The Negro World
Saturday, January 20, 1923
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
ARE MOROCCANS AND ALGERIANS NEGROES?
VOL. XIII. No. 23
FELLOW MEN OF THE NEGRO RACE, Grecting:
A few days ago the New York "World" gave out a statement in which the French were quoted as saying that the Moroccan troops they are using in the invasion of Germany are not to be classified as Negroes because they are not of that race. The same paper on Monday, January 15, published a confirmatory statement of Drs. Clark Wissler and Franz Boaz, the latter a professor of anthropology at Columbia University. These gentlemen uphold the statement of the French that Moroccans and Algerians are not Negroes. How the French and these gentlemen arrive at such a conclusion is marvelous to understand, but I feel it is the old-time method of depriving the Negro of anything that would tend to make him recognized in any useful occupation or activity.
With these anthropologists it is always the custom that whenever a black man, whether he be Moroccan, Algerian or Senegalese or what not accomplishes anything of importance, he is no longer a Negro. The question therefore suggests itself, "Who, and what is a Negro?" The answer is: "A Negro is a person of dark complexion or race, who has not accomplished anything and to whom others are not obligated for any useful service." If the Moroccans and Algerians were not needed by France at this time to augment their occupation in Germany or to save the French nation from extinction they would have been Negroes as usual, but now that they have rendered themselves useful to the higher appreciation of France they are no longer members of the Negro race, but can be classified in a higher type as made out by these two professors above mentioned.
PREJUDICE CAUSED BY CONDITION
This proves the argument of the Universal Negro Improvement Association at all times that the prejudice against us as Negroes is not because of our color but because of our condition. If black men throughout the world will render themselves so independent and useful as to be sought out by other race groups it will simply mean that all the problems of race will be smashed to pieces, and the Negro would be regarded like anybody else, a man to be respected and admired.
But whether these professors or France desires to make the Moroccans other than Negroes we are satisfied that their propaganda before has made these people to understand that their destiny is linked up with all other men of color throughout the world, and now that the hun-
A Newspaper Devoted Solely to the Interests of the Negro Race
NS AND ALGERI
FRENCE AND TWO AMERICAN ANTHRO-
OLOGISTS SAY NO FOR CONVENIENCE!
CAN A BLACK MAN CHANGE HIS SKIN?
ALL GOOD AND CREDIT WHEN VISIBLE TAKEN FROM RACE!
ONCE A NEGRO ALWAYS A NEGRO, IF WE MUST BE NEGROES!
dreds of millions of darker peoples are looking toward one common union and destiny through the effort of universal co-operation we have no fear that the Moroccans and Algerians will take care of the situation in France and Germany peculiar to the interest of Negroes throughout the world.
Let us not be flattered by the anthropologists and statesmen who from time to time because of our success here, there or anywhere try to make out that we are no longer members of the Negro race. If we were Negroes when we were down under the heel of oppression then we will be Negroes when we are up and liberated from such thralldom.
The Moroccans and Algerians have a splendid opportunity for now proving the real worth of the Negro in Europe, and we would not be surprised that one of these fine days Africa will colonize Europe, even as Europe has been endeavoring to colonize the world for hundreds of years. We trust the Moroccan and Algerian troops of occupation in Germany will come to their senses and realize that their first duty and their interest are linked up with the four hundred million Negroes of the world, and whatsoever they do should be done from that point of view.
THE POSSIBILITIES FOR 1923
The year 1923 opens up brilliantly with suggestive opportunities for the Negro race, and we should not fail to take advantage of them. From indications we are led to conclude that the European disturbance of 1914-1918 is but half patched, and at any time the old sore of hatred and animosity will break out which will result in the infliction of a larger political wound than Europe has experienced before. Any political upheaval in Europe similar to the one of 1914-1918 is bound to present the opportunity to the four hundred million Negroes of the world to further advance their cause for African liberation, and we hope that the Senegalese, Moroccan and Algerian troops will not forget that the Negro's first duty anywhere when the tide turns is to strike the blow for African freedom.
Reaching the Mass of Negroes
The Best Advertising Medium
PRICE: FIVE CENTS IN GREATER NEW YORK
TEN CENTS IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES
SEVEN CENTS ELSEWHERE IN THE U. S. A.
We are tired of being shunted and shifted here, there and everywhere to please the fancy and change of mind of anthropologists and statesmen. When it is to their interest they make us Negroes or something else, but if we were Negroes yesterday surely we are satisfied to be Negroes today.
THE SOUTH AFRICAN
A similar situation arose in South Africa not longer than twelve months ago when the natives started to press the limited white population to the wall in the demand for "Africa for the Africans." the prejudiced Boers and South Africans were willing then to let down the color bar and admit to their ranks, socially and otherwise, the half-breed colored people whom they once classified as impossible hybrids to be despised both by whites and natives. Now they are making an effort to make common cause with these so-called half-breeds of South Africa so as to strengthen their position against the threatening ascendancy of the demand for a free and redeemed Africa for the blacks of the world.
These people, anthropologists and statesmen will seek every opportunity to fraternize with any race in the world, even the one despised yesterday, if by so doing they can strengthen their position, whether it be in Europe, Africa or elsewhere, but it is for us as four hundred million people who have been discriminated against throughout the world to take a decided stand so that whether we are Moroccans, Algerians, Senegalese or Western Negroes the time is for us to stand together as one mighty whole and strike a universal blow for our liberation and for better recognition.
LET NEGROES STAND TOGETHER
Let every member of the Universal Negro Improvement Association fight toward the end of a united race. Let Negroes everywhere make it the higher purpose in life that we stand together and fall together. Let us support the Universal Negro Improvement Association, therefore, to further scatter its propaganda throughout the world. Send us your financial help and give us your moral support, and if this is properly done we feel sure that in a short while we will bring the drunken world to its sober senses.
With very best wishes for your success I have the honor to be.
HE U.N. L.A. PASSING THROUCH A PERIOD OF SPIRITUAL SUSPENSE
Ree NioRomEy: < L - 5 “ .
ey ¥ oo oR bs ee Fat i. a f () i 4 ~. 2 oe La
, Bh AMM e's 5 remem Acre AS, MN RY Vesa rest =, A
sili se ars ae ae ey or STORM e.| daa: eee a ON P= aoe POP ne,
Bruised ?-ease the pain! st
Apply Sloan's to sore spot. It increas- ~S
es circulation scatters congestion This Cy) oy
reduces swelling and inflammation as
~the pain disappears! i a
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SfoansLiniment (o" &
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LAS AAL MOREE LLL Sr RATA R RORY ed TS
q DIRECT TO YOUR HOME
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LIBERTY HALL, NEW Yorth xan
Amy night, Jan, 14, 1933 — After ine tu
mal opening of ine meciing ton xn
with the usual pretimin ies tne mus
fal program, whic peeceden the
specoh-making wan tari! wer secu
Ladten of the Heval Court et Priney +
Under the direction at Mie Mom ie
son Young, the sherman this -
one of the many evideies ut rer
Pride which hae been eyelved wut ef t+
idea of the Univereai Nok o Loe
ment Anrociutlon wand coneets fa
group of ledies— the ere vin ef the men
berehip uf the New York onal wu
hy then noble, upright and eaeinpiars
Wem and chara ters ure mic isang t
typify African nobility aw seme ed
The daye when Ethtop a wan oa her
Blory und bringing belure the atten
Hon ef the werd the ppt oat the new
Mamanhood of the ou:
The program wisae fulune 1 oxe
Iection by the Lniverss! Hand 2 sum
imary of the work of the Lada sf he
Moyal Court sf Ethiopn hy Mise Bale
Parham, generod secretary ef the out
2 Holo by Moan Agua Coun aw devas
member uf the Ludlen Court yeei
panied by Vrof Harvey Haken 4 Din
mat) reading by Mre Charies | oxeott
Corresponding wecretary ut the cout
subgect, SP thtepia Sr eden ton
WUAt he mast at Mew Meath e stevie +
Feading, @hin wan exerared woth eect
rand feehns at bebe ted tremerateus
syplaure The secretary Mise dtu
Pam. i cnet WE spe utr eed
The hiatory of the court und oxy cine
In a brief way sty con emp ite t plans
foe aersice, whieh rhe sol were ui
Henitesd
The progiuin aver the spees hes tot
lowed Hon Marcus Carvey shsceut eed
on the subject, “The Pleasure af sere
be Mervice an given through te
T niversul Negro Improvement Armocia-
Hon, he rand wom de tignetal ne
(he UNlvernAl responsivencen that was
found among the pene whom %
served Of the araociation Mr farses
Said that ne other eves tenon centile
Herivea AY Vaan One tants tine te
tsmocintion Is undergeing te gir vies!
period of muccesn for it las land «foo
dation that wil dict forever We are
peemesng (heouRh at Chie howe le added
{period of epiritual sumpense when
WED ultimately break out ies fre wed
new enthuaiarm the Uke of whieh wo
Hever moon before The asaociation he
nid, tn xplte of ite wethucks and han
Aicapa, had accomplished things \ hit
Were astonishing and that amaged the
arid, and new we ure about ty sift
sur banner anew fo go forth in the vem
1923 to Maht w battle for Afri an (ree-
slam un it never wan fought ts nian be
fury, He pointed hopefully tu the tense
stuation In Europe with «degree of
certainty that out ef iC would come the
complete emancipation ef the Negi
and Dis repatriniion to hia mather-
hind, Afrien, Ho urged ntfongly, how -
Cyer, That preparedness wan neces
nary. The Negro lost out in the last
war beraur ho han rot prepared, he
had no program nor poly, and weno
wu given no connilerntion When the
neat War comer he declared we ums
te ready with « peagram and nur pene
artim will be a free and independent
Mfuiem aint an andustriatly recvall
slueavenaly and pol te dly emaney
Peted Negte tare everywhere |
Whilo making the annowie en ute of |
leathetieally to (he death uf tie Le
TOW TD Basen who wane ferment con
fected wath the ot negation Hs ref
Lene 1o Me Lanan wane cerned ty
Hee GUT ve mene et the yso8
Veation in New Orlewne hint heen ae.
tested and beat are un wm
Hest ds was The ats Of The mee
simtn te tare a fur bk te t eae be
Henee tein the eet toa 8
fer wed tn tee ree
i we ee Tipe ne
Me te ey amet wate ts :
dol Mike ae ou nee
| yang Ee oer
The Pleasure of Service
We Ma eae ae
Meaty tO The pire ose
ie te We at as wank bath wae
Jee sans tee anes e dee asses Mtn
Fan et meh ghee nd Crater
jive When aT eT ee
ea Ril ee te net al ae
That enn be benmnt er gat toe teat
ee Meat ated be ewe dt ener
Le ai@ iene) Peete OS Hee ale vee a ge
re st er ee
Rienier mers hen te New
Stim tyne mnd foe The Bay Oe at
ert, omnes Min tile ot
Heronmh the boo erent Semen bmprese
Ment Aesnctatian some et us dent apes
Ok eM ADRHT Turse detent
Mere tae nf Wat un etree Feat sy
hes wt wet dom and meng
pee wom ee were
1s We > We W GRETA
Neste Tingnovemen Aper tatinn ne
ae 2 Vee CARINE BR HEN
Sent nent et tie qeende 8 daa
een a omted the See
Per tae camp aie won
che fener ate ane pe antl
ob dt teh that the wens
Pietenens thatthe wath Stet ey
tessice We ee et as onthe
SR
ts fore aman whe aces thing fren
the serfs e She man whe jake a noe
Succes ef man movements cat font
Ihe kbameur of the hour net foun the
weed eothariacin ef the minate bat
from the permonent Comiation Chats
Feet ae me ten otter eee tueun
TS b that at Mee bese te Universal
Soe ett i et A ae cathode fe tan
Merge te Hs ate UTES petted al nites ase
« WENN - Anthem toe wee
Jaat forever 0 funndtion upon why ts
rrme nee SR. Rt never ta he
Hemedshed wesee te de defaced a
Hructure that owe hepe and beteve
WM rat Greve Tht aves these
ef us wae teal a glortoun pat ate tien
Aompirit of pede iil happiness one of
klury Dect we knew that without
the Inbor uf the foundation there could
he ne rtrue tute
A Time of Spiritual Suspense
Woenre qaseing the aah at thie bo
Ao perieal ef mplrit ret suspense: wtih:
will ultimately break out in a fresh |
nd new enthuatenns the like ef what
WAR Never meen before You may say
Why de thongs that wast Mur the cs
Who have wneve te the afvane ment
Of Rrant exusen nnd grent movemente
Beperally watede the racer of the tunes
And beenuse of our desire ve teat the
strength ef protably Powaill say pew
VO attace nenement ene
wegen nized among Negi ra we alien a
ines te seme tate the tte of ase
Liserant Nepee Impravemert Awan
seution that seme may rot tase a tn
Hite and Npeted but the seater
Hump omhe gre ster mieees oe te
Csereal Neste tipes ement veo
Ceitton weil came pie ts nage cat at ite
WAMouiee ate at se tee ap
acer tse teas nd Deemed ages
Have we be a set tack Ihive we
Ce OC web the beet
wiewer Leone cat te thee atent at whet
FOaBE Ie gee ol Mmevemnen trieine
mut al tes Gertie cer ary eiming
}Will Ultimately Break Out in Fresh and New Enthusiasm—So Says Hon. Marcus Garvey
in Brief Discourse on “The Pleasure of Service’'—Movement Has Had a Phenomenal
Rise—Has Climbed From Insignificant Nothingness to a World Power—Has Astonished
Ourselves and Amazed the World
PREPAREDNESS ON THE PART OF THE RACE IS URGED—NEXT WAR MUST FIND
THE NEGRO WITH A PROGRAM FOR A FREE AND INDEPENDENT AFRICA AND
AN EMANCIPATED NEGRO RACE—NEGROES WILL STICK TO THE DECLARA.
TION OF RIGHTS OF 1920—WILL NOT BE USED AS THEY HAVE BEEN BEFORE
Garvey Repudiates Responsibility on the Part of the Association for Death of Eason—Makes
Appeal for Defense Fund for Men Held in Connection With the Crime——Liberal
Response Is Made and Large Contribution Taken Up—Ladies of the Royal Court of
Ethiopia Conduct Musical Program
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moon eld way .
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Applause s
At Ite Strongest Hour
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Sebiben ss dee tet gt
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weaned evar awd the paper are
SBME te Negrete ee ev lee
EAPpLunse) Amt et ome te. Nem tia
wir ine fe bemter eam gw
Wea ee became tha News ewan
broker tommy Lond tee ed
wm og at 8 nt
ee eC
‘ Ce Ce
PASM OWE fF be ate eet genni te ate
bem Lest tune placer wR te
moore sere tal Powe ee gt
et wt AE a Derek ne
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ye vont hy bower Nome tim
prevemert Vee ian or the nee
Wer dowar de hae efter eet
Hee we ore aM ere Poaet bade
Same he ate tas geougn t
iste get ‘he papere sane Se et us
peoready Hd oaver ttn do ee oa
[our omgat come kom ote mane
nro twee e ete
qvAvoae Fav eu
The Effects of the White Man's
Prepegends
Ut
Viet Om We Oy
sade Lae ee pg ee
We WE at EW edn
me ter Nem enpagmedi tt white
fee eb ate tents
wee we ee
ceed th emia feta
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Wet See aah sor vee dee thes
sorts What ante
Fe Wy Sak nyt dines vetmed une oe
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AE the wie a peep amined met
eo er a se
celta ven tines wal cel eu teat
Sehumbus te overed Ame bates
webu tie gw get ame ew
DU aes nee OR nee wll
Se
severe Vow a Thugs there ate tee
Ethie Tiered oy Hiens af blag pene
Pho Afiies they mi be dim ounted
Ah en the That as re eanuntes
Heb Theawtiteamanim Tiss 6 the ekennye
ieee MOTLEY BE Multis eaee 0
Javingetiens ant meme of these amen
whe werCover tnere in the emity day
Race Consciousness Exhibited by
Schoolgirl
A colored Bul ou daightes af ue
of the officers of the Voiwersal Negra
Hiniievemert Vesaciatinn on oes
ef Cohimbus co wae iekedt te ga tn
The hoard sone af the eo wnede af that
Vaty cud waite that the white race in
The gredteat rave im the world he
leek Der place at the tewrd aiongesdte
the other gules and the teacher ob.
served that this girl wes not writing
and questioned her about it The gic
replied that abe could wat arte what
wan given her, and the wetter was re |
worted te the principal When the girl
saw that the thing wan getting serious
she wrote on the board that ‘the white
lace ie the greatest race in the world
~en they may’ (Applause) They
wanted to put her out of the echool,
wut the girl held out, and. ike a truo
member of tho Universal Negro tm-
provement Association she won out
Applause )
Time to Call « Halt
It le time, continued Mr Poston that
se calla halt to the white man's,
propaganda, which tries to diecount |
everything in the world that te not
white. We must start a counter-
propaganda at least strong enough jn
the race to give the le to what the
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Co ye Ry ah
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: fo me
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Lae ie vat oe
NN moe { 7 wee
et temtdin se any ahh
“« 8 rene
uw hal ‘ ‘
. ¢ ° mo |e
Willing to Sacr-hee All for UN I
1 ‘ a 1
. : dhe te nee
oo noe Monat
> i RS a Be
raed ed yey ‘ is
wr ee ree ee eel we
he were willing be ee aon
ba eee eee tae eae
a Ryu one
yer su oye Boonen te ye
wings os Weeden, ae Gee HR, gu
Spee wn he ee ee ee Danette, teom
he oumpe Of ths wae ont Are
ononeel et orate bef sate
We RT ue mword
en th ge men arden thar ow
Moe ne the ste on te
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DYER AND SHAKESPEARE
DEFENSE FUND; EVERY-
BODY MUST SUBSCRIBE
Pee eee atthe br oe Negra
Impre oment Ve ct nae Wares
PM est et he dene te
cr ho ut
soa fawn it New
tens de ane Hotes
& ey BREE b WGOE MH Re
Pace tae bee mere
Cc m
' shoe aed
Pew decane tee dee et :
member 6 1 PS etn
Preven Neri atin pas
re shams
Vern are Mere by pene tei eis
none simi
Sv for be ee me Wt a beate
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Special Features
lon Monday, Wednesday and:
Sunday Nights
Hon. Mareue Gervey in the Chair.
Be Barly te Get Good Seats
Let Liberty Hall Be Your
Social Center
Come and Hear What Is Going
On All Over the World
HON. MARCUS GARVEY, PRESIDENT-GENERAL OF THE
U.N. LA. AND PROVISIONAL PRESIDENT OF AFRICA,
AND PARTY TO MAKE TRIP AROUND THE WORLD
IN INTEREST OF THE ORGANIZATION .
Help! Officer!
Ree . er
Edith’s in Again fh
[TES in on this joyous one io oo
and you'll forget what all a ey
wasa-troublin’you. It's Edith 4,
Wilson with an old cause of in- ae
growin’ blues, egged on by the ree: poe tiog
sobbin’, s\mpathetic, ayneo- fee
pated jubilation of Johnny %
Dues Orrgimal Jazz Hounds.
Between ‘em they make raed, Godino sored
. ler the Columbia Grephe=
“Evil Blues” "phone Co?
one moanful confession that
she's powerful evil—ahe ad-
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company. On the other side of
the rame platter ix
“Pensacola Blues”
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Important Notice
| Allmembers of the Universal Negro
Improvement Association are hereby
| reminded that their One Dollar An-
nual Assessment is payable during the
/ month of January. |
To be financial you MUST pay this As-
| sessment this month.
| By order
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT
ASSOCIATION
MARCUS GARVEY, President-General |
January 1, 1923.
meg + eurus gener
Morepreses atone om et ae aie
fe eI OP) ae wamERyL, Neen
Innpes eine Mere ane
Forme of mom ert amt py the
fee npmen thet certain Neato or
benia one ne en Lvdere and ot
L cite VAN een ot he Munda ut
Blanes number ot ne mh ie peng of
Amer ca foc tne quirpeer of mit on
Riese ens be eee eo
Pom ne tae fee ee emt peta
a ea etn
Ne an me cmente and
PoE VS ye Mace
Harvey Pestle Gener at tne tne
rash ty eva
base uted Lupe of bee
teow See eta ew an
veme ah Wek oe pe akin
bt ah ee om te
Wee Me ak fe te nie the
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POSTPONEMENT OF
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HARVARD UNIVERSITY BARS THE SON OF ROSCOE CONKLING BRUCE FROM FRESHMAN DORMITORY
President Lowell and Prof. Bruce Exchange Letters Bruce Vindicates Negro's Claim in English That Is Both Faultless and Classic
Confraternity of the intention of Harvard University to break its tradition as regards treatment of Negro students and draw a color line by excluding them from the fraternity denomination as alleged in a moral sent to President A Lawyer of the ill-fated prominent Harvard graduate. It him was received yearly at Harvard. It was learned that President Leavitt told the police of the fraternity to recognize a Negro graduate who recently admitted to the fraternity for the first time. Simultaneously it was beaten by the fraternity at the Hotel at New York. We were fourth, fifth and some of the signs of the fraternity were were
Bruce Was Glass Orator
The freshman class was
tablished only a few years ago
and the club that was not confined
with the university now holds
President Lowell's Letter
The son is preparing at Philippe Xavier Academy for Harvard and his father is living there, was necessary to make reservation in the Freshman Halls a long time in advance, applied to the registrar. The application was answered by President Lowell, who said
"Dear Mr. Prince, Your letter to the Registrar out of time has been given to me in the last week. I will tell you that in the last week, my residence in the University was filled from the beginning the year of not including me in the class. I am not a dormitor and I am not admitted freely. Halls I am not all interested and why, from the beginning, I thought I should be admitted different so I am ready to make the decision."
President Lowell would make no statement concerning the meaning of the words "one of different races" but by those close to him it was said this referred to the Negro race and not to Java Indians. Japanese, Chinese Hindus or many other races which from time to time are represented in the Harvard student body.
Bruce Shocked by the Decision
"Mr. Bruce replied to President Law's letter a week ago. He said
LETTER FROM AWARENESS TEACHER
"Your letter of the 11th Decem-
reached me daily. I wrote to the Rig-
tistrar in good faith and not for con-
troversal purposes.
'My delay in responding to your letter is occasioned by my endeavors to recover beforehand from the shock of your decision to retire my son in place in the Freshman Hall specially because he is an American of AF
Catarrh Of the Stomach Is Dangerous
"Thousands Have It and Don't Know It" Nays Physiologist Frequently Misunderstands, "Gentle Gestion How to Recognize and Treat
Thousands of people suffer more or less constantly from food, caused tongue biting, breath, your burning stomach frequent fistling, rumbling in stomach bitter symptoms, gas, wind and stoma in a cavity and call in the patient because the stomach is too prone to gastric catch of the stomach, writes a New York physician.
