "Batouala," Rene Maran speaks of the utter objectivity of his book and also of a forthcoming work which he is at present engaged on and which will be entirely subjective. In other words, if he had tried to overwhelm the world with ideas on the brutality of French rule in equatorial Africa there would have been no "Batouala." Still, if a Negro paraphrasing Allen Wilson Porterfield had written "Uncle Tom's Cabin" there is no telling where the race would be today."
To my mind this sums up the position that I maintained in my chapter on "The American Negro's Contribution to Literature" in "The African Abroad" nine years ago. This raises the question, "What is there wrong in proparanda fiction?"
The Ten Greatest Novels
Twelve years ago last spring a contest was launched by a Boston newspaper for the purpose of awarding prizes to those who selected the world's ten greatest novels. The committee of judges, consisting of noted college professors, authors and editors, decided upon the following as the world's ten greatest novels:
"The Three Musketeers," by Alexander Dumas; "Les Misérables," by Victor Hugo; "Tvanhoe," by Sir Walter Scott; "The Last Days of Pompeii," by Lord Bulwer-Lytton; "Ben-Hur," by General Lew Wallace; "Uncle Tom's Cabin," by Harriet Beecher Stowe; "The Scarlet Letter," by Nathaniel Hawthorne; "Adam Bede," by George Eliot; "Vanity Fair," by W. M. Thackray; "A Tale of Two Cities," by Charles Dickens.
"Passers-By," "Homo Sum," "Hypatia," "Prusinae," "Quintus Claudius," "The Gladiator," "Barabbas," and "Scottish Chief" impressed me as much as some of the selected ten. If a list were made out today possibly a novel of H. G. Wella-oe Hall Caine would get in the fortunate ten, and possibly not. In the totality of his work Balzac was wonderful. But there was no one particularly novel of his that swept the English-speaking world.
A careful survey of the novels indicates that five of them—"The Three Musketeers," "Ivanhoe," "The Last Days of Pompeii," "Ben-Hur" and "Uncle Tom's Cabin"—show that besides the adventures and love affairs of the greater and lesser heroes and heroines these novels are descriptive presentations of dramatic epochs of human history. The first tells of the glory of the court of Louis XIV of France and Cardinal Richelieu, with intrigues of states. The second pictures chivalry during the Middle Ages and breathes the spirit of that period. The third pictures the autumnal splendor of the Roman civilization. The fourth presents the Graeco-Roman world in the age of Christ. The fifth gives a wonderfully vivid picture of American civilization.
1.
Of the remaining five novels, two—"Les Miserables" and "Vanity Fair"—brilliantly describe the Battle of Waterloo." Victor Hugo's is probably the world's greatest battle picture. Two—"Adam Bede" and "The Scarlet Letter"—not only give psychological analysis of human souls, but envisage the moral condition of the age of the heroes and heroines around whom the story contens.
Why Rene Maran's "Batutaia" Won the
Gonesault Prize
Now on a smaller scale the Rene Maran novel, "Batouala," possesses the qualities which made "The Three Musketeers," "Ivanhoe," "The Last Days of Pompei" "Ban-Hur" and "Uncle
MAGAZINE PAGE
Tom's Cabin famous. The plot centers around a love romance. The favorite wife of Bataoula, an African king, falls in love with a young and handsome Don Juan. But "Bataoula does more than unfold a love affair. It gives a realistic picture of primitive native life in a tropical jungle. The dance, the hunt and natural scenery show the touch of a realistic artist. Incidentally the oppression and injustice of Caucasian rule and French colonial policy are brought out. And here in where Bataoula differs from a propaganda novel per se, although it has a powerful propaganda effect. Ione Maran's ideas of the harshness and severity of French rule in equatorial Africa are not consciously forced upon the reader, but are revealed naturally in the course of the story. And here in where Maran's genius as a story teller shines superbly.
Novels for Propaganda
During the past year I have read a novel which will soon be published and a play which will some day be staged by Negro writers whose theme is the "external" race question. In the novel the plot centers around two colored girls, a colored man and a wealthy white artist. The white artist seduces a beautiful colored girl who posed for him. She, in revenge, slashes the picture and then commits suicide. The artist goes crazy, and the colored man she was once engaged to falls in love with and marries a noble colored girl. In the play the plot centers around the attempt of a Southern aristocrat to first seduce and then kidnap a beautiful and cultured colored girl, both of which attempts were frustrated.
Now, this novel and this play are powerful and dramatic in parts. They have wonderful possibilities. But this is where they fall short of "Batouala" and the great novels that I have mentioned. Evidently the phase of the race question that impressed the novelist and playwright most was the quest of some white men for pretty colored girls. But here is where the propaganda purpose partly defeats itself. After reading the first few chapters one could tell what the outcome would be. And the charm and fascination of a real story is that you don't know how it will end. And you read with breathless interest and are held spellbound because you don't know how it will end.
Then, again, the lure of sex which attracts some white men toward comely black, brown and yellow women is only one phase of the interrelation between blacks and whites in the Western Hemisphere, and a novel or play which hinges around this lure of sex only presents a fragmentary instead of a complete picture of the strivings of men and women of color in a hostile environment, and hence lacks the perspective and breadth of views of "The Three Musketeers." "The Last Days of Pompell," "Ivanhoe." "Ben-Hur" and "Uncle Tom's Cabin."
Then, again, if Alexandre Dumas, Pere, Lord Bulwer-Lytton, Gen. Lew Wallace and Harriot Becker Slowe were handling that love episode they would make it a side show instead of the main show of the story; make it a smaller incidental plot instead of the main theme
There is nothing wrong in a propaganda novel or play per se. "Ben-Hur." "Uncle Tom's Cabin" and "The Scarlet Letter" show how powerfully propaganda can be woven into a story. But there is always this danger of a propaganda story or play—the novelist or playwright is liable to be awayed too much by his personal feelings and prejudices, to overemphasize the particular situation or problem that weighs upon his mind and oppresses his spirit, and hence he will present not the picture in its totality, but a fragment of the picture.
A safe rule to follow would be to weave the propaganda into the thread
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1922
of the narrative instead of making it the fiber and texture out of which the story itself is woven.
The Complete Picture
We once met a talented young Negro writer, who had written a brilliant book on the Negro question in the form of a semi-novel, which white publishers were loath to publish.
It was designed to arouse sympathy for a Negro struggling for the higher life but it was written from the standpoint of a partisan rather than a philosopher. The book did not even perfectly reflect the author's own experience. In his own experience white men as well as colored men had given him a helping hand and in his own experience colored men as well as white men had put stumbling blocks in his way. The result was that the book, which was, on the whole, scholarly, and, in parts, brilliant, was not exactly true to nature, not a complete picture of a Negro psychically reacting upon his environment.
The painter who will really interpret nature must not only paint the plains and the trees but also the sky and the clouds, the hills and winding brooks. As he views a wonderful scene from a hilltop in Stockbridge, Mass., he may paint a splendid painting of the beautiful town of Stockbridge, but it will not be a perfect view of the Berkshire Hills unites the river and the plains beyond, which rise into the thickly wooded hills, are also included
We find this completeness, this sense of fullness, in Homer, Shakespeare, "The Threo Musketeers." "The Last Days of Pompeii," "Ben-Hur," "Ivanhoe" and "Uncle Tom's Cabin." And we need this completeness, this sense of fullness, in the Negro novelist and Negro sociologist. What they often give is a powerful presentation of a section of the picture, a powerful reproduction of the segment of a circle, when the world calls for the presentation of the complete picture and the reproduction of the full circle.
The colored writers have a difficult task before them. The weight of race prejudice bears so heavily down upon them, the shoes of caste proscription pinches them so hard that it is almost impossible for them to get in a calm, judicial frame of mind and write dispassionately. A man tossed about and battered in the storm and stress of life and crucible of experience can not caste, assume the philosophic point of view and write with the detachment of a disinterested spectator. He is in the combat. He feels the blows, the strain on muscles and sinews. He gets weared, he pants and gaasps for breath. And when we read the impassioned work of a colored novelist, playwright or scholar we must remember that we are not reading the works of a loisurely philosopher, smoking his pipe in peace and comfort, but of a man engaged in a struggle and race which taxes his mental, moral and physical energies to the utmost.
Still, just as the Heron Age of Greece produced its Homer, just as the Middle Ages produced its Dante, just as medieval chivalry produced its Walter Scott and just as the anti-slavery movement produced its orator in Wendell Phillips and its writer in Harriet Beecher Stowe, who gave classic expression to the slave's longing for freedom, so, I believe, the present tense delicate and complicated race situation and race inter-relation today will produce a novelist who, with his pen, and the poet, who with his verse, will measure up to the demands of the occasion as Frederick Douglas, the orator, did with his voice fifty, sixty and seventy years ago.
The vision of God and the setting of human life sub species determinism will assist in giving the Negro writer perspective and breadth of vision
TO THE SUN
Hall lord of light.
Weekly Sermon
---
MEMORY IS ETERNAL
(Bt Luke XYT 25 'Son, Remember )
By G. EMONEI CARTER
Christ in giving us this parable sets forth several lessons of importance, one of which is that our memory is eternal, that the things done and said in this life are recalled in our lives on the plane beyond the pole of death therefore, let us briefly study the value of memory in this lesson
The value of any man to himself and to the world at large depends in a great degree upon his memory—upon his ability to recall and to use at any desired moment the recollection of what he has seen heard experienced or thought
As an asset in practical life whether one ambition be literary scientific artistic or merely transferring dollars from one pocket into his own as a practical asset power of memory as of the highest conceiveable value. A good memory will give you a decided advantage over others an advantage which no other mental qualification will balance. Memory is not as we used to be taught many years ago a faculty of the soul. Memory is merely a term used to describe the way certain acts or thoughts tend to remain in the mind
We remember host the things in which we have most interest the things in which we are most familiar. The memory, then of any act or thought may stick in mind or it may not, whether it is or is not remembered depends mainly upon the amount of attention we have given to that act or that thought at the time it was occurring. If therefore, we would have fine powers of memory, if we desire a large supply of clear, vivid memories, all under instant command, it is essential that we should pay to the thing or person we wish to remember strict attention and careful study. This is really the great secret of what is called good memory.
1. How to develop a memory
a. Study the object you wish to remember in all its phases in all its peculiarities, in all its relations (Christ's object of study)
b For the time being, in everything else out of mind the evil and selfish purposes, keep out by filling or occupying with good and altruistic ideas. Make object part of yourself.
c Make Christ part of you by accepting Him as your personal Saviour His spirit, your spirit. His life, your life. His whole image, your entire possession.
Are you living in such a way as to form memories that are sweet, pure and good, or in such a way as to form memories that are bitter, impure and wicked?
Do your memories cause you to shudder, fear and shriek when sickness comes? Are there any who can remember when some illness came in your life or life of your family and you promised God and man you would do certain things if the illness was cured, and yet you have failed to keep this promise.
Are there any who stood at the death bed of some relative or friend as they were leaving all that is mortal and being clothed in immortality, and promised them you would meet them in the greater life beyond?
Are you willing to be reminded that for the sake of such memories you should make good the promise?
Are there any that would accept Christ but you have memories of bitterness against someone and you won't give them up.
Ah my friends are you cognizant of the fact that memory is exculsating and you must reill in after life your promises, even if you forget them now.
That in after life you will desire to make amends, but you cannot. Now is the time. Start now. Make memories that you can well cherish and revere. Increase your joy by storing away deeds of love, mercy and truth.
Two Illustrations How Memories Stay with
Chief Justice Old relates the following story.
That in passing a building that was being constructed in Cincinnati, Ohio, one of the laborers was suddenly caught beneath one of the iron girders that was being used in the construction. He, with others, went to the assistance of the man who was grooming in pain Justice Old repeated the simple childish prayer so well known to
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many of us, beginning "Now I lay me down to sleep, etc." While this was repeated the old man ceased his groaning. When Justice Old was through the old man renewed his groaning. Then Justice Old repeated the Lord's Prayer, and the man in his dying agonies repeated after him, word/for word and line for line. This is a concrete illustration that an old man who had lived many years could only recall, in his dying hours the one prayer no doubt taught him by some fond mother in his infancy. Better thus to be able to repeat a simple childish prayer in your dying hours than no prayer at all.
Recollection of New Birth in Christ
There is one common gr and on which we all are agreed, and that is the recollection of our being born again. It is impossible to forget this scene in our crate while busy lives. Carees worries complexities and what not may crowd in upon us, but we cannot help but remember the hour, the day and year' the moment when we accepted the higher way of living for the former lowly walk
It seemed as if an angel sang a melody,
A melody sublime and sweet.
So sweet I thought of Easter chimes.
Those royal chimes of peace.
It seemed as if an angel sang a melody,
A melody so rich, so rare.
As rare as Oriental gems.
Such gems as those we wish.
It seemed as if an angel sang a melody,
A melody, divine and true.
It seemed to soothe as aching heart.
A heart that longed for peace.
You' a true angel really sang that
melody.
That melody sublime and sweet
I listened and I heard the voice
l singing that song of peace.
'Twas you that sang the melody.
The melody so rich and rare.
You sang the song with such sweet
voice.
A voice of love and cheer.
You wonder what could be the melody
'Twas Hope, divine and true.
Whispering back the echo,
The voice of angel songs.
THE NEW PSYCHOL
The Rising Tide of Intellige
the Negro People
THE NEW PSYCHOLOGY OF THE NEGRO
The Rising Tide of Intelligence Among the Masses of the Negro Peoples of the World
Prior to the coming of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, with its program of self-determination, economic independence, racial cohesiveness, nationalism and Negro psychology, it was next to impossible to assemble a crowd of Negroes in a public gathering intended for their racial welfare, in any great numbers, other than local or national politics or gatherings of a religious nature.
This writer remembers in 1917, at which time he was president of an educational society here in Chicago, in a community of 100,000 Negroes, the society felt flattered when they had an attendance of fifty to hear their lectures, even after much advertising
What was true five years ago in this respect is not true today. Negroes throughout the world have undergone a great psychological change, and have had such an awakening through the philosophy of the Universal Negro Improvement Association—a philosophy of manhood, courage, racial kinship, racial pride and enlightened self-interest, that though five years ago it was an effort to assemble fifty, it is an easy matter today to gather them by the thousands, and for proof of this statement just visit any U. N. L. A. mass meeting in any large city, and there you will find determined, eager and serious faces by the thousands, contributing their moral, financial and intellectual support to the advancement of the cause of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, a cause which they are willing to make the supreme sacrifice for if called upon to do so.
Negroes Everywhere Exercising Independent Thought
The masses of Negroes are learning to analyze and decide for themselves just where their interest lies. After having had a thorough schooling through the Universal mass meetings and THE NEGRO WORLD on men, measures, governments, sociology and human society, it has proven to be a very hard task for the enemy and the critio to hoodwink the loyal membership of this great movement, because of the rising tide of intelligence among the Negro peoples of the world as a result of the training they have received through the propaganda and philosophy of the Carvay Movement.
Overseeing a Great Handicap
One of the darkest curses that have
fallen on the Negro is his being shut
JAMES H THEODORE. Toronto, Canada.
By J. JACKSON TILFORD
THE MELODY
VALUABLE DOCUMENTS
LOST TO THE RACE
The Anderson Art Gallery, Fifty-ninth street and Jark avenue, at public auction lasting four days, sold to a white purchaser the Life and Adventures of Zambi," an African King who was brought to this country and sold as a slave. The book was published in South Carolina in 1847. Also to a white buyer went several first editions of Phyllis Wheatley's poems, "Narrative of James Williams," with an introduction by Whittier, a first edition of "Uncle Tom's Cabin" and "Memoirs of Phyllis Wheatley" published in Boston, 1834.
The only Negro who was present at the sale was George Young, proprietor of Young's Book Exchange, 135 W. 135th street, who in a statement to The Negro World deplored the fact that well-to-do Negroes are not taking an interest in the preservation of racial heirloom such as valuable old books, prints, etchings, photographs, etc.
(With apology to the editor of The Negro Times and the literary editor of The Negro World)
When two editors light
With all their might
And make a spectacle—
Yeah' 'tis a miracle
There did dawn a light
That blinded our editors' sight.
They wore a pair of spectacles
And call the act
With cunning tact
A pack of physical miracles
Did God create something—
Something out of nothing
Or nothing out of something"
If you say 'yea' 'tis a miracle.
If you say 'no' 'tis a miracle—
A miracle o miracles. 'tis a miracle
Is father the cause of son
Or son of father? A great fun!
Without mother a child was born.
In clouds the maples bore a fine acorn.
In sober sense if you forbear
To laugh, tie a miracle I'll swear
When our simple souls marvel:
At our foolish wits we revel
In a divine miracle
We know not simple truths of nature,
In blind darkness freely rapture—
Our stupidity, a great miracle!
EOGY OF THE NEGRO
gence Among the Masses of
les of the World
BON TILFORD
out of the wondrous world of modern
thought.
The great gates of the temple of Science, Political Economy, Economics and Government are clanged in his face, and his mind has been fed up on things spiritual by heological imperialists, and in the schools and press he has been fed up on white psychology and denied Negro history narrating the glories of his forefathers, and this killed much of his imagination, his incentive to aspire, and crushed much of his ambition.
Millions of Negroes have now discarded this curse and thrown off that white psychology, and have accepted those great truths expounded by the Universal Negro Improvement Association, which contains the gorm of real freedom, self-determination and African redemption, and are waging an uncompromising and an unyielding fight under a new leadership, with a new psychology, a Negro culture and a rising tide of mass intelligence, and the goal is not far distant, the real freedom of a great people and the total redemption of a mother country
SIMON OF CYRENE
The path that leads to Calvary
The footprints bear of sable feet.
The wind hath blown the dust away
That bore their stamp in that retreat.
But history cries out, and lo'
Where trod those faithful feet and
black
His heaving breast tells of his woe
As on his back he bears the Cross
That means redemption here below,
Hope of the saint, the sinner's loss.
And in its shadow oft I steal
When sorrowing sun of life is high.
And I can feel him lift the weig t
That burdens me when he goes by.
Ah, great his grief that fatal day!
He knew not why it should be so;
But we who bear his sable hue
Gave through the ages, and we know.
For we who bear the captive's cross
To Simon lift our weeping eyes,
And fancy that he hears our groans,
A scattered nation's pleas and sighs.
We know not why it should be so;
But when the crucifixion's o'er
The meaning of it all we'll know.
And why the captive's cross we bore.
.ETHEL TREW DUNLAP.
1807 Allison Ave. Los Angeles, Cal.
THE MIRACLE
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A COUPLE OF SMILES
Mr Wellington Koo, the Chinese Ambassador tells excellent stories in perfect English.
One he is fond of relating concerns a London society woman who started to patronize a Chinese laundry recently established in Soho.
On day she called in person to lodge a mild complaint, and, thinking the owner only knew pidgin-English, she tried it on him.
Me no likee my washee blou-ht home Fliday," she said. "Why you no blingee washee Thursday?"
And the suave Chinaman replied and said.
"Madam, I regret it was not convenient."
A clargyman in one of the Southern States married a young colored couple.
How much Ah owes you, revend?" the bridegroom asked at the ceremony's end.
Oh,' said the minister, "pay me whatever it is worth to you."
The young fellow looked his bride over from head to foot with adoring eyes. Then he turned to the minister, and said
"You're ruined me fo' life, rev'end—you sauh hah!"
FALSE PRIDE
False pride in spread so wide
People think the world they can guide
With their feeble, false, numbed hands
Which readily greet guilty bands.
'Tis a hard, tough world—oh' dear,
The cowards are heroes here;
God loves most the hypocrites.
The dotards are his great favorites.
Truth the people hate like hell
In dishonesty they always swell.
Still, they have a private code
Of morals others to goad.
Of music, beauty, love
They are innocent as a dove.
In madness still they rave
Till their fine sense be in grave.
Their folly they call piety.
Their hatred they term God's pity
To hell their deeds and brains soar.
To be purged of mixed evil's soe.
H. G. MUDGAL.
"MORRIS"
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THE NEWS AND VIEWS OF U.N.I.A. DIVISIONS
HIGH COMMISSIONER OF EASTERN PROVINCE OF THE WEST INDIES SENDS GREETINGS TO HIS TERRITORY FROM BERMUDA, HIS OFFICIAL HEADQUARTERS
Bermuda, B W I.
October 1, 1922
I, residents, secretaries, general officers and members of the L N I A, as well as fellowmen of the African Communities League in the field of action assigned to me, I hereby greet you in the name of the One God, in whom we trust, with love. One Am we have in view now, that the Destiny we have pledged to our work is
Rising from a Total International Convention of the Negro People's of the World a convention which lasted for thirty-three days and nights, our host countries and delegates have gone forth with a clear determination to hold higher standards over the significant issue of race. Black and the Cree not on our side the year 1922-23 but on our side the time. The present principal consideration is our engagement with the Genoa Conference and the political amalgamation of the Negro Nation and the subsistence of these sable souls. It is our goal to go down in history so that a yet unborn should all be blessed.
But there is no need yet an important part in us to play for the good. Nor shall it be strong enough to weaken Link Remember, it is our program to be put in the program God gave us a mission to Marus to serve us and pass on to us and to the consciousness of others and determine Negroes have pledged themselves to this mission and to the property of the 400,000 Negroes of the world The truth is that the African is crossed and we are torn back During the war, we lost millions of the lives in the hands of our race from the slaves in Marus (Garry) Must go
This was a miraculous propaganda
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Published by the African Community Improvement Association
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U. N. L. A. FORGING TO THE FRONT IN YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO
An inspirational meeting of the division was held at the Booker T. Washington Settlement that will never be forgotten. The newly elected president W S Vaughn, opened the meeting in its usual form and proceeded with a persuasive argument in the subject. The Need of a More Perfect Union, which received much applause. He then introduced the following speakers Vice-President Rev T S Renafield, who made some very encouraging remarks, Mr J O Bolomon, of Detroit, Mich., who proved himself well versed in the principles of the association. Mr William Anderson manager of the National Benefit Life Insurance Company, who rendered an eloquent address. Dr L. C Youngblood, physician and surgeon who pursued a course of wholesome instructions, and Rev S. P Phillips, the pastor of Tabernacle Baptist Church, who rose and delivered a burning message that held the audience spellbound for twenty minutes.
He received many choirs. All of the above-mentioned gentlemen and many others who were not members joined us and pledged their support. The meeting was really a success and we are determined to go over the top. Enclose a check for $12 for the Defense Fund to cover list herewith. Hoping the Hon. Mr. Garvey will get it as a result of a fair and impartial trial, we remain yours. W. S. VAUGHN, President. MRS. H. R. BARNES, Secretary. Youngtown Division No. 123
A RINGING MESSAGE FROM BANES, CUBA
October 10. 1922
Sir William Ferrie.
Editor Negro World
Dear Sir.
By this short letter I wish to inform you and all members of this worldwide movement of Negroes that the Bates Division is still alive. Every true and loyal officer and member is putting forth splendid efforts to the cool that No. 52 remain the model division of this republic. Right now there is a two-fold drive on, one is to supply the division with a band which has already eight pieces engineered by the Universal African Legion, whose officers are Major J U Evans, Captain Vivian Cleghorn Lieutenant and Adjutant Andrews Quarter Master R G Murray and second Lieutenant Aarons, getting band master. The other drive is the Genoa delegate fund. Taking into consideration the stiff times through which we are passing I think the membership is doing fairly well.
On the list of August's monster parade and gala day was pulled off. At 2 a.m. the order 'quick march' was given by the acting president, who was in command, and wore the uniform of the officers of the legion The U A L. under Major Evans, motor corps, under Captain Eva Campbell Black Cross nurses, led by their president Mrs. Muggle Lewis, the Boy Scouts, all in uniform, made a spectacle never to be forgotten. The procession halted and formed a square at
ance of the Greatest Negro Magazine
"Blackman"
William Ferris, Sir John E. Bruce
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unities' Leauge for the Universal
station in the Interest of the
hoes of the World
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THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1922
the Government Park, where an address was read by Mr George Douglas and presented to the Alcalde. The parade reformed for marching order, and on reaching the La Guira grounds an address was given by a prominent lawyer, representing the Alcalde. He said we were in the same road that others have trod to gain recognition. The remaining part of the day was spent joyfully. Borry to say that immediately after this pleasant affair trouble commenced among the officers, which resulted in four executive officers being relieved of their positions. The vacancies have been filled. After a storm comes a calm, and we are again sweetly gliding on
Dear Mr. Editor, the call of the hour is for heroes, men and women, who will sacrifice. We, therefore, give notice to all graffitors to quit. Tell Garvey to lead on, for little Banes is in line with the millions of Negroes that are behind him
Yours racially
R. N. F. BLAKE.
Chaplain-Acting President
Banes Division U N I A
COMMISSIONER SMYERS PUSHING THINGS IN THE NEW ORLEANS, LA., DIV.
New Orleans Division of the Universal Negro Improvement Association is alive and full of enthusiasm, our Liberty Hall is packed at every meeting, members are joining by the hundred, delinquent members are paying up, some paying six to twelve months back dues the offerings on meeting night rang from $25 to $50
The president has been suspended. This great ship has cast over a Jonah, the sea of dissatisfaction has been calmed and we are now sailing on to success.
Commissioner Smyers is on the job and the executive secretary, Mr William Phillips, is a live wire which has caught a fresh ignition from the great dynamo, the Garvey Movement. The New Orleans Division has analyzed the Commissioner and the executive secretary and our decision is they are the right men in the right place
On Sunday night October 8, we held a mass meeting. We had a fine program and such a meeting of determined people we have never had since the Hoon Mr Garvey was with us. Among the many good items on our program were addresses by Mrs Lilian Hall and Mr William Phillips, the Executive Secretary, Mr Phillips, in his forebite argument referring to J W. H Eason, who is holding meetings in this city to tell the truth about the Garvey Movement (2) quoted Mr. Eason's remarks when he spoke on our platform last May. When the person was getting paid by the Universal Negro Improvement Association he said it was the greatest thing in the world for Negroes, and he wanted his bones to be taken to Africa to rest in the soil of his motherland, but since we have cut off that salary he is saving the Back-to-Africa movement is a wild scheme and he will now tell the truth about the movement. A man who will come to us at one time and for a salary, we have no answer since that he is not telling a bigger he now for a larger salary. A man who can contract himself any time he wants to is a dangerous character and we have no respect for him.
Commissioner Smyers also spoke and in his forcible manner he opened up to us a great reservoir of logical and constructive plans for the success and triumph of the New Orleans Displa-
He is going to increase the membership of the New Orleans Division to 5,000 in short order. The speaker made us see what Mr Garvey saw in his dream of a government of our own.
The Negro's psychology must be changed. Commissioner Smyers is not concerned about the enemies and the orios who have never done anything. We are glad however that Mr Eason has come to New Orleans for we are made to see those among us who are disloyal.
LLEWELYN MANN
A BAPTIST MINISTER ON THE GARVEY MOVEMENT
Negro World Publishing Company.
New York City, N. Y
Dear Gentlemen:
Please allow me space in your valuable paper to say just a few things about the great movement which you are advocating.
First, I am a Gospel minister pastor of the Second Baptist Church in my city. I am also a student in Southwestern University, which is located here.
I used to think that maybe Mr. Garvey was wrong, even though he is earnest in his endeavor to lift the race to a higher plane, and that it is only "imagination" or he might be experiencing an hallucination in thinking that the other race is giving our group any serious consideration, while the Negro leaders sleep on most contentedly; but after three years of study on the various phases of the sociological questions, I have come to the conclusion that, in spite of all that our great men may say about the matter why, in my op'nion, Mr. Garvey is right in his various contentions, and his is the only racial uplift program that will solve this very perplexing problem of races. From now on I am in the wagon, tooting a back to Africa "horn" or any other "horn" which will mean the development of a strong Negro nationality.
Hersain you will find $125. Please send me the Negro World.
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On Sunday, October 8, the Kingston Division of the U. N. I. A. had a monster reception and concert at Ward's Theatre in honor and respect of the Hon. Charles Bryant, High Commissioner for Central America and Panama.
On his way to take up his duties he visited Jamaica and gave a stirring address in the hall, having as his subject the question, 'What Shall Your Answer Be?'
After clearing up his subject twelve new members were enlisted and many backsliders came in. During his short stay we prepared a program, and on Sunday night, October 8, the entertainment came off.
The public had only a short notice yet before the doors were opened hundreds of people gathered around the theatre specially to hear our worthy gentleman, whom we styled as the 'Silver-Tongued Orator'.
The following officers were present Rev B. H Jones, president, Dr Bruce Forbes, executive secretary, Leo Grant, treasurer, I. C Fraser, first vice-president, J. W. Allen, second vice-president, S. A. McFarlane, general secretary; Miss Eva Aldred, lady president; Miss Clarke, second lady president, and Miss Ada Hyat, first lady vice-president.
The Legion, Black Cross Nurses and Girl Guides, dressed in their full uniform, were on duty from start to finish. The Legion, under Major J. W Beliahy, performed their duties quite orderly. Among the other members of the staff were Lieuts. S M Browne, C. A. Taylor, Chaplain S. Dixon.
At 120 p. m. the meeting began by singing the opening hymn, "From Greenland's Icy Mountains," while the Legion, Nurses and Guides marched around to the platform. The chairman, Rev S H Jones, gave the prayers from the ritual, while all listened attentively. Following, the U N I A. band gave a special selection.
The chiefman opened the meeting with an enthusiastic address, thanking the audience for their large gathering and slating that he did not believe that there were so many sympathizers of the world wide organization. He explained to the audience how the organization has spread its wings to the four corners of the globe and it has put the world to thinking. He referred to the conditions which we have to undergo in Jamaica, mentioning the starving wages and color question which are existing at present. He dwelt considerably on the wages which we work for per week and showed the audience that the U.N.A. is the only organization to better those conditions.
He further stated the U.N. I. A has made a change in Kingston and that it is going to launch a power in this island like that of a thunderbolt (Great applause)
Continuing he told the audience how the Negro is demanding respect from all other races and how they will have to bow at the feet of the Hon. Marcus Garvey (Loud applause)
The chairman closed his address, and all were anxious to hear the Commissioner, and the program continued.
A piano solo entitled 'One God, One Aim, One Destiny,' was rendered by Mr J Williams, at the close of which the audience called for an encore.
Following, Miss Stirling recited a recitation entitled "Behold the Star in the East, the deathy of 400,000,000 Negroes." The audience was greatly pleased with the manner in which this recitation was rendered. All praise was given to Miss Stirling. The band then gave a selection, followed by a solo by Miss F. Brown
founded by a vote of Anne P. Brown
The Executive Secretary then addressed the audience in such a manner that all outsiders began to think.
He greeted all officials, members and visitors of the Branch, telling the audience that they were not there to see a Commissioner nor to hear a Com-
missioner speak, but to hear a Negro speak—a Negro who has had the vision of Garveyism.
He introduced the High Commissioner to the audience, telling them that the Hon. Charles Bryant, a Jamaica Negro, has labored and is now granted the position of High Commissioner for Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Panama, and we as Negroes must learn to honor Negroes. The Secretary's address is a lesson for all to learn.
After his conclusion a solo was rendered by Mr. Morrison, entitled The Lord is Risen. It was splendidly rendered and was cheered by all. Following this Miss B. Forbes gave a solo entitled "Don't Turn Mo Away." This is looked upon as one of the best ever rendered in Kingston.
The chairman, before calling on the High Commissioner, read his credentials to the audience.
The Hon. Charles Bryant was introduced by Rev S. M. Jones, and then his lengthy introduction began. He asked the audience if they ever heard of Negroes attaining such positions before. The whole audience answered "Not before."
Proceeding, he said that the Negroes now demand recognition and respect from every other race.
His subject was "It Behooves No Man to Court Despair." He showed how the Englishman claims England as his home, the Frenchman France, the German Germany and the American America, etc., and the Negroes are claiming Africa as their home.
He said that the time has come when the Negroes are claiming Africa as their motherland and future home. He showed what other governments have done in favor of the convention, especially how the Negroes were represented by the mayor of New York. He told the audience of the grand procession which was held in New York at the convention during the month of August this year.
The High Commissioner, speaking of expected war, told the audience how the white man has taken the Negroes from time to time to fight for their white democracy.
He said that the new Negroes are determined now to follow what the President-General has said, namely, that the Negroes must go on a strike to demand the goods or the cash in advance, should the war start.
Comming on the delegates to the League of Nations, he said that the Negroes have caused the great powers of Europe and Asia to consider differently from the past, naming our delegates.