A murdurth of the stomach is dangerous because the mucous membrane lining of the stomach is thickened and a coating of pheromone covers the surface that the dog is cannot mix with the food and digest them. This condition soon breeds deadly disease in the fermented, unassimilated food. The blood pith, and carries the infection through out the body. OdocoilUsers are apt to form and frequently in liver is the first sign of a deadly cancer.
clean descent a decision applying a general policy upon which your administration has entered deliberately
"I have lived and labored in the South so long since my graduation from Harvard College over twenty years ago that despite the newspapers, I had fondly cherished the illusion that, step by step with the unquestionable growth of liberal sentiment in the Southern States as a whole New England, I have nothing other than impoverishing her heritage
The policy of compultery residence in the Freshman Hall is costly indeed if it is the thing that constrains Harvard to enter open eyes and brunquem to a policy of racial discrimination it will become a great mother of culture available to contrain the consciousness of racial differences among Americans that resulted in so many strife and grief. Not true but culture I had supported as the basis of sound nationality. Have the formans taught us nothing. If America is the mixing pot collection is the sacred fire. And Hail to the embroiled herself if through contours of high endeavor the National University.
Son Never Will Deny His Name
I am my deliberate opinion that in the coming man who like me to be after all Negroes by election will with the policy of exclusion so far as the themselves are concerned is simply not confessing themselves unaware of the proscribed group. No that criminal not a blood test will express that helpful duplicity. With respect to the individuals (and they outnumber popular estimates) may not the policy of exclusion have the curious care of promoting that very amalgamation of races which the white North with the white South in affecting outread. It is a titing, may I add in all candor, which all self-respecting Americans of color do not desire. And he deserved the son of mine will ever deny the name or his blood on his tradition.
To proxibe a youth because of his race is a procedure as novel at Harvard until one introduction as it is unnatural. However unpopular the Jew the Irishman and the Negro may be in certain minds and certain sections and at certain times wartime not being one, the fact remains that the distribution of human excellence in each of these races as in the case of every other race begins at zero and ends at infinity.
Shall Harvard Be Less Humane?
The difference in racial excellence consist in the comparative numbers of individuals to be found on the higher ranks of the vast number of human quality and serviceability. And the relative values of the racial stocks of mankind enlarge as one must concede an exceedingly delicate and difficult indeed perilous task. Shall Harvard Be Less Humane?
Who shall prescribe a Straus,
Humbert to a longgess of his
eye? The particular individual may
be a personality of charm and power
a prospect absolutely apart from the
theoretical frequency of inferiorities in the race. From kindergarten to university I wouldain believe the spirit of education approaches children and youth as individuals, not as racial symbols. Even courts of law deal with men upon their ascertained merits as individuals. Shall a world-famed nursery of the humanities be less humane? After Charles W. Elliot, Harvard cannot escape the grave responsibilities of leadership in American life. And one leads by ascent to higher levels after the manner of scholar and statesman, of poet and prophet—and by descent.
Two Unfortunate Words
"To me whose personal indebtedness to Harvard is immeasurable the university is neither a mere mechanism of
ST. CROIX LEGISLATOR BLAMES PRESENT CONDITIONS ON EDITOR OF "JUDAS JOURNAL"
---
In a letter to the editor of The Negro World, W. B. Abramson a Negro in Hawaii, and of the Rocky Council, Virgin Islands, U. B. A., places the whole responsibility on the shoulders of Halph De Chabert for the present revolting economic chans in the state.
I have written this declares Mr. Abramson, to let the world know how this Negro Judas Isacriot has betrayed his own people"
Mr. Abramson's letter follows:
Dear Mr. Editor—please publish in your valuable paper the sufferings of our laboring people in St. Croix. The people are suffering today, and I say the cause of it all is due to the wilful ignorance of Ralph De Chabert, former president of the St. Croix Labor Union.
This cringing Negro in 1921 wrote the planters demanding $1.33 per day at a time when he knew they could not get it. At this same time, during a strike which lasted for thirteen weeks, he, as head of the labor union, was obligated by his union laws to support the people. He gave food to some, and to many others nothing.
The government appointed a Labor
instruction nor a social club, but a center of enlightenment and idealism and service rendered holy by aspiring centuries.
"Few words in the English language, I submit, are susceptible of more polignant abuse than two you have seen fit to employ. The first is 'race', the second 'incessity'. As the one is often nothing more than a term of social convenience, so the other is quite often a means to buttress prejudice. But veritas is less elusive."
DR. ELIOT QUESTIONS HARVARD'S RULING AGAINST NEGROES
Declares Traditions of Institution Are Violated
Dr Charles W Ellot, during whose forty years an president of Harvard University the institution became recognised an standing pre-eminently for democratic ideals in education and who was himself one of the great influences in American life, yesterday, from his retirement at Cambridge spoke out in opposition to the action recently taken by his successor, President A Lawrence Lowell, in hurting Negroes from the freshman demographics.
I am opposed "President Lencertius E. W. wired The New York World, 'to every form of racial discrimination in the universities of our heterogeneous democracy. Any such discrimination would violate such precious Harvard traditions."
Dr Elliot's message contradicts the statement of Dr Lowell, who in a letter to Rousee Coomling Bruce of Kendall W. Ya, explaining his position declared the action was not a departure from the traditions of the university.
HOLSTEIN ELECTED PRESIDENT OF V. I. COUNCIL
Not Your Money, but Your Moral Support, He Asks For
At a recent meeting held at Lafayette Hall Mr. Casper Holstein was elected president and L. Fraser secretary of the newly formed Virgin Islands Congressional Council, an organization endeavoring to bring about justice to the Negro nations in American West Indian islands. Mr. Holstein in an address stated clearly the purpose of the organization and the principles for which it stands as follows.
"Yellow country men and women—In the present struggles for life, liberty and happiness at home among our people in the Virgin Islands we need men and women of singleness of vision and honesty of purpose men and women who will meet the measure, fill the bill because their hearts are true and tried.
We have before us the task of demonstrating that democracy is more than a guild shamed
It is we who are called upon to hear witness by our countless efforts attests and sacrifices to the truth and reality of such virtues as Freedom, Justice Democracy and Liberty
"That is why the Virgin Islands Congressional Council is logging you to join in head, heart and hand to make it possible for the political compartment of our people at home. It is not money we are asking, but your whole-hearted moral support.
Meetings are held the first and third Sundays of each month at Lafoyte Hall, 121st street and Seventh avenue New York city.
MR. ERIC WALBOND
WRITES FOR "CLASSIC"
Mr. Lue D. Walrond the associate editor of The Negro World, contributes an interesting and beautifully illustrated article for the Library issue of *Chicago* an illustrated magazine co-titled *Dark Stars That Shine*. We shall comment at length upon this article in the next issue of *The Negro World*.
BLAMES PRESENT OR OF "JUDAS JOURNAL"
Commission. The commission set but accomplished very little. "It is the University of D Hamilton Jackson to St. Croix in November, 1921, that brought a settlement of the strike and a little work for the laboring people.
Now today our laboring people are being oppressed by heartless and cruel taskmasters. The order of the day is work, but "no pay." Thirty cents a day for a laborer today here is "no pay." It is starvation wages.
This mean man is lined up on the side of the oppressors of his suffering people.
Until today this Ralph De Chabert is trying to throw dust in the government's eyes, and is doing his utmost day by day in his Judas Journal to break up the peace and unity of the people and to sacrifice the highest interest of the workers to those to whom he has sold himself for pay.
I have written this to let the world know how this Negro Judas has betrayed his own people.
I also desire to let the little Judas lecariot know that, though he may throw dust in the eyes of the government, we are not all asleep in St. Croix.
Thanking you for valuable space, I remain
Yours truly,
W. S. ADRAMSON.
Member of the Colonial Courtell, St.
Crox, V. L. U. B. A.
THE NEGRO WORLD. SATURDAY. JANUARY 20, 1923
Contradicts Lowell
---
Boston Was Shocked When the Boston Daily Globe State "Old Time Graduates Protest Jim-Crow Policy in Excluding Negroes From Dormitories" By WILLIAM H. PERRIS
HARVARD'S GORGEOUS RECORD
This caused a garp when it was recalled that Harvard had ignored an irrational color prejudice in the past and honored men of color who had been elected class orators, served as commencement speakers, won scholarships and fellowships, literary and oratorical prizes and represented her on athletic and debating teams. Harvard has stood foremost among American universities in championing and building cultural, Christian and democratic ideals. She has dared to practice what churches, other universities and patriotic orators have preached. She has stood with her feet firmly planted on the earth, but with head looking towards the eternal state, minored by the idols of the crowd and the marketplace, by the gifts of millions, the smiles of aristocrats and the flavors of natu
From the days when Dr Charles W. Elliot, president emeritus, established the elective system amid protests, made the Harvard Divinity School an undenominational school for the study of religion and, with Prof C. Langdell, introduced the case system of studying law at the Harvard Law School. Harvard has been a leader rather than a follower of publication.
She was fortunate in having upon her faculty men of wealth and so prestige like Charles Ellis, Norton and A. S. But men of distinguished family and exceptional ability like W. J. James and Dean C. C. Everett and men of amuseative genius like J. Rosey, whose bread and butter and intellectual and social standing did not depend upon their connection with taoic severity. These, coupled with her close proximity to Boston with her traditions of freedom and liberty has created Harvard to be bold and fearless in championing the ideals of the true good and the beautiful whether the mob, the new man and the a-tac politicians applauded or not.
The Growth of Southern Prejudice
Harvard has been like a powerful man living in a malarial climate. He must always be careful not to let his system get run down and take quinine occasionally, or else the insidious disease will get a stranglehold upon him. Some twenty-five years ago the South began to inaugurate the "Jim Crow polley" on her railroads and to extend it to her street cars. Twenty years ago, with his delegate optimum Dr Booker T. Washington made light of it. The American Negro as a whole did not become alarmed until the late spring of 1913, when President Woodrow Wilson began to extend it to the government departments. And he did not fully realize the real power and strength of the insidious Jim Crow propaganda until it sought to take captive fair France in the year 1918, where the Negro soldier went forth to battle manfully and shed his life blood in order to save the white man's civilization and make the world safe for democracy.
As long as Southern attesters were willing and content to confine the Jim Crow' policy to the Southern States of America, to the small section of the earth which they ruled, no one seriously objected. But when they sought to spread a doctrine at variance with the ideals of culture civilization Christianity and democracy over the entire civilized world then it became not only a challenge to the black man but a slander upon the Almighty and blasphemy against the Most High. Because it was established as the criterion of worth and value not the mind and heart of a man but the color of his skin and the texture of his hair. It imputed unworthy motives to the great God and creator of the universe.
Harvard at the Cross Roads
Harvard at the Cross Routes
Something more is left than ever, including Jews from certain dormitories and excluding a handful of Negro students from freshman and midtowers. Harvard must decide whether she is prepared to give up her intellectual and moral leadership of America. She must decide whether she regards the Hermon on the Mount the Declaration of Independence Lincoln's Gettysburg address and the lofty sayings of Ralph Waldo Emerson after whom she has named her hall of philosophy, as poetic dreams, rainbow visions, mirages in the desert which can be talked
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If you are troubled with Rheumatism, Pains, Stiffness in Limbs, Joints and Muscles, get Joyzone Capayles at once. Swallow a Capsule with a little water instantly that rain stops. Your system be- etiquently about and realized in heaven or a thousand years from now but not hereto and now on mother earth in this terrestrial life. The church has lost force in modern life because she has not fully squared doctrine with life, present with practice, and has not fully translated her ideals into flesh and blood. The recent World War showed how small is the gap between twentieth century civilization and pagan Rome. So what the Jim "crow" poll of the South really involves in a conflict between the pleasures of pagan Rome and of Christian civilization. Negro World June 21 1822
THE "OLD GRADS"
PROTEST HARVARD'S
JIM-CROW POLICY
THE "OLD GRADS"
PROTEST HARVARD'S
JIM-CROW POLICY
BOSTON MAKE JUN 10 HARVARD
University, which within the first year
of has been under filio for all Jewish de-
crimination was placed on record by
drawing the color line to exhult
from its freshmen dormitory the son
of Rosemary Cooking Brunzel, a Negro
dummin President A Lawrence Lowell
it was learned has stated the uni-
versity's promise a letter to Mr. Brunzel
President Lowell Here
A mention was held at the Harvard
Chartered afternoon having two
boys who was attended by President
Lowell and some of the signer of a
memorial to be in Lowell and June
in which charges of discrimination
were made. The mention of Negro at
tendency is being in societies with
special respect to Harvard was to
ported to have aroused heated discussion.
Storm in Offing
Among the old grades who charge the university with Jim Crow methods in the Rev Dr William Channing Campbell of Rochester, Moorfield Storey, 66, of Boston president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Charles C. Burlingham 79, New York, Alfred Jareczki 81, John Reynolds 07, and Edward Eyre Hunt, 10. Two Negroes were permitted in the freshman dormitories during the year 1904. C. Hunt and V. M. Knox, Jr., were excluded, taking quarters elsewhere.
A storm promises to develop over the university's stand on the question, as intimated by President Lowell.
President Lowell in his reply to Mr. Reynolds, a reckless report and emphasized his decision He wrote
I am sure that you do not feel the responsibility of our position about the freeman dormitories. It is not a departure from the past to refuse to compel white and colored men to room in the same building. We owe to the colored man the same opportunities for education that we do to the white man, but we do not owe to him to force him and the white into social relations that are not or may not be mutually coadjunct.
Would Increase Preludice.
We give him freely opportunities for room and board when it is voluntarily, but it are as one that for the colored man to obtain that he is entitled to have the white man compelled to live with him is a very unfortunate innovation which for from doing him good would increase a prejudice that as you and I will thoroughly agree a most unfortunate and probably growing.
On the other hand to maintain that compulsions residence in the freshman dormitories—which has proved a great benefit in breaking up the social classes that did much injury to the college—should not be established for 29% per cent of the students because the remaining one-half of 1 per cent could not properly be included, seems to me an untenable position.
He getting very much that we should not agree upon the wisdom of the policy adopted for the freshman dormitories, I am.
"Very truly yours."
very truly yours
Mr Bruce, in a reply dated January 9,
made an earnest plea that Harvard
should not join in the growing preju
gins to overcome the poison, urio
acid, your blood becomes pure. No
more sore, stiff, aching joints. No
more Solistias, Lumbago; all the
rheumatic, neuralgic pains gone.
Don't delay. Why suffer any longer?
lice which Dr Lowell mentioned:
The reply follows:
"Yes, the wind just now is blowing
in the direction of increased prejudice
toward Americana of African descent.
The same phenomenon is observed in
the case of Irish Catholics and of
Jews. But the course of high-minded
leadership is not determined by the
shifting of such winds.
Harvard is under no obligation, you
inform me, to "force" the man of color
and the white man into "social rela-
tions that are not, or may not be, mu-
tually congenial." The rooming of boys
in the same building is the present
Social Intimacy Voluntary
When I go to New York City I stop at the Astor. Should I reach Boston tomorrow I should stop at the Parker House. In either of these buildings there may be at the same time men and women of pure Anglo-Saxon blood and tradition from the Southern States. We live for the time being under the same roof. We walk the same halls and floors. We sit in the same lobby. A social relation is constituted thereby in the same sense that residence in the same block or city or State or nation or ruling in the same street car constitutes a social relation of a certain order; thus social intimacy there is none—unless it be entirely voluntary on both sides.
Social intimacy is no more compitable in the case of the Freshman Hall of Harvard than in the case of the hotel. Here are Smith from Texas and Jones from Mississippi illly-white freshmen, living in the same hall. Does the university undertake to force Smith and Jones into social intimacy? Certainly not. A college dormitory. I know is not a hotel, but in essential the analogy holds. Beullons and thieves may sleep under the same roof with aristocrats and saints, but social intimacy does not result necessarily, nor does the question of this congeniality of the mechanical relation of abode even arise.
"Of Course | Protest."
I suppose that none may deny that being members of the same college class is a social relationship. Being members of the same university is certainly one. If the principle which you are applying to the present case of rooming in the same building is conceded, the day may come when it will be applied to the class, the classroom, the campus, the university itself. Of course, I protest.
"Is it fair to say that this Is not a departure from the past?" Hitherto Harvard—and it is not the attitude of a group of private persons, but that of a renowned university affected by a public interest that is at issue—has looked upon the individual student as an individual and not as a racial symbol. It has extended to him all its facilities with exclusive regard not to his ancestry but to himself. And one does not, I submit, determine questions of principle by percentages.
"Wanted that the wind just now is blowing in the direction of reaction, does it behove a great and responsible centre of enlightenment to be caught like some paltry straw, in the gust? If the way to resume specie payments is to resume (as Grover Cleveland pointed out with clarity), the way to lead is not to follow.
Likens Policy to That of Klan
"A former president of Harvard has set forth weightly some of the considerations that lead to the belief that
Bust of the HON. MARCUS GARVEY
Life size bust or smaller bust of the Hon. Marcus Garvey can be had by writing Miss Augusta Savage, 167 West 129th Street, New York City, N. Y.
Critics declare that these busts are the true likeness of the Hon. Marcus Garvey. They are done in bronze and are the work of a young Negro sculptress. Any division or individual desiring to have one of these as a choice possession should write Miss Augusta Savage, 167 West 129th Street, New York, N. Y., regarding terms, as there is a limited number of these to be had.
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our American democracy may endure. But a policy that officially recognizes and sanctions and accentuates racial incompatibilities among the diverse elements of our population conduces not to the stability of our institutions.
"Impress, if you will, upon the Irishman (not forgetting the 'Roman Conquest' of Massachusetts mentioned by Mr. Many), or the Jew or Negro the idea that the oldest and noblest of our universities shares the conviction of the Ku Klux Klan that, no matter what his charm and gift and serviceability as an individual, he can be no full-fledged American because of the very blood in his veins, you manufacture griefs in the present and prepare for the future—strife.
...
"And I speak not as a radical, but as a conservative."
James Weldon Johnson, as Secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, wrote President Lowell in part as follows:
"May I be permitted to amend your statement so that it will accord with the facis? Your statement should read:
"I am sure you will understand why, from the beginning, we have thought it expedient to compel men of different races to reside apart."
"May I further suggest that Harvard's surrender of its traditions and the traditions of liberal America to the slaveholder's prejudice intensifies the very problem which you as Harvard's spokesman are professing to meet. Such amelioration of race problems as has been brought about in this country has occurred in large measure through Southern students who were met in Northern universities by an uninchilling affirmation of the equality of all men in the realm of the arts and of learning.
"One of the most liberalizing influences on the Southern racial situation has been that the traditional stand of Harvard has offered to Southern white students the opportunity of coming to know as human beings their fellow-colored students with whom they were associated. Deprive those Southern students of their last opportunity to learn the tolerance that comes of living with and understanding men of all races, man with whom they will have perceive to live and mingle in the United States, and Harvard University helps mightly to darken the future of the United States; for by capitulating to anti-Negro prejudice, in the fresh man domiciliaries or anywhere else Harvard University affirms that prejudice and strengthens it and, in quite into effect the program proclaimed the infamous Ku Klux Klan and apologists."
MISS CLARK TO SING
IN LIBERTY HALL
Miss Ethyl Oughton Clark, the coloratura soprano, and Mr. Lyndon Hoffman Caldwell, Mrs. B. Syracuse University, and Mr. Errington Kerr, a violinist, will appear in a joint recital in Liberty Hall, New York, on Tuesday evening, January 30.
GAS IN STOMACH IS DANGEROUS
Recommends Daily Use of Magnesium to Overcome Trouble Caused by Fermenting Food and Acid Indigestion
Gas and wind in the stomach, accompanied by that full, bloated feeling after eating, are almost certain evidence of the presence of acid in the stomach, creating so-called "acid indigestion."
Acid stomachs are dangerous because too much acid irritates the dilute lining of the stomach, often leading to gastritis, accompanied by serious stomach ulcers, creating the distressing gas which distends the stomach and hampers the normal functions of the vital internal organs, often affecting the heart.
It is the worst of folly to neglect such a serious condition or to treat with ordinary digestive aids which have no effect. It is better to treat instead get from any drunken, few ounces of Bisurated Magnesia and take a teaspoonful in a quarter glass of water right after part. This will dilute the gas, wind and bleat right out of the stomach. It will also trazalize the excess acid and prevent inflammation, and there is no source of pain. Bisurated Magnesia (in powder or tablet form—never liquid or milk) last harmless to the stomach, insensitive for stomach purposes. It is used by thousands of people who enjoy their meals with no more fear of indigestion.
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1923
ats
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ee GN aaa
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‘Telephone Hartem £317
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he reread Negre Unprovement Association by the lafrican Communitier
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DWALIOND........-.c0cesessereeesesenenereersevessAmeoeiate, EGItor
ER NATHEWS ... ... . Seeereeeteeee coevesses Business Manager
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course of his lectures on American history that some men could sign
the Declaration of Independence, which stated “that all men are
created equal,” and at the same time hold slaves because they did
not regard the slave as a man. And that is the real issue at stake
in the so-called American rate problem. Every man knows that
he does not take as a social companion everyone who lives 1 the
same block. lodges m the same hotel, boards in the same restaurant
or rides on the same bus, atreet car, railway train or steambout with
him. He, asa tule, only confabs with 5 or 10 per cent. of the group,
sometimes vith unly 1 or 2 per cent. The high and holy students of
Harvard recoxize this fact. But the fact is that, regardless of what-
ever transe, want ability or character a Negro posscsses, they do not
regard hi «> a man, ‘They regard him as part ape and part man, as
a vertebrate ammal of the genus homo, but not of the genus tir.
It follows hence that all black men, the good, the bad, the 1n-
different, the high toned, the low toned and the no toned, the bril-
hant, the mediocre and the half-wits are all placed in the same cate-
gory and classified alike. If the souls of Poushkin of Russa, Samuel
Goleridge Taylor of England, Gen. Alexander Duman, \exander
Dumas Pere and Alexander Dumas Fils of France with their gemus
and character were to be reincarnated in the body of an American
Negro, they would be compelled to ride in a jim-crow car in the
South and their sons could not lodge i the freshman durmitory at
‘Harvard.