He spoke of the might of the organization, inasmuch as during the four and a half years since it was founded we have succeeded in uniting 6,500,000 Negroes, greater than any other organization, but he still asked, "What are the others doing?"
He asked us as men to look after the welfare of our women, for a race depends on its womanhood.
He went so far as to tell us how the Negroes in Costa Rica are learning the Negro history in their schools which is allowed by the government chiefly because the Negroes played such a gigantic part in some of the country's affairs some years ago.
He concluded his address by encouraging every Negro to stick to the U N I A, no matter what hindrances appear.
After the chairman, Rev B M Jones, made a few remarks the meeting came to a close with the singing of our national anthem.
On the following Monday night he visited the mass meeting at the hall and gave another stirring address, at which time he installed. Rev B M Jones as President and read the oath that is laid down in the constitution.
He again pointed out to the audience the great war clouds that hang over
Europe, and besought them to stick to the Red, Black and Green.
We are exceedingly sorry for his quick departure, but where duty calls we must obey, hoping he will pay us another visit on his way to the next convention, as he promised.
THEOPHILUS BEECHER.
FOWLER, NEW MINISTER OF LABOR AND INDUSTRY, THRILLS OAKLAND DIV.
Effervescing with optimism, inspiration and encouragement. Mr John W Fowler, the pride and idol of the Oakland division, returned last Wednesday from the largest and most successful convention ever held by Negroes anywhere. No time was lost by Oakland's chosen delegate in giving to his anxiously waiting friends the information they most desired to hear, i.e., the important accomplishments, appointment of committees on vital matters and their noteworthy resolutions, besides giving to all so fortunate to hear him a most vivid and realistic account of the convention happenings.
California is indeed proud of her two sons, Mr Fowler and Mr J. J. Adams, the latter a delegate from the San Francisco division, who was accorded the position of chief interpreter with the delegation that sailed from New
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York to attend the Peace Centerspor being held in Switzerland. Oakland is particularly delighted with the distinction awarded her own delegate, the Hon Mr Fowler, who served on two of the most important committees and, in addition to these honors, was appointed by his Excellency to a place on the Executive Cabinet, which supervises all the industries and businesses operated by the association. L. A. Minister of Labor and Industry.
We predict for the newly appointed executive a most brilliant success, and hasten to assure him of our most hearty support and co-operation.
A record-breaking crowd greeted our delegate last Sunday and a most interesting program was rendered.
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U. S. OCCUPATION OF SANTO DOMINGO BROUGHT TO END
Provisional Government by Islanders Will Be Set Up Soon if Proclamation Is Ratified—Burgos May Be President—Rear Admiral Robison Issues Decree; Withdrawal of Marines to Begin at Once
WASHINGTON Oct 20 The State Department made public today plans for the evacuation of the Dominican Republic by American military forces and announced that a proclamation has been formally agreed to by which a provisional government would be established. According to the terms of the proclamation, which has just been issued at Santo Domingo by Rear Admiral Samuel B. Robinson, military governor of the republic, the withdrawal of American marines will begin as soon as the provisional president has ratified the executive orders and laws of the American administration in the island. The announcement said the provisional government would be headed by Nenor Juan Batista Vicini-Burgos and Cabinet officers selected in accordance with the plan of evacuation.
It was specifically provided that President Burgoa, in taking the oath of office, could bind himself to enforce the plan of evacuation agreed upon abide by the regulations and conditions placed upon the exercise of the provisional government by the commission which agreed to the plan of evacuation, and do all in his power to further the re-establishment of constitutional normality and the restoration of a constitutional government
the proclamation follows, in part. Now, therefore, I. Samuel S. Robinson, Rear Admiral, United State Navy military governor of the Dominican Republic, acting under the authority and by direction of the government of the United States, declare and announce to all concerned, in accordance with the provisions of Article I of the said plan of evacuation, that, on October 21, 1922, there will be installed a provisional government of the Dominican Republic for the purpose of promulgating legislation to regulate the holding of elections, to provide for the reorganization of the provincial and municipal governments and to enable the Dominican people to make such amendments to the constitution as they may deem appropriate, and hold general elections without the intervention of military government; and this provisional government will order such further powers and duties as are specified in the plan of evacuation.
The provisional government of the Dominican Republic will assume, from the date of its installation, administrative powers to carry out freely the uforesaid purposes, and the said provisional government from that date will alone be responsible for its acts. The American military government has been in the Dominican Republic for seven years, marines first landing because of disorders.
GREETINGS TO SIQUIRRES, COSTA RICA. DIVISION
GREETINGS TO SIQUIRRES, COSTA RICA. DIVISION
---
October 7, 1922.
To the Sibiquirres, Madro-de-Dios, Cedar Creek, Germania and Cairo Divisions, U. N. I. A., Costa Rica, C. A.
Dear Friends and Fellow Negroes On the eve of my departure from New York, coming back to you, I take this opportunity of urging upon you, as well as upon all members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, and all Negroes in all parts of the world, the urgent necessity of us Negroes standing together as we never have done before, so that we may be able, in the days that are ahead of us, to achieve the things upon which we have set our hearts, and to which we have dedicated our lives.
Now that the Third International Convention of the Negro People of the World has passed into history, it remains for us to set ourselves to the tasks confronting us in a fearless, upright, brave, manly fashion, truckling to no man, fearing no foe, but living our lives in God's own appointed way. We shall have to banish from our hearts malice, envy, jealousy, hate, fear, doubt, and every other sort of hindrance and hardship, which would keep up from attaining to the place to which we are aspiring, and so deport ourselves that we shall be able not only to convince all creation that indeed the Negro is God's man, but be able to make all mankind know and feel that we do not intend to be any more mere drifters on the sea of chance, tossed about by every wind of adversity, but that we have set out on the pathway of achievement, and intend to earn for ourselves and our posterity our rightful place among the sons of men.
This does not mean that we of the Negro race must assume an offensive attitude, or go running around with chippe on our shoulders, butting into other people's business, or otherwise rendering ourselves obnoxious by any of our activities, but it does mean that we must shape our courses like heroic in the midst of men, like a race of stout swolls who know what they want, and will use every righteous endeavor to attain it. It means that nothing on earth or in hell, for that matter, must be allowed to turn us from the goal we have set out to attain, finds the purpose, to which we have dedicated our souls. We must, by our learning in this world, show to the definite of the children of God that we have a race of men who know how their destiny applies for the liberty
willing to go forth to the great advent
This is what it Universal Negro Improvement Association expects of us. This is what the world expects of ever true-hearted son of Ham. This is what the Divine Creator of the universe expects of the creatures of His hand, and we must not come short of that expectation we Negroes must not fail.
The time is at hand when everyone of us must do the best we can for the unhersing in of the era of prophecy and attainment for the future in every avenue of human achievement therefore let us get busy. Let us dig deep down into the heart of things, delineate ourselves of all petty bindrances, and thus hasten the coming of the day when the Negro shall set up for him self in the land of his fathera a government that will win the respect and admiration of the world. Henceforth, for us it is 'forward'.
In a few short days I shall be with you and again linking forces we shall set ourselves to the task as we have never done our share in that we, too, shall contribute our share in the carrying out of the great program which is set before the race in its high endeavor. With beat wishes for a great and glorious future, I have the honor to remain, yours for the freedom of the race and the redemption of the fatherland
MORON, CUBA, DIV.
NO. 374 CELEBRATES
SECOND ANNIVERSARY
On September 24 quite an enjoyable time was spent in our Liberty Hall, when an unusual gathering assembled to celebrate the second anniversary of this division.
The Moron Choral Union, under the directorship of Mr J A. Todd, enthused the audience with some of Lorena's brilliant anthems. Others who contributed to the program were Misses McLarine, Obborne, Griffith, Palmer, and Eursil Todd with some very appropriate recitations.
Representatives Jones from Mount Olive Lodge No. 2, G. B. & D. of R., and T. B. Heid, from Pearl of Moron Lodge, U. L O. M. No. 20, brought greetings and words of encouragement combined with expressions of sympathy.
The chairman, Mr. R. C. Rusnell, and Mr. D. H. Campbell, second vice-president, addressed the audience in extension. The year's report was read by the executive secretary, Mr. J A Todd, and follows "To the officers and members of the Nixon Division, No 374—It is my pleasant duty to report to you the work that has been done for the past year and the financial condition of same. In the month of November our president, Mr. F. A. Ogilvie, and Mr. J H Buckland, chaplain, resigned. On the 16th of the same month Mr. J B Duff, president, and Mr. Muthlaa McCatty, chaplain, were elected."
Several entertainments were pulled of with favorable and unfavorable results. Among those of note were a silver tree December 25, a ladies' exhibition in February, a popularity contest in April, et cetera.
Our lady, president, Mrs. C. E. Burrowes, severed connection with the division in July. Our president went to Jamaica in August in search of medical aid.
We raised approximately $229, $340 of which was paid for rent, $60 for janitor service, $279 for miscellaneous expenses, charity included A Sunday school is being superintended by Mr G L. Claypole and a night school is in good working style
We own a typewriter which cost $25 and some minor accessories, all of which must be accredited to the uniting and social ability of Acting President R. C. Russell. My ledger records the names of 116 members, 72 of whom are financial. This is quite a poor showing for such a large community, but I can safely say this is not the fault of the present administration. It has long been our will and pleasure to have the entire community of Moron liked up with this great chain which will ultimately stretch around the world, but in the face of much disgust, discouragement, ridicule and contempt we are yet able to greet you in our Liberty Hall.
In the name of the Universal Negro Improvement Association.
York, Calle Calleja, Moron, Cuba.
Hon. Sir—I received your communication of September 26, bearing answer to my request in connection with my recent order and the inquiry of an order during the past administration.
There is hope in their forthcoming, and I shall endeavor to do my best to straighten the matter up.
Not the amount of $3 credit due this division on my last order, you can be good enough to send me 1,000 sheets of stationery in bill head form with the name of the Moron Division No. $74 printed thereon, and whatever the difference may be you can let me know.
There will still be a balance of $3 and some cents due us from that order of May 5 for the 50 buttons and 50 certificates, as the amount sent was $9.
Thanking you for your prompt attention, I have the honor to be your obsequious servant. JOSEPH A. TODD,
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1922
KANSAH CITY Sept. 28 - Tonight we meet on a very vital issue to discuss and conclude on a permanent meeting place for Division 318.
After a very peaceful and agreeable discussion we agreed to make preparations to purchase a piece of ground, improved or unimproved, to have our Liberty Hall so we can quit moving from place to place.
A committee was appointed to investigate a prospective site which is already partly improved. Lyric Hall was engaged to have our convention report to our delegate unfold.
We will have a joint report on Sunflower Division of Kansas City. Kan will have there also, and a good program is in store for those who will be present.
We of Division 318, Kansas City,
Mo. believe that close to the thorny grow roses, so every effort will be doubled to give 318 a Liberty Hall at the very own.
Thanking you for space. I am
GEO THOMAS
1635 E 11th S. care of W M Holmes
Kansas City, Mo
By DR. WALTER S. HANNA
For the last six months since its organization Chapter 47 has lived through laborious days until now she has taken the place as one of the foremost assistants of Gavinry in the laboratory* of the U.N.L.A in helping to apply the most potent "reagent"—Hace "unity" to the present day problems of Negroes throughout the world. The urge of Gavinry has found itself crystallized in the fine constructive work and co-operative efforts of this branch, including the once tangled problems of Philadelphia to a more simple, workable and practical solution. Indeed, work and forethought, not wizardry, have been the secret of its present achievement
This fact proved itself in one of the most recent evidences of the chapter's remarkable progress, when on Tuesday, October 10, 1922, the local U.N.I.A. received its most recent surprise when "47" moved into and took possession of its new headquarters at 809 South Beverenteenth street, one of the most desirable sites in South Philadelphia. Indeed, this is heralded as a significant step, marking the half an anniversary of the successful utilization on a large scale of its chapter rights as a divisional unit. The possession of the key to this property, today a reality, is symbolic of the solid foundation upon which this unit stands, of the fact that it stands today upon the threshold which leads to greater achievement in the future, and of which the entire Universal Negro Improvement Association may justly feel proud. As a concrete achievement it must provide a source of inspiration to the general membership, telling them they are human factors who, by united cooperative effort, little patience and foreseen conquer in the future what today seems the impossible. In the last analysis, what are the various divisional units of the U.N.I.A. but numerous enterprises for achieving the economic, industrial and political independence of Negroes everywhere, for finding some practical solution for caring the Negro's burden of existence and sweetening his savior of living the one grand process in working out his own death. The U.N.I.A. as a collective whole, with its comprehensive program for African redemption, is proving itself a veritable Aladdin's lamp, whose innumerable genius serving the daily needs and changing moods of millions of Negroes.
Indeed, the Philadelphia Chapter, with its loyal membership, has a true conception of its appointed task in helping to make that part of the planet which lies between the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans and Mediterranean and Red Sea a fit habitat for an advancing black coexistence
The writer takes this opportunity to announce, through the Editor, that he is contributing next week a special article on "The World Significance of the Third Annual International Convention."
LOYAL MEMBER OF TAMPICO DIVISION PASSES AWAY
With very deep regret we announce the death of Mrs. Kellium Jackson, of Tampico Division No. 525 Mrs. Jackson, a true-hearted active member aged 28 years, came to this country nine months ago from Cuba, where she was a member. On her arrival she was married. On September 1 she gave birth to a baby boy September 15, after a severe illness, she was called away by the angel of death, leaving her husband and fifteen-day-old baby to mourn her death. The baby is under the care of Mrs. A. B. Paisly, mother.
The burial took place September 16 at 4 p. m. The funeral procession formed at the home of the deceased, which was headed by the chaplain, J. H. Palaly, who was neatly dressed in his robes, and marched to the cemetery, where the ceremony was solemnly performed by him.
A large gathering of members of the division and sympathizers were in attendance.
UJ M. L. A., Templeico Division.
HOWARD UNIV. BEGINS
ACADEMIC YEAR WITH
RECORD ENTRANCE CLASS
WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 18 — Howard University began its academic year Monday, October 7 with the largest entering class on its collegiate department ever registered in a university specializing in the training of young colored men and women. There is an increase of approximately 2 percent in the number of applications for admission and nearly two applicants were granted permission to register for freshmen. A marked trend is noted in the large number of students entering the university with advanced standing. This is partly counted for by the new rating in the Howard University to last year when its collegiate department was placed on the approved list of the Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools of the Middle States and Maryland. According to the estimate of the Registrar of the university more than 1,000 students will be registered in the collegiate department for the first quarter of the present school year.
Dormitories Crowded
Despite the fact that many of the terms in the university dormitories were released by students who howeve side at the various trinity and university houses at the university, very dormitory on the university grounds filled to capacity and demands are being made for additional space.
President Counsels Students
Dr J Stanley Durke, president of the University, welcomed the students at the first chapel exercise and in an address counsel them regarding the tasks of the nursing school year.
"The college year 1922-23 opens as a pleasously not only for our own Howard University, but for America as a whole. Dr Durke said, 'Langer numbers of students than ever before are crowding up to the sources of intellectual light, and home moral and spiritual guidance. A greater appreciation of the value of trained minds and hearts possessed the youth of our land in a republic like ours the only hope for permanency in progress stability in shifting opinions and newly evolving theories and constantly greater liberty and freedom in a government with a written and respected Constitution lies in an intellectually trained and morally sound student. The permanency of American students is of the growing expanding nation rests on these cornerstones.
"To before, every school and college in the land must teach more as well as secrecy. You have your personal problems" he continued, "of our racial problems which threaten your mind and heart, sometimes almost to behold endurance. As you develop the inner appreciations of life, these problems will more and more test your耐寒 and strain your faith."
Collegiate Activities Begin
With registration practically complete for the college department and the professional schools, the regular student activities have begun. The various classes and student organizations have held their first meeting on the count of the large enrollment for all of the student societies the great interest in membership. The weekly prayer meeting held during the school year every Wednesday commenced with its first meeting on October 6. The initial meeting of the Chi Rho Sigma Society is dedicated to organized at Howard last year by Dr. St. Ilmo Björk, the professor of chemistry, was held in the Thinking Science Hall Monday evening to October 9. The Kappa Sigma Debating Society held its first meeting Thursday evening to October 12 in the library hall, having as its first debating subject involved the mixed school is better than the separate school for thecolored student. The student body of the Y. M. A. held its annual reception to the new students of the university in the new dining hall Friday evening to October 13.
Registration in the Law School
A notable feature of the registration this year in the Howard University School of Law is the increase in the percentage of matriculants who have completed from one to four years of work of standard college grade. Howard University leads in the number of students entering the School of Law who make up this group who have had college training, but other colleges are well represented by matriculants, including Harvard, Yale, Dartmouth, Pink and Morris Brown. The value of this type of student is not to be overlooked in light of the fact that Howard is already seeking by raising its standards to impress upon those desiring to take up the study of law the need of thorough preparation for such a profession. So for the registration at the School of Law this year is 600 students, including 29 Veterans' Bureau trainees. Last year on October 31 the registration was 154 students, including 54 Veterans' Bureau trainees. The leasing in the number of matriculants in the School of Law is due in part to the decrease in the number of Veterans Bureau trainees and the fact that the entrance requirements are being increased.
Medical School Overcrowded
The action of the board of Trustees of the university in requiring that all entering classes in the School of Medicine be limited to 50 students has resulted in the rejection of a large number of applicants. The entering classes in both the Medical and Dental Colleges have been filled to the limit and a large number of students are on the waiting list for any vacancy that may occur. To accommodate the enrollment in the Dental College it was necessary to make temporary additions to the Dental Infirmary to provide space for additional chairs and laboratory facilities.
The continued overcrowding of the School of Medicine and the financiality of present facilities to accommodate the increased number of students applying each year for admission has heightened interest in the Howard University campaign to secure the $225,000 which
topic was "Unity for Advance." He made a great heart-to-heart plea, earnestly calling upon all Negroes to put awaits petty feelings and enter the grand fold of the I N A A saying that the further they were from it the further were they also keeping from God.
He was followed by the song, "On an Armor-Bearer," Mr. K Watson our president, how fine he is going a short address in his regular loud manner in reviewing and laying special emphasis on the very important point raised by the two past speakers. He then read some vital correspondence from the parent body, which was well received. There was also read "Mrs J Watson," only president, a letter from one of our members that is away from our community, asking us to hold on and assist our great leader, the Hon. Mat (Grace) in the past struggle.
The next speaker was Hugh Ingram, a worldly trader who said he had some experience of the last war, and has not prepared to go to another except that of our Motherland Africa. He was followed by a dust singer Mrs J Watton, lady president and Mrs K Hansay, G S L D' which was highly appreciated. The next was a speech given by Mr U. Huston, chairman of the honorable advisory board M Hunty, secretary of the honorable advisory board, was the next speaker followed by Mr Lester.
The president gave a short address.
MASS M
Under the Auspices of UNIT
At LIBERTY HALL
TUESDAY, OCT. 3
HON. ALFRE
(Degree Candidate)
MAYOR JOHN
DR. ROYAL S
(Democrat Candidate)
JOHN P.
Democrat Candidate for So
Will Positi
Mayor Hylan will personally than
vote they gave him last November.
Other addresses will be delivered
gressional, State and County tickets.
HON. FERDINAND Q. MORTO
preside
Eight thousand attended the Hylan
so come early to get a seat.
Your Own
Patronize Your Own Industries!
Fellow Members of the Negro Race:
Support your own industries and
for Race
for every dollar you spend we
present Association helps to strengthen
Race. The more you patronize
will we be able to employ more
we employ about five thousand
but four thousand abroad. In
two hundred.
at the race to grow financially;
economically independent. if you
generally, if you expect us to re
enterprises, if you expect us
must support the enterprises
ing enterprises are now operated
cent Association through the A
the Negro Factories Corporate
UNERSAL STEAM LAUN
Why not support your own industries and help to find employment for your Race?
Every penny or every dollar you spend with the Universal Negro Improvement Association helps to strengthen the financial standing of the Race. The more you patronize your own enterprises the more will we be able to employ more members of our Race. Already we employ about five thousand Negroes all over America and about four thousand abroad. In New York alone, we employ over two hundred.
If you expect the race to grow financially; if you expect the race to become economically independent, if you expect the race to be respected generally, if you expect us to run more factories and operate more enterprises, if you expect us to employ more Negroes, then you must support the enterprises we have already started.
The following enterprises are now operated by the Universal Negro Improvement Association through the African Communities League and the Negro Factories' Corporation:
UNIVERSAL STEAM LAUNDRY
62 West 142nd Street
ed laundry work done by compete
to this laundry and help the race
entry. Call Harlem 2877 for orders
MILORING AND DRESSMAKING
Wet and finished laundry work done by competent hands Send or take all your clothes to this laundry and help the race to develop strength in the laundry industry. Call Harlem 2817 for orders
UNIVERSAL TAILORING AND DRESSMAKING DEPARTMENT
62 West 142nd Street
suits and dresses made to on
every Negro should have his or her
provement Association, by doing the
length in the tailoring industry.
GO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
AND PRINTING HOUSE
VE., NEW YORK Telephone
publishing of every description. Words
orders to the above address. Help
strength in the printing industry.
Just be addressed to Printing Depa-
tation, 56 West 133th Street, New
Laines' and Genius' suits and dresses made to order. Also pressing and dry cleaning. Every Negro should have his or her suit tailored by the Universal Negro Improvement Association, by doing this you will help the race to develop strength in the tailoring industry. Call Harlem 2877 for orders.
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION'S PUBLISHING AND PRINTING HOUSE
2305 SEVENTH AVE., NEW YORK Telephone Morningside 2931 Printing and Publishing of every description. Whatsoever you have to print, take your orders to the above address. Help us to build up the race as a tower of strength in the printing industry. All orders for out-of-town printing must be addressed to Printing Dept., Universal Negro Improvement Association, 50 West 135th Street, New York.
Groceries of every description You can get everything you want at our grocery stores.
GROCERY STORE NO. 2-646 LENOX AVENUE, NEW YORK
Groceries' of all descriptions. You should, by duty, buy your groceries from these stores, and help the race to develop strength in the Grocery industry.
GROCERY STORE NO. 3—552 LENOX AVE. Phone Harlem 2853
It pays to patronize your own.
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION'S RESTAURANT RESTAURANT NO. 21-73 WEST 135th STREET, NEW YORK Everything tasty and palatable can be obtained at our restaurant. RESTAURANT NO. 1—LIBERTY HALL, 120 W. 138th, NEW YORK Everything you want to eat and drink can be obtained from this restaurant. And now for the sacrifice to build a race. Will you not walk a little further than where you used to deal so as to patronize your own industries? Will you not make the sacrifice of going a block, two or three so as to deal with your own race enterprise, which through its success may employ you some day? A real race patriot would go a mile if need be to help his race develop. Please make up in your mind to help the Universal Negro Improvement Association employ more Negroes by patronizing these industries. Do it and let the race grow. Look for the colors, the Red, Black and Green.
THE ABOVE INDUSTRIES ARE RUN UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF THE Department of Labor and Industry of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. 56 West 135th Street, New York
THE U. N. I. A.
IN MIRANDA, CUBA
October 10, 1922
To the Editor of the Negro World
Dear Sir. At our last members' business meeting it was decided that I should be asked to write you a weekly report of the changes of our division in compliance of which I am sending you this.
on Tuesday the 31st we held our usual meeting, which was fairly well attended. I was of a high order with our leading members taking an active part. Our honorable presidents were in the chair opened the meeting by singing of the opening歌 from Greenmounts by Mountains. Mr A Thomas and hisagogue friend and brother moore read the order for the more meeting from the actual followed by the singing of the hymn God Our Help in Apostolat. The opening address was given by Mr J Hickett the vice-president who in a very elegant speech have home to monitors (some why they) should all initially fall in behind the association and not give up until we should have joined the colors, the Red, the Black and the Green on the hills of our sacred Mount and Mist. He was followed by the 'Minna Crown' from Mr A Thomas, whoose
It must raise to obtain the conditionals礼 off $25,000 from the General Education Board for the endowment of the School of Medicine
Additions to Medical School Faculty
On account of the increase in the number of students in the Dental College three additional demonstrators have had to be acquired Dr Edward Morton, Dr Merrill H. Curtis and Dr Walter F. Gorman have been appointed to these three places. Dr Charles Liberman has been added to the staff of the College of Pharmacy as Professor of the medical Pharmacy
Various Improvements Made During Summer
During the summer months many improvements to the buildings and grounds have been made. The administration of the Howard University welcomed the resident students to the row dining hall, which was dedicated in June 1922. The building is the most beautiful and modernly equipped of any on the university grounds. In addition to the many improvements made to the buildings attention has been given to the living of walks and the placing of flower beds about the grounds to aid both to the convenience and beauty of the campus.
and the meeting came to a close by the
singing of the Ethiopian National
Anthem
Please accept our best wishes for
your progress in the association.
Should you need help, please
contact us.
BIRTHDAY SURPRISE TO
LADY FLORENCE BRUCE
A birthday and surprise party was given in honor of Mrs F A Bruce on Thursday evening, October 19, 1922 at West 139th street. Among those present were Mrs Eva Nicholas, Mrs Evelyn F. and Miss Ruth Green, Mrs Isabella Lawrence, Mrs Miss Pimf Lomas, Mrs Hagel Rose, Sir George and Lady Florence Tobias, Master Liamite Tobias, Mr and Mrs O. Poston Mr and Mrs Mennes H. Coffin, Nurse Mr John H. Wilson, Prof William H. Ketra and Sir John E. Bruce Mrs Iva Nicholas and others delivered interesting addresses, music was rendered refreshment-served and an enjoyable evening was spent. When Dr. Nurse pointed to Mrs Bruce's devotion to her dis-tinished husband and called her. Pendle pee the audience. Mrs Nicholas addressed the audience by her thoughtful and mobility of speech.
Inter-Racial Congress Ends Session in Raleigh With Declaration — Not Social Equality—Want Equality in Courts and Schools
By BROCK BARKLEY
RALEIGH, N. C. Oct. 13—A Statewide sentiment demanding for the best man equity of opportunity with the white brother in the things which he as a human being is deserving was derailed by speakers at today's closing session of the North Carolina Inter-Racial Relations Conference the most important prerequisite to the effective betterment of race conditions.
Not the social commingling of the race which is the first thought to strike the mind of the average white citizen when equality and the Negro is mentioned, but the same opportunity and chance in the things that go really to make life worth while, a chance for the Negro boy and girl in the school and a chance for the Negro family to live in the enjoyment of health protections and the like.
A board of school commissioners should not pose consideration of Negro schools until it has built all its white schools, the city fathers should not look upon it as a waste of money to saving a few street lights in the Negro section and a good street should not be confined to the thoroughfares of the white region.
ATTRIBUTES: Farewell of a friend
born, died. After time how
different the fate wanted to jure
the fate lasted for a million
dollar war aggravated the agree-
ration between the Negro schools
and the schools in Negro schools and
white schools on the minds of the
opposing factories and suspicion to
better oppose units.
FATHER OF THE HON.
S. A. HAYNES DIES
IN BRITISH HONDURAS
Was Honored by Her
Majesty the Late Queen
Victoria
Mr Samuel Edward Haynes father of the Hon. S. A. Haynes who was registrar in Convention now Commissioner for Maryland and Virginia, died at Beise, British Honduras, Central America, on October 18, 1922.
The deceased served with distinction as a sergeant in the old West India regiment which fought so gallantly in the Ashanti Wars, British West Africa. He was decorated for valor at Kumasi by Her M jesty the late Queen Victoria, at Red Hill, England. When the regiment returned to Jamaica, B. W. L. the deceased, along with others, proceeded to British Honduras, Central America, and enlisted in the constabulary force.
"Bergean Haynes," as he was familiar known to all, was a prominent figure in the celebration of historic occaessions, always occupying a place of honor at all military and civic functions. He was one of the oldest pen-solvers of the famous regiment. He labored hard to bring into existence the Belle Friendly Society, one of the most prosperous organizations of its kind in the city today, and was thrice selected secretary of the society.
The deceased was a native of the island of Barbadoc, B. W. L., and father of thirteen children. He leaves nine of these and several grandchildren to mourn his loss.
By R. T. BROWN
In the midst of all the clamoring of the smaller peoples of the world for self determination and for the according of their rights, the voice of the awakened and enlightened Negro of the twentieth century is heard with unmistakable clearness, calling out for his rights and a recognition of his race as a factor to be considered in the settling of the affairs of the world henceforth.
Look where you will, you can see that it is not the intention of these peoples to be regarded any longer as merely the under dogs of the human race, but that while God and heaven stand they are going to assert themselves in an unmistakable way
Slav, Greek, Pole, Hungarian, Serb, Irish and Bulgar have had their rights recognized and have set up governments of their own which they are prepared to support with every drop of their lifeblood. The men of every nation look on and seem to feel that a great step forward has been taken in the onward march of the human race and the leading statesmen of the world seem to congratulate themselves and their colleagues for the ability to see the fatness which was excercised in the recognition of the claims of these people to self-determination. Yet the amazing thing about these statesmen who have been guilding the world with such soft and sweet-sounding statements as "The world must be made safe for democracy" and "Self-determination for smaller peoples is that they seem to intercept these declarations to mean 'Self-determination for smaller white peoples' and 'The world must be made safe for white democracy, for while they have latened with patience and care to the appeals of the Poles, Slavs, Serbs and other smaller groups of the
they are exceptionally deaf
dish when it comes to the appellation of the four hundred million of the Negro race scattered all over the world who form ten and even fifty a greater group of human souls than any of the small groups mentioned before. But the march of斗争 has changed the temperament of many people and those who in times past were willing to bow their necks in irritation and meekly endured the cross of depression which has been thrust upon them for forcing themselves, as an example, her nest, placing their rights and their demands therefor in lieu and unimplicit terms, preparing to soil the souls they have made with their lifeblood rather than any more to be the heirs of burden for those who hitherto held the whip hand. The voice of the Negro has stirred the hearts and minds of men, and it now holds their attention as it has done before. The Negro, too, is afraid of the needs of the life of the all round advancement of all the land and government are determined to win old hold their freedom and the right to when how and by whom they small government so too is the Negro prepared and the meaningful, omnious sounds which attract our attention from the universe where the son of Ham dwell are the earranging to be warning to their earranging to the death-knell of the longsuffering and the death-knell of the to which they have been subjected. They are calm in determination and stern of soul. They have their hearts upon freedom and mean to reach it or die in the attempt. They will never again how their necks in tribute, looking on, can see the steely glint in their eager earnest, determined eyes. The race of Negroes have caught the vision, the infection of the spirit of the age, and are looking hopefully forward to the day when they will be able to bask under the protecting hand of a strong and masterly respect-commanding government of their own in their fatherland, a government so strong that when the rights of the Negro are trampled upon in any part of the world they will have some power to see that the wrongs so done are redressed. For this time they are eagerly looking, and out of the depths of their souls they are sending forth their earnest cries to all mankind to be true and just and fair.
Out of the largeness of his heart the Negro is willing to forgive his erstwhile oppressors and to forget and forgive the wrongs and injustices which have been heaped upon him through centuries, but he has steeled his heart and set his face against every form of oppression, no matter from what quarter of the globe that oppression comes. Henceforth for him it is going to be freedom or death, for this is the spirit of the age.
This twentieth century, more than any other, in the age of advancement the age when men of every creed and color are coming into their own, the age of progress and prosperity, the age of daring and achievement, the age when the souls of oppressed peoples are being expressed as they have never been expressed before, and out of the midst of all this progress and advancement and daring and achievement we find that the Negro is standing prominently forward among the hitherto oppressed peoples. Men of vision, men who can sense the spirit of the age and who can see beneath the surface and heed the signs of the times, can understand the meaning of all the restlessness and preparation on the part of this mighty race of Negroes, which has thus far been ready and willing, to fight the battles of all the other peoples of the world except his own, and understand that he is now getting ready for the dawning of the day when all of his forces shall have been marshalled. Then will strikes for his own complete freedom, for he has also
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1922 caught the infection of the spirit of this age of self-determination.
this age of self-determination.
Some of those who have long deceived mankind are crying "Peace, peace," and making frantic efforts for a false show of peace and tranquility all over the world, but their efforts are unavailing, and always and ever they can hear the voice of the Negro peoples of the world saying, "There shall be no peace on earth till the race of Negroes is truly free and Africa is redeemed." The false hopes raised in the breasts of the scheming statesmen of Europe die before they can even spring up to view, and they come face to face, with the stern reality of a race that is marshalling all of its forces, its talents and its resources for the shaping of their destiny according to the dictates of their own mind, as the God of the universe has given them the vision. Four hundred million cagers, anxious cannot souls raise their hands on high and lift up their voices to heaven, saying that since we, too have caught the vision and have been inspired with the desire for freedom and advancement, we shall step out in the highway of progress marching on till victory is won.