Now, that 13 the perplexing thing about t.- race situation im
America, There 18 social and artificial rathi. an a Inological.
psychological and natural cataloguing and classitwation of a black
man which ignores variation and differentiation within the racial
group. ‘That 1s to say, the race from which he sprang rather than his
Rifts of mind and heast and his physical stamina determmies fis 1
dustrial, civic, political and social status in modern society Now
that is a caste prejudice which 19 suppused to be dispelled by de
mocracy, Christianity and culture. WILLIAM H. FERRIS
The Negro World does hot knowingly accept questionable
or traudulent advertising. Readers of the Negro World are
earnestly requested to {nvite our attention to any failure on the
part of an advertiser to adhere to any representation contained
in a Negro World advertisement.
THE IRONY OF FATE
T seems indeed the irony of fate that Prof. Roscoe Conkling Bruce
I should be the one to have his son discriminated agamst at Harvard,
His father had been a United States Senator and Registrar of the
Treasury. Ils record hoth im and out of college was brilliant. He
spoke on a victorious Harvard debating team; won the Coolidge prize
in debatmg,, was clected class orator, received ls degree with a magna
cum laude, delivered the memorial address at Harvard; served as prm-
cipal of the acadenne department of Luskegee and as Assistant Superin-
tendent of Pubhe Instruction im Washington, D.C.
_ Then both im and out of college Mrofessor Bruce was what the
sunny South would term “a good Negro", that 15, one who way hari:
less. He never actively identified himself with any of the radical ajgta-
tion movements, Both at Harvard, Tuskegee and Washington, D.C.
he followed perfectly the line of least resistance. Ie studiously re-
trained by word or deed from saying or doing anfthing that would give
offense to the sensibilities, tastes or prejudices of his Caucasian neigh:
bors and associates. He easily and comfortably swallowed the indus-
trial fad, and smiled calmly at disfranchisement, jim crowism and an
occasional lynching. Seemingly he and his would he the last ones to be
discriminated against. What was the fly in the omtiment, then?
In June, 1901, the writer and Professor Bruce by the accident of
fortune chanced to ride on the same train, in the same car and in the
same seat from New York City to New Haven, Comn . where the former
alighted while the ‘atter rode on to Boston and to Harvard, where he
was stepping from one triumph to another. It was a dehghtful conver-
sation, The wisdom of young Bruce, the elegance of his language and
the modulation of his voice made a pleasing impression upon the writer.
Quite naturally, after discussing for nearly an hour the philosophy
of Royce and Ladd, the psychology of James, the sociology of Sumner
and the philosophy of art of Nortan ws -yould descend from the heights
of Meuxt Parnassus to the mundane sphere and discuss such terrestrial
affairs as industrial traming, disfranchisement and jim-crow cars.
Young Bruce thought the passive rather than the active attitude was the
ideal one for the young colored scholars, “because.” he said, “race }1-c)-
udice is a fact which, like the law of gravitation, must be reckuned
with.” We remembered that phrase, for it recalled the saying of Prof.
Josiah Royce that a woman's will is a fact to be reckoned with like the
fact of gravitation.
In watching the subsequent career of Professor Bruce we observed
that he acted out his thought. When other conservative scholars, who
had positions at stake, like Dr. W. E B. Du Bois, Mr 1. M. Hershaw,
Prof. C.C Cook of the department of English at Howard Unversity
and Prof. William H. Richards of the school of law, had the courage,
the spirit and the high principle to speak out boldly in behalf of Ingher
aspirations of black men and black womten, Professor Bruce was a
serene philosophic spectator as the black man was slowly but surely
being robbed of the civil and political rights guaramteed him by the
Constitution of the United States. He made no move to stay the ad-
vancing tide of caste prejudice and caste proscription as it mounted
higher and higher until it swept his own son off his feet.
Perhaps if when Professor Bruce delivered the memorial sities
at Harvard some eighteen years ago last May, instead of indorsing the
current attitude towards the Negro, which favored industrial education
and self-effacement from politics, he had adopted the idealistic and
courageous tone and attitude of his letters to President Lowell, lie would
have assisted in moulding and crystallizing an enlightened public seati-
ment which would have made impossible the recent attitade of Har-
vard's president. “Eternal vigilance 18 the price of hierty.” The old
saying is “better late than never And although Prosessor Bruce was
late—extremely late—in raising his voice for liberts, freedom, juste
equality and democracy, we are yet grateful for ns brilliant and forceful
vindication of the idealistic strivings of the Negro in language that
charms us with its simplicity, chasteness and elegance
BRAN V ANY AS 8EEE UU
Done why was a student in the Harvard Divinity and Harvard
A Graduate. Schvol in the last three years of the nincteenth
century, when Harvard had the finest philosophical faculty
im the world, when (harles Eliot Norton defied public opinion in
airing ils views upon the Spanish-American War, when Wilham
James was the principal orator at the unveiling of the Robert Gould
Shaw monument, when Swami Abhedanada lectured at the Cambridge
conferences, when Mozoombar preached in Dr. Edward Everett
Hale's church, and when Bita Chaudra Pal clectrified the audience at
the meeting of the Free Religious Association and when James
Coolidge Carter of the New York bar pictured Harvard as the shrine
of truth at the alumni dinner, quite naturally I would be interested
in observing whether Harvard would preserve those ideals and tra-
ditions of culture which made her foremost amoung American uni-
versities.
I read with interest the correspondence between President Ab-
bott Lawrence Lowell of Harvard and Prof. Roscoe Conkling Bruce
relative to the exclusion of the son of the latter from the freshman
dormitorica because his presence would drive away Southern stu-
dents who have certain preconceived notions as to the Negro’s place
in human soclety.
President Lowell said in his first letter to Prof. Bruce: “I am
sure you will understand why, from the beginning, we have not
thought it possible to compel men of different races to reside to-
ether.” He said in his second letter: “But it seems to me that
for the colored man to claim that he le entitled to have the white
man compelled to live with him is a very unfortunate innovation,
which, far from doing him good, would increase a prejudice that, as
you and ; will thoroughly agree, is most unfortunate and probably
Growing. =
“On the other hand, to maintain that compulsory residence in the
freshman dormitorics—which has proved a great benefit in breaking
up the soeial cliques that did much injury to the collego—chould not
be established for 99/4 per cent. of the students because the remain-
ing one-half of 1 per cent. could not properly he included, seems to
me an untenable position.”
In running away from one evil President Lowell is running into
the arms of a greater cvil. He is endeavoring to break up the social
cliques at Harvard, but he is also sanctioning u custe prejudice based
upon the color of the skin or ancestry of an individual, which is at
varlance with the highest democratic, Christian and cultural ideals.
The real question at issuc is not whether white and colored men
whould be compelled to live in the same building, but whether a
colored man should be regarded and treated as a man, the same as)
other men, and estimated not by the social status of his grandfather,
but by his intrinsi. worth as a man.
The Zeit Geist
While the presidents of and professors in universities, hke the
President of the United States and the Congressman, mould public
sentiment, they are also affected by public sentiment. They are in-
fluenced by the Zeit Geist. The members of the faculties are not
gods, but men, and they feel the force of the sentiments of the alumni
and the undergraduates. Consequently they arc as much straws
which indicate the way the wind blows as rudders which guide and
direct ships.
At present two powerful forces are at work in the American
\ civilization at the bottom and at the top. First there is the Ku Klux.
Klan, whose members are confined to white American protestants.
‘This puts the ban upon black men, Jews and Irish Catholics. Then
at the top of American society are aristocratic Anglo-Saxons, some of
Northern, ofhers of Southern birth and breeding. They are too cul-
tured and refined to indorse the coercive measures of the Ku Klux
Klan. But they feel themselves immeasurably superior to Negroes,
Jews and Irishmen, and they desire not only to avoid social contact
‘and-feilowahip, but even the semblance and appearance of social can-
tact.with supposedly inferior races and socie! groups.
‘For a long while Harvard University has been boom-proof
against the artificial distinctions of human society and has upheld
“¢he aristocracy of culture and character as well as the arisocracy of
spirth.and wealth. She seems naw to be wavering. As to whether
“she will:contigus to lift the country up to her ideals, or whether che
iecanhte the tdols of the crowd and the market place remains
CCS AT}a' true that at present colored students at Harvard are free
‘ peompste fonecholustic arid literary honors. But this exclusion of
{Negro students-from-the freshman dormitory may be ‘the cpeniog
shies bi. The Bias may come when a Southern student will object to
SHIFI9E oh same football or baseball team or participating on the
aense dabating thir ot clats diy or commencement program with «
asploredistuidbats: Wher thea? It one once starts downward on the
ORREE AE LAE of comptoniiee, where will he stop?
reed ia fit Ne well for: Harvard to tear in mind the words of the
PRY ok Conceras Whoa aie did not recognize until be was old, and
4 Feta, itee'tantil be swettets ple you have mun, black or white
Bn Te
Ra Paci eae ee
sue HEN rete cide ete ven ee
op ee xe
RRR eta Rete ate eet PAAR Cie eN ty
eee ter ar hy
MAYNARD KEYNES WAS RIGHT
1 1ER four years ot “peace’ Europe is agai about to drench
A itself in a whirlpool of blood and fire and desolation. The
reparations question, as it is revealing itself as we go to press,
is the solution to the mystery of the handwriting on the wall as seen in
that remarkable book, “The Economic Consequences of the Peace,” by
that British super-economist, John Maynard Keynes, fellow of King’s
College.
In his book Mr. Keynes predicted Germany's inability to pay the
enormous indemnity imposed on her by the allied Premiers. Now, after
fout yeara of normalcy, Germany who. of the nations of the entire
world, alone knows the real mean‘ng of that word—ig unable to live up
to the provisions of the Treaty of Versail'es. At the Paris conference
Mr: Bonar Law washed England’s hands of France's petulance. Am-
bassador Harvey backed out. Poincaré, urged on hy a reactionary
Chamber of Deputies. flung down the gauntlet, and the die was once
more cast. Mr. Harding, up to that time reticent, recalled the 13.000
American troops on the Rhine, but, in the words of the New York
Wald, “again Mr, Harding's gesture is too fate and too feeble to be
effective.”
And eo France sent her Moroccan troops galloping into the Ruhr.
‘What is the meaning of all this? It means that another big war is
ahead of ys, It means that France is ag relentless as when Georges
Clemenceau was(in the saddle. It means that Belgium is the Belgium
Of-colonial tHiditions—the chef the Cango horrors.’ Andin Germany,
the only country today that is not swept by cyclones of unrest and-indus-
trial disorganization, is taking it passively—is yielding to the onslaught
of the French imperialists.
It is interesting to note just at this point that American anthro-
pologists like Franz Boas and Dr. Clark Wissler are trying to say that
the Moroccans are not really Negroes, but “Negroid,” being but “a blend
of Arab, Jew and Berber.” “I should say.” Dr. Wissler is quoted as
having said, “the Moroccans were approximately 50 per cent. Negroid.”
This excludes them. In the eyes of white Americans it 1s O. K. for
them to occupy the Ruhr Valley. Anti-German propaganda? Yes, Or
it might be an attempt to justify France's war gesture. But whatever
1t 15, 1t somehow misses fire Surely people—dark-skinned people—who
are 50 per cent. Negroid are, if not Negroes, what, then, are they?
We are not begging the question. It 1s the white race that legislates
that one drop of black blood makes a man a Negro. It is this same
white race that 19 contradicting itself when 1 says that “50 per cent.
Nogroid” does not make “Negro” This decision, come to think of it,
imght result in a complete revolution of the statutes of the South It
might put a half-million “blacks ' on the other side of the fence. Let us
hope so!
BRUCE GRIT’S COLUMN
THE PASSING SHOW
CONTEMPORARY COMMENT
BE et ent erie eee ee tea me
| HC ta ealated of tho eclebrated Brun.
Jala Dekiila that he once was invited
‘10 give a volin rerital at one of the
mont farbionable and cx: nive clubs
In Porto Rico, and that he a repid
the Invitation and was. accompanied
by hie white wife. w prepoaneantng an
tery attractive woman Dek
played divinely wt ile violtn and whlin
waiting for him the guretn enjoyed
themeclven immensely tripping the
ght. fantastic, Mra, Detulla among
them. for she waa a teautifal and
racetul dancer and the envy of other
Women After Detiniia had ress
the third number wt like tepertetre the
orchestra began (o play a beautiful
waltz Ag the DeBalin proceeded to
Join In It one of the male members of
[ae club erlang an winjestlon (0. the
Negea arate dan ing with white
Soman, although he liad Iimael€ stanred
several times with Madanie Dexaln
Tt wan all done very quletly and war
aver ina few pilnutes. Then Detalis
without showing any emotion or rain:
ing hin voicr, went at once to the
attorn. revured his violin, placed
In itn vaee, locked It and, taking Nia
‘wife by the sem, walked out of the
hall in disgust. ‘The other and most
important part of hia repertoire, which
ned been lett for the last of course.
wae not piven and hundreds who ad
come apeviatly to hear the great Negro
Vlolinist were enuiy. disappointed.
| The immigratio isw .f Cubs are
restricted to emigrante from the North
fof Italy, Sweden, Copenhagen and
Norway, I do not find Africa in the
ise
It in amuaing to arn at this lato
day that there la a color line at Har
Sra, when the color linn se existed
Maters We pesce BNP dea. ae OB
attempt to ahow at another we Ung.
T would not he sar ied if all the
Rreat white colleges and univeraities
now attended by Nug-oee do not adopt
the plan being worked out "y Harvard
{to oliminate the colored ¥ other aa It
te proceeding to Uo «uhily and craftly.
Mr. Roscoe Conkling Druce'c inability
to have his non entered as a Fresh-
man at Marvard, his Aime Mator, Ie
hard blow, but it hee made ims
iner man and & Negro and given Wim
© clearer insight Into the paycholony
of tho while man Others of hie class
will, In the process of time, make aim-
Ung alacovery and come on home We
admire Mr Mruce's courage In 1dsnti-
fying himaeif ae a Negro. Men of his
fine siture and ability ean help
greatly to bring the name Negro back
to the commancing place it once oc-
cupled and give it tho standing it de-
serves among nations and races.
Well, France hae gone and “one
tt, and the world ia walling and laten-
ng to Bear what will happen when
all of her army of invanion te landed
on German territory it waa a bold
thing for France to do. Ita wisdom or
unieiadom ina matter abuut “which
opinions will differ. of course The
German reparations bill to France is
pretty seep and French aecupntion of
the Iiuhe sector will add to it, and
may bo the straw that will break the
Dnchshund's back, which le newurally a
little caved In. Dut France, perhaps.
and America, Underatandn what sho le
attempting t# do and how ahe In quing
to accomplish the doing ot it. We malt
know more about this mensatlonal In-
vasion of tho enemy's country siz
—
Wria.n H Ferrie has an artioly tn
‘he current lenue of the Negro World
that ourht to be read by every Negro
tp the United States, and by every
white person too. Mr Ferris writes 0
short summary of the achievements of
graduates of Linco!n and Howard Uni.
veraitiea tn the past fifty years. It ts
@ atriking ist of names, enough to re-
assure any Tegro who doubts the value
of the higher edacation for his race and
to give the Ile to any white person
who says that the educated Negro has
never done anything. Just the bald
statement of the facta, apart from Mr.
Ferris’ philosophical treatment of them,
is enough to put new courage Ihto every
Negro who reads,
In that Ust are some of our most
distingulshed names, and they ere too
numereus to be cited here In fifty
year® Howard and Lineoin have given
weeks of a month ur tee from now
Large bodies move slowly, though
France in her present mood for do-
Ing things In a hurry may move mure
quickly than te usually the case with
large Wedies The altuation in inter-
cating, looked at from any \lew point
The rapidity with which hintory ts
now being made ean Mut evoke vur
nurpriae and wonderment at the dar-
Ing methoda employed 4 those who
are thaking it Xerxen and thy mighty
military leaders of antiquity compared
WIND Their muslern autity pen were mere
roe in the gage of war.
The magnanimity of the Negro fs
khown in the following story tid alout
Poter Jacknon, tho gentleman!y Negru
prizo fighter of yearn age, when he
fought the plumMng JoaMeAuliffe nt
Mon Francisco on McAuliffea own
terme, which wera that he would not
light the Negro uniesn the whole of the
puree war marked “for the winner,”
aa he was far awny from Australia
and was without money to falt back
upon. Jackson, with some reluctance,
vonsented to this unfulr proposal and
entered tho ring with the conceited
Auntralian, who had visualized a larce
and continuous meal ticket, running In-
to yenrr, ana result of his pig-handled
bargain to Night with a Negro whom he
Colt confident of knocking out after a
few rounds or nv then enshing in and
In a few dayn aulling for the Antipodes
But “the bent laid plana of men aud
mice gang aft agiey." The vain Aua-
(rallan had counted without nis host.
Peter Jackson beat him to @ frazale
from start to Onish. He did something
more when tho fight wae finished,
which dincovered the innate sympathy
and kindness of heart of the Negro:
he handed MeAuliffe a generoun por-
Hon af she purse an a eaive for Lis
wounds of mind and bod), so that he
might be able to return to his Aus-
weullan home, Such, magnonimity as
that had never been known In pugiiiem
before and has not been known since.
It takes © Negro tu show the white
man what humenity and true religion
are and mean.
‘The archaeologists who are plunder-
tng the grave of King Tutanhamin in
Thebes have discovered. so the cablo
Informa a hunk of linir, the texture
of which Im not fully described, In an
alabaster box found in the tomb aud
which In anaumed 10 have been that
of hin wife, who Is believed to have
died Mrat_ Tho hair tn sald to be gray.
Whether It was frirsied oF fleccy, auch
an Homer describes that of Lury 9.0
ton, who nignaiized himeelf at the
Alege of Troy, to lave besn, depononts
do not depore.
If Tutenhamin wos an Etinopian, or
ACeican, of a man with « bituminous
complexion. something as Lord Carnn-
Von avers hia wife wan, very posaibly
of the same race and color and pos-
served the heir and ull phyaival fea-
turen of the race, I muapect that this
hunk of hair wan (riealy or fleeey an
the face blew: and halr strawgintening
artiatn were us nown at that early: pe-
rlod, and Wee des, Negroes were fhent
then, and there waa no need, Inclina-
tion or desire among them to imitate
tho whites in the matter of hair and
complexion, ‘Thin hunk of halr may
Intor be straightened ( prove that
Tutonhamin upd hin queen were Anglo-
Saxone of a remute period Meienco
can do wonders there days —Negro
Times
ve historians, preachers, theolngiens,
orators, atptomate, physicitns, scholars,
Judges, editors, legisiators, librarians.
lawyers, college presidents. In addition
to these men of outstanding success,
Howard and Lineo'n have sprend thou-
sands of graduates through the coun-
try @s teachers, carrying the torch of
rrogrere into backward communities
They have never received due oredit:
Indeed, at the height of the Industrial
eGucation idea, they suffered consider-
able dlecreaie and ridicule, but they
went on with thelr quiet work. Today
we can eee its result. Their work had
© large share in making the Negro of
today, with his svif-reapect and ambl-
tion, bis buainess enterprise. Through
ther ‘e learned that anything good
encugh for other races was not too
goed for him, that he too ls the heir of
all the ages, that the great scientists
and artiste and healefe of past gener-
ations were working for him as much
aa for anyone else.
‘One canpot overestimate the psyoho-
logical benefit to a race when it learns
that It has @ share in the heritage of
mankind. Our eltuation was wretched
in the past largely because of cur pay~
chological attitude which was forced
upon us by over two centuries, of
mlavery, and even now ts not wholly
Gupelled. Onogthe mind ts freed trom
Mp fetters all else will follow. ‘Thanks
to the work of such men and women as
Howard and Lincoln bave given us
we may sing with Byron “Eternal epirit
of the chalniess mind."—Negro Times.
a “Ls
The following editorial article was
[prepared for The Negro Times by re-
quest by Aubrey Bowser. a graduate
of Harvard Univeraity, Mr Bowser
has served time as & journalist on sev-
oral newopapere and { the author of
“The Man Whe Would Dare” ana oth-
er stories,
Under the misleading headline.
‘Harvard Bare Bon of Negro Scholar,”
the New York World of Wednesday
announced that the son of Roscoe
Conkling Bruce had been refused ad-
miaaion (o the freshman dormitories.
Mr Bruce, of the Harvard Colloge class
of 1902, made a moat brilliant record
at Harvard He won the Coolidge
prize for varsity debating, was grad-
uated magna cum faude, and wan
elected clasn orator, One of his pro-
fennore said of him “There is no het-
tor representative of the Harvard atyle
of npeaking" To such a man it ts
hard thing to have his son dlscrim-
inated againat at Harvard
Many people, eapectatly those who
rend onty headiines, have the Idea thot
Harvard University has harred all Ne-
gro atudenta Such tn not tho case,
‘They arn ati! admitted to all depart-
ments of the university and ell priv-
Hleges, and, when competent, aro mem-
hora of the Harvard athletic teams,
romething which cannot be anid of
other great American untveraition. The
one exception to the rule leads in the
care of tho freshman dormitories. Up.
to 1915, or thereaboute frealimen
could live anywhere they pleused, but
In that year apecial dormitories were
built in whieh they were compelled to
realde Before that time @ Nouthorner
id not have to live in the anine hall
with a Negro or eat in the same din-
Ing room. With the now rule a great
clamor came from the Bouth and Went
ugainst Negro residence, and President
Lowell yielded to It, barring colored
hoya from the freshman halls, All oth-
ce dormitories at Harvard are atill
open to Negrucn as before At other
univeraities, such as Cornell and Co-
lumbia, a Nogro cannot live in any
dormitery whatever, and at Princeton
he cannot even hecome @ student 1
must be admitted that Harvard, In aplte
uf her recent rulings, 1 still the mest
Uberal of tho untveraition toward tho
Negro, It in only in comparison with
herself, her glorious record, that she
has failed.
And fallod Harvard bas. Hor history
im that of a “herald of love and & bear-
er of light.” calmly holding her course
through change and storm., Ignoring
the {temptations of expediency, un-
daunted by the enmity she Incurred
whe held fast to her ideal of @ fair
chance for all men, and she lost noth-
Ing by It Her presidente never al-
lowed Southern students or Northern
studenta to dictate to them; they said.
“It Harvard's principloa do not ault
you, you can go to some other college *
‘Asa result Harvard University was
the great stronghold of American lib-
crallam, the most influential schoo! in
the country From her bosom came
such crusugera as Emerson, Thoreau.