HOWARD ELEVEN DOWNS VIRGINIA SEMINARY IN INITIAL GRIDIRON GAME
HOWARD ELEVEN DOWNS VIRGINIA SEMINARY IN INITIAL GRIDIRON GAME
WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 18 — Howard University wins in initial football game of the season against Virginia Theological Seminary and College, Lynchburg, Va., by a score of 6 to 0. A large and enthusiastic crowd witnessed the game, as much interest is being centered in the 'blue and white' eleven, which is to meet Lincoln University on Thanksgiving Day in the football class of the year, to be played at the American League Park, Washington, D.C.
Howard secured its score in the second quarter after getting far down into the Theolog's territory by blocking a kick which was recovered by a Howard man and followed by a couple of line plunges and the use of a short forward pass for a touch down. A forward pass was attempted for the extra point, but the effort failed.
In the third and fourth quarters Howard kept in the territory of the Theology and a number of times threatened their goal. The plucky Virginia fought hard and held the white and blue clash from scoring again during the game. While the first games results were not as oneided as was expected by the Howard supporters, none the less confidence is expressed in the belief that the Howard warriors will be successful throughout the season.
Lineup and Summary
SWEET ZIPPORAH
How oft when fancy roves I roam
Where sweet Zipporah beckons me.
Where purple-robed she pensive stands
Beside the Bay of Araby
Her shepherdia crook I dim behold.
The bleating sheep she leads to
drink.
I gaze at stars, reflected there
In well that loaned historic drink.
Romance hath paused in Midian
And fanned love to immortal glow.
For there it was that Moses wooed
Sweet, sweet Zipporah long age
Her Ethiopic features haunt
With glimpses of their sable grace.
O daughter of Bethuel thou.
No other one can take thy place
O Jethro a daughter, noble born.
Who to a refugee was kind.
That unto Moses ministered.
We hold the precious in our mind.
So call me off' Mine ears I1 arrest
To cheer thy gentle, distant cry
Wave high thy crook, O Moses' bride.
And to thy side I swift will fly
But let me touch thy garment a hem.
O shepherdess, sit at thy feet.
Entrulled with thee as Moses was
When thou wert his Zipporah sweet
ETHEL TREW DUNLAP.
1307 Allison avenue, Los Angeles,
Cal.
RUTH WHITEHEAD WHALEY WINS PRIZES OVER FIVE HUNDRED FIRST-YEAR LAW STUDENTS
RUTH WHITEHEAD WHALEY WINS PRIZES OVER FIVE HUNDRED FIRST-YEAR LAW STUDENTS
CONTEMPORARY COMMENT
THE POLITICS OF LLOYD GEORGE'S SPEECH
It is the politics and not the argument of Lloyd George's Manchester speech which matters most. As an argument in defense of British policy in the Near East the best that can be said for it is that the Prime Minister defended his choice of the lesser of two evils by an adroit and classed appeal to the non conformist conscience with a quirky reckless disregard of the effect of his words outside of England. But as politics in the complicated maneuver for position the speech is interesting and important. It followed, we must remember, the address of his colleague Austen Chamberlain to the Conservatives. The two addresses might almost be said to have been spoken from the same notes, and with the same argument about the Near East in their hands the two speakers stood back to back and met the attacks on two fronts against the Coalition. Mr. Chamberlain met the diehard attack. Mr Lloyd George met the independent Liberal attack.
Mr. Chamberlain's method was to use the threat of the Labor Party to frighten the Conservatives. He let them see that the Conservatives alone could not govern and that if there was no coalition with Lloyd George a new coalition was bound to form, composed of Labor and Liberalism. Mr. Lloyd George's method was a violent offensive against the Liberal leaders, aimed to discredit them so that he could enter the deal for a new election with the Liberal leadership in his control. Where Mr. Chamberlain had appealed to fear as a whip against the die-hard Tories, the Prime Minister used devastating ridicule against the die-hard Liberals.
The Lloyd George and Chamberlain combination has for the present certain distinct advantages. Like Germany in the war, it lights on interior lines against a scattered enemy who has no unity of command. Soon or late the Coalition will break down under the accumulating odds against it, but it is a safe guess that its downfall will not from the attacks on the various oppositions but from a revolt within the Coalition. The thing to watch is not what Mr. Asquith or Lrd Grey or Lord Robert Cecil says but what happens to Mr Austin Chamberlain's leadership of the Conservative. That is, that Mr Lloyd George is watching a sudden call for a general election would probably mean that he had decided to strike before a Conservative revolt against Chamberlain had matured. A delayed election would probably mean that within the Coalition harmony had prevailed—New York World.
LLOYD GEORGE RESIGNS
It could hardly have happened better for Mr Lloyd George. Because of the vote of the Conservative party, deciding to withdraw from the Coalition, it is the Conservative party which must worry along with what remains of the unhappy and discredited Parliament of 1918. Mr Lloyd George, on the other hand, can enter the next general election not as a public official on the defensive but as the aggressive leader of the opposition. This is his proper and most successful and most dangerous role.
He has thrown off the burden of Europe at a time when he could no longer carry it and has placed it upon shoulders far weaker than his own. In a time when no English party is a majority party he has been able by a turn of events to put the strongest minority party into a position of power and responsibility whose its every internal weakness must be revealed. Instead, therefore, of having to fight the next election isply on the basis of what was bad in the Coalition Government he is able to bring to the country a realization of what a Conservative Government is actually like. He recovers the immense political advantage of being able to attack. He forces on his opponents the immense disadvantage of having to defend.
Thus there ends in a great strategic maneuver one of the most significant governments in English history. It carried on a victorious war. It helped write the peace. Those two facts will make it memorable always for good or evil or for both good and evil. It lived so long, it lived through such immense excitement, it touched so many enormous issues, it has been the focus of so much hate and so much admiration, it has been so brilliant and so blundering, so resolute and so vacillating. That it defies any general and simple judgment at the end.
It was based on a union of discordant elements. It moved in a domestic and in a world situation in which all the familiar landmarks had been swept away. It was, therefore, a government of improvisation, turning swiftly one way and then another with the tides of opinion among the rocks of circumstances. Never before have human beings in public office dealt with such swift and cataclysmic, such unpredictable and such confused facts. Not even the basis of their own power was certain. And therefore almost every great decision had to be bent and twisted not only according to a very fallible human judgment of the facts abroad but according to the equally
Cured Her Rheumatism
COMPLAINT DEPARTMENT
The President-General of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, on his tour of the nation, has been approached by hundreds of loyal members and well wishers of the Association in complaints against the treatment they have received from several of the various departments of the Organization at headquarters and from individual officers and employees at headquarters, as also against the conduct of certain Executive Officers whilst on the field.
The President-General is grieved of the many complaints and hereby begs to announce that a Complaint Department is now established and attached to his office. All persons having complaints to make against any department, officer or employee of the Organization will please write to
COMPLAINT DEPARTMENT
P. B.-If you love the Organization and desire to see it improve its service to the race, then you will not fail to report any irregularity on the part of officials, officers and employees of the Organization, acting, not whom the service be, if he or she has done anything improper or unintentional, report it. If you have any complaints, send them in now and don't wait until it is too late.
human prejudices and ambitions of the Coalition at home.
The faults of the Lloyd George government lie on the surface for all men to see. They are plain as a pikistask. They glare at you. They shout at you. They are excavable and indefensible. But for the present at least they must be judge* in what perspective we can obtain, and in that perspective, in the perspective of other governments for example, it becomes impossible to condemn easily.
After all Lloyd George in politics has been and still is a manifestation of which the ordinary rules of politics as we learned them before 1914 throw very little light - New York World.
A BROOKLYN BRIDGE
By HAMILTON WRIGHT
"By HAMILTON WRIGHT
Long before Colonel Roebling built the Brooklyn Bridge, the savages of Africa were successful in making suspension bridges of creepers over large rivers. Here is the original Brook in Bridge,' declared the professor with a great show of learning.
In the Kamerunus, that part of West Africa formerly in possession of the Germans, but now under French rule, Jack and Jill had come upon a suspension bridge made by the natives over a steaming tropical river
The bridge was entirely made up of creepers which abound throughout the dense forest. Four large cables of creepers were fastened to the trunks of trees, one pair about four feet higher than the other. To these cables were secured other creepers from the tops of the oftest trees on each side of the stream, while horizontal guys presented the bridge from awaying about. Arrows the lower pair of cables ticks were laid to form a runway. These were lashed in their places and wattled in with creepers, while a large network of creepers connected the upper and lower tables on each side of the bridge. "It must take an awful long time to build this" Jill said.
"No indeed, lady. With all the materials of our turret and our armor knives we can make one quickly, said the native guide—Brooklyn Lally Eagle.
A SAMUEL ADAMS DAY
On Wednesday falls the 200th anniversary of the birth of Samuel Adams. Gov. Cox in a proclamation calls upon all citizens of Massachusetts to recognize the day by the unfurling of flags, both State and national and by gatherings in spots made historical by association with the great patriot of revolutionary Boston. The people of all the States well may join, in thought at least, with those of the Bay State in observance of the Wednesday occasion
Samuel Adams, according to the word of Gov Cox, was a sentinel for liberty. It means more to say that Adams was a radical for liberty. Back in his Harvard days he chose for his thesis for a degree the proposition "Whether it be lawful to resist the Supreme Magistrate if the Commonwealth cannot otherwise be preserved," and he took up the affirmative with the full weight of conviction. Years later, when pressing for the Declaration he said "I should advise persisting in our struggle for liberty though it were revealed from heaven that 999 were to perish and one out of 1,000 were to survive and retain his liberty." A progressive in the politics of his day, Adams was a conservative in religion. He was as Leut. Gov Hutchison testified to the British Government, "of such an obstinate and inflexible disposition that no gift nor office would ever conciliate him." He was a man for his times and his country. He helped to mould the town meeting he sounded one of the earliest calls to revolt, he signed the Declaration, he was one of the framers of the Constitution. He was alive and alert wherever duty and love of liberty called him. In the lack of leaders of his type in the peril of American government today - N. Y. World.
Started by the Universal Negro Improvement Association for the Liberation of Africa-All Negroes Asked to Subscribe Five Dollars or More
The Universal Negro Improvement Association, charged with the responsibility of freeing the four hundred million oppressed Negroes of the world and with the redemption of Africa, is now raising a universal fund to capitalize its work for the freedom of Africa.
The Second Annual International Convention of the Negro peoples of the world legislated that a capitalization fund for the propagation of the work be raised from among all Negroes under the caption of "The African Redemption Fund"; that each member of the Negro race be asked to donate five dollars ($5.00) or more to the fund for the cause of world-wide race adjustment, and the freedom of Africa. Each and every Negro contributing to this fund will receive a certificate of race loyalty given by the Universal Negro Improvement Association with the autographed signatures of the Provisional President of Africa, the Secretary General and High Chancellor of the Universal Negro Improvement Association.
If you are a race patriot, if you are desirous of seeing your race liberated, if you are desirous of seeing Africa free from oppression, if you are desirous of building up a great Negro race, you will send in your five dollars or more immediately to the "African Redemption Fund." Send postal money order, money mail order, check or American currency in registered cover, made out to the Universal Negro Improvement Association. All remittances must be made out to the association and not to individuals. Address your communication to Secretary General, Universal Negro Improvement Association, 56 West 135th street, New York City, N. Y., U. S. A.
All donations to this fund will be acknowledged in The Negro World week by week, and a book of donors will be printed and circulated all over the world as a record for succeeding generations of Negroes to see and know those who contributed to the liberation of the race and the freedom of Africa. Send in your five dollars or more now.
All persons donating $25 or more to this fund, in addition to being granted a certificate, will have his or her photograph published in The Negro World and in the Universal Volume to be published for distribution all over the world.
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MARCUS GARVEY'S DEFENSE FUND
Everyone Will Subscribe to This Fund to Offset the Plotters Against Negro Rights and Liberty—The Enemies Are at Work—Send in Your Subscription Now
The cast against the Honorable Marus Garvey, Kile Garcia and George Tobias of the Black Star Line for alleged misuse of the United States mails will be called some time this month in New York. For quite a while enmies of Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association have been working for the purpose of turning public sentiment against Mr Garvey.
Different Negro associations have been canvassing the people, asking them to testify against Mr Garvey. They have organised opposition meetings in different centres under the capa-
tion, "Garvey Must Go." All this is being done to defeat the hopes of our race through the only real Negro movement started in the interest of the race.
The fight for African freedom is eternal and you must support it now by supporting the greatest leader of the race. Send in your subscription to this fund immediately. All subscriptions will be acknowledged in the columns of this paper.
The case will be reported day by day in the Daily Negro Times and weekly in this paper for universal circulation. Bend all subscriptions addressed to Secretary-General, Universal Negro Improvement Association, 56 West 185th street, New York city, N Y
THE FUND
Conn.
Mrs. E. Woods, Hartford, Conn.
Guthrie Division, Guthrie, Okla.
Joe Mosey, Winston Salem, N. C. Grace Morse, Winston Salem
Paul P. Hunter, Brookhaven, Nr.
E. D. Holland, Pocahontas. Va.
Rev. Samuel Johnson, Pocahontas.
Polly Hunter, Pocahontas.
Narsha Jackson, Pocahontas.
Lee Jackson, Pocahontas.
Charles Hancock, Pocahontas.
Sarah Goodwin, Hampton, Va.
T. Bill Whelaton, Okla.
Ohio.
James Moore, Grange, N. J.
Sydney Jessie, New York city
Mir. M. Christian, N. Y. city
Jane Thorne, New York city
Joseph Maynard, N. Y. city
Davis Nicholl, Chippea, La.
Mary Daniel, Closterville, La.
Jennifer James, Closterville, La.
Mia Patterson, Closterville, La.
Nathaniel Closterville, La.
Nathaniel Closterville, La.
Jane Tervison, Closterville, La.
Jane Tervison, Closterville, La.
Jane Tervison, Derry, La.
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1922
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Frances Napper Elizabeth N J
Turner Napper, Elizabeth N J
Josephine Napper Elizabeth N J
Amy Brown, Elizabeth N J
Robert Roberts Burlington N J
Elizabeth Burlthers, Burlington
Julius Steel, Burlington N J
L Stell Burlington N J
William Produs, Burlington
A JI Brown, Burlington N J
Aris Latimore, Burlington N J
Elizabeth Hanna Burlington N J
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Maggie Simmora Johns Island
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100 William Bradley. Maryville N. C.
A Simmons, Maryville, N. C.
Prof John H Darden College
Col Norman Walker Indiana
100 Harbor, Ind
William Young Pleasant City
Fla
L. J. Lungeet West Palm Beach
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Richie Morrison West Palm
Heach Fla
Daniel Gibson West Palm Heach
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Chase West Palm Heach
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L. J. Wright Pleasant City
British Show Freton N. J.
Marshall Show Freton N. J.
Bishop A. W. Cook Youlmen
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THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1922
La Vergüienza de los chamientos
Durante el debate del proyecto de ley contra los linhamientos en la camara de representantes mas de uno de los miembros de ella procedente de los estados del sur declarado que esas entidades harian frente al problema resueltamente si siquiera se les deje en libertad. Se esperaba en verdad, que la discussion por si misma podria producir un nuevo aspecto más ligico en la situación e induir al gobierno y a los jefes de policía a ser más resueltos y energicos en la defensa de hombres y mujeres a quienes amenacen los linhadores. En algunos estados podria haberse obtenido tal resultado. Es un signo alentador la organización de una mihuña femenil para detener la continuación de los linhamientos en los Estados Unidos, tomando parte en esa organización directores procedentes de todos los estados. Y sin embargo, mensualmente se informan nuevos linhamientos, que constituyen una vergüenza para el país, y que significan un estigma difícil de eliminar para los americanos que se encuentran con reproches cuando protestan contra las atrocidades turcas o los atentados de Rusia, nadie puede negarlo. Y sin embargo, los esfuerzos por dar fin a esa vergüenza parecen haber logrado muy poco.
Los Capitalistas Blancos Intersados Siempre en la Explotación del Continente Africano se Valen de un Nuevo Método Para Consiguir sus Propósitos—Utilizan Ciertos de los Tal Llamados Directores de Nuestra Raza, Mediante Pago, Como Instrumentos
Las naciones v corporaciones financieras interesadas siempre en la explotación del continente africano, se han dado cuenta de que existe actualmente una agitación universal en pro de la absoluta emancipación de Africa, patrocinada por los pueblos Negros del mundo y que los africanos en su madre patria toman parte activa en esta agitación
Sus hermanos en raza del hemisferio occidental, de Asia, y de Europa dan a esta agitación una ayuda prepotente y millones de Negros en America especialmente trabajan y luchan sin cesar por la completa libertad de nuestra raza en todas partes
El proyecto de ley contra los luchamientos aprobado por la camara, puede no haber sido una ley completenamente sabia o constitucional. De hecho, fue considerablemente modificada por la comisión del senado antes de presentar su dictamen Hasta entonces no pudo lograrse que la discusión avanzara, a causa de las sospechas de partidariismo que se levantaban por ambas partes. Los republicanos fueron acusados de apoyar insinceramente el proyecto de ley simplemente con el fin de ganar los votos de la probación negra en las elecciones congressionales. Por otra parte, los democratas del senado hostilizaron e, proyecto de ley y expresaron su opción con un inocultable fin de bandera. En Diembre proximo la cuestión se presentará logicamente de nuevo como un asunto que no ha terminado. Es posible que entonces se estudie como un problema no de partido, sino de interés nacional. Podria aprobarse por medio de un convenio patrimonio una ley que puerta una especie de referender federal a la expresion de ilegalidad y desorden que atrue a la nación entera una gran verguenza.
Poco tiempo ha la Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra envío a la Liga de Naciones en Geneva. Suiza, una delegación de representantes de nuestra raza para presentar ante aquel augusto cuerpo, las demandas de una raza que aspira a su absoluta libertad.
Gran pullicidad se ha dado a este asunto en Europa, lo cual ha despertado gran interes entre los europeos, especialmente entre las clases trabajadoras. Con el objeto de contrarestar nuestra labor hacia la realización de nuestro ideal los capitalistas europeos se valen de nuevos métodos, en lo que respecta a los asuntos en el continente altivo.
Filos tratan de convencer a la humanidad con la teoria de que el Africa no necesita una independencia propia, sino que su desarrollo debe depender de la bondad de las sociedades missionarias blancas, las cuales son protejidas por los buenos bilantrópicos blancos.
Istos calculan que si consiguen que el mundo vea el futuro de Africa bajo este punto de vista, habrán muy pocos elementos de las otras razas que simpaticen con esta nueva demanda, lanzada a la opinión pública por nuestra organización, para recuperar lo que por ley natural nos pertenecice.
Turquía No Consentirá que Inglaterra Ordene en los Dardanelos
Los capitalistas de Norte America y de Inglaterra y los centros financieros de Francia e Italia se han propuesto de nuevo afianzar su poderio en el continente africano, con el objeto de extraer de el la última onza de oro, plata, cobre hierro, petroleo y demas minerales usando el sudor y su es posible, la sangre de sus nativos.
El general Mazanaris, enviado de Grecia en la conferencia de Mudania, se nego a firmar el protocolo del armistico mientras consultaba al gobierno de Atenas, según despacho oficial recibido al mediodel comandante britanico v delegado en la conferencia, general Harington
Ya que el Negro del presente empieza a hacer uso de las facultades, que la Natureleza le ha conferido, los filantropicos blancos realizan que será para ellos una árdua labor el convencerle que acepte su amigable protección y utilizan ciertos de los tal llamados directores de nuestra propia raza, quienes mediante pago, harán uso de toda su influencia y malicia para que tal protección sea aceptada
Los generales aliados v los turcos firmaron el documento y se espera que Grecia lo firmara dentro de uno o dos dias Harington informo ademas que la preparacion se habia retardado a tal punto que las firmas no habian fijado todas sino a las seis y cuarenta minutos de la majana
La historia se repite y con gran disgusto vemos de nuevo a los Judas Iscariotes desempeñando su papel. El pago por ellos recibido es el precio de venta de su propia raza. Ninguna persona ha de regalar millares de pesos sin nungun propósito. Su intención, al donar financias a instituciones e individualidades de nuestra raza, es que se dé al Negro una educación limitada y que se evite que éste se convierta en un elemento de una raza unida, fuerte e independiente. He aquí el porque de nuestro retroceso en esta nueva era de civilización.
Los curcos en el último momento se retractaron sobre las cuestiones de la zona neutral a lo largo de los estrechos y el tamaño de la gendarmeria turca en Tracia.
Noticias de Adrianopolis informa que la junta de socorro norteamericana en el oriente habia sido invitada a supervigilar la evacuación de 400.000 griegos de Constantino pla y el este de Tracia. El ministerio del exterior confirma que las objetiones de los griegos son solo tecnicas y que pronto seran resultados
Los filantrópicos blancos han notado que las instituciones de nuestra raza, influenciadas por su protección financiera, no han practicado la enseñanza de amor a la raza y a la madre patria y aprovechan esta gran oportunidad para posesionarse de la mas mínima pulgada del territorio africano y vemos hoy dia que el norte, sur, este, oeste y centro de Africa es todo propiedad del hombre blanco, quien intenta explotarla para su enriquecimiento y el de su raza.
Civilización Oriental
Pueblos jóvenes, nacidos de las runas de viejas civilizaciones asiáticas, van surgiendo poco a poco en el escenario de la vida mundial, de nunciario una personalidad más menos vigorosa, mas o menos evolucionada. Una inconfirmed general hacía los dogmas y sistemas de la vida extendida a lo largo de los siglos precedentes a la gran guerra, ha provocado la concentración de grupos homogéneos en las dilatadas comarcas asiaticas, consientes del advenimiento de una era que les permita alinearse entre los pueblos a quienes incorpora en su sen principios reveladores de la civilización actual.
Afortunadamente la Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra está aquí para, exponer todas esta tramas las cuales han sido puestas en práctica para detrimento, no solamente del continente africano, sino también de la raza Negra en general. Abrigamos la esperanza de que ninguna atención será prestada a la propaganda de estos Judas Iscariotes, instrumentos de una raza, que en todo tiempo ha demostrado muy poca 6 ninguna consideración por la nuestra.
Hace diez y ocho años las granadas demoleadoras de los acorazados japoneses anuncarron a los atomitos espectadores europeos que no todo era decadenenta y quietismo sepulcral en los dominios espirituales de Buda, y ahora los bedunos aguerridos, beliceros y bovis y de Bravos Pasha, ponen una barrera infraquable a las ambiciones imperialistas de las potencias europeas, anunciando de manera categórica que la personalidad de los pueblos orientales no se cotizará por más tiempo en el mercado de los intereses de Occidente. Refrenda esta actitud la insurrección latente en los gloriosos dominios faráconicos, aptos para la vida
El Africa no necesita del consejo ni de la protección de las tal llamadas naciones cristianas. Por centenares de años han estado predicando cristianismo como medio eficiente para explotar y robar el continente africano. La Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negrá está determinada a llevar a cabo el programa de una absoluta emancipación, por medio del apoyo moral, físico y financiero de los elementos de nuestra raza. Si hemos de ser leales a esta noble causa, no vemos la razón por la cual dentro de breve tiempo podamos derrotar a los enemigos de nuestra raza y existir en un medio ambiente de libertad.
civilizada, debido a la concreción de los postulados de dos civilizaciones en los laboratorios del alma popular egregia. Y detrás de estos, levanta su cabeza milenaria el alma mística de la India, que evoca, bajo sus tiendas revolucionarias, el poder del verbo, sugeridor de Chendi, el esplendor de un pasado grandioso, que se confunde con los origenes de las nieves del Himalaya y con el quietismo murmurante del Ganges. El velo impenetrable que hasta hoy ha enviuido a la mayoría de las sociedades asiaticas ha mantenido una hición mexicana como dugma mitangible del desarrollo o decadencia de esos pueblos. Nunca la verdad fue defrauada en forma más desconcertante que cuando se quiso inquirir el estado social de alguna agrupación asiatica.
Prejuicios religiosos o políticos, intereses mercantiles y el egoismo de los pueblos que, arrogantemente, se llaman orientadores de la civilización, anunciaron a los vientos de la publicidad, a la manera de horoscopo infable, la decadencia y barbarie de tales sociedades. Fue preciso la accion coerciva de la guerra en Vladivostock, con el trunfo del Japon, o en Smirna, con el trunfo de los musulmanes, para permitir a esos pueblos orientales la enunciación de su derecho a la vida, y esto debido a que no habia poder humano capaz de sofrer la arrogancia de sus victorias incuestionables
Contra esto es preciso emprender una campaña depuradora que destruya la montaña de mentiras convenionales que hoy entorpece el juicio de la humadad. En el alma de los pueblos de Oriente hay motivos de la mas profunda admiración, como los hay en los pueblos europeos. Nadie, en ninguna parte, está en posición de la verdad absoluta, la cual, al traducirse en maneras de pensar colectivo y en normas de vida, dio origen a las actuales religiones, todas nacidas en el Asia
Francia en Contra de la Ley Prohibicionista Americana
El comisionado Haynes afirma que la semana de extension concedida a los buques extranjeros para zarpar puerto libres de la lev Volstea significa cambio alguno en la actitud de la administración en la de los funcionarios encargado de hacer observar la prohibición, pero Mr Haynes tiene graves prejudicios Espera que la extension concedida no signifique ningun cambio de frente. Pero es improbable que haya jamás ninguna tentativa para restablecer la jurisdicción de la ley de prohibición sobre los buques de bandera extranjera en la forma ahora en discussion. El peligro de ancho que es demasiado evidente para el presidente Harding y el secretario Mellon. Entre tanto ha tribunales que pueden suspender la vigencia del reglamento dictado por Mr Daugherty y al final seran los tribunales quienes decidan su ese reglamento la de persistir o no.
Si persiste, lo que parece improbable, considerando su seria transcendencia internacional, la ley Volstead debera ser revisada. Si el congresso ha legislado neciamente contra la posición de losiores abordo de buques extranjeros que se hallen dentro de nuestros limites jurisdicionales, existe un conflicto directo entre las leyes extranjeras y la de los Estados Unidos. Las compañías que navegan bajo bandera francesa se ven requeridas, según Joseph P Nolan, abogado consultor de la línea francesa, a suministrar diariamente a cada miembro de la tripulación de sus buques medio litro de vino de contenido alcoholico por dia y a los 'logoneros un litro Los buques franceses no podrán obedecer al mismo tiempo las leyes francesas y las de los Estados Unidos Para poner en vigencia la ley habria que legislar para Francia, lo que Francia no podrá permitir
Hay solo una salida de la estupida situacion creada por Mr. Daugherty Los Estados Unidos deben retirar su absurda pretension de soberana sobre los buques extranjeros. El que esto se haga por medio de los tribunales o por una reforma de la ley Volstead no significa nada. Pero debe ser hecho.
La Causa India
Los amigos de la libertad de la India han preparado un banquete en el cual hablarán oradores conocidos de los Estados Unidos y del país hindu.
Semejantes demostraciones tenderán lugar simultámente en Boston, Egipto, Sud Africa y en cerca de 700,000 aldeas y cuadades de la India.
La celebración se hace con motivo del decimoséptimo aniversario del movimiento nacionalista para la obtención de la independencia de la India. Igualmente se celebra el día de Gandhi, que los amigos y simpatizadores de la independencia de la India, obtervan el dia 8 de cada mes.
Tal celebración es significativa, como expresión universal de la camaradería de la libertad y de la cooperación mandial en todos los fines que constituyen una aspiración universal.
La Campafia Contra el Gobernador de Puerto Rico
De nuevo ilegan de la hermosa Borinquen ecos de fronda, en la información de una renaciente campaña contra el gobierno E. Montgomery Reilly, ya furiosamente atacado por prominentes nucleos políticos el año pasado
A la cabeza de la nueva agitacion aparecen representantes de colectividades políticas muy importantes. Los cargos que se presentan, reiteracion mas detallada de los hechos anteriormente, tienen undudable gravedad Implican inversiones poco correctas de fondos públicos, empleo indebido de la autoridad gubernatorial, abuso de poder y excesos en la intervención política del mandatario Cualquiera de esos cargos por si solo tendria bastante importancia para motivar la investigación tan solicitada. Todos juntos la hacen impreсundible.
Puerto Rico lleva un periodo de anormalidad política de cerca de dos años, en que el representante del poder de Washington en la isla ha estado divorciado, cuando menos, de sectores muy importantes de la opinion del país. Nada podra, en justicia, imputarse directamente a la administración de Washington, en sus relaciones directas con los puertorriquenos Cualesquilera que sean las ideas de estos, convienen en que sus negociaciones directas con los departamentos interesados de Washington son casi siempre satisfactorias. Pero la actuación del gobernador Reilly, que es precisamente representante de la administración federal, ha logrado el prodigio de crear antagonismos furiosos e irreconcilables, que nada vencer vencer.
Una comisión parece en formación y destinada a traer de nuevo ante la Casa Blanca la reclamaciones de los borranquenos contra el gobernador impuesto Nada nuevo, por el momento al menos, puede decirse sobre la base legal y la documentación fehaciente que los comisionados traigan a los Estados Unidos. Pero el simple hecho del viaje de esa mission y de la agitación que sacué a la isla, hablan elocuentemente en favor de una investigación oficial superior que trate de restaurar la paz moral y organizzada, alterada desde hace tanto en Puerto Rico.
Los puertorriquenos han demostrado a la Union una leal y probada amistad en la hora del peligro. Pero allá, como en el resto de Hispano America, no se olvida, no puede olvidarse, que Puerto Rico es una nación de nuestra raza, que cono todas las demas de esturpe hispana han nacido y existen con el perenne anhelo de libertad e independencia. Los puertorriquenos podran, y de hecho lo hacen, aceptar hechos históricos y condicionales inudibles de su situación. Pero las aspiraciones de libertad no moriran con represiones absurdas o gobernadores reflexivos. La labor del gobernante americano de Puerto Rico debe tender a encauzar el desarrollo de aquel laborioso y culto pueblo por senderos normales y pacíficos.
Y el porvenir dira lo que el destino reserve a la nacion hermana. Pero en nombre de la democracia, de la libertad v del derecho de los pueblos al gobierno propio, no puede negarse a la población de la isla una investigacion sobre la clase de gobernante que la rige tan a su disgusto -La Prensa, N Y
COLORED DELEGATE TO NATIONAL CONVENTION OF THE AMERICAN LEGION
Commander Thomas H. Walters of the Col Charles Young Post No. $28, American Legion, of New York, left Saturday morning on the American Legion special for the national convention at New Orleans, La. Mr. Walters is the only colored delegate representing New York State. As accompanying the delegate in Mr. Sol. Butler, a member of the Col Charles Young Post, who will represent the State in the national athletic meet Mr. Walters' special work at the convention will be that of securing the passage of a resolution effecting the admission of colored men into the legion from those States which do not now grant charters.
The Col Charles Young Post No. 388 has been waging a vigorous campaign in the interest of this resolution for several months. Colored posts in many States have worked for adoption of such a resolution, and to date it is reported that the States of Indiana, Ohio, Massachusetts, New York, the District of Columbia and several others have pledged support to the resolutions.
HIGH COMMISSIONER TOBITT
SAILS, FOR HIS FIELD
SAILS FOR HIS FIELD
Rev Dr. J. H. Tobitt, who has recently been appointed High Commissioner of the West Indian group, including Bermuda, the Leeward Islands, Barbados, British Guiana, and who took a prominent part in the recent U. N. I. A. convention, is expected to sell for his field on Tuesday next. Originally the principal of a grammar school in Bermuda, being a Mious school graduate, Dr. Tobitt retired to take up service in the U. N. L. A. and has met with well-descended success. With him further steps in his career were
OPPORTUNITIES
There is a tide in the affair of men, which, when taken at the flood, leads en to greatness—Lengfellow.
Never before in the history of the Negro peoples of the world have there ever been such daunting prospects and brilliant opportunities forthcoming as are now presented by the Universal Negro Improvement Association.
Going back years ago, through the inculcation of false doctrines taught them by alien races for their own aggredissement, they evinced an inability to unite and blind themselves together, which borders strongly on incredulity.