Parker Prescott, Fay, Robert Gould
Shaw, the Lowell of Civil Var days,
Wendell Philtips, Charles Sumner. the
Hallowell, the Higgingone and hun-
Gredn more Such men, lovers, think~
ers martyrs, made Harvard « inighty
mother, and gave her @ spiritual her
itage possessed by no other Ameriaan
Institution
T) turning down her lofty prineipier.
by trimming her fair sails to the winds
of race hate, by dickering with the
devil, Harvard will lone her high plece
In American life And no one realizen
(hin more than the group of Influential
white Harvard graduates who are
valiantly Aghting to end color discrim-
ination at thelr Alma Mater, and 're-
store her purity of soul.
AUBREY HOWSER.
‘The Negro Times
Ther Charles Wo Blot Harvard
never had a race ianuc, Under A. Law
rence Lowell It has had two race Issues
In one year
When the so-enlleé Jowlsh question
wan raised lant spring It was asserted
that It wan the reault of an increas
in the number of Jewish immigrants
Now there In a Negro Inaue at Harvard,
It concsena ono Negro, the son of &
well-known Harvard graduate There
baw heen no Negro immigration.
What there hes been at Hervard is
a change of eoul at the top Thet
change of soul hag communicated itself
to the university tn the place of Eliot,
who embodied the stern but liberal
virtue of New Engiand, there site a
man who has lost bis grip on the great
tradition which made Harvard one of
te true spiritual centere of American
uM.
Harvard, with the prejudices of &
summer hotel; Harvard, with the
standarde of @ country club, te not the
Harvard of her greatest eons, It te
not the Harvard of Eliot or Emerson
or Willlam James, @ raining ground
of free men in a republic. It is get the
Harvard of its moat loyal graduates,
but a Harvard temporarily at eve in a
Alsordered world.—New York World.
EDITORIAL NOTE
‘The Patriot's Creed, No. 3%, which ap-
eared unsigned in the January 28th
fanue of The Negro World, was written
by Mra. Kate Fenner, a talented writer
of the Denver (Col) Division.
ALPHA PHI ALPHA CONVENTION
PORTRAYS EDUCATIONAL PROGRESS
OF THE NEGRO IN AMERICA
Serious Attitude of Delegates Towards Important Problems Appeals to St. Louis Citizens
ST LOUIS, Mo. Jan. 8—Nothing more vividly portrayed the educational progress of the American Negro than the appearance in St Louis Mo., of more than 300 representatives of the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity from sixty of the leading colleges and universities in the United States in attendance upon the fifteenth annual convention of their fraternity, which was held during the days December 27 to 31 1922, inclusive. The occasion afforded the first opportunity for the citizens of St Louis to come in close touch with such large numbers of young Negro college men from all parts of the country and get an idea of just what place a fraternity occupies in their college life. The Epsilon Lambda, graduate chapter of the Alpha Phi Alpha, located at St Louis, and the citizens of St Louis saw to it that every delegate and visiting member of the Alpha Phi Alpha was comfortably situated throughout the period of the convention
The opening session of the convention was held Wednesday afternoon at 230, at the St. Louis headquarters Pine street branch Y M C A, with over three hundred college men as delegates and visiting members of the fraternity from the various colleges and universities in America stretching from Harvard, Boston University and Yale, on the New England coast to the University of California, on the Pacific coast, and from the Universities of Michigan and Minnesota on the Great Lakes to Atlanta University and Morehouse College in the South. The business of the convention was successfully handled under the direction of the national officers of the fraternity Bimeon S Booker, president, Dr J H Hillburn, first vice-president, Raymond P. Alexander, second vice-president, Norman L Methee, secretary, Dr Homer Cooper, treasurer, and Carl J Murphy, editor of the official organ The Spinix
---
Report of National Officers
At the Friday afternoon session the national officers of the fraternity made their yearly reports. The national president, Simeon S. Booker, reported that the fraternity had made great progress during the year, especially in the results from the annual "Go to High School, Go to College" campaign and in the increasingly important place which the organization is taking in collegiate life. It was noted from the report of the national secretary, Norman L. McGhee, that during the past year chapters of the Alpha Dbl Alpha have been established at the University of California, Berkeley, Cal., the State University of Iowa Iowa City, Iowa, the State College of Iowa Iowa, Iowa, the University of Denver Denver, Colo., Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.; Springfield College, Springfield, Mass.; Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill., and a graduate chapter at Indianapolis, Ind., which added to the chapter roll of thirty-six as reported at the last convention, makes a total chapter roll of forty-four, with a membership of over 2500 Of these forty-four chapters thirty-six were
Won't You Try This Free For That Nasal and Throat Catarrh?
All Divisions and Divisional Officers are hereby warned against paying money to Executive Officers, Officials or Representatives from the Parent Body on the Field. No Executive Officer, Official or Representative is supposed to receive any money from any Division for dues, taxes or assessments. If such money should be sent by mail to Headquarters, Any local Officer or Representative who receives 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.
represented at St Louis at the fifteenth annual convention
Pilgrimage to Lovejoy's Monument
The Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity, in harmony with its idea of keeping ever before its members the deeds of those characters of American history whose lives offer inspiration and encouragement for the problems of race which they must face in America, made a pilgrimage this year to Alton, Ill., to the spot where there is created a monument to Rev E P Lo Joy, the noted abolitionist, who gave his life in defense of freedom. A wreath was placed on the monument by the fraternity and brief exercises were held Successful Public Session Held in
Poro College Auditorium
Pehahs the best public impression of the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity was received at the public session which was held in the Poro College auditorium on Sunday afternoon, December 31. The seriousness of the program and plans of the fraternity were effectively presented to the public by Raymond P. Alexander, vice-president of the fraternity, in his discussion of the subject "Alpha Phi Alpha's Task" Mr. Aaron E. Malone, president of Poro College and an honorary member of the Alpha Phi Alpha, gave to the public a very definite idea of the relation which Alpha Phi Alpha bears to it in his sound and common sense analysis of his subject "Alpha Phi Alpha's Relation to the Public." The address delivered by Dr. E. P Roberts of New York City, an honorary member of the fraternity, was an appealing interpretation of the "Ideals of Alpha Phi Alpha."
"Go to High School" Campaign Continued—Conlumbus, Ohio, Selected as Meeting Place for Sixteenth Annual Convention
The final session of the convention was held Saturday afternoon, at which time action was taken respecting the plans to push the annual "Go to High School, Go to College" movement in every State of the Union during the month of May, and recommendation was made to the forty-four chapters asking the establishment of additional scholarships to aid men in staying in school. Much interest was exhibited in the selection of the meeting place for the sixteenth annual convention. After a spirited campaign on the part of the delegates from the six chapters located in the State of Ohio, who urged that Columbus, Ohio, be selected, the convention decided in their favor, despite the enticing bids of the delegates from New York and Detroit.
Officera Elected for 1923
At the end of the final session, the following officers were elected to guide the Alpha Phi Alpha through the year 1923: Nimone R. Booker, Baltimore Ml. president, Raymond P. Alexander, Boston, Mass. first vice-president; R. W. Cannon, Minneapolis, Minn., second vice-president, Norman L. McGhee, Washington D.C., secretary, Homer Cooper, Chicago, Ill., treasurer, Oscar C. Brown, Indianapolis, Ind., editor of the official organ, "The Sphinx." On account of the remarkal growth of the Alpha Phi Alpha in the far West, it was decided to add an additional vice-president to have charge of that section, and James W. McGregor of Los Angeles, Cal., was selected for that office.
Pioneers Present
In answer to the call for the return of all pioneers and the request for a
THE NEGRO WORLD SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1999
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1923
large number of visiting members of the fraternity a large number of the older members of the Alpha Phi Alpha responded with their presence at St. Louis, including the following. W. H. Temple, D. N. Cronthwait, Jr., Herman B. Brown, J. Danny Cacei Howlett, Gordon H. Chapman, Daniel W Bowlas, David Jones, R. B Atwood, V. S. Bolen, George Buckner, William O. Stokes, A H Beckham, C A McCoy, Clarence B. Burbridge, William T. McKnight, T S. Cherry, Howard B. Shepard, Clifford V. Smith, M W Fields, R L. Linton, Charles W. Greene, George M Brown H. S. Jones, Walter R Thornhill, Walker D. Brown, P W Waters, Burt A Mayberry, Jr., Braxton F Cann, M E Carroll, George A. Glipson, B H. Scott, Dr B A Rossa, A A Dalton Dr B M Rhetta, Charles W Warfield A E Woodruff, Elmer J Cheel, Dr C A Greer, Lucius M McGee, John D Winkerson, Howard H McNeill, Vance M Mullon, Joseph H B Evana, James A Scott, Frank B Wilson, F T Wilson, R Jason, Cyril B, J R Henderson Charles H Carroll Ernest L Harris, Fugone B Perry, Arnett G. Lindsay, J O Wood, F D. Gardner, L A Mahone, L T Cronthwait, J Horace Bynoe, George Lyle, Joseph F Clarke, J W Powell, S R Rhodes, Wilbur A Page J D B St Felix Isaac, F D Jordan, J P Drawley I F Bradley Jr, Charles S Stone and Roy S Bond.
St. Louis Entertains Royally
All S. Louis was host to the Alpha Phi Alpha during the convention week. Aside from the scheduled social events, which included the symposium and smoker at the Pine Street Branch Y. M. C. A. on Wednesday evening; the formal public reception on Thursday evening at Poro College, the annual formal reception on Saturday evening at the Pythian Temple and the annual banquet at the Poro College on Sunday evening. There were also the unofficial events by the friends of the fraternity, including the tea and matinee dance by the Misses Scott of West Belle place on Wednesday afternoon; the formal reception by the Informal Dames at the Pythian Temple on Wednesday evening, and an informal dance by eight ladies in honor of the Alpha Phi Alpha on Thursday evening; a formal dance by the Gamma Omega chapter of the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority in honor of the general convention on Friday evening; a breakfast to the entire fraternity on Sunday morning, given by exalted honorary member Aaron E. Malone at the Poro College, and ending with a dance by three ladies in honor of the Alpha Phi Alpha at the Pythian Temple on Monday morning, January 1, 1923.
Citizens of St. Louis Pronounce the Convention a Success
The fifteenth annual convention of the Alpha Phi Alpha officially closed with the fraternity banquet held at Zoro College on Sunday evening, December 31, with the assurance from the citizens of St Louis that the prevailing idea which met the members of the Alpha Phi Alpha upon their arrival that the main object of a fraternity convention was for social entertainment had been completely changed by the seriousness with which the delegates of the fraternity had undertaken the important work before their organization.
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HARVARD'S ACTION ON NEGROES NEVER BEFORE OVERSEERS
That Board and Corporation Both Supposed to Act on All Policies of Importance
Foremost among development yesterday connected with the recently announced decision of President A. Lawrence Lowell of Harvard excluding the son of Roscoso Conkling Bruce, well-known Negro graduate, from the freshman dormitory was the discover that the matter never has been put before or acted on by the Board of Overseers of the university.
The Board of Overseers is one of the two governing boards of the institution. The other is the "Corporation," consisting of the president and fellows. Whether the matter has been laid before or acted on by the Corporation could not be learned yesterday. The question of which board is superior in authority is one, it is said, that has never been settled in 300 years, but joint action of both boards is required on all important matters.
No decision can be said to represent the policy of the university, it was declared, that has not been favorably acted on by both, and doubt was expressed as to whether action by the president would be hold valid if the boards failed to approve it.
Overseers to Take It Up
It is known the question of barring the freshman dormitories to Negroes, which has been brought to a head by the case of Bruce, probably will be taken up by the Board of Overseers, but no member could be reached in New York yesterday who would discuss it or give any opinion as to the probable attitude of the board.
The strength of the graduate protest against what is declared to be a departure from the university, a historic tradition of tolerance is indicated by the fact, ascertain yesterday, that the memorial drawn up by seven prominent graduates lost June when other cases of exclusion from the freshman dormitory were reported, had the signatures of 138 graduates of classes ranging from 1850 to 1820 when it was presented to President Lowell. It was in reply to this memorial that Dr. Lowell met a committee of graduates at the Harvard Club last Wednesday and gave his reasons for his decision.
"Jim Crow the College."
Declaring the action would "Jim Crow the college," the Rev. Dr. William Channing Gannett of Rochaster yesterday gave The World a state-
ment of his views on President Lowell's action. Dr. Gannett is a Unitarian clergyman and an author. He was a member of the class of 1860, matriculating at Harvard in the very heat of the Abolitionist movement, and he headed the committee that drafted the memorial to President Lowell. He said:
"I think the proposed exclusion policy at Harvard would violate all her best traditions and certainly her best ideals. In its measure it would 'Jim Crow' the college. It would show her siding with those disposed to increase rather than lessen the birth burdens of the colored people in our land, and this at a critical time when inter-racial and international questions are pressing to the fore, demanding noble adjustment. Ideals of justice and democracy are certainly part of a Harvard education.
"Nor do I believe the best element in the South would be won by a surrender of our Northern conception of such ideals to their social preferences. As proposed, it might be but a slight exclusion, the educational opportunity, as I understand it, not being withheld, but it would be a great racial insult, undeserved and it is too late in history to do such a thing—above all, for Harvard, with her record, to do it. In less than a generation we should all be ashamed of it."—New York World, January 12.
FOUR NEW SPEAKERS ARE ANNOUNCED FOR BUILDERS' CONFERENCE
HAMPTON, Va., Jan. 15.—The first annual Hampton Institute Builders' Conference, which will be held for three days, beginning on January 29. will bring together a large group of national experts who will give free instruction to colored builders and others who are interested in the building industry.
H. Whittimore Brown, who is in charge of the newly organised department of building construction in the Armstrong-Slater Memorial Trade School at Hampton Institute and who is in charge of this builders' conference, announces four new speakers: Frank R. Walker of Chicago, well-known author of textbooks on cost accounting and estimating; Walter C. Allen of Stamford, Conn., president of the Yale and Towne Manufacturing Company; Dudley F. Holtman of Washington, D. C., construction engineer of the National Lumber Manufacturers' Association, and T. Alfred Fleming of New York, supervisor Conservation Department, National Board of Fire Underwriters.
The colored speakers will include R. R. Taylor, director of industries at Tuskegee Institute, and William T Courtney, engineer at Spelman Seminary, Atlanta, Ga.
Dr. James E. Drugg, principal of Hampton Institute, will deliver the address of welcome, and H. Whittimore
ROSEWOOD, Fla., Jan. 3—Rosewood is quiet Monday, following the racial disturbances of the past few days, in which seven persons were killed as the result of a search by officers and citizens possessed for Jesse Hunter, Negro, wanted for an alleged attack on a young white woman at Summer last Monday. Officers are still without a clue as to the whereabouts of Hunter.
Officers are inclined to believe that the burning of twelve houses, all that was left of the Negro quarter of Rose-
Brown will speak on "Alms and Ideals of the Hampton Builders' Course." Through the generosity of Albert Farwell Bemis of Boston the establishment of the builders' course and the new department of building construction has been made possible.
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10th EPISCOPAL DIST
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Agents wanted. She teaches the art.
For consultation, other than sickness, send two dollars (63) and if you take treatment, this will go on your bill.
Please state whether you are Miss, Mrs. or Mr., and the date of your birth.
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BOX 648
wood, Sunday afternoon, surrounded end of the racial clashes, they were
The Negroes whose houses fire are still taking refuge in their woods out of fear. The houses burned by a number of white men while a crowd locked out but they could be found who would say they the houses burned, according to the county officers.
The burning Sunday afternoon came as a sequel to the previous destruction of a large part of the Negro question and the clashes between white men and Negroes in which the fatalities occurred.
Two white men were killed in the confl. and five Negroes fall victims, two of them being shot to death in a rain of bullets on a dwelling in which the blanks barricaded themselves and the other three being slam at different times.
Authorities have in custody several Norroes in connection with the clashes, the officials stating that these prisoners, who have been spirited away for safe keeping, were among those who barricaded themselves in a house and were fired on.
Officers on Monday expressed the hope of controlling the situation without further outbreaks. The section, however, is still much aroused over the disturbances.
PERSON, EVANGELIST OF
ST. A. M. E. CHURCH,
HIGH TEXAS
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ATTRACTIONS EXTRACRDINARY
AT THE LAFAYETTE THIS WEEK
3 * LIBERTY HALL, 120 W. 138TH ST.
| TUESDAY EVENING
|. JANUARY 30, 1923, AT 8:15
d
AJOINT RECITAL
iB
oO BY
Bey
= ETHYL OUGHTON CLARKE
Fak” : Coloratura Soprano |
. i
oe [NDON HOFFMAN CALDWELL
Sc, Mig: B, Syracuse University
Ase tip)
Fe ge ca, Violin, New Yor:
oe VOCALOFULNLA
7 0e t Olicn 06 Wet a0 8
Re ee Cale ee EER ON aS. y
‘The Lafayette Theatre managers
have secured what promises to be one
of the best attractions that has ever
graced the stage of the popular old
playhouse for this week in booking
William Isles’ celebrated band
Mr, Iales and his wonderful aggrena-
on of musicians, formerly the Black
tar Line Band, were for several year
aMiated with the Universal Negro Im-
Brovement Asnociation, and rendered
Valuable service to the only progres:
aly cnorgotic organization of Negroes,
yo have banded together to advanvo
fhe cause of the black man throughout
the world.
‘The band was organized in Beptom-
Der, 1919, and was aided at the time hy
Mr. Garvoy, Provisional Prosident of
Africa, who most heartily approved of
guch an organization. It wan not long
after its creation that tt becazns an act
funet to the U.N. L.A. and was the talk
Go aloggerom world.
—Séeven other. acts will also be on tho
Brogram, Judging from tho advertised
attractions, the bill 1s one of great pro-
raise,
Joe fhattell's Rovue, a tab with ten
Gaver entertainors, woll known fa-
‘torites, have always proven an cxicl-
font attraction,
Efna Deal, Rodero Dean, Kelly and
dtona, Ruth Clifford and lox Canuris
ere al) high-class acts,
“SEE AFRICA AWAKENING
Africa's awakening,
From her drowsy ago-long niccp,
Hex valiant eons are hastening
"hele taithtut watch to ken
¥ ft choers our apiritn
how ft nerves our #ouln,
the Negro'n merits,
". our noble svuls,
on, a awakening;
‘The day is drawing wih.
time Ia suroly hastening,
When we'l! be lifted high.
Hiiwe, then, truo-hearted Negroen’
\ “Raise, raiso tho standard high.
” Show Creation we are heroes,
‘And we'll have Liborty—or dle
-R. T Brown, Biquirres Costa Rien
i \ FATE HATH DECREED
- that I must go
ey nanity in wider fields;
rf wn to mest the foe,
“4 buf hie thrusta with burnishe¢
ahidn
cae fefglud, or Fate ia cross,
0 by*duty to perform:
ty te ‘tho’ the témpest toss,
f) ta to brave the ntorm.
Clidhats come—tet tlona roar,
Upahantty noeds my work.
on wings of love may soar,
Yn Ufe's ttle mark.
ben let me onward go to God,
And wort while yet I may:
Work every day, and just bo gin,
‘Ere Bfe's brief hours fleo away.
LE . Brown, Siquirres, Costa Rica.
AGE IS NOT ESSENTIAL
TO SUCCESS
By JAMES R. TAYLOR
Many of our failures sweep us te
Aura e Neughta of muccens than We esr:
hoped for im our wildest deramm, It 1:
often the turning pont, the pivot of
Fircumatance that swings un ty bighar
lovels, Age In many canes causes nati
{to became dinheartened, tly think
‘their ¢fforte will amount to naught but
elm do thy realize the unremit ine
concentration, tha herule courage ax
[uring sume of the causes wf aus ne
Mucratea, when toa hair white wed wh
snow of age, learned to play on inateu
mente of munic, (aly at eighty te gn
he study of Greek, Theophratun grea!
ent work was begun uf is nine uel
Wrthday, Ronnard, the Leen te pct stat
not develin Ma poetic farulty until
DE. Hobbes the Wintliats philenoy hee
pablined nin vermion of the Gdssay 4
ie clahtysneventh year Three nen
dad put fear age henee there mhuwel te
sens en of hope and he rtening te every
colored Ametiat = The Wurlisnston
Kale
REFORD IN A WHITE SHEET
| There ean no longer be any doubt
that the Ku tux Kian was directly
responalble for the torture and murder
of Thoman Nichurda und Watt Daniel
at Mer Rouge Witnenn after witnenn
toatifying ut the Bustroy hearings han
given names, datew and «ircumatantial
details which not only uereutnate the
local organization hut reveal tho exist-
eneo in the vicinity of underground
government int open terroriam known
to every uitizer
Yet the xame evidence which chargen
the Kian with the moat horrible crime
within the memory of this generation
Also brings out tho extraordinary fact
that the original purpono of the chnp-
ter, no far an can bo discovered, wan
to clean up Mor Rouge. Tho Ku Klux
Klan a Mer Rouge thought of iteelt.
At Ieant ut frat, an the better clement.
dluxatintied with In neighbors’ morils
And embarked upad the rightoun job of
compolling reform It Intended to run
the rougha out of town and deport
women of Ill-repato. It ended by mak-
Ing Mer Rougo a hideous national
xeandal and branding the community
with un indelible ntain—the ntain left
om tho memory by thoso two broken
bodies found floating in Lake La
Vourche.
Imperial Wizard Evans insists that
the alms of tho Kian aro legitimate,
Mtn methods above reproach Ilo re-
pudiates violence and characterizes
attempta to connect the Ku Kiux with
manked raids as dellverate falainea-
tion, In Mer Rouge ho has his answer.
A necret government encouraging race
prejudice and “executing.” ax ite do-
fenders claim, ‘tho nentince of God
upon evil.” 4 inherently rere vicloux
and vastly ware dangiroun than any
amount of disorganized crime and Im-
morality. A majority of thoso who
Join probably accept tho xtatementa of
the Amperiat Wiznrd) In geet fastn,
noverthelesx they have cast thelr Jot
with @ blackhand gang and entered an
eaay apprentinship to murder —New
‘York World
“EDUCATION IS
SELF-EDUCATION”
Dr. Wallace Buttrick, Presi-
dent of the General Edu-
cation Board, Pays Trib-
ute to Dr. Hollis B.
Frissell
By WM. ANTHONY AERY
| Dro tor Huttrick referred in deta t.
neering In Columbus Cr verety whoeh
nets Magag ne we custeatine ef the
ne Degun to tise nthe puss Phe pends
ee solf-educated Yeu cannet educate
laboraterion and shop are not neces
| Phat only in trae education whist
Bint dav of December of cy year |
days of my life"
ward tho truth, ever struggling towarc
tho best in charactor, ever tighting fo1
“WHIRLWIND” JOHNSON
IS TO CAPTAIN THE
“LIONS” IN 1923
Sixteen Receive Letters for
Gridiron Warfare — Ster-
rett New Student Manager
At the anni Deve oe lection fa
fonthall ananager at Laneotn Cnty ereity
Subn Vo Starest of Woerinburg was
shonen to muccerd Lek Redmond it
munuger of the Lint fer 1932 ster
Pett I the third atudent to annie
Lincoln's foothall teams wince her seat
ly gridiron trannactioun hse passed
tho #10000 mark It was Storrett « pre-
Mecenmer, a rtudent of Linenin, whe
frat put the Lincolu-Howa at battle on
@ clasnic plane by staging It in thy
city of Philadelphia tw 1919 Prien
that year neither Lincolt ner Howard
had piayed tho game ina big way away
from thoir own campurer )
Besides tho honor which came to
Blorrott, sixteen of the Lincoln “cubs ’
were awarted La (The basin of anard-
Ing football Le at Liswede oi premtt =
und une which In not altogether natin-
factory —t8 participation In the Turkey
Day Classic.) Their namen follow:
Coston (Capt), Nkinker, “Bty” Wood.
Diggs, Morgan, Carter, Lancaster, Me-
Lean, A. Wilson, “Whirlwind” (RoW)
Jobnson, Goodman, Poindexter, Lee.
Byrd, Crudup and Jncquee
| Plans and achedules are now being
arranged for the ensuing year. Robert
Walter Jobnron, dubbed “Whirlwind”
on acdount of his wild, streaming mane
and furious whirling in battle, has been
eleotod taptain of the Lincoln squid
for 1923. Ife has a flashy record. As
“Bil Shakespeare would put it,
“Whirlwind” has all the high additic «
of a mighty Achilles and experiences
gmacking richer ‘han all the host of
Greekish vailanta. Ho has playet
against Morehouse, Whbertorce, Union,
Howard, Hampton, West Virginia Col-
legtate and the little fo:lews, Tennc he
playa well Baseball (a also his tall
sult. Won bis letters on the b shall
* araity of Lincoln ard led the equad
in batting averages. He is twenty-two,
married, and Ups tho scales at 165
stripped. Prior to 1928 “Whirlwind’s”
stroay point was his défense. During
the past football season, of Lincoln's
twenty-three touchdowns — Johnsan
goored atx, two: being made against
eat Vie etait oP at
Reatoiy: We Val Atalay Bt Past
whordefedted: Union, he gained 175
Weekly Sermon
Hubert “The Vote from the Cloud
Text Mt Luke 9 34-35
When the three sbusen disciples were
with Jesus on the Meunt of Trane-
Nguration aa they communed together
a loud overshadowed them und they
fared mentor it but when ener fowed
with nit all ther tear was gone The
discuvers whieh they mide in the Cloud
was the greatest that can come to
iments There they found Ged and
out ef che dathnene heard Tin voue
The duckners which shut them out
fame te worbl Crease opened to them
the hea only glen cut of whieh the
susie Sn eC uttie
Head Sete ty often in ae hatin
Whee cite Cent we da not enter
Moone The devene fioend as wath ue
tnd ctheagh we deat see lis foe
Weomnay be sure of Hin presence The
PDs dearer alatieg aut the
werk und ehut ig usa with Him se
warts be heated Se spe ds
Shetty befits when desea Our
sare. Phi ppt tnade kiwwn to Din
followers the uuwer hl nature uf Ute
hinagdem Mle shattered these Meseiaiie
Hepes watts He tesut Mate genet de
fection ok tee Pa Carty the
Waning faith el th se wee refused ts
Meet nes trem: Tim oc ress suring
Tentinens touches He thus glery wan
heeded vital it os Ge atinwer thar need
that wut of the cba on the Meant of
Transngue etic came a valee may ate
Ths rete re my teen Meat
am
Wis tle nee aan eo Meee
wae Ae amen tee at te tae ate
snd rendu Mis wer bs mh thee
Seem re My ateath usd an my heat
A Nenee el gent stillness "0! fd eesedd
AMERICA!
REISE TE REIN SETA CSAEERR RR: RUS TEY.
WE Ey en nts saat
SU St wn
orator aml owte tad peer tied nts
Sand vo puting bee thous arin ted
Mets tet be adr nat te
Wate ts ea a
awd hae ney nt set ec esen an
Ws erly Garten ead the at ne meer
fee tite ictean Prot William ben
Whe bet debe ran ae
Udeaeas gemias ne
gave Pengmatieim i wh eh pede
Known unit he bas west en ty domes
Martiieau had parsed the these sor
and ten mark befgre he produce 9%
Mite phd wee wR oD
werk! vm ee ph phe
Moir \menes fed ene
The dream ef man Creed ot
erp thy vision true and best
Te eeunh the wean, ey ale net
Theangh vo the cemng ve nett
The hope ot nna Paberty
Fou mel fe ae tee
Heritane of ti Than Bare
My late caters eau Tha
Hecomee timmert it att Dsus
Laos any ds the over sat
Poting at waetin the ete
Siewe dee vital sm 1 ste
THO) Pewee Same tes
Siarmiely ttl eupe oe Tee
Suptomets Beventula sos
Py forme ant fe etn ee stan
Tike Bagg pt foam ld Nuits apace
Uy wade are Wath otal atid oon
Unit ttaete ane tite tee dane
Phy evtle fe amt an a ond
Wie ae ane tok anne pba at
Peete tien sets Ga at anant and
Phreweth peat ames af Ue sted
The tate the woith ast matin «
igi caro Come fe tne nee
Thy Conatity sae sine sand tials
The mother feu ber wd te mde
Miah fe tthe cannes tated este
OC pmrer meds better Fae
Vue unaanns oo gentter teed
Br evens atid lk ar putes ette freed
The marie ent apne ss ocd hea tit
Hiv sour Deal Coominsonwe ath
Where Justice sits upen hee tine
Weenie tile ts ets ety ae
Bee em fen teed tear ot ge
Mood quickly fot ae the tie dhe
Rude = Mone ste vrei
Naum cumue tribes
Justinian revises agen
To rid eu Land of hurt and van
Magen Chit, Mewere a Thee
Corre ww wands Just and ter
© Mothertant! 0 Parade!
To Thee my fxtut jacans lee
With reverentiand heart aftame
My heat bows low te ‘thy great Name
With spirit crapte 1 stand in ane
Refore Thy culminating Law
Thy radiant Fing unfurtedd
Iz emblem of an Eden-World
For all Th wondioun gifts to me
1 love, more, Thee poignantly’
Copyright, 1923. by Prof, William 1
HW. Mart AM. LLM Principal of Hart
Farm choo! and Juntor Republle for
Dependent Children, 716 Arthur place,
Washington, D.C
yards of territory. During the mid-
soason, when tho Lion equad was nr.
ten with o pair of defeats and diss
sion was kindling. it was “Whiriwind”
who united the backfield, manifestly the
weakest portion of the Lion eleven.
Five days before the classic struggle
he bad been confined to bed with grip.
Though not sensational, five days later
“Whirlwind” was gripping wildcate in
clean tackica in National League Park.
And what are his other “addisione™1
Well, he never playa with headgear,
never weare shoulder pads and never
was put out of a game, He defies cal-
amity end disdains superstition by
wearing on his jersey the traditional
12, 114 Le.thattnootn:captain and they
calli "Whithwiads 730
to the inner ear, and beard only by
Unose to whom It ie spoken
The form in which God speaks mat
tern litle tne fact that He dove speak
in everything Ie ever keeps Mimactt
Within peaking distance and hua many
ways of making Himaelt heard II
Volee Ia the Voice of fatherly inti rent
and love He npeaks in the punaline
and in lifes happy providers en, an
He speaks with equal clearness in the
‘loud of earthly sorrow and dinappoint-
ment and in the whirlwind of earthly
Ainanter
In hore dark daya through whi
We have beens pinmings the diviue veer
tea been apeuking in the © ua of war
acmennage of Judhement ane rede myst ten
todas ga the Mount of Transfiguration
the AW-Father haw leon direc thing Me
thoughtn omen to His Son. bie teese th
telling them te hear Mim thay hes
may find tems Hen lps tine metatien 0
ait peatte nae
Poel et ond ot somtevnte vn tale
ieee mo thal thowr wae tefues bo send
Tis written work cumnet heap from
Wer LIN Goat U8 La rte att pt O8
Feneon uF we Whinieesal withite th soul
Te this sone every erat ation ot Wend
fwithing aed fantening ewe fut
Many make ane re mpennn Phe stom
Hae eum because they abe nut 8 ant te
Neue Nett mpeake th ance yeu ten
the man togursten it net tub St 1)
He ate Hinton ty ear ann vane
OF tw the ieee at ethene wee unnut
eae Mim spewk Gods vee nats
Feneteay nee (andl tae tied es heard
ony lySthoxe wie hea meting ele
Alum ew are at an tee tint a weal stl!
Hhotigh fe her Goat ape
Coot te dumb th hese at
speak tne mets
Ve thn tests studenten ane we
Att Wed we Se tae th see
LET’S HAVE ACTION!
Thea the whities Hlawang aiid se
Ne thames the centres nen btn han
fos dew the shy Wasat dae ut all
mon Va ats the New Var What
Bee tis) Windom we dlth heath
rhe Sate ee att thes
Saw: i Ue Wee edn
TH oma Was athe wathont the
Foe Da came we a
s # Poa oe
Pee TO) ae meso ad beundios
epperun 8 Let we the eh dren of
ower vel ise ge pen iene
Fetus tiate he sts a xe that since
thee e So wserete anal
bs Ahay TA a RORY ge
wav at 0 eee Paw gatnaneet
feet WE decomp Sarg
thea shel am Ameng ro naayin t
woe fee Ce wnt are we seed
Code te tt we nee nie
perme Vee te bate bene
fur ater ed a
New de ou ebink fer waar ie we
ep ME Ween og othae these
Sates San bm We nt
fee whee ten te eal tame
Me UL NE ete anghe ett thet
went compel thoc nw see be fone at
haw parsed cur te bes the tonne rete
fe cour fiture wealth Mead amd age
Mos sand Never bak tack rear at
Be UM ae font Daehn
hes quertion tno mint Pea ee oy af
teotave ren Bed cur tatemited goat’
Thaw man, of ue hive mate ¢ tremen-
stom orn Conard tty ats ated grea
tnd ow mony af eater antes
fore Than we wet ele ht
ene Sear age?
Tie who tay teaches then geal
Fete eater theay Those whe have
made ere ubvaners an ant chet geal
St Over KE them for are se ne
Ming Ge marek with the new eae!
Hut rememtor mat white se are 4
taping al tiers things we want wre
Hom and hener fo sithou wisdone te
ean never ges weal and cee raely
Neuth tor the fe tides the very thing
Ut the Dew af nature fords hin te
do And without henor whe war «
happinere
Our destiny in governed by our wit
dy ane thought und hy eur ability to
PY Asad amen wenn te have Cath
Cul te think and fail ty DO one destiny
must neede therefore be governed“
others so we ner that we must have
witand think and DO. Let us then not
rleep no peacefully on thin New Years
night but wake vol make a rerolutio
that we wil not etana back, but will
Join the ambitious struggling and aurg-
ing mare of humanity that we will
write our namen amoug those und de
mand the attention of the ending men
and women o: America befaro the yenr
has past. If wo cannot reach our goal
this year, let 8 make It wholly and nole-
ly responsible for {t when It In reached.
Such of you an have parents and
frienda have the advantage of me, for I
have neither But, if you don't mind,
Vil beat you to It.
J W STREETER, Jn,
East Liverpool 0.
HARLEM LIBRARY NOTES
“Enjoyment of Books Evening” will
be on Wednesday, January 17, at §:30
> m. As previously announced, the
speaker for this evening is Dr. William
DB. DuBois, who will speak on “Bome
Phase of Negro Literature.” The public
is cordially invited,
Dr. EB Eillott Rawlics will be the
speakeNat the public forum on Thurs-
day evqhing, Hla topta ls “The Phys-
sai Kiteck of @ Northern citisate
on Persons BornIn-tbe Trepicat’....
NOW PLAYING
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JOR SHEFTELL'S
| WITH
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SMALLWOOD, ALBERTO JONES, MITA CATO
RES
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dice euhates ae
heehee a mend oe
me yaaa el ae
ie ee og en
ae ace oe
a a cote
eee merrea s
en canes
ce ene
i ee
nding
—Srarecrem dees nl UG
eee ee
so ed pence oa
ree
De eae hamarae
oe ae neers
re earn eat ie
a oe ge NE
ri tee ee
fe eee
eee
Nl dr om
of hae experiaeen with African wild
oe eae arene
Be ae fee San
Ue ouee fou Se
eh a es
eed Cv hele oe Hee tian ef Africa)
curse uid related the csoclationn of
oe reget
be tee ce ce omen
nee, Stee te
ye aa
Bet ee
soe a eine
seen sae
=
Cal ania
ont ines ncreadie
aii | a
es gm ni oe
Se at cea
Sr se en
eee te
oi ee
Fn ecesonanenmesene
re naan
See aie
goonies Sees es
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Recommended by an Ohio
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oe
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W. J. Temple, 202 W. Central
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yeara could not eat a meal without
distress. His trouble was catarrh
of the stomach and bowels brought
on by exposure. Mr. Temple says.
—"A_ druggist recommended Pe-
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well man. While formerly I could
not do a day’s work. I now never
become fatigued Pe-ru-na is the
best medicine and tonic in the
world. It is especially fine for
catarth and colds.”
* The value of md medicine is
determined by ts.
Pe-ra-na has been accumulating
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Seid Everywhere
Tablets or Liquid
Tesiet_wpen having tho guizince
HAMPTON STUDENTS
HONOR wanORY OF
DR. B. T WASHINGTON
MAMPTON, Va, Jan 15—The Dun-
tur Literary and Debating Boclety,
Whitt In a stident organization at
Steen Institute, recently enter-
jtained a lurse number of men and
waren with @ unique program—"A
Hooker T Wanhington Evening.” In-
[uding a Uheee-roel motion picture
flim, “Pitzrimage to Tunkegee.” which
eave Vey autintactory. presentation
of every day life at Tuskegee as well
Ins a phture af Tuskegeo on tho ocen-
son ef the unvelling of Charles
Kesha hero bronze atatie of Dr
Hiewher T Washington
Thee Hampton Institute atudonts—
Thames Inga of Chaclottenviite,
Vo dam N Freeman, Jr, of Kansas
City, Kan and Wesley Dy Elam of
Waverly, \.a spoke interestingly and
forcefully on “Washington at Hamp-
ton” “Washington at Turkegee” ant
“Washington Contribution to the
| ‘To thourxands of present-day Negew
cstudenta Doctor Washington inn
npiritual hero wi created at Tuskegee
an Institution which tn influen ing for
om el ational thought throughout
the wer'l oo oman whom white and
selted ‘culeew delight to honor for
he integer t and Cheistlaa service
stations, with 665 white comminsion-
aries In the five atations and over 900
nstive ev ingelinta, who aro also school
tavhers Thirty years ago they had
not herd of the Sabbath day, and now
the Sabbath day is kept beautifully all
iheough the country.”
GIVEN AWAY FREE
THIS 2
fy
cee aa Te
Se MAU oon Haart
Tan fess
cae ame eerie
Bete 2771 oan
Peas Se ern es
SAR is i aR a
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op omen, ee, meee ee ates ak
BO tae ee ott
Sa ae Cee
A sit em see a Re
Pe Wate es
tion ano women,
‘usec, tee tee en te ohn
eee acts eee ewe
iL ewan el cota a eae
View Sth find In vida Hist below some very useful
cei eet ceed te saan Sah ee a8
i argh gt as
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aot cue Okan sew eae
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we oe
tiie NE meme gig 35/00 96
CELT pet attr alae HS ER
De sei es Ee
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4 iy are oe St aes cee PEL F?
LS meets emer oe
1S "See ene SiS 8
1S) BT vm pe SS
Ver Sarhg ecattae SFR
So SSN INN ete ae aur ates
1a. Xie tinder in ete ER
Lie, Mine Telarc ame Tee EE
Sahai sthetgt a LB
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Paidets abipret oct terchaneu
a ‘SSVERTN. AVENUE. NEW YeRK city
THE NEWS AND VIEWS OF U.N.I.A. DIVISION
FIRST CANADIAN NAT'L STUDENT CONFERENCE, DEC. 28-JAN.2, IMPRESSIVE
Toronto Branch, U. N. I. A., Holds Big Meeting—Marked Improvement Is Shown in Program
HIGH COMMISSIONER J. W. SLAPPY, OF SOUTH CAROLINA, ENTHUSIASTICALLY RECEIVED AT CHARLESTON
On Thursday evening, January 4, the High Commissioner addressed the Charleston Division at the Young Men's Christian Association on Cannon street.
There were representatives from the various chapters in the vicinity, and the forceful address delivered by the High Commissioner on the doctrines of the Universal Negro Improvement Association thrilled the audience. This address based upon divers topics, was insurging and was enthusiastically received.
On Friday evening January 6 the Commissioner took for his subject The Fight 'a On.' He explained that the subject meant that Negroes should unite and fight for the redemption of their motherland Africa, not with swords but intellectually and financially. This address was very spirited in instructive.
We are very pleased to have the High Commissioner with us, for there is much need for his instructions and assistance.
We are also pleased to have our former associate secretary, E. W. Bristow, with us again after an absence of a few months. He has come back with the same ardor to speak at every opportunity on the great work of our beloved U. N. J. A.
Mr. S. M. Sanders, chaplain of the division, sang a solo.
Mr. Richard H. Bollinger, chairman of the trustee board, and Mr. E. W. Bristow delivered spirited addresses.
U. N. I. A. OFFICERS IN COLON NOT GUILTY
The U. N. I. A. cause celebre came to an end on December 6, when President Brooks and Secretary Pilgrim were notified by Judge Ayarza that they were absolved of the charge of abuse and confidence preferred against them.
The case opened up at 2 p.m. on November 27, in the Second Circuit Court. The prosecution was conducted by Mr Isaac Fernandez, with Prosecuting Attorney Mr Cervera representing the government. The accused were represented by Mr Erfrain Tejada and Mr Ellis Alspuru.
The opening was rather dramatic and created quite a scene in court when a star witness for the prosecution broke down under a rigid cross-examination by counsel for the defense; another witness did very little better and tried to prove that his knowledge of the shortage of funds was predicated upon suspicion and his suspicion was founded upon honesty.
The case took 4 days for the examination of witnesses. Five witnesses testified in behalf of the defense and their evidence was corroborated in every material point. The defence proved that the association was not cognizant of any shortage of funds, that they did not authorize the indictment of officers, and they affirmed the honesty and integrity of the officers charged and further reiterated their implicit confidence in their administration.
At the close of the defence the Prosecuting Attorney addressed the court for about 10 minutes, followed by Mr. Fernandez.
For the defense Mr. Tejada spoke for over three hours and his address was closed in forensic oratory. He stared the point of the illegality of the arrest of the officers, and argued that these officers were the victims of spite, malice and revenge, because others were expelled from the association for disorderly conduct and conspiracy against the officers of the association. Both Mr. Fernandez and Mr. Cervera prosecuted the case in a very technical manner.
Mr. Tejada in a lucid manner replied to each point raised, and Mr. Alpurpura gave the closing address in a short but pointed speech.
Each day the capacity of the court was taxed to the limit.
Another case is now pending against the said officers, but this case has been transferred to Panama, and will be disposed of shortly—The Independent, Colon, Republic of Panama.
In business, love, marriage
(pleasure) and trust (respect)
Why not let us help you?
help you? Not a flag or a
warrison utithet.
warrison utithet.
cording to direction.
"Doe
birth kit, Diphenylene
"Have found them all you respond,
Brulgan, Brulgan,
All Good help, Lucky
at last. Dead 250 (in stance) for a lucky
Lucky Mary and all great
wrapping in Lucky Mary
garanteed or your money back.
garanteed or your money back.
the thousands. 92.69 gets
fit ready to start. Hurry. Address Lucky
Mary. D. 435 Wm 8th St.
Cleveland, Ohio. D. 435 Wm 8th St.
As a delegate to the First Canadian National Student Conference, which was held in Toronto, December 28 to January 2, I had the opportunity of visiting several places in the "Queen City." The aim of the conference was. To unite members of the Student Christian Movement undergraduates or graduates who may wish to join with them, in fellowship, to find a solution for agricultural, racial, national and international problems of Canada, and to promote a spirit of universal brotherhood amongst the different races and religions. Nearly ever, country of the globe and all the races and religions were represented. Seven hundred students besides hundreds of visitors were present.
During recess on Sunday I visited the Toronto branch of the U N I A and was pleased to find the hall filled beyond capacity. The improvement while gratifying was no less mysterious, judging from the poor attendance during last summer. A new spirit seemed to have impregnated all Mrs. Francis lady president, was effective in her tribute to Marcus Garvey and her testimony to the integrity of the cause won prolonged applause. I was charmed by the singing of the choir and the religious atmosphere that permeated the place. I thought the Montreal branch was incomparable in rendering good singing but the singers of the Toronto branch showed superiority in technique. President Brett is doing a good work and is worthy of encouragement. He is a man of force and determination.
Mr. Riley, the achievement speaker, thrilled in the hearers with an instructive address on Ancient History. Of all I N I A members Mr. Riley has shown patience loyalty and sincerity. Chaplain Dr. Myers was present and made arrangements for the Watch Night service which began at nine o'clock. The doctor contributes regularly to the spiritual needs of the members.
Mrs. Blackburn program director thanked the contributors and wished a happy New Year.
The program consisted of an address by Mr. Riley: anthem, "My Lord, Thy Will Be Done, piano solo, Miss Clarke address, by Mrs. Francis, saxophone solo, Mr. Giarr, duet, Miss Riley and Moore address, improvement Mr. Francis, anthem, their address, "Recognition of Duty," Mr. Padmore.
The people of Toronto are friendly and hospitable. I never forget the short but penentious time spent with Mr George in talking on real interest Hurrah for the Toronto Division
SECRET TROUBLES !
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Anyone ruptured, man, woman or child, should write at once to W. Rice 1728 Main St. Adams N.Y. for a free trial of his wonderful stimulating application. Just put it on the rupture begin to tighten they begin to bind together and close closes naturally and the need of a support or truss or appliance is then done away with. Don't neglect to send for this free trial. Even if your rupture doesn't bother you, what is the use of wearing supports all your life? Why buffer this nuisance? Why run the rupture from a small and innocent little child, kind it athes throw thousands on the operating table? A best of men and women are daily running such risk just because their rupture do not hurt or prevent them from running around. Write at once for this trial, as it certainly a wonderful thing and has made them that were as big as a man's two fins. Try and write at once using the coupon below.