Years ago the Negro felt that all for which he had to live was the security of a meal, he lay in his bed and visions of the plough, scenes of drudgery, the whip and lash all rose before him like dark, towering, frowning and insu, mountable walls that stopped his progress.
The intervention of providence from its throne of immutability, working in its mysterious way, coupled with his own efforts, led him through the above mentioned obstacles. He steps out in the world determined to make something of himself, but alas he sees on the horizon a dark cloud of race prejudice rushing headlong toward him, he sees rising on either side of him waves of race hatred and breakers of segregation threatening to throw him off his feet at any moment, and last, but not least, he hears the stentorian voice of his former master ringing out like a peal of thunder. "Thus far shalt thou go and no further."
He stands alone, unarmed, unprotected against these great odds that spell death, slavery and extermination; he sees the last chance of his being a man vanishing before him like the melting of ice.
Yet with qualities unlike those of Redmen he stoops to conquer; he despares not; injuries are given him without retaliation, injustices borne without redress being sought for.
Anon' it seems as if in vindication of the words "Reward comes to those who wait" there comes one out of the maestrom of these depicted conditions, one who was predestined to revive the fast-waning hope of this grand old race, one who was destined to excavate even from the bowels of Mother Earth the hidden history of Ethiopia's lost glory to enlighten a people yearning for a knowledge of themselves, one who is destined, like Wellington, who defeated and crushed the onward march of Napoleon Bonaparte, the greatest military genius of modern times, in his attempted invasion of European liberty, to lead the 400,000,000 Negroes through the unequal strife of this greedy and covetous world against the overwhelming odds to the possession of their rightful heritage and to make them citizens of a free Africa.
He of whom I write is no less a person than His Excellency, Hon. Marcus Garvey, Provisional President of Africa and President-General and Administrator of the Universal Negro Improvement Association.
Of him it can be said, "Vent. vid. vici," he is a prodigy that stands today as the Pyramids of Egypt, unrivaled by any of his race in the art of organization he is a Rock of Gibraltar, guarding and guiding the destiny of 400,000,000 Negroes of the world in their Mediterranean Sea of Troubles. Powerful in the originality of his ideas, decisive, bold, defiant in the execution of his duty; of an independent mien, of an integrity of character capable of facing the powerful searchlights of public scrutiny and the investigating gaze of an unscrupulous world, the Negro race can boast at last of having presented to the world a leader unsurpassed in his magnanimity and one whose unfinishing determination is to give liberty to the 400,000,000 Negroes or die in the attempt. The success of the program of this master mind depends largely upon the
My dear readers, at this moment it is with a heart full of race-love and pride in my color that I am appealing to you, it is with a hope that you have been aroused to race-consciousness, with the belief that you have realized that the future of the children and your children's children is within your power to make or mar, that I am asking you not to let this opportunity allp. Remember, "opportunity lost can never be regained," and that it knocks but once at a man's door.
Opportunity has a long time been in knocking at the Negro's door, but the longest day has an end, and it has at last presented itself in the Universal Negro Improvement Association, and it behooves every Negro man and woman to grasp this life-line which has been thrown out to him, for upon it rests the destiny of 400,000,000 Negroes of the world.
In the opening I stated that more brilliant opportunities never presented themselves, and to the eye of a careful and analytical observer this statement is irrefutable.
England today is from a physical point of view extremely weak, financially she borders on bankruptcy, and the situation demands all the tast and diplomacy her statesman can exhibit to keep the crumbling wall intact.
Ireland writhes within the throes of a civil war, and anarchy strides like a Colosseus through her streets; Scotland is beginning to send up her cry for liberty and self-government; India is like unto a boiling volcano ready at any moment to send into the atmosphere her columns of deadly lively; Russia runs red with the blood of penalized rebels; Turkey and Greece are again engaged in the deadly scions of civilization; war"; China"; Britain; forces are burning, to have their ancestors or slaves from foreign lands killed; for the master of all these nations
ago been a pawn in the social institutions. is now binding links with the inseparable codes of love, the silver links of the once divided chain are now being riveted strongly together with the golden rivets of unity and they are forming a body 400,000,000 strong with the intention of joining their part, not as a pawn in the game this time, but as a player, and the player who holds the winning cards.
Although it may seem a matter of physical impossibility for us to succeed in the accomplishment of our aims, yet in accordance with Patrick Henry, "there is a just God who presides over the destinies of nations," and although we are not yet one, he has seen and knows the oppression of His people in Africa and will certainly hear the cry of 400,000,000 in their effort for freedom.
Let us then be up and doing, with a heart for any fate.
Realizing that before us lies the opportunity of materializing these visions our imaginations build, the vision of a land thriving with industry and commerce, a land teeming with millions of free citizens, beautiful marble halls of legislature, seats of culture, universities of learning, where our men and women can aspire to be the holders of titles, where they can be afforded the opportunity to illuminate the pages of history with their definitions which are now stifled, and where we can behold floating in the balmy sephyrs of sunny Africa the new-born banner of the Red, Black and Green.
RANDOLPH ONEAL
Private Secretary.
PERCIVAL L. BURROWE
Trinidad, B. W. L.
MORAVIAN TEACHER AND CAT-
ECHIST PASSES AWAY
Mr. A. W. Wright, who, for nearly fifty years, was connected with the Moravian denomination, both as teacher and catechist, died at his residence, Malvern, Parish of Saint Elizabeth, Jamaica, B. W. L. in his 77th year.
During his career he labored at the Cairn Curran, Irwin Hill, Ashton, Hopeton and Littis schools. He leaves six children and four grand children to mourn his loss.
"Gone, but not forgotten."
Informacion General
REQUISITOS NECESARIOS
PARA SER MIEMBRO DE LA
"ASOCIACION UNIVERSAL
PARA EL ADELANTO DE
LA RAZA NEGRA."
Con la cantidad de sesenta centavos ($0.60) todo elemento de nuestra raza puede ser miembro de la "Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra". Ela suma incluye cuota de entrada, veinte y cinco centavos ($0.72), y pago del primer mea, treinta y cinco centavos ($0.35) como miembro.
Todo miembro debe ser provisto de una Constitución, o Libro de Leyes de la Organizacion (valor 25 centavos) y una insignia (valor 15 centavos).
Si hubiera en la villa, pueblo o ciudad donde Ud. viva una División Autorizada de esta Asociación, haga su aplicación en ella; en caso contrario, manda su aplicación, al Cuero Directivo de la Asociación remitiendo la cantidad de un tolar ($1.00). Al recibo de esta cantidad le sera enviado por corropos artículos antes mencionados, con un Certificado como miembro de la Asociación. La aplicación dela ser dirigida a:
Sr. Secretario, Officina General del
Aconsejamos a aquellos que envien sus cottas al Chuerro Directivo lo hagan annual, semi-annual o cadas tres meses, para evitar la constante transmisión de la Tarjeta a esta oficina todos los meses.
APORTE SU OBOLO PARA EL GRAN MOVIMIENTO DE TODAS LAS BFOCAS POR LA REDENCION DE AFRICA Y EL ADELANTO DEL NEGRO EN TODAS PARTES.
Bordera, tal de soplora, o 9 p. 12...9,50 g. g. g.
Gordena, tal de soplora, 12 p. 18...9,50 g. g.
Rocosa, rel. madera y corcho...9,50 g. g.
Rocosa, corro madera y corcho...9,50 g. g.
Sobelina, Natividad Gordiana...9,50 g. g.
Sobelina, Corro madera y corcho...9,50 g. g.
Sobelina, Corro madera y corcho...9,50 g. g.
Fotografía, Embalaje de bebida...9,50 g. g.
Proteo especial para Criatura y juvenile de por supuesto
Compre los discos para fondos
fos de la U. N. I. A. por artista de
la raza, a precios redimedos. En
viamos ordenes a todas partes midi-
dante pago por adelantado.
BLACK FRENCH OFFICERS 10 |
COMMAND WHITE TROOPS
(Bperial Vorrespendonce ts The Negro Times!
PARIS Oct 10 —While England and
America are apparently doing all they
can to retard the progress of thelr
Negre popuiation Wrance realizing
that her future tom grent extent lire
in her black populntion ie doing overy
thing to develop her Nearors.
The latest move to atartle the
Americans here ie the proposal of
Colonel Stub? « leading military au-
thority to onea French — muiitary
schools to Negro studeote frum tho
African Colonies, Under this proposal.
which 19 being seriously considered
by the Army Commission, these black
oMfcers would bo appointed to the
command of white troops.
With the suscees of Moran and BIkKl.
and the very splendid service rendered
by Negro officors and men during the
war, the eyes of the French Govern:
ment are wide upen to the great por:
abilities of her black colonials,
Famous Negro Genera!
1 te not generally known in the
United States that the moat distin
guished figure in ¥rench military
circles prior to the great war war
Genernt alfred Almedea Dodds, who
died in his eighty-fourth year recently
General Dodds was a Beneguicar iin
mother was © native woman and his
father @ white official.
He was Commandor-in-Chief of the
armies that added tho great native
Kingdom of Dahomey and much of
Nigeria, as wetl as the whole trans-
Bahara territory with its millions of
population to the huge colonial empire
of France in West Africa.
He also aaw considerable service in
ANALYZING BIASED
PROPAGANDA
The following 1» un excerpt from tho
editorial columna of tho ‘Jamaica
Times,” a weekly newspaper published
in Kingston, Jamaica, BW. I
‘A great Gcal te being written and
said hero just now on the part of Mr
Garvey's propaganda. From one stand-
point it need hardly be discussed.
Whatever Mr. Garvey's motives, aims,
intentions or desires, however pure
they may be, however patriotic or
however courageous, one has only to
look correctly into the matter to real-
ize that there is nothing practical or
real in tho plan of taking back to
Africa people whose forbears came
from Africa, but who themselves have
long since bocome part and parce! of
other Innds, They wont go in any
letge numbers. If they did on, they
would find that they had been let In
for something vory different trom
what they had expected, and they
would have to reckon witb the millluns
of Africans already in Africa and
whose minds and ideals would have to
be cqually saturated and pervaded and
convinced with tho ideas pormeating
the minds of the oncoming millions.
A war rather than a welcome would be
the most likely thing under tho cir-
cumstances. If the material difcuiti¢s
‘ere great, greater stil] would be tho
mbqal and social diMoulites. Thore is
without doubt something noble and
appgeliog ebout this tdea of the return
to the mother continent of her far-
scattered children or thelr descendants,
many of whom, most of whom, have,
during the centuries aince thoir fore-
fatherd teft Africa, suffered oppression
and bardships and who are etill in 10
many capes sufferers from prejudice.
But new opportunities have swung
open fey them. They have found new
countries. They are part and parcel
of the life of these countries, The best
of them will thin with a tender beart
of Africa, but they will see how im-
practicable is the wholesale return to
the motherland. Just as a Gootchman
never forgets Scotland, never ceases to
love her, but sottics down in other,
countries, there to lve and work all)
dip dgya, We will not take it upon
curselved to tell our people not to put,
thelg mone. into any “Back-to-Africa”
. ‘That they must decide for
themsslves, What we Go sfvise and
enjoin {s that each project which under
‘this, general title asks for their money
ahovld be carefully anf minutely ex-
amined with clear business insight.
Thay should not be minicd by such
argiments that if the people tram this
{eland migrated, the richer here would
havertheir business paralyzed, and that
‘therefore these rich people ocessarily
oppose the movement. If black Jamal-
dais left Jamaica in this way, the first
Rebult would be to improve The ad-
‘ydnithgns/of Ufe here for the laborers
femain.: The spcond result would be
the i of new population from
auewhete. The Chinese are quite will-
Nog'te ave China anf the Japaness
‘to quit Japan. fo ure the Portuguese
‘£6: the Spantarda It would only be
‘te beatlep'c? time, and just as Jamaica,
‘whlth.gaw the benished Arawaks re-
Fetus op qons of Africa, would seo
08 replaged by some other elev
s MNO ATY sore cn nares econ
ts a general sense, it cisy embody
a agldlinad bral fe it is transtated into
fbgew, reeire for, a.new.intyrest in and
Rew, Cemiih t0.\kbow adpat rang to
RYE Bcitbas Tete: mbsooet: pitied ies
eenbe WMAay RlkoK Fase, meta to thin
Rraintiai wen eae fA. ele con
Bera ATION RaW BILYBD Ie
CCRC As ta i capetat pang’ abn te
TARR SHE SPA TY: toe vatentatisne’ goers)
Saal aes eee os
ern en merece
SS vel coer stent a kaart’
Pe ed eo
i re)
To All Divisions of the Universal Negro
Improvement Association
All Divisions and Divisional Officers are hereby
warned against paying moneys to Executive Officers,
Officials or Representatives from the Parent Body on
the Field. No Executive Officer, Official or Represen-
tative is supposed to receive any money from any Divi-
sion for dues, taxes or assessments on the field. All
such moneys should be sent by mail to Headquarters.
Any local Officer or Division who loans an Executive
Officer, Official or Representative money on the field
does so at their own risk. Refuse to entertain any
Officer, Official or Representative. who attempts to
borrow money from your Division.
BY ORDER
ised iia ace oH cy tee yp
CRATE er uit d BN A NA Cat aN BS CG why St EM ee ed Meme
SMM EMR a nN Nast arma NGAUS OA NE adi us” yo |
Cochin China@and Chinn During the
aes
Though captured several times, he
De place at the front Belote he was
uty ip be hed’ wan meavin, ever
| The hue acuurded thie biack gon-
eat by France ia indicative of the
prejudiced custom of rewarding ability
Case of Colonel Young
Contrast thus cave: hun that ofthe
tate Gat Cuartes Youss woe wan gor
Mtieally retired from tho army at a
sehatola. the ueneralamp. frees bles
Who knows but that Colonel Young
Dodds had he boen permitted to take
are tha lant ae
General Dodds was encouraged by
white Frenchmen, and recolved the
highest honore from them. Culunel
Young. on the other hand, was dis-
couraged and shunted from active ser-
vise by Americe
Naturally tho Americans here are
smush "worried. ever: ihe” progosal
training black offcers, and’ are. dolog
all they can to set the Frenchmen
against the idea.—The Negro Times.
nor given to unduly flourishing it be-
fore the attention of others.
Tho preceding appeared in the issue
of September 23. Two pages away in
the same issue appears the following
Egypt?
Tt Jaa Iittle eurly yet. of course, to
Judgo how Egypt farcs um an indo-
pendent nation, but so far the augurlos
ure hardly bright. While the conatitu-
tion Js being worked out the copta
show symploma of a flerco factional
break away This is bocause the com-
mission has refused to givo them pro-
portional reprenentation, and they fear
they will be swamped by the Muslem
vote. Throughout tho country robbery
murder, brfjandage, assaults and
destruction of crops have increased
Two high Egyptian officials have been
diacovered accepting bribes, and gen-
eral pubile security hus grown less
dependable. The prospect is that the
country will sink back Into the hor-
ribly conditions that prevailed before
British rule organized and lifted it to
the stakes of firm, falr and honest
sovernment
Then in the tnsue of Septembor 30
we find thin (nino on t= cftcrial
page)
“By the Head and Ears”
Burely oven thoso who do it must
nce, in looking back on thelr perform-
ances, that their dragging of race and
color questions into discussions of
public matters Is, #0 to speak, often
by the head and ours. If they reflect
@ minuto they will sce that this vory
{vequoncy defeats the object they alm
at. That alr is presumably to got out
Into the daylight of publlo attention
genuine and actual cases of color
Prejudice being allowed to militate
against merit. But If one is forever
crying out “Wolf, Wolf,” when there
fe no wolf, the day comes when tho
ory Je no longer heeded. Thin is a
Doint of view that might well be con-
aldered even by those to whom tho
other fact rhakes little appeal, that
fact being that as we are a mixed
community we should do all we can to
lve together in peace and goodwill
even to the length of overlooking
rather than “looking up” causes of
grievance of one section against the
other. This country belongs to the
black man no more than to the white
Each has his share in It aa a British
subject. That in the basis of stability.