PERFORMANCE SUBMITTED.
ELRIE DORSETT. Gen. Sec.
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1923
CORRESPONDENCE
CORRESPONDENCE
Give us a call or send for our price lists Gingham aird Organdy dresses for ladies. Special offer this week. Men's Cotton and Percale Shirts, $1.98. We specialize in uniforms for Legions, Motor Corps and Black Cross Nurses.
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Factory----62 West 142d Street, N. Y. City
Write Office----56 West 135th Street, N. Y. City
PHONE HARIEM 2877
SANTIAGO NEWS
How We Spent Christmas in Santiago
On Christmas Eve we were treated to a rich and ideal "Silver Treo" entertainment, which was got up specially by the ladies, of which Miss Elvira Ferguson is to be congratulated as the real organizer of name, during which course we were harangued with sweet choruses, anthems, and recitations, most especially a recitation by Miss Selma Williams, entitled "Battleham Star." This brought forth great applause as the young miss of fourteen summers thrills the heart of everyone. She was encored three times, and the more she responded the more she excelled which caused Mr George Rawlins to ask the visiting friends and members to subserve for a "purse" for the gay reciter, which was responded to instantaneously. We wish the young lady a prosperous and prolonged career. Mamie Robinson, a four-year-old child, and little Alfred Green are to be congratulated. Our executive secretary, Mr Coto who is more of a preacher than a politician, gave us an excellent lecture, also next morning, Christmas Day, when he held a religious early morning meeting. On that night we had an enjoyable dance, which was a bright occasion. Wednesday we had a lively welfare meeting. On New Year's Eve we held another bright mass meeting, followed by a watch night service by our preacher secretary. All these functions were satisfactorily attended. Thus the new year finds us watching and praying for the redemption of our motherland Africa. Later in the day we held a phone, which was very disappointing, as our members did not patronize us, but we returned to Liberty Hall, where we had a general dedication.
H STONEWALL JACKSON.
Official Reporter
LADIES STAGE GREAT PROGRAM AT U. N. I. A. MASS MEETING IN OAKLAND, CAL.
By ARTHUR 8. GRAY
Last Sunday afternoon at Carpenter's Hall the indies of the Oakland Division. Local No. 188, U. N. I. A., scorned an immense hit with one of the greatest programs it has been our pleasure to enjoy for some time.
Miss Corrine Clark, the charming Misset of Ceremonies, was delightfully entertaining with wholesome wit, humor and originality. Her pleasant personality was decidedly magnetic and kept her audience in a happy mood throughout her superintendence of the program.
Master Joseph Johnston, the boy wonder of the juveniles, recited another of his interesting recitations. Miss Geraldine Inman, their musical directress, rendered a piano selection, entitled "The Flower Song." Miss Louise Johnson also recited a dainty selection that was heartily applauded.
Mrs. H. E. Vann displayed her ability as an elocutionist in a recitation entitled "By the Side of the Road That's a Friend to Man" Mrs. Lois Pittman, the lady-president, delivered an address from the Bible concerning the duties of her sex in this great movement Madame Hill, the spiritualist, was present and spoke on the possibilities of African redemption if we but place our trust in the Omnipotent One and work relentlessly toward our objective. Spirited applause was accorded the speaker—Calif. Voice, Dec 22.
THE FIGHT AGAINST TUBERCULOSIS
To the Editor of the .legro World:
There is both encouragement and a strong apur for continued unremitting effort on our part in the fact, just determined, that there were 130 fewer deaths from tuberculosis in this city in 1922 than there were in 1921.
Allowing for an estimated increase of our population in the same period of 87,879, this indicates a decline in tuber-
LEAGUE OF NATIONS DELEGATES VISIT THE NEW HAVEN DIVISION
On January 3 the New Haven Division was visited by two of the delegates, Ilon. Mosera, Adams and O'Malley, who recently returned from the League of Nations sessions in Geneva. They were sent by the U. N. I. A. for the purpose of visiting the former German colony, whereby a national home can be established for the Negro people of the world.
At 8 p.m. the Masonic Hall was filled to its capacity with members, friends, well-wishers and critics of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, all anxiously awaiting the distinguished visitors. The meeting opened at 8:30 p.m with the singing of the opening hymn, "From Greenland's Iry Mountains," and opening prayer by the assistant chaplain, Rev. Mr. Irving. After a brief preliminary the president, Mr. B Murray, introduced the Hon James O Malley, who expressed his opinion of the League of Nations and kept the audience at a high pitch for at least three quarters of an hour.
The next speaker was the Hon Jean J. Adams, who gave a glowing report of the good work accomplished by the delegation. It was indeed an evening of inspiration and realization for the people of New Haven. The U.N.A is demonstrating to the world that its aims and objects must be fulfilled and the 400 000 000 Negroes must enjoy liberty freedom and true democracy.
GREETINGS TO THE CUBAN DIVISIONS OF THE U. N. L. A
GREETINGS TO THE CUBAN DIVISIONS OF THE U. N. L. A
---
Jan 9. 1923.
Clejo de Avila Division 78, U N I A
and A C L.
Dear Sir. To the many divisions of the U N I A in the Island of Cuba,
greetings. You are hereby advised not to entertain any one at the expense of your division, nor otherwise claiming to be members of the Clejo de Avila Division 78 unless such ladies can produce credentials, stamped with the seal of the division, showing their true membership.
There are several parties who have received support from other divisions when stranded by claiming to be members of this division, when they are the enemies of the division, and thus make their boast of the loyal treatment they had received.
Caution should be taken on whom such fraternal sympathy is bestowed
In a recent issue of The Nogr World there was published an article relating to a main meeting held in Central Violitta, province of Camaguey, wherein it was stated that from the issue of that meeting three new members were made for Ciejo Avila Division. Many more for the Moron Division. It further stated that the secretary of the division went over and got those members' names enrolled and their fees, but up to the present time of writing I have not received the names of those members, nor their fees. Therefore, this division will not be held responsible for those members.
JAMES D. BOYCE
Acting Executive Secretary
Narciso Lopez No. 23, Clejo de Avila
Cuba.
colonia mortality among us of 4 per cent.
This fact speaks for itself. When it is considered that tuberculosis is needless—since anything that is preventable is surely needless—it is plain that the 5.792 deaths of this kino in our city last year were 5.792 too many. The fight must be kept up.
For the good of New York, we shall be glad to give helpful information, without charge, to all who may inquire of us.
NEW YORK TUBERCULOSIS ASSOCIATION
10 East 39th St.
New York, Jan. 5, 1922.
GREATEST HAPPENINGS IN HISTORY OF THE FLORIDA (CUBA), U. N. L. A., DIV. 343
---
It shall be long remembered of the proceedings in Florida (Cuba) when on December 26, 1932, through the energetic effort of our worthy president, R. A. Martin, the U. N. I. A., with its officers and members, marched through the streets of this town with our national flag, the Red, Black and Green, the Cuban flag, under the command of our worthy president. The throng stopped in front of the police station, carrying a banner, written in letters of gold, in both languages. The band played both anthems. Cuban and Ethiopian, which was much appreciated by the police on guard, who saluted. At the soldiers' camp proceedings were in the usual manner. Thence the throng proceeded to the commons of Central Florida and celebrated the day magnificently with a plenic. At night, at 8 o'clock, the doors of Liberty Hall were thrown open for a tea meeting, at which were representatives of Ethiopia a royal family). There were the features of the day and night, which brought much satisfaction and great hope to our people of Ethiopia restoration.
(Nigned) M B. DAVERAL
GRAND MASS MEETING
HELD IN LOS ANGELES, CAL
Los Angeles Dayton No. 166, C. N. I. A. and A. C. L. met in their regular Sunday afternoon muese meeting at their hall 1824 Central avenue with D. J. Henderson president presiding The meeting opened by singing 'From Greenland a Lily Mountain' Motto and prayer repeated by the division. The roll call of officers after which the president turned the meeting into a program meeting, Mrs. C. H. Smith ordered a paper entitled 'All Men Equ. Non Slave'. A solo was also rendered by Mrs. Monile Myer, second lady incident, 'Let Your Light Burn in the Dark'. Mr. Johnson rendered a paper entitled 'Free Lender', in which he
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PHYLLIS WHEAT
UNIVERSAL NEG
IVISIONS
pointed to all those that love to lead and do not know how.
Mrs. J. J. Johnson gave us an interesting talk and also asked that each and every member appoint himself a committee of one and bring a new member each week, and this division in a few months will be second to none in the United States.
The president sang a beautiful solo which was enjoyed by the division.
R. A. Garrison made some remarks on "Back to Africa for the Negro."
P. Buck make a short address to the division, and among the many things he said were that the Negro of today is prepared in all walks of life if he will only fall in line with the U. N. I. A. P. Berd of Oakland Division gave an historical talk on the Negro, in which he pointed out that if the Negro will only read his book and history and stay in the U. N. I. A. he will be better off.
Mr Johnson of Oakland also gave us a short talk on "The New Negro; What We Stand For at This Moment."
H. Hoxley stated how he was converted in the U. N. L. A. by reading The Negro World.
Mr. Canaan made a few remarks, stating that he is going to do his best to support the division.
A Brown made some interesting remarks about the U. N. L. A. and the people of Los Angeles.
Every Sunday afternoon we hold a big mass meeting. Come one dnd all; the free
1410 East 15th St., Los Angeles, Cal.
Palace Garden Hall
TO RENT
8 Lackawanna Avenue
Newark, N. J.
NOW THE PROPERTY OF
U. N. I. A. and A. C. L.
Call to see us and secure dates for recept-
tions, dinners and dances; also small halls
to first floor suitable for leagues and receptions.
COMBINATION OFFER!
In to the Negro World, Which Is
and a Copy of Either of the Two
Books Listed Below for $4.00
TIAN REVOLUTION²²
Captain T. G. Steward
PRICE, $2.00
(heritative work on the history and sociology of
Review later.)
TION IN AFRICA²³
Jesse Jones (Review Later)
CLOTH BOUND, $2.00
for the convenience of Negro World readers
with
A CORKING COMB
A Year's Subscription to the
Ordinarily $2.50, and a Co
Great Negro Books Lif
"THE HAYTIAN
By Chaplain T.
PRICE,
Decidedly the most authoritative w
the little Black Republic. (Review last
"EDUCATION
By Thomas Jesse Jo
PRICE: CLOTH
This offer, made especially for the co
is made in conjunction with
A CORKING COMBINATION OFFER!
A Year's Subscription to the Negro World, Which I Ordinarily $2.50, and a Copy of Either of the Two Great Negro Books Listed Below for $4.00
Decidedly the most authoritative work on the history and sociology of little Black Republic. (Review later.)
By Thomas Jesse Jones (Review Later).
PRICE: CLOTH BOUND, $2.00
This offer, made especially for the convenience of Negro World readers, is made in conjunction with
Young's Book Exchange,
THE NEGRO WORLD, 81 West 185th Street, New York City.
Gentlemen, Enclosed please find $4.00 for which please send me (THE HAYTIAN REVOLUTION) or (THE AFTERMATH OF SLAVERY) and one year's subscription to the NEGRO WORLD.
Name ....
Address ...
83rd Street, New York City.
find $4.99 for which please send me (THE HAYTIAN
MATH OF SLAVERY) and one year's subscription to
ND BOOKER WASH-
Gentlemen Enclosed please find $4.00 for which please send me [THE HARTIAN
REVOLUTION] or [THE AFTERMATH OF SLAVERY] and one year's subscription to
the NEGO WORLD.
W. A. WALLACE MAKESABLE ADDRESS IN SPRINGFIELD, IL.
Hon. W. A. Wallace, Commissioner of the U. N. I. A. for Iowa, Minnesota and Illinois, was in the city January 1 and 2, and delivered two able and constructive addresses at Pleasant Grove Baptist Church before a fairly large representative audience. His talk was clear - cut, educating and historical. No abler address has been heard here for some time. The members and believers in the movement have taken on new courage and enthusiasm, and are determined to recuperate the organization and push it forward. Mr. Wallace will be back in March.
BISHOP L E. GUINN
631 SIXTH STREET, CHICAGO, IL
Author and Publisher of Four Negro
Literature.
In answer to your question I take great
pleasure in publishing books of wisdom for the Negro race.
No. 1: The History and Politics of
Negroes in the United States of
India, Persia, Greece and Rome. These
nine books and darker race books, each
pierced with the light of the Negro race. The only official history of Negroes for Negroes. Price $1.06. For any other
information a two-unit cost.
History from 1619 up to 1881, and 1883 to 1892." The past and future history of Negro Women. Price $1.16.
One book of this and one book of Rise
on the Ethiopian Black Man. Price $1.16.
Negro Women must let white men alone
and not allow them to enter the future message for Negro white-sworn.
A message for four hundred millions of Negroes.
This is included with the Rise
on the Ethiopian Black Man. Price $1.16 and $2.01 in our E Bible.
Two of the greatest race songs in the
United States of America. Band, Piano or organ; Our Bone in Rise." The Golden Crown." Arise in Rise Nation." Price, four copies
$1.06.
Four Rituals of the New Church and
the Appalachian Creed This Christmas Gift.
PRICE $1.00
Fire New Testament. $2.65.
The Old and New Bible plain. $2.15.
The Helper's Teacher, reference Bible.
$4.50—out of these books a Christmas
gift for a Friend.
Order from address, Money order
only. It is also now new Negroes in
trade with Negroes.
‘ .
AERP hae lat Sy la § a, Pest SP PRRs, us oat Be Jat’ ae
STEN OPERAS eaten RRERApeR Sco NUiEaie a tise ps mea AEREES chon Ber
es RTS meal rnasy RS Pre as Fiver Es fee
errant ei aes e :
eee Bee pear area even capi
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 cass against tho ionorable
Marcos Garvey, Bile Garcia and
George Tobias of the Black star Line
for alleged misuse uf the ( uited
States mails will be culled sume tne
this month in New York For quite
while enemies of Marcus Garvey end
the Universal Negro linprovement As-
soclation have been working for the
purpose of turning public sentiment
against Mr Garvey
Different Negro assoriations have
been canvassing the people asking
Ahem to teetify against Ne Garvey
They have organized opposition mect-
Inga in difforent renters under the
caption, “Garvey Must (iu All thin Is
being done to defeat the hopes uf ur
race through the oniv reac Negro
movement started in the vuterent of
the race
‘The fight for African freedom ts
eternal and you must support it now
by supporting the Ereateat leader of
the race Bend in yuur aubreription te
| To ADVERTISE in
A paper that fs read and backed by
an organised group, In
There iso branch of thin organiza-
ton right in your city or tuwn
There are over 4,000,000 membera al-
rectly Interested in thin, their
foremost Race medium,
|
§0!
fe there any wonder that those
who aro wise coor to advertine
in this paper recolve much won-
dorful results” Absolutely no. |
NOW, LISTEN!
If you are in buntnens, let us have
@ practical talk together
Interested in the growth of your
business?
Want some or to see your cuter-
prigo world-liko (as big) an tho
other fellows?
In the final analyses, you want to be
considered a nuccossful business
than or woman,
‘If these are the heights to which
you are attempting to climb,
Be as wise as the other fellow,
end ADVERTISE in
newspaper controlled by the targ-
! eat Race movement on earth.
ya
ne IF |
bites = : |
ci cia |
‘Toa: are Intebested in Placing
e eaverteement with us, yourt
5, Sey.
WE WOUD |
ans
Fou rae it. If you would
nos P3517, or tall a
band: rOiion, 56 Went; 155th
a aaah ak appointment
art ‘teX-cal’ ao +z.
[ibe atte: toredee: You ‘pur “eppctal
ee ee
Wipe Aas Beck
ties; Yours, inet fii.
apa Ray
OBA LPE DD ts. SALES
aDVATISING DEBT
Recah e Ne anleeet ae DS
en oan rer ST
anne tt De
Pecans Les pR eei A te 2
Re
aC RT tas
Re
eBay eo
? ha
ae
ees by
a P
a
‘a
rat
“MARCUS GARVEY'S DEFENSE FUND
thia fund ummediate’s Vil aubaccip
Hone will be acknumicdged in tne
volumna of this paper
The sase will be reported day b.
day in the Daily Negro Times and
weekly in this paper for universal cir-
culation Send all subscriptions ad-
diverse tu Mecretary-Genera Ui.
Nereal Nexto Improvement Aasociation,
v6 Weat 135th treet New York city,
any
THE FUND
Ae oe nt
Ce MIE
iran iiatmess Vaan G98
Tot Weten
MORON, PROV. CAM., CUBA
| Our Chrietmuntide was Joyfully apent
by everyone In thin community, leasing
year, and while we have enjoyed our-
| Which stands In the uppermomt mind of
the Universal Negro Improvement An-
| soctation which itm executive heads can
|Aever neglect. and that Is to remind
‘uur thoughtlonn membern of the race of
thetr past experiences,
Aw executive secretary of thia divt-
sion U cannot blink at plain facte, and
this holdn me up to ridicule in the
cutie community. Gur exhibitien
which was sv long published, hos prac-
Ucally left @ gloom un our community.
Its no gainsaying that in this town
there are many persons, especially
Women, who are capable of competition
along the Hnes of handicraft with any
other women of any other race Rut
what do we sce? We do not know if
It lack of knowledge of the aims and
objects of the asnociation on thele part
pe do not know if they unknowingly
refuse to admit that they are an inte-
| cral part of the Negro race We dont
Know if there te any prejudice directed
| owned the executive staff oF the meme
bership in general of the diviaion. Rut
whatever may be the outstanding
cures, we should worry We ore only
deniroun of bringing two of the parables
ef our Lord and Saviour while here
jm earth,
| When one lighte bis candi stot jie
i under a bushel, he'e yet in the dark,
when the other fellow acquires a talent
jand hides it In the earth, he aleo 1s
cursed and committed to the dark
regions, Therefore we appeul to the
People, not of our community alone.
wut to Negroes all over the world where
‘much grows crrorn are made on their
Part to mako an immediate correction
Nevertheless, our exhibition went on in
fino atyle, and expocially vur ineren
made a fino showing for tho future.
Here thes go .
Minn Heatrice Hohinaun crochet yoke
and knitted en Mise Inadora Newman,
centerpiene Mra Loulee Orhorne unti-
Mocanear utd Romer pot Minn Khvenbeth
Dunkley petticont, pin vushion and
Pilloweane, Min Florence Willams,
corent cover and centerpiove, Mine
Gerteude Unborne, pillow care aml anrh.
Miss Dorrin MeLaren, handbag and
centerpiece, Ming Elma Walker hand-
bag. basket, lamp mat. Miss Narsian
Contera, chair cushion, Misa Darcus
Brown, handkerchiefs; Miss Ines
Haughton, handkerchiefs, Mr Mce-
Katty, knitted slipper, Mrs. Fletcher,
crochet yoke, pillow case, antimacnssar;
Mrs. Bo Watnon, corset cover: Floret
Watkins, lamp mat: Mr. Simon A.
Amith sent from Bt. Thomas (formerly
Wanish West Iudiva, now property of
U, B.), thirteen handsomely knitted
belts. The firm for a very long time
our Liberty Hall was packed ‘to over-
flowing on Kunday, December 21. when
the Moron Choral Union, under the di-
rectorship of Mr JA. Todd, wan ace
corded many congratulations for the
eplendid way In which they entertained
the audience with a number of Lor-
ena's Christmas anthems, dusts, quer-
tets, trics, and solos, including the
Hallelujah Chorus. In view of the fact
that Mr. Todd singularly prepared bis
choir in a little less than a month and
made such a hit is worthy of commend.
He intends packing one of the biggest
heatres tn this town for the Easter
peason. JOSEPH A. TODD,
Executive Secretary,
Moron Div. No. 874.
So $700 in 2 Bows
1B | ¥ ess
ey a: aed
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1923
o Ht
ore URA.f. ONY
Ga fo
Gee. Othe damous @
es » | oor ueen
mm aa cae ea) rm): ong h * Ss had
iG aA Pi: | ; a li air’ whi soft
gs ae ike th ch sh
vA oN e Raven’ one
fen, Ta 3 NN ens wi
Cua ( f ke ae ae e Ancie wit
ea Wag a = of sh nt Moori:
UN 1 Were Ae a ampo : ‘ish Se %
fh as \\ iy ly now oing th cret
an Qa {cine accessible to th hair,
Y LAY Gas ft and tran? Thay erace |
coe Ne ee matter of care, They were rt orn ith ben
oN 0 } Se a ne
ae i Ai Ne Beople sigue them. simply a
INN ZURA, SHAMPOO. which
a | Set Soa aon Sacer
eee) 4 The us Rmawees |
Say Wf iy) dutaly 2 of ZURA ™ |
Nv Ue ey scaly eradicate oa i
(ot oy. Ny » ref ave th
LA Yiy ZURA reshed e
| V7 —_
As Yin ie ge HAMP00 <A ing
(( ne i conallon and to kee ae
We KC fo matter how often pte hale In pert ae ee
A RS ss money RA GUARAN its ve it in any sig ocoq Pers
Wey) For ala end Eo itete, aes
SEN o' 60 cont drug 8! oF Cami i:
we mas, ne eevee or went upon at at IB
ea fe ZURA, ine Ss ke
: KS Caxton Bldg., CI best. 7 WI cl ua
, CWS Agen \dg., CHICA’ ~s001ff
We find Soar pent Gace co KS \
; eee “shay ar — A a y 4
my
REPORT OF THE BANES
DIV. NO. 52, U.N. L A
The Hannes Division for Cie month of
Hie citer) MUM forging ite Way shew
wih he prow un of the Universal Ne
gra Tinpe seme it Aeagetian Reeey
seer aanek meaner of tae dis anton feekn
et tam uty tee bets uage ciel Call ane line
SIT Workers of ties cee tatinn ts
put thie great program «ver the top
Though conditions te Guta ees
poring St we feel Met Neg
stateless a ke SE EMINENE OE Ube rain
Le eal upon in Sine et Mtsticne bea
Thoma meme four members ee mat
Hered fue froin uae wang te tle coals
Thana witch ovist vet the adivaseant ta
Nehting werden thaw ever tee ee fae
wad WIE The pueqeaends ovat wath
the determination uf tne toot cine
Aim One Dest
On the thors a dele en et twe
famels MEOW b Murray neers aes of
the Moneras Ves. Mee tow
Mier bo Coombs oe retreat ie sane
Hay Sehoel oe mpaned ey cu geen
Ment My HO Mak at tes
Nhe penta tt bate Cats
WHE Cas thant fee tree
The net wis agi wes se
Ane oe item Ge
Peete at tones Phe aie i
Treat frome one deb cate oat te ee
Thastintie audieres at be the
syelhennd Cr seme nan ute
Cat ef the ime ys ie re ne
fueetings tet dura 8 ne tL
ee
tent Wee footie van bs use E feaes
fey tne singt get the sak ne ta ee
tama fey Memiiten of dee brat
Heading of Me wide at nee
Woke ae eM Me bake on
Motredie ed MOd SE bt kee
Het se Menanan ft te
Meeting Me na moe
Menem Pues te dws
OMe OE Mamas te te
Havin fee dnd tae tet
IngR Anetie dent wee net
Liberty Hat eta wpe bony
Mune it ele erg ts
your matte the OS El
Frommer if) ce detente sted
Mowe give een aay ad mene tn
faune The sete ered erie of
Mfferemy deren at ete thee
VON TOA thanks ne VO wwe
be redeemet in gd beat be thes
hive drawn apie cal y see rien
EINE Me attention sete LN
Tut let ux who feet the fie ot fice teas
burning within eur less! ce fowl
faring not et tle diteatt. © tect sin
round us Nekre men ail women 0 |
keep away from the 1 ON TV has
he real abject tn view for Uhei stat
dren, but intend then te be seria
all the days or then hfe ber dec 4
parents, who have ie is bone uf
Africa at heart, push thy ore, + an along
UN we have achieved yur wim» then
our children coming dawn the ages
WAL he more bens fated
MWS-e-sees Hatened ducan ie wo a aad
INGENIO RIO CANTO,
DIV. 282, BUYS AND OPENS
NEW LIBERTY HALL
ee af te Ree tent happenings tint
ease 2 ore added te the misters ef the
| Neer thin vice uty mes ete baa tead
st Ot Ts
Ge tht ese nae Bo Cait teat be
Some eee net atte tion hen in
Ween te he newb tee
HE ed deepened Ve one
SUD he gretp of Cisttors wena
Ing Mey ws to and aiwarssng the
feo 6 nek Cradle et baterts
Whe a Wane pant a tte services
Sem DW WE Me abner
Slee Re ake tin te
SEM poner Net bs ashe
beet pwr tat hospi cr ete
Const
He presutent Ma Hees 1 tan
Pe We eis rk
WE Wate therm ni ab Ue we
Sd tare eaten det te tae ony
Pee tet En vette
te Vee ti Dan tla tea Sea
SP AS Nantes
: Mra the tt peak os were MD
Som Baten eymeutice seg
Mover) Pend nest diy seonal pee ot
Mews DOA teres tet drivel
re Me PB tnten Lee pee tent
Sdn te Aven
OS Powenten mus Te ateade of
HOS Beebe bbe an wine he ee
Shorted fhe meni of thes ahev ars ts
sti testy the CON EON and
Meech tn a i ways TE teed
Fee tae aad papas tae feos
meteors ef thas sty eaten tad bowtie +
Fo Daerts Hi than geen tan 4
seanee tear blioa his henecs Gem a
Moperty ett EON TY
The clear under the dire toe of Me
Walfied Sana ts reedered good ses
be NF fo comments en the
FH emiag © progr an hy the president, the
singing ef ote Dalnepian Nattenal
Ninth bie ht iter aenyccen to dane
COM TRITON,
Ameag rie Sen potas
A WEAUTIVUD STORK INV FING
Low MLITY
APART oF Wine In To WENT
APYEY EARLY AT STORE
2250 Seventh Ave., N. Y. C.
Neur (std st Thone Murninaside #263
O00 REWARD I TFA TC GROW HAlh
HAIR ROOT HAIR GROWER
HOWARD PLAYERS TO
APPEAR IN ANOTHER
ORIGINAL PRODUCTION
WASTING TON TD dae ©The
Howard Phaser at he Hie sed Cnt
Seemity wall wipe cue cieettoee on aginal
Hama rattled The Peat anes te
he preseutad en Letday evening Dan
ary TN on the Nadie Hanekan Me
menel Clare! oan tne untvenaty
Sane The water at the tama
Mi Penne Dune ns niente ot
ENE arm oD eh Me waned Ease ee aty
Phe quod ten wed sae rane
Forman ae ee at heptane te
Ty rT
Dinthont Cormans Vee a Dae:
Fat De Phere sb te t ue
Septet copmentan ty a
eva ea
Vane en seat te tae no ptesentat oe
Sr ee
Poe pen teen tenet ohh
SUeptatien wf tee 4 ome tte
ce
a
WE bee Seams OE be eee
Vt steas teat ow cOtee rmmn et
Wome nnn a sain ven
mane be be nat tte
Vode aan e * Hae oe
PO Meet Ma a the ey
HOMSAHE bey ode trae te tee ae
Ie AL en Thales woud seine! « an
2 ODA eM
Reet Ree paused
2) EBay Bed STE ae
ey v ase
ay) 2 RARE
Me We AA
Pap, ~ fen aa?
aes
rhs Rat iat
op
i Wa Oh rae
URS Raetn
aM oy y
ROYAL CHEMICAL CO.
JAMAICA, NY.
lerpretation of Azumana, her “danre
of death’ boug 0 brillant achieve
ment JW Nichulnon ua the Medi
tine Mas, Putcia J Cheason ae Kumo
and Hernard Walton un Allhu, are all
Hasers uf vonsiterable undoratandlng
and juwer oXpeccat muate hun been
tompored fa The Dunes of Meatir’
by Vetar Kerney The seconory will
fiemen a beautiful pieture of a tribal
Villans an the rie csivring vf an
Ati ean aanse?
Accutpany ing thie play will be the
Maker of Deeama a planing fantaay
FOO scrit Prawn Phe part of Perrot
we tage te dese nays Newaume
mh Vane te by Gene Hone Nab
eb Metalic taney AT feed Sean
Ve use 8 He turmished by the
Fie ety Oe es ea aunt eee adie
Percad Sepgeae Per 60 Miede CN
fie Abed Phe ore hee ause of
Huet wer Ao nath predactions
Fine cee ange Unteugbout
feet) am deadern in the moves
eet oe teuhal wt Natenal Negro
ee
cot tea etn welt the Late af
Mee Sake nel te tener ate a dee
Ft ante nee emma tice of the
ele aad api eran Of the
‘ The ee ett et wan
oe abn ie sain be
ba Te te dee rte
' A ant oi fe Nn tine
co si Mee nde at Poe
Vel be dette ara Het weer
1s a sclontific vegetab'e compound of
nair rvot and Aino Ol, together with
several other poxitive nerbs, therefor
making the ‘ost powerful narmles1
Hair Grower known actually torcing
hair to grow in most obstinate caacs.
UCnexcollod for Vandru itching, Soro
Builp Falling Muir Wil grow mour-
tacho and eyebrows {ike magic It
must not po put where ualr is not
wanted.
Mana. Lurerrts writes: “After hay-
ing usod evory known advertised bair
Brower for yonrs with no rosults &
tried Hair Root flair Grower and
continued faithfully for 16 months,
now my hair is 29 inchos (It was 4
inches when 1 started) I beliove
every woman can grow her pair ono-
half to two inches a month by using
Hair Root.” ‘
Halt Root Hair Growor ts 50c. @
box oF bottle, Bhampoo, 5c. Agenia
| Wanted Pverywhere Make Big Profits.
Sel atamp for particular. (f you wish
tatty ageney wend us $1 and receive
abply When sold cctuin us our money.
epagets
a
IF U DON'T C
cONsULT
The Eyesight Specialist
RELIABLE AND REASONABLE
€vEC EXAMINED FREE
631 LENOX AVENUE
NEW VORK
Opposite Plartem teapties
REMOVED
DR. J. P. BAILEY
REGISTERED CHIROPODIST
Never ignore fret roablea—
"They tnfure the Nerves
Phone: Aud, 4135 101 W. 14188 Bt.
WHAT IS HOME
WITHOUT A BABY?
Bye carrion greece et
SET Ki cata tne Ss
THE NERVANO CO.
Dept. 104 Kansaa City, Mo.
Success, Happineess, Peace Are Yours
If You Know the Law of
DENIAL and AFFIRMATION
tine aeathiy esoer kod Goa ace oe
cast Gare C2 Comamerrtal eas aman ett
"The feet tase sit) emt you teesty tho eas
Sissel ene
Emonei Publishing Co.
AS Fifth Ave. Room 702, N. Y. Cty
Wishing os tan aa Tealn on Ste ying
nlerematien "Ney eRten eae mate eaeey
Be LN inant eas oe ea
Deawant tingiorier! Weise
Inter Railway, Dept. C,
Indianapolis, Ind.
ZOPSY tesa! tenes a
DROPSY reise oh
renin woon gone Alt distreeane nrinpte iy
Tapuily “iteapweer Atiet mad mttneye st
etter’ General improvement’ ve teniiae, 7
sind by cin atrial trentinen’ an ay
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por La Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la
Raza Negra.
54-56 Oeste, Calle 135,
Cludad de Nueva York, N. Y.
PROF. M. A. FIGUEROA, Editor
Nuevo Prospecto de Guerra en el Viejo Continente—La
Unión de los Millones de Elementos de Nuestra Raza
Por una Causa Justificada—La Labor de Redención
Continuará Por Medio de la Determinación de los
Miembros que Constituyen Nuestra Organización
Nuevos nubarrones de guerra empiezan a aglomerarse en el cielo del viejo continente y de un momento a otro se desarrollará un nuevo conflicto continental que forzará los designos y tendencias militares de Francia, lo cual envolverá al universo en otro holocaustro.
Los cuatrocientos millones de elementos de nuestra raza en el universo se preparan para que en circunstancias como la actual, se les presente la oportunidad de libertar la madre patria y emanciparse universalmente, aprovechandose de los cambios que proporciona el resultado de estas conflagraciones. Estos cambios, indudablemente, traerán en si un mejoramiento en la condición actual de nuestra raza, los cuales no serán instigados por el Negro, sino por los distintos pueblos que le ha explotado por centenares de años.
Los grandes gobiernos coloniales del continente europeo, hemos de repetir, darán el golpe por medio del cual los cuatrocientos millones de nuestra raza serán reconocidos como parte integrante de la humanidad y Francia toma de nuevo la iniciativa en tales contingencias. No podemos asegurar el que ésta haya perdido en el uso de sus facultades intelectuales, pero estamos en la completa seguridad de que ella continuará provocando a los gobiernos de Europa, hasta que los pilares del templo de la civilización caigan sobre ellos mismos.
Preparemonos, organicmonos mas y mas con el objeto de efectuar el programa de nuestra organización. Aspiramos a la victoria y debemos obtenerla; ambicionamos nuestro propio gobierno y debemos obtenerlo; queremos libertad, verdadera libertau, verdadera democracia. Esta no sera una cuestion de esperar que los otros pueblos nos concedan estos derechos humanos bajo su gobierno; tenemos que prepararnos y obtener estos por medio de nuestro propio esfuerzo
El medio mas eficiente de obtener verdadera libertad es cuando, por medio de nuestro propio esfuerzo, deliniemos los planes para la fundación de un gran gobierno propio. Para lograr tal oportunidad esperamos con pacienza la proximidad de la hora.
Francía invadirá el valle aleman del Ruhr forzando a Alemania hacia la pared y dentro de poco veremos de nuevo a la vicia Europa envuelta en un incendio tal que serán subcientes esfuerzos sobrehumanos para extinguir las llamas. Las naciones de Europa han tenido sus días de gloria, pero en la época actual se precipitan hacia el abismo. Como el imperio de la antigua Roma, sus poderes y gobiernos caerán a pedazos y en sus ruinas surgirán otros poderes y gobiernos mas prepotentes aun.
Si Francia no da su glope de estado hoy, lo dará mañana, si Francia no lo da a tiempo, Alemania lo dará; Italia lo dará, Japón lo dará. Doquiera provenga el glope, el momento hallará a los cuatrocientos millones de nuestra raza listos para marchar hacia la emancipación de la madre patria.
Trabajemos con mayor determinación aunque nos tome una eternidad; luchemos de dia en dia por la realización de nuestro propósito. Las filas de la Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra no serán desalentadas por la rudeza del tiempo ó la propaganda en su contra. Olvidaremos a los traidores en nuestra marcha hacia la victoria, olvidaremos a aquellos que han tratado de interceptar nuestro paso hacia la tierra de promisión.
Todas las razas, todos los gobiernos y todos los movimientos han tenido sus traidores; no es nada nuevo el que la nuestra los tenga, pero hemos de prestar en lo sucesivo mayor afención al germen que se debe el sentimiento humano, exterminandolo con nuestra determinación. Hemos de hacer uso de todas nuestras energías en pro de la constitución de su gobierno.
En estos instantes en que nuevas nubes ocultan el astro de la paz, consolidemos nuestra determinación hasta que llegue la hora de realizar nuestro propósito, ya tarde ésta un mes, un año, una decada ó un siglo.
En todas las épocas y en todas las edades el hombre ha tratado de aventajarse de la ignorancia y debilidad de los demas, pero, en esta época de adelanto, la Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra ha puesto coto a esta clase de política de engaños. Ninguna propaganda, ya sea ésta religiosa, política ó social es aceptada por el Negro del presente, sin antes haber hecho un estudio minucioso de su propósito.
En lo que respecta a nuestra vida social, política y religiosa, pertenecemos por ley natural al reino animal que nos iguala a cualquier otro ser existente, estando dotado de los mismos sentidos. El japonés, el blanco americano, el anglo-sajón, el francés, etc., todas luchan por el enaltecimiento de sus respectivas razas; nosotros con igual derecho, hemos de luchar por el enaltecimiento 'de la nuestra. Tal es el objeto por el cual vivimos; tal es nuestra determinación.
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1923
LA CASA BANCARIA DE
MORGAN TOMA EL EM
PRESTITO CUBANO
No abrieron en la Habana los sobres que contienen las proposiones de las firmas bancarias neojorquinas en la puja del emprestito cubano de incunenta millones depesos, proposiciones que fueron hechas por las casas financieras de Morgan, Spyer y Blair decidiendose dar la preferencia a la proposition de la casa Morgan & Co., por ser la más favorable a los intereses cubanos.
El empréstito fue decretedo por el congresso de Cuba y autorizado posteriormente por el presidente de los Estados Unidos, por provision de la emmenda Platt adscripta a la constitución nacional de Cuba.
Los bonos del emprestuto seran pagaderos en oro de los Estados Unidos, los cuales seran emítidos por el ejecutivo cubano. Son amortizables en treinta años, o antes se sequere, teudran un valor nominal de $1 000, $500 y $100 y devengaran un interes de cinco y medio por ciento anual, pagadero por trimestres vencidos.
Se establecera un fondo de aforizacion que sera de $500,000 para el primer año, cantidad que se aumentara annualmente en $50,000 hasta el año undecimo inclusive, en el cual se abonara un millon de dólares, del duodecimo año inclusive al vigesimo primero inclusive el pago annual aumentara en $100,000 annualmente, en lo adelante hasta el vigesimo mono, en $200,000 cada año, en el año trigesimo el pago annual sera de $3,050,000
Como amortizacion adicional se destina el 10 por ciento de toda cantidad que exceda de $600,000,000 que muerre al estado en el año fisa!
RETIRADA DE LAS TRO
PAS AMERICANAS
DEL RHIN
La retirada de las tropas americanas del Rhim, Alemania, es claramente una protesta contra la empresa de Francia de poner en plena observancia las estupulaciones de pagos anuales de reparaciones por Alemania por medio de presión militar
El voto casi unánime del senado de los Estados Unidos el sabado declarandose en favor de la retirada immediata de las tropas americanas de Alemania es importante en su significación por representar fielmente el sentimiento americano ante la actitud y las medidas de Francia.
Nada hay en las relaciones internacionales que pudiese desconcertar mas al pueblo americano que encontrarse en disconformidad con Francia en alguna cuestion. Pero que se ha llegado a esto en cuanto a la actitud general de Francia hacia la nacion deudora, con todo lo que significa en la situacion economica de Europa y la paz mundial, es cierto. Se ha visto venir esto y repetamente se ha enarceado que la psicologia americana es incapaz de entender y simpátizar con el punto de vista frances, porque en los Estados Unidos la cesacion de las hostudades armadas es el principio de la paz.
Los Estados Undidos no pueden comprender la resistencia de França a aceptar el concurso recibir con agrado el junco de los Estados Undidos en los problemas transcendentales que se presentan ante ella. Il lugar que Francia tiene en la estimación de los Estados Undidos, el profundo interes que los Estados Undidos tienen por Francia, para no decir nada de la parte de los Estados Undidos en la guerra, hacen exdiente que si la ranca hubiera solicitado con sego de los Estados Undidos en el problema de los reparaciones y en otros seres problemas existentes entre ella y Alemania habría tenido la más sincera y sumatica respuesta de este pas
DEPOSICIÓN DE UN FISCAL EN PUERTO RICO
El gobierno interino de Puerto Rico, siguiendo instrucciones del gobierno Reilly, ha depuesto al fiscal Quinones
Las razones que el gobierno da para la deposición son las siguientes
El fiscal Quinones, hallandose en la plaza pública de Guavama, hablo mal de Mr. Reilly
El mismo funcionario, utilizaba a veces en sus visitas oficiales un automóvil de su esposa v cobra luego este servicio al gobierno insular
El interesado va a hacer que se haga una investigación de los cargos y pedira que se citeen como testigos a algunos altos funcionarios v sus familiares, a fin de que se investigue también el hecho de que estos hacen uso indebido de los autonóviles del gobierno de Puerto Rico. La opinión general se manifiesta sumamente de acuerdo en que se haga la última investigación
Automoviles Cruzen el Desierato de Sahara
Noticias informa que un grupo de tractores automóviles, tipo "Caterpillar", ha logrado cruzar el desierto de Sahara. Confiase en que de este modo se establecerá un sistema de locomoción que substituirá a las caravanas de camellos.
MEJICO Y LA CONFE
RENCIA PANAMERI-
CANA DE CHILE
El cable comunica que Méjico, no habiendo sido todavía reconcidido por los Estados Unidos, ha declarado que se ve en la posición de declinar la instación que se le ha hecho para concurrir a la conferencia panamericana de marzo en Santiago de Chile. La noticia es transcendental y abre un capítulo Ramado a producir sorpresas en los preliminares de la quinta conferencia
Desde luego, partiendo de la base de que en el reglamento porque se rigen las conferencias panamericanas no se establece la asistencia sino de gobierno reconocidos en Washington, la actitud asumida por Méjico parece sencillamente logica. Si la conferencia panamericana, en efecto, como organismo oficial de relaciones interamericanas, va a reunirse para discutir v aprobar soluciones de problemas que afectan al continente entero, no es difícil prever que, en el curso de los debates v en el proceso de la aplicación de las soluciones adoptadas, Méjico se encontraria en una posición difícil ante la delegación de Washington, v esta, quiza compelida por la fuerza de las circunstancias, a colocarse en actitud violenta frente a sus colegas leguianos.
El punto legal de si la abstención de Mejico es o no obligada, bajo los terminos del reglamento, queda abierto a discussion. Igualmente es debatible apreciar si seria o no conveniente para la republica vecuna afrontar la situación sin prejudicios y aceptar la invitación de Chile para la conferencia, dejando para el momento oportuno dilucidar si su presencia en Santiago era o no autorizada.
Lo evidente, lo indiscutible y cada día mas apremiante, es la necesidad de una solución del conflicto internacional yanqui-nejicano que data de hace ya cuatro años. Este estado de cosas que permite que las dos republicas más importantes del norte del continente, vecinas, unidas por enormes intereses, comunes y que deben cooperar para provecho de todos en una política de cordial inteligencia, vivan en un asilamiento hostil y peligroso, debe acabar. Cada dia que se prolonga crea nuevos conflictos y produce renovados peligros. Ni a los Estados Unidos aprovecha, ni aprovecha a Mejice. Y a ambos países, y al resto de America, crea una llaga viviente, un problema palpitante, abierto a todas las complicaciones y a todos los riesgos.
Ambas cancilieras deben encontrar un amino para la solución Washington. quiza, se halle en mejores condiciones de dar el paso decisivo en esa vía Y Mexico, llegado el momento, debería abrir más amphaniente posible el camino a la inteligencia. El mundo está demasiado lleno de posibilidades de conflictos internacionales, para que en América, sin problemas de fondo, sin razones trascendentes para ello, se abhenden y se prolonguen situaciones como la que significa la ruptura de relaciones entre Mono y los Estados Unidos. La Preusa, N.Y.
NOMBRADO MINISTRO
AMERICANO DE CUBA
El general F. H. Crowder, asesor general del ejercito de los Estados Unidos y representante del presidente Harding ante el gobierno cubano hasta hace poco, sera el primer embajador de los Estados Unidos en la república de Cuba.
La noticia del presidente Harding de nombrar a Crowder para ese puesto fue dada conocer por el presidente del comite de erogaciones de la camara, Mr. Madden, el cual execito a la camara a que aceptara esa designacion.
Puesto a votación el nombramiento, la camara lo aprobe por 50 votos contra 38.
El nuevo cargo cuesta $17 500 anuales. El general Crowder va a retirarse pronto del ejercito
Desde hace días los diarios de la Habana venan publicando despaños de sus correspondales de Washington en que se aseguraba la designacion del general Crowder para el referido puesto y en ellos se decía que, dado el conocimiento que tiene el nombrado de las relaciones existentes entre el gobierno cubano y el de los Estados Unidos, estaba de hecho indicado para el cargo.
El general Crowder estuvo primer alli como representante personal del presidente Wilson ante el gobierno cubano, puesto que lo ratificó el presidente Harding al encargarse del poder.
Condenados a Muerte en la India Inglesa
Como resultado de los atentados cometidos por los no coopercionistas en el mes de febrero del año pasado, cliento setenta y dos personas fueron condenadas a muerte por habérselas declarado sulpables de asesinato.
DR. RUDOLPH L. COFFEE ENCOURAGES OAKLAND DIVISION, U. N. I. A.
Sunday afternoon, December 31, at Carpenter a Hall, before a most appreciative and attentive audience Dr. Rudolph I. Coffee, distinguished orator, lecturer and rabbi of the Jewish synagogue, delivered an interesting and particularly instructive address on "America and Africa."
The noted philosopher dealt impressively with the white man's interpretation of Christianity, and how false it is to the true conception and teaching of the Christ Jesus. The Fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man were thoroughly analyzed and explained, and the commandment, Love thy neighbor as thyself" was meant for all mankind irrespective of color race or creed.
The failure of the United States Senate to grant the proposed Liberian loan was lauded by the speaker as a wonderful opportunity for the Negroes of America to prove their ability to help their fellow-man in Africa, independently of the other races that exported such exorbitant interest and unnecessary commissions. We were also reminded of the fact that The Lord helps those who help themselves (Deafening applause rewarded this statement.) Having been present at the appearance of the Hon. Marcus Garvey last summer in our city, a most respectful tribute was paid our masterful leader and champion for Negro liberty, Justice and freedom.
The lynching evil was forcibly dealt with by the fearless and conscientious speaker namely, that the laws were already on our statutes to prevent moth violence but in the absence of their enforcement... only two things remained for the race to do: either put up with this wrong and suffer or—he a man''
After wishing the division a happy and prosperous New Year, and continued success and progress in our wonderful work, one of our most interesting addresses was brought to a close. A standing vote of thanks was accorded this splendid speaker
ARTHUR S. GRAY
chairman of Publicity
Local No. 148
Informacion General
REQUISITOS NECESARIOS
PARA SER MIEMBRO DE LA
"ASOCLACION UNIVERSAL
PARA EL ADELANTO DE
LA RAZA NEGRA."
Con la cantidad de sesenta conta
vos ($0.60) todo elemento de nuestra raza puede ser miembro de la "Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra"
Esta suma incluye cuota de entrada veinte y cinco centavos ($0.25) y pago del primer mes, treinta y cinco centavos ($0.35) como miembro.
Todo miembro debe ser provisto de una Constitución, o Libro de Leyes de la Organización (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, mande su aplicación al Cuerpo Directivo de la Asociación remitiendo la cantidad de un dollar ($1.00). Al recibo de esta cantidad le será enviado por correo los artículos antes mencionados, con un Certificado como miembro de la Asociación. La aplicación debe ser dirigida a:
Sr Secretario, Oficina General del Cuerpo Directivo.
Aconsejamos a aquellos que envien sus cuotas al Cuerpo Directivo lo hagan anual, semi-anual o cada tres meses, para evitar la constante trasmisión de la Tarjeta a esta oficina todos los meses.
APORTE SU OROLO PARA EL GRAN MOVIMIENTO DE TODAS LAS RPOCAS POR LA REDENCION DE AFRICA Y EL ADELANTO DEL NEGRO EN TODAS PARTES
Bandera, lista de diagnoza 8 por 19
Bandera, lista de diagnoza 19 por 19
Bandera, lista de diagnoza 19 por 19
Rocos, Cristo, Nuestro
Christos, Cristo, Nuestro
Christos, Cristo, Nuestro
Satena, Cristo, Nuestro
Fotografía, carácter de la Convención
Fotografía, carácter de la Convención
Fotografía, carácter de la Convención
Compre los discos para fonógra
fos de la U. N. L. A. por artistas de
la raza, a precios reducidos
Enviamos ordenes a todas partes
mediante pago por adelantado
Agentes en los Estados Unidos
$9.00 por docena, mas gastos de
flete.
Agentes en el extranjero, $10.00
por docena, mas gastos de sellos.
Discos por correo, $1.00 cada uno
mas gastos de sellos.
Precio en nuestra oficina, $0.90
ada uno.
The Ladies of the Royal Provisional Court—Ethiopia OF THE UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
Wednesday Eve., February 21, 1923
(WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY EVE)
At LIBERTY HALL
20 WEST 138TH STREET
Come and See the Crowning of the Queen of Ethiopia.
Military Escort of Universal African Royal Guards
PROGRAM STUPENDOUS! ORIGINAL! SPECTACULAR! HERALDED WITH MUSIC FROM THE ORIENT
GENERAL ADMISSION, 50 CENTS Tickets at Office U. N. I. A., 50 West 135th Street
MONDAY NIGHT, JANUARY 22, 1923 AT 8:15 O'CLOCK FOR BENEFIT OF
AMERICA'S ONLY DAILY NEGRO NEWSPAPER
Let Everybody Get Ready It Will Be a Big Show
ADMISSION 50 CENTS TICKETS AT NEGRO TIMES OFFICE 56 WEST 135th STREET, N. Y. C.
GENERAL NOTICE TO MEMBERS
Without Prejudice, This Is to Inform One and All That
All persons to whom Mr. Garcia has loan bonds or receipts or conversed with for Improvement Association are requested to a with Complaint Department, Universal Association, 89 West 158th Street, New York
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ENGLISH WAITER ADMITS NEGRO'S
PHYSICAL ADVANTAGES OVER OTHER MEN
Ought White Men to Box Black Men When Races Oppose
Each Other in the Ring
10
By E B OSBORN
1 mw ean aire stan Dov tee
@yerame Bret famine is wills ai tig om
WHR Geuimes Cong tet fund
Hamad Ge te vn ked eater
Roleme bower of smelt pote
Te had pod tage on
weoprine Ve Pe a 6 PNM eM
champions 6 er et teas
Foam ete Dh te cee ba
Wo ebb betas mse fades
Renate Aas gato fee ato
Who eth b eres tt bea
Neb nee re athe salphedetle te ee
fe ewe te tines thee bee tte
Pastel bane ws ie ane
PRpeGLT Uet om we RIA a wok
mines tame ne
hie nae
Word ee wee tee no
woehampier ot test dhe damn
wh bom sec etal bos
PehOng tere bean mt '
Meee ned ue at eae babel
flor hapes cbareng: the wrt i
wren she te ee ay tated
Teeter te Ve fone tae
Le Hemme BE ape ne te
Nec rnnet he toe hon
Ad detec be cae 7 OY az
peent
MRE at ee deed te ge
nas doth work She an ete vey thie
Beene Ph etm why the bee tere t
IS desing cer tes We neat
faventte Pperenth ot hope os cape
Qnember lin long tie et ger we
fetes and pert tat de dal bee
Manee of pert alcstong er peta
ten
qeee WEE! oe oe aay
Abe GE rian Cescone ne ok epee
Maumee tle feeb ees se = re
Kame above the pra wt! te babe a
Bpecie dnatenee Ia ed oe te four
Rive HIN Welln tin teins eadmpet et
ing failures .
The Color Line
Dut thin Riki Curpenticn fhe ore
opens an oft dimcuaned question ought
vontertn between white imd tdoek men
tebe atlewed dn tie ring * Ta Never
Ten ever nines the nacre) pete origina
1g I Jobnnen a detect of bette panty
Te opinion bas grows mers vost mere
atrongly oppured toomuch bie k ond
white eheounters
And if and when a world ech siqoun
ship contesh between Dempars and
Marry Willa, the biggest and best of
the Negro boxera out there is fnelly
ranged. Pam contain that State fter
hints and city after city will refune
to have it ataged within their jurindic
tlon, Remember that the Willnrd-
Johnpon Nght hid to be taken to Cube
where « hard and Cant color-line duce
Nat exint
In England we de not portean aw
Jorge Negro population no thet the
evil enctal resulty af oman te-aue
Nghtn between the auperin and the
Inferior racea do not arin Yot 1 ful
that a democratic mudicnce meh on
one seen at the cing er the Liven peal
Stadium, deem notcare fur thene bhich
and-whito bouta And at Cardi and
other places, where the disgus ini
sight of “Mart niggers going vbeut
with white girls han canaed 1 uial
riots yn a ommall aeale, Tam told they
are forbidden by the poll «
Many Negro boxers, tf admit tase
fought In a clean, aportamantibe #tyie
and proved themacivern decent weil
mannered men outnide the squared
ticle Peter Sncknon, the greatest of
all colored pugitiate, had the inatin t
of @ +portaman and a gentleman sam
Langford that geniat humorint with 1
amile Uke a red carthquake in a ment
Ukeable creature And the Dixie iid
fought like an ariat and war sulle in
offensive in hin conduct
Physical Inequalities
Keil leaving out of connuteration
the queation of the relations between ,
the two races there are sound rearone —
why biack-and white prigenghts,
whould he taboor’ The Negre has |
phvseal advantages whieh others
tinge belng equal ae nearly so abould |
ynabie him to beat a white man ;
He hae a lower nervous orguniza- |
Hon, which ienders him fur lesa
tuaceplible to pain er shock Hila akull |
iw harder and thicker than the white |
man's and in many carer he can take!
Ablow oo re chin with impontty, |
whi would deatres the equilibrium
uf the liquide in the aural ehunnate of | |
nay white min thua bringi ge about; !
ha phenomenon of the Knockout it
Team often raid that the Necro'n ©
stomach In a weak apot Tatom
fallacy, as ring experivace shown and!"
Ma medical nuthority insists The shin,”
a alway n weak pot with colored —
folk (even quadroons or octoroona) |
bul that Is no help to the white boxer
who would he pro-ptly diaquaiined if!
he tried to hack the ‘chunk «f smoke” |
»Pposed to him
On the whole, 1s annot help think. |
ng white men sHould nor Aght black ;
men in the ring And 1 feel sure,
Na eee
SEND NO MONEY
as AUTOMATICS
a.
Wax ‘ eo
eva :
sage Sia ees j
SEL een
= Ree corte ae
ee ERO a nbitatnk sin. o
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VERGO 5D! ta
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RS a net ToD osu
Otten they
EMINENT GERMAN SCIENTIST TELLS OF MAGIC
POWER IN NEW DISCOVERY FOR RESTORING
YOUTHFUL VIGOR, HEALTH AND STRENGTH
Every man oe woman may now O44 mene Raper: care ta the 1 re ant
FOaIRtGE IWAli shieeelb had “igor A Wieieres ane en baleen se be
LRM etter theny Frere Of cereus tescar hand #UAs ss Go n Umed suger net
Minbe the forous GLAND. ON AFRICAN MAM TREVTUENT Cr teear ve
Cngihtul siger, health. strength apd grace Inet be pee cet t) egies ature
THO BRONOCING LANORATONIRS were eo attracted ta. the remerkable rreges
Tee aed be pninem Thyricinna ther (mee erranued tm mmas this cicatment coe
athe to el) Americea poopie, The tresiment te cers siupl Inespenaiie and can
fe lekew by any one at Rome People testing this treatment have been amered a!
the quiek resuite and aatpnienes to foe) abe Viger of Sth and rerength returning
eaten Mgoan wureca tet hie tested of compe :
LOTR AERO TNE CRO RARKC TREATMENT together with ciher pawerfal in
seeaieate eich etimatatce tech gland end nerve forree tn netmal activity causing
Sens co'aisappene end youtbfel vigor, health ana power te return Any man
or woman ect ene. or in re health may now he restored by this wonderful
treatment 38. rent |. All you need do te just pend your nam= and sddreae to
{rate nocINe LABORATORIES. Dept G60 Louie. Mo. end ther wil eend |
wee TER s fell $8.00 treatmen!” On errival par the pretman oniy #2 °0 and
jete If you prefer, oncioen $200 In pour letter In either ras if sow are
oo Mealy. With rooulte iniowe rook jan nonitr "ihr jletersiony and Ma,
verund yewr payment in ny one show ee Ine
LeEET rc tmrene, o Niece are fatty Proieceed by thie gearanter
ef gee . eo “ "
we ok Ho OM OH
Mer bt bw oe
eo Ve ne, honestly
Pott eas a eat won
shot meee . #
Fhe geben ew ee
Poe we
fos " ne Hoos toe
Mer ve ” tai
a “a my
vat t &
1
so 1 '
1 noo 1 4 ste
(gu RH ‘
1 pet wet Fg
a tha
ate teow bow gst
My they tebe te ead
a wo ' 1 Bn ‘
a ike a
oe eae 1
Pepe bere yd Weoowe '
Meta owas sw
wh bee bw be tt
Peet ete tah
2) fhe te @ oaecuwn mS
the ar Patten et yt
Wee ea tae ne mee er
Pry rie atid yew
Mey ever de ates soe oa
HONS ID the 8 ate he br we
ment tyes od tow
fees tees hora
Cre nee bth eu a
Weare a te wet
Pov Mae teva ba
weber wine OG wT tea
Ma fee ep eee komen eg
Hee When they wal ste ns
Whew fea then freedom ba th wy
Will mules Vit nt be yt
thawing Hush |
There are magus evens iene fede
Which point the Se ee
eee on te eg by
Mee ef ote Te Ppt es ele ating
Ne great nats de adie on tre
femmes atthe bin wud anger 6 ee
ated cd tie desis 0 weer) pete
Wh tees GW SME ee ete nr
Hestinies of penpees win gw
Mae at etnies te ayn wend neta tw
they stall te qevetued ned ems
Oe Oo | ft
Reverning teaticns woth neg rd te +
De
of the near appre of a de wae
There ue gelng nt creer seuss
Ment amen men tad tues wha
feu te daminete heir fellow 6
wero thee Jute eit Mec ef vec
Whe wall tehe ie tere ad the wri as
en the waleftame samme fail teres
vem all Tere OMiNede Ske the
meted Cf the geal og ef te nate
fed pee paunatens te tae met ne oat at
Home of the world vit ne se towed!
mews tras stree a Me vwed eet Sarr te thie '
secunney uf the foreboding of res
KHENS omoneus ue thes ue Phe sean
Eo the mperetang for et tte ae oat
Lueqes ecto teamed te Que tetionag te!
he werld thar thes re the aber
cuirdn of the coming ef a dis wie
Surepe gete ite due Ned when tie
Inv dawne the blond of tie suena ot
Ham will no mere be spit te uve 4
Willgation that hee brought them oj
Femme merci stim tum ston sn ae
WH hinds of bare ant barrits oad ever
‘oncelvable form of hindi ane teow |
TORT OeR We Necro es hive earned
ur Ieasona weil
We do net intend again ta be te
anne of any group af blued sik ne
turopeans or thetic kin und tasters whl
ecord henceforth that when the Nee
ros paled in the future he witha ow},
voice in that geveruine nt mt we teed
pat auch nm ROvernmMe nt te test founded
tthe land of hin Githers the Lend men |
ME Africa
There are vet other sigue thar are fi
Moot meaning whied the evee ot the |,
prervant ones will he wble fo disceen
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1923
fore ate aigus ainang the camps of
Fond sat the wold The
CE at fe tte daw tng
fotne + Whey the fF teenm wall be
Hee pe tre ite et aH pee
eee we those wie
oa wd enorent bat
He Peete nae
® ‘ ' - Cette
1 wom ve tee Negee
as Ke soe tee
Pa ‘ tat
ate tn hb bteteg
Lagi ee Hye tothe
Vie 1 ‘ tie
fat Bed we wey no
. . ane
vas we
fu on ‘ ‘
vot bes mw ya t
ayo” * . 48
> ¥ Moe
ho ‘ a
" : «
8 fo = Be
\
bee 1
at . a & ‘
sort ot
, ha \ ‘
pee n : ‘
wae Be soe
‘ ean de
eo te .
' ii Eg
. Sy t
sa bas
foo . nod
not . so
wee i
: mo ee ec
' 1 ei
. 1 sae
‘ ne mes
v4 1
‘ . . Moy
Pore oth ate soefcue ’
* sd
ye wot ate vot
here oe
tee see 6 ‘
won nas Poe
' tee so
ta i oh all G Vea tee .
‘ls veel me ' fran
Pop brass
A JAMAICA NEGRO BEATEN BY
THREE POLICEME?:
er
i . soe
. hoe
or rat
Mere PL ee sae
wet bos vt
we Seen
od by te oy ‘
bed dam Woe bere om ne
,t tae gp dee ae bed
| Wiesel Sow eG ss sete
Fan fe sae we re
te vale or Date boboeames at
Wath taeoner bans tant
police van! .
fer atte Phorm erty
an hemo howe
Feb eee tans
Ween ew teats Sabra
Pom the dda 6 yen oe dae
Fr Md Et te ae Bek
So deg the veung men eg
Cb er ge Cet aM er hw ey
Negrete feed ee on tte
Myer tad ore on Ps a wa
Wome dev eng ro ne
ee eee
Thom ot atner ume .
Mente saw the soca ceatment given
tethe Negra rn tig ceurty fae ate
Mea et tes Crends Sawe eee
Pesnboe bbe dee mre tot
OS
mere we a tat
Wheat Teme ee Se wee
Vodebe rad ener feel of
hw ee nat eee 8 ome a
bern don ot Pe eee a
Deak tote be fr bc ye eee sent ane
patter ae " sehen
Molo TiASER
NOTICE T0 THE PUBLIC!
Pamphlets or Writings and Speeches by ,
HONORABLE MARCUS GARVEY
; ‘ te ite u ie . , _ antl a . tes rel
ed a Me Tapou tt how sim Mcwd eles ae
PRD aay ee PD tr
Ripe woe fel ves Tedfl ne Pb BF ~ om F NP
les wethe Wah Pade Ta] pede
de ee ea tet
Serva Beene Ee ee
1 Sit iw es ~4 ~ cua.
BOOK DEPARTMENT
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
56 West 135th Street, New York City
—— eee
| INDIAN SYRUP & TONIC CO.
|
| P .
INDIAN Long Life Tonic
HERB and
MEDICINE Cough Syrup
THE WORLD'S FAMOUS INDIAN HERG MEDICINES
Women and men leat you forget the tole Quick Hair Gtower for
crowing hair on bald heade an) bald speta terghthens the hair and pre-
vents ite falling Now 6$c per can Long Life Temic for the blood and
rheumatiem 7Sc Cough Syiup for etubbtern eulde and coughr 2a La
No Fuce Lotion for cleaning the face from worms and tumpsa 60c All
made trom the purest of Indian Herbs and Norke Mail ordere promytly
attended to Suid by all druggvate
INDIAN SYRUP & TONIC CO.
Cumberland Street, Merrick Park, Jamaica, N. ¥.
PHONE, SAMAICA (010-3 Jamaice Factory and Office
: RHEUMATISM
' Why sitter, mith Piheuvatinens Gout. Belaticn. fisersiass Parn and discases
“ef impure bleed when you retiew ve
SCHAPIRA’S ANTIDOL
Money refunded for first trial bottle. if not eatisfactory Try tt—you
lore nothing and gain your health.
| Price, $1.00 ) Per Bottle; 6 Bottles, $5.00
Nail jorn Attended to Prompt;
WILLIAM SCHAPIRA MANUFACTURING CHEMIS
182 First Avenue, Corner 1ith Street, New York City
NEW YEAR'S VOW
eo welt oeowe
ered oe vere °
poke ee Me 4 “eo!
betaine a ee tte
teu ge wed te
Geige Tener 8 We oe
de Wem ete dca Chee ae ne
Sod det bw et
same s a as ay ed
Bob eg a
. \
? poe
. ‘ wo
vo ou oN
* ‘wan E
” \
aot ho
Ms .
1
« ‘
‘ ‘ ‘
‘ :
1 1 ‘
. oy
1 \
a ' i
ws hoy yg
. - noon
. 1
mi 8 =, : ’
‘ tims 8 ce Row
n ‘4
Satry so mu hh about om veur is ae
when Veg det t know wnat te de ee
Fo et ae be ve wae
beeome forge War he nen bene
Taw et abd we dome ts
Tee dood me yt sot
mes % ot t
teow ” ga NT
one ome one
yess sims eo
ok eN wee
Peay Dee toe foreman wi oat
. ned wae ae et
se bowen tet oho.
bbe ee Sem
whens z ‘e
4 \ , me i
t ‘ es av
Von rae
, ‘
“ ob -
roof as te & Bay
1 woe sae we
THOUSANDS HAVE KIDNEY
TROUBLE AND NEVER
SUSPECT IT
Applicants for Insurance Should
Use Swamp-Root
te wt re
1 :
long rows
Pesan ~ % i ,
. SUF 4
1 4 ' M
‘ " a
ve ac
, aS
* Ser oe at
baw? Watts ee
ue A tek ore NOY
\ ce Week
ae
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
OMve—S6 West 135th Street, New York City
Factory—2305 Seventh Avenue New York City
ATTENTION!
Sade ng Sd i Pte L versal Greens?
OUR GROCERIES
‘The Only Negro Chain-Groceries Operating
in Harlem
Grocery No. 1 y 47 West 135th St.
Leave an order . k It will be delivered pee 1
Do Your Duty — Reap the Benefits
IT PAYS TO PATRONIZE YOUR OWN
Look Out for the Appearance of the Greatest Negro
Monthly Magazine
66 99
Che Blackman
Toute.) CHa A pW ood ve Tend Boewe
Ponte vir, met at Poa ee Mae eal
8 pre oert Now tor ste bees tobe
Pew remar Nolt cgad dle W { !
—_— |
ANNOUNCEMENT WILL BE MADE LATER GIVING |
A DEFINITE DATE FOR THE APPEARANCE
OF THE FIRST ISSUE |
PRICE—25 CENTS PER COPY
SUBSCRIPTION—$3.00 PER YEAR; ORDER NOW
Agents Wantcd All Over the World
ADDRESS ‘
Manager “THE BLACKMAN”
56 West 135th Street
NEW YORK CITY, U.S. A.
Universal Negro Improvement Assn
le
NOTICE! NOTICE! NOTICE!
Tre Pea fener et the bor a Negi Tinnrovement: Assnetae
been hin tour eC the tatten has Leen approached - hundreds ef loyal
Members und well Wiehe uf tte Ver ation in complaints againat the
treatment they have received from eoveril of the varius departments of
the Organ gation at headyu gies od from indusduel etticern and em:
eves at headquarters an also gai t the cenduct ef certain Laccutive
OMcera whilat on the field
The Cresent General ie gece def the mans emp ainty aed hereby
bege to announce that a Complaint Departmeot is now established and
attached to his offer AM persona having com ainte to make againat any
department officer or empiove sf hy O ganizauen wil! please write to
President-General’s Office, U. N. 1. A.
86 West 135th Street, New York
P SI you tore the Orginization and desire t+ sea it fmprove Ite
service to the rare, then you wil not fail to report any trreguiarity un
the part uf officials, o'ficers and employes of the Ureanizution caring net
whom the person be if he or ahe haa dene ansthing improper or unconat,
tuttonal, report It, Uf you have any, compliints send them in now an!
don't wait until it Ie toa Inte
cinti&g from hei te fect he te)
Saye beavenward and in cup, 4
fen te tes Maker ie omeaned oat
bent OO tnd Give ne tegen ed
Fob teem vom den 1d
there my vee te pe ony
Maner af Mer re
‘ Te ah owes sono
fe oTke be ere ot
ome one
Weowakbter ee ee ,
ties. ae if death hau clisped us alt
n elke grasp A @t!linene
hed over he meene- the only thing
Fb ee tum Like mtlenee was
CfA wing ef the caatin the aretes
Tos me ene ta bles ecg
cot feos eds wee Dee
settee tee Ae
‘ v be hte oe
HOW Stare TInt
dol port daverpe |oU