THE, NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 238, 1922
After writing on another tople for
half @ eoluma, the thread of tho plot is
resumed with the following
The Turk Ae Usual
As Kemal Pasha advanced on
Syrmna he made statement after
statement to the offect that he and his
meh would observe all the rules and
observations of modern civilized war,
i war can be civilized The ses
eral population was to be reepocted
so far as safety and security of life
and property went Material (nkan was
lo be paid far The rlghte of non-
rombatantn of every aurt were tu be
fegarded an eacred It really neeme as
Cat length the Turks nad learned not
wmly to conquer but haw to cunauer
sid Dow to rule phen suddenly ine
neeno im changed | Viadense suthaxe
atrocity in the moat hideous form
burat out und glured gnaatly under the
vault of heaven In Siyenn Mire and
imuraacie seared ind erimaoned the
Whole area! Prinune ra were muntered
In cold blood and women worme than
killed, Onee again the Park has aptung
forth in hue rest cotorm une hangs
and apparently uothangeable Kemal
may have meant as a pullle measure
to observe ull he promined but the In
horited tendencics of the men he led
thelr fanaticiama, bloed-wint nnd ine
aUnet for rap ne could not beste! L
by those who mae farther and may
clearer The Tork sin vanquer
cannot rute
Following these the next pake cu
ries an article entitled — Natene on
the Brink of Hutn written by ane
Arthur Lynch (L wonder aa he rides
to Judge I.yneh of Georgia's wiih
containa the fu.lowing statements
Lowent to Mussa tad of aympathy
for ite democrat asia tony I
Hetened while there to all the tal a of
civil war and borkaden und ageren
slong that accounted for ther cin
that wax so apparent, but 1 was
not convinced
It Ruenia bad had no ween and nv
blockade the economic #ystem that the
Bolahevika attempted © put in force
would have nuiMerd tu bring the cuun-
try to misery.
There you have the reat aceret of the
Russian chaos, The Holnhevistn are
not cruel and bloody tyrants hy ns tn
lugury and fattening Gn the labor of
ahe multitude, they are plain living.
Renerally hard-working men of on
Idoalietic tendency who are trying to
put Impossible theorles into practice
Comments on Biased Propaganda
Bix years ago black penple would
have xwallowed all this pro-inpertalint
stuff whole, but today* Ab’ Todas
We are ourntives trying our hand at
Propaganda, and the effect i hin on
ua ta the namo that arguments an to
the quality of cloth have on textile
oxperts, “Let ua examine the goodn
With black men becoming analyticn! in
thelr reading, do you wonder that the
white overterds ef Hurege are bey tie
nightmares” Tho nituation ix not nt all
unllke that of one Baninm, whore ana
Addresned him in perfectly Kewl He-
brew, much to his menial perturta-
tlon. The black ans of Ethiopian has
begun to apcak, and his apeerh hay net
tho European Baalam to “avein’
things.” Later on whon ho In tirmd of
more speech ho will turn around hin
hinder parts and begin to kick Mave
you ever been kicked by an African
Jacknan? Brother, ho ts. pain.
REV. ALEXANDER HANNUM
DEAD
Tho and nows of the sleath of Rev
Alexander Hannum, pueter of Wesley
AM, EB. Zion Church, at Fifteenth
and Lombard atreots, Ihiladelphia, is
announced from Salisbury NC
where he went a short time azo in an
attempt to recover hin acalin
Rev Hannum died on Sunday Sep-
tember 10, and wae buried Tuesday
afternoon, September 12 at 230 oclock
at Salisbury The Reverand Hannum
was one of tho most uroful and popu-
lar ministers in Philadelphia, He
commanded the respect of all classes
of people, both w. hin and without the
church. He was prominently mon
tioned In Zion connection a# a can-
didate for tho bishopric, and no dvubt
would have beon elected had he lived
in 1924,
Roverend Hannum had been In the
pantory for a number of years hin
charges having oxtonded all over the
country. Me was an upright Chrintian
gentleman, believed and practiced the
Rospel he preached. Ho leaves a
widow, two daughters and two sons
to mourn bis loss.
a
ATTENTION!
Are You Buying Your Provisions from the Universal Groceries?
OUR GROCERIES
The Only Negro Chain-Groceries’' Operating
in Harlem
Grocery No. 1............. 47 West 138th St.
Grocery No. 2.............646 Lenox Avenue
Grocery No. 3.............682 Lenox Avenue 7
Phone Harlem 2883 and leave an order. it will be delivered promptly.
You will find our prices just the aame as any other grocer's in Harlem.
Do Your Duty — Reap the Benefits
IT PAYS TO PATRONIZE YOUR OWN
DO NOT. NEGLECT YOUR EDUCATION !
Shorthand and Business School
Prepares men and women for pestoent occupations and affords those
syhame slementary education bas been negie\ted an opportunity to somplete
STENOQRAPHY, TYPEWRITING, BOOKKEEPING, BNGLICH,»
ARITHMETIC, MATHEMATICS, CIVIL SERVICE, ETC.
Day and Evening Classes, Correspondence Courses in Shorthand and
‘Typewriting to any part of the world, Write for free booklet and particulars,
2376 Seventh Ave. (At 139th-5t.) Tel. 9971 Audubon
2 MEWTOH BRATERWAITM, Prineiped
- Miata) Edacthend Reperjer of TJ. L A. and Mere World,
ANSWER TO LAST WEEK'S
HISTORY QUESTIONS
1 The Sonegambian Seres, who
range in height from 6 feet to 6 fost
4 Inches, and who have splendid
thyaiques ‘The Negrilinn, that te, the
Pygmies, Obongo, Akita, and Datwa
tribes of Contral Africa. The average
height Ia 4% feet, weight, 77 pounds.
2 That the Negro draftoes had
nounder feat than the white ones
Chas. E Davenport, foremost Ameri-
san cageniat nave in the Belentite
Menthty of January and february.
1920 “The one ateiking fact of the
xeowraphical diatribution Ia the com-
trative freedom fram {wot defects on-
Joyed by the Houthern Hmiea, This te
due both to tho comparutive absence of
bea ‘9 the rural population during
surly yeara of Mfe and to ite lurae
sulored population which, partly be
saure of auch freedom from shoes and
partly because of anatomical und
Uhysiological peculiarities, te leas af-
fected With weak feet Uion whites
Fhe’ great center of fut feet is in the
Northweat
3. The African Negra, Thog latter
«Mea almont solely wn natural mht
ind thus his eyen are unapoiled by
the glare of wetifetal light
4 Tho Zulue
B The former — Primitive peoplen
unually have much better teeth thus
siillked onen, thet diet le much more
natural The Negie pact suturly when
Unmixed, ts noted for hm excellent
toth
6 Differences of color are cauned by
Ufferencea in the doxree vf sunlight
I{ one aturta In the extreme north of
Lurope and travels nouthward ho will
find that us the raym of the sun in
Hrynae in heat and constaney the darket
Ie umen humanity He will see that
mankind from a very light blonde
shaites into brunette and then brown
untit when he reaches the Sudan he
wit find it burnt quite black
Tho truo akin of all humanity ta of
a very palo shade of yeiluw — The
coloring matter of pigment in the layer
of akin above acts as a protection for
the delicate nerves under the true skin
in pretty much the same manner an
the dark color in glaanen ehields the
‘yee
In the Aretle circlom the ¢ lor of the
animus changes twico a year brown
wot imottiea in summer and white in
winter
The effect of sunlight Is the samo
with regand to hair Net only does
feepleal man lke tropleal anim als,
need little hair, but In the case of the
Nexto, thousands and thousands of!
years of ntrong aunlicht mhining on his
unenvered head hag dried up the nat.
hina oll fn the realp, rf the |
Frewth of the hair Th oe man
Fyn where ehnnene In caBbapm tty witty
tho environment, Thin ia a necenaity
for survival, and explains how from
a single ate. k and uno common center
so many Nutietien of mankind orixi-
hated.
THE NORTH HARLEM HOUSE
WIVES’ LEAGUE
The North Harlem —Housewivor’
Teague tn line with nlnter urganiza-
Hons in the Hronx and Washington
Heights fe prevaring plana with which
it Intends to atriko a stunning blow
Of protent at tho profiteers in good and
bring to repentance tho heartlons land-
lomia Things in theao linea are worse
In the colored mecllons of Harlem than
In any other parts of the city where
low wagu-enrning famillen reside Thin
Meht on the part of the colared howae-
Wives of Hurlem In Justifnble avd will
eventually have itm denired renulta,
‘Tho present high prices of tnblo ar-
Ueles, according to the recorda of the
Wholesale merchant, are unwnrrunted
and charged up to the middleman and
retailor The only legitimate rmedy
Ieft In the banda of tho housewife :eol-
Ing the pinch of homo economic dit-
Acultion te to keep hammering at thene
brofteerm until subdued Join the
North Harlem Housewives’ League.
Mra. Narcisug Turner. 168 W 13int
street. prenidont, Mra, Mamlo L.
Urigga 65 W. 137th street, necretary,
Mra. Cocclta E, Easley, 288 W. 137th
atreet, troasurer.
Mre. Hamilton J. Travia, of 200 W.
13int street, was selected to assume
the dutics of financial secretary to
the North Harlem Housewives’
League, Mra Travis ia the wife of
the popular chairman of che Eixecutive
Committee of the Appomatox Republi-
can Clud, and is @ highly educated
Ganghter of the free Blate of New
Joraey.
Mra. Cecelia Easley, treasurer of the
North Harlem Housewives’ League,
roturned a (ow duys ago to the city
from « Qying trip to Pittsburgh, where
sho apent a week with hor aged mother
Mra. Mainlo L. Briggs, very popular
In nuchal welfare work, who Is general
secretary for the North Harlem House-
wives Lougue, is lo head a committee
of Harlem women to distribute Christ-
mas cheer among Harlem's desorving
pour and needy Further announce-
ment» are to be made In regard to the
Uefinite plans uf operation by this com-
mittee,
To All Divisions and Mem-
bers of the Universal
African Black Cross
Nurses
All Black Cross Nurse unita must
necure competent Instructors to teach
su firat aid community health work
and nome hygiene and care of the
sick Instructors shail begin with In-
Mtruction in firat ald. procuring ana-
tomical charts for demonstration work,
alno bandages, splints and compreanes
On conclusion of courses of instruction
In first aid arrangemonts shall be made
for examination, subject to the ap-
proval of the Central Committee, Suc-
comsful ntudents to ogyain certificates
of proficiency. The Instructor shall
krude Ma unit Into three classes—
A. Band C—after a Mterary test. Any
member of @ unit with the necossary
qualification who haa not passed the
age limit must be advised and encour-
aged to take m regular three-year
course In nursing In a recognized
training school for nurses.
Uniforms
‘The uniforma of the Universal Afri-
can Black Cross Nurse shal consist
of
Dross—One-pleco white linene dress
hot more than eight inches from tho
ground, width of nk.rt at bottom, two
yards, for parade and demonstration
only
Dresa—Ono-pleco green chambray
dreas not mere than oight Inches from
the ground, widile vf wkirt at bottom
ie yards, for visiting service, dia-
pen:ary and clinte work only.
Melt—Beparate, two Inches wide
Aprons—Whito wash govde, to be
worn only for work In dispensary,
clinic and home of the sick
Collara and Cuffs—White linen, to be
worn with green dress.
Nat—Black straw eullor with tho
oMcial emblem of tho Black Cross
woven on hat band (summer). Black
felt nailor with the official emb'em of
the Rinck Cross woven on hat vand
(winter) .
Coat—Black, red lining
Cap—One piece white imualin, with
oMcini emblem of the Hlack Crean
woven on band; for dispensary and
clinic work only Uraduate nurses
shall wear the regulation graduate
nurse's cap on all occasions, with off-
cial emblem of Rack Cross woven on
cap band
Vell—One-plece white muslin aquare,
with official emblem of the Black Crome
woven on band for parades and dem-
onatrations of whatever kind
Tie—Black satin windeor tle.
Pin—Black Croum Nurses’ pin to be
worn on loft broaat.
Shocs—White, to be worn with
white uniform. Black, to be worn with
green uniform
Blockinge—White. to be worn with
white uniform, black. to be worn with
green uniform.
Ry ordor Central Committee.
ISABELLA LAWRENCE.
Acting Directress.
ee oe ee
Gossio
CONVENTION FUND OF UNIVERSAL NEGRO
IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION FOR 1922
For the purpose of meeting the expenses of the Third Interna-
tional Convention of the Negro peoples of the world, the Universal
Negro Improvement Association today opcns its “Convention Col-
lecting List,” asking every Negro in the world to contribute a dollar or
more to meet the expense of this gigantic movement.
The program of the Convention this year will be f:r in advance
of that of the two prec..‘ing conventions. Important Commissions
will be sent abroad from the Convention, and a great deal of con-
structive work will be done and representatives sent to different parts
of the world to carry out the commands of the Convention. Therefore,
it 1s incumbent upon every Negro to contribute his or her bit to meet
the tremendous expenses that will be inflicted upon the Universal Negro
Improvement Association.
The ,. ronstration this year will surpass anything of its kind
qver staged by any race It is expected that several thousand
slelegates and members will attend the ope of the Conventic: -n
the first of August. Delegates will be coming from @l parts of the
world to take part in the deliberations of the Convention, and the British,
French, United States, Italian, Belgium, Spanish and Portuguese
Governments have been requested to send representatives to the Con-
vention for the purpose of staung the:r social policies in regard to their
government of Negro and Negroid peoples under their dominion,
Please send m your dollars, two, five, ten, twenty, fifty or one
hundred, to help in the work.
Address your communication to Registrar, Universal Negro Im-
provement Association, 56 West 135th Street, New York, United
States of America. All donations sent in will be acknowledged week
fe a eee
Brought forward $20 296 25
Baptist Polen Costa Rica, C A 500
James Hunna, Minmi, Flo 500
Mand@y Koss 5.00
Gertrude Maison, Toronto, Gan 400
Edward Curriigt-n, Sea ue
Wash 500
1. Martin, Chicago, HL 500
John Cote, Lew Angeles Cal. Sue
Hemuit Rend Divir en Jee it
Bond, La ae S00
$29 456 20
Guatemala CA
Os tuber ta, 1922
Gentlems
Viewer cept the hc naed $3 an my
fonteliietes te the cause of Afrlea
With vey heat Winner Lor your access,
trem on Yours truly,
GoM.
Miam! Fla.
Ortober 14 1922,
Genttomen
| It ta sedeed a pleasure fur me to be
able’¢6:(arwiird ‘sus Hheren lth mo: dana
mite of $5 for the redemption of nut
motherland = May God Wess the usso-
elation In itn every effort
Friternally yours,
sun
Mirstanipp!
Goober Diag
Dear Kir
Please fied herein enctused ms git
ff Sh to the cane ot Ate Lact
aH that bopsahih gue ote ley anche os
worthy o1une Yours troy
Mou
| Omer mt
October 16, 1922
Gentlemen
T feel omy duty ana Nexro to du
all that Tenn fer the freedom of the
Negro, und am theroforo en: lenin $6
an my contribntien to the African Re-
demption Fund With every wih for
NOTICE!
a
If You Are Interested in the Development of
Your Race, You Will Start a Division
or Chapter of ;
In Your City, Town or Village
| THE OBJECTS OF THE ASSOCIATIONS ARE
The objects of the Universal Negro Improvement Associa-
tion and African Communities’ League shall be to establish a
Universal Confraternity among the racc; to promote the
spirit of pride and love; to reclaim the fallen; to administer
to and assist the needy; to assist in civilizing the backward
‘tribes of Africa; to assist in the development of Independent
Negro Nations and Communities; to establish Commissionaries
or Agencies in the principal countries and cities of the world
for the representation and protection of all Negroes, irrespective
of nationality; to promote a conscientious Spiritual worship
among the native tribes of Africa; to establish Universities,
Colleges, Academies and Schools for the racial education and
culture of the people; to conduct a world-wide Commercial and
Industrial Intercourse for the good of the people; to work for
better conditions in all Negro communities.
For information to start, write Secretary-General,
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSN.,
66 West 185th Street, New York, U.S. A.
.
By order President-General,
SEND IN YOUR DONATION NOW
ee ee
auccesn T beg to remain
Yours fraternally,
LM.
Costa Rica, C. A.
Octobor 6, 1932
Dear Sinn
I tvrewith enclose $5 for tho Af-
rw iedemption Fund. Hoplng aue-
tess muy meet you tn every venture, |
am Respectfully,
BP
MILITARY HISTORY
Whe are the following?
1 Mohammed Askin.
2 Cudjue
2 Crienne Attacien
4° Honrt Diag,
® Opt
6. Mortenol.
In Every Community an Direct
